summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--39294-0.txt14451
-rw-r--r--39294-0.zipbin0 -> 274623 bytes
-rw-r--r--39294-h.zipbin0 -> 649242 bytes
-rw-r--r--39294-h/39294-h.htm20039
-rw-r--r--39294-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 365884 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/39294-8.txt14728
-rw-r--r--old/39294-8.zipbin0 -> 273185 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/39294.txt14728
-rw-r--r--old/39294.zipbin0 -> 273103 bytes
12 files changed, 63962 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/39294-0.txt b/39294-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cc5015f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39294-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14451 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Great House, by Stanley J. Weyman
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: The Great House
+
+Author: Stanley J. Weyman
+
+Release Date: March 28, 2012 [eBook #39294]
+[Most recently updated: June 16, 2021]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: Charles Bowen
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT HOUSE ***
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+
+THE HOUSE OF THE WOLF
+THE NEW RECTOR
+THE STORY OF FRANCIS CLUDDE
+A GENTLEMAN OF FRANCE
+THE MAN IN BLACK
+UNDER THE RED ROBE
+MY LADY ROTHA
+MEMOIRS OF A MINISTER OF FRANCE
+THE RED COCKADE
+SHREWSBURY
+THE CASTLE INN
+SOPHIA
+COUNT HANNIBAL
+IN KINGS’ BYWAYS
+THE LONG NIGHT
+THE ABBESS OF VLAYE
+STARVECROW FARM
+CHIPPINGE
+LAID UP IN LAVENDER
+THE WILD GEESE
+
+
+
+
+THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+BY
+STANLEY J. WEYMAN
+
+Author of “The Castle Inn,” “Chippinge,”
+“A Gentleman of France,” etc., etc.
+
+NEW YORK
+
+LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
+
+FOURTH AVENUE AND 30th STREET
+
+1919
+
+Copyright, 1919
+BY
+STANLEY J. WEYMAN
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+ CHAPTER I. The Hôtel Lambert—Upstairs.
+ CHAPTER II. The Hôtel Lambert—Downstairs.
+ CHAPTER III. The Lawyer Abroad.
+ CHAPTER IV. Homeward Bound.
+ CHAPTER V. The London Packet.
+ CHAPTER VI. Field and Forge.
+ CHAPTER VII. Mr. John Audley.
+ CHAPTER VIII. The Gatehouse.
+ CHAPTER IX. Old Things.
+ CHAPTER X. New Things.
+ CHAPTER XI. Tact and Temper.
+ CHAPTER XII. The Yew Walk.
+ CHAPTER XIII. Peter Pauper.
+ CHAPTER XIV. The Manchester Men.
+ CHAPTER XV. Strange Bedfellows.
+ CHAPTER XVI. The Great House at Beaudelays.
+ CHAPTER XVII. To the Rescue.
+ CHAPTER XVIII. Masks and Faces.
+ CHAPTER XIX. The Corn Law Crisis.
+ CHAPTER XX. Peter’s Return.
+ CHAPTER XXI. Toft at the Butterflies.
+ CHAPTER XXII. My Lord Speaks.
+ CHAPTER XXIII. Blore Under Weaver.
+ CHAPTER XXIV. An Agent of the Old School.
+ CHAPTER XXV. Mary is Lonely.
+ CHAPTER XXVI. Missing.
+ CHAPTER XXVII. A Footstep in the Hall.
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. The News from Riddsley.
+ CHAPTER XXIX. The Audley Bible.
+ CHAPTER XXX. A Friend in Need.
+ CHAPTER XXXI. Ben Bosham.
+ CHAPTER XXXII. Mary Makes a Discovery.
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. The Meeting at the Maypole.
+ CHAPTER XXXIV. By the Canal.
+ CHAPTER XXXV. My Lord Speaks Out.
+ CHAPTER XXXVI. The Riddsley Election.
+ CHAPTER XXXVII. A Turn of the Wheel.
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII. Toft’s Little Surprise.
+ CHAPTER XXXIX. The Deed of Renunciation.
+ CHAPTER XL. “Let Us Make Others Thankful.”
+
+
+
+
+THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+THE HÔTEL LAMBERT—UPSTAIRS
+
+
+On an evening in March in the ’forties of last century a girl looked
+down on the Seine from an attic window on the Ile St. Louis. The room
+behind her—or beside her, for she sat on the window-ledge, with her
+back against one side of the opening and her feet against the other—was
+long, whitewashed from floor to ceiling, lighted by five gaunt windows,
+and as cold to the eye as charity to the recipient. Along each side of
+the chamber ran ten pallet beds. A black door broke the wall at one
+end, and above the door hung a crucifix. A painting of a Station of the
+Cross adorned the wall at the other end. Beyond this picture the room
+had no ornament; it is almost true to say that beyond what has been
+named it had no furniture. One bed—the bed beside the window at which
+the girl sat—was screened by a thin curtain which did not reach the
+floor. This was her bed.
+
+But in early spring no window in Paris looked on a scene more cheerful
+than this window; which as from an eyrie commanded a shining reach of
+the Seine bordered by the lawns and foliage of the King’s Garden, and
+closed by the graceful arches of the Bridge of Austerlitz. On the water
+boats shot to and fro. The quays were gay with the red trousers of
+soldiers and the coquettish caps of soubrettes, with students in
+strange cloaks, and the twinkling wheels of yellow cabriolets. The
+first swallows were hawking hither and thither above the water, and a
+pleasant hum rose from the Boulevard Bourdon.
+
+Yet the girl sighed. For it was her birthday, she was twenty this
+twenty-fifth of March, and there was not a soul in the world to know
+this and to wish her joy. A life of dependence, toned to the key of the
+whitewashed room and the thin pallets, lay before her; and though she
+had good reason to be thankful for the safety which dependence bought,
+still she was only twenty, and springtime, viewed from prison windows,
+beckons to its cousin, youth. She saw family groups walking the quays,
+and father, mother, children, all, seen from a distance, were happy.
+She saw lovers loitering in the garden or pacing to and fro, and
+romance walked with every one of them; none came late, or fell to
+words. She sighed more deeply; and on the sound the door opened.
+
+“_Hola!_” cried a shrill voice, speaking in French, fluent, but oddly
+accented. “Who is here? The Princess desires that the English
+Mademoiselle will descend this evening.”
+
+“Very good,” the girl in the window replied pleasantly. “At the same
+hour, Joséphine?”
+
+“Why not, Mademoiselle?” A trim maid, with a plain face and the
+faultless figure of a Pole, came a few steps into the room. “But you
+are alone?”
+
+“The children are walking. I stayed at home.”
+
+“To be alone? As if I did not understand that! To be alone—it is the
+luxury of the rich.”
+
+The girl nodded. “None but a Pole would have thought of that,” she
+said.
+
+“Ah, the crafty English Miss!” the maid retorted. “How she flatters!
+Perhaps she needs a touch of the tongs to-night? Or the loan of a pair
+of red-heeled shoes, worn no more than thrice by the Princess—and with
+the black which is convenable for Mademoiselle, oh, so neat! Of the
+_ancien régime_, absolutely!”
+
+The other laughed. “The _ancien régime_, Joséphine—and this!” she
+replied, with a gesture that embraced the room, the pallets, her own
+bed. “A curled head—and this! You are truly a cabbage——”
+
+“But Mademoiselle descends!”
+
+“A cabbage of—foolishness!”
+
+“Ah, well, if I descended, you would see,” the maid retorted. “I am but
+the Princess’s second maid, and I know nothing! But if I descended it
+would not be to this dormitory I should return! Nor to the tartines!
+Nor to the daughters of Poland! Trust me for that—and I know but my
+prayers. While Mademoiselle, she is an artist’s daughter.”
+
+“There spoke the Pole again,” the girl struck in with a smile.
+
+“The English Miss knows how to flatter,” Joséphine laughed. “That is
+one for the touch of the tongs,” she continued, ticking them off on her
+fingers. “And one for the red-heeled shoes. And—but no more! Let me
+begone before I am bankrupt!” She turned about with a flirt of her
+short petticoats, but paused and looked back, with her hand on the
+door. “None the less, mark you well, Mademoiselle, from the whitewash
+to the ceiling of Lebrun, from the dortoir of the Jeunes Filles to the
+Gallery of Hercules, there are but twenty stairs, and easy, oh, so easy
+to descend! If Mademoiselle instead of flattering Joséphine, the
+Cracovienne, flattered some pretty gentleman—who knows? Not I! I know
+but my prayers!” And with a light laugh the maid clapped to the door
+and was gone.
+
+The girl in the window had not throughout the parley changed her pose
+or moved more than her head, and this was characteristic of her. For
+even in her playfulness there was gravity, and a measure of stillness.
+Now, left alone, she dropped her feet to the floor, turned, and knelt
+on the sill with her brow pressed against the glass. The sun had set,
+mists were rising from the river, the quays were gray and cold. Here
+and there a lamp began to shine through the twilight. But the girl’s
+thoughts were no longer on the scene beneath her eyes.
+
+“There goes the third who has been good to me,” she pondered. “First
+the Polish lodger who lived on the floor below, and saved me from that
+woman. Then the Princess’s daughter. Now Joséphine. There are still
+kind people in the world—God grant that I may not forget it! But how
+much better to give than to take, to be strong than to be weak, to be
+the mistress and not the puppet of fortune! How much better—and, were I
+a man, how easy!”
+
+But on that there came into her remembrance one to whom it had not been
+easy, one who had signally failed to master fortune, or to grapple with
+circumstances. “Poor father!” she whispered.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+THE HÔTEL LAMBERT—DOWNSTAIRS
+
+
+When ladies were at home to their intimates in the Paris of the
+’forties, they seated their guests about large round tables with a view
+to that common exchange of wit and fancy which is the French ideal. The
+mode crossed to England, and in many houses these round tables, fallen
+to the uses of the dining-room or the nursery, may still be seen. But
+when the Princess Czartoriski entertained in the Hôtel Lambert, under
+the ceiling painted by Lebrun, which had looked down on the arm-chair
+of Madame de Châtelet and the tabouret of Voltaire, she was, as became
+a Pole, a law to herself. In that beautiful room, softly lit by wax
+candles, her guests were free to follow their bent, to fall into
+groups, or to admire at their ease the Watteaus and Bouchers which the
+Princess’s father-in-law, old Prince Adam, had restored to their native
+panels.
+
+Thanks to his taste and under her rule the gallery of Hercules
+presented on this evening a scene not unworthy of its past. The silks
+and satins of the old régime were indeed replaced by the
+high-shouldered coats, the stocks, the pins and velvet vests of the
+dandies; and Thiers beaming through his glasses, or Lamartine, though
+beauty, melted by the woes of Poland, hung upon his lips, might have
+been thought by some unequal to the dead. But they were now what those
+had been; and the women peacocked it as of old. At any rate the effect
+was good, and a guest who came late, and paused a moment on the
+threshold to observe the scene, thought that he had never before done
+the room full justice. Presently the Princess saw him and he went
+forward. The man who was talking to her made his bow, and she pointed
+with her fan to the vacant place. “Felicitations, my lord,” she said.
+She held out her gloved hand.
+
+“A thousands thanks,” he said, as he bent over it. “But on what,
+Princess?”
+
+“On the success of a friend. On what we have all seen in the _Journal_.
+Is it not true that you have won your suit?”
+
+“I won, yes.” He shrugged his shoulders. “But what, Madame? A bare
+title, an empty rent-roll.”
+
+“For shame!” she answered. “But I suppose that this is your English
+phlegm. Is it not a thing to be proud of—an old title? That which money
+cannot buy and the wisest would fain wear? M. Guizot, what would he not
+give to be Chien de Race? Your Peel, also?”
+
+“And your Thiers?” he returned, with a sly glance at the little man in
+the shining glasses.
+
+“He, too! But he has the passion of humanity, which is a title in
+itself. Whereas you English, turning in your unending circle, one out,
+one in, one in, one out, are but playing a game—marking time! You have
+not a desire to go forward!”
+
+“Surely, Princess, you forget our Reform Bill, scarce ten years old.”
+
+“Which bought off your cotton lords and your fat bourgeois, and left
+the people without leaders and more helpless than before. No, my lord,
+if your Russell—Lord John, do you call him?—had one jot of M. Thiers’
+enthusiasm! Or your Peel—but I look for nothing there!”
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. “I admit,” he said, “that M. Thiers has an
+enthusiasm beyond the ordinary.”
+
+“You do? Wonderful!”
+
+“But,” with a smile, “it is, I fancy, an enthusiasm of which the object
+is—M. Thiers!”
+
+“Ah!” she cried, fanning herself more quickly. “Now there spoke not Mr.
+Audley, the attaché—he had not been so imprudent! But—how do you call
+yourself now?”
+
+“On days of ceremony,” he replied, “Lord Audley of Beaudelays.”
+
+“There spoke my lord, unattached! Oh, you English, you have no
+enthusiasm. You have only traditions. Poor were Poland if her fate hung
+on you!”
+
+“There are still bright spots,” he said slyly. And his glance returned
+to the little statesman in spectacles on whom the Princess rested the
+hopes of Poland.
+
+“No!” she cried vividly. “Don’t say it again or I shall be displeased.
+Turn your eyes elsewhere. There is one here about whom I wish to
+consult you. Do you see the tall girl in black who is engaged with the
+miniatures?”
+
+“I saw her some time ago.”
+
+“I suppose so. You are a man. I dare say you would call her handsome?”
+
+“I think it possible, were she not in this company. What of her,
+Princess?”
+
+“Do you notice anything beyond her looks?”
+
+“The picture is plain—for the frame in which I see her. Is she one of
+the staff of your school?”
+
+“Yes, but with an air——”
+
+“Certainly—an air!” He nodded.
+
+“Well, she is a countrywoman of yours and has a history. Her father, a
+journalist, artist, no matter what, came to live in Paris years ago. He
+went down, down, always down; six months ago he died. There was enough
+to bury him, no more. She says, I don’t know”—the Princess indicated
+doubt with a movement of her fan—“that she wrote to friends in England.
+Perhaps she did not write; how do I know? She was at the last sou, the
+street before her, a hag of a concierge behind, and withal—as you see
+her.”
+
+“Not wearing that dress, I presume?” he said with a faint smile.
+
+“No. She had passed everything to the Mont de Piété; she had what she
+stood up in—yet herself! Then a Polish family on the floor below, to
+whom my daughter carried alms, told Cécile of her. They pitied her,
+spoke well of her, she had done—no matter what for them—perhaps
+nothing. Probably nothing. But Cécile ascended, saw her, became
+enamoured, _enragée!_ You know Cécile—for her all that wears feathers
+is of the angels! Nothing would do but she must bring her here and set
+her to teach English to the daughters during her own absence.”
+
+“The Princess is away?”
+
+“For four weeks. But in three days she returns, and you see where I am.
+How do I know who this is? She may be this, or that. If she were
+French, if she were Polish, I should know! But she is English and of a
+calm, a reticence—ah!”
+
+“And of a pride too,” he replied thoughtfully, “if I mistake not. Yet
+it is a good face, Princess.”
+
+She fluttered her fan. “It is a handsome one. For a man that is the
+same.”
+
+“With all this you permit her to appear?”
+
+“To be of use. And a little that she may be seen by some English
+friend, who may tell me.”
+
+“Shall I talk to her?”
+
+“If you will be so good. Learn, if you please, what she is.”
+
+“Your wishes are law,” he rejoined. “Will you present me?”
+
+“It is not necessary,” the Princess answered. She beckoned to a stout
+gentleman who wore whiskers trimmed à la mode du Roi, and had laurel
+leaves on his coat collar. “A thousand thanks.”
+
+He lingered a moment to take part in the Princess’s reception of the
+Academician. Then he joined a group about old Prince Adam Czartoriski,
+who was describing a recent visit to Cracow, that last morsel of free
+Poland, soon to pass into the maw of Austria. A little apart, the girl
+in black bent over the case of miniatures, comparing some with a list,
+and polishing others with a square of silk. Presently he found himself
+beside her. Their eyes met.
+
+“I am told,” he said, bowing, “that you are my countrywoman. The
+Princess thought that I might be of use to you.”
+
+The girl had read his errand before he spoke and a shade flitted across
+her face. She knew, only too well, that her hold on this rock of safety
+to which chance had lifted her—out of a gulf of peril and misery of
+which she trembled to think—was of the slightest. Early, almost from
+the first, she had discovered that the Princess’s benevolence found
+vent rather in schemes for the good of many than in tenderness for one.
+But hitherto she had relied on the daughter’s affection, and a little
+on her own usefulness. Then, too, she was young and hopeful, and the
+depths from which she had escaped were such that she could not believe
+that Providence would return her to them.
+
+But she was quick-witted, and his opening frightened her. She guessed
+at once that she was not to be allowed to await Cécile’s return, that
+her fate hung on what this Englishman, so big and bland and forceful,
+reported of her.
+
+She braced herself to meet the danger. “I am obliged to the Princess,”
+she said. “But my ties with England are slight. I came to France with
+my father when I was ten years old.”
+
+“I think you lost him recently?” He found his task less easy than it
+should have been.
+
+“He died six months ago,” she replied, regarding him gravely. “His
+illness left me without means. I was penniless, when the young Princess
+befriended me and gave me a respite here. I am no part of this,” with a
+glance at the salon and the groups about them. “I teach upstairs. I am
+thankful for the privilege of doing so.”
+
+“The Princess told me as much,” he said frankly. “She thought that,
+being English, I might advise you better than she could; that possibly
+I might put you in touch with your relations?”
+
+She shook her head.
+
+“Or your friends? You must have friends?”
+
+“Doubtless my father had—once,” she said in a low voice. “But as his
+means diminished, he saw less and less of those who had known him. For
+the last two years I do not think that he saw an Englishman at home.
+Before that time I was in a convent school, and I do not know.”
+
+“You are a Roman Catholic, then?”
+
+“No. And for that reason—and for another, that my account was not
+paid”—her color rose painfully to her face—“I could not apply to the
+Sisters. I am very frank,” she added, her lip trembling.
+
+“And I encroach,” he answered, bowing. “Forgive me! Your father was an
+artist, I believe?”
+
+“He drew for an Atelier de Porcelaine—for the journals when he could.
+But he was not very successful,” she continued reluctantly. “The china
+factory which had employed him since he came to Paris, failed. When I
+returned from school he was alone and poor, living in the little street
+in the Quartier, where he died.”
+
+“But forgive me, you must have some relations in England?”
+
+“Only one of whom I know,” she replied. “My father’s brother. My father
+had quarrelled with him—bitterly, I fear; but when he was dying he bade
+me write to my uncle and tell him how we were placed. I did so. No
+answer came. Then after my father’s death I wrote again. I told my
+uncle that I was alone, that I was without money, that in a short time
+I should be homeless, that if I could return to England I could live by
+teaching French. He did not reply. I could do no more.”
+
+“That was outrageous,” he answered, flushing darkly. Though well under
+thirty he was a tall man and portly, with one of those large faces that
+easily become injected. “Do you know—is your uncle also in narrow
+circumstances?”
+
+“I know no more than his name,” she said. “My father never spoke of
+him. They had quarrelled. Indeed, my father spoke little of his past.”
+
+“But when you did not hear from your uncle, did you not tell your
+father?”
+
+“It could do no good,” she said. “And he was dying.”
+
+He was not sentimental, this big man, whose entrance into a room
+carried with it a sense of power. Nor was he one to be lightly moved,
+but her simplicity and the picture her words drew for him of the
+daughter and the dying man touched him. Already his mind was made up
+that the Czartoriski should not turn her adrift for lack of a word.
+Aloud, “The Princess did not tell me your name,” he said. “May I know
+it?”
+
+“Audley,” she said. “Mary Audley.”
+
+He stared at her. She supposed that he had not caught the name. She
+repeated it.
+
+“Audley? Do you really mean that?”
+
+“Why not?” she asked, surprised in her turn. “Is it so uncommon a
+name?”
+
+“No,” he replied slowly. “No, but it is a coincidence. The Princess did
+not tell me that your name was Audley.”
+
+The girl shook her head. “I doubt if she knows,” she said. “To her I am
+only ‘the English girl.’”
+
+“And your father was an artist, resident in Paris? And his name?”
+
+“Peter Audley.”
+
+He nodded. “Peter Audley,” he repeated. His eyes looked through her at
+something far away. His lips were more firmly set. His face was grave.
+“Peter Audley,” he repeated softly. “An artist resident in Paris!”
+
+“But did you know him?” she cried.
+
+He brought his thoughts and his eyes back to her. “No, I did not know
+him,” he said. “But I have heard of him.” And again it was plain that
+his thoughts took wing. “John Audley’s brother, the artist!” he
+muttered.
+
+In her impatience she could have taken him by the sleeve and shaken
+him. “Then you do know John Audley?” she said. “My uncle?”
+
+Again he brought himself back with an effort. “A thousand pardons!” he
+said. “You see the Princess did not tell me that you were an Audley.
+Yes, I know John Audley—of the Gatehouse. I suppose it was to him you
+wrote?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“And he did not reply?”
+
+She nodded.
+
+He laughed, as at something whimsical. It was not a kindly laugh, it
+jarred a little on his listener. But the next moment his face softened,
+he smiled at her, and the smile of such a man had its importance, for
+in repose his eyes were hard. It was clear to her that he was a man of
+position, that he belonged of right to this keen polished world at
+which she was stealing a glance. His air was distinguished, and his
+dress, though quiet, struck the last note of fashion.
+
+“But I am keeping you in suspense,” he said. “I must tell you, Miss
+Audley, why it surprised me to learn your name. Because I, too, am an
+Audley.”
+
+“You!” she cried.
+
+“Yes, I,” he replied. “What is more, I am akin to you. The kinship is
+remote, but it happens that your father’s name, in its place in a
+pedigree, has been familiar to me of late, and I could set down the
+precise degree of cousinship in which you stand to me. I think your
+father was my fourth cousin.”
+
+She colored charmingly. “Is it possible?” she exclaimed.
+
+“It is a fact, proved indeed, recently, in a court of law,” he answered
+lightly. “Perhaps it is as well that we have that warrant for a
+conversation which I can see that the Princess thinks long. After this
+she will expect to hear the whole of your history.”
+
+“I fear that she may be displeased,” the girl said, wincing a little.
+“You have been very kind——”
+
+“Who should be kind,” he replied, “if not the head of your family? But
+have no fear, I will deal with the Princess. I shall be able to satisfy
+her, I have no doubt.”
+
+“And you”—she looked at him with appeal in her eyes—“will you be good
+enough to tell me who you are?”
+
+“I am Lord Audley. To distinguish me from another of the same name, I
+am called Audley of Beaudelays.”
+
+“Of Beaudelays?” she repeated. He thought her face, her whole bearing,
+singularly composed in view of his announcement. “Beaudelays?” she
+repeated thoughtfully. “I have heard the name more than once. Perhaps
+from my father.”
+
+“It were odd if you had not,” he said. “It is the name of my house, and
+your uncle, John Audley, lives within a mile of it.”
+
+“Oh,” she said. The name of the uncle who had ignored her appeals fell
+on her like a cold douche.
+
+“I will not say more now,” Lord Audley continued. “But you shall hear
+from me. To—morrow I quit Paris for three or four days, but when I
+return have no fear. You may leave the matter in my hands in full
+confidence that I shall not fail—my cousin.”
+
+He held out his hand and she laid hers in it. She looked him frankly in
+the face. “Thank you,” she said. “I little thought when I descended
+this evening that I should meet a kinsman.”
+
+“And a friend,” he answered, holding her hand a little longer than was
+needful.
+
+“And a friend,” she repeated. “But there—I must go now. I should have
+disappeared ten minutes ago. This is my way.” She inclined her head,
+and turning from him she pushed open a small door masked by a picture.
+She passed at once into a dark corridor, and threading its windings
+gained the great staircase.
+
+As she flitted upwards from floor to floor, skirting a long procession
+of shadowy forms, and now ogled by a Leda whose only veil was the dusk,
+now threatened by the tusks of the great boar at bay, she was not
+conscious of thought or surprise. It was not until she had lighted her
+taper outside the dormitory door, and, passing between the rows of
+sleeping children, had gained her screened corner, that she found it
+possible to think. Then she set the light in her tiny
+washing-basin—such was the rule—and seated herself on her bed. For some
+minutes she stared before her, motionless and unwinking, her hands
+clasped about her knees, her mind at work.
+
+Was it true, or a dream? Had this really happened to her since she had
+viewed herself in the blurred mirror, had set a curl right and,
+satisfied, had turned to go down? The danger and the delivery from it,
+the fear and the friend in need? Or was it a Cinderella’s treat, which
+no fairy godmother would recall to her, with which no lost slipper
+would connect her? She could almost believe this. For no Cinderella, in
+the ashes of the hearth, could have seemed more remote from the gay
+ball-room than she crouching on her thin mattress, with the breathing
+of the children in her ears, from the luxury of the famous salon.
+
+Or, if it was true, if it had happened, would anything come of it?
+Would Lord Audley remember her? Or would he think no more of her,
+ignoring to-morrow the poor relation whom it had been the whim of the
+moment to own? That would be cruel! That would be base! But if Mary had
+fallen in with some good people since her father’s death, she had also
+met many callous, and a few cruel people. He might be one. And then,
+how strange it was that her father had never named this great kinsman,
+never referred to him, never even, when dying, disclosed his name!
+
+The light wavered in the draught that stole through the bald, undraped
+window. A child whimpered in its sleep, awoke, began to sob. It was the
+youngest of the daughters of Poland. The girl rose, and going on
+tip-toe to the child, bent over it, kissed it, warmed it in her bosom,
+soothed it. Presently the little waif slept again, and Mary Audley
+began to make ready for bed.
+
+But so much turned for her on what had happened, so much hung in the
+balance, that it was not unnatural that as she let down her hair and
+plaited it in two long tails for the night, she should see her new
+kinsman’s face in the mirror. Nor strange that as she lay sleepless and
+thought-ridden in her bed the same face should present itself anew
+relieved against the background of darkness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+THE LAWYER ABROAD
+
+
+Half an hour later Lord Audley paused in the hall at Meurice’s, and
+having given his cloak and hat to a servant went thoughtfully up the
+wide staircase. He opened the door of a room on the first floor. A
+stout man with a bald head, who had been for some time yawning over the
+dying fire, rose to his feet and remained standing.
+
+Audley nodded. “Hallo, Stubbs!” he said carelessly, “not in bed yet?”
+
+“No, my lord,” the other answered. “I waited to learn if your lordship
+had any orders for England.”
+
+“Well, sit down now. I’ve something to tell you.” My lord stooped as he
+spoke and warmed his hands at the embers; then rising, he stood with
+his back to the hearth. The stout man sat forward on his chair with an
+air of deference. His double chin rested on the ample folds of a soft
+white stock secured by a gold pin in the shape of a wheat-sheaf. He
+wore black knee-breeches and stockings, and his dress, though plain,
+bore the stamp of neatness and prosperity.
+
+For a minute or two Audley continued to look thoughtfully before him.
+At length, “May I take it that this claim is really at an end now?” he
+said. “Is the decision final, I mean?”
+
+“Unless new evidence crops up,” Stubbs answered—he was a lawyer—“the
+decision is certainly final. With your lordship’s signature to the
+papers I brought over——”
+
+“But the claimant might try again?”
+
+“Mr. John Audley might do anything,” Stubbs returned. “I believe him to
+be mad upon the point, and therefore capable of much. But he could only
+move on new evidence of the most cogent nature. I do not believe that
+such evidence exists.”
+
+His employer weighed this for some time. At length, “Then if you were
+in my place,” he said, “you would not be tempted to hedge?”
+
+“To hedge?” the lawyer exclaimed, as if he had never heard the word
+before. “I am afraid I don’t understand.”
+
+“I will explain. But first, tell me this. If anything happens to me
+before I have a child, John Audley succeeds to the peerage? That is
+clear?”
+
+“Certainly! Mr. John Audley, the claimant, is also your heir-at-law.”
+
+“To title and estates—such as they are?”
+
+“To both, my lord.”
+
+“Then follow me another step, Stubbs. Failing John Audley, who is the
+next heir?”
+
+“Mr. Peter Audley,” Stubbs replied, “his only brother, would succeed,
+if he were alive. But it is common ground that he is dead. I knew Mr.
+Peter, and, if I may say it of an Audley, my lord, a more shiftless,
+weak, improvident gentleman never lived. And obstinate as the devil! He
+married into trade, and Mr. John never forgave it—never forgave it, my
+lord. Never spoke of his brother or to his brother from that time. It
+was before the Reform Bill,” the lawyer continued with a sigh. “There
+were no railways then and things were different. Dear, dear, how the
+world changes! Mr. Peter must have gone abroad ten years ago, but until
+he was mentioned in the suit I don’t think that I had heard his name
+ten times in as many years. And he an Audley!”
+
+“He had a child?”
+
+“Only one, a daughter.”
+
+“Would she come in after Mr. John?”
+
+“Yes, my lord, she would—if living.”
+
+“I’ve been talking to her this evening.”
+
+“Ah!” The lawyer was not so simple as he seemed, and for a minute or
+two he had foreseen the _dénouement_. “Ah!” he repeated, thoughtfully
+rubbing his plump calf. “I see, my lord. Mr. Peter Audley’s daughter?
+Really! And if I may venture to ask, what is she like?”
+
+Audley paused before he answered. Then, “If you have painted the father
+aright, Stubbs, I should say that she was his opposite in all but his
+obstinacy. A calm and self-reliant young woman, if I am any judge.”
+
+“And handsome?”
+
+“Yes, with a look of breeding. At the same time she is penniless and
+dependent, teaching English in a kind of charity school, cheek by jowl
+with a princess!”
+
+“God bless my soul!” cried the lawyer, astonished at last. “A
+princess!”
+
+“Who is a good creature as women go, but as likely as not to send her
+adrift to-morrow.”
+
+“Tut-tut-tut!” muttered the other.
+
+“However, I’ll tell you the story,” Audley concluded. And he did so.
+
+When he had done, “Well,” Stubbs exclaimed, “for a coincidence——”
+
+“Ah, there,” the young man broke in, “I fancy, all’s not said. I take
+it the Princess noted the name, but was too polite to question me.
+Anyway, the girl is there. She is dependent, friendless; attractive,
+and well-bred. For a moment it did occur to me—she is John Audley’s
+heiress—that I might make all safe by——” His voice dropped. His last
+words were inaudible.
+
+“The chance is so very remote,” said the lawyer, aware that he was on
+delicate ground, and that the other was rather following out his own
+thoughts than consulting him.
+
+“It is. The idea crossed my mind only for a moment—of course it’s
+absurd for a man as poor as I am. There is hardly a poorer peer out of
+Ireland—you know that. Fourteenth baron without a roof to my house or a
+pane of glass in my windows! And a rent-roll when all is told of——”
+
+“A little short of three thousand,” the lawyer muttered.
+
+“Two thousand five hundred, by God, and not a penny more! If any man
+ought to marry money, I am that man, Stubbs!”
+
+Mr. Stubbs, staring at the fire with a hand on each knee, assented
+respectfully. “I’ve always hoped that you would, my lord,” he said,
+“though I’ve not ventured to say it.”
+
+“Yes! Well—putting that aside,” the other resumed, “what is to be done
+about her? I’ve been thinking it over, and I fancy that I’ve hit on the
+right line. John Audley’s given me trouble enough. I’ll give him some.
+I’ll make him provide for her, d—n him, or I don’t know my man!”
+
+“I’d like to know, my lord,” Stubbs ventured thoughtfully, “why he
+didn’t answer her letters. He hated her father, but it is not like Mr.
+John to let the young lady drift. He’s crazy about the family, and she
+is his next heir. He’s a lonely man, too, and there is room at the
+Gatehouse.”
+
+Audley paused, half-way across the room. “I wish we had never leased
+the Gatehouse to him!”
+
+“It’s not everybody’s house, my lord. It’s lonely and——”
+
+“It’s too near Beaudelays!”
+
+“If your lordship were living at the Great House, quite so,” the lawyer
+agreed. “But, as it is, the rent is useful, and the lease was made
+before our time, so that we have no choice.”
+
+“I shall always believe that he had a reason for going there!”
+
+“He had an idea that it strengthened his claim,” the lawyer said
+indulgently. “Nothing beyond that, my lord.”
+
+“Well, I’ve made up my mind to increase his family by a niece!” the
+other replied. “He shall have the girl whether he likes it or not. Take
+a pen, man, and sit down. He’s spoiled my breakfast many a time with
+his confounded Writs of Error, or whatever you call them, and for once
+I’ll be even with him. Say—yes, Stubbs, say this:
+
+“‘I am directed by Lord Audley to inform you that a young lady,
+believed to be a daughter of the late Mr. Peter Audley, and recently
+living in poverty in an obscure’—yes, Stubbs, say obscure—‘part of
+Paris, has been rescued by the benevolence of a Polish lady. For the
+present she is in the lady’s house in a menial capacity, and is
+dependent on her charity. Lord Audley is informed that the young lady
+made application to you without result, but this report his lordship
+discredits. Still, he feels himself concerned; and if those to whom she
+naturally looks decline to aid her, it is his lordship’s intention to
+make such provision as may enable her to live respectably. I am to
+inform you that Miss Audley’s address is the Hôtel Lambert, Ile St.
+Louis, Paris. Letters should be addressed “Care of the Housekeeper.”’”
+
+“He won’t like the last touch!” the young man continued, with a quiet
+chuckle. “If that does not touch him on the raw, I’ll yield up the
+title to-morrow. And now, Stubbs, good-night.”
+
+But Stubbs did not take the hint. “I want to say one word, my lord,
+about the borough—about Riddsley,” he said. “We put in Mr. Mottisfont
+at the last election, your lordship’s interest just tipping the scale.
+We think, therefore, that a word from you may set right what is going
+wrong.”
+
+“What is it?”
+
+“There’s a strong feeling,” the lawyer answered, his face serious,
+“that the party is not being led aright. And that Mr. Mottisfont, who
+is old——”
+
+“Is willing to go with the party, eh, Stubbs?”
+
+“No, my lord, with the party leaders. Which is a different thing. Sir
+Robert Peel—the land put him in, but, d—n me, my lord”—the lawyer’s
+manner lost much of its deference and he spoke bluntly and strongly—“it
+looks as if he were going to put the land out! An income-tax in peace
+time, we’ve taken that. And less protection for the farmer, very
+good—if it must be. But all this taking off of duties, this letting in
+of Canadian corn—I tell you, my lord, there’s an ugly feeling abroad!
+There are a good many in Riddsley say that he is going to repeal the
+Corn Laws altogether; that he’s sold us to the League, and won’t be
+long before he delivers us!”
+
+The big man sitting back in his chair smiled. “It seems to me,” he
+said, “that you are travelling rather fast and rather far, Stubbs!”
+
+“That’s just what we fear Sir Robert is doing!” the lawyer retorted
+smartly, the other’s rank forgotten. “And you may take it from me the
+borough won’t stand it, my lord, and the sooner Mr. Mottisfont has a
+hint the better. If he follows Peel too far, the bottom will fall out
+of his seat. There’s no Corn Law leaguer will ever sit for Riddsley!”
+
+“With your help, anyway, Stubbs,” my lord said with a smile. The
+lawyer’s excitement amused him.
+
+“No, my lord! Never with my help! I believe that on the landed interest
+rests the stability of the country! It was the landed interest that
+supported Pitt and beat Bony, and brought us through the long war. It
+was the landed interest that kept us from revolution in the dark days
+after the war. And now because the men that turn cotton and iron and
+clay into money by the help of the devil’s breath—because they want to
+pay lower wages——”
+
+“The ark of the covenant is to be overthrown, eh?” the young man
+laughed. “Why, to listen to you, Stubbs, one would think that you were
+the largest landowner in the county!”
+
+“No, my lord,” the lawyer answered. “But it’s the landowners have made
+me what I am. And it’s the landowners and the farmers that Riddsley
+lives by and is going to stand by! And the sooner Mr. Mottisfont knows
+that the better. He was elected as a Tory, and a Tory he must stop,
+whether Sir Robert turns his coat or not!”
+
+“You want me to speak to Mottisfont?”
+
+“We do, my lord. Just a word. I was at the Ordinary last fair day, and
+there was nothing else talked of. Free Canadian corn was too like free
+French corn and free Belgian corn for Stafford wits to see much
+difference. And Peel is too like repeal, my lord. We are beginning to
+see that.”
+
+Audley shrugged his shoulders. “The party is satisfied,” he said. “And
+Mottisfont? I can’t drive the man.”
+
+“No, but a word from you——”
+
+“Well, I’ll think about it. But I fancy you’re overrunning the scent.”
+
+“Then the line is not straight!” the lawyer retorted shrewdly.
+“However, if I have been too warm, I beg pardon, my lord.”
+
+“I’ll bear it in mind,” Audley answered. “Very good. And now,
+good-night, Stubbs. Don’t forget to send the letter to John Audley as
+soon as you reach London.”
+
+Stubbs replied that he would, and took his leave. He had said his say
+on the borough question, lord or no lord; which to a Briton—and he was
+a typical Briton—was a satisfaction.
+
+But half an hour later, when he had drawn his nightcap down to his ears
+and stood, the extinguisher in his hand, he paused. “He’s a sober hand
+for a young man,” he thought, “a very sober hand. I warrant he will
+never run his ship on the rocks for lack of a good look-out!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+HOMEWARD BOUND
+
+
+In the corner of the light diligence, seating six inside, which had
+brought her from Montreuil, Mary Audley leant forward, looking out
+through the dingy panes for the windmills of Calais. Joséphine slept in
+the corner facing her, as she had slept for two hours past. Their
+companions, a French shopkeeper and her child, and an English bagman,
+sighed and fidgeted, as travellers had cause to sigh and fidget in days
+when he was lucky who covered the distance from Paris to Calais in
+twenty-five hours. The coach rumbled on. The sun had set, a small rain
+was falling. The fading light tinged the plain of the Pas de Calais
+with a melancholy which little by little dyed the girl’s thoughts.
+
+She was on her way to her own country, to those on whom she might be
+dependent without shame. And common sense, of which she had a large
+share, told her that she had cause, great cause to be thankful. But the
+flush of relief, to which the opening prospect had given rise, was
+ebbing. The life before her was new, those amongst whom she must lead
+that life were strange; nor did the cold phrases of her uncle’s
+invitation, which ignored both her father and the letters that she had
+written, promise an over-warm welcome.
+
+Still, “Courage!” Mary murmured to herself, “Courage!” And she recalled
+a saying which she had learned from the maid, “At the worst, ten
+fingers!” Then, seeing that at last they were entering the streets of
+the town and that the weary journey was over—she had left Paris the day
+before—she touched Joséphine. “We are there,” she said.
+
+The maid awoke with her eyes on the bagman, who was stout. “Ah!” she
+muttered. “In England they are like that! No wonder that they travel
+seeing that their bones are so padded! But, for me I am one ache.”
+
+They jolted over the uneven pavement, crossed a bridge, lumbered
+through streets scarcely wider than the swaying diligence, at last with
+a great cracking of whips they swerved to the left and drew up amid the
+babel of the quay. In a twinkling they were part of it. Porters dragged
+down, fought for, snatched up their baggage. English-speaking touts
+shook dirty cards in their faces. Tide-waiters bawled questions in
+their ears. The postilion, the conductor, all the world stretched
+greedy palms under their noses. Other travellers ran into them, and
+they ran into other travellers. All this, in the dusk, in the rain,
+while the bell on the deck overhead clanged above the roar of the
+escaping steam, and a man shouted without ceasing, “Tower steamer!
+Tower steamer! Any more for England?”
+
+Joséphine, after one bitter exchange of words with a lad who had seized
+her handbag, thrust her fingers into her ears and resigned herself.
+Even Mary for a moment was aghast. She was dragged this way and that,
+she lost one article and recovered it, lost another and recovered that,
+she lost her ticket and rescued it from a man’s hand. At last, her
+baggage on board, she found herself breathless at the foot of the
+ladder, with three passengers imploring her to ascend, and six touts
+clinging to her skirts and crying for drink-money. She had barely time
+to make her little gift to the kind-hearted maid—who was returning to
+Paris by the night coach—and no time to thank her, before they were
+parted. Mary was pushed up the ladder. In a moment she was looking down
+from the deck on the wet, squalid quay, the pale up-turned faces, the
+bustling crowd.
+
+She picked out the one face which she knew, and which it pained her to
+lose. By gestures and smiles, with a tear in the eye, she tried to make
+amends to Joséphine for the hasty parting, the half-spoken words. The
+maid on her side was in tears, and after the French fashion was proud
+of them. So the last minute came. The paddles were already turning, the
+ship was going slowly astern, when a man pushed his way through the
+crowd. He clutched the ladder as it was unhooked, and at some risk and
+much loss of dignity he was bundled on board. There was a lamp
+amidships, and, as he regained his balance, Mary, smiling in spite of
+herself, saw that he was an Englishman, a man about thirty, and plainly
+dressed. Then in her anxiety to see the last of Joséphine she crossed
+the deck as the ship went about, and she lost sight of him.
+
+She continued to look back and to wave her handkerchief, until nothing
+remained but a light or two in a bank of shadow. That was the last she
+was to see of the land which had been her home for ten years; and
+chilled and lonely she turned about and did what, had she been an older
+traveller, she would have done before. She sought the after-cabin.
+Alas, a glance from the foot of the companion was enough! Every place
+was taken, every couch occupied, and the air, already close, repelled
+her. She climbed to the deck again, and was seeking some corner where
+she could sit, sheltered from the wind and rain, when the captain saw
+her and fell foul of her.
+
+“Now, young lady,” he said, “no woman’s allowed on deck at night!”
+
+“Oh, but,” she protested, “there’s no room downstairs!”
+
+“Won’t do,” he answered roughly. “Lost a woman overboard once, and as
+much trouble about her as about all the men, drunk or sober, I’ve ever
+carried. All women below, all women below, is the order! Besides,” more
+amicably, as he saw by a ray of lantern-light that she was young and
+comely, “it’s wet, my dear, and going to be d—d wet, and as dark as
+Wapping!”
+
+“But I’ve a cloak,” she petitioned, “if I sit quite still, and——”
+
+A tall form loomed up at the captain’s elbow. “This is the lady I am
+looking for,” the new-comer said. “It will be all right, Captain
+Jones.”
+
+The captain turned sharply. “Oh, my lord,” he said, “I didn’t know; but
+with petticoats and a dark night, blest if you know where you are! I’m
+sure I beg the young lady’s pardon. Quite right, my lord, quite right!”
+With a rough salute he went forward and the darkness swallowed him.
+
+“Lord Audley?” Mary said. She spoke quietly, but to do so she had to
+steady her voice.
+
+“Yes,” he replied. “I knew that you were crossing to-night, and as I
+had to go over this week I chose this evening. I’ve reserved a cabin
+for you.”
+
+“Oh, but,” she remonstrated, “I don’t think you should have done that!
+I don’t know that I can——”
+
+“Afford it?” he said coolly. “Then—as it is a matter of some
+shillings—your kinsman will presume to pay for it.”
+
+It was a small thing, and she let it pass. “But who told you,” she
+asked, “that I was crossing to-night?”
+
+“The Princess. You don’t feel, I suppose, that as you are crossing, it
+was my duty to stay in France?”
+
+“Oh no!” she protested.
+
+“But you are not sure whether you are more pleased or more vexed? Well,
+let me show you where your cabin is—it is the size of a milliner’s box,
+but by morning you will be glad of it, and that may turn the scale.
+Moreover,” as he led the way across the deck, “the steward’s boy, when
+he is not serving gin below, will serve tea above, and at sea tea is
+not to be scorned. That’s your number—7. And there is the boy. Boy!” he
+called in a voice that ensured obedience, “Tea and bread and butter for
+this lady in number 7 in an hour. See it is there, my lad!”
+
+She smiled. “I think the tea and bread and butter may turn the scale,”
+she said.
+
+“Right,” he replied. “Then, as it is only eight o’clock, why should we
+not sit in the shelter of this tarpaulin? I see that there are two
+seats. They might have been put for us.”
+
+“Is it possible that they were?” she asked shrewdly. “Well, why not?”
+
+She had no reason to give—and the temptation was great. Five minutes
+before she had been the most lonely creature in the world. The parting
+from Joséphine, the discomfort of the boat, the dark sea and the darker
+horizon, the captain’s rough words, had brought the tears to her eyes.
+And then, in a moment, to be thought of, provided for, kindly
+entreated, to be lapped in attentions as in a cloak—in very fact, in
+another second a warm cloak was about her—who could expect her to
+refuse this? Moreover, he was her kinsman; probably she owed it to him
+that she was here.
+
+At any rate she thought that it would be prudish to demur, and she took
+one of the seats in the lee of the screen. Audley tucked the cloak
+about her, and took the other. The light of a lantern fell on their
+faces and the few passengers who still tramped the windy deck could see
+the pair, and doubtless envied him their shelter. “Are you
+comfortable?” he inquired—but before she could answer he whistled
+softly.
+
+“What is it?” Mary asked.
+
+“Not much.” He laughed to himself.
+
+Then she saw coming along the deck towards them a man who had not found
+his sea-legs. As he approached he took little runs, and now brought up
+against the rail, now clutched at a stay. Mary knew the man again. “He
+nearly missed the boat,” she whispered.
+
+“Did he?” her companion answered in the same tone. “Well, if he had
+quite missed it, I’d have forgiven him. He is going to be ill, I’ll
+wager!”
+
+When the man was close to them he reeled, and to save himself he
+grasped the end of their screen. His eyes met theirs. He was past much
+show of emotion, but his voice rose as he exclaimed, “Audley. Is that
+you?”
+
+“It is. We are in for a rough night, I’m afraid.”
+
+“And—pardon me,” the stranger hesitated, peering at them, “is that Miss
+Audley with you?”
+
+“Yes,” Mary said, much surprised.
+
+“Oh!”
+
+“This is Mr. Basset,” Audley explained. Mary stared at the stranger.
+The name conveyed nothing to her.
+
+“I came to meet you,” he said, speaking with difficulty, and now and
+again casting a wild eye abroad as the deck heaved under him. “But I
+expected to find you at the hotel, and I waited there until I nearly
+missed the boat. Even then I felt that I ought to learn if you were on
+board, and I came up to see.”
+
+“I am very much obliged to you,” Mary answered politely, “but I am
+quite comfortable, thank you. It is close below, and Lord Audley found
+this seat for me. And I have a cabin.”
+
+“Oh yes!” he answered. “I think I will go down then if you—if you are
+sure you want nothing.”
+
+“Nothing, thank you,” Mary answered with decision.
+
+“I think I—I’ll go, then. Good-night!”
+
+With that he went, making desperate tacks in the direction of the
+companion. Unfortunately what he gained in speed he lost in dignity,
+and before he reached the hatch Lord Audley gave way to laughter.
+
+“Oh, don’t!” Mary cried. “He will hear you. And it was kind of him to
+look for me when he was not well.”
+
+But Audley only laughed the more. “You don’t catch the full flavor of
+it,” he said. “He’s come three hundred miles to meet you, and he’s too
+ill to do anything now he’s here!”
+
+“Three hundred miles to meet me!” she cried in astonishment.
+
+“Every yard of it! Don’t you know who he is? He’s Peter Basset, your
+uncle’s nephew by marriage, who lives with him. He’s come, or rather
+your uncle has sent him, all the way from Stafford to meet you—and he’s
+gone to lie down! He’s gone to lie down! There’s a squire of dames for
+you! Upon my honor, I never knew anything richer!”
+
+And my lord’s laughter broke out anew.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+THE LONDON PACKET
+
+
+Mary laughed with him, but she was not comfortable. What she had seen
+of the stranger, a man plain in feature and ordinary in figure, one
+whom the eye would not have remarked in a crowd, did not especially
+commend him. And certainly he had not shown himself equal to a
+difficult situation. But the effort he had made to come to her help
+appealed to her generosity, and she was not sure how far she formed a
+part of the comedy. So her laughter was from the lips only, and brief.
+Then, “My uncle’s nephew?” she asked thoughtfully.
+
+“His wife’s nephew. Your uncle married a Basset.”
+
+“But why did he send him to meet me?”
+
+“For a simple reason—I should say that he had no one else to send. Your
+uncle is not a man of many friends.”
+
+“I understood that some one would meet the boat in London,” she said.
+“But I expected a woman.”
+
+“I fancy the woman would be to seek,” he replied. “And Basset is a kind
+of tame cat at the Gatehouse. He lives there a part of the year, though
+he has an old place of his own up the country. He’s a Staffordshire man
+born and bred, and I dare say a good fellow in his way, but a dull dog!
+a dull dog! Are you sure that the wind does not catch you?”
+
+She said that she was very comfortable, and they were silent awhile,
+listening to the monotonous slapping of a rope against the mast and the
+wash of the waves as they surged past the beam. A single light at the
+end of the breakwater shone in the darkness behind them. She marked the
+light grow smaller and more distant, and her thoughts went back to the
+convent school, to her father, to the third-floor where for a time they
+had been together, to his care for her—feeble and inefficient, to his
+illness. And a lump rose in her throat, her hands gripped one another
+as she strove to hide her feelings. In her heart she whispered a
+farewell. She was turning her back on her father’s grave. The last
+tendril which bound her to the old life was breaking.
+
+The light vanished, and gradually the girl’s reflections sought a new
+channel. They turned from the past to the present, and dwelt on the man
+beside her, who had not only thought of her comfort, who had not only
+saved her from some hours of loneliness, but had probably wrought this
+change in her life. This was the third time only that she had seen him.
+Once, some days after that memorable evening, he had called at the
+Hôtel Lambert, and her employer had sent for her. He had greeted her
+courteously in the Princess’s presence, had asked her kindly if she had
+heard from England, and had led her to believe that she would hear. And
+she remembered with a blush that the Princess had looked from one to
+the other with a smile, and afterwards had had another manner for her.
+
+Meanwhile the man wondered what she was thinking, and waited for her to
+give him the clue. But she was so long silent that his patience wore
+thin. It was not for this, it was not to sit silent beside her, that he
+had taken a night journey and secured these cosey seats.
+
+“Well?” he said at last.
+
+She turned to him, her eyes wet with tears. “It seems so strange,” she
+murmured, “to be leaving all and going into a world in which I know no
+one.”
+
+“Except the head of your family.”
+
+“Except you! I suppose that I owe it to you that I am here?”
+
+“I should be happy if I thought so,” he replied, with careful
+reticence. “But we set a stone rolling, we do not know where it falls.
+You will soon learn—Basset will tell you, if I don’t—that your uncle
+and I are not on good terms. Therefore it is unlikely that he was moved
+by what I said.”
+
+“But you said something?”
+
+“If I did,” he answered, smiling, “it was against the grain—who likes
+to put his finger between the door and the jamb? And let me caution
+you. Your uncle will not suffer meddling on my part, still less a
+reminder of it. Therefore, as you are going to owe all to him, you will
+do well to be silent about me.”
+
+She was sure that she owed all to him, and she might have said so, but
+at that moment the boat changed its course and the full force of the
+wind struck them. The salt spray whipped and stung their faces. Her
+cloak flew out like a balloon, her scarf pennon-wise, the tarpaulin
+flapped like some huge bird. He had to spring to the screen, to adjust
+it to the new course, to secure and tuck in her cloak—and all in haste,
+with exclamations and laughter, while Mary, sharing the joy of the
+struggle, and braced by the sting of the salt wind, felt her heart
+rise. How kind he was, and how strong. How he towered above ordinary
+men. How safe she felt in his care.
+
+When they were settled anew, she asked him to tell her something about
+the Gatehouse.
+
+“It’s a lonely place,” he said. “It is quite out of the world. I don’t
+know, indeed, how you will exist after the life you have led.”
+
+“The life I have led!” she protested. “But that is absurd! Though you
+saw me in the Princess’s salon, you know that my life had nothing in
+common with hers. I was downstairs no more than three or four times,
+and then merely to interpret. My life was spent between whitewashed
+walls, on bare floors. I slept in a room with twenty children, ate with
+forty—onion soup and thick tartines. The evening I saw you I wore shoes
+which the maid lent me. And with all that I was thankful, most
+thankful, to have such a refuge. The great people who met at the
+Princess’s——”
+
+“And who thought that they were making history!” he laughed. “Did you
+know that? Did you know that the Princess was looking to them to save
+the last morsel of Poland?”
+
+“No,” she said. “I did not know. I am very ignorant. But if I were a
+man, I should love to do things like that.”
+
+“I believe you would!” he replied. “Well, there are crusades in
+England. Only I fear that you will not be in the way of them.”
+
+“And I am not a princess! But tell me, please, what are they?”
+
+“You will not be long before you come upon one,” he replied, a hint of
+derision in his tone. “You will see a placard in the streets, ‘_Shall
+the people’s bread be taxed?_’ Not quite so romantic as the
+independence of Poland? But I can tell you that heads are quite as
+likely to be broken over it.”
+
+“Surely,” she said, “there can be only one answer to that.”
+
+“Just so,” he replied dryly. “But what is the answer? The land claims
+high prices that it may thrive; the towns claim cheap bread that they
+may live. Each says that the country depends upon it. ‘England
+self-supporting!’ says one. ‘England the workshop of the world!’ says
+the other.”
+
+“I begin to see.”
+
+“‘The land is the strength of the country,’ argues the squire. ‘Down
+with monopoly,’ cries the cotton lord. Then each arms himself with a
+sword lately forged and called ‘Philanthropy,’ and with that he
+searches for chinks in the other’s armor. ‘See how factories work the
+babes, drive the women underground, ruin the race,’ shout the squires.
+‘Vote for the land and starvation wages,’ shout the mill-owners.”
+
+“But does no one try to find the answer?” she asked timidly. “Try to
+find out what is best for the people?”
+
+“Ah!” he rejoined, “if by the people you mean the lower classes, they
+cry, ‘Give us not bread, but votes!’ And the squires say that that is
+what the traders who have just got votes don’t mean to give them; and
+so, to divert their attention, dangle cheap bread before their noses!”
+
+Mary sighed. “I am afraid that I must give it up,” she said. “I am so
+ignorant.”
+
+“Well,” he replied thoughtfully. “Many are puzzled which side to take,
+and are waiting to see how the cat jumps. In the meantime every fence
+is placarded with ‘Speed the Plough!’ on one side, and ‘The Big Loaf!’
+on the other. The first man you meet thinks the landlord a devourer of
+widows’ houses; to the next the mill-owner is an ogre grinding men’s
+bones to make his bread. Even at the Gatehouse I doubt if you will
+escape the excitement, though there is not a field of wheat within a
+mile of it!”
+
+“To me it is like a new world,” she said.
+
+“Then, when you are in the new world,” he replied, smiling as he rose,
+“do not forget Columbus! But here is the lad to tell you that your tea
+is ready.”
+
+He repented when Mary had left him that he had not made better use of
+his time. It had been his purpose to make such an impression on the
+girl as might be of use in the future, and he wondered why he had not
+devoted himself more singly to this; why he had allowed minutes which
+might have been given to intimate subjects to be wasted in a dry
+discussion. But there was a quality in Mary that did not lightly invite
+to gallantry—a gravity and a balance that, had he looked closely into
+the matter, might have explained his laches.
+
+And in fact he had builded better than he knew, for while he reproached
+himself, Mary, safe within the tiny bathing machine which the packet
+company called a cabin, was giving much thought to him. The dip-candle,
+set within a horn lantern, threw its light on the one comfortable
+object, the tea-tray, seated beside which she reviewed what had
+happened, and found it all interesting; his meeting with her, his
+thought for her, the glimpses he had given her of things beyond the
+horizon of the convent school, even his diversion into politics. He was
+not on good terms with her uncle, and it was unlikely that she would
+see more of him. But she was sure that she would always remember his
+appearance on the threshold of her new life, that she would always
+recall with gratitude this crossing and the kindness which had lapped
+her about and saved her from loneliness.
+
+In her eyes he figured as one of the brilliant circle of the Hôtel
+Lambert. For her he played a part in great movements and high
+enterprises such as those which he had revealed to her. His light
+treatment of them, his air of detachment, had, indeed, chilled her at
+times; but these were perhaps natural in one who viewed from above and
+from a distance the ills which it was his task to treat. How ignorant
+he must think her! How remote from the plane on which he lived, the
+standards by which he judged, the objects at which he aimed! Yet he had
+stooped to explain things to her and to make them clear.
+
+She spent an hour deep in thought, and, strange as the life of the ship
+was to her, she was deaf to the creaking of the timbers, and the surge
+of the waves as they swept past the beam. At intervals hoarse orders, a
+rush of feet across the deck, the more regular tramp of rare
+passengers, caught her attention, only to lose it as quickly. It was
+late when she roused herself. She saw that the candle was burning low,
+and she began to make her arrangements for the night.
+
+Midway in them she paused, and colored, aware that she knew his tread
+from the many that had passed. The footstep ceased. A hand tapped at
+her door. “Yes?” she said.
+
+“We shall be in the river by daybreak,” Audley announced. “I thought
+that you might like to come on deck early. You ought not to miss the
+river from the Nore to the Pool.”
+
+“Thank you,” she answered.
+
+“You shouldn’t miss it,” he persisted. “Greenwich especially!”
+
+“I shall be there,” she replied. “It is very good of you. Good-night.”
+
+He went away. After all, he was the only man on board shod like a
+gentleman; it had been odd if she had not known his step! And for going
+on deck early, why should she not? Was she to miss Greenwich because
+Lord Audley went to a good bootmaker?
+
+So when Peter Basset, still pale and qualmish, came on deck in the
+early morning, a little below the Pool, the first person he saw was the
+girl whom he had come to escort. She was standing high above him on the
+captain’s bridge, her hands clasping the rail, her hair blown about and
+shining golden in the sunshine. Lord Audley’s stately form towered
+above her. He was pointing out this and that, and they were talking
+gaily; and now and again the captain spoke to them, and many were
+looking at them. She did not see Basset; he was on the deck below,
+standing amid the common crowd, and so he was free to look at her as he
+pleased. He might be said not to have seen her before, and what he saw
+now bewildered, nay, staggered him. Unwillingly, and to please his
+uncle, he had come to meet a girl of whom they knew no more than this,
+that, rescued from some backwater of Paris life, into which a weak and
+shiftless father had plunged her, she had earned her living, if she had
+earned it at all, in a dependent capacity. He had looked to find her
+one of two things; either flashy and underbred, with every fault an
+Englishman might consider French, or a nice mixture of craft and
+servility. He had not been able to decide which he would prefer.
+
+Instead he saw a girl tall, slender, and slow of movement, with eyes
+set under a fine width of brow and grave when they smiled, a chin
+fuller than perfect beauty required, a mouth a little large, a perfect
+nose. Auburn hair, thick and waving, drooped over each temple, and
+framed a face as calm as it was fair. “Surely a pearl found on a
+midden!” he thought. And as the thought passed through his mind, Mary
+looked down. Her eyes roved for a moment over the crowded deck, where
+some, like Basset, returned her gaze with interest, while others sought
+their baggage or bawled for missing companions. He was not a man, it
+has been said, to stand out in a crowd, and her eyes travelled over him
+without seeing him. Audley spoke to her, she lifted her eyes, she
+looked ashore again. But the unheeding glance which had not deigned to
+know him stung Basset! He dubbed her, with all her beauty, proud and
+hard. Still—to be such and to have sprung from such a life! It was
+marvellous.
+
+He knew nothing of the convent school with its hourly discipline
+lasting through years. He did not guess that the obstinacy which had
+been weakness in the father was strength in the child. Much less could
+he divine that the improvidence of that father had become a beacon,
+warning the daughter off the rocks which had been fatal to him! Mary
+was no miracle, but neither was she proud or hard.
+
+They had passed Erith, and Greenwich with its stately pile and formal
+gardens glittering in the sunshine of an April morning. The ripple of a
+westerly wind, meeting the flood, silvered the turbid surface. A
+hundred wherries skimmed like water-flies hither and thither, long
+lines of colliers fringed the wharves, tall China clippers forged
+slowly up under a scrap of foresail, dumb barges deep laden with hay or
+Barclay’s Entire, moved mysteriously with the tide. On all sides hoarse
+voices bawled orders or objurgations. Charmed with the gayety, the
+movement, the color, Mary could not take her eyes from the scene. The
+sunshine, the leap of life, the pulse of spring, moved in her blood and
+put to flight the fears that had weighed on her at nightfall. She told
+herself with elation that this was England, this was her native land,
+this was her home.
+
+Meanwhile Audley’s mind took another direction. He reflected that in a
+few minutes he must part from the girl, and must trust henceforth to
+the impression he had made. For some hours he had scarcely given a
+thought to Basset, but he recalled him now, and he searched for him in
+the throng below. He found him at last, pressed against the rail
+between a fat woman with a basket and a crying child. Their eyes met.
+My lord glanced away, but he could not refrain from a smile as he
+pictured the poor affair the other had made of his errand. And Basset
+saw the smile and read its meaning, and though he was not
+self—assertive, though he was, indeed, backward to a fault, anger ran
+through his veins. To have travelled three hundred miles in order to
+meet this girl, to have found her happy in another’s company, and to
+have accepted the second place—the position had vexed him even under
+the qualms of illness. This morning, and since he had seen her, it
+stirred in him an unwonted resentment. He d—d Audley under his breath,
+disengaged himself from the basket which the fat woman was thrusting
+into his ribs, lifted the child aside. He escaped below to collect his
+effects.
+
+But in a short time he recovered his temper. When the boat began to go
+about in the crowded Pool and Mary reluctantly withdrew her eyes from
+the White Tower, darkened by the smoke and the tragedies of twenty
+generations, she found him awaiting them at the foot of the ladder. He
+was still pale, and the girl’s conscience smote her. For many hours she
+had not given him a thought. “I hope you are better,” she said gently.
+
+“Horrid thing, _mal de mer!_” remarked my lord, with a gleam of humor
+in his eye.
+
+“Thank you, I am quite right this morning,” Basset answered.
+
+“You go from Euston Grove, I suppose?”
+
+“Yes. The morning train starts in a little over an hour.”
+
+No more was said, and they went ashore together. Audley, an old
+traveller, and one whose height and presence gave weight to his orders,
+saw to Mary’s safety in the crowd, shielded her from touts and
+tide-waiters, took the upper hand. He watched the aproned porters
+disappearing with the baggage in the direction of the Custom House, and
+a thought struck him. “I am sorry that my servant is not here,” he
+said. “He would see our things through without troubling us.” His eyes
+met Basset’s.
+
+Basset disdained to refuse. “I will do it,” he said. He received the
+keys and followed the baggage.
+
+Audley looked at Mary and laughed. “I think you’ll find him useful,” he
+said. “Takes a hint and is not too forward.”
+
+“For shame!” she cried. “It is very good of him to go.” But she could
+not refrain from a smile.
+
+“Well trained,” Audley continued in a whimsical tone, “fetches and
+carries, barks at the name of Peel and growls at the name of Cobden,
+gives up a stick when required, could be taught to beg—by the right
+person.”
+
+She laughed—she could not resist his manner. “But you are not very
+kind,” she said. “Please to call a—whatever we need. He shall not do
+everything.”
+
+“Everything?” Lord Audley echoed. “He should do nothing,” in a lower
+tone, “if I had my way.”
+
+Mary blushed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+FIELD AND FORGE
+
+
+The window of the clumsy carriage was narrow, but Mary gazed through it
+as if she could never see enough of the flying landscape, the fields,
+the woods, the ivy-clad homes and red-roofed towns that passed in
+procession before her. The emotions of those who journeyed for the
+first time on a railway at a speed four times as great as that of the
+swiftest High-flier that ever devoured the road are forgotten by this
+generation. But they were vivid. The thing was a miracle. And though by
+this time men had ceased to believe that he who passed through the air
+at sixty miles an hour must of necessity cease to breathe, the novice
+still felt that he could never tire of the panorama so swiftly unrolled
+before him.
+
+And it was not only wonder, it was admiration that held Mary chained to
+the window. Her infancy had been spent in a drab London street, her
+early youth in the heart of a Paris which was still gloomy and
+mediæval. Some beautiful things she had seen on fête days, the bend of
+the river at Meudon or St. Germain, and once the Forest of
+Fontainebleau; on Sundays the Bois. But the smiling English meadows,
+the gray towers of village churches, the parks and lawns of
+manor-houses, the canals with their lines of painted barges, and here
+and there a gay packet boat—she drank in the beauty of these, and more
+than once her eyes grew dim. For a time Basset, seated in the opposite
+corner, did not exist for her; while he, behind the _Morning
+Chronicle_, made his observations and took note of her at his leisure.
+The longer he looked the more he marvelled.
+
+He asked himself with amusement what John Audley would think of her
+when he, too, should see her. He anticipated the old man’s surprise on
+finding her so remote from their preconceived ideas of her. He wondered
+what she would think of John Audley.
+
+And while he pondered, and now scanned his paper without reading it,
+and now stole another glance at her, he steeled himself against her.
+She might not have been to blame, it might not have been her fault;
+but, between them, the two on the boat had put him in his place and he
+could not forget it. He had cut a poor figure, and he resented it. He
+foresaw that in the future she would be dependent on him for society,
+and he would be a fool if he then forgot the lesson he had learned. She
+had a good face, but probably her up-bringing had been anything but
+good. Probably it had taught her to make the most of the moment and of
+the man of the moment, and he would be foolish if he let her amuse
+herself with him. He had seen in what light she viewed him when other
+game was afoot, and he would deserve the worst if he did not remember
+this.
+
+Presently an embankment cut off the view, and she withdrew her eyes
+from the window. In her turn she took the measure of her companion. It
+seemed to her that his face was too thoughtful for his years, and that
+his figure was insignificant. The eye which had accustomed itself to
+Lord Audley’s port and air found Basset slight and almost mean. She
+smiled as she recalled the skill with which my lord had set him aside
+and made use of him.
+
+Still, he was a part of the life to which she was hastening, and
+curiosity stirred in her. He was in possession, he was in close
+relations with her uncle, he knew many things which she was anxious to
+know. Much of her comfort might depend on him. Presently she asked him
+what her uncle was like.
+
+“You will see for yourself in a few hours,” he replied, his tone cold
+and almost ungracious. “Did not Lord Audley describe him?”
+
+“No. And you seem,” with a faint smile, “to be equally on your guard,
+Mr. Basset.”
+
+“Not at all,” he retorted. “But I think it better to leave you to judge
+for yourself. I have lived too near to Mr. Audley to—to criticise him.”
+
+She colored.
+
+“Let me give you one hint, however,” he continued in the same dry tone;
+“you will be wise not to mention Lord Audley to him. They are not on
+good terms.”
+
+“I am sorry.”
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. “It cannot be said to be unnatural, after
+what has happened.”
+
+She considered this. “What has happened?” she asked after a pause.
+
+“Well, the claim to the peerage, if nothing else——”
+
+“What claim?” she asked. “Whose claim? What peerage? I am quite in the
+dark.”
+
+He stared. He did not believe her. “Your uncle’s claim,” he said
+curtly. Then as she still looked a question, “You must know,” he
+continued, “that your uncle claimed the title which Lord Audley bears,
+and the property which goes with it. And that the decision was only
+given against him three months ago.”
+
+“I know nothing of it,” she said. “I never heard of the claim.”
+
+“Really?” he replied. He hardly deigned to veil his incredulity. “Yet
+if your uncle had succeeded you were the next heir.”
+
+“I?”
+
+“Yes, you.”
+
+Then her face shook his unbelief. She turned slowly and painfully red.
+“Is it possible?” she said. “You are not playing with me?”
+
+“Certainly I am not. Do you mean that Lord Audley never told you that?
+Never told you that you were interested?”
+
+“Never! He only told me that he was not on good terms with my uncle,
+and that for that reason he would leave me to learn the rest at the
+Gatehouse.”
+
+“Well, that was right,” Basset answered. “It is as well, since you have
+to live with Mr. Audley, that you should not be prejudiced against
+him.”
+
+“No doubt,” she said dryly. “But I do not understand why he did not
+answer my letters.”
+
+“Did you write to him?”
+
+“Twice.” She was going to explain the circumstances, but she refrained.
+Why appeal to the sympathies of one who seemed so cold, so distant, so
+indifferent?
+
+“He cannot have had the letters,” Basset decided after a pause.
+
+“Then how did he come to write to me at last?”
+
+“Lord Audley sent your address to him.”
+
+“Ah!” she said. “I supposed so.” With an air of finality she turned to
+the window, and for some time she was silent. Her mind had much upon
+which to work.
+
+She was silent for so long that before more was said they were running
+through the outskirts of Birmingham, and Mary awoke with a shock to
+another and sadder side of England. In place of parks and homesteads
+she saw the England of the workers—workers at that time exploited to
+the utmost in pursuance of a theory of economy that heeded only the
+wealth of nations, and placed on that wealth the narrowest meaning.
+They passed across squalid streets, built in haste to meet the needs of
+new factories, under tall chimneys the smoke of which darkened the sky
+without hindrance, by vile courts, airless and almost sunless. They
+looked down on sallow children whose only playground was the street and
+whose only school-bell was the whistle that summoned them at dawn to
+premature toil. Haggard women sat on doorsteps with puling babes in
+their arms. Lines of men, whose pallor peered through the grime,
+propped the walls, or gazed with apathy at the train. For a few minutes
+Mary forgot not only her own hopes and fears, but the aloofness and
+even the presence of her companion. When they came to a standstill in
+the station, where they had to change on to the Grand Junction Railway,
+Basset had to speak twice before she understood that he wished her to
+leave the carriage.
+
+“What a dreadful place!” she exclaimed.
+
+“Well, it is not beautiful,” Basset admitted. “One does not look for
+beauty in Birmingham and the Black Country.”
+
+He got her some tea, and marshalled her carefully to the upper line.
+But his answer had jarred upon her, and when they were again seated,
+Mary kept her thoughts to herself. Beyond Birmingham their route
+skirted towns rather than passed through them, but she saw enough to
+deepen the impression which the lanes and alleys of that place had made
+upon her. The sun had set and the cold evening light revealed in all
+their meanness the rows of naked cottages, the heaps of slag and
+cinders, the starveling horses that stood with hanging heads on the
+dreary lands. As darkness fell, fires shone out here and there, and
+threw into Dantesque relief the dark forms of half-naked men toiling
+with fury to feed the flames. The change which an hour had made in all
+she saw seemed appalling to the girl; it filled her with awe and
+sadness. Here, so near the paradise of the country and the plough, was
+the Inferno of the town, the forge, the pit! Here, in place of the
+thatched cottage and the ruddy faces, were squalor and sunken cheeks
+and misery and dearth.
+
+She thought of the question which Lord Audley had raised twenty-four
+hours before, and which he had told her was racking the minds of
+men—should food be taxed? And she fancied that there was, there could
+be, but one answer. These toiling masses, these slaves of the hammer
+and the pick, must be fed, and, surely, so fed that a margin, however
+small, however meagre, might be saved out of which to better their
+sordid lot.
+
+“We call this the Black Country,” Basset explained, feeling the silence
+irksome. After all, she was in his charge, in a way she was his guest.
+He ought to amuse her.
+
+“It is well named,” she answered. “Is there anything in England worse
+than this?”
+
+“Well, round Hales Owen and Dudley,” he rejoined, “it may be worse. And
+at Cradley Heath it may be rougher. More women and children are
+employed in the pits; and where women make chains—well, it’s pretty
+bad.”
+
+She had spoken dryly to hide her feelings. He replied in a tone as
+matter-of-fact, through lack of feeling. For this he was not so much to
+blame as she fancied, for that which horrified her was to him an
+everyday matter, one of the facts of life with which he had been
+familiar from boyhood. But she did not understand this. She judged him
+and condemned him. She did not speak again.
+
+By and by, “We shall be at Penkridge in twenty minutes,” he said.
+“After that a nine-miles drive will take us to the Gatehouse, and your
+journey will be over. But I fear that you will find the life quiet
+after Paris.”
+
+“I was very quiet in Paris.”
+
+“But you were in a large house.”
+
+“I was at the Princess Czartoriski’s.”
+
+“Of course. I suppose it was there that you met Lord Audley?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Well, after that kind of life, I am afraid that the Gatehouse will
+have few charms for you. It is very remote, very lonely.”
+
+She cut him short with impatience, the color rising to her face. “I
+thought you understood,” she said, “that I was in the Princess’s house
+as a governess? It was my business to take care of a number of
+children, to eat with them, to sleep with them, to see that they washed
+their hands and kept their hair clean. That was my position, Mr.
+Basset. I do not wish it to be misunderstood.”
+
+“But if that were so,” he stammered, “how did you——”
+
+“Meet Lord Audley,” she replied. “Very simply. Once or twice the
+Princess ordered me to descend to the salon to interpret. On one of
+these occasions Lord Audley saw me and learned—who I was.”
+
+“Indeed,” he said. “I see.” Perhaps he had had it in his mind to test
+her and the truth of Audley’s letter, which nothing in her or in my
+lord’s conduct seemed to confirm. He did not know if this had been in
+his mind, but in any case the result silenced him. She was either very
+honest or very clever. Many girls, he knew, would have slurred over the
+facts, and not a few would have boasted of the Princess’s friendship
+and the Princess’s society, and the Princess’s hôtel, and brought up
+her name a dozen times a day.
+
+She is very clever, he thought, or she is—good. But for the moment he
+steeled himself against the latter opinion.
+
+No other travellers alighted at Penkridge, and he went away to claim
+the baggage, while she waited, cold and depressed, on the little
+platform which, lit by a single oil lamp, looked down on a dim
+churchyard. Dusk was passing into night, and the wind, sweeping across
+the flat, whipped her skirts and chilled her blood. Her courage sank. A
+light or two betrayed the nearness of the town, but in every other
+direction dull lines of willows or pale stretches of water ran into the
+night.
+
+Five minutes before she had resented Basset’s company, now she was glad
+to see him return. He led the way to the road in silence. “The carriage
+is late,” he muttered, but even as he spoke the quick tramp of a pair
+of horses pushed to speed broke on them, lights appeared, a moment
+later a fly pulled up beside them and turned. “You are late,” Basset
+said.
+
+“There!” the man replied. “Minutes might be guineas since trains came
+in, dang ’em! Give me the days when five minutes made neither man nor
+mouse, and gentry kept their own time.”
+
+“Well, let us get off now.”
+
+“I ask no better, Squire. Please yourself and you’ll please me.”
+
+When they were shut in, Basset laughed. “Stafford manners!” he said.
+“You’ll become used to them!”
+
+“Is this my uncle’s carriage?” she asked.
+
+“No,” he replied, smiling in the darkness. “He does not keep one.”
+
+She said no more. Though she could not see him, her shoulder touched
+his, and his nearness and the darkness in which they sat troubled her,
+though she was not timid. They rode thus for a minute or two, then
+trundled through a narrow street, dimly lit by shop windows; again they
+were in the dark and the country. Presently the pace dropped to a walk
+as they began to ascend.
+
+She fancied, peering out on her side, that they were winding up through
+woods. Branches swept the sides of the carriage. They jolted into ruts
+and jolted out of them. By and by they were clear of the trees and the
+road seemed to be better. The moon, newly risen, showed her a dreary
+upland, bare and endless, here dotted with the dark stumps of trees,
+there of a deeper black as if fire had swept over it and scarred it.
+They met no one, saw no sign of habitation. To the girl, accustomed all
+her life to streets and towns, the place seemed infinitely desolate—a
+place of solitude and witches and terror and midnight murder.
+
+“What is this?” she asked, shivering.
+
+“This is the Great Chase,” he said. “Riddsley, on the farther side, is
+our nearest town, but since the railway was opened we use Penkridge
+Station.”
+
+His practical tone steadied her, but she was tired, and the loneliness
+which she had felt while she waited on the bleak platform weighed
+heavily on her. To what was she going? How would her uncle receive her?
+This dreary landscape, the gaunt signpost that looked like a gibbet and
+might have been one, the skeleton trees that raised bare arms to
+heaven, the scream of a dying rabbit, all added to the depression of
+the moment. She was glad when at last the carriage stopped at a gate.
+Basset alighted and opened the gate. He stepped in again, they went on.
+There were now shadowy trees about them, sparsely set. They jolted
+unevenly over turf.
+
+“Are we there?” she asked, a tremor in her voice.
+
+“Very nearly,” he said. “Another mile and we shall be there. This is
+Beaudelays Park.”
+
+She called pride to her aid, and he did not guess—for all day he had
+marked her self-possession—that she was trembling. Vainly she told
+herself that she was foolish, that nothing could happen to her, nothing
+that mattered. What, after all, was a cold reception, what was her
+uncle’s frown beside the poverty and the hazards from which she had
+escaped? Vainly she reassured herself; she could not still the rapid
+beating of her heart.
+
+He might have said a word to cheer her. But he did not know that she
+was suffering, and he said no word. She came near to hating him for his
+stolidity and his silence. He was inhuman! A block!
+
+She peered through the misty glass, striving to see what was before
+them. But she could make out no more than the dark limbs of trees, and
+now and then a trunk, which shone as the light of the lamp slipped over
+it, and as quickly vanished. Suddenly they shot from turf to hard road,
+passed through an open gateway, for an instant the lamp on her side
+showed a grotesque pillar—they wheeled, they stopped. Within a few feet
+of her a door stood open, and in the doorway a girl held a lantern
+aloft in one hand, and with the other screened her eyes from the light.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+MR. JOHN AUDLEY
+
+
+An hour later Basset was seated on one side of a wide hearth, on the
+other John Audley faced him. The library in which they sat was the room
+which Basset loved best in the world. It was a room of silence and
+large spaces, and except where four windows, tall and narrow, broke one
+wall, it was lined high with the companions of silence—books. The
+ceiling was of black oak, adorned at the crossings of the joists and
+beams with emblems, butterflies, and Stafford knots and the like, once
+bright with color, and still soberly rich. A five-sided bay enlarged
+each of the two inner corners of the room and broke the outlines. One
+of these bays shrined a window, four-mullioned, the other a spiral
+staircase. An air of comfort and stateliness pervaded the whole; here
+the great scutcheon over the mantel, there the smaller coats on the
+chair-backs blended their or and gules with the hues of old rugs and
+the dun bindings of old folios. There were books on the four or five
+tables, and books on the Cromwell chairs; and charts and deeds, antique
+weapons and silver pieces, all the tools and toys of the antiquary, lay
+broadcast. Against the door hung a blazoned pedigree of the Audleys of
+Beaudelays. It was six feet long and dull with age.
+
+But Basset, as he faced his companion, was not thinking of the room, or
+of the pursuits with which it was connected in his mind, and which,
+more than affection and habit, bound him to John Audley. He moved
+restlessly in his chair, then stretched his legs to meet the glow of
+the wood fire. “All the same,” he said, “I think you would have done
+well to see her to-night, sir.”
+
+“Pooh! pooh!” John Audley answered with lazy good humor. “Why? It
+doesn’t matter what I think of her or she thinks of me. It’s what Peter
+thinks of Mary and Mary thinks of Peter that matters. That’s what
+matters!” He chuckled as he marked the other’s annoyance. “She is a
+beauty, is she?”
+
+“I didn’t say so.”
+
+“But you think it. You don’t deceive me at this time of day. And
+stand-off, is she? That’s for the marines and innocent young fellows
+like you who think women angels. I’ll be bound that she’s her mother’s
+daughter, and knows her value and will see that she fetches it! Trading
+blood will out!”
+
+To the eye that looked and glanced away John Audley, lolling in his
+chair, in a quilted dressing-gown with silk facings, was a plump and
+pleasant figure. His face was fresh-colored, and would have been comely
+if the cheeks had not been a little pendulous. His hair was fine and
+white and he wore it long, and his hands were shapely and well cared
+for. As he said his last word he poured a little brandy into a glass
+and filled it up with water. “Here’s to the wooing that’s not long
+adoing!” he said, his eyes twinkling. He seemed to take a pleasure in
+annoying the other.
+
+He was so far successful that Basset swore softly. “It’s silly to talk
+like that,” he said, “when I have hardly known the girl twenty-four
+hours and have scarcely said ten times as many words to her.”
+
+“But you’re going to say a good many more words to her!” Audley
+retorted, grinning. “Sweet, pretty words, my boy! But there, there,” he
+continued, veering between an elfish desire to tease and a desire
+equally strong to bring the other to his way of thinking. “I’m only
+joking. I know you’ll never let that devil have his way! You’ll never
+leave the course open for _him!_ I know that. But there’s no hurry!
+There’s no hurry. Though, lord, how I sweated when I read his letter! I
+had never a wink of sleep the night after.”
+
+“I don’t suppose that he’s given a thought to her in that way,” Basset
+answered. “Why should he?”
+
+John Audley leant forward, and his face underwent a remarkable change.
+It became a pale, heavy mask, out of which his eyes gleamed, small and
+malevolent. “Don’t talk like a fool!” he said harshly. “Of course he
+means it. And if she’s fool enough all my plans, all my pains, all my
+rights—and once you come to your senses and help me I shall have my
+rights—all, all, all will go for nothing. For nothing!” He sank back in
+his chair. “There! now you’ve excited me. You’ve excited me, and you
+know that I can’t bear excitement!” His hand groped feebly for his
+glass, and he raised it to his lips. He gasped once or twice. The color
+came back to his face.
+
+“I am sorry,” Basset said.
+
+“Ay, ay. But be a good lad. Be a good lad. Make up your mind to help me
+at the Great House.”
+
+Basset shook his head.
+
+“To help me, and twenty-four hours—only twenty-four hours, man—may make
+all the difference! All the difference in the world to me.”
+
+“I have told you my views about it,” Basset said doggedly. He shifted
+uneasily in his chair. “I cannot do it, sir, and I won’t.”
+
+John Audley groaned. “Well, well!” he answered. “I’ll say no more now.
+I’ll say no more now. When you and she have made it up”—in vain Basset
+shook his head—“you’ll see the question in another light. Ay, believe
+me, you will. It’ll be your business then, and your interest, and
+nothing venture, nothing win! You’ll see it differently. You’ll help
+the old man to his rights then.”
+
+Basset shrugged his shoulders, but thought it useless to protest. The
+other sighed once or twice and was silent also. At length, “You never
+told me that you had heard from her,” Basset said.
+
+“That I’d——” John Audley broke off. “What is it, Toft?” he asked over
+his shoulder.
+
+A man-servant, tall, thin, lantern-jawed, had entered unseen. “I came
+to see if you wanted anything more, sir?” he said.
+
+“Nothing, nothing, Toft. Good-night!” He spoke impatiently, and he
+watched the man out before he went on. Then, “Perhaps I heard from her,
+perhaps I didn’t,” he said. “It’s some time ago. What of it?”
+
+“She was in great distress when she wrote.”
+
+John Audley raised his eyebrows. “What of it!” he repeated. “She was
+that woman’s daughter. When Peter married a tradesman’s
+daughter—married a——” He did not continue. His thoughts trickled away
+into silence. The matter was not worthy of his attention.
+
+But by and by he roused himself. “You’ve ridiculous scruples,” he said.
+“Absurd scruples. But,” briskly, “there’s that much of good in this
+girl that I think she’ll put an end to them. You must brighten up, my
+lad, and spark it a little! You’re too grave.”
+
+“Damn!” said Basset. “For God’s sake, don’t begin it all again. I’ve
+told you that I’ve not the least intention——”
+
+“She’ll see to that if she’s what I think her,” John Audley retorted
+cheerfully. “If she’s her mother’s daughter! But very well, very well!
+We’ll change the subject. I’ve been working at the Feathers—the
+Prince’s Feathers.”
+
+“Have you gone any farther?” Basset asked, forcing an interest which
+would have been ready enough at another time.
+
+“I might have, but I had a visitor.”
+
+Visitors were rare at the Gatehouse, and Basset wondered. “Who was it?”
+he asked.
+
+“Bagenal the maltster from Riddsley. He came about some political
+rubbish. Some trouble they are having with Mottisfont. D—n Mottisfont!
+What do I care about him? They think he isn’t running straight—that
+he’s going in for corn-law repeal. And Bagenal and the other fools
+think that that will be the ruin of the town.”
+
+“But Mottisfont is a Tory,” Basset objected.
+
+“So is Peel. They are both in Bagenal’s bad books. Bagenal is sure that
+Peel is going back to the cotton people he came from. Spinning Jenny
+spinning round again!”
+
+“I see.”
+
+“I asked him,” Audley continued, rubbing his knees with sly enjoyment,
+“what Stubbs the lawyer was doing about it. He’s the party manager. Why
+didn’t he come to me?”
+
+Basset smiled. “What did he say to that?”
+
+“Hummed and hawed. At last he said that owing to Stubbs’s connection
+with—you know who—it was thought that he was not the right person to
+come to me. So I asked him what Stubbs’s employer was going to do about
+it.”
+
+“Ah!”
+
+“He didn’t know what to say to that, the ass! Thought I should go the
+other way, you see. So I told him”—John Audley laughed maliciously as
+he spoke—“that, for the landed interest, the law had taken away my
+land, and, for politics, I would not give a d—n for either party in a
+country where men did not get their rights! Lord! how he looked!”
+
+“Well, you didn’t hide your feelings.”
+
+“Why should I?” John Audley asked cheerfully. “What will they do for
+me? Nothing. Will they move a finger to right me? No. Then a plague on
+both their houses!” He snapped his fingers in schoolboy fashion and
+rose to his feet. He lit a candle, taking a light from the fire with a
+spill. “I am going to bed now, Peter. Unless——” he paused, the
+candlestick in his hand, and gazed fixedly at his companion. “Lord,
+man, what we could do in two or three hours! In two or three hours.
+This very night!”
+
+“I’ve told you that I will have nothing to do with it!” Basset
+repeated.
+
+John Audley sighed, and removing his eyes, poked the wick of the candle
+with the snuffers. “Well,” he said, “good-night. We must look to bright
+eyes and red lips to convert you. What a man won’t do for another he
+will do for himself, Peter. Good-night.”
+
+Left alone, Basset stared fretfully at the fire. It was not the first
+time by scores that John Audley had tried him and driven him almost
+beyond bearing. But habit is a strong tie, and a common taste is a bond
+even stronger. In this room, and from the elder man, Basset had learned
+to trace a genealogy, to read a coat, to know a bar from a bend, to
+discourse of badges and collars under the guidance of the learned
+Anstie or the ingenious Le Neve. There he had spent hours flitting from
+book to book and chart to chart in the pursuit, as thrilling while it
+lasted as any fox-chase, of some family link, the origin of this, the
+end of that, a thing of value only to those who sought it, but to them
+all-important. He could recall many a day so spent while rain lashed
+the tall mullioned windows or sunlight flooded the window-seat in the
+bay; and these days had endeared to him every nook in the library from
+the folio shelves in the shadowy corner under the staircase to the
+cosey table near the hearth which was called “Mr. Basset’s,” and
+enshrined in a long drawer a tree of the Bassets of Blore.
+
+For he as well as Audley came of an ancient and shrunken stock. He also
+could count among his forbears men who had fought at Blore Heath and
+Towton, or had escaped by a neck from the ruin of the Gunpowder Plot.
+So he had fallen early under the spell of the elder man’s pursuits,
+and, still young, had learned from him to live in the past. Later the
+romantic solitude of the Gatehouse, where he had spent more of the last
+six years than in his own house at Blore, had confirmed him in the
+habit.
+
+Under the surface, however, the two men remained singularly unlike.
+While a fixed idea had narrowed John Audley’s vision to the inhuman,
+the younger man, under a dry and reserved exterior—he was shy, and his
+undrained acres, his twelve hundred a year, poorly supported an ancient
+name—was not only human, but in his way was something of an idealist.
+He dreamed dreams, he had his secret aspirations, at times ambition of
+the higher kind stirred in him, he planned plans and another life than
+this. But always—this was a thing inbred in him—he put forward the
+commonplace, as the cuttle-fish sheds ink, and hid nothing so shyly as
+the visions which he had done nothing to make real. On those about him
+he made no deep impression, though from one border of Staffordshire to
+the other his birth won respect. Politics viewed as a game, and a
+selfish game, had no attraction for him. Quarter Sessions and the Bench
+struck no spark from him. At the Races and the County Ball richer men
+outshone him. But given something to touch his heart and fire his
+ambition, he had qualities. He might still show himself in another
+light.
+
+Something of this, for no reason that he could imagine, some feeling of
+regret for past opportunities, passed through his mind as he sat
+fretting over John Audley’s folly. But after a time he roused himself
+and became aware that he was tired; and he rose and lit a candle. He
+pushed back the smouldering logs and slowly and methodically he put out
+the lights. He gave a last thought to John Audley. “There was always
+one maggot in his head,” he muttered, “now there’s a second. What I
+would not do to please him, he thinks I shall do to please another!
+Well, he does not know her yet!”
+
+He went to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+THE GATEHOUSE
+
+
+It is within the bounds of imagination that death may make no greater
+change in our inner selves than is wrought at times by a new mood or
+another outlook. When Mary, an hour before the world was astir on the
+morning after her arrival, let herself out of the Gatehouse, and from
+its threshold as from a ledge saw the broad valley of the Trent
+stretched before her in all the beauty of a May morning, her alarm of
+the past night seemed incredible. At her feet a sharp slope, clothed in
+gorse and shrub, fell away to meet the plain. It sank no more than a
+couple of hundred feet, but this was enough to enable her to follow the
+silver streak of the river winding afar between park and coppice and
+under many a church tower. Away to the right she could see the three
+graceful spires of Lichfield, and southward, where an opal haze closed
+the prospect, she could imagine the fringe of the Black Country, made
+beautiful by distance.
+
+In sober fact few parts of England are less inviting than the low lands
+of Staffordshire, when the spring floods cover them or the fogs of
+autumn cling to the cold soil. But in spring, when larks soar above
+them and tall, lop-sided elms outline the fields, they have their
+beauty; and Mary gazed long at the fair prospect before she turned her
+back on it and looked at the house that was fated to be her home.
+
+It was what its name signified, a gatehouse; yet by turns it could be a
+sombre and a charming thing. Some Audley of noble ideas, a man long
+dead, had built it to be the entrance to his demesne. The park wall,
+overhung by trees, still ran right and left from it, but the road which
+had once passed through the archway now slid humbly aside and entered
+the park by a field gate. A wide-latticed Tudor tower, rising two
+stories above the arch and turreted at the four corners, formed the
+middle. It was buttressed on either hand by a lower building, flush
+with it and of about the same width. The tower was of yellowish stone,
+the wings were faced with stained stucco. Right and left of the whole a
+plot of shrubs masked on the one hand the stables, on the other the
+kitchens—modern blocks set back to such a distance that each touched
+the old part at a corner only.
+
+He who had planned the building had set it cunningly on the brow of the
+Great Chase, so that, viewed from the vale, it rose against the
+skyline. On dark days it broke the fringe of woodland and stood up,
+gloomy and forbidding, the portal of a Doubting Castle. On bright days,
+with its hundred diamond panes a-glitter in the sunshine, it seemed to
+be the porch of a fairy palace, the silent home of some Sleeping
+Beauty. At all times it imposed itself upon men below and spoke of
+something beyond, something unseen, greater, mysterious.
+
+To Mary Audley, who saw it at its best, the very stains of the plaster
+glorified by the morning light, it was a thing of joy. She fancied that
+to live behind those ancient mullioned windows, to look out morning and
+evening on that spacious landscape, to feel the bustle of the world so
+remote, must in itself be happiness. For a time she could not turn from
+it.
+
+But presently the desire to explore her new surroundings seized her and
+she re-entered the house. A glance at the groined roof of the hall—many
+a gallant horseman had ridden under it in his time—proved that it was
+merely the archway closed and fitted with a small door and window at
+either end. She unlocked the farther door and passed into a paved
+court, in which the grass grew between the worn flags. In the stables
+on the left a dog whined. The kitchens were on the other hand, and
+before her an opening flanked by tall heraldic beasts broke a low wall,
+built of moss-grown brick. She ventured through it and uttered a cry of
+delight.
+
+Near at hand, under cover of a vast chestnut tree, were traces of
+domestic labor: a grindstone, a saw-pit, a woodpile, coops with
+clucking hens. But beyond these the sward, faintly lined at first with
+ruts, stretched away into forest glades, bordered here by giant oaks
+brown in bud, there by the yellowish-green of beech trees. In the
+foreground lay patches of gorse, and in places an ancient thorn, riven
+and half prostrate, crowned the russet of last year’s bracken with a
+splash of cream. Heedless of the spectator, rabbits sat making their
+toilet, and from every brake birds filled the air with a riot of song.
+
+To one who had seen little but the streets of Paris, more sordid then
+than now, the scene was charming. Mary’s eyes filled, her heart
+swelled. Ah, what a home was here! She had espied on her journey many a
+nook and sheltered dell, but nothing that could vie with this! Heedless
+of her thin shoes, with no more than a handkerchief on her head, she
+strayed on and on. By and by a track, faintly marked, led her to the
+left. A little farther, and old trees fell into line on either hand, as
+if in days long gone, before age thinned their ranks, they had formed
+an avenue.
+
+For a time she sat musing on a fallen trunk, then the hawthorn that a
+few paces away perfumed the spring air moved her to gather an armful of
+it. She forgot that time was passing, almost she forgot that she had
+not breakfasted, and she might have been nearly a mile from the
+Gatehouse when she was startled by a faint hail that seemed to come
+from behind her. She looked back and saw Basset coming after her.
+
+He, too, was hatless—he had set off in haste—and he was out of breath.
+She turned with concern to meet him. “Am I very late, Mr. Basset?” she
+asked, her conscience pricking her. What if this first morning she had
+broken the rules?
+
+“Oh no,” he said. And then, “You’ve not been farther than this?”
+
+“No. I am afraid my uncle is waiting?”
+
+“Oh no. He breakfasts in his own room. But Etruria told me that you had
+gone this way, and I followed. I see that you are not empty-handed.”
+
+“No.” And she thrust the great bunch of may under his nose—who would
+not have been gay, who would not have lost her reserve in such a scene,
+on such a morning? “Isn’t it fresh? Isn’t it delicious?”
+
+As he stooped to the flowers his eyes met hers smiling through the
+hawthorn sprays, and he saw her as he had not seen her before. Her
+gravity had left her. Spring laughed in her eyes, youth fluttered in
+the tendrils of her hair, she was the soul of May. And what she had
+found of beauty in the woodland, of music in the larks’ songs, of
+perfume in the blossoms, of freshness in the morning, the man found in
+her; and a shock, never to be forgotten, ran through him. He did not
+speak. He smelled the hawthorn in silence.
+
+But a few seconds later—as men reckon time—he took note of his
+feelings, and he was startled. He had not been prepared to like her, we
+know; many things had armed him against her. But before the witchery of
+her morning face, the challenge of her laughing eyes, he awoke to the
+fact that he was in danger. He had to own that if he must live beside
+her day by day and would maintain his indifference, he must steel
+himself. He must keep his first impressions of her always before him,
+and be careful. And be very careful—if even that might avail.
+
+For a hundred paces he walked at her side, listening without knowing
+what she said. Then his coolness returned, and when she asked him why
+he had come after her without his hat he was ready.
+
+“I had better tell you,” he answered, “this path is little used. It
+leads to the Great House, and your uncle, owing to his quarrel with
+Lord Audley, does not like any one to go farther in that direction than
+the Yew Tree Walk. You can see the Walk from here—the yews mark the
+entrance to the gardens. I thought that it would be unfortunate if you
+began by displeasing him, and I came after you.”
+
+“It was very good of you,” she said. Her face was not gay now. “Does
+Lord Audley live there—when he is at home?”
+
+“No one lives there,” he explained soberly. “No one has lived there for
+three generations. It’s a ruin—I was going to say, a nightmare. The
+greater part of the house was burnt down in a carouse held to celebrate
+the accession of George the Third. The Audley of that day rebuilt it on
+a great scale, but before it was finished he gave a housewarming, at
+which his only son quarrelled with a guest. The two fought at daybreak,
+and the son was killed beside the old Butterfly in the Yew Walk—you
+will see the spot some day. The father sent away the builders and never
+looked up again. He diverted much of his property, and a cousin came
+into the remainder and the title, but the house was never finished, the
+windows in the new part were never glazed. In the old part some
+furniture and tapestry decay; in the new are only bats and dust and
+owls. So it has stood for eighty years, vacant in the midst of
+neglected gardens. In the sunlight it is one of the most dreary things
+you can imagine. By moonlight it is better, but unspeakably
+melancholy.”
+
+“How dreadful,” she said in a low voice. “I almost wish, Mr. Basset,
+that you had not told me. They say in France that if you see the dead
+without touching them, you dream of them. I feel like that about the
+house.”
+
+It crossed his mind that she was talking for effect. “It is only a
+house after all,” he said.
+
+“But our house,” with a touch of pride. Then, “What are those?” she
+asked, pointing to the gray shapeless beasts, time-worn and
+weather-stained, that flanked the entrance to the courtyard.
+
+“They are, or once were, Butterflies, the badge of the Audleys. These
+hold shields. You will see the Butterflies in many places in the
+Gatehouse. You will find them with men’s faces and sometimes with a
+fret on the wings. Your uncle says that they are not butterflies, but
+moths, that have eaten the Audley fortunes.”
+
+It was a thought that matched the picture he had drawn of the deserted
+house, and Mary felt that the morning had lost its brightness. But not
+for long. Basset led her into a room on the right of the hall, and the
+sight drew from her a cry of pleasure. On three sides the dark wainscot
+rose eight feet from the floor; above, the walls were whitewashed to
+the ceiling and broken by dim portraits, on stretchers and without
+frames. On the fourth side where the panelling divided the room from a
+serving-room, once part of it, it rose to the ceiling. The stone
+hearth, the iron dogs, the matted floor, the heavy chairs and oak
+table, all were dark and plain and increased the austerity of the room.
+
+At the end of the table places were laid for three, and Toft, who had
+set on the breakfast, was fixing the kettle amid the burning logs.
+
+“Is Mr. Audley coming down?” Basset asked.
+
+“He bade me lay for him,” Toft replied dryly. “I doubt if he will come.
+You had better begin, sir. The young lady,” with a searching look at
+her, “must want her breakfast.”
+
+“I am afraid I do,” Mary confessed.
+
+“Yes, we will begin,” Basset said. He invited her to make the tea.
+
+When they were seated, “You like the room?”
+
+“I love it,” she answered.
+
+“So do I,” he rejoined, more soberly. “The panelling is linen—pattern
+of the fifteenth century—you see the folds? It was saved from the old
+house. I am glad you like it.”
+
+“I love it,” she said again. But after that she grew thoughtful, and
+during the rest of the meal she said little. She was thinking of what
+was before her; of the unknown uncle, whose bread she was eating, and
+upon whom she was going to be dependent. What would he be like? How
+would he receive her? And why was every one so reticent about him—so
+reticent that he was beginning to be something of an ogre to her? When
+Toft presently appeared and said that Mr. Audley was in the library and
+would see her when she was ready, she lost color. But she answered the
+man with self-possession, asked quietly where the library was, and had
+not Basset’s eyes been on her face he would have had no notion that she
+was troubled.
+
+As it was, he waited for her to avow her misgiving—he was prepared to
+encourage her. But she said nothing.
+
+None the less, at the last moment, with her hand on the door of the
+library, she hesitated. It was not so much fear of the unknown relative
+whom she was going to see that drove the blood from her cheek, as the
+knowledge that for her everything depended upon him. Her new home, its
+peace, its age, its woodland surroundings, fascinated her. It promised
+her not only content, but happiness. But as her stay in it hung upon
+John Audley’s will, so her pleasure in it, and her enjoyment of it,
+depended upon the relations between them. What would they be? How would
+he receive her? What would he be like? At last she called up her
+courage, turned the handle, and entered the library.
+
+For a moment she saw no one. The great room, with its distances and its
+harmonious litter, appeared to be empty. Then, “Mary, my dear,” said a
+pleasant voice, “welcome to the Gatehouse!” And John Audley rose from
+his seat at a distant table and came towards her.
+
+The notion which she had formed of him vanished in a twinkling, and
+with it her fears. She saw before her an elderly gentleman, plump and
+kindly, who walked with a short tripping step, and wore the
+swallow-tailed coat with gilt buttons which the frock-coat had
+displaced. He took her hand with a smile, kissed her on the forehead,
+and led her to a chair placed beside his own. He sat for a moment
+holding her hand and looking at her.
+
+“Yes, I see the likeness,” he said, after a moment’s contemplation.
+“But, my dear, how is this? There are tears in your eyes, and you
+tremble.”
+
+“I think,” she said, “I was a little afraid of you, sir.”
+
+“Well, you are not afraid now,” he replied cheerfully. “And you won’t
+be again. You won’t be again. My dear, welcome once more to the
+Gatehouse. I hope that it may be your home until another is offered
+you. Things came between your father and me—I shall never mention them
+again, and don’t you, my dear!”—this a little hurriedly—“don’t you; all
+that is buried now, and I must make it up to you. Your letters?” he
+continued, patting her hand. “Yes, Peter told me that you wrote to me.
+I need not say that I never had them. No, never had them—Toft, what is
+it?”
+
+The change in his voice struck her. The servant had come in quietly.
+“Mr. Basset, sir, has lost——”
+
+“Another time!” John Audley replied curtly. “Another time! I am engaged
+now. Go!” Then when the door had closed behind the servant, “No, my
+dear,” he continued, “I need not say that I never had them, so that I
+first heard of your troubles through a channel upon which I will not
+dwell. However, many good things come by bad ways, Mary. I hope you
+like the Gatehouse?”
+
+“It is charming!” she cried with enthusiasm.
+
+“It has only one drawback,” he said.
+
+She was clever enough to understand that he referred to its owner, and
+to escape from the subject. “This room,” she said, “is perfection. I
+have never seen anything like it, sir.”
+
+“It is a pleasant room,” he said, looking round him. “There is our coat
+over the mantel, gules, a fret or; like all old coats, very simple.
+Some think it is the Lacy Knot; the Audley of Edward the First’s time
+married a Lacy. But we bore our old coat of three Butterflies later
+than that, for before the fall of Roger Mortimer, who was hung at
+Tyburn, he married his daughter to an Audley, and the escheaters found
+the wedding chamber in his house furnished with our Butterflies. Later
+the Butterfly survived as our badge. You see it there!” he continued,
+pointing it out among the mouldings of the ceiling. “There is the
+Stafford Knot, the badge of the great Dukes of Buckingham, the noblest
+of English families; it is said that the last of the line, a cobbler,
+died at Newport, not twenty miles from here. We intermarried with them,
+and through them with Peter’s people, the Bassets. That is the Lovel
+Wolf, and there is the White Wolf of the Mortimers—all badges. But you
+do not know, I suppose, what a badge is?”
+
+“I am afraid not,” she said, smiling. “But I am as proud of our
+Butterfly, and as proud to be an Audley, sir, as if I knew more.”
+
+“Peter must give you some lessons in heraldry,” he answered. “We live
+in the past here, my dear, and we must indoctrinate you with a love of
+our pursuits or you will be dull.” He paused to consider. “I am afraid
+that we cannot allot you a drawing-room, but you must make your room
+upstairs as comfortable as you can. Etruria will see to that. And Peter
+shall arrange a table for you in the south bay here, and it shall be
+your table and your bay. That is his table; this is mine. We are
+orderly, and so we do not get in one another’s way.”
+
+She thanked him gratefully, and with tears in her eyes, she said
+something to which he would not listen—he only patted her hand—as to
+his kindness, his great kindness, in receiving her. She could not,
+indeed, put her relief into words, so deep was it. Nowhere, she felt,
+could life be more peaceful or more calm than in this room which no
+sounds of the outer world except the songs of birds, no sights save the
+swaying of branches disturbed; where the blazoned panes cast their
+azure and argent on lines of russet books, where an aged hound sprawled
+before the embers, and the measured tick of the clock alone vied with
+the scratching of the pen. She saw herself seated there during drowsy
+summer days, or when firelight cheered the winter evenings. She saw
+herself sewing beside the hearth while her companions worked, each
+within his circle of light.
+
+Then, she also was an Audley. She also had her share in the race which
+had lived long on this spot. Already she was fired with the desire to
+know more of them, and that flame John Audley was well fitted to fan.
+For he was not of the school of dry-as-dust antiquaries. He had the
+knack of choosing the picturesque in story, he could make it stand out
+for others, he could impart life to the actors in it. And, anxious to
+captivate Mary, he bent himself for nearly an hour to the display of
+his knowledge. Taking for his text one or other of the objects about
+him, he told her of great castles, from which England had been ruled,
+and through which the choicest life of the country had passed, that now
+were piles of sherds clothed with nettles. He told her of that woodland
+country on the borders of three counties, where the papists had long
+lived undisturbed and where the Gunpowder Plot had had its centre. He
+told her of the fashion which came in with Richard the Second, of
+adorning the clothes with initials, reading and writing having become
+for the first time courtly accomplishments; and to illustrate this he
+showed her the Westminster portrait of Richard in a robe embroidered
+with letters of R. He quoted Chaucer:
+
+
+And thereon hung a broch of gold ful schene
+On which was first i-written a crowned A
+And after that, Amor vincit omnia.
+
+
+Then, turning his back on her, he produced from some secret place a
+key, and opening a masked cupboard in the wall, he held out for her
+inspection a small bowl, bent and mis-shapen by use, and supported by
+two fragile butterflies. The whole was of silver so thin that to modern
+eyes it seemed trivial. Traces of gilding lingered about some parts of
+it, and on each of the wings of the butterflies was a capital A.
+
+She was charmed. “Of all your illustrations,” she cried, “I prefer this
+one! It is very old, I suppose?”
+
+“It is of the fifteenth century,” he said, turning it about. “We
+believe that it was made for the Audley who fell early in the Wars of
+the Roses. Pages and knights, maids and matrons, gloves of silk and
+gloves of mail, wrinkled palms and babies’ fingers, the men, the women,
+the children of twelve generations of our race, my dear, have handled
+this. Once, according to an old inventory, there were six; this one
+alone remains.”
+
+“It must be very rare?” she said, her eyes sparkling.
+
+“It is very rare,” he said, and he handled it as if he loved it. He had
+not once allowed it to go out of his fingers. “Very rare. I doubt if,
+apart from the City Companies, there is another in the hands of the
+original owners.”
+
+“And it came to you by descent, sir?”
+
+He paused in the act of returning it to its hiding-place. “Yes, that is
+how it came to me,” he said in a muffled tone. But he seemed to be a
+long time putting it away; and when he turned with the key in his hand
+his face was altered, and he looked at her—well, had she done anything
+to anger him, she would have thought he was angry. “To whom besides me
+could it descend!” he asked, his voice raised a tone. “But there, I
+must not grow excited. I think—I think you had better go now. Go, my
+dear, now. But come back presently.”
+
+Mary went. But the change in tone and face had been such as to startle
+her and to dash the happy mood of a few moments earlier. She wondered
+what she had said to annoy him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+OLD THINGS
+
+
+The Gatehouse, placed on the verge of the upland, was very solitary.
+Cut off from the vale by an ascent which the coachmen of the great
+deemed too rough for their horses, it was isolated on the other three
+sides by Beaudelays Park and by the Great Chase, which flung its barren
+moors over many miles of table-land. In the course of the famous suit
+John Audley had added to the solitude of the house by a smiling
+aloofness which gave no quarter to those who agreed with his rival. The
+result was that when Mary came to live there, few young people would
+have found the Gatehouse a lively abode.
+
+But to Mary during the quiet weeks that followed her arrival it seemed
+a paradise. She spent long hours in the open air, now seated on a
+fallen trunk in some glade of the park, now watching the squirrels in
+the clear gloom of the beech-wood, or again, lying at length on the
+carpet of thyme and heather that clothed the moor. She came to know by
+heart every path through the park—except that which led to the Great
+House; she discovered where the foxgloves clustered, where the
+meadow-sweet fringed the runlet, where the rare bog-bean warned the
+traveller to look to his footing. Even the Great Chase she came to
+know, and almost daily she walked to a point beyond the park whence she
+could see the distant smoke of a mining village. That was the one sign
+of life on the Chase; elsewhere it stretched vast and unpeopled, sombre
+under a livid sky, smiling in sunshine, here purple with ling, there
+scarred by fire—always wide under a wide heaven, raised high above the
+common world. Now and again she met a shepherd or saw a gig, lessened
+by distance, making its slow way along a moorland track. But for days
+together she might wander there without seeing a human being.
+
+The wide horizon became as dear to her as the greenwood. Pent as she
+had been in cities, straitened in mean rooms where sight and smell had
+alike been outraged, she revelled in this sweet and open life. The hum
+of bees, the scent of pines, the flight of the ousel down the water,
+the whistle of the curlew, all were to her pleasures as vivid as they
+were new.
+
+Meantime Basset made no attempt to share her excursions. He was
+fighting a battle with himself, and he knew better than to go out of
+his way to aid the enemy. And for her part she did not miss him. She
+did not dislike him, but the interest he excited in her was feeble. The
+thought of comparing him with Lord Audley, with the man to whose
+intervention she owed this home, this peace, this content, never
+occurred to her. Of Audley she did think as much perhaps as was
+prudent, sometimes with pensive gratitude, more rarely with a smile and
+a blush at her folly in dwelling on him. For always she thought of him
+as one, high and remote, whom it was not probable that she would ever
+see again, one whose course through life lay far from hers.
+
+Presently, it is not to be denied, Basset began to grow upon her. He
+was there. He was part of her life. Morning and evening she had to do
+with him. Often she read or sewed in the same room with him, and in
+many small ways he added to her comfort. Sometimes he suggested things
+which would please her uncle; sometimes he warned her of things which
+she would do well to avoid. Once or twice he diverted to himself a
+spirt of John Audley’s uncertain temper; and though Mary did not always
+detect the manœuvre, though she was far from suspecting the extent of
+his vigilance or the care which he cast about her, it would have been
+odd if she had not come to think more kindly of him, and to see merits
+in him which had escaped her at first.
+
+Meanwhile he thought of her with mingled feelings. At first with
+doubt—it was never out of his mind that she had made much of Lord
+Audley and little of him. Then with admiration which he withstood more
+feebly as time went on, and the cloven hoof failed to appear. Later,
+with tenderness, which, hating the scheme John Audley had formed, he
+masked even from himself, and which he was sure that he would never
+have the courage to express in her presence.
+
+For Basset was conscious that, aspire as he might, he was not a hero.
+The clash of life, the shock of battle, had no attraction for him. The
+library at the Gatehouse was, he owned it frankly, his true sphere.
+She, on the other hand, had had experiences. She had sailed through
+unknown seas, she had led a life strange to him. She had seen much,
+done much, suffered much, had held her own among strangers. Before her
+calmness and self-possession he humbled himself. He veiled his head.
+
+He did not attempt, therefore, to accompany her abroad, but at home he
+had no choice save to see much of her. There was only one living room
+for all, and she glided with surprising ease into the current of the
+men’s occupations. At first she was astray on the sea of books. Her
+knowledge was not sufficient to supply chart or compass, and it fell to
+Basset to point the way, to choose her reading, to set in a proper
+light John Audley’s vivid pictures of the past, to teach her the
+elements of heraldry and genealogy. She proved, however, an apt
+scholar, and very soon she dropped into the position of her uncle’s
+secretary. Sometimes she copied his notes, at other times he set her on
+the track of a fact, a relationship, a quotation, and she would spend
+hours in a corner, embedded in huge tomes of the county histories.
+Dugdale, Leland, Hall, even Polydore Vergil, became her friends. She
+pored over the Paston Letters, probed the false pedigrees of Banks, and
+could soon work out for herself the famous discovery respecting the
+last Lovel.
+
+For a young girl it was an odd pursuit. But the past was in the
+atmosphere of the house, it went with the fortunes of a race whose
+importance lay in days long gone. Then all was new to her, enthusiasm
+is easily caught, and Mary, eager to please her uncle, was glad to be
+of use. She found the work restful after the suspense of the past year.
+It sufficed for the present, and she asked no more.
+
+She never forgot the lamplit evenings of that summer; the spacious
+room, the fluttering of the moths that entered by the open windows, the
+flop of the old dog as it sought a cooler spot, the whisper of leaves
+turned ceaselessly in the pursuit of a fact or a fancy. In the
+retrospect all became less a picture than a frame containing a past
+world, a fifteenth-century world of color and movement, of rooms
+stifled in hangings and tapestries, of lines of spear-points and rows
+of knights in surcoats, of tolling bells and praying monks, of
+travellers kneeling before wayside shrines, of strange changes of
+fortune. For says the chronicler:
+
+“I saw one of them, who was Duke of Exeter (but he concealed his name)
+following the Duke of Burgundy’s train barefoot and bare-legged,
+begging his bread from door to door—this person was the next of the
+House of Lancaster and had married King Edward’s sister.”
+
+And of dark sayings:
+
+“Thys sayde Edward, Duke of Somerset, had herde a fantastyk prophecy
+that he sholde dy under a Castelle, wherefore he, as meche as in him
+was, he lete the King that he sholde not come in the Castelle of
+Wynsore, dredynge the sayde prophecy; but at Seint Albonys there was an
+hostelry havyng the sygne of a Castelle, and before that hostelry he
+was slayne.”
+
+“His badge was a Portcullis,” her uncle said, when she read this to
+him, “so it was natural that he should fall before a castle. He used
+the Beanstalk, too, and if his name had been John, a pretty thing might
+have been raised upon it. But you’re divagating, my dear,” he
+continued, smiling—and seldom had Mary seen him in a better
+humor—“you’re divagating, whereas I—I believe that I have solved the
+problem of the Feathers.”
+
+“The Prince of Wales’s? No!”
+
+“I believe so. Of course there is no truth in the story which traces
+them to the blind King of Bohemia, killed at Crécy. His crest was two
+vulture wings.”
+
+“But what of Arderne, who was the Prince’s surgeon?” Basset objected.
+“He says clearly that the Prince gained it from the King of Bohemia.”
+
+“Not at all!” John Audley replied arrogantly—at this moment he was an
+antiquary and nothing more. “Where is the Arderne extract? Listen.
+‘Edward, son of Edward the King, used to wear such a feather, and
+gained that feather from the King of Bohemia, whom he slew at Crécy,
+and so assumed to himself that feather which is called an ostrich
+feather which the first-named most illustrious King, used to wear on
+his crest.’ Now who was the first-named most illustrious King, who
+before that used to wear it?”
+
+“The King of Bohemia.”
+
+“Rubbish! Arderne means his own King, ‘Edward the King.’ He means that
+the Black Prince, after winning his spurs by his victory over the
+Bohemian, took his father’s insignia. He had only been knighted six
+weeks and waited to wear his father’s crest until he had earned it.”
+
+“By Jove, sir!” Basset exclaimed, “I believe you are right!”
+
+“Of course I am! The evidence is all that way. The Black Prince’s
+brothers wore it; surely not because their brother had done something,
+but because it was their father’s crest, probably derived from their
+mother, Philippa of Hainault? If you will look in the inventory of
+jewels made on the usurpation of Henry the Fourth you will see this
+item, ‘A collar of the livery of the Queen, on whom God have mercy,
+with an ostrich.’”
+
+“But that,” Basset interposed, “was Queen Anne of Bohemia—she died
+seven years before. There you get Bohemia again!”
+
+“Compare this other entry,” replied the antiquary, unmoved: “‘A collar
+of the livery of Queen Anne, of branches of rosemary.’ Now either Queen
+Anne of Bohemia had two liveries—which is unlikely—or the inventory
+made by order of Henry IV. quotes verbatim from lists made during the
+lifetime of Queen Anne; if this be the case, the last deceased Queen,
+on whom God have mercy, would be Philippa of Hainault; and we have here
+a clear statement that her livery was an ostrich, of which ostrich her
+husband wore a feather on his crest.”
+
+Basset clapped his hands. Mary beat applause on the table. “Hurrah!”
+she cried. “Audley for ever!”
+
+“Miss Audley,” Basset said, “Toft shall bring in hot water, and we will
+have punch!”
+
+“Miss Audley!” her uncle exclaimed, with a wrinkling nose. “Why don’t
+you call her Mary? And why, child, don’t you call him Peter?”
+
+Mary curtseyed. “Why not, my lord?” she said. “Peter it shall be—Peter
+who keeps the keys that you discover!”
+
+And Peter laughed. But he saw that she used his name without a blush or
+a tremor, whereas he knew that if he could force his lips to frame her
+name, the word would betray him. For by this time, from his seat at his
+remote table, and from the ambush of his book, he had watched her too
+often for his peace, and too closely not to know that she was
+indifferent to him. He knew that at the best she felt a liking for him,
+the growth of habit, and tinged, he feared, with contempt.
+
+He was so far right that there were three persons in the house who had
+a larger share of the girl’s thoughts than he had. The first was John
+Audley. He puzzled her. There were times when she could not doubt his
+affection, times when he seemed all that she could desire, kind,
+good-humored, frank, engaged with the simplicity of a child in innocent
+pursuits, and without one thought beyond them. But touch a certain
+spot, approach with steps ever so delicate a certain subject—Lord
+Audley and his title—and his manner changed, the very man changed, he
+became secretive, suspicious, menacing. Nor, however quickly she might
+withdraw from the danger-line, could the harm be undone at once. He
+would remain for hours gloomy and thoughtful, would eye her covertly
+and with suspicion, would sit silent through meals, and at times mutter
+to himself. More rarely he would turn on her with a face which rage
+made inhuman, a face that she did not know, and with a shaking hand he
+would bid her go—go, and leave the room!
+
+The first time that this happened she feared that he might follow up
+his words by sending her away. But nothing ensued, then or later. For a
+while after each outburst he would appear ill at ease. He would avoid
+her eyes, and look away from her in a manner almost as unpleasant as
+his violence; later, in a shamefaced way, he would tell her that she
+must not excite him, she must not excite him, it was bad for him. And
+the man-servant meeting her in the hall, would take the liberty of
+giving her the same advice.
+
+Toft, indeed, was the second who puzzled her. He was civil, with the
+civility of the trained servant, but always there was in his manner a
+reserve. And she fancied that he watched her. If she left the house and
+glanced back she was certain to see his face at a window, or his figure
+in a doorway. Within doors it was the same. He slept out, living with
+his wife in the kitchen wing, which had a separate entrance from the
+courtyard. But he was everywhere at all hours. Even his master appeared
+uneasy in his presence, and either broke off what he was saying when
+the man entered, or continued the talk on another note. More rarely he
+turned on Toft and without rhyme or reason would ask him harshly what
+he wanted.
+
+The third person to share Mary’s thoughts, but after a more pleasant
+fashion, was Toft’s daughter, Etruria. “I hope you will like her, my
+dear,” John Audley had said. “She will give you such attendance as you
+require, and will share the south wing with you at night. The two
+bedrooms there are on a separate staircase. I sleep above the library
+in this wing, and Peter in the tower room—we have our own staircase. I
+have brought her into the house because I thought you might not like to
+sleep alone in that wing.”
+
+Mary had thanked him, and had said how much she liked the girl. And she
+had liked her, but for a time she had not understood her. Etruria was
+all that was good and almost all that was beautiful. She was simple,
+kindly, helpful, having the wide low brow, the placid eyes, and perfect
+complexion of a Quaker girl—and to add to these attractions she was
+finely shaped, though rather plump than slender; and she was incredibly
+neat. Nor could any Quaker girl have been more gentle or more demure.
+
+But she might have had no tongue, she was so loth to use it; and a
+hundred times Mary wondered what was behind that reticence. Sometimes
+she thought that the girl was merely stupid. Sometimes she yoked her
+with her father in the suspicions she entertained of him. More often,
+moved by the girl’s meek eyes, she felt only a vague irritation. She
+was herself calm by nature, and reserved by training, the last to
+gossip with a servant, even with one whose refinement appeared innate.
+But Etruria’s dumbness was beyond her.
+
+One day in a research which she was making she fancied that she had hit
+on a discovery. It happened that Etruria came into the room at the
+moment, and in the fulness of her heart Mary told her of it. “Etruria,”
+she said, “I’ve made a discovery all by myself.”
+
+“Yes, Miss.”
+
+“Something that no one has known for hundreds of years! Think of that!”
+
+“Indeed, Miss.”
+
+Provoked, Mary took a new line. “Etruria,” she asked, “are you happy?”
+
+The girl did not answer.
+
+“Don’t you hear me? I asked if you were happy.”
+
+“I am content, Miss.”
+
+“I did not ask that. Are you happy?”
+
+And then, moved on her side, perhaps, by an impulse towards confidence,
+Etruria yielded. “I don’t think that we can any of us be happy, Miss,”
+she said, “with so much sorrow about us.”
+
+“You strange girl!” Mary cried, taken aback. “What do you mean?”
+
+But Etruria was silent.
+
+“Come,” Mary insisted. “You must tell me what you mean.”
+
+“Well, Miss,” the girl answered reluctantly, “I’m sad and loth to think
+of all the suffering in the world. It’s natural that you should not
+think of it, but I’m of the people, and I’m sad for them.”
+
+Balaam when the ass spoke was scarcely more surprised than Mary. “Why?”
+she asked.
+
+The girl pointed to the open window. “We’ve all we could ask,
+Miss—light and air and birds’ songs and sunshine. We’ve all we need,
+and more. But I come of those who have neither light nor air, nor songs
+nor sunshine, who’ve no milk for children nor food for mothers! Who, if
+they’ve work, work every hour of the day in dust and noise and heat.
+Who are half clemmed from year’s end to year’s end, and see no close to
+it, no hope, no finish but the pauper’s deals! It’s for them I’m sad,
+Miss.”
+
+“Etruria!”
+
+“They’ve no teachers and no time to care,” Etruria continued in
+desperate earnest now that the floodgates were raised. “They’re just
+tools to make money, and, like the tools, they wear out and are cast
+aside! For there are always more to do their work, to begin where they
+began, and to be worn out as they were worn out!”
+
+“Don’t!” Mary cried.
+
+Etruria was silent, but two large tears rolled down her face. And Mary
+marvelled. So this mild, patient girl, going about her daily tasks,
+could think, could feel, could speak, and upon a plane so high that the
+listener was sensible of humiliation as well as surprise! For a moment
+this was the only effect made upon her. Then reflection did its
+part—and memory. She recalled that glimpse of the under-world which she
+had had on her journey from London. She remembered the noisome alleys,
+the cinder wastes, the men toiling half-naked at the furnaces, the
+pinched faces of the women; and she remembered also the account which
+Lord Audley had given her of the fierce contest between town and
+country, plough and forge, land-lord and cotton-lord, which had struck
+her so much at the time.
+
+In the charms of her new life, in her new interests, these things had
+faded from her mind. They recurred now, and she did not again ask
+Etruria what she meant. “Is it as bad as that?” she asked.
+
+“It is not as bad as it has been,” Etruria answered. “Three years ago
+there were hundreds of thousands out of work. There are thousands,
+scores of thousands, still; and thousands have no food but what’s given
+them. And charity is bitter to many,” she added, “and the poorhouse is
+bitter to all.”
+
+“But what has caused things to be so bad?”
+
+“Some say one thing and some another. But most that machines lower
+wages, Miss, and the bread-tax raises food.”
+
+“Ah!” Mary said. And she looked more closely at the girl who knew so
+much that was at odds with her station.
+
+“Others,” Etruria continued, a faint color in her cheeks, “think that
+it is selfishness, that every one is for himself and no one for one
+another, and——”
+
+“Yes?” Mary said, seeing that she hesitated.
+
+“And that if every one thought as much of his neighbor as of himself,
+or even of his neighbor as well as of himself, it would not be machines
+nor corn-taxes nor poorhouses would be strong enough to take the bread
+out of the children’s mouths or the work out of men’s hands!”
+
+Mary had an inspiration. “Etruria,” she cried, “some one has been
+teaching you this.”
+
+The girl blushed. “Well, Miss,” she said simply, “it was at church I
+learned most of it.”
+
+“At church? What church? Not Riddsley?” For it was to Riddsley, to a
+service as dull as it was long, that they proceeded on Sundays in a
+chaise as slow as the reader.
+
+“No, Miss, not Riddsley,” Etruria answered. “It’s at Brown Heath on the
+Chase. But it’s not a real church, Miss. It’s a room.”
+
+“Oh!” Mary replied. “A meeting-house!”
+
+For some reason Etruria’s eyes gleamed. “No, Miss,” she said. “It’s the
+curate at Riddsley has a service in a room at Brown Heath on
+Thursdays.”
+
+“And you go?”
+
+“When I can, Miss.”
+
+The idea of attending church on a week-day was strange to Mary; as
+strange as to that generation was the zeal that passed beyond the
+common channel to refresh those whom migrations of population or
+changes in industry had left high and dry. The Tractarian movement was
+giving vigor not only to those who supported it, but to those who
+withstood it.
+
+“And you’ve a sermon?” Mary said. “What was the text last Thursday,
+Etruria?”
+
+The girl hesitated, considered, then looked with appeal at her
+mistress. She clasped her hands. “‘Two are better than one,’” she
+replied, “‘because they have good reward for their labor. For if they
+fall, one will lift up his fellow, but woe to him that is alone when he
+falleth, for he hath not another to lift him up.’”
+
+“Gracious, Etruria!” Mary cried. “Is that in the Bible?”
+
+Etruria nodded.
+
+“And what did your preacher say about it?”
+
+“That the employer and the workman were fellows, and if they worked
+together and each thought for the other they would have a good reward
+for their labor; that if one fell, it was the duty of the other to help
+him up. And again, that the land and the mill were fellows—the town and
+the country—and if they worked together in love they would have a good
+return, and if trouble came to one the other should bear with him. But
+all the same,” Etruria added timidly, “that the bread-taxes were
+wrong.”
+
+“Etruria,” Mary said. “To-morrow is Thursday. I shall go with you to
+Brown Heath.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+NEW THINGS
+
+
+Mary Audley, crossing the moor to a week-day service, was but one of
+many who in the ’forties were venturing on new courses. In religion
+there were those who fancied that by a return to primitive forms they
+might recapture the primitive fervor; and those again who, like the
+curate whom Mary was going to hear, were bent on pursuing the beaten
+path into new places. Some thought that they had found a panacea for
+the evils of the day in education, and put their faith in workmen’s
+institutes and night schools. Others were satisfied with philanthropy,
+and proclaimed that infants of seven ought not to toil for their
+living, that coal-pits were not fit places for women, and that what
+paid was not the only standard of life. A few dreamt of a new England
+in which gentle and simple were to mix on new-old terms; and a
+multitude, shrewd and hard-headed, believed in the Corn Law League,
+whose speakers travelled from Manchester to carry the claims of cheap
+bread to butter crosses and market towns, and there bearded the very
+landlord’s agent.
+
+The truth was that the country was lying sick with new evils, and had
+perforce to find a cure, whether that cure lay in faith, or in the
+primer, or in the Golden Rule, or in Adam Smith. For two generations
+men had been quitting the field for the mill, the farm for the
+coal-pit. They had followed their work into towns built haphazard, that
+grew presently into cities. There, short of light, of air, of water,
+lacking decency, lacking even votes—for the Reform Bill, that was to
+give everything to everybody, had stopped at the masters—lacking
+everything but wages, they swarmed in numbers stupendous and alarming
+to the mind of that day. And then the wages failed. Machines pushed out
+hands, though
+
+
+Tools were made, and born were hands,
+Every farmer understands.
+
+
+Machines lowered wages, machines glutted the markets. Men could get no
+work, masters could sell no goods. On the top of this came bad seasons
+and dear bread. Presently hundreds of thousands were living on public
+charity, long lists of masters were in the _Gazette_. In the gloomy
+cities of the North, masses of men heaved and moaned as the sea when
+the south-west wind falls upon it.
+
+All but the most thoughtless saw danger as well as unhappiness in this,
+and called on their gods. The Chartists proclaimed that safety lay in
+votes. The landed interest thought that a little more protection might
+mend matters. The Golden Rulers were for shorter hours. But the men who
+were the loudest and the most confident cried that cheap bread would
+mend all. The poor, they said, would have to eat and to spend. They
+would buy goods, the glut would cease. The wheels would turn again,
+there would be work and wages. The Golden Age would return. So preached
+the Manchester men.
+
+In the meantime the doctors wrangled, and the patient grew a little,
+not much, better. And Mary Audley and Etruria walked across the
+moorland in the evening sunshine, with a light breeze stirring the
+bracken, and waves of shadow moving athwart the stretches of purple
+ling. They seemed very far, very remote from the struggle for life and
+work and bread that was passing in the world below.
+
+Presently they dropped into a fern-clad dingle and saw below them,
+beside the rivulet that made music in its bottom, a house or two.
+Descending farther, they came on more houses, crawling up the hill
+slopes, and on a few potato patches and ash-heaps. As the sides of the
+valley rose higher and closed in above the walkers cottages fell into
+lines on either side of the brook, and began to show one behind the
+other in rough terraces, with middens that slid from the upper to the
+lower level. The valley bent to the left, and quickly tall chimneys
+became visible, springing from a huddle of mean roofs through which no
+other building of size, no tower, no steeple, rose to break the ugly
+sameness. This was Brown Heath.
+
+“It’s a rough place,” Etruria said as they picked their way. “But don’t
+be afraid, Miss. I’m often passing, and they know me.”
+
+Still it was a rough place. The roadway was a cinder-track, and from
+the alleys and lanes above it open drains wormed their way across the
+path and into the stream, long grown foul. The air was laden with
+smoke, coal dust lay everywhere; the most cleanly must have despaired.
+Men seated, pipe in mouth, on low walls, watched the two go by—not
+without some rude banter; frowsy women crouching on door-steps and
+nursing starveling babes raised sullen faces. Lads in clogs made way
+for them unwillingly. In one place a crowd seethed from a side street
+and, shouting and struggling, overflowed the roadway before them and
+threatened to bar their path.
+
+“It’s a dog-fight,” Etruria said. “They are rare and fond of them,
+Miss. We’d best get by quickly.”
+
+They passed in safety, passed, too, a brawl between two colliers, the
+air about them thick with oaths, passed a third eddy round two women
+fighting before a public-house. “The chaps are none so gentle,” Etruria
+said, falling unconsciously into a commoner way of speaking. “They’re
+all for fighting, dogs or men, and after dark I’m not saying we’d be
+safe. But we’ll be over the moor by dusk, Miss.”
+
+They came, as she spoke, to a triangular space, sloping with the hill,
+skirted by houses, and crossed by an open sewer. It was dreary and
+cinder-covered, but five publics looked upon it and marked it for the
+centre of Brown Heath. Etruria crossed the triangle to a building a
+little cleaner than its neighbors; it was the warehouse, she told her
+mistress, of a sack-maker who had failed. She entered, and her
+companion followed her.
+
+Mary found herself in a bare barn-like room, having two windows set
+high in the walls, the light from which fell coldly on a dozen benches
+ranged one behind the other, but covering only a portion of the floor.
+On these were seated, when they entered, about twenty persons, mainly
+women, but including three or four men of the miner class. No attempt
+had been made to alter the character of the place, and of formality
+there was as little. The two had barely seated themselves before a lean
+young man, with a long pale face and large nose, rose from the front
+bench, and standing before the little congregation, opened his book. He
+wore shabby black, but neither surplice nor gown.
+
+The service lasted perhaps twenty minutes, and Mary was not much moved
+by it. The young man’s voice was weak, the man himself looked
+under-fed. She noticed, however, that as the service went on the number
+in the room grew, and when it closed she found that all the seats were
+filled, and that there were even a few men—some of them colliers fresh
+from the pit—standing at the back. Remembering the odd text that the
+clergyman had given out the week before, she wondered what he would
+choose to-day, and, faintly amused, she stole a glance at her
+companion. But Etruria’s rapt face was a reproach to her levity.
+
+The young clergyman pushed back the hair from his forehead. His posture
+was ungainly, he did not know what to do with his hands, he opened his
+mouth and shut it again. Then with an effort he began. “My text, my
+friends,” he said, “is but one word, ‘Love.’ Where will you find it in
+the Scriptures? In every chapter and in every verse. In the dark days
+of old the order was ‘Thou shalt live!’ The new order in these days is
+‘Thou shalt love!’” He began by describing the battle of life in the
+animal and vegetable world, where all things lived at the cost of
+others; and he admitted that the struggle for life, for bread, for
+work, as they saw it around them, resembled that struggle. In moving
+terms he enlarged on the distress, on the vast numbers lately living on
+the rates, on the thousands living, where even the rates fell short, on
+Government aid. He described the fireless homes, the foodless children,
+the strong men hopeless. And he showed them that others were stricken,
+that masters suffered, tradesmen were ruined, the country languished.
+“The worst may be past,” he said. “You are working half-time, you are
+living on half-wages, you are thankful that things are better.” Then he
+told them that for his part he did not presume to say what was at the
+root of these unhappy conditions, but that of one thing he felt
+sure—and this was his message to them—that if the law of love, if the
+golden rule of preferring another to one’s self, if the precept of that
+charity,
+
+
+Which seeketh not itself to please
+Nor for itself hath any care,
+But for another gives its ease,
+
+
+if that were followed by all, then all
+
+
+Might build a heaven in hell’s despair.
+
+
+And in words more eloquent than he had yet compassed he begged them to
+set that example of brotherhood, in the certainty that the worst social
+evils, nay, all evils save pain and death, would be cured by the love
+that thought for others, that in the master preferred the servant’s
+welfare and in the servant put first his master’s interests. Finally he
+quoted his old text, “Let two work together, for if they fall, one will
+lift up his fellow!”
+
+It seemed as if he had done. He was silent; his hearers waited. Then
+with an effort he continued:
+
+“I have a word to say about something which fell from me in this place
+last week. While I did not venture, unskilled as I am, to say where
+lies the cause of our distress, I did say that I found it hard to
+believe that the system which taxes the bread you earn in the sweat of
+your brow, which takes a disproportionate part from the scanty crust of
+the widow and from the food of the child, was in accordance with the
+law of love. I repeat that now; and because I have been told that I
+dare not say in the pulpit of Riddsley church what I say here, I shall
+on the first opportunity state my belief there. You may ask why I have
+not done so; my answer is, that I am there the representative of
+another, whereas in this voluntary work I am myself more responsible.
+In saying that I ask you to judge me, as we should judge all, with that
+charity which believeth no evil.”
+
+A moment later Mary, deeply moved, was passing out with the crowd. As
+she stood, caught in the press by the door, an old man in horn-rimmed
+glasses, who was waiting there, held out his hand. She was going to
+take it, when she saw that it was not meant for her, but for the young
+clergyman who was following at her heels.
+
+“Master, dunno you do it,” the old fellow growled. “You’ll break your
+pick, and naught gotten. Naught gotten, that’ll serve. Your gaffer’ll
+not abide it, and you’ll lose your job!”
+
+“Would you have me take it,” the young man answered, “and not do the
+work, Cluff? Never fear for me.”
+
+“Dunno you be rash, master!” the other rejoined, clutching his sleeve
+and detaining him. “You be sure——”
+
+Mary heard no more. She felt Etruria’s hand pressing her arm. “We’d
+best lose no time,” the girl whispered. And she drew Mary onward,
+across the triangle and into the lane which led to the moor.
+
+“Are we so late?” The sun had set, but it was still light. “We’d best
+hurry,” Etruria persisted, increasing her speed.
+
+Mary looked at her and saw that she was troubled, but at the moment she
+set this down to the influence of the sermon, and her own mind went
+back to it. “I am glad you brought me, Etruria,” she said. “I shall
+always be glad that I came.”
+
+“We’d best be getting home now,” was Etruria’s only answer, but this
+time Mary’s ear caught the sound of footsteps behind them, and she
+turned. The young clergyman was hastening after them.
+
+“Etruria!” he cried.
+
+For a moment Mary fancied that Etruria did not hear. The girl hurried
+on. But Mary saw no occasion to run away, and she halted. Then Etruria,
+with a gesture of despair, stopped.
+
+“It is no use,” she said.
+
+The young man came up with them. His head was bare, his hat was in his
+hand, his long plain face was aglow with the haste he had made. He had
+heard Etruria’s words, and “It is of every use,” he said.
+
+“This is—my mistress,” Etruria said.
+
+“Miss Audley?”
+
+“I am Miss Audley,” Mary announced, wondering much.
+
+“I thought that it might be so,” he replied. “I have waited for such an
+occasion. I am Mr. Colet, the curate at Riddsley. Etruria and I love
+one another,” he continued. “We are going to be married, if ever my
+means allow me to marry.”
+
+“No, we are not,” the girl rejoined sharply. “Mr. Colet knows my mind,”
+she continued, her eyes turned away. “I have told him many times that I
+am a servant, the daughter of a servant, in a different class from his,
+and I’ll never be the one to ruin him and be a disgrace to him! I’ll
+never marry him! Never!”
+
+“And I have told Etruria,” he replied, “that I will never take that
+answer. We love one another. It is nothing to me that she is a servant.
+My work is to serve. I am as poor as it is possible to be, with as poor
+prospects as it is possible to have. I shall never be anything but what
+I am, and I shall think myself rich when I have a hundred pounds a
+year. I who have so little, who look for so little, am I to give up
+this happiness because Etruria has less? I, too, say, Never!”
+
+Mary, standing between them, did not know what to answer, and it was
+Etruria who replied. “It is useless,” she said. And then, in a tone of
+honest scorn, “Who ever heard,” she cried, “of a clergyman who married
+a servant? Or who ever heard of good coming of it?”
+
+Mary had an inspiration. “Does Etruria’s father know?” she asked.
+
+“He knows and approves,” the young man replied, his eyes bent fondly on
+his mistress.
+
+Mary too looked at Etruria—beautiful, patient, a servant, loved. And
+she wondered. All these weeks she had been rubbing elbows with this
+romance, and she had not discerned it! Now, while her sympathies flew
+to the lover’s side, her prejudices rose up against him. They echoed
+Etruria’s words, “Who ever heard of good coming of such a match?” The
+days had been, as Mary knew, when the chaplain had married the lady’s
+maid. But those days were gone. Meantime the man waited, and she did
+not know what to say.
+
+“After all,” she said at last, “it is for Etruria to decide.”
+
+“No, it is for us both to decide,” he replied. And then, as if he
+thought that he had sufficiently stated his case, “I ask your pardon,
+Miss Audley, for intruding,” he continued. “I am keeping you, and as I
+am going your way that is needless. I have had a message from a sick
+woman, and I am on my way to see her.”
+
+He took permission for granted, and though Etruria’s very shoulders
+forbade him, he moved on beside them. “Conditions are better here than
+in many places,” he said, “but in this village you would see much to
+sadden you.”
+
+“I have seen enough,” Mary answered, “to know that.”
+
+“Ten years ago there was not a house here. Now there is a population of
+two thousand, no church, no school, no gentry, no one of the better
+class. There is a kind of club, a centre of wild talk; better that,
+perhaps, than apathy.”
+
+“Is it in Riddsley parish?” Mary asked. They were nearly clear of the
+houses, and the slopes of the hill, pale green in the peaceful evening
+light, began to rise on either side. It was growing dusk, and from the
+moorland above came the shrill cries of plovers.
+
+“Yes, it is in Riddsley parish,” he answered, “but many miles from the
+town, and as aloof from it—Riddsley is purely agricultural—as black
+from white. In such places as this—and there are many of them in
+Staffordshire, as raw, as rough, and as new—there is work for plain men
+and plain women. In these swarming hives there is no room for any
+refinement but true refinement. And the Church must learn to do her
+work with plain tools, or the work will pass into other hands.”
+
+“You may cut cheese with an onion knife,” Etruria said coldly. “I don’t
+know that people like it.”
+
+“I know nothing better than onions in the right place,” he replied.
+
+“That’s not in cheese,” she rejoined, to Mary’s amusement.
+
+“The poor get little cheese,” he said, “and the main thing is to cut
+their bread for them. But here I must leave you. My errand is to that
+cottage.”
+
+He pointed to a solitary house, standing a few score paces above the
+road on the hillside. Mary shook hands with him, but Etruria turned her
+shoulder resolutely.
+
+“Good-bye, Etruria,” he said. And then to Mary, “I hope that I have
+made a friend?”
+
+“I think you have,” she answered. “I am sure that you deserve one.”
+
+He colored, raised his hat, and turned away, and the two went on,
+without looking back; darkness was coming apace, and they were still
+two miles from home. Mary kept silence, prudently considering how she
+should deal with the matter, and what she should say to her companion.
+As it fell out, events removed her difficulty. They had not gone more
+than two hundred yards, and were still some way below the level of the
+Chase, when a cry reached them. It came out of the dusk behind them,
+and might have been the call of a curlew on the moor. But first one,
+and then the other stood. They turned, and listened, and suddenly
+Etruria, more anxious or sharper of eye than her mistress, uttered a
+cry and broke away at a run across the sloping turf towards the
+solitary cottage. Alarmed, Mary looked intently in that direction, and
+made out three or four figures struggling before the door of the house.
+She guessed then that the clergyman was one of them, and that the cry
+had come from him, and without a thought for herself she set off,
+running after Etruria as fast as she could.
+
+Twice Etruria screamed as she ran, and Mary echoed the cry. She saw
+that the man was defending himself against the onset of three or
+four—she could hear the clatter of sticks on one another. Then she trod
+on her skirt and fell. When she had got, breathless, to her feet again,
+the clergyman was down and the men appeared to be raining blows on him.
+Etruria shrieked once more and the next moment was lost amid the moving
+figures, the brandished sticks, the struggle.
+
+Mary ran on desperately. She caught sight of the girl on her knees over
+the fallen man, she saw her fend off more than one blow, she heard more
+than one blow fall with a sickening thud. She came up to them. With
+passion that drove out fear, she seized the arm of the nearest and
+dragged him back.
+
+“You coward!” she cried. “You coward! I am Miss Audley! Do you hear!
+Leave him! Leave him, I say!”
+
+Her appearance, the surprise, checked the man; her fearlessness,
+perhaps her name, gave the others pause. They retreated a step. The man
+she had grasped shook himself free, but did not attempt to strike her.
+“Oh, d—n the screech-owls!” he cried. “The place is alive with them!
+Hold your noise, you fools! We’ll have the parish on us!”
+
+“I am Miss Audley!” Mary repeated, and in her indignation she advanced
+on him. “How dare you?” Etruria, still on her knees, continued to
+shriek.
+
+“You’re like to get a wipe over the head, dang you!” the man growled,
+“whoever you be! Go to—— and mind your own brats! He’ll know better now
+than to preach against them as he gets his living by! You be gone!”
+
+But Mary stood her ground. She declared afterwards that, brutally as
+the man spoke, the fight had gone out of him. Etruria, on the contrary,
+maintained that, finding only women before them, the ruffians would
+have murdered them. Fortunately, while the event hung in the balance,
+“What is it?” some one shouted from the road below. “What’s the matter
+there?”
+
+“Murder!” cried Etruria shrilly. “Help! Help!”
+
+“Help!” cried Mary. She still kept her face to the men, but for the
+first time she began to know fear.
+
+Footsteps thudded softly on the turf, figures came into view, climbing
+the slope. It needed no more. With a volley of oaths the assailants
+turned tail and made off. In a trice they were round the corner of the
+house and lost in the dusk.
+
+A moment later two men, equally out of breath and each carrying a gun,
+reached the spot. “Well!” said the bigger of the two, “What is it?”
+
+He spoke as if he had not come very willingly, but Mary did not notice
+this. The crisis over, her knees shook, she could barely stand, she
+could not speak. She pointed to the fallen man, over whom Etruria still
+crouched, her hair dragged down about her shoulders, her neckband torn,
+a ghastly blotch on her white cheek.
+
+“Is he dead?” the new-comer asked in a different tone.
+
+“Ay, dead!” Etruria echoed. “Dead!”
+
+Fortunately the curate gave the lie to the word. He groaned, moved,
+with an effort he raised himself on his elbow. “I’m—all right!” he
+gasped. “All right!”
+
+Etruria sprang to her feet. She stepped back as if the ground had
+opened before her.
+
+“I’m not—hurt,” Colet added weakly.
+
+But it was evident that he was hurt, even if no bones were broken. When
+they came to lift him he could not stand, and he seemed to be uncertain
+where he was. After watching him a moment, “He should see a doctor,”
+said the man who had come up so opportunely. “Petch,” he continued,
+addressing his companion, who wore a gamekeeper’s dress, “we must carry
+him to the trap and get him down to Brown Heath. Who is he, do you
+know? He looks like a parson.”
+
+“He’s Mr. Colet of Riddsley,” Mary said.
+
+The man turned and looked at her. “Hallo!” he exclaimed. And then in
+the same tone of surprise, “Miss Audley!” he said. “At this time of
+night?”
+
+Mary collected herself with an effort. “Yes,” she said, “and very
+fortunately, for if we had not been here the men would have murdered
+him. As it is, you share the credit of saving him, Lord Audley.”
+
+“The credit of saving you is a good deal more to me,” he answered
+gallantly. “I did not think that we should meet after this fashion.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+TACT AND TEMPER
+
+
+He looked at Etruria, and Mary explained who she was.
+
+“I am afraid that she is hurt.”
+
+The girl’s temple was bruised and there was blood on her cheek; more
+than one of the blows aimed at her lover had fallen on her. But she
+said eagerly that it was “Nothing! Nothing!”
+
+“Are you sure, Etruria?” Mary asked with concern.
+
+“It is nothing, indeed, Miss,” the girl repeated. She was trying with
+shaking fingers to put up her hair.
+
+“Then the sooner,” Audley rejoined, “we get this—this gentleman to my
+dogcart, the better. Take his other arm, Petch. Miss Audley, can you
+carry my gun?—it is not loaded. And you,” he continued to Etruria, “if
+you are able, take Petch’s.”
+
+They took the guns, and the little procession wound down the path to
+the road, where they found a dogcart awaiting them, and, peering from
+the cart, two setters, whining and fretting. The dogs were driven under
+the seat, and the clergyman, still muttering that he was all right, was
+lifted in. “Steady him, Petch,” Audley said; “and do you drive slowly,”
+he added, to the other man. “You will be at the surgeon’s at Brown
+Heath in twenty minutes. Stay with him, Petch, and send the cart back
+for me.”
+
+“But are you not going?” Mary cried.
+
+“I am not going to leave you in the dark with only your maid,” he
+answered with severity. “One adventure a night is enough, Miss Audley.”
+
+She murmured a word or two, but submitted. The struggle had shaken her;
+she could still see the men’s savage faces, still hear the thud of
+their blows. And she and Etruria had nearly a mile to go before they
+reached the park.
+
+When they were fairly started, “How did it happen?” he asked.
+
+Mary told the story, but said no word of Etruria’s romance.
+
+“Then you were not with him when they set on him?”
+
+“No, we had parted.”
+
+“And you went back?”
+
+“Of course we did!”
+
+“It was imprudent,” he said, “very imprudent. If we had not come up at
+that moment you might have been murdered.”
+
+“And if we had not gone back, Mr. Colet might have been murdered!” she
+answered. “What he had done to offend them——”
+
+“I think I can tell you that. He’s the curate at Riddsley, isn’t he?
+Who’s been preaching up cheap bread and preaching down the farmers?”
+
+“Perhaps so,” Mary answered. “He may be. But is he to be murdered for
+that? From your tone one might think so.”
+
+“No,” he replied slowly, “he is not to be murdered for it. But whether
+he is wise to preach cheap bread to starving men, whether he is wise to
+tell them that they would have it but for this man or that man, this
+class or that class—is another matter.”
+
+She was not convinced—the sermon had keyed her thoughts to a high
+pitch. But he spoke reasonably, and he had the knack of speaking with
+authority, and she said no more. And on his side he had no wish to
+quarrel. He had come down to Riddsley partly to shoot, partly to look
+into the political situation, but a little—there was no denying it—to
+learn how Mary Audley fared with her uncle.
+
+For he had thought much of her since they had parted, and much of the
+fact that she was John Audley’s heir. Her beauty, her spirit, her
+youth, had caught his fancy. He had looked forward to renewing his
+acquaintance with her, and he was in no mood, now he saw her, to spoil
+their meeting by a quarrel. He thought Colet, whose doings had been
+reported to him, a troublesome, pestilent fellow, and he was not sorry
+that he had got his head broken. But he need not tell her that.
+Circumstances had favored him in bringing them together and giving him
+the beau rôle, and he was not going to cross his luck.
+
+So, “Fire is an excellent thing of course,” he continued with an air of
+moderation, “but, believe me, it’s not safe amid young trees in a wind.
+Whatever your views, to express them in all companies may be honest,
+but is not wise. I have no doubt that a parson is tried. He sees the
+trouble. He is not always the best judge of the remedy. However, enough
+of that. We shall agree at least in this, that our meetings are
+opportune?”
+
+“Most opportune,” Mary answered. “And from my point of view very
+fortunate!”
+
+“There really is a sort of fate in it. What but fate could have brought
+about our meeting at the Hôtel Lambert? What but fate could have drawn
+us to the same spot on the Chase to-night?”
+
+There was a tone in his voice that brought the blood to her cheek and
+warned her to keep to the surface of things. “The chance that men call
+fate,” she answered lightly.
+
+“Or the fate that fools call chance,” he urged, half in jest, half in
+earnest. “We have met by chance once, and once again—with results! The
+third time—what will the third time bring? I wonder.”
+
+“Not a fright like this, I hope!” Mary answered, remaining cheerfully
+matter of fact. “Or if it does,” with a flash of laughter, “I trust
+that the next time you will come up a few moments earlier!”
+
+“Ungrateful!”
+
+“I?” she replied. “But it was Etruria who was in danger!”
+
+For the peril had left her with a sense of exhilaration, of lightness,
+of ease. She was pleased to feel that she could hold her own with him,
+relieved that she was not afraid of him. And she was glad—she was
+certainly glad—to see him again. If he were inclined to make the most
+of his advantage, well, a little gallantry was quite in the picture;
+she was not deceived, and she was not offended. While he on his side,
+as they walked over the moor, thought of her as a clever little witch
+who knew her value and could keep her head; and he liked her none the
+less for it.
+
+When they came at last to the gap in the wall that divided the Chase
+from the park, a figure, dimly outlined, stood in the breach waiting
+for them. “Is that you?” a voice asked.
+
+The voice was Basset’s, and Mary’s spirits sank. She felt that the
+meeting was ill-timed. “Yes,” she answered.
+
+Unluckily, Peter was one of those whose anxiety takes an irritable
+form. “What in the world has happened?” he asked. “I couldn’t believe
+that you were still out. It’s really not safe. Hallo!” breaking off and
+speaking in a different tone, “is some one with you?”
+
+“Yes,” Mary said. They were within touch now and could see one another.
+“We have had an adventure. Lord Audley was passing, he came to our
+rescue, and has very kindly seen us home.”
+
+“Lord Audley!” Basset was taken by surprise and his tone was much as if
+he had said, “The devil!”
+
+“By good fortune, Basset,” Audley replied. He may have smiled in the
+darkness—we cannot say. “I was returning from shooting, heard cries for
+help, and found Miss Audley playing the knight-errant, encircled by
+prostrate bodies!”
+
+Basset could not frame a word, so great was his surprise, so
+overwhelming his chagrin. Was this man to spring up at every turn? To
+cross him on every occasion? To put him in the background perpetually?
+To intrude even on the peace and fellowship of the Gatehouse? It was
+intolerable!
+
+When he did not answer, “It was not I who was the knight-errant,” Mary
+said. “It was Etruria. She is a little the worse for it, I fear, and
+the sooner she is in bed the better. As Mr. Basset is here,” she
+continued, turning to Audley, “we must not take you farther. Your cart
+is no doubt waiting for you. But you will allow us to thank you again.
+We are most grateful to you—both Etruria and I.”
+
+She spoke more warmly, perhaps she let her hand rest longer in his, to
+make up for Basset’s silence. For that silence provoked her. She had
+gathered from many things that Basset did not love the other; but to
+stand mute and churlish on such an occasion, and find no word of
+acknowledgment—this was too bad.
+
+And Basset knew, he too knew that he ought to thank Audley. But the
+black dog was on his back, and while he hesitated, the other made his
+adieux. He said a pleasant word to Etruria, tossed a careless
+“Good-night” to the other man, turned away, and was gone.
+
+For awhile the three who remained trudged homewards in silence. Then,
+“What happened to you?” Basset asked grudgingly.
+
+Vexed and indignant, Mary told the story.
+
+“I did not know that you knew Mr. Colet!”
+
+“When a man is being murdered,” she retorted, “one does not wait for an
+introduction.”
+
+He was a good fellow, but jealousy was hot within him, and he could not
+bridle his tongue. “Oh, but murdered?” he said. “Isn’t that rather
+absurd? Who would murder Colet?”
+
+Mary did not deign to reply.
+
+Baffled, he sought for another opening. “I do not know what your uncle
+will say.”
+
+“Because we rescued Mr. Colet? And perhaps saved his life?”
+
+“No, but——”
+
+“Or because Lord Audley rescued us?”
+
+“He will certainly not be pleased to hear that,” he retorted
+maliciously. He knew that he was misbehaving, but he could not refrain.
+“If you take my advice you will not mention it.”
+
+“I shall tell him the moment I reach the house,” she declared.
+
+“You will be very unwise if you do.”
+
+“I shall be honest at least! For the rest I would rather not discuss
+the matter, Mr. Basset. I am a good deal shaken by what we have gone
+through, and I am very tired.”
+
+He muttered humbly that he was sorry—that he only meant——
+
+“Please leave it there,” she said. “Enough has been said.”
+
+Too late the anger and the spirit died out of the unlucky man, and he
+would have grovelled before her, he would have done anything to earn
+his pardon. But Etruria’s presence tied his tongue, and gloomy and
+wretched—oh, why had he not gone farther to meet them, why had he not
+been the one to rescue her?—he walked on beside them, cursing his
+unhappy temper. It was dark, the tired girls lagged, Etruria hung
+heavily on her mistress’s arm; he longed to help them. But he did not
+dare to offer. He knew too well that Mary would reject the offer.
+
+Etruria had her own dreams, and in spite of an aching head was happy.
+But to Mary, fatigued by the walk, and vexed by Basset’s conduct, the
+way seemed endless. At last the house loomed dark above them, their
+steps rang hard on the flagged court. The outer door stood ajar, and
+entering, they found a lamp burning in the hall; but the silence which
+prevailed, above and below, struck a chill. Silence and an open door go
+ill together.
+
+Etruria at Mary’s bidding went up at once to her room. Basset called
+angrily for Toft. But no Toft appeared, and Mary, resentment still hot
+in her, opened the door of the library and went in to see her uncle.
+She felt that the sooner her story was told the better.
+
+But the library was empty. Lights burned on the several tables, the
+wood fire smouldered on the hearth, the tall clock ticked in the
+silence, the old hound flopped his tail. But John Audley was not there.
+
+“Where is my uncle?” she asked, as she stood in the open doorway.
+
+Basset looked over her shoulder. He saw that the room was empty. “He
+may have gone to look for us.”
+
+“And Toft?”
+
+“And Toft, too, I suppose.”
+
+“But why should my uncle go to look for us?” she asked, aghast at the
+thought—he troubled himself so little for others, he lived so
+completely his own life!
+
+“He might,” Basset replied. He stood for a moment, thinking. Then—for
+the time they had forgotten their quarrel—“You had better get something
+to eat and go to bed,” he said. “I will send Mrs. Toft to you.”
+
+She had not the strength to resist. “Very well,” she said. “Are you
+going to look for them?”
+
+“Perhaps Mrs. Toft will know where they are.”
+
+She took her candle and went slowly up the narrow winding staircase
+that led to her room and to Etruria’s. As she passed, stair by stair,
+the curving wainscot of dull wood which so many generations had rubbed,
+she carried with her the picture of Basset standing in thought in the
+middle of the hall, his eyes on the doorway that gaped on the night.
+Then a big man with a genial face usurped his place; and she smiled and
+sighed.
+
+A moment later she went into Etruria’s room to learn how she was, and
+caught the girl rising from her knees. “Oh, Miss,” she said, coloring
+as she met Mary’s eyes, “if we had not been there!”
+
+“And yet—you won’t marry him, you foolish girl?”
+
+“Oh no, no!”
+
+“Although you love him!”
+
+“Love him!” Etruria murmured, her face burning. “It is because I love
+him, Miss, that I will never, never marry him.”
+
+Mary wondered. “And yet you love him?” she said, raising the candle so
+that its light fell on the other’s face.
+
+Etruria looked this way and that way, but there was no escape. In a
+very small voice she said,
+
+
+“Love seeketh not itself to please
+Nor for itself hath any care!”
+
+
+She covered her hot cheeks with her hands. But Mary took away the hands
+and kissed her.
+
+“Oh, Miss!” Etruria exclaimed.
+
+Mary went out then, but on the threshold of her own room she paused to
+snuff her candle. “So that is love,” she thought. “It’s very
+interesting, and—and rather beautiful!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+THE YEW WALK
+
+
+Basset had been absent the greater part of the day, and returning at
+sunset had learned that Miss Audley had not come back from Brown Heath.
+The servant had hinted alarm—the Chase was lonely, the hour late; and
+Basset had hurried off without more, not doubting that John Audley was
+in the house.
+
+Now he was sure that John Audley had been abroad at the time, and he
+suspected that Toft had known it, and had kept it from him. He stood
+for a moment in thought, then he crossed the court to Toft’s house.
+Mrs. Toft was cooking something savory in a bonnet before the fire, and
+the contrast between her warm cheerful kitchen and the stillness of the
+house from which he came struck him painfully. He told her that her
+daughter had received a blow on the head, and that Miss Audley needed
+supper—she had better attend to them.
+
+Mrs. Toft was a stout woman, set by a placid and even temper above
+small surprises. She looked at the clock, a fork in her hand. “I can’t
+hurry it, Mr. Basset,” she said. “You may be Sir Robert Peel himself,
+but meat’s your master and will have its time. A knock on the head?”
+she continued, with a faint stirring of anxiety. “You don’t say so?
+Lor, Mr. Basset, who’d go to touch Etruria?”
+
+“You’d better go and see.”
+
+“But where’s Toft?”
+
+Basset’s temper gave way at that. “God knows!” he said. “He ought to be
+here—and he’s not!” He went out.
+
+Mrs. Toft stared after him, and by and by she let down her skirt and
+prepared to go into the house. “On the head?” she ruminated. “Well,
+’Truria’s a tidy lot of hair! And I will say this, if there’s few
+points a man gives a woman, hair’s one of them.”
+
+Meanwhile Basset had struck across the court and taken in the darkness
+the track which led in the direction of the Great House. The breeze,
+light but of an autumn coldness, swept the upland, whispering through
+the dying fern, and rustling in the clumps of trees by which he steered
+his course. He listened more than once, hoping that he might hear
+approaching footsteps, but he heard none, and presently he came to the
+yew-trees that masked the entrance to the gardens.
+
+The trees formed a wall of blackness exceeding that of the darkest
+night, and Basset hesitated before he plunged into it. The growth of a
+century had long trespassed on the walk, a hundred and fifty yards
+long, which led through the yew-wood, and had been in its time a
+stately avenue trimmed to the neatness of a bowling green. Now it was
+little better than a tunnel, dark even at noon, and at night bristling
+with a hundred perils. Basset peered into the blackness, listened,
+hesitated. But he was honestly anxious on John Audley’s account, and
+contenting himself with exclaiming that the man was mad, he began to
+grope his way along the path.
+
+It was no pleasant task. If he swerved from his course he stumbled over
+roots, branches swept his cheek, jagged points threatened his eyes, and
+more than once he found himself in the hedge. Half-way through the wood
+he came to a circular clearing, some twenty yards across; and here a
+glimmer of light enabled him to avoid the crumbling stone Butterfly
+that crouched on its mouldering base in the centre of the clearing—much
+as a spider crouches in its web. It seemed in that dim light to be the
+demon of this underworld, a monster, a thing of evil.
+
+The same gleam, however, disclosed the opposite opening, and for
+another seventy yards he groped his way onward, longing to be clear of
+the stifling air, and the brooding fancies that dwelt in it, longing to
+plant his feet on something more solid than this carpet of rotting yew.
+At last he came to the tall, strait gate, wrought of old iron, that
+admitted to the pleasance. It was ajar. He passed through it, and with
+relief he felt the hard walk under his feet, the fresh air on his face.
+He crossed the walk, and stepping on to the neglected lawn, he halted.
+
+The Great House loomed before him, a hundred yards away. The moon had
+not risen, but the brightness which goes before its rising lightened
+the sky behind the monstrous building. It outlined the roof but left
+the bulk in gloom. No light showed in any part, and it was only the
+watcher’s memory that pictured the quaint casements of the north wing,
+or filled in the bald rows of unglazed windows, which made of the new
+portion a death-mask. In that north wing just eighty years before, in a
+room hung with old Cordovan leather, the fatal house-warming had been
+held. The duel had been fought at sunrise within a pace or two of the
+moss-grown Butterfly that Basset had passed; and through the gate of
+ironwork, wood-smelted and wrought with the arms of Audley, which had
+opened at his touch, they had carried the dead heir back to his father.
+Tradition had it that the servant who bore in the old lord’s morning
+draught of cool ale had borne also the tragic news to his bedside.
+
+Basset remembered that the hinges of the gate, seldom as it was used,
+had not creaked, and he felt sure that he was on the right track. He
+scanned the dark house, and tried to sift from the soughing of the wind
+any sound that might inform him.
+
+Presently he moved forward and scrutinized with care the north wing,
+which abutted on the yew-wood. There lay between the two only a strip
+of formal garden, once set with rows of birds and beasts cut in yew.
+Time had turned these to monsters, huge, amorphous, menacing, amidst
+which rank grass rioted and elder pushed. Even in daylight it seemed as
+if the ancient trees stretched out arms to embrace and strangle the
+deserted house.
+
+But the north wing remained as dark as the bulk of the house, and
+Basset uttered a sigh of relief. Ill-humor began to take the place of
+misgiving. He called himself a fool for his pains and anticipated with
+distaste a return through the yew-walk. However, the sooner he
+undertook the passage the sooner it would be over, and he was turning
+on his heel when somewhere between him and the old wing a stick
+snapped.
+
+Under a foot, he fancied; and he waited. In two or three minutes the
+moon would rise.
+
+Again he caught a faint sound. It resembled the stealthy tread of some
+one approaching from the north wing, and Basset, peering that way, was
+striving to probe the darkness, when a gleam of light shot across his
+eyes. He turned and saw in the main building a bright spark. It
+vanished. He waited to see it again, and while he waited a second stick
+snapped. This time the sound was behind him, and near the iron gate.
+
+He had been outflanked, and he had now to choose which he would stalk,
+the footstep or the light. He chose the latter, the rather as while he
+stood with his eyes fixed on the house the upper edge of a rising moon
+peeped above the roof.
+
+He stepped back to the gate, and in the shadow of the trees he waited.
+Two or three minutes passed. The moon rose clear of the roof, outlining
+the stately chimneys and gables and flooding with cold light the lower
+part of the lawn. With the rising of the moon the air grew more chilly.
+He shivered.
+
+At length a dull sound reached him—the sound of a closing door or a
+shutter cast back. A minute later he heard the footsteps of some one
+moving along the walk towards him. The man trod with care, but once he
+stumbled.
+
+Basset advanced. “Is that you, sir?” he asked.
+
+“D—n!” John Audley replied out of the darkness. He halted, breathing
+quickly.
+
+“I say d—n, too!” Basset replied. As a rule he was patient with the old
+man, but to-night his temper failed him.
+
+The other came on. “Why did you follow me?” he asked. “What is the use?
+What is the use? If you are willing to help me, good! But if not, why
+do you follow me?”
+
+“To see that you don’t come to harm,” Basset retorted. “As you
+certainly will one of these nights if you come here alone.”
+
+“Well, I haven’t come to harm to-night! On the contrary—— But there,
+there, man, let us get back.”
+
+“The sooner the better,” Basset replied. “I nearly put out an eye as I
+came.”
+
+John Audley laughed. “Did you come through the yews in the dark?” he
+asked.
+
+“Didn’t you?”
+
+“No, I brought a lantern.” He removed as he spoke the cap of a small
+bull’s-eye lantern and threw its light on the path. “Who’s the fool
+now?”
+
+“Let us get home,” Basset snapped.
+
+John Audley locked the iron gate behind them and they started. The
+light removed their worst difficulties and they reached the open park
+without mishap. But long before they gained the house the elder man’s
+strength failed, and he was glad to lean on Basset’s arm. On that a
+sense of weakness on the one side and of pity on the other closed their
+differences. “After all,” Audley said wearily, “I don’t know what I
+should have done if you had not come.”
+
+“You’d have stayed there!”
+
+“And that would have been—Heavens, what a pity that would have been!”
+Audley paused and struck his stick on the ground. “I must take care of
+myself, I must take care of myself! You don’t know, Basset, what I——”
+
+“And I don’t want to know—here!” Basset replied. “When you are safe at
+home, you may tell me what you like.”
+
+In the courtyard they came on Toft, who was looking out for them with a
+lantern. “Thank God, you’re safe, sir,” he said. “I was growing alarmed
+about you.”
+
+“Where were you,” Basset asked sharply, “when I came in?” John Audley
+was too tired to speak.
+
+“I had stepped out at the front to look for the master,” Toft replied.
+“I fancied that he had gone out that way.”
+
+Basset did not believe him, but he could not refute the story. “Well,
+get the brandy,” he said, “and bring it to the library. Mr. Audley has
+been out too long and is tired.”
+
+They went into the library and Toft pulled off his master’s boots and
+brought his slippers and the spirit-tray. That done, he lingered, and
+Basset thought that he was trying to divine from the old man’s looks
+whether the journey had been fruitful.
+
+In the end, however, the man had to go, and Audley leant forward to
+speak.
+
+“Wait!” Basset muttered. “He is coming back.”
+
+“How do you know?”
+
+Basset raised his hand. The door opened. Toft came in. “I forgot to
+take your boots, sir,” he said.
+
+“Well, take them now,” his master replied peevishly. When the man had
+again withdrawn, “How did you know?” he asked, frowning at the fire.
+
+“I saw him go to take your boots—and leave them.”
+
+Audley was silent for a time, then “Well,” he said, “he has been with
+me many years and I think he is faithful.”
+
+“To his own interests. He dogged you to-night.”
+
+“So did you!”
+
+“Yes, but I did not hide! And he did, and hid from me, too, and lied
+about it. How long he had been watching you, I cannot say, but if you
+think that you can break through all your habits, sir, and be missing
+for two hours at night and a man as shrewd as Toft suspect nothing, you
+are mistaken. Of course he wonders. The next time he thinks it over.
+The third time he follows you. Presently whatever you know he will
+know.”
+
+“Confound him!” Audley turned to the table and jerked some brandy into
+a glass. Then, “You haven’t asked yet,” he said, “what I’ve done.”
+
+“If I am to choose,” Basset replied, “I would rather not know. You know
+my views.”
+
+“I know that you didn’t think I should do it? Well, I’ve done it!”
+
+“Do you mean that—you’ve found the evidence?”
+
+“Is it likely?” the other replied petulantly. “No, but I’ve been in the
+Muniment Room. It is fifty years since I heard my father describe its
+position, but I could have gone to it blindfold! I was a boy then, and
+the name—he was telling a story of the old lord—took my fancy. I
+listened. In time the thing faded, but one day when I was at the
+lawyer’s and some one mentioned the Muniment Room, the story came back
+to me so clearly, that I could almost repeat my father’s words.”
+
+“And you’ve been in the room?”
+
+“I’ve been in it. Why not? A door two inches thick and studded with
+iron, and a lock that one out of any dozen big keys would open!” He
+rubbed his calves in his satisfaction. “In twenty minutes I was
+inside.”
+
+“And it was empty?”
+
+“It was empty,” the other agreed, with a cunning smile. “As bare as a
+board. A little whitewashed room, just as my father described it!”
+
+“They had removed the papers?”
+
+“To the bank, or to London, or to Stubbs’s. The place was as clean as a
+platter! Not a length of green tape or an end of parchment was left!”
+
+“Then what have you gained?” Basset asked.
+
+Audley looked slyly at him, his head on one side. “Ay, what?” he said.
+“But I’ll tell you my father’s story. At one time the part of the room
+under the stairs was crumbling and the rats got in. The steward told
+the old lord and he went to see it. ‘Brick it up!’ he said. The steward
+objected that there would not be room—the place was full; there were
+boxes everywhere, some under the stairs. The old lord tapped one of the
+boxes with his gold-headed cane. ‘What’s in these!’ he asked. ‘Old
+papers,’ the steward explained. ‘Of no use, my lord, but curious; old
+leases for lives, and terriers.’ ‘Terriers?’ cried the old lord. ‘Then,
+by G—d, brick ’em up with the rats!’ And that day at dinner he told my
+father the story and chuckled over it.”
+
+“And that’s what you’ve had in your mind all this time?” Basset said.
+“Do you think it was done?”
+
+“The old lord bricked up many a pipe of port, and I think that he would
+do it for the jest’s sake. And”— John Audley turned and looked in his
+companion’s face—“the part under the stairs _is bricked up_, and the
+room is as square and as flush as the family vault—and very like it.
+The old lord,” he added sardonically, “knows what it is to be bricked
+up himself now.”
+
+“And still there may be nothing there to help you.”
+
+Audley rose from his chair. “Don’t say it!” he cried passionately. “Or
+I’ll say that there’s no right in the world, no law, no providence, no
+God! Don’t dare to say it!” he continued, his cheeks trembling with
+excitement. “If I believed that I should go mad! But it is there! It is
+there! Do you think that it was for naught I heard that story? That it
+was for naught I remembered it, for naught I’ve carried the story in my
+mind all these years? No, they are there, the papers that will give me
+mine and give it to Mary after me! They are there! And you must help me
+to get them.”
+
+“I cannot do it, sir,” Basset replied firmly. “I don’t think that you
+understand what you ask. To break into Audley’s house like any common
+burglar, to dig down his wall, to steal his deeds——”
+
+John Audley shook his fist in the young man’s face. “His house!” he
+shrieked. “His wall! His deeds! No, fool, but my house, my wall, my
+deeds! my deeds! If the papers are there all’s mine! All! And I am but
+taking my own! Can’t you see that? Can’t you see it? Have I no right to
+take what is my own?”
+
+“But if the papers are not there?” Basset replied gravely. “No, sir, if
+you will take my advice you will tell your story, apply to the court,
+and let the court examine the documents. That’s the straightforward
+course.”
+
+John Audley flung out his arms. “Man!” he cried. “Don’t you know that
+as long as he is in possession he can sit on his deeds, and no power on
+earth can force him to show them?”
+
+Basset drew in his breath. “If that is so,” he said, “it is hard. Very
+hard! But to go by night and break into his house—sticks in my gizzard,
+sir. I’m sorry, but that is the way I look at it. The man’s here too. I
+saw him this evening. The fancy might have taken him to visit the
+house, and he might have found you there?”
+
+Audley’s color faded, he seemed to shrink into himself. “Where did you
+see him?” he faltered.
+
+Basset told the story. “I don’t suppose that the girls were really in
+danger,” he continued, “but they thought so, and Audley came to the
+rescue and brought them as far as the park gap.”
+
+The other took out his silk handkerchief and wiped his brow. “As near
+as that,” he muttered.
+
+“Ay, and if he had found you at the house, he might have guessed your
+purpose.”
+
+John Audley held out a hand trembling with passion. “I would have
+killed him!” he cried. “I would have killed him—before he should have
+had what is there!”
+
+“Exactly,” Basset replied. “And that is why I will have nothing to do
+with the matter! It’s too risky, sir. If you take my advice you will
+give it up.”
+
+Audley did not answer. He sat awhile, his shoulders bowed, his eyes
+fixed on the hearth, while the other wondered for the hundredth time if
+he were sane. At length, “What is he doing here?” the old man asked in
+a lifeless tone. The passion had died out of him.
+
+“Shooting, I suppose. But there was some talk in Riddsley of his coming
+down to stir up old Mottisfont.”
+
+“What about?”
+
+“Against the corn-law repeal, I suppose.”
+
+Audley nodded. But after a while, “That’s a pretext,” he said. “And so
+is the shooting. He has followed the girl.”
+
+Basset started. “Followed Mary!” he exclaimed.
+
+“What else? I have looked for it from the first. I’ve pressed you to
+come to an understanding with her for that reason. Why the devil can’t
+you? If you leave it much longer you’ll be too late! Too late! And, by
+G—d, I’ll never forgive you!” with a fresh spirt of passion. “Never!
+Never, man!”
+
+“I’ve not said that I meant to do it.”
+
+“You’ve not said!” Audley replied contemptuously. “Do you think that I
+don’t know that she’s all the world to you? Do you think that I’ve no
+eyes? Do you think that when you sit there watching her from behind
+your book by the hour together, I have not my sight? Man, I’m not a
+fool! And I tell you that if you’re not to lose her you must speak! You
+must speak! Stand by another month, wait a little longer, and Philip
+Audley will put in his oar, and I’ll not give that for your chances!”
+He snapped his fingers.
+
+“Why should he put in his oar?” Basset asked sullenly. His face had
+turned a dull red.
+
+John Audley shrugged his shoulders. “Do you think that she is without
+attractions?”
+
+“But Audley lives in another world.”
+
+“The more likely to have attractions for her!”
+
+“But surely he’ll look for—for something more,” Basset stammered.
+
+“For a rich wife? For an alliance, as the saying is? And sleep ill of
+nights? And have bad dreams? No, he is no fool, if you are. He sees
+that if he marries the girl he makes himself safe. He makes himself
+safe! After me, it lies between them.”
+
+“I take it that he does think himself safe.”
+
+“Not he!” Audley replied. He was stooping over the ashes, warming his
+hands, but at that he jumped up. “Not he! he knows better than you! And
+fears! And sleeps ill of nights, d—n him! And dreams! But there, I must
+not excite myself. I must not excite myself. Only, if he once begins,
+he’ll be no laggard in love as you are! He’ll not sit puling and
+peeping and looking at the back of her head by the hour together! He’ll
+be up and at her—I know what that big jowl means! And she’ll be in his
+arms in half the time that you’ve taken to count her eyelashes!” He
+turned in a fresh fit of fury and seized his candle. “In his arms, I
+tell you, fool, while you are counting her eyelashes. Well, lose her,
+lose her, and I never want to see you again, or her! Never! I’ll curse
+you both!”
+
+He stumbled to the door and went out, a queer, gibbering, shaking
+figure; and Basset had no doubt at such moments that he was mad. But on
+this occasion he was afraid—he was very much afraid, as he sat
+pondering in his chair, that there was method in his madness!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+PETER PAUPER
+
+
+The impression which the events of the evening had made on Mary’s mind
+was still lively when she awoke next day. It was not less clear,
+because like the feminine letter of the ’forties, crossed and
+recrossed, it had stamped itself in two layers on her mind, of which
+the earlier was the more vivid.
+
+The solitude in which her days had of late been spent had left her
+peculiarly open to new ideas, while the quiet and wholesome life of the
+Gatehouse had prepared her to answer any call which those ideas might
+make upon her. Rescued from penury, lifted above anxiety about bed and
+board, no longer exposed to the panic-fears which in Paris had beset
+even her courageous nature, Mary had for a while been content simply to
+rest. She had taken the sunshine, the beauty, the ease and indolence of
+her life as a convalescent accepts idleness, without scruple or
+question.
+
+But this could not last. She was young, nature soon rallied in her, and
+she had seen things and done things during the last two years which
+forbade her to accept such a limited horizon as satisfied most of the
+women of that day. Unlike them, she had viewed the world from more than
+one standpoint; through the grille of a convent school, from the grimy
+windows of a back-street in Paris; again, as it moved beneath the
+painted ceilings of a French salon. And now, as it presented itself in
+this retired house.
+
+Therefore she could not view things as those saw them whose standpoint
+had never shifted. She had suffered, she still had twinges—for who,
+with her experience, could be sure that the path would continue easy?
+And so to her Mr. Colet’s sermon had made a strong appeal.
+
+It left the word which Mr. Colet had taken for his text sounding in her
+ears. Borne upward on the eloquence which earnestness had lent to the
+young preacher, she looked down on a world in torment, a world holding
+up piteous hands, craving, itself in ignorance, the help of those who
+held the secret, and whose will might make that secret sufficient to
+save. Love! To do to others as she would have others do to her! With
+every day, with every hour, with every minute to do something for
+others! Always to give, never to take! Above all to give herself, to do
+her part in that preference of others to self, which could alone right
+these mighty wrongs, could find work for the idle, food for the hungry,
+roofs for the homeless, knowledge for the blind, healing for the sick!
+Which could save all this world in torment, and could
+
+
+“Build a Heaven in Hell’s despair!”
+
+
+It was a beautiful vision, and in this her first glimpse of it, Mary’s
+fancy was not chilled by the hard light of experience. It seemed so
+plain that if the workman had his master’s profit at heart, and the
+master were as anxious for the weal of his men, the interests of the
+two would be one. Equally plain it seemed that if they who grew the
+food aimed at feeding the greatest number, and they who ate had the
+same desire to reward the grower, if every man shrank from taking
+advantage of other men, if the learned lived to spread their knowledge,
+and the strong to help the weak, if no man wronged his neighbor, but
+
+
+“Each for another gave his ease,”
+
+
+then it seemed equally plain that love would indeed be lord of all!
+
+Later, she might discover that it takes two to make a bargain; that
+charity does bless him who gives but not always him who takes; even,
+that cheap bread might be a dear advantage—that at least it might have
+its drawbacks.
+
+But for the moment it was enough for Mary that the vision was beautiful
+and, as a theory, true. So that, gazing upward at the faded dimity of
+her tester, she longed to play her part in it. That world in torment,
+those countless hands stretched upward in appeal, that murmur of
+infinite pain, the cry of the hungry, of the widow, of men sitting by
+tireless hearths, of children dying in mill and mine—the picture
+wrought on her so strongly, that she could not rest. She rose, and
+though the hoar frost was white on the grass and the fog of an autumn
+morning still curtained the view, she began to dress.
+
+Perhaps the chill of the cold water in which she washed sobered her. At
+any rate, with the comb in one hand and her hair in the other, she
+drifted down another line of thought. Lord Audley—how strange was the
+chance which had again brought them together! How much she owed him,
+with what kindness had he seen to her comfort, how masterfully had he
+arranged matters for her on the boat. And then she smiled. She recalled
+Basset’s ill-humor, or his—jealousy. At the thought of what the word
+implied, Mary colored.
+
+There could be nothing in the notion, yet she probed her own feelings.
+Certainly she liked Lord Audley. If he was not handsome, he had that
+air of strength and power which impresses women; and he had ease and
+charm, and the look of fashion which has its weight with even the most
+sensible of her sex. He had all these and he was a man, and she admired
+him and was grateful to him. And yesterday she might have thought that
+her feeling for him was love.
+
+But this morning she had gained a higher notion of love. She had
+learned from Etruria how near to that pattern of love which Mr. Colet
+preached the love of man and woman could rise. She had a new conception
+of its strength and its power to expel what was selfish or petty. She
+had seen it in its noblest form in Etruria, and she knew that her
+feeling for Lord Audley was not in the same world with Etruria’s
+feeling for the curate. She laughed at the notion.
+
+“Poor Etruria!” she meditated. “Or should it be, happy Etruria? Who
+knows? I only know that I am heart-whole!”
+
+And she knotted up her hair and, Diana-like, went out into the pure
+biting air of the morning, along the green rides hoary with dew and
+fringed with bracken, under the oak trees from which the wood-pigeons
+broke in startled flight.
+
+But if the energy of her thoughts carried her out, fatigue soon brought
+her to a pause. The evening’s excitement, the strain of the adventure
+had not left her, young as she was, unscathed. The springs of
+enthusiasm waned with her strength, and presently she felt jaded. She
+perceived that she would have done better had she rested longer; and
+too late the charms of bed appealed to her.
+
+She was at the breakfast table when Basset—he, too, had had a restless
+night and many thoughts—came down. He saw that she was pale and that
+there were shadows under her eyes, and the man’s tenderness went out to
+her. He longed, he longed above everything to put himself right with
+her; and on the impulse of the moment, “I want you to know,” he said,
+standing meekly at her elbow, “that I am sorry I lost my temper last
+evening.”
+
+But she was out of sympathy with him. “It is nothing,” she said. “We
+were all tired, I think. Etruria is not down yet.”
+
+“But I want to ask your——”
+
+“Oh dear, dear!” she cried, interrupting him with a gesture of
+impatience. “Don’t let us rake it up again. If my uncle has not
+suffered, there is no harm done. Please let it rest.”
+
+But he could not let it rest. He longed to put his neck under her foot,
+and he did not see that she was in the worst possible mood for his
+purpose. “Still,” he said, “you must let me say——”
+
+“Don’t!” she cried. She put her hands to her ears. Then, seeing that
+she had wounded him, she dropped them and spoke more kindly. “Don’t let
+us make much of little, Mr. Basset. It was all natural enough. You
+don’t like Lord Audley——”
+
+“I don’t.”
+
+“And you did not understand that we had been terribly frightened, and
+had good reason to be grateful to him. I am sure that if you had known
+that, you would have behaved differently. There!” with a smile. “And
+now that I have made the amende for you, let us have breakfast. Here is
+your coffee.”
+
+He knew that she was holding him off, and all his alarms of the night
+were quickened. Again and again had John Audley’s warning recurred to
+him and as often he had striven to reject it, but always in vain. And
+gradually, slowly, it had kindled his resolution, it had fired him to
+action. Now, the very modesty which had long kept him silent and
+withheld him from enterprise was changed—as so often happens with
+diffident man—into rashness. He was as anxious to put his fate to the
+test as he had before been unwilling.
+
+Presently, “You will not need to tell your uncle about Lord Audley,” he
+said. “I’ve done it.”
+
+“I hope you told him,” she answered gravely, “that we were indebted to
+Lord Audley for our safety.”
+
+“You don’t trust me?”
+
+“Don’t say things like that!” she cried. “It is foolish. I have no
+doubt that in telling my uncle you meant to relieve me. You have helped
+me more than once in that way. But——”
+
+“But this is a special occasion?”
+
+She looked at him. “If you wish us to be friends——”
+
+“I don’t,” he answered roughly. “I don’t want to be friends with you.”
+
+Then, ambiguous as his words were, she saw where she stood, and she
+mustered her presence of mind. She rose from her seat. “And I,” she
+said, “am not going to quarrel with you, Mr. Basset. I am going now to
+learn how Etruria is. And then I shall see my uncle.”
+
+She escaped before he could answer.
+
+Once or twice it had crossed her mind that he looked at her with
+intention; and once reading that look in his eyes she had felt her
+color rise, and her heart beat more quickly. But the absence on her
+side of any feeling, except that which a sister might feel for a kind
+brother, this and the reserve of his manner had nipped the fancy as
+soon as it budded. And if she had given it a second thought, it had
+been only to smile at her vanity.
+
+Now she had no doubt of the fact, no doubt that it was jealousy that
+moved him, and her uppermost, almost her only feeling was vexation.
+Because they had lived in the same house for five months, because he
+had been useful and she had been grateful, because they were man and
+woman, how foolish it was! How absurd! How annoying! She foresaw from
+it many, many, inconveniences; a breach in their pleasant intercourse,
+displeasure on her uncle’s part, trouble in the house that had been so
+peaceful—oh, many things. But that which vexed her most was the fear
+that she had, all unwittingly, encouraged him.
+
+She believed that she had not. But while she talked to Etruria, and
+later, as she went down the stairs to interview her uncle, she had this
+weight on her mind. She strove to recall words and looks, and upon the
+whole she was sure that she could acquit herself, sure that of this
+evil no part lay at her door. But it was very, very vexatious!
+
+On the threshold of the library she wrested her thoughts back to the
+present, and paused a moment, considering what she should say to her
+uncle.
+
+She need not have troubled herself, for he was not there. At the first
+glance she took the room to be empty; a second showed her Basset. She
+turned to retire, but too late; he stepped between her and the door and
+closed it. He was a little paler than usual, and his air of purpose was
+not to be mistaken.
+
+She stiffened. “I came to see my uncle,” she said.
+
+“I am the bearer of a message from him,” he answered. “He asked me to
+say that he considers the matter at an end. He does not wish it to be
+mentioned again. Of course he does not blame you.”
+
+“But, Mr. Basset——”
+
+But he would not let her speak. “That was his message,” he continued,
+“and I am glad to be the messenger because it gives me a chance of
+speaking to you. Will you sit down?”
+
+“But we have only just parted,” she remonstrated, struggling against
+her fate. “I don’t understand what you want——”
+
+“To say? No, I am going to explain it—if you will sit down.”
+
+She sat down then with the feeling that she was trapped. And since it
+was clear that she must go through with it, she was glad that his
+insistence hardened her heart and dried up the springs of pity.
+
+He went to the fire, stooped and moved the wood. “You won’t come
+nearer?” he said.
+
+“No,” she replied. How foolish to trap her like this if he thought to
+get anything from her!
+
+He turned to her and his face was changed. Under his wistful look she
+discovered that it was not so easy to be hard, not so easy to maintain
+her firmness. “You would rather escape?” he said, reading her mind. “I
+know. But I can’t let you escape. You are thinking that I have trapped
+you? And you are fearing that I am going to make you unhappy for—for
+half an hour perhaps? I know. And I am fearing that you are going to
+make me unhappy for—always.”
+
+No, she could not retain her hardness. She knew that she was going to
+feel pity after all. But she would not speak.
+
+“I have only hope,” he went on. “There is only one thing I am clinging
+to. I have read that when a man loves a woman very truly, very deeply,
+as I love you, Mary”—she started violently, and blushed to the roots of
+her hair, so sudden was the avowal—“as I love you,” he repeated
+sorrowfully, “I have read that she either hates him or loves him. His
+love is a fire that either warms her or scorches her, draws her or
+repels her. I thought of that last night, as I thought of many things,
+and I was sure, I was confident that you did not hate me.”
+
+“Oh no,” she answered, unsteadily. “Indeed, indeed, I don’t! I am very
+grateful to you. But the other—I don’t think it is true.”
+
+“No?” he said, keeping his eyes on her face. “And then, you don’t doubt
+that I love you?”
+
+“No.” The flush had faded from her face and left her pale. “I don’t
+doubt that—now.”
+
+“It is so true that—you know that you have sometimes called me Peter?
+Well, I would have given much, very much to call you Mary. But I did
+not dare. I could not. For I knew that if I did, only once, my voice
+would betray me, and that I should alarm you before the time! I knew
+that that one word—that word alone—would set my heart upon my sleeve
+for all to see. And I did not want to alarm you. I did not want to
+hurry you. I thought then that I had time, time to make myself known to
+you, time to prove my devotion, time to win you, Mary. I thought that I
+could wait. Now, since last night, I am afraid to wait. I doubt, nay I
+am sure, that I have no time, that I dare not wait.”
+
+She did not answer, but the color mounted again to her face.
+
+He turned and knocked the fire together with his foot. Then he took a
+step towards her. “Tell me,” he said, “have I any chance? Any chance at
+all, Mary?”
+
+She shook her head; but seeing then that he kept his eyes fixed on her
+and would not take that for an answer, “None,” she said as kindly as
+she could. “I must tell you the truth. It is useless to try to break
+it. I have never once, not once thought of you but as a friend, Peter.”
+
+“But now,” he said, “cannot you regard me differently—now! Now that you
+know? Cannot you begin to think of me as—a lover?”
+
+“No,” Mary said frankly and pitifully. “I should not be honest if I
+said that I could. If I held out hopes. You have been always good to
+me, kind to me, a dear friend, a brother when I had need of one. And I
+am grateful, Mr. Basset, honestly, really grateful to you. And fond of
+you—in that way. But I could not think of you in the way you desire. I
+know it for certain. I know that there is no chance.”
+
+He stood for a moment without speaking, and seeing how stricken he
+looked, how sad his face, her eyes filled with tears. Then, “Is there
+any one else?” he asked slowly, his eyes on her face.
+
+She did not answer. She rose to her feet.
+
+“Is there any one else?” he repeated, a new note in his voice. He moved
+forward a step.
+
+“You have no right to ask that,” she said.
+
+“I have every right,” he replied. “What?” he continued, moving still
+nearer to her, his whole bearing changed in a moment by the sting of
+jealousy. “I am condemned, I am rejected, and I am not to ask why?”
+
+“No,” she said.
+
+“But I do ask!” he retorted with a passion which surprised and alarmed
+her; he was no longer the despondent lover of five minutes before, but
+a man demanding his rights. “Have you no heart? Have you no feeling for
+me? Do you not consider what this is to me?”
+
+“I consider,” Mary replied with a warmth almost equal to his own, “that
+if I answered your question I should humiliate myself. No one, no one
+has a right, sir, to ask that question. And least of all you!”
+
+“And I am to be cast aside, I am to be discarded without a reason?”
+
+That word “discarded” seemed so unjust, and so uncalled for, seeing
+that she had given him no encouragement, that it stung her to anger.
+“Without a reason?” she retorted. “I have given you a reason—I do not
+return your love. That is the only reason that you have a right to
+know. But if you press me, I will tell you why what you propose is
+impossible. Because, if I ever love a man I hope, Mr. Basset, that it
+will be one who has some work in the world, something to do that shall
+be worth the doing, a man with ambitions above mere trifling, mere
+groping in the dust of the past for facts that, when known, make no man
+happier, and no man better, and scarce a man wiser! Do you ever think,”
+she continued, carried away by the remembrance of Mr. Colet’s zeal, “of
+the sorrow and pain that are in the world? Of the vast riddles that are
+to be solved? Of the work that awaits the wisest and the strongest, and
+at which all in their degree can help? My uncle is an old man, it is
+well he should play with the past. I am a girl, it may serve for me.
+But what do you here?” She pointed to his table, laden with open folios
+and calf-bound volumes. “You spend a week in proving a Bohun marriage
+that is nothing to any one. Another, in raking up a blot that is better
+forgotten! A third in tracing to its source some ancient tag! You move
+a thousand books—to make one knight! Is that a man’s work?”
+
+“At least,” he said huskily, “I do no harm.”
+
+“No harm?” Mary replied, swept away by her feelings. “Is that enough?
+Because in this quiet corner, which is home to my uncle and a refuge to
+me, no call reaches you, is it enough that you do no harm? Is there no
+good to be done? Think, Mr. Basset! I am ignorant, a woman. But I know
+that to-day there are great questions calling for an answer, wrongs
+clamoring to be righted, a people in travail that pleads for ease! I
+know that there is work in England for men, for all! Work, that if
+there be any virtue left in ancient blood should summon you as with a
+trumpet call!”
+
+He did not answer. Twice, early in her attack he had moved as if he
+would defend himself. Then he had let his chin fall and he had listened
+with his eyes on the table. And—but she had not seen it—he had more
+than once shivered under her words as under a lash. For he loved her
+and she scourged him. He loved her, he desired her, he had put her on a
+pedestal, and all the time she had been viewing him with the clear
+merciless eyes of youth, trying him by the standard of her dreams,
+probing his small pretensions, finding him a potterer in a library—he
+who in his vanity had raised his eyes to her and sought to be her hero!
+
+It was a cruel lesson, cruelly given; and it wounded him to the heart.
+So that she, seeing too late that he made no reply, seeing the grayness
+of his face, and that he did not raise his eyes, had a too-late
+perception of what she had done, of how cruel she had been, of how much
+more she had said than she had meant to say. She stood
+conscience-stricken, remorseful, ashamed.
+
+And then, “Oh, I am sorry!” she cried. “I am sorry! I should not have
+said that! You meant to honor me and I have hurt you.”
+
+He looked up then, but neither the shadow nor the grayness left his
+face. “Perhaps it was best,” he said dully. “I am sure that you meant
+well.”
+
+“I did,” she cried. “I did! But I was wrong. Utterly wrong!”
+
+“No,” he said, “you were not wrong. The truth was best.”
+
+“But perhaps it was not the truth,” she replied, anxious at once,
+miserably anxious to undo what she had done, to unsay what she had
+said, to tell him that she was conceited, foolish, a mere girl! “I am
+no judge—after all what do I know of these things? What have I done
+that I should say anything?”
+
+“I am afraid that what is said is said,” he replied. “I have always
+known that I was no knight-errant. I have never been bold until
+to-day—and it has not answered,” with a sickly smile. “But we
+understand one another now—and I relieve you.”
+
+He passed her on his way to the door, and she thought that he was going
+to hold it open for her to go out. But when he reached the door he
+fumbled for the handle, found it as a blind man might find it, and went
+out himself, without turning his head.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+THE MANCHESTER MEN
+
+
+Basset knew every path that crossed the Chase, and had traversed them
+at all seasons, and in all weathers. But when, some hours later, he
+halted on a scarred and blackened waste that stretched to the horizon
+on every side, he would have been hard put to it to say how he came to
+be there. He wore his hat, he carried his stick, but he could not
+remember how he had become possessed of either.
+
+For a time the shock of disappointment, the numbing sense of loss had
+dulled his mind. He had walked as in a dream, repeating over and over
+again that that was what she thought of him—and he had loved her. It
+was possible that in the interval he had sworn at fate, or shrieked
+against the curlews, or cursed the inhuman sky that mocked him with its
+sameness. But he did not think that he had. He felt the life in him too
+low for such outbursts. He told himself that he was a poor creature, a
+broken thing, a failure. He loved her, and—and that was what she
+thought of him.
+
+He sat on the stump of an ancient thorn-tree that had been a landmark
+on the burnt heath longer than the oldest man could remember, and he
+began to put together what she had said. He was trifling away his life,
+picking stray finds from the dust-heap of the past, making no man wiser
+and no man better, doing nothing for any one! Was she right? The Bohun
+pedigree, at which he had worked so long? He had been proud of his
+knowledge of Norman descents, proud of the research which had won that
+knowledge, proud of his taste for following up recondite facts. Were
+the knowledge, the research, the taste, all things for which he ought
+to blush? Certainly, tried by the test, _cui bono?_ they came off but
+poorly. And perhaps, to sit down at his age, content with such
+employments, might seem unworthy and beneath him, if there were other
+calls upon him. But were there other calls?
+
+Time had been when his family had played a great part, not in
+Staffordshire only but in England; and then doubtless public service
+had been a tradition with them. But the tradition had waned with their
+fortunes. In these days he was only a small squire, a little more
+regarded than the new men about him; but with no ability to push his
+way in a crowd, no mastery among his fellow-men, one whom character and
+position alike cast for a silent part.
+
+Of course she knew none of these things, but with the enthusiasm of
+youth she looked to find in every man the qualities of the leading
+role. He who seldom raised his voice at Quarter Sessions or on the
+Grand Jury—to which his birth rather than his possessions called
+him—she would have had him figure among the great, lead causes,
+champion the oppressed! It was pitiful, if it had not been absurd!
+
+He walked on by and by, dwelling on the pity of it, a very unhappy man.
+He thought of the evenings in the library when she had looked over his
+shoulder, and one lamp had lighted them; of the mornings when the sun
+had gilded her hair as she bent over the task she was even then
+criticizing; of afternoons when the spirit of the chase had been
+theirs, and the sunshine and the flowers had had no charm strong enough
+to draw them from the pursuit of—alas! something that could make no man
+better or wiser. He had lost her; and if aught mattered apart from
+that, she had for ever poisoned the springs of content, muddied the
+wells of his ordered life.
+
+Beyond doubt she loved the other, for had she not, she would have
+viewed things differently. Beyond doubt in her love for the other lay
+the bias that weighted her strictures. And yet, making all allowance
+for that, there was so much of truth in what she had said, so much that
+hit the mark, that he could never be the same again, never give himself
+with pleasure to his former pursuits, never find the old life a thing
+to satisfy!
+
+And still, like the tolling of a death bell above the city’s life, two
+thoughts beat on his mind again and again, and gave him intolerable
+pain. That was what she thought of him! And he had lost her! That was
+what she thought of him! And he had lost her! Her slender gracious
+figure, her smiling eyes, the glint in her hair, her goodness, her very
+self—all were for another! All were lost to him!
+
+Presently the day began to draw in, and fagged and hopeless he turned
+and began to make his way back. His road lay through Brown Heath, the
+mining village, where in all the taverns and low-browed shops they were
+beginning to light their candles. He crossed the Triangle, and made his
+way along the lane, deep in coal-dust and foul with drains, that ran
+upwards to the Chase. A pit, near at hand, had just turned out its
+shift, and in the dusk tired men, swinging tins in their hands, were
+moving by twos and threes along the track. With his bent shoulders and
+weary gait he was lost among them, he walked one with them; yet here
+and there an older man espied the difference, recognized him, and
+greeted him with rough respect. Presently the current slackened;
+something, he could not see what, dammed the stream. A shrewish voice
+rose in the darkness before him, and other voices, angry, clamant,
+protesting, struck in. A few of the men pushed by the trouble, others
+stood, here and there a man added a taunt to the brawl. In his turn
+Basset came abreast of the quarrel. He halted.
+
+A farm cart blocked the roadway. Over the tail hung three or four
+wailing children; into it a couple of sturdy men were trying to lift an
+old woman, seated in a chair. A dingy beadle and a constable, who
+formed the escort and looked ill at ease, stood beside the cart, and
+round it half a score of slatternly women pushed and shrieked and
+gesticulated. On the group and the whole dreary scene nightfall cast a
+pallid light.
+
+“What is it?” Basset asked.
+
+“They’re shifting Nan Oates to the poorhouse,” a man answered. “Her son
+died of the fever, and there’s none to keep her or the little uns.
+She’ve done till now, but they’ll not give her bite nor sup out of the
+House—that’s the law now’t seems. So the House it be!”
+
+“Her’d rather die than go!” cried a girl.
+
+“D—n them and their Bastilles!” exclaimed a younger man. “Are we free
+men, or are we not?”
+
+“Free men?” shrieked a woman, who had seized the horse’s rein and was
+loudest in her outcry. “No, nor Staffordshire men, nor Englishmen, nor
+men at all, if you let an old woman that’s always lived decent go to
+their stone jug this way. Give me Stafford Gaol—’tis miles afore it!”
+
+“Ay, you’re at home there, Bet!” a voice in the crowd struck in, and
+the laugh that followed lightened matters.
+
+Basset looked with pity at the old woman. Her head sunk upon her
+breast, her thin shawl tucked about her shoulders, her gray hair in
+wisps on her cheeks, she gazed in tearless grief upon the hovel which
+had been home to her. “Who’s to support her,” he asked, “if she stays?”
+
+“For the bite and sup there’s neighbors,” a man answered. “Reverend
+Colet he said he might do something. But he’s been lammed. And there’s
+the rent. The boy’s ten, and he made four shilling a week in the pit,
+but the new law’s stopped the young uns working.”
+
+“Ay, d—n all new laws!” cried another. “Poor laws and pit laws we’re
+none but the worse for them!”
+
+The men were preparing to move the cart. The woman who held the rein
+clung to it. “Now, Bet, have a care!” said the constable. “Or you’ll go
+home by Weeping Cross again!”
+
+“Cross? I’ll cross you!” the termagant retorted. “Selling up widows’
+houses is your bread and meat! May the devil, hoof and horn, with his
+scythe on his back, go through you! If there were three men here, ay,
+men as you’d call men——”
+
+“Easy, woman, easy!”
+
+“Woman, dang you! You call me woman——”
+
+“Now, let go, Bet! You’ll be in trouble else!” some one said.
+
+But she held on, and the crowd were beginning to jostle the men in
+charge when Basset stepped forward. “Steady, a moment,” he said. “Will
+the guardians let the woman stop if the rent is provided?”
+
+“Who be you, master?” the constable asked. “You’d best let us do our
+duty.”
+
+“Dang it, man,” an old fellow interposed, “it’s Squire Basset of Blore.
+Dunno you know him? Keep a civil tongue in your head, will you!”
+
+“Ay,” chimed in another, pushing forward with a menacing gesture. “You
+be careful, Jack! You be Jack in office, but ’twon’t always be so!
+’Twon’t always be so!”
+
+“Mr. Colet knows the old woman?” Basset asked.
+
+“Sure, sir, the curate knows her.”
+
+“Well, I’ll find the rent,” Basset said, addressing the constable, “if
+you’ll let her be. I’ll see the overseer about her in the morning.”
+
+“So long as she don’t come on the rates, sir?”
+
+“She’ll not come on the rates for six months,” Basset said. “I’ll be
+answerable for so much.”
+
+The men had little stomach for their task, and with a good excuse they
+were willing enough to desist. A woman fetched a stub of a pen and a
+drop of ink and Basset wrote a word for their satisfaction. While he
+did so, “O’d Staffordshire! O’d Staffordshire!” a man explained in the
+background. “Bassets of Blore—they be come from an Abbey and come to a
+Grange, as the saying is. You never heard of the Bassets of Blore, you
+be neither from Mixen nor Moor!” In old Stafford talk the rich lands of
+Cheshire stood for the “mixen” as against the bare heaths of the home
+county.
+
+In five minutes the business was done, the woman freed, and Basset was
+trudging away through the gathering darkness. But the incident had done
+him good. It had lightened his heart. It had changed ever so little the
+direction of his thoughts. Out of his own trouble he had stretched a
+hand to another; and although he knew that it was not by stray acts
+such as this that he could lift himself to Mary’s standard, though the
+battle over the new Poor Law had taught him, and many others, that
+charity may be the greatest of evils, what he had done seemed to bring
+him nearer to her. A hardship of the poor, which he might have seen
+with blind eyes, or viewed from afar as the inevitable result of the
+stay of outdoor relief, had come home to him. As he plodded across the
+moor he carried with him a picture of the old woman with her gray hair
+falling about her wrinkled face, and her hands clasped in hopeless
+resignation. And he felt that his was not the only trouble in the
+world.
+
+When he had passed the wall of Beaudelays Park, Basset struck—not far
+from the Gatehouse—into the road leading down to the Vale, and a couple
+of hours after dark he plodded into Riddsley. He made for the Audley
+Arms, a long straggling house on the main street, in one part of two
+stories, in another of three, with a big bay window at the end.
+Entering the yard by the archway he ordered a gig to go to the
+Gatehouse for his portmanteau. Then he turned into the inn, and
+scribbled a note to John Audley, stating that he was called away, and
+would explain matters when he wrote again. He sent it by the driver.
+
+It was eight o’clock. “I am afraid, Squire,” the landlord said, “that
+there’s no fire upstairs. If you’d not mind our parlor for once,
+there’s no one there and it’s snug and warm.”
+
+“I’ll do that, Musters,” he said. He was cold and famished and he was
+not sorry to avoid the company of his own thoughts. In the parlor, next
+door to the Snug, he might be alone or listen to the local gossip as he
+pleased.
+
+Ten minutes later he sat in front of a good plain meal, and for the
+time the pangs of appetite overcame those of disappointment. About nine
+the landlord entered on some errand. “I suppose, sir,” he said,
+lingering to see that his guest had all that he wanted, “you’ve heard
+this about Mr. Mottisfont?”
+
+“No, Musters, what is it? Get a clean glass and tell me about it.”
+
+“He’s to resign, sir, I hear. And his son is to stand.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Along o’ this about Sir Robert Peel, I understand. They have it that
+Sir Robert’s going to repeal the corn taxes—some say that he’s been for
+it all through, and some talk about a potato failure. Mr. Mottisfont
+sees that that’ll never do for Riddsley, but he don’t want to part from
+his leader, after following him all these years; so he’ll go out and
+the young gentleman will take his place.”
+
+“Do you think it is true about Peel?”
+
+“They’re saying it, and Mr. Stubbs, he believes it. But it’ll never go
+down in Riddsley, Squire. We’re horn and corn men here, two to one of
+us. There’s just the two small factories on the other side, and most of
+the hands haven’t votes. But here’s Mr. Stubbs himself.”
+
+The lawyer had looked into the room in passing. Seeing Basset he
+removed his hat. “Pardon, Squire,” he said. “I did not know that you
+were here.”
+
+“Not at all,” Basset answered. He knew the lawyer locally, and had seen
+him often—at arm’s length—in the peerage suit. “Will you take a glass
+of wine with me?”
+
+Stubbs said that he would with pleasure, if he might take it
+standing—his time was short. The landlord was for withdrawing, but
+Stubbs detained him. “No, John, with Mr. Basset’s leave I’ve a bone to
+pick with you,” he said. “Who are these men who are staying here?”
+
+Musters’s face fell. “Lord, Mr. Stubbs,” he said, “have you heard of
+them?”
+
+“I hear most things,” the lawyer answered. “But repealers talking
+treason at the Audley Arms is a thing I never thought to hear. They
+must go.”
+
+The landlord rubbed his head. “I can’t turn ’em out,” he said. “They’d
+have the law of me. His lordship couldn’t turn ’em out.”
+
+“I don’t know about that,” Stubbs replied. “He’s a good landlord, but
+he likes his own way.”
+
+“But what can I do?” the stout man protested. “When they came I knew no
+more about them than a china babe. When they began to talk, so glib
+that no one could answer them, I was more took aback than anybody.
+Seems like the world’s coming to an end with Manchester men coming
+here.”
+
+“Perhaps it is,” Basset said.
+
+Stubbs met his eye and took his meaning. Later the lawyer maintained
+that he had his suspicions from that moment. At the time he only
+answered, “Not in our day, Mr. Basset. Peel or Repeal, there’s no one
+has attacked the land yet but the land has broken them. And so it will
+be this time. John, the sooner those two are out of your house the
+better.”
+
+“But, dang me, sir, what am I to do?”
+
+“Put ’em in the horse trough for what I care!” the lawyer replied.
+“Good-evening, Squire. I hope the Riddsley parliament mayn’t disturb
+you.”
+
+The landlord followed him out, after handing something through the
+hatch, which opened into the Snug. He left the hatch a little ajar when
+he had done so, and the voices of those who gathered there nightly, as
+to a club, reached Basset. At first he caught no more than a word here
+or there, but as the debate grew warm the speakers raised their voices.
+
+“All mighty fine,” some one said, laying down the law, “but you’re like
+the rest, you Manchester chaps. You’ve your eyes on your own rack and
+manger!”
+
+“I’m not denying it,” came the answer in a Lancashire accent, “I’m not
+saying that cheap bread won’t suit us. But it isn’t for that——”
+
+“No, no, of course not,” the former speaker replied with heavy
+irony—Basset thought that the voice belonged to Hayward of the Leasows,
+a pompous old farmer, dubbed behind his back “The Duke.” “You don’t
+want low wages i’ your mills, of course!”
+
+“Cheap bread doesn’t make low wages,” the other rejoined. “That’s where
+you mistake, sir. Let me put it to you. You’ve known wheat high?”
+
+“It was seventy-seven shillings seven years back,” the farmer
+pronounced. “And I ha’ known it a hundred shillings a quarter for three
+years together.”
+
+“And I suppose the wages at that time were the highest you’ve ever
+known?”
+
+“Well, no,” the farmer admitted, “I’m not saying that.”
+
+“And seven years ago when wheat was seventy-seven—it is fifty-six
+now—were wages higher then than now?”
+
+“Well,” the Duke answered reluctantly, “I don’t know as they were,
+mister, not to take notice of.”
+
+“Think it out for yourself, sir,” the other replied. “I don’t think
+you’ll find that wages are highest when wheat is highest, nor lowest
+when wheat is lowest.”
+
+The farmer, more weighty than ready, snorted. But another speaker took
+up the cudgels. “Ay, but one minute,” he said. “It’s the price of wheat
+fixes the lowest wages. If it’s two pound of bread will keep a man fit
+to work—just keep him so and no more—it’s the price of bread fixes
+whether the lowest wages is eightpence a day or a shilling a day.”
+
+“Well, but——”
+
+“Well, but by G—d, he’s got you there!” the Duke cried, and smacked his
+fat thigh in triumph. “We’ve some sense i’ Riddsley yet. Here’s your
+health and song, Dr. Pepper!” At which there was some laughter.
+
+“Well, sir, I’ll not say yes, nor no, to that,” the Lancashire man
+replied, as soon as he could get a hearing. “But, gentlemen, it’s not
+low wages we want. I’ll tell you the two things we do want, and why we
+want cheap bread; first, that your laborers after they have bought
+bread may have something over to buy our woollens, and our cottons, and
+your pots. And secondly, if we don’t take foreign wheat in payment how
+are foreigners to pay for our goods?”
+
+But at this half a dozen were up in arms. “How?” cried the Duke, “why
+wi’ money like honest men at home! But there it is! There’s the devil’s
+hoof! It’s foreign corn you’re after! And with foreign corn coming in
+at forty shillings where’ll we be?”
+
+“No wheat will ever be grown at that price,” declared the free trader
+with solemnity, “here or abroad!”
+
+“So you say!” cried Hayward. “But put it at forty-five. We’ll be on the
+rates, and our laborers, where’ll they be?”
+
+“I don’t like such talk in my house!” said Musters.
+
+“I’d certainly like an answer to that,” Pepper the surgeon said. “If
+the farmers are broke where’ll their laborers be but flocking to your
+mills to put down wages there!”
+
+“The laborers? Well, they’re protected now, that’s true.”
+
+“Lucky for them!” cried two or three.
+
+“They are protected now,” the stranger repeated slowly. “And I’ll tell
+you what one of them said to me last year. ‘I be protected,’ he said,
+‘and I be starving!’”
+
+“Dang his impudence!” muttered old Hayward. “That’s the kind of thing
+they two Boshams at the Bridge talk. Firebrands they be!”
+
+But the shot had told; no one else spoke.
+
+“That man’s wages,” the Manchester man continued, “were six shillings a
+week—it was in Wiltshire. And you are protected too, sir,” he
+continued, turning suddenly on the Duke. “Have you made a fortune, sir,
+farming?”
+
+“I don’t know as I have,” the farmer answered sulkily—and in a lower
+voice, “Dang his impudence again!”
+
+“Why not? Because you are paying a protected rent. Because you pay high
+for feeding-stuff. Because you pay poor-rates so high you’d be better
+off paying double wages. There’s only one man benefits by the corn-tax,
+sir, there’s only one who is truly protected, and that is the
+landlord!”
+
+But to several in the room this was treason, and they cried out upon
+it. “Ay, that’s the bottom of it, mister,” one roared, “down with the
+landlords and up with the cotton lords!” “There’s your Reform Bill,”
+shouted another, “we’ve put the beggars on horseback, and none’s to
+ride but them now!” A third protested that cheap bread was a herring
+drawn across the track. “They’re for cheap bread for the poor man, but
+no votes! Votes would make him as good as them!”
+
+“Anyway,” the stranger replied patiently, “it’s clear that neither the
+farmer nor the laborer grows fat on Protection. Your wages are nine
+shillings——”
+
+“Ten and eleven!” cried two or three.
+
+“And your farmers are smothered in rates. If that’s all you get by
+Protection I’d try another system.”
+
+“Anyways, I’ll ask you to try it out of my house,” Musters said. “I’ve
+a good landlord and I’ll not hear him abused!”
+
+“Hear! Hear! Musters! Quite right!”
+
+“I’ve not said an uncivil word,” the Manchester man rejoined. “I shall
+leave your house to-morrow, not an hour before. I’ll add only one word,
+gentlemen. Bread is the staff of life. Isn’t it the last thing you
+should tax?”
+
+“True,” Mr. Pepper replied. “But isn’t agriculture the staple industry?
+Isn’t it the base on which all other industries stand? Isn’t it the
+mainstay of the best constitution in the world? And wasn’t it the land
+that steadied England, and kept it clear of Bonaparte and Wooden
+Shoes——”
+
+“Ay, wooden ships against wooden shoes for ever!” broke in old Hayward,
+in great excitement. “Where were the oaks grown as beat Bony! No,
+master, protect the oak and protect the wheat, and England’ll never
+lack ships nor meat! Your cotton-printers and ironfounders they’re
+great folks now, great folks, with their brass and their votes, and so
+they’ve a mind to upset the gentry. It’s the town against the country,
+and new money against the old acres that have fed us and our fathers
+before us world without end! But put one of my lads in your mills, and
+amid your muck, and in twelve months he’d not pitch hay, no not three
+hours of the day!”
+
+Basset could hear the free trader’s chair grate on the sanded floor as
+he pushed it back. “Well, gentlemen,” he said, “I’ll not quarrel with
+you. I wish you all the protection you deserve—and I think Sir Robert
+will give it you! For us, I’m not saying that we are not thinking of
+our own interests.”
+
+“Devil a doubt of that!” muttered the farmer.
+
+“And some of us may have been cold-shouldered by my lord. But you may
+take it from me that there’s some of us, too, are as anxious to better
+the poor man’s lot—ay, as Lord Ashley himself! That’s all! Good-night,
+gentlemen.”
+
+When he was gone, “Gi’ me a coal for my pipe, John,” said the Duke. “I
+never heard the like of that in Riddsley. He’s a gallus glib chap
+that!”
+
+“I won’t say,” said Mr. Pepper cautiously, “that there’s nothing in
+it.”
+
+“Plenty in it for the cotton people and the coal people, and the
+potters. But not for us!”
+
+“But if Sir Robert sees it that way?” queried the surgeon, delicately.
+
+“Then if Sir Robert were member for Riddsley,” Hayward answered
+stubbornly, “he’d get his notice to quit, Dr. Pepper! You may bet your
+hat on that!”
+
+“There’s one got a lesson last night,” a new-comer chimed in. “Parson
+Colet got so beaten on the moor he’s in bed I am told. He’s been
+speaking free these last two months, and I thought he’d get it. Three
+lads from your part I am told, Hayward.”
+
+“Well, well!” the farmer replied with philosophy. “There’s good in
+Colet, and maybe it’ll be a lesson to him! Anyway, good or bad, he’s
+going.”
+
+“Going?” cried two or three, speaking at once.
+
+“I met Rector not two hours back. He’d a letter from Colet saying he
+was going to preach the same rubbish here as he’s fed ’em with at Brown
+Heath—cheap bread and the rest of it. Rector’s been to him—he wouldn’t
+budge, and he got his notice to quit right straight. Rector was fit to
+burst when I saw him.”
+
+“Colet be a born fool!” cried Musters. “Who’s like to employ him after
+that? Wheat is tithe and the parsons are as fond of their tithe as any
+man. You may look a long way before you’ll find a parson that’s a
+repealer.”
+
+“Serves Colet right!” said one. “But I’m sorry for him all the same.
+There’s worse men than the Reverend Colet.”
+
+Basset could never say afterwards what moved him at this point, but
+whatever it was he got up and went out. The boots was lounging at the
+door of the inn. He asked the man where Mr. Colet lodged, and learning
+that it was in Stream Street, near the Maypole, he turned that way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+STRANGE BEDFELLOWS
+
+
+Had any one told Basset, even that morning, that before night he would
+seek the advice of the Riddsley curate, he would have met the
+suggestion with unmeasured scorn. Probably he had not since his college
+days spent an hour in intimate talk with a man so far from him in
+fortune and position, and so unlike him in those things which bring men
+together. Nor in the act of approaching Colet—under the impulse of a
+few casual words and a sudden thought—was he able to understand or to
+justify himself.
+
+But when he rose to his feet after an hour spent beside the curate’s
+dingy hearth—over the barber’s shop in Stream Street—he did not need to
+justify the step. He had said little but he had heard much. Colet’s
+tongue had been loosened by the sacrifice he had made, and inspired by
+that love of his kind which takes refuge in the most unlikely shapes,
+he had poured forth at length his beliefs and his aspirations. And
+Basset, whose world had tottered since morning, for whom common things
+had lost their poise and life its wonted aspect, began to think that he
+had found in the other’s aims a new standpoint and the offer of a new
+beginning.
+
+The dip candles, which had been many times snuffed, were burning low
+when the two rose. The curate, whose pale cheeks matched his bandaged
+head, had a last word to say. “Of the need I am sure,” he repeated, as
+Basset’s eye sought the cheap clock on the mantelpiece. “If I have not
+proved that, the fault, sir, is mine. But the means—they are a question
+for you; almost any man may see them more clearly than I do. By votes,
+it may be, and so through the people working out their own betterment.
+Or by social measures, as Lord Ashley thinks, through the classes that
+are fitted by education to judge for all. Or by the wider spread, as I
+hold, of self-sacrifice by all for all—to me, the ideal. But of one
+thing I am convinced; that this tax upon the commonest food, which
+takes so much more in proportion from the poor than from the rich, is
+wrong. Certainly wrong, Mr. Basset,—unless the gain and the loss can be
+equally spread. That’s another matter.”
+
+“I will not say any more now,” Basset answered cautiously, “than that I
+am inclined to your view. But for yourself, are there not others who
+will not pay so dearly for maintaining it?”
+
+A redness spread over the curate’s long horse-face. “No, Mr. Basset,”
+he rejoined, “if I left my duty to others I should pay still more
+dearly. I am my own man. I will remain so.”
+
+“But what will you do when you leave here?” Basset inquired, casting
+his eyes round the shabby room. He did not see it as he had seen it on
+his entrance. He discerned that, small as it was, and shabby as it was,
+it might be a man’s home. “I fear that there are few incumbents who
+hold your views.”
+
+“There are absentees,” Colet replied with a smile, “who are not so
+particular; and in the north there are a few who think as I think. I
+shall not starve.”
+
+“I have an old house on the Derbyshire border twenty miles from here,”
+Basset said. “A servant and his wife keep it, and during some months of
+the year I live there. It is an out-of-the-way place, Mr. Colet, but it
+is at your service—if you don’t get work?”
+
+The curate seemed to shrink into himself. “I couldn’t trespass on you,”
+he said.
+
+“I hope you will,” Basset replied. “In the meantime, who was the man
+you quoted a few minutes ago?”
+
+“Francis Place. He is a good man though not as we”—he touched his
+threadbare cloth—“count goodness. He is something of a Socialist,
+something of a Chartist—he might frighten you, Mr. Basset. But he has
+the love of the people in him.”
+
+“I will see him.”
+
+“He has been a tailor.”
+
+That hit Basset fairly in the face. “Good heavens!” he said. “A
+tailor?”
+
+“Yes,” Colet replied, smiling. “But a very uncommon tailor. Let me tell
+you why I quoted him. Because, though he is not a Christian, he has
+ideals. He aims higher than he can shoot, while the aims of the
+Manchester League, though I agree with them upon the corn-tax, seem to
+me to be bounded by the material and warped by their own interests.”
+
+Basset nodded. “You have thought a good deal on these things,” he said.
+
+“I live among the poor. I have them always before me.”
+
+“And I have thought so little that I need time. You must think no worse
+of me if I wait a while. And now, good-night.”
+
+But the other did not take the hand held out to him. He was staring at
+the candle. “I am not clear that I have been quite frank with you,” he
+said awkwardly. “You have offered me the shelter of your house though I
+am a stranger, Mr. Basset, and though you must suspect that to harbor
+me may expose you to remark. Well, I may be tempted to avail myself of
+your kindness. But I cannot do so unless you know more of my
+circumstances.”
+
+“I know all that is necessary.”
+
+“You don’t know what I am going to tell you,” Colet persisted. “And I
+think that you should. I am going to marry the daughter of your uncle’s
+servant, Toft.”
+
+“Good Lord!” cried Basset. This was a second and more serious blow. It
+brought him down from the clouds.
+
+“That shocks you, Mr. Basset,” the curate continued with dignity, “that
+I should marry one in her position? Well, I am not called upon to
+justify it. Why I think her worthy, and more than worthy to share my
+life, is my business. I only trouble you with the matter because you
+have made me an offer which you might not have made had you known
+this.”
+
+Basset did not deny the fact. He could not, indeed. His taste, his
+prejudice, his traditions all had received a blow, all were up in arms;
+and, for the moment, at any rate he repented of his visit. He felt that
+in stepping out of the normal round he had made a mistake. He should
+have foreseen, he should have known that he would meet with such
+shocks. “You have certainly astonished me,” he said after a pause of
+dismay. “I cannot think the match suitable, Mr. Colet. May I ask if my
+uncle knows of this?”
+
+“Miss Audley knows of it.”
+
+“But—you cannot yourself think it suitable!”
+
+“I have,” Colet replied dryly, “or rather I had seventy pounds a year.
+What girl, born in comfort, gently bred, sheltered from childhood could
+I ask to share that? How could I, with so little in the present and no
+prospects, ask a gentlewoman to share my lot?”
+
+Basset did not reply, but he was not convinced. A clergyman to marry a
+servant, good and refined as Etruria was! It seemed to him to be
+unseemly, to be altogether wrong.
+
+Colet too was silent a moment. Then, “I am glad I have told you this,”
+he said. “I shall not now trespass on you. On the other hand, I hope
+that you may still do something—and with your name, you can do much—for
+the good cause. If rumor goes for anything, many will in the next few
+months examine the ground on which they stand. It will be much, if what
+I have said has weight with you.”
+
+He spoke with constraint, but he spoke like a man, and Basset owned his
+equality while he resented it. He felt that he ought to renew his offer
+of hospitality, but he could not—reserve and shyness had him again in
+their grip. He muttered something about thinking it over, added a word
+or two of thanks—which were cut short by the flickering out of the
+candle—and a minute later he was in the dark deserted street, and
+walking back to his inn—not over well content with himself, if the
+truth be told.
+
+Either he should not have gone, he felt, or he should have gone the
+whole way, sunk his ideas of caste, and carried the thing through. What
+was it to him if the man was going to marry a servant?
+
+But that was a detail. The main point was that he should not have gone.
+It had been a foolish impulse—he saw it now—which had taken him to the
+barber’s shop; and one which he might have known that he would repent.
+He ought to have foreseen that he could not place himself on Colet’s
+level without coming into collision with him; that he could not draw
+wisdom from him without paying toll.
+
+An impossible person, he thought, a man of ideas quite unlike his own!
+And yet the man had spoken well and ably, and spoken from experience.
+He had told the things that he had seen as he passed from house to
+house, hard, sad facts, the outcome of rising numbers and falling
+wages, of over-production, of mouths foodless and unwanted. And all
+made worse, as he maintained, by this tax on bread, that barely touched
+the rich man’s income, yet took a heavy toll from the small wage.
+
+As he recalled some of the things that he had heard, Basset felt his
+interest revive. Colet had dealt with facts; he had attempted no
+oratory, he had cast no glamour over them. But he had brought to bear
+upon them the light of an ideal—the Christian ideal of unselfishness;
+and his hearer, while he doubted, while he did not admit that the
+solution was practical, owned its beauty.
+
+For he too, as we know, had had his aspirations, though he had rarely
+thought of turning them into action. Instead, he had hidden them behind
+the commonplace; and in this he had matched the times, which were
+commonplace. For the country lay in the trough of the wave. Neither the
+fine fury of the generation which had adored the rights of man, nor the
+splendid endurance which the great war had fostered, nor the lesser
+ardors of the Reform era, which found its single panacea in votes,
+touched or ennobled it. Great wealth and great poverty, jostling one
+another, marked a material age, seeking remedies in material things,
+despising arms, decrying enthusiasm; an age which felt, but hardly
+bowed as yet, to the breath of the new spirit.
+
+But Basset—perhaps because the present offered no great prospect to the
+straitened squire—had had his glimpses of a life higher and finer,
+devoted to something above the passing whim and the day’s indulgence, a
+life that should not be useless to those who came after him. Was it
+possible that he now heard the call? Could this be the crusade of which
+he had idly dreamed? Had the trumpet sounded at the moment of his
+utmost need?
+
+If only it were so! During the evening he had kept his sorrow at bay as
+well as he could, distracting his thoughts with passing objects. Now,
+as the boots ushered him up the close-smelling stairs to the inn’s best
+room, and he stood in his hat and coat, looking on the cold bare aspect
+and the unfamiliar things—he owned himself desolate. The thought of
+Mary, of his hopes and plans and of the end of these, returned upon him
+in an irresistible flood. The waters which he had stemmed all day,
+though all day they had lapped his lips, overwhelmed him with their
+bitterness. Mary! He had loved her and she—he knew what she thought of
+him.
+
+He could not take up the old life. She had made an end of that, the
+rather as from this time onward the Gatehouse would be closed to him by
+her presence. And the old house near Wootton where he had been wont to
+pass part of his time? That hardly met his needs or his aspirations.
+Unhappy as he was, he could not see himself sitting down in idleness,
+to brood and to rust in a home so remote, so quiet, so lost among the
+stony hills that the country said of it,
+
+
+“Wootton under Weaver
+Where God came never!”
+
+
+No, he could hardly face that. Hitherto he had not been called upon to
+say what he would do with his life. Now the question was put to him and
+he had to answer it. He had to answer it. For many minutes he sat on
+the bed staring before him. And from time to time he sighed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+THE GREAT HOUSE AT BEAUDELAYS
+
+
+It was about a week after this that two men stood on the neglected
+lawn, contemplating the long blind front of Beaudelays House. With all
+its grandeur the house lacked the dignity of ruin, for ruin presumes a
+past, and the larger part of the Great House had no past. The ancient
+wing that had welcomed brides, and echoed the laughter of children and
+given back the sullen notes of the passing-bell did not suffice to
+redeem the whole. By night the house might pass; the silent bulk
+imposed on the eye. By day it required no effort of fancy to see the
+scaffold still clinging to the brickwork, or to discern that the grand
+entrance had never opened to guest or neighbor, that everyday life had
+never gazed through the blank windows of the long façade.
+
+The house, indeed, was not only dead. It had never lived.
+
+Certainly Nature had done something to shroud the dead. The lawn was
+knee-deep in weeds, and the evergreens about it had pushed out
+embracing arms to narrow the vista before the windows. At the lower end
+of the lawn a paved terrace, the width of the house, promised a freer
+air, but even here grass sprouted between the flags, and elders labored
+to uproot the stately balustrade that looked on the lower garden. This
+garden, once formal, was now a tangle of vegetation, a wilderness amid
+whose broad walks Venuses slowly turned to Dryads, and classic urns lay
+in fragments, split by the frosts of some excessive winter. Only the
+prospect of the Trent Valley and the Derbyshire foot-hills, visible
+beyond the pleasance, still pleased; and this view was vague and sad
+and distant. For the Great House, as became its greatness, shunned the
+public eye, and, lying far back, set a wide stretch of park between its
+bounds and the verge of the upland.
+
+One of the two men was the owner. The other who bore a bunch of keys
+was Stubbs. Both had a depressed air. It would have been hard to say
+which of the two entered more deeply into the sadness of the place.
+
+Presently my lord turned his back on the house. “The view is fine,” he
+said. “The only fine thing about the place,” he added bitterly. “Isn’t
+there a sort of Belvedere below the garden?”
+
+“There is, my lord. But I fear that it is out of repair.”
+
+“Like everything else! There, don’t think I’m blaming you for it, man.
+You cannot make bricks without straw. But let us look at this
+Belvedere.”
+
+They descended the steps, and passed slowly along the grass-grown walk,
+now and again stepping aside to avoid the clutch of a straggling rose
+bough, or the fragments of a broken pillar. They paused to inspect the
+sundial, a giant Butterfly with closed wings, a replica of the stone
+monster in the Yew Walk. Lord Audley read the inscription, barely
+visible through the verdigris that stained the dial-plate:
+
+“Non sine sole volo!”
+
+
+“Just so!” he said. “A short life and a merry one!”
+
+A few paces farther along the walk they stopped to examine the basin of
+the great fountain. Cracked from edge to centre, and become a shallow
+bed of clay and weeds, it was now as unsightly as it had been beautiful
+in the days when fair women leaning over it had fed the gold fish, or
+viewed their mirrored faces in its waters.
+
+“The fortunes of the Audleys in a nutshell!” muttered the unlucky
+owner. And turning on his heel, “Confound it, Stubbs,” he cried, “I
+have had as much of this as I can stand! A little more and I shall go
+back and cut my throat! It is beginning to rain, too. D—n the
+Belvedere! Let us go into the house. That cannot be as bad as this.”
+
+Without waiting for an answer, or looking behind him, he strode back
+the way they had come. Stubbs followed in silence, and they regained
+the lawn.
+
+“I tell you what it is,” Audley continued, letting the agent come
+abreast of him. “You must find some vulgarian to take the place—iron
+man or cotton man, I don’t care who he is, if he has got the cash I You
+must let it, Stubbs. You must let it! It’s a white elephant, it’s the
+d—ndest White Elephant man ever had!”
+
+The lawyer shook his head. “You may be sure, my lord,” he said mildly,
+“I should have advised that long ago, if it were possible. But we
+couldn’t let it in its present state—for a short term; and we have no
+more power to lease it for a long one than, as your lordship knows, we
+have power to sell it.”
+
+The other swore. At the outset he had scarcely felt his poverty. But he
+was beginning to feel it. There were moments such as this when his
+withers were wrung; when the consequence which the title had brought
+failed to soften the hardships of his lot—a poor peer with a vast
+house. Had he tried to keep the Great House in repair it would have
+swallowed the whole income of the peerage—a sum which, as it was,
+barely sufficed for his needs as a bachelor.
+
+Already Stubbs had hinted that there was one way out—a rich marriage.
+And Audley had received the hint with the easiness of a man who was in
+no haste to marry and might, likely enough, marry where money was. But
+once or twice during the last few days, which they had been spending in
+a review of the property, my lord had shown irritation. When an old
+farmer had said to his face, that he must bring home a bride with a
+good fat chest, “and his lordship would be what his forbears had been,”
+the great man, in place of a laughing answer, had turned glumly away.
+
+Presently the two halted at the door of the north wing. Stubbs unlocked
+it and pushed it open. They entered an ante-room of moderate size.
+
+“Faugh!” Audley cried. “Open a window! Break one if necessary.”
+
+Stubbs succeeded in opening one, and they passed on into the great
+hall, a room sixty feet long and open to the roof, a gallery running
+round it. A withdrawing-room of half the length opened at one end, and
+midway along the inner side a short passage led to a second hall—the
+servants’ hall—the twin of this. Together they formed an H, and were
+probably a Jacobean copy of a Henry the Eighth building. A long table,
+some benches, and a score of massive chairs furnished the room. Between
+the windows hung a few ragged pictures, and on either side of the
+farther door a piece of tapestry hung askew.
+
+Audley looked about him. In this room eighty years before the old lord
+had held his revels. The two hearths had glowed with logs, a hundred
+wax-lights had shone on silver and glass and the rosy tints of old
+wine. Guests in satin and velvet, henchmen and led captains, had filled
+it with laughter and jest, and song. With a foot on the table they had
+toasted the young king—not stout Farmer George, not the old, mad
+monarch, but the gay young sovereign. To-day desolation reigned. The
+windows gray with dirt let in a grisly light. All was bare and cold and
+rusty—the webs of spiders crossed the very hearths. The old lord,
+mouldering in his coffin, was not more unlike that Georgian reveller
+than was the room of to-day unlike the room of eighty years before.
+
+Perhaps the thought struck his descendant. “God! What a charnel-house!”
+he cried. “To think that men made merry in this room. It’s a vault,
+it’s a grave! Let us get away from it. What’s through, man?”
+
+They passed into the withdrawing-room, where panels of needlework of
+Queen Anne’s time, gloomy with age, filled the wall spaces, and a few
+pieces of furniture crouched under shrouds of dust. As they stood
+gazing two rats leapt from a screen of Cordovan leather that lay in
+tatters on the floor. The rats paused an instant to stare at the
+intruders, then fled in panic.
+
+The younger man advanced to one of the panels in the wall. “A hunting
+scene?” he said. “These may be worth money some day.”
+
+The lawyer looked doubtful. “It will be a long day first, I am afraid,”
+he said. “It’s funereal stuff at the best, my lord.”
+
+“At any rate it is out of reach of the rats,” Lord Audley answered. He
+cast a look of distaste at the shreds of the screen. He touched them
+with his foot. A third rat sprang out and fled squeaking to covert.
+“Oh, d—n!” he said. “Let us see something else.”
+
+The lawyer led the way upstairs to the ghostly, echoing gallery that
+ran round the hall. They glanced into the principal guest-room, which
+was over the drawing-room. Then they went by the short passage of the H
+to the range of bedrooms over the servants’ hall. For the most part
+they opened one from the other.
+
+“The parents slept in the outer and the young ladies in the inner,”
+Audley said, smiling. “Gad! it tells a tale of the times!”
+
+Stubbs opened the nearest door and recoiled. “Take care, my lord!” he
+said. “Here are the bats!”
+
+“Faugh! What a smell! Can’t you keep them out?”
+
+“We tried years ago—I hate them like poison—but it was of no use. They
+are in all these upper rooms.”
+
+They were. For when Stubbs, humping his shoulders as under a shower,
+opened a second door, the bats streamed forth in a long silent
+procession, only to stream back again as silently. In a dusky corner of
+the second room a cluster, like a huge bunch of grapes, hung to one of
+the rafters. Now and again a bat detached itself and joined the living
+current that swept without a sound through the shadowy rooms.
+
+“There’s nothing beyond these rooms?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Then let us go down. Rats and bats and rottenness! _Non sine sole
+volo!_ We may not, but the bats do. Let us go down! Or no! I was
+forgetting. Where is the Muniment Room?”
+
+“This way, my lord,” Stubbs replied, turning with suspicious
+readiness—the bats were his pet aversion. “I brought a candle and some
+of the new lucifers. This way, my lord.”
+
+He led the way down to a door set in a corner of the ante-room. He
+unlocked this and they found themselves at the foot of a circular
+staircase. On the farther side of the stairfoot was another door which
+led, Stubbs explained, into the servants’ quarters. “This turret,” he
+added, “is older even than the wing, and forms no part of the H. It was
+retained because it supplied a second staircase, and also a short cut
+from the servants’ hall to the entrance. The Muniment Room is over this
+lobby on the first floor. Allow me to go first, my lord.”
+
+The air was close, but not unpleasant, and the stairs were clean. On
+the first floor a low-browed door, clamped and studded with iron,
+showed itself. Stubbs halted before it. There was a sputter. A light
+shone out. “Wonderful invention!” he said. “Electric telegraph not more
+wonderful, though marvellous invention that, my lord.”
+
+“Yes,” the other answered dryly. “But—when were you here last, Stubbs?”
+
+“Not for a twelvemonth, my lord.”
+
+“Leave your candle?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Then what’s that?” The young man pointed to something that lay in the
+angle between a stair and the wall.
+
+“God bless my soul!” the lawyer cried. “It’s a candle.”
+
+“And clean. It has not been there a week. Who has been here, my
+friend?”
+
+Stubbs reflected. “No one with my authority,” he said. “But if the
+devil himself has been here,” he continued, stoutly recovering himself,
+“he can have done no harm. I can prove that in five minutes, my lord—if
+you will kindly hold the light.” He inserted a large key in the lock,
+and with an effort, he shot back the bolts. He pushed open the door and
+signed to Lord Audley to enter.
+
+He did so, and Stubbs followed. They stood and looked about them. They
+were in a whitewashed chamber twelve feet square, clean, bare, empty.
+The walls gave back the light so that the one candle lit the place
+perfectly.
+
+“It’s as good as air-tight,” Stubbs said with pride. “And you see, my
+lord, we swept it as bare as the palm of my hand. I can answer for it
+that not a shred of paper or a piece of wax was left.”
+
+Audley, gazing about him, seemed satisfied. His face relaxed. “Yes,” he
+said, “you could not overlook anything in a place like this. I’m glad
+I’ve seen it.”
+
+He was turning to go when a thought struck him. He lowered the light
+and scanned the floor. “All the same, somebody has been here!” he
+exclaimed. “There’s one of the things you are so pleased with—a
+lucifer!”
+
+Stubbs stooped and looked. “A lucifer?” he repeated. He picked up the
+bit of charred wood and examined it. “Now how did that come here? I
+never used one till six months ago.”
+
+My lord frowned. “Who is it?” he asked.
+
+“Some one, I fear, who has had a key made,” the agent answered, shaking
+his head,
+
+“I can see that for myself. But has he learned anything?”
+
+Stubbs stared. “There’s nothing to learn, my lord,” he said. “You can
+see that. Whoever he is, he has cracked the nut and found no kernel!”
+
+The young man looked round him again. He nodded. “I suppose so,” he
+said. But he seemed ill at ease and inclined to find fault. He threw
+the light of the candle this way and that, as if he expected the clean
+white walls to tell a tale. “What’s that?” he asked suddenly. “A crack?
+Or what?”
+
+Stubbs looked, passed his hand over the mark on the wall, effaced it.
+“No, my lord, a cobweb,” he said. “Nothing.”
+
+There was no more to be seen, yet Audley seemed loth to go. At length
+he turned and went out. Stubbs closed and locked the door behind them,
+then he took the candle from his lordship and invited him to go down
+before him. Still the young man hesitated. “I suppose we can learn
+nothing more?” he said.
+
+“Nothing, my lord,” Stubbs answered. “To tell you the truth, I have
+long thought Mr. John mad, and it is possible that his madness has
+taken this turn. But I am equally sure that there is nothing for him to
+discover, if he spends every day of his life here.”
+
+“All the same I don’t like it,” the owner objected. “Whoever has been
+here has no right here. It is odd that I had some notion of this before
+we came. You may depend upon it that this was why he fixed himself at
+the Gatehouse.”
+
+“He may have had something of the sort in his mind,” Stubbs admitted.
+“But I don’t think so, my lord. More probably, being here and idle, he
+took to wandering in for lack of something to do.”
+
+“And by and by, had a key made and strayed into the Muniment Room! No,
+that won’t do, Stubbs. And frankly there should be closer supervision
+here. It should not have remained for me to discover this.”
+
+He began to descend, leaving Stubbs to digest the remark; who for his
+part thought honestly that too much was being made of the matter.
+Probably the intruder was John Audley; the man had a bee in his bonnet,
+and what more likely than that he should be taken with a craze to haunt
+the house which he believed was his own? But the agent was too prudent
+to defend himself while the young man’s vexation was fresh. He followed
+him down in silence, and before many minutes had passed, they were in
+the open air, and had locked the door behind them.
+
+Clouds hung low on the tops of the trees, mist veiled the view, and a
+small rain was falling on the wet lawn. Nevertheless the young man
+moved into the open. “Come this way,” he said.
+
+The lawyer turned up the collar of his coat and followed him
+unwillingly. “Where does he get in?” my lord asked. It seemed as if the
+longer he dwelt on the matter the less he liked it. “Not by that
+door—the lock is rusty. The key had shrieked in it. Probably he enters
+by one of the windows in the new part.”
+
+He walked towards the middle of the lawn and Stubbs, thankful that he
+wore Wellington boots, followed him.
+
+The lawyer thought that he had never seen the house wear so dreary an
+aspect as it wore under the gray weeping sky. But his lordship was more
+practical. “These windows look the most likely,” he said after a short
+survey: and he dragged his unwilling attendant to the point he had
+marked.
+
+A nearer view strengthened his suspicions. On the sill of one of the
+windows were scratches and stains. “You see?” he said. “It should not
+have been left to me to discover this! Probably John Audley comes from
+the Gatehouse by the Yew Walk.” He turned to measure the distance with
+his eye, the distance which divided the spot from the Iron Gate.
+“That’s it,” he said, “he comes——”
+
+Then, “Good G—d!” he muttered. “Look! Look!” Stubbs looked. They both
+looked. Beyond the lawn, on the farther side of the iron grille and
+clinging to it with both hands, a man stood bareheaded under the rain.
+Whether he had come uncovered, or his hat had been jerked from him by
+some movement caused by their appearance, they could not tell; nor how
+long he had stood thus, gazing at them through the bars. But they could
+see that his eyes never wavered, that his hands gripped the iron, and
+the two knew by instinct that in the intensity of his hate, the man was
+insensible alike to the rain that drenched him, and to the wind that
+blew out the skirts of his thin black coat.
+
+Even Stubbs held his breath. Even he felt that there was something
+uncanny and ominous in the appearance. For the gazer was John Audley.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+TO THE RESCUE
+
+
+Stubbs was the first to collect himself, but a minute elapsed before he
+spoke. Then, “He must be mad,” he cried, “mad, to expose himself to the
+weather at his age. If I had not seen it, I couldn’t believe it!”
+
+“I suppose it is John Audley?”
+
+“Yes.” Then raising his voice, “My lord! I don’t think I would go to
+him now!”
+
+But Audley was already striding across the lawn towards the gate. The
+lawyer hesitated, gave way, and followed him.
+
+They were within twenty paces of the silent watcher when he moved—up to
+that time he might have been a lay figure. He shook one hand in the
+air, as if he would beat them off, then he turned and walked stiffly
+away. Half a dozen steps took him out of sight. The Yew Walk swallowed
+him.
+
+But, quickly as he vanished, the lawyer had had time to see that he
+staggered. “I fear, my lord, he is ill,” he said. “He will never reach
+the Gatehouse in that state. I had better follow him.”
+
+“Why the devil did he come here?” Audley retorted savagely. The
+watcher’s strange aspect, his face, white against the dark yews, his
+stillness, his gesture, a something ominous in all, had shaken him. “If
+he had stopped at home——”
+
+“Still——”
+
+“D—n him, it’s his affair!”
+
+“Still we cannot leave him if he has fallen, my lord,” Stubbs replied
+with decision. And without waiting for his employer’s assent he tried
+the gate. It was locked, but in a trice he found the key on his bunch,
+turned it, and pushed back the gate. Audley noticed that it moved
+silently on its hinges.
+
+Stubbs, the gate open, began to feel ashamed of his impulse. Probably
+there was nothing amiss after all. But he had hardly looked along the
+path before he uttered a cry, and hurrying forward, stooped over a
+bundle of clothes that lay in the middle of the walk. It was John
+Audley. Apparently he had tripped over a root and lain where he had
+fallen.
+
+Stubbs’s cry summoned the other, who followed him through the gate, to
+find him on his knees supporting the old man’s head. The sight recalled
+Audley to his better self. The mottled face, the staring eyes, the
+helpless limbs shocked him. “Good G—d!” he cried, “you were right,
+Stubbs! He might have died if we had left him.”
+
+“He would have died,” Stubbs answered. “As it is—I am not sure.” He
+opened the waistcoat, felt for the beating of the heart, bent his ear
+to it. “No, I don’t think he’s gone,” he said, “but the heart is
+feeble, very feeble. We must have brandy! My lord, you are the more
+active. Will you go to the Gatehouse—there is no nearer place—and get
+some? And something to carry him home! A hurdle if there is nothing
+better, and a couple of men?”
+
+“Right!” Audley cried.
+
+“And don’t lose a minute, my lord! He’s nearly gone.”
+
+Audley stripped off his overcoat. “Wrap this about him!” he said. And
+before the other could answer he had started for the Gatehouse, at a
+pace which he believed that he could keep up.
+
+Pad, pad, my lord ran under the yew trees, swish, swish across the
+soaking grass, about the great Butterfly. Pad, pad, again through the
+gloom under the yews! Not too fast, he told himself—he was a big man
+and he must save himself. Now he saw before him the opening into the
+park, and the light falling on the pale turf. And then, at a point not
+more than twenty yards short of the open ground, he tripped over a
+root, tried to recover himself, struck another root, and fell.
+
+The fall shook him, but he was young, and he was quickly on his feet.
+He paused an instant to brush the dirt from his hands and knees; and it
+was during that instant that his inbred fear of John Audley, and the
+certainty that if John Audley died he need fear no more, rose before
+him.
+
+Yes, if he died—this man who was even now plotting against him—there
+was an end of that fear! There was an end of uneasiness, of anxiety, of
+the alarm that assailed him in the small hours, of the forebodings that
+showed him stripped of title and income and consequence. Stripped of
+all!
+
+Five seconds passed, and he still stood, engaged with his hands. Five
+more; it was his knees he was brushing now—and very carefully. Another
+five—the sweat broke out on his brow though the day was cold. Twenty
+seconds, twenty-five! His face showed white in the gloom. And still he
+stood. He glanced behind him. No one could see him.
+
+But the movement discovered the man to himself, and with an oath he
+broke away. He thrust the damning thought from him, he sprang forward.
+He ran. In ten strides he was in the open park, and trotting steadily,
+his elbows to his sides, across the sward. The blessed light was about
+him, the wind swept past his ears, the cleansing rain whipped his face.
+Thank God, he had left behind him the heavy air and noisome scent of
+the yews. He hated them. He would cut them all down some day.
+
+For in a strange way he associated them with the temptation which had
+assailed him. And he was thankful, most thankful, that he had put that
+temptation from him—had put it from him, when most men, he thought,
+would have succumbed to it. Thank God, he had not! The farther he went,
+indeed, the better he felt. By the time he saw the Gatehouse before
+him, he was sure that few men, exposed to that temptation, would have
+overcome it. For if John Audley died what a relief it would be! And he
+had looked very ill; he had looked like a man at the point of death.
+The brandy could not reach him under—well, under half an hour. Half an
+hour was a long time, when a man looked like that. “I’ll do my best,”
+he thought. “Then if he dies, well and good. I’ve always been afraid of
+him.”
+
+He did not spare himself, but he was not in training, and he was well
+winded when he reached the Gatehouse. A last effort carried him between
+the Butterflies, and he halted on the flags of the courtyard. A woman,
+whose skirts were visible, but whose head and shoulders were hidden by
+an umbrella, was standing in the doorway on his left, speaking to some
+one in the house. She heard his footsteps and turned.
+
+“Lord Audley!” she exclaimed—for it was Mary Audley. Then with a
+woman’s quickness, “You have come from my uncle?” she cried. “Is he
+ill?”
+
+Audley nodded. “I am come for some brandy,” he gasped.
+
+She did not waste a moment. She sped into the house, and to the
+dining-room. “I had missed him,” she cried over her shoulder. “The
+man-servant is away. I hoped he might be with him.”
+
+In a trice she had opened a cellarette and taken from it a decanter of
+brandy. Then she saw that he could not carry this at any speed, and she
+turned to the sideboard and took a wicker flask from a drawer. With a
+steady hand and without the loss of a minute—he found her presence of
+mind admirable—she filled this.
+
+As she corked it, Mrs. Toft appeared, wiping her hands on her apron.
+“Dear, dear, miss,” she said, “is the master bad? But it’s no wonder
+when he, that doesn’t quit the fire for a week together, goes out like
+this? And Toft away and all!” She stared at his lordship. Probably she
+knew him by sight.
+
+“Will you get his bed warmed, Mrs. Toft,” Mary answered. She gave Lord
+Audley the flask. “Please don’t lose a moment,” she urged. “I am
+following—oh yes, I am. But you will go faster.”
+
+She had not a thought, he saw, for the disorder of her dress, or for
+her hair dishevelled by the wind, and scarce a thought for him. He
+decided that he had never seen her to such advantage, but it was no
+time for compliments, nor was she in the mood for them. Without more he
+nodded and set off on his return journey—he had not been in the house
+three minutes. By and by he looked back, and saw that Mary was
+following on his heels. She had snatched up a sun-bonnet, discarded the
+umbrella, and, heedless of the rain, was coming after him as swiftly
+and lightly as Atalanta of the golden apple. “Gad, she’s not one of the
+fainting sort!” he reflected; and also that if he had given way to that
+d—d temptation he could not have looked her in the face. “As it is,”
+his mind ran, “what are the odds the old boy’s not dead when we get
+there? If he is—I am safe! If he is not, I might do worse than think of
+her. It would checkmate him finely. More”—he looked again over his
+shoulder—“she’s a fine mover, by Gad, and her figure’s perfect! Even
+that rag on her head don’t spoil her!” Whereupon he thought of a
+certain Lady Adela with whom he was very friendly, who had political
+connections and would some day have a plum. The comparison was not, in
+the matter of fineness and figure, to Lady Adela’s advantage. Her lines
+were rather on the Flemish side.
+
+Meanwhile Mary was feeling anything but an Atalanta. Wind and rain and
+wet grass, loosened hair and swaying skirts do not make for romance.
+But in her anxiety she gave small thought to these. Her one instinct
+was to help. With all his oddity her uncle had been kind to her, and
+she longed to show him that she was grateful. And he was her one
+relative. She had no one else in the world. He had given her what of
+home he had, and ease, and a security which she had never known before.
+Were she to lose him now—the mere fancy spurred her to fresh exertions,
+and in spite of a pain in her side, in spite of clinging skirts, and
+shoes that threatened to leave her feet, she pushed on. She was not far
+behind Audley when he reached the Yew Walk.
+
+She saw him plunge into it, she followed, and was on the scene not many
+seconds later. When she caught sight of the little group kneeling about
+the prostrate man, that sense of tragedy, and of the inevitable, which
+assails at such a time, shook her. The thing always possible, never
+expected, had happened at last.
+
+Then the coolness which women find in these emergencies returned. She
+knelt between the men, took the insensible head on her arm, held out
+her other hand for the cup. “Has he swallowed any?” she asked, taking
+command of the situation.
+
+“No,” Toft answered—and she became aware that the man with Lord Audley
+was the servant.
+
+She waited for no more, she tilted the cup, and by some knack she
+succeeded where Toft had failed. A little of the spirit was swallowed.
+She improvised a pillow and laid the head down on it. “The lower the
+better,” she murmured. She felt the hands and began to rub one. “Rub
+the other,” she said to Toft. “The first thing to do is to get him
+home! Have you a carriage? How near can you bring it, Lord Audley?”
+
+“We can bring it to the park at the end of the walk,” he answered. “My
+agent has gone to fetch it.”
+
+“Will you hasten it?” she replied. “Toft will stay with me. And bring
+something, please, on which you can carry him to it.”
+
+“At once,” Audley answered, and he went off in the direction of the
+Great House.
+
+“I’ve seen him as bad before, Miss,” Toft said. “I found that he had
+gone out without his hat and I followed him, but I could not trace him
+at once. I don’t think you need feel alarmed.”
+
+Certainly the face had lost its mottled look, the eyes were now shut,
+the limbs lay more naturally. “If he were only at home!” Mary answered.
+“But every moment he is exposed to the cold is against him. He must be
+wet through.”
+
+She induced the patient to swallow another mouthful of brandy, and with
+their eyes on his face the two watched for the first gleam of
+consciousness. It came suddenly. John Audley’s eyes opened. He stared
+at them.
+
+His mind, however, still wandered. “I knew it!” he muttered. “They
+could not be there and I not know it! But the wall! The wall is
+thick—thick and——” He was silent again.
+
+The rambling mind is to those who are not wont to deal with it a most
+uncanny thing, and Mary looked at Toft to see what he made of it. But
+the servant had eyes only for his master. He was gazing at him with an
+absorbed face.
+
+“Ay, a thick wall!” the sick man murmured. “They may look and look,
+they’ll not see through it.” He was silent a moment, then, “All bare!”
+he murmured. “All bare!” He chuckled faintly, and tried to raise
+himself, but sank back. “Fools!” he whispered, “fools, when in ten
+minutes if they took out a brick——”
+
+The servant cut him short. “Here’s his lordship!” he cried. He spoke so
+sharply that Mary looked up in surprise, wondering what was amiss. Lord
+Audley was within three or four paces of them—the carpet of yew leaves
+had deadened his footsteps. “Here’s his lordship, sir!” Toft repeated
+in the same tone, his mouth close to John Audley’s ear.
+
+The servant’s manner shocked Mary. “Hush, Toft!” she said. “Do you want
+to startle him?”
+
+“His lordship will startle him,” Toft retorted. He looked over his
+shoulder, and without ceremony he signed to Lord Audley to stand back.
+
+“Bare, quite bare!” John Audley muttered, his mind still far away. “But
+if they took out—if they took out——”
+
+Toft waved his hand again—waved it wildly.
+
+“All right, I understand,” Lord Audley said. He had not at first
+grasped what was wanted, but the man’s repeated gestures enlightened
+him. He retired to a position where he was out of the sick man’s sight.
+
+The servant wiped the sweat from his brow. “He mustn’t see him!” he
+repeated insistently. “Lord! what a turn it gave me. I ask your pardon,
+Miss,” he continued, “but I know the master so well.” He cast an uneasy
+glance over his shoulder. “If the master’s eyes lit on him once, only
+once, when he’s in this state, I’d not answer for his life.”
+
+Mary reproached herself. “You are quite right, Toft,” she said. “I
+ought to have thought of that myself.”
+
+“He must not see any strangers!”
+
+“He shall not. You are quite right.”
+
+But Toft was still uneasy. He looked round. Stubbs and a man who had
+been working in the neighborhood were bringing up a sheep-hurdle, and
+again the butler’s anxiety overcame him. “D—n!” he said: and he rose to
+his feet. “I think they want to kill him amongst them! Why can’t they
+keep away?”
+
+“Hush! Toft. Why——”
+
+“He mustn’t see the lawyer! He must not see him on any account.”
+
+Mary nodded. “I will arrange it!” she said. “Only don’t excite him. You
+will do him harm that way if you are not careful. I will speak to
+them.”
+
+She went to meet them and explained, while Stubbs, who had not seen her
+before, considered her with interest. So this was Miss Audley, Peter
+Audley’s daughter! She told them that she thought it better that her
+uncle should not find strangers about him when he came to himself. They
+agreed—it seemed quite natural—and it was arranged that Toft and the
+man should carry him as far as the carriage, while Mary walked beside
+him; and that afterwards she and Toft should travel with him. The
+carriage cushions were placed on the hurdle, and the helpless man was
+lifted on to them. Toft and the laborer raised their burden, and slowly
+and heavily, with an occasional stagger, they bore it along the sodden
+path. Mary saw that the sweat sprang out on Toft’s sallow face and that
+his knees shook under him. Clearly the man was taxing his strength to
+the utmost, and she felt some concern—she had not given him credit for
+such fidelity. However, he held out until they reached the carriage.
+
+Babbling a word now and again, John Audley was moved into the vehicle.
+Mary mounted beside him and supported his head, while Toft climbed to
+the box, and at a footpace they set off across the sward, the laborer
+plodding at the tail of the carriage, and Lord Audley and Stubbs
+following a score of paces behind. The rain had ceased, but the clouds
+were low and leaden, the trees dripped sadly, and the little procession
+across the park had a funereal look. To Mary the way seemed long, to
+Toft still longer. With every moment his head was round. His eyes were
+now on his master, now jealously cast on those who brought up the rear.
+But everything comes to an end, and at length they swung into the
+courtyard, where Mrs. Toft, capable and cool, met them and took a load
+off Mary’s shoulders.
+
+“He’s that bad is he?” she said calmly. “Then the sooner he’s in his
+bed the better. ’Truria’s warming it. How will we get him up? I could
+carry him myself if that’s all. If Toft’ll take his feet, I’ll do the
+rest. No need for another soul to come in!” with a glance at Lord
+Audley. “But if they would fetch the doctor I’d not say no, Miss.”
+
+“I’ll ask them to do that,” Mary said.
+
+“And don’t you worrit, Miss,” Mrs. Toft continued, eyeing the sick man
+judicially. “He’s been nigh as bad as this before and been about within
+the week. There’s some as when they wool-gathers, there’s no worse
+sign. But the master he’s never all here, nor all there, and like a
+Broseley butter-pot another touch of the kiln will neither make him nor
+break him. Now, Toft, wide of the door-post, and steady, man.”
+
+Lord Audley and Stubbs had remained outside, but when they saw Mary
+coming towards them, the young man left Stubbs and went to meet her.
+“How is he?” he asked.
+
+“Mrs. Toft thinks well of him. She has seen him nearly as ill before,
+she says. But if he recovers,” Mary continued gratefully, “we owe his
+life to you. Had you not found him he must have died. And if you had
+lost a moment in bringing the news, I am sure that we should have been
+too late.”
+
+The young man might have given some credit to Stubbs, but he did not;
+perhaps because time pressed, perhaps because he felt that his virtue
+in resisting a certain temptation deserved its reward. Instead he
+looked at Mary with a sympathy so ardent that her eyes fell. “Who would
+not have done as much?” he said. “If not for him—for you.”
+
+“Will you add one kindness then?” she answered. “Will you send Dr.
+Pepper as quickly as possible?”
+
+“Without the loss of a minute,” he said. “But one thing before I go. I
+cannot come here to inquire, yet I should like to know how he goes on.
+Will you walk a little way down the Riddsley road at noon to-morrow,
+and tell me how he fares?”
+
+Mary hesitated. But when he had done so much for them, when he had as
+good as saved her uncle’s life, how could she be churlish? How could
+she play the prude? “Of course I will,” she said frankly. “I hope I
+shall bring a good report.”
+
+“Thank you,” he said. “Until to-morrow!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+MASKS AND FACES
+
+
+Cherbuliez opens one of his stories with the remark that if the law of
+probabilities ruled, the hero and heroine would never have met, seeing
+that the one lived in Venice and the other seldom left Paris. That in
+spite of this they fell in with one another was enough to suggest to
+the lady that Destiny was at work to unite them.
+
+He put into words a thought which has entertained millions of lovers.
+If in face of the odds of three hundred and sixty-four to one Phyllis
+shares her birthday with Corydon, if Frederica sprains her ankle and
+the ready arm belongs to a Frederic, if Mademoiselle has a _grain de
+beauté_ on the right ear, and Monsieur a plain mole on the left—here is
+at once matter for reverie, and the heart is given almost before the
+hands have met.
+
+This was the fourth occasion on which Audley had come to Mary’s rescue,
+and, sensible as she was, she was too thoroughly woman to be proof
+against the suggestion. On three of the four occasions the odds had
+been against his appearance. Yet he had come. To-day in particular, as
+if no pain that threatened her could be indifferent to him, as if no
+trouble approached her but touched a nerve in him, he had risen from
+the very ground to help and sustain her.
+
+Could the coldest decline to feel interest in one so strangely linked
+with her by fortune? Could the most prudent in such a case abstain from
+day dreams, in which love and service, devotion and constancy, played
+their parts?
+
+_Sic itur ad astra!_ So men and women begin to love.
+
+She spent the morning between the room in which John Audley was making
+a slow recovery, and the deserted library which already wore a cold and
+unused aspect. In the one and the other she felt a restlessness and a
+disturbance which she was fain to set down to yesterday’s alarm. The
+old interests invited her in vain. Do what she would, she could not
+keep her mind off the appointment before her. Her eyes grew dreamy, her
+thoughts strayed, her color came and went. At one moment she would
+plunge into a thousand attentions to her uncle, at another she opened
+books only to close them. She looked at the clock—surely the hands were
+not moving! She looked again—it could not be as late as that! The truth
+was that Mary was not in love, but she was ready to be in love. She was
+glad and sorry, grave and gay, without reason; like a stream that
+dances over the shallows, and rippling and twinkling goes its way
+through the sunshine, knowing nothing of the deep pool that awaits it.
+
+Presently, acting upon some impulse, she opened a drawer in one of the
+tables. It contained a portrait in crayons of Peter Basset, which John
+Audley had shown her. She took out the sketch and set it against a book
+where the light fell upon it, and she examined it. At first with a
+smile—that he should have been so mad as to think what he had thought!
+And then with a softer look. How hard she had been to him! How
+unfeeling! Nay, how cruel!
+
+She sat for a long time looking at the portrait. But in fact she had
+forgotten that it was before her, when the clock, striking the
+half—hour before noon, surprised her. Then she thrust the portrait back
+into its drawer, and went with a composed face to put on her hat.
+
+The past summer had been one of the wettest ever known, for rain had
+fallen on five days out of seven. But to-day it was fine, and as Mary
+descended the road that led from the house towards Riddsley, a road
+open to the vale on one side and flanked on the other by a rising slope
+covered with brushwood, a watery sun was shining. Its rays, aided by
+the clearness of the air, brought out the colors of stubble and field,
+flood and coppice, that lay below. And men looking up from toil or
+pleasure, leaning on spades or pausing before they crossed a stile, saw
+the Gatehouse transformed to a fairy lodge, gray, clear—cut,
+glittering, breaking the line of forest trees—saw it as if it had stood
+in another world.
+
+Mary looked back, looked forward, admired, descended. She had made up
+her mind that Lord Audley would meet her at a turn near the foot of the
+hill, where a Cross had once stood, and where the crumbling base and
+moss-clothed steps still bade travellers rest and be thankful.
+
+He was there, and Mary owned the attraction of the big smiling face and
+the burly figure, that in a rough, caped riding-coat still kept an air
+of fashion. He on his side saw coming to meet him, through the pale
+sunshine, not as yesterday an Atalanta, but a cool Dian, with her hands
+in a large muff.
+
+“You bring a good report, I hope?” he cried before they met.
+
+“Very good,” Mary replied, sparkling a little as she looked at him—was
+not the sun shining? “My uncle is much better this morning. Dr. Pepper
+says that it was mainly exertion acting on a weak heart. He expects him
+to be downstairs in a week and to be himself in a fortnight. But he
+will have to be more careful in future.”
+
+“That is good!”
+
+“He says, too, that if you had not acted so promptly, my uncle must
+have died.”
+
+“Well, he was pretty far gone, I must say.”
+
+“So, as he will not thank you himself, you must let me thank you.” And
+Mary held out the hand she had hitherto kept in her muff. She was
+determined not to be a prude.
+
+He pressed it discreetly. “I am glad,” he said. “Very glad. Perhaps
+after this he may think better of me.”
+
+She laughed. “I don’t think that there is a chance of it,” she said.
+
+“No? Well, I suppose it was foolish, but do you know, I did hope that
+this might bring us together.”
+
+“You may dismiss it,” she answered, smiling.
+
+“Ah!” he said. “Then tell me this. How in the world did he come to be
+there? Without a hat? Without a coat? And so far from the house?”
+
+Mary hesitated. He had turned, they were walking side by side. “I am
+not sure that I ought to tell you,” she said. “What I know I gathered
+from a word that Mr. Audley let fall when he was rambling. He seems to
+have had some instinct, some feeling that you were there and to have
+been forced to learn if it was so.”
+
+“But forced? By what?” Lord Audley asked. “I don’t understand.”
+
+“I don’t understand either,” Mary answered.
+
+“He could not know that we were there?”
+
+“But he seems to have known.”
+
+“Strange,” he murmured. “Does he often stray away like that?”
+
+“He does, sometimes,” she admitted reluctantly.
+
+“Ah!” Audley was silent a moment. Then, “Well, I am glad he is better,”
+he said in the tone of one who dismisses a subject. “Let us talk of
+something else—ourselves. Are you aware that this is the fourth time
+that I have come to your rescue?”
+
+“I know that it is the fourth time that you have been very useful,” she
+admitted. She wished that she had been able to control her color, but
+though he spoke playfully there was meaning in his voice.
+
+“I, too, have a second sense it seems,” he said, almost purring as he
+looked at her. “Did you by any chance think of me, when you missed your
+uncle?”
+
+“Not for a moment,” she retorted.
+
+“Perhaps—you thought of Mr. Basset?”
+
+“No, nor of Mr. Basset. Had he been at the Gatehouse I might have. But
+he is away.”
+
+“Away, is he? Oh!” He looked at her with a whimsical smile. “Do you
+know that when he met us the other evening I thought that he was a
+little out of temper? It was not a continuance of that which took him
+away, I suppose?”
+
+Mary would have given the world to show an unmoved face at that moment.
+But she could not. Nor could she feel as angry as she wished. “I
+thought we were going to talk of ourselves,” she said.
+
+“I thought that we were talking of you.”
+
+On that, “I am afraid that I must be going back,” she said. And she
+stopped.
+
+“But I am going back with you!”
+
+“Are you? Well, you may come as far as the Cross.”
+
+“Oh, hang the Cross!” he answered with a masterfulness of which Mary
+owned the charm, while she rebelled against it. “I shall come as far as
+I like! And hang Basset too—if he makes you unhappy!” He laughed.
+“We’ll talk of—what shall we talk of, Mary? Why, we are cousins—does
+not that entitle me to call you ‘Mary’?”
+
+“I would rather you did not,” she said, and this time there was no lack
+of firmness in her tone. She remembered what Basset had said about her
+name and—and for the moment the other’s airiness displeased her.
+
+“But we are cousins.”
+
+“Then you can call me cousin,” she answered.
+
+He laughed. “Beaten again!” he said.
+
+“And I can call you cousin,” she said sedately. “Indeed, I am going to
+treat you as a cousin. I want you, if not to do, to think of doing
+something for me. I don’t know,” nervously, “whether I am asking more
+than I ought—if so you must forgive me. But it is not for myself.”
+
+“You frighten me!” he said. “What is it?”
+
+“It’s about Mr. Colet, the curate whom you helped us to save from those
+men at Brown Heath. He has been shamefully treated. What they did to
+him might be forgiven—they knew no better. But I hear that because he
+preaches what is not to everybody’s taste, but what thousands and
+thousands are saying, he is to lose his curacy. And that is his
+livelihood. It seems most wicked to me, because I am told that no one
+else will employ him. And what is he to do? He has no friends——”
+
+“He has one eloquent friend.”
+
+“Don’t laugh at me!” she cried.
+
+“I am not laughing,” he answered. He was, in fact, wondering how he
+should deal with this—this fad of hers. A little, too, he was wondering
+what it meant. It could not be that she was in love with Colet. Absurd!
+He recalled the look of the man. “I am not laughing,” he repeated more
+slowly. “But what do you want me to do?”
+
+“To use your influence for him,” Mary explained, “either with the
+rector to keep him or with some one else to employ him.”
+
+“I see.”
+
+“He only did what he thought was his duty. And—and because he did it,
+is he to pay with all he has in the world?”
+
+“It seems a hard case.”
+
+“It is more, it is an abominable injustice!” she cried.
+
+“Yes,” he said slowly. “It seems so. It certainly seems hard. But let
+me—don’t be angry with me if I put another side.” He spoke with careful
+moderation. “It is my experience that good, easy men, such as I take
+the rector of Riddsley to be, rarely do a thing which seems cruel,
+without reason. A clergyman, for instance; he has generally thought out
+more clearly than you or I what it is right to say in the pulpit; how
+far it is lawful, and then again how far it is wise to deal with
+matters of debate. He has considered how far a pronouncement may offend
+some, and so may render his office less welcome to them. That is one
+consideration. Probably, too, he has considered that a statement, if
+events falsify it, will injure him with his poorer parishioners who
+look up to him as wiser than themselves. Well, when such a man has laid
+down a rule and finds a younger clergyman bent upon transgressing it,
+is it unreasonable if he puts his foot down?”
+
+“I had not looked at it in that way.”
+
+“And that, perhaps, is not all,” he resumed. “You know that a thing may
+be true, but that it is not always wise to proclaim it. It may be too
+strong meat. It may be true, for instance, that corn-dealers make an
+unfair profit out of the poor; but it is not a truth that you would
+tell a hungry crowd outside the corn-dealer’s shop on a Saturday
+night.”
+
+“No,” Mary allowed reluctantly. “Perhaps not.”
+
+“And again—I have nothing to say against Colet. It is enough for me
+that he is a friend of yours——”
+
+“I have a reason for being interested in him. I am sure that if you
+heard him——”
+
+“I might be carried away? Precisely. But is it not possible that he has
+seen much of one side of this question, much of the poverty for which a
+cure is sought, without being for that reason fitted to decide what the
+cure should be?”
+
+Mary nodded. “Have you formed any opinion yourself?” she asked.
+
+But he was too prudent to enter on a discussion. He saw that so far he
+had impressed her with what he had said, and he was not going to risk
+the advantage he had gained. “No,” he said, “I am weighing the matter
+at this moment. We are on the verge of a crisis on the Corn Laws, and
+it is my duty to consider the question carefully. I am doing so. I have
+hitherto been a believer in the tax. I may change my views, but I shall
+not do so hastily. As for your friend, I will consider what can be
+done, but I fear that he has been imprudent.”
+
+“Sometimes,” she ventured, “imprudence is a virtue.”
+
+“And its own reward!” he retorted. They had passed the Cross, they were
+by this time high on the hill, with one accord they came to a stand.
+“However, I will think it over,” he continued. “I will think it over,
+and what a cousin may, a cousin shall.”
+
+“A cousin may much when he is Lord Audley.”
+
+“A poor man in a fine coat! A butterfly in an east wind.” He removed
+his curly-brimmed hat and stood gazing over the prospect, over the wide
+valley that far and near gleamed with many a sheet of flood-water.
+“Have you ever thought, Mary, what that means?” he continued with
+feeling. “To be the shadow of a name! A ghost of the past! To have for
+home a ruin, and for lands a few poor farms—in place of all that we can
+see from here! For all this was once ours. To live a poor man among the
+rich! To have nothing but——”
+
+“Opportunities!” she answered, her voice betraying how deeply she was
+moved—for she too was an Audley. “For, with all said and done, you
+start where others end. You have no need to wait for a hearing. Doors
+stand open to you that others must open. Your name is a passport—is
+there a Stafford man who does not thrill to it? Surely these things are
+something. Surely they are much?”
+
+“You would make me think so!” he exclaimed.
+
+“Believe me, they are.”
+
+“They would be if I had your enthusiasm!” he answered, moved by her
+words. “And, by Jove,” gazing with admiration at her glowing face, “if
+I had you by me to spur me on there’s no knowing, Mary, what I might
+not try! And what I might not do!”
+
+Womanlike, she would evade the crisis which she had provoked. “Or fail
+to do!” she replied. “Perhaps the most worthy would be left undone. But
+I must go now,” she continued. “I have to give my uncle his medicine. I
+fear I am late already.”
+
+“When shall I see you again?” he asked, trying to detain her.
+
+“Some day, I have no doubt. But good-bye now! And don’t forget Mr.
+Colet! Good-bye!”
+
+He stood awhile looking after her, then he turned and went down the
+hill. By the time he was at the place where he had met her he was glad
+that she had broken off the interview.
+
+“I might have said too much,” he reflected. “She’s handsome enough to
+turn any man’s head! And not so cold as she looks. And she spells
+safety. But there’s no hurry—and she’s inclined to be kind, or I am
+mistaken! That clown, Basset, too, has got his dismissal, I fancy, and
+there’s no one else!”
+
+Presently his thoughts took another turn. “What maggots women get into
+their heads!” he muttered. “That pestilent Colet—I’m glad the rector
+acted on my hint. But there it is; when a woman meddles with politics
+she’s game for the first spouter she comes across! Fine eyes, too, and
+the Audley blood! With a little drilling she would hold her own
+anywhere.”
+
+Altogether, he found the walk to the place where he had left his
+carriage pleasant enough and his thoughts satisfactory. With Mary and
+safety on one side, and Lady Adela and a plum on the other—it would be
+odd if he did not bring his wares to a tolerable market.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+THE CORN LAW CRISIS
+
+
+He had been right in his forecast when he told Mary that a political
+crisis was at hand. That which had been long whispered, was beginning
+to be stated openly in club and market-place. The Corn Laws, the
+support of the country, the mainstay, as so many thought, of the
+Constitution, were in danger; and behind closed doors, while England
+listened without, the doctors were met to decide their fate.
+
+Potatoes! The word flew from mouth to mouth that wet autumn, from town
+to country, from village to village. Potatoes! The thing seemed
+incredible. That the lordly Corn Laws, the bulwark of the landed
+interest, the prop of agriculture, that had withstood all attacks for
+two generations, and maintained themselves alike against high prices
+and the Corn Law League—that these should go down because a vulgar root
+like the potato had failed in Ireland—it was a thing passing belief. It
+couldn’t be. With the Conservatives in power, it seemed impossible.
+
+Yet it was certain that the position was grave, if not hopeless. Never
+since the Reform Bill had there been such meetings of the Cabinet, so
+frequent, so secret. And strange things were said. Some who had
+supported Peel yet did not trust him, maintained that this was the
+natural sequel of his measures, the point to which he had been moving
+through all the years of his Ministry. Potatoes—bah! Others who still
+supported him, yet did not trust him, brooded nervously over his action
+twenty years before, when he had first resisted and then accepted the
+Catholic claims. Tories and Conservatives alike, wondered what they
+were there to conserve, if such things were in the wind; they
+protested, but with growing misgiving, that the thing could not be.
+While those among them who had seats to save and majorities to guard,
+met one another with gloomy looks, whispered together in corners and
+privately asked themselves what they would do—if he did. Happy in these
+circumstances were those who like Mottisfont, the father, were ready to
+retire; and still happier those who like Mottisfont, the son, knew the
+wishes of their constituents and could sing “John Barleycorn, my Joe,
+John,” with no fear of being jilted.
+
+Their anxieties—they were politicians—were mainly personal—and selfish.
+But there were some, simple people like Mr. Stubbs at Riddsley, who
+really believed, when these rumors reached them, that the foundations
+of things were breaking up, and that the world in which they had lived
+was sinking under their feet. Already in fancy they saw the glare of
+furnaces fall across the peaceful fields. Already they heard the tall
+mill jar and quiver where the cosey homestead and the full stackyard
+sprawled. They saw a weakly race, slaves to the factory bell, overrun
+the land where the ploughman still whistled at his work and his wife
+suckled healthy babes. To these men, if the rumors they heard were
+true, if Peel had indeed sold the pass, it meant the loss of all. It
+meant the victory of coal and cotton, the ruling of all after the
+Manchester pattern, the reign of Cash, the Lord, and ten per cent. his
+profit. It meant the end of the old England they had loved.
+
+Not that Stubbs said this at Riddsley, or anything like it. He smiled
+and kept silence, as became a man who knew much and was set above
+common rumor. The landlord of the Audley Arms, the corndealer, the
+brewer, the saddler went away from him with their fears allayed merely
+by the way in which he shrugged his shoulders. At the farmers’ ordinary
+he had never been more cheerful. He gave the toast of “Horn and Corn,
+gentlemen! And when potatoes take their place you may come and tell
+me!” And he gave it so heartily that the farmers went home,
+market-peart and rejoicing, laughed at their doubting neighbors, and
+quoted a hundred things that Lawyer Stubbs had not said.
+
+But a day or two later the lawyer sustained an unpleasant shock. He had
+been little moved by Lord John’s manifesto—the declaration in which the
+little Whig Leader, seeing that the Government hesitated, had plumped
+for total repeal. That was in the common course of things. It had
+heartened him, if anything. It was natural. It would bring the Tories
+into line and put an end to trimming. But this—this which confronted
+him one morning when he opened his London paper was different. He read
+it, he held his breath, he stood aghast a long minute, he swore. After
+a few minutes he took his hat and the newspaper, and went round to the
+house in which Lord Audley lived when he was at Riddsley.
+
+It was a handsome Georgian house, built of brick with stone facings,
+and partly covered with ivy. A wide smooth lawn divided it from the
+road. The occupant was a curate’s widow who lived there with her two
+sisters and eked out their joint means by letting the first floor to
+her landlord. For “The Butterflies” was Audley property, and the
+clergyman’s widow was held to derogate in no way by an arrangement
+which differed widely from a common letting of lodgings. Mrs. Jenkinson
+was stout, short, and fussy, her sisters were thin, short, and precise,
+but all three overflowed with words as kindly as their deeds. Good Mrs.
+Jenkinson, in fact, who never spoke of his lordship behind his back but
+with distant respect, sometimes forgot in his presence that he was
+anything but a “dear young man,” and when he had a cold, would
+prescribe a posset or a warming-pan with an insistence which at times
+amused and more often bored him.
+
+Stubbs found his lordship just risen from a late lunch, and in his
+excitement, the lawyer forgot his manners. “By G—d, my lord!” he cried,
+“he’s resigned.”
+
+Audley looked at him with displeasure. “Who’s resigned?” he asked
+coldly.
+
+“Peel!”
+
+Against that news the young man was not proof. He caught the infection.
+“Impossible!” he said, rising to his feet.
+
+“It’s true! It’s in the _Morning Post_, my lord! He saw the Queen
+yesterday. She’s sending for Lord John. It’s black treachery! It’s the
+blackest of treachery! With a majority in the House, with the peers in
+his pocket, the country quiet, trade improving, everything in his
+favor, he’s sold us—sold us to Cobden on some d—d pretext of famine in
+Ireland!”
+
+Audley did not answer at once. He stood deep in thought, his eyes on
+the floor, his hands in his pockets. At length, “I don’t follow it,” he
+said. “How is Russell, who is in a minority, to carry repeal?”
+
+“Peel’s promised his support!” Stubbs cried. Like most honest men, he
+was nothing if not thorough. “You may depend upon it, my lord, he has!
+He won’t deceive me again. I know him through and through, now. He’ll
+take with him Graham and Gladstone and Herbert, his old tail, Radicals
+at heart every man of them, and he’s the biggest!”
+
+“Well,” Audley said slowly, “he might have done one thing worse. He
+might have stayed in and passed repeal himself!”
+
+“Good G—d!” the lawyer cried, “Judas wouldn’t have done that! All he
+could do, he has done. He has let in corn from Canada, cattle from
+Heaven knows where, he has let in wool. All that he has done. But even
+he has a limit, my lord! Even he! The man who was returned to support
+the Corn Laws—to repeal them. Impossible!”
+
+“Well?” Audley said. “There’ll be an election, I suppose?”
+
+“The sooner the better,” Stubbs answered vengefully. “And we shall see
+what the country thinks of this. In Riddsley we’ve been ready for
+weeks—as you know, my lord. But a General Election? Gad! I only hope
+they will put up some one here, and we will give them such a beating as
+they’ve never had!”
+
+Audley pondered. “I suppose Riddsley is safe,” he said.
+
+“As safe as Burton Bridge, my lord!”
+
+The other rattled the money in his pocket. “As long as you give them a
+lead, Stubbs, I suppose? But if you went over? What then?”
+
+Stubbs opened his eyes. “Went over?” he ejaculated.
+
+“Oh, I don’t mean,” my lord said airily, “that you’re not as staunch as
+Burton Bridge. But supposing you took the other side—it would make a
+difference, I suppose?”
+
+“Not a jot!” the lawyer answered sturdily.
+
+“Not even if the two Mottisfonts sided with Peel?”
+
+“If they did the old gentleman would never see Westminster again,”
+Stubbs cried, “nor the young one go there!”
+
+“Or,” Audley continued, setting his shoulders against the mantel-shelf,
+and smiling, “suppose I did? If the Beaudelays interest were cast for
+repeal? What then?”
+
+“What then?” Stubbs answered. “You’ll pardon me, my lord, if I am
+frank. Then the Beaudelays influence, that has held the borough time
+out of mind, that returned two members before ’32, and has returned one
+since—there’d be an end of it! It would snap like a rotten stick. The
+truth is we hold the borough while we go with the stream. In fair
+weather when it is a question of twenty votes one way or the other, we
+carry it. And you’ve the credit, my lord.”
+
+Audley moved his shoulders restlessly. “It’s all I get by it,” he said.
+“If I could turn the credit into a snug place of two thousand a year,
+Stubbs—it would be another thing. Do you know,” he continued, “I’ve
+often wondered why you feel so strongly on the corn-taxes?”
+
+“You asked me that once before, my lord,” the agent answered slowly.
+“All that I can say is that more things than one go to it. Perhaps the
+best answer I can make is that, like your lordship’s influence in the
+borough, it’s part sentiment and part tradition. I have a picture in my
+mind—it’s a picture of an old homestead that my grandfather lived in
+and died in, and that I visited when I was a boy. That would be about
+the middle nineties; the French war going, corn high, cattle high, a
+good horse in the gig and old ale for all comers. There was comfort
+inside and plenty without; comfort in the great kitchen, with its floor
+as clean as a pink, and greened in squares with bay leaves, its dresser
+bright with pewter, its mantel with Toby jugs! There was wealth in the
+stackyard, with the poultry strutting and scratching, and more in the
+byres knee-deep in straw, and the big barn where they flailed the
+wheat! And there were men and maids more than on two farms to-day, some
+in the house, some in thatched cottages with a run on the common and
+wood for the getting. I remember, as if they were yesterday, hot summer
+afternoons when there’d be a stillness on the farm and all drowsed
+together, the bees, and the calves, and the old sheep-dog, and the only
+sounds that broke the silence were the cluck of a hen, or the clank of
+pattens on the dairy-floor, while the sun fell hot on the orchard,
+where a little boy hunted for damsons! That’s what I often see, my
+lord,” Stubbs continued stoutly. “And may Peel protect me, if I ever
+raise a finger to set mill and furnace, devil’s dust and slave-grown
+cotton, in place of that!”
+
+My lord concealed a yawn. “Very interesting, Stubbs,” he said. “Quite a
+picture! Peace and plenty and old ale! And little Jack Horner sitting
+in a corner! No, don’t go yet, man. I want you.” He made a sign to
+Stubbs to sit down, and settling his shoulders more firmly against the
+mantel-shelf, he thrust his hands deeper into his trouser-pockets. “I’m
+not easy in my mind about John Audley,” he said. “I’m not sure that he
+has not found something.”
+
+Stubbs stared. “There’s nothing to find,” he said. “Nothing, my lord!
+You may be sure of it.”
+
+“He goes there.”
+
+“It’s a craze.”
+
+“It’s a confoundedly unpleasant one!”
+
+“But harmless, my lord. Really harmless.”
+
+The younger man’s impatience darkened his face, but he controlled it—a
+sure sign that he was in earnest. “Tell me this,” he said. “What
+evidence would upset us? You told me once that the claim could be
+reopened on fresh evidence. On what evidence?”
+
+“I regard the case as closed,” Stubbs answered stubbornly. “But if you
+put the question—” he seemed to reflect—“the point at issue, on which
+the whole turned, was the legitimacy of your great-grandfather, my
+lord, Peter Paravicini Audley’s son. Mr. John’s great-grandfather was
+Peter Paravicini’s younger brother. The other side alleged, but could
+not produce, a family agreement admitting that the son was
+illegitimate. Such an agreement, if Peter Paravicini was a party to it,
+if it was proved, and came from the proper custody, would be an awkward
+document and might let in the next brother’s descendants—that’s Mr.
+John. But in my opinion, its existence is a fairy story, and in its
+absence, the entry in the register stands good.”
+
+“But such a document would be fatal?”
+
+“If it fulfilled the conditions it would be serious,” the lawyer
+admitted. “But it does not exist,” he added confidently.
+
+“And yet—I’m not comfortable, Stubbs,” Audley rejoined. “I can’t get
+John Audley’s face out of my mind. If ever man looked as if he had his
+enemy by the throat, he looked it; a d—d disinheriting face I thought
+it! I don’t mind telling you,” the speaker continued, some disorder in
+his own looks, “that I awoke at three o’clock this morning, and I saw
+him as clearly as I see you now, and at that moment I wouldn’t have
+given a thousand pounds for my chance of being Lord Audley this time
+two years!”
+
+“Liver!” said Stubbs, unmoved. “Liver, my lord, asking your pardon!
+Nothing else—and the small hours. I’ve felt like that myself. Still, if
+you are really uneasy there is always a way out, though it may be
+impertinent of me to mention it.”
+
+“The old way?”
+
+“You might marry Miss Audley. A handsome young lady, if I may presume
+to say so, of your own blood and name, and no disparagement except in
+fortune. After Mr. John, she is the next heir, and the match once made
+would checkmate any action on his part.”
+
+“I am afraid I could not afford such a marriage,” Audley said coldly.
+“But I am to you. As for this news—” he flicked the newspaper that lay
+on the table—“it may be true or it may not. If it is true, it will
+alter many things. We shall see. If you hear anything fresh let me
+know.”
+
+Stubbs said that he would and took his leave, wondering a little, but
+having weightier things on his mind. He sought his home by back ways,
+for he did not wish to meet Dr. Pepper or Bagenal the brewer, or even
+the saddler, until he had considered what face he would put on Peel’s
+latest move. He felt that his reputation for knowledge and sagacity was
+at stake.
+
+Meanwhile his employer, left alone, fell to considering, not what face
+he should put upon the matter, but how he might at this crisis turn the
+matter and the borough to the best account. Certainly Stubbs was
+discouraging, but Stubbs was a fool. It was all very well for him; he
+drew his wages either way. But a man of the world did not cling to the
+credit of owning a borough for the mere name of the thing. If he were
+sensible he looked to get something more from it than that. And it was
+upon occasions such as this that the something more was to be had by
+those who knew how to go about the business.
+
+Here, in fact, was the moment, if he was the man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+PETER’S RETURN
+
+
+Not a word or hint of John Audley’s illness had come to Basset’s ears.
+At the time of the alarm he had been in London, and it was not until
+some days later that he took his seat in the morning train to return to
+Stafford. On his way to town, and for some days after his arrival, he
+had been buoyed up by plans, nebulous indeed, but sufficient. He came
+back low in his mind and in poor spirits. The hopes, if not the
+aspirations, which Colet’s enthusiasm had generated in him had died
+down, and the visit to Francis Place had done nothing to revive them.
+
+Some greatness in the man, a largeness of ideas, an echo of the
+revolutionary days when the sanest saw visions, Basset was forced to
+own. But the two stood too far apart, the inspired tailor and the
+country squire, for sympathy. They were divided by too wide a gulf of
+breeding and prejudice to come together. Basset was not even a Radical,
+and his desire to improve things, and to better the world, fell very
+far short of the passion of humanity which possessed the aged
+Republican—the man who for half a century had been so forward in all
+their movements that his fellows had christened him the “_Old
+Postilion_.”
+
+Nothing but disappointment, therefore, had come of the meeting. The two
+had parted with a little contempt on the one side, a sense of failure
+on the other. If a man could serve his neighbors only in fellowship
+with such, if the cause which for a few hours had promised to fill the
+void left by an unhappy love, could be supported only by men who held
+such opinions, then Basset felt that the thing was not for him. For six
+or seven days he went up and down London at odds with himself and his
+kind, and ever striving to solve a puzzle, the answer to which evaded
+him. Was the hope that he might find a mission and found a purpose on
+Colet’s lines, was it just the desire to set the world right that
+seized on young men fresh from college? And if this were so, if this
+were all, what was he to do? Whither was he to turn? How was he going
+to piece together the life which Mary had broken? How was he going to
+arrange his future so that some thread of purpose might run through it,
+so that something of effort might still link together the long
+bede-roll of years?
+
+He found no answer to the riddle. And it was in a gloomy, unsettled
+mood, ill-content with himself and the world, that he took his seat in
+the train. Alas, he could not refrain from recalling the May morning on
+which he had taken his seat in the same train with Mary. How ill had he
+then appreciated her company, how little had he understood, how little
+had he prized his good fortune! He who was then free to listen to her
+voice, to meet her eyes, to follow the changes of her mood from grave
+to gay! To be to her—all that he could! And that for hours, for days,
+for weeks!
+
+He swore under his breath and sat back in the shadow of the corner. And
+a man who entered late, and saw that he kept his eyes shut, fancied
+that he was ill; and when he muttered a word under his breath, asked
+him if he spoke.
+
+“No,” Basset replied rather curtly. And that he might be alone with his
+thoughts he took up a newspaper and held it before him. But not a word
+did he read. After a long interval he looked over the journal and met
+the other’s eyes.
+
+“Surprising news this,” the stranger said. He had the look of a
+soldier, and the bronzed face of one who had lived under warm skies.
+
+Basset murmured that it was.
+
+“The Whigs have a fine opportunity,” the other pursued. “But I am not
+sure that they will use it.”
+
+“You are a Whig, perhaps?”
+
+The stranger smiled. “No,” he replied. “I am not. I have lived so long
+abroad that I belong to no party. I am an Englishman.”
+
+“Ah?” Basset rejoined, curiosity beginning to stir in him. “That’s
+rather a fine idea.”
+
+“Apparently it’s a novel one. But it seems natural to me. I have lived
+for fifteen years in India and I have lost touch with the cant of
+parties. Out there, we do honestly try to rule for the good of the
+people; their prosperity is our interest. Here, during the few weeks I
+have spent in England I see things done, not because they are good, but
+because they suit a party, or provide a cry, or put the other side in a
+quandary.”
+
+“There’s a good deal of that, I suppose.”
+
+“Still,” the stranger continued, “I know a great man, and I know a fine
+thing when I see them. And I fancy that I see them here!” He tapped his
+paper.
+
+“Has Lord John formed his ministry, then?”
+
+“No, I am not sure that he will. I am not thinking of him, I am
+thinking of Peel.”
+
+“Oh! Of Peel?”
+
+“He has done a fine thing! As every man does who puts what is right
+before what is easy. May I tell you a story of myself?” the Indian
+continued. “Some years ago in the Afghan war I was unlucky enough to
+command a small frontier post. My garrison consisted of two companies
+and six or seven European officers. The day came when I had to choose
+between two courses. I must either hold my ground until our people
+advanced, or I must evacuate the post, which had a certain
+importance—and fall back into safety. The men never dreamed of
+retiring. The officers were confident that we could hold out. But we
+were barely supplied for forty days, and in my judgment no
+reinforcement was possible under seventy. I made my choice, breached
+the place, and retired. But I tell you, sir, that the days of that
+retreat, with sullen faces about me, and hardly a man in my company who
+did not think me a poltroon, were the bitterest of my life. I knew that
+if the big-wigs agreed with them I was a ruined man, and after ten
+years service I should go home disgraced. Fortunately the General saw
+it as I saw it, and all was well. But—” he looked at Basset with a wry
+smile—“it was a march of ten days to the base, and to-day the sullen
+looks of those men come back to me in my dreams.”
+
+“And you think,” Basset said—the other’s story had won his
+respect—“that Peel has found himself in such a position?”
+
+“To compare great issues with small, I do. I suspect that he has gone
+through an agony—that is hardly too strong a word—such as I went
+through. My impression is that when he came into office he was in
+advance of his party. He saw that the distress in the country called
+for measures which his followers would accept from no one else. He
+believed that he could carry them with him. Perhaps, even then, he held
+a repeal of the Corn Laws possible in some remote future; perhaps he
+did not, I don’t know. For suddenly there came on him the fear of this
+Irish famine—and forced his hand.”
+
+“But don’t you think,” Basset asked, “that the alarm is premature?” A
+dozen times he had heard the famine called a flam, a sham, a bite,
+anything but a reality.
+
+“You have never seen a famine?” the other replied gravely. “You have
+never had to face the impossibility of creating food where it does not
+exist, or of bringing it from a distance when there are no roads. I
+have had that experience. I have seen people die of starvation by
+hundreds, women, children, babes, when I could do nothing because steps
+had not been taken in time. God forbid that that should happen in
+Ireland! If the fear does not outrun the dearth, God help the poor! Now
+I am told that Peel witnessed a famine in Ireland about ’17 or ’18, and
+knows what it is.”
+
+“You have had interesting experiences?”
+
+“The experience of every Indian officer. But the burden which rests on
+us makes us alive to the difficulties of a statesman’s position. I see
+Peel forced—forced suddenly, perhaps, to make a choice; to decide
+whether he shall do what is right or what is consistent. He must betray
+his friends, or he must betray his country. And the agony of the
+decision is the greater if he has it burnt in on his memory that he did
+this thing once before, that once before he turned his back on his
+party—and that all the world knows!”
+
+“I see.”
+
+“If a man in that position puts self, consistency, reputation all
+behind him—believe me, he is doing a fine thing.”
+
+Basset assented. “But you speak,” he added, “as if Sir Robert were
+going to do the thing himself—instead of merely standing aside for
+others to do it.”
+
+“A distinction without much difference,” the other rejoined. “Possibly
+it will turn out that he is the only man who can do it. If so, he will
+have a hard row to hoe. He will need the help of every moderate man in
+the country, if he is not to be beaten. For whether he succeeds or
+fails, depends not upon the fanatics, but upon the moderate men. I
+don’t know what your opinions are?”
+
+“Well,” Basset said frankly, “I am not much of a party-man myself. I am
+inclined to agree with you, so far.”
+
+“Then if you have any influence, use it. Unfortunately, I am out of it
+for family reasons.”
+
+Basset looked at the stranger. “You are not by any chance Colonel
+Mottisfont?” he said.
+
+“I am. You know my brother? He is member for Riddsley.”
+
+“Yes. My name is Basset.”
+
+“Of Blore? Indeed. I knew your father. Well, I have not cast my seed on
+stony ground. Though you are stony enough about Wootton under Weaver.”
+
+“True, worse luck. Your brother is retiring, I hear?”
+
+“Yes, he has just horse sense, has Jack. He won’t vote against Peel.
+His lad has less and will take his place and vote old Tory. But there,
+I mustn’t abuse the family.”
+
+They had still half an hour to spend together before Basset got out at
+Stafford. He had time to discover that the soldier was faced by a
+problem not unlike his own. His service over, he had to consider what
+he would do. “All I know,” the Colonel said breezily, “is that I won’t
+do nothing. Some take to preaching, others to Bath, but neither will
+suit me. But I’ll not drift. I kept from brandy pawnee out there, and I
+am going to keep from drift here. For you, you’re a young man, Basset,
+and a hundred things are open to you. I am over the top of the hill.
+But I’ll do something.”
+
+“You have done something to-day,” Basset said. “You have done me good.”
+
+Later he had time to think it over during the long journey from
+Stafford to Blore. He drove by twisting country roads, under the gray
+walls of Chartley, by Uttoxeter and Rocester. Thence he toiled uphill
+to the sterile Derbyshire border, the retreat of old families and old
+houses. He began to think that he had gained some ideas with which he
+could sympathize, ideas which were at one with Mary Audley’s burning
+desire to help, while they did not clash with old prejudices. If he
+threw himself into Peel’s cause, he would indeed be seen askance by
+many. He would have to put himself forward after a fashion that gave
+him the goose-flesh when he thought of it. A landowner, he would have
+to go against the land. But he would not feel, in his darker moods,
+that he was the dupe of cranks and fanatics. He saw Peel as Mottisfont
+had pictured him, as a man putting all behind him except the right; and
+his heart warmed to the picture. Many would fall away, few would be
+staunch. From this ship, as from every sinking ship, the rats would
+flee. But so much the stronger was the call.
+
+The result was that the Peter Basset who descended at the porch of the
+old gabled house, that sat low and faced east in the valley under
+Weaver, was a more hopeful man than he who had entered the train at
+Euston. A purpose, a plan—he had gained these, and the hope that
+springs from them.
+
+He had barely doffed his driving-coat, however, before his thoughts
+were swept in another direction. On the hall table lay two letters. He
+took up one. It was from Colet and written in deep dejection. “The
+barber was a Tory and had given him short notice. Feeling ran high in
+the town, and other lodgings were not to be had. The Bishop had
+supported the rector’s action, and he saw no immediate prospect of
+further work.” He did not ask for shelter, but it was plain that he was
+at his wit’s end, and more than a little surprised by the storm which
+he had raised.
+
+Basset threw down the letter. “He shall come here,” he thought. “What
+is it to me whom he marries?” Many solitary hours spent in the streets
+of London had gone some way towards widening Peter’s outlook.
+
+He took up the second letter. It was from John Audley, and before he
+had read three lines, he rang the bell and ordered that the post-chaise
+which had brought him from Stafford should be kept: he would want it in
+the morning. John Audley wrote that he had been very ill—he was still
+in bed. He must see Basset. The matter was urgent, he had something to
+tell him. He hinted that if he did not come quickly it might be too
+late.
+
+Basset could not refuse to go; summoned after this fashion, he must go.
+But he tried to believe that he was not glad to go. He tried to believe
+that the excitement with which he looked forward to the journey had to
+do with his uncle. It was in vain; he knew that he tricked himself. Or
+if he did not know this then, his eyes were opened next day, when,
+after walking up the hill to spare the horses—and a little because he
+shrank at the last from the meeting—he came in sight of the Gatehouse,
+and saw Mary Audley standing in the doorway. The longing that gripped
+him then, the emotion that unmanned him, told him all. It was of Mary
+he had been thinking, towards Mary he had been travelling, of her work
+it was that the miles had seemed leagues! He was not cured. He was not
+in the way to be cured. He was the same love-sick fool whom she had
+driven from her with contumely an age—it seemed an age, ago.
+
+He bent his head as he approached, that she might not see his face. His
+knees shook and a tremor ran through him. Why had he come back? Why had
+he come back to face this anguish?
+
+Then he mastered himself; indeed he took himself the more strongly in
+hand for the knowledge he had gained. When they met at the door it was
+Mary, not he, whose color came and went, who spoke awkwardly, and
+rushed into needless explanations. The man listened with a stony face,
+and said little, almost nothing.
+
+After the first awkward greeting, “Your room has been airing,” she
+continued, avoiding his eyes. “My uncle has been expecting you for some
+days. He has asked for you again and again.”
+
+He explained that he had been in London—hence the delay; and, further,
+that he must return to Blore that day. She felt that she was the cause
+of this, and she colored painfully. But he seemed to be indifferent. He
+noticed a trifling change in the hall, asked a question or two about
+his uncle’s state, and inquired what had caused his sudden illness.
+
+She told the story, giving details. He nodded. “Yes, I have seen him in
+a similar attack,” he said. “But he gets older. I am afraid it alarmed
+you?”
+
+She forced herself to describe Lord Audley’s part in the matter—and Mr.
+Stubbs’s, and was conscious that she was dragging in Mr. Stubbs more
+often than was necessary. Basset listened politely, remarked that it
+was fortunate that Audley had been on the spot, added that he was sure
+that everything had been done that was right.
+
+When he had gone upstairs to see John Audley she escaped to her room.
+Her cheeks were burning, and she could have cried. Basset’s coldness,
+his distance, the complete change in his manner all hurt her more than
+she could say. They brought home to her, painfully home to her what she
+had done. She had been foolish enough to fling away the friend, when
+she need only have discarded the lover!
+
+But she must face it out now, the thing was done, and she must put up
+with it. And by and by, fearing that Basset might suppose that she
+avoided him, she came down and waited for him in the deserted library.
+She had waited some minutes, moving restlessly to and fro and wishing
+the ordeal of luncheon were over, when her eyes fell on the door of the
+staircase that led up to her uncle’s room. It was ajar.
+
+She stared at it, for she knew that she had closed it after Basset had
+gone up. Now it was ajar. She reflected. The house was still, she could
+hear no one moving. She went out quickly, crossed the hall, looked into
+the dining-room. Toft was not there, nor was he in the pantry. She
+returned to the library, and went softly up the stairs.
+
+So softly that she surprised the man before he could raise his head
+from the keyhole. He saw that he was detected, and for an instant he
+scowled at her in the half-light of the narrow passage, uncertain what
+to do. Mary beckoned to him, and went down before him to the library.
+
+There she turned on him. “Shut the door,” she said. “You were
+listening! Don’t deny it. You have acted disgracefully, and it will be
+my duty to tell Mr. Audley what has happened.”
+
+The man, sallow with fear, tried to brave it out.
+
+“You will only make mischief, Miss,” he said sullenly. “You’ll come
+near to killing the master.”
+
+“Very good!” Mary said, quivering with indignation. “Then instead of
+telling Mr. Audley I shall tell Mr. Basset. It will be for him to
+decide whether Mr. Audley shall know. Go now.”
+
+But Toft held his ground. “You’ll be doing a bad day’s work, Miss,” he
+said earnestly. “I want to run straight.” He raised his hand to his
+forehead, which was wet with perspiration. “I swear I do! I want to run
+straight.”
+
+“Straight!” Mary cried in scorn. “And you listen at doors!”
+
+The man made a last attempt to soften her. “For God’s sake, be warned,
+Miss!” he cried. “Don’t drive me. If you knew as much as I do——”
+
+“I should not listen to learn the rest!” replied Mary without pity.
+“That is enough. Please to see that lunch is ready.” She pointed to the
+door. She was not an Audley for nothing.
+
+Toft gave way and went, and she remained alone, perplexed as well as
+angry. Mrs. Toft and Etruria were good simple folk; she liked them. But
+Toft had puzzled her from the first. He was so silent, so secretive, he
+was for ever appearing without warning and vanishing without noise. She
+had often suspected that he spied on his master.
+
+But she had never caught him in the act, and the certainty that he did
+so, filled her with dismay. It was fortunate, she thought, that Basset
+was there, and that she could consult him. And the instant that he
+appeared, forgetting their quarrel and the strained relations between
+them, she poured out her story. Toft was ungrateful, treacherous, a
+danger! With Mr. Audley so helpless, the house so lonely, it frightened
+her.
+
+It was only when she had run on for some time that Basset’s air of
+detachment struck her. He listened, with his back to the fire, and his
+eyes bent on the floor, but he did not speak until she had told her
+story, and expressed her misgivings.
+
+When he did, “I am not surprised,” he said. “I’ve suspected this for
+some time. But I don’t know that anything can be done.”
+
+“Do you mean that—you would do nothing?”
+
+“The truth is,” he answered, “Toft is pretty far in his master’s
+confidence. And what he does not know he wishes to know. When he knows
+it, he will find it a mare’s nest. The truth—as I see it at any rate—is
+that your uncle is possessed by a craze. He wants me to help him in it.
+I cannot. I have told him so, firmly and finally, to-day. Well, I
+suspect that he will now turn to Toft. I hope not, but he may, and if
+we report the man’s misconduct, it will only precipitate matters and
+hasten an understanding. That is the position, and if I were you, I
+should let the matter rest.”
+
+“You mean that?” she exclaimed.
+
+“I do.”
+
+“But—but I have spoken to Toft!” Her eyes were bright with anger.
+
+He kept his on the floor. It was only by maintaining the distance
+between them that he could hope to hide what he felt. “Still I would
+let him be,” he repeated. “I do not think that Toft is dangerous. He
+has surprised one half of a secret, and he wishes to learn the other
+half. That is all.”
+
+“And I am to take no notice?”
+
+“I believe that will be your wisest course.”
+
+She was shocked, and she was still more hurt. He pushed her aside, he
+pushed her out of his confidence, out of her uncle’s confidence! His
+manner, his indifference, his stolidity showed that she had not only
+killed his fancy for her at a stroke, but that he now disliked her.
+
+And still she protested. “But I must tell my uncle!” she cried.
+
+“I think I would not,” he repeated. “But there—” he paused and looked
+at his watch—“I am afraid that if you are going to give me lunch I must
+sit down. I’ve a long journey before me.”
+
+Then she saw that no more could be said, and with an effort she
+repressed her feelings. “Yes,” she said, “I was forgetting. You must be
+hungry.”
+
+She led the way to the dining-room, and sat down with him, Toft waiting
+on them with the impassive ease of the trained man. While they ate,
+Basset talked of indifferent things, of his journey from town, of the
+roads, of London, of Colonel Mottisfont—an interesting man whom he had
+met in the train. And as he talked, and she made lifeless answers, her
+indignation cooled, and her heart sank.
+
+She could have cried, indeed. She had lost her friend. He was gone to
+an immense distance. He was willing to leave her to deal with her
+troubles and difficulties, it might be, with her dangers. In killing
+his love with cruel words—and how often had she repented, not of the
+thing, but of the manner!—she had killed every feeling, every liking,
+that he had entertained for her.
+
+It was clear that this was so, for to the last he maintained his
+coldness and indifference. When he was gone, when the sound of the
+chaise-wheels had died in the distance, she felt more lonely than she
+had ever felt in her life. In her Paris days she had had no reason to
+blame herself, and all the unturned leaves of life awaited her. Now she
+had turned over one page, and marred it, she had won a friend and lost
+him, she had spoiled the picture, which she had not wished to keep!
+
+Her uncle lay upstairs, ready to bear, but hardly welcoming her
+company. He had his secrets, and she stood outside them. She sat below,
+enclosed in and menaced by the silence of the house. Yet it was not
+fear that she felt so much as a sadness, a great depression, a gray
+despondency. She craved something, she did not know what. She only knew
+that she was alone—and sad.
+
+She tried to fight against the feeling. She tried to read, to work,
+even to interest herself in Toft and his mystery. She failed. And at
+last she gave up the attempt and with her elbows on her knees and her
+eyes on the fire she fell to musing, the ticking of the tall clock and
+the fall of the embers the only sounds that broke the stillness of the
+shadowy room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+TOFT AT THE BUTTERFLIES
+
+
+Basset’s view of Toft, if it did not hit, came very near the mark. For
+many years the man had served his master with loyalty, the relations
+between them being such as were common in days when servants stayed
+long in a place and held themselves a part of the family. The master
+had been easy, the man had had no ambitions beyond those of his
+fellows, and no temptations except those which turned upon the
+cellar-book.
+
+But a year before Mary Audley’s arrival two things had happened. First
+the curate had fallen in love with Etruria, and the fact had become
+known to her father, to whom the girl was everything. Her refinement,
+her beauty, her goodness were his secret delight. And the thought that
+she might become a lady, that she might sit at the table at which he
+served had taken hold of the austere man’s mind and become a passion.
+He was ready to do anything and to suffer anything to bring this about.
+Nor was he deceived when Etruria put the offer aside. She was nothing
+if not transparent, and he was too fond of her not to see that her
+happiness was bound up with the man who had stooped to woo her.
+
+He was not blind to the difficulties or to the clergyman’s poverty. But
+he saw that Colet, poor as he was, could raise his daughter in the
+social scale; and he spent long hours in studying how the marriage
+might be brought about. He hugged the matter to him, and brooded over
+it, but he never discovered his thoughts or his hopes either to his
+wife, or to Etruria.
+
+Then one day the sale of a living happened to be discussed in his
+presence, and as he went, solemn and silent, round the table he
+listened. He learned that livings could be bought. He learned that the
+one in question, with its house and garden and three hundred a year,
+had fetched a thousand guineas, and from that day Toft’s aim was by
+hook or crook to gain a thousand guineas. He revelled in impossible
+dreams of buying a living, of giving it to Etruria, and of handing maid
+and dowry to the fortunate man who was to make her a lady.
+
+There have been more sordid and more selfish ambitions.
+
+But a thousand guineas was a huge sum to the manservant. True, he had
+saved a hundred and twenty pounds, and for his position in life he held
+himself a rich man. But a thousand guineas? He turned the matter this
+way and that, and sometimes he lost hope, and sometimes he pinned his
+faith to a plan that twenty-four hours showed to be futile. All the
+time his wife who lay beside him, his daughter who waited on him, his
+master on whom he waited, were as far from seeing into his mind as if
+they had lived in another planet.
+
+Then the second thing happened. He surprised, wholly by chance, a
+secret which gave him a hold over John Audley. Under other
+circumstances he might have been above using the advantage; as it was,
+he was tempted. He showed his hand, a sum of four hundred pounds was
+named; for a week he fancied that he had performed half his task. Then
+his master explained with a gentle smile that to know and to prove were
+two things, and that whereas Toft had for a time been able to do both,
+John Audley had now destroyed the evidence. The master had in fact been
+too sly for the man, and Toft found himself pretty well where he had
+been. In the end Audley thought it prudent to give him a hundred
+pounds, which did but whet his desire and sharpen his wits.
+
+For he had now tasted blood. He had made something by a secret. There
+might be others to learn. He kept his eyes open, and soon he became
+aware of his master’s disappearances. He tracked him, he played the
+spy, he discovered that John Audley was searching for something in the
+Great House. The words that the old man let fall, while half-conscious
+in the Yew Walk, added to his knowledge, and at the same time scared
+him. A moment later, and Lord Audley might have known as much as he
+knew—and perhaps more!
+
+For he did not as yet know all, and it was in the attempt to complete
+his knowledge that Mary had caught him listening at the door. The blow
+was a sharp one. He was still so far unspoiled, still so near the old
+Toft that he could not bear that his wife and daughter should learn the
+depth to which he had fallen. And John Audley? What would he do, if
+Mary told him?
+
+Toft could not guess. He knew that his master was barely sane, if he
+was sane; but he knew also that he was utterly inhuman. John Audley
+would put him and his family to the door without mercy if that seemed
+to him the safer course. And that meant an end of all his plans for
+Etruria, for Colet, for them all.
+
+True, he might use such power as he had. But it was imperfect, and in
+its use he must come to grips with one who had shown himself his better
+both in courage and cunning. He had imbibed a strong fear of his
+master, and he could not without a qualm contemplate a struggle with
+him.
+
+For a week after his detection by Mary, he went about his work in a
+fever of anxiety. And nothing happened; it was that which tried him.
+More than once he was on the point of throwing himself at her feet, of
+telling her all he knew, of imploring her pardon. It was only her
+averted eyes and cold tone that held him back.
+
+Such a crisis makes a man either better or worse, and it made Toft
+worse. At the end of three days a chance word put a fine point on his
+fears and stung him to action. He might not know enough to face John
+Audley, but he thought that he knew enough to sell his secret—in the
+other camp. His lordship was young and probably malleable. He would go
+to him and strike a bargain.
+
+Arrived at this point the man did not hide from himself that he was
+going to do a hateful thing. He thought of his wife and her wonder
+could she know. He thought of Etruria’s mild eyes and her goodness. And
+he shivered. But it was for her. It was for them. Within twenty-four
+hours he was in Riddsley.
+
+As he passed the Maypole, where Mr. Colet had his lodgings, he noticed
+that the town wore an unusual aspect. Groups of men stood talking in
+the doorway, or on the doorsteps. A passing horseman was shouting to a
+man at a window. Nearer the middle of the town the stir was greater.
+About the saddler’s door, about the steps leading up to the Audley
+Arms, and round the yard of the inn, knots of men argued and
+gesticulated. Toft asked the saddler what it was.
+
+“Haven’t you heard?”
+
+“No. What’s the news?”
+
+“The General Election’s off!” The saddler proclaimed it with an
+inflamed look. “Peel’s in again! And damn me, after this,” he
+continued, “there’s nothing I won’t swallow! He come in in the farming
+interest, and the hunting interest, and the racing interest, and the
+gentlemanly interest, that I live by, and you too, Mr. Toft! And it was
+bad enough when he threw it up! But to go in again and to take our
+money and do the Radicals’ work!” The saddler spat on the brick
+pavement. “Why, there was never such a thing heard of in the ’varsal
+world! Never! If Tamworth don’t blush for him and his pigs turn pink,
+I’m d—d, and that’s all.”
+
+Toft had to ask half a dozen questions before he grasped the position.
+Gradually he learned that after Peel had resigned the Whigs had tried
+to form a government; that they had failed, and that now Peel was to
+come in again, expressly to repeal the Corn Laws. The Corn Laws which
+he had taken office to support, and to the maintenance of which his
+party was pledged!
+
+The thing was not much in Toft’s way, nor his interest in it great, but
+as he passed along he caught odds and ends of conversation. “I don’t
+believe a word of it!” cried an angry man. “The Radicals have invented
+it!” “Like enough!” replied another. “Like enough! There’s naught they
+wouldn’t do!” “Well, after all,” suggested a third in a milder tone,
+“cheap bread is something.” “What? If you’ve got no money to buy it?
+You’re a fool! I tell you it’ll be the ruin of Riddsley!” “You’re right
+there, Joe!” answered the first speaker. “You’re right! There’ll be no
+farmer for miles round’ll pay his way!”
+
+At the door of Mr. Stubbs’s office three excited clients were clamoring
+for entrance; an elderly clerk with a high bridge to his nose was
+withstanding them. Before the Mechanics’ Institute the secretary, a
+superior person of Manchester views, was talking pompously to a little
+group. “We must take in the whole field,” Toft heard him say. “If
+you’ll read Mr. Carlyle’s tract on——” Toft lost the rest. The Institute
+readers belonged mainly to Hatton’s Works or Banfield’s, and the
+secretary taught in an evening school. He was darkly suspected of being
+a teetotaller, but it had never been proved against him.
+
+Toft began to wonder if he had chosen his time well, but he was near
+The Butterflies and he hardened his heart; to retreat now were to dub
+himself coward. He told the maid that he came from the Gatehouse, and
+that he was directed to deliver a letter into his lordship’s own hand,
+and in a moment he found himself mounting the shallow carpeted stairs.
+In comparison with the Gatehouse, the house was modern, elegant,
+luxurious, the passages were warm.
+
+When he was ushered in, his lordship, a dressing-gown cast over a chair
+beside him as if he had just put on his coat, was writing near the
+fireplace. After an interval that seemed long to Toft, who eyed his
+heavy massiveness with a certain dismay, he laid down his pen, sat
+back, and looked at the servant.
+
+“From the Gatehouse?” he asked, after a leisurely survey.
+
+“Yes, my lord,” Toft answered respectfully. “I was with Mr. Audley when
+he was taken ill in the Yew Walk.”
+
+“To be sure! I thought I knew your face. You’ve a letter for me?”
+
+Toft hesitated. “I wished to see you, my lord,” he said. The thing was
+not as easy as he had hoped it would be; the man was more formidable.
+“On a matter of business.”
+
+Audley raised his eyebrows. “Business?” he said. “Isn’t it Mr. Stubbs
+you want to see?”
+
+“No, my lord,” Toft answered. But the sweat broke out on his forehead.
+What if his lordship took a high tone, ordered him out, and reported
+the matter to his master? Too late it struck Toft that a gentleman
+might take that line.
+
+“Well, be quick,” Audley replied. Then in a different tone, “You don’t
+come from Miss Audley?”
+
+“No, my lord.”
+
+“Then what is it?”
+
+Toft turned his hat in his hands. “I have information”—it was with
+difficulty he could control his voice—“which it is to your lordship’s
+interest to have.”
+
+There was a pregnant pause. “Oh!” the young man said at last. “And you
+come—to sell it?”
+
+Toft nodded, unable to speak. Yet he was getting on as well as could be
+expected.
+
+“Rather an unusual position, isn’t it?”
+
+“Yes, my lord.”
+
+“The information should be unusual?”
+
+“It is, my lord.”
+
+Lord Audley smiled. “Well,” he answered, “I’ll say this, my man. If you
+are going to sell me a spavined horse, don’t! It will not be to your
+advantage. What’s it all about?”
+
+“Mr. Audley’s claim, my lord.”
+
+Audley had expected this, yet he could not quite mask the effect which
+the statement made upon him. The thing that he had foreseen and feared,
+that had haunted him in the small hours and been as it were a
+death’s-head at his feast, was taking shape. But he was quick to
+recover himself, and “Oh!” said he. “That’s it, is it! Don’t you know
+that that’s all over, my man?”
+
+“I think not, my lord.”
+
+The peer took up a paper-knife and toyed with it. “Well,” he said,
+“what is it? Come, I don’t buy a pig in a poke.”
+
+“Mr. Audley has found——”
+
+“Found, eh?” raising his eyebrows.
+
+Toft corrected himself. “He has in his power papers that upset your
+lordship’s case. I can still enable you to keep those papers in your
+hands.”
+
+Audley threw down the paper-cutter. “They are certainly worthless,” he
+said. His voice was contemptuous, but there was a hard look in his
+eyes.
+
+“Mr. Audley thinks otherwise.”
+
+“But he has not seen them?”
+
+“He knows what’s in them, my lord. He has been searching for them for
+weeks.”
+
+The young man weighed this, and Toft’s courage rose, and his
+confidence. The trumps were in his hand, and though for a moment he had
+shrunk before the other’s heavy jaw he was glad now that he had come;
+more glad when the big man after a long pause asked quietly, “What do
+you want?”
+
+“Five hundred pounds, my lord.”
+
+The other laughed, and Toft did not like the laugh. “Indeed? Five
+hundred pounds? That’s a good deal of money!”
+
+“The information is worth that, or it is worth nothing.”
+
+“I quite agree!” the peer answered lightly. “You’re a wit, my man. But
+that’s not saying you’ve a good case. However, I’ll put you to the
+test. You know where the papers are?”
+
+“I do, my lord.”
+
+“Very good. There’s a piece of paper. Write on one side the precise
+place where they lie. I will write on the other a promise to pay £500
+if the papers are found in that place, and are of the value you assert.
+That is a fair offer.”
+
+Toft stood irresolute. He thought hard.
+
+My lord pushed the paper across. “Come!” he said; “write! Or I’ll write
+first, if that is your trouble.” With decision he seized a quill, held
+it poised a moment, then he wrote four lines and signed them with a
+flourish, added the date, and read them to himself. With a grim smile
+he pushed the paper across to Toft. “There,” he said. “What more do you
+want, my man, than that?”
+
+Toft took the paper and read what was written on it, from the “In
+consideration of,” that began the sentence, to the firm signature
+“Audley of Beaudelays” that closed it. He did not speak.
+
+“Come! You can’t want anything more than that!” my lord said. “You have
+only to write, read me the secret, and keep the paper until it is
+redeemed.”
+
+“Yes, my lord.”
+
+“Then take the pen. Of course the place must be precise. I am not going
+to pull down Beaudelays House to find a box of papers that I do not
+believe is there!”
+
+Toft’s face was gray, the sweat stood on his lip. “I did not say,” he
+muttered, the paper rustling in his unsteady hand, “that they were in
+Beaudelays House.”
+
+“No?” Audley replied. “Perhaps not. And for the matter of that, it is
+not a question of saying anything. It is a question of writing. You can
+write, I suppose?”
+
+Toft did not speak. He could not speak. He had supposed that the power
+to put his lordship on the scent would be the same as pulling down the
+fox. When he had said that the papers were in the house, that they were
+behind a wall, that Mr. Audley knew where they were, he would have
+earned—he thought—his money!
+
+But he had not known the man with whom he had to deal. And challenged
+to set down the place where the papers lay, he knew that he could not
+do it. In the house? Behind a wall? He saw now that that would not do.
+That would not satisfy the big smiling gentleman who sat opposite him,
+amused at the dilemma in which he found himself.
+
+He knew that he was cornered, and he lost his countenance and his
+manners. He swore.
+
+The young man laughed. “The biter bit,” he said. “Five hundred pounds
+you said, didn’t you? I wonder whether I ought to send for the
+constable? Or tell Mr. Audley? That would be wiser perhaps? What do you
+think you deserve, my man?”
+
+Toft stretched out a shaking arm towards the paper. But my lord was
+before him. His huge hand fell on it. He tore it across and across, and
+threw the pieces under the table.
+
+“No,” he said, “that won’t do! You will write at a venture and if you
+are right you will claim the money, and if you are wrong you will have
+this paper to show that I bargained with you. But I never meant to
+bargain with you, my good rascal. I knew you were a fraud. I knew it
+from the beginning. And now I’ve only one thing to say. Either you will
+tell me freely what you know, and in that case I shall say nothing. Or
+I report you to your master. That’s my last word.”
+
+Toft shook from head to foot. He had done a hateful thing, he had been
+defeated, and exposure threatened him. As far as his master was
+concerned he could face it. But his wife, his daughter? Who thought him
+honest, loyal, who thought him a man! Who believed in him! How could
+he, how would he face them, if this tale were told?
+
+My lord saw the change in him, saw how he shrank, and, smiling, he
+fancied that he had the man in his grasp, fancied that he would tell
+what he knew, and tell it for nothing. And twice Toft opened his lips
+to speak, and twice no words came. For at the last moment, in this
+strait, what there was of good in him—and there was good—rose up, and
+had the better; had the better, reinforced perhaps by his hatred of the
+heavy smiling face that gloated upon him.
+
+For at the last moment, “No, my lord,” he said desperately, “I’ll not
+speak. I’m d—d if I do! You may do what you like.”
+
+And before his lordship, taken by surprise, could interpose, the
+servant had turned and made for the door. He was half-way down the
+stairs before the other had risen from his seat. He had escaped. He was
+clear for the time, and safe in the road he breathed more freely. But
+he had gone a hundred yards on his way before he remarked that he was
+in the open air, or bethought himself to put on his hat.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+MY LORD SPEAKS
+
+
+For a few moments Audley had certainly hoped that he was going to learn
+all that Toft knew, and to learn it for nothing. He had been baulked in
+this. But when he came to think over the matter he was not ill content
+with himself, nor with his conduct of the interview. He had dealt with
+the matter with presence of mind, and in the only safe way; and he had
+taught the man a lesson. “He knows by this time,” he reflected, “that
+if I am a lord, I am not a fool!”
+
+But this mood did not last long, and it was succeeded by one less
+cheerful. The death’s-head had never been wanting at his feast. The
+family tradition which had come down to him with his blood had never
+ceased to haunt him, and in the silence of the night he had many a time
+heard John Audley at work seeking for the means to displace him. Even
+the great empty house had seemed to mock his pretensions.
+
+But until the last month his fears had been vague and shadowy, and in
+his busy hours he had laughed at them. He was Lord Audley, he sat, he
+voted, the doors of White’s, of Almack’s were open to him. In town he
+was a personage, in the country a divinity still hedged him, no
+tradesman spoke to him save hat in hand. Then, lately, the traces which
+he had found in the Great House had given a shape to his fears; and
+within the last hour he had learned their solidity. Sane or mad, John
+Audley was upon his track, bent upon displacing him, bent upon ruining
+him; and this very day the man might be laying his hand upon the thing
+he needed.
+
+Audley did not doubt the truth of Toft’s story. It confirmed his fears
+only too well; and the family tradition—that too weighed with him. He
+sat for a long time staring before him, then, uneasy and restless, he
+rose and paced the floor. He went to and fro, to and fro, until
+by-and-by he came to a stand before one of the windows. He drummed with
+his fingers on the glass. There was one way, certainly. Stubbs had said
+so, and Stubbs was right. There was one way, if he could make up his
+mind to the limitations it would impose upon him. If he could make up
+his mind to be a poor man.
+
+The window at which he stood looked on a road of quiet dignity, a
+little removed from the common traffic of the town. But the windows,
+looking sideways, commanded also a more frequented thoroughfare which
+crossed this street. His thoughts far away and sombrely engaged, the
+young man watched the stream of passers, as it trickled across the
+distant opening.
+
+Suddenly his eyes recalled his mind to the present. He started, turned,
+in three strides he was beside the hearth. He rang the bell twice, the
+signal for his man. He waited impatiently.
+
+“My hat and coat!” he cried to the servant. “Quick, I’m in a hurry!”
+Like most men who have known vicissitudes he had a superstitious side,
+and the figure which he had seen pass across the end of the road had
+appeared so aptly, so timely, had had so much the air of an answer to
+his doubts that he took it for an inspiration.
+
+He ran down the stairs, but he knew that his comings and goings were
+marked, and once outside the house he controlled his impatience. He
+walked slowly, humming a tune and swaying his cane, and it was a very
+stately gentleman taking the air and acknowledging with courtesy the
+respectful salutations of the passers, who came on Mary Audley as she
+turned from Dr. Pepper’s door in the High Street.
+
+He stood. “Miss Audley!” he cried.
+
+Mary was flushed with exercise, ruffled by the wind, travel-stained.
+But she would have cared little for these things if she could have
+governed the blood that rose to her cheeks at his sudden appearance. To
+mask her confusion she rushed into speech.
+
+“You cannot be more surprised than I am,” she said. “My uncle is not so
+well to-day, and in a panic about his medicine. Toft, who should have
+come in to town to fetch it, was not to be found, so I had to come.”
+
+“And you have walked in?”
+
+Smiling, she showed him her boots. “And I am presently going to walk
+out,” she said.
+
+“You will never do it?”
+
+“Before dark? No, perhaps not!” She raised her hand and put back a
+tress of hair which had strayed from its fellows. “And I shall be
+tired. But I shall be much surprised if I cannot walk ten miles at a
+pinch.”
+
+“I shall be surprised if you walk ten miles to-day,” he retorted. “My
+plans for you are quite different. Have you got what you came to
+fetch?”
+
+She had steadied herself, and was by this time at her ease. She made a
+little grimace. “No,” she said. “It will not be ready for quarter of an
+hour.”
+
+He rang Dr. Pepper’s bell. An awestruck apprentice, who had watched the
+interview through the dusty window of the surgery, showed himself.
+
+“Be good enough to send the medicine for Miss Audley to Mrs.
+Jenkinson’s,” Audley said. “You understand?”
+
+“Yes, my lord! Certainly, my lord!” She was going to protest. He turned
+to her, silenced her. “And now I take possession of you,” he said,
+supremely careless what the lad heard. “You are coming to The
+Butterflies to take tea, or sherry, or whatever you take when you have
+walked five miles.”
+
+“Oh, Lord Audley!”
+
+“And then I am going to drive you as far as the old Cross, and walk up
+the hill with you—as far as I choose.”
+
+“Oh, but I cannot!” Mary cried, coloring charmingly, but whether with
+pleasure or embarrassment she could not tell. She only knew that his
+ridiculous way of taking possession of her, the very masterfulness of
+it, moved her strangely. “I cannot indeed. What would my uncle say?”
+
+“I don’t know, and I don’t care!” he replied, swinging his walking
+cane, and smiling as he towered above her.
+
+“He may go hang—for once!”
+
+She hesitated. “It is very good of you,” she said. “I confess I did not
+look forward to the walk back. But——”
+
+“There is no—but,” he replied. “And no walk back! It is arranged. It is
+time—” his eyes dwelt kindly on her as she turned with him—“it is time
+that some one took it in hand to arrange things for you. Five miles in
+and five miles out over dirty roads on a winter afternoon—and Miss
+Audley! No, no! And now—this way, please!”
+
+She yielded, she could not tell why, except that it was difficult to
+resist him, and not unpleasant to obey him. And after all, why should
+she not go with him? She had been feeling fagged and tired, depressed,
+moreover, by her uncle’s fears. The low-lying fields, the town, the
+streets, all dingy under a gray autumn sky, had given her no welcome.
+
+And her thoughts, too, had been dun-colored. She had felt very lonely
+the last few days, doubtful of the future, without aim, hipped. And now
+in a moment all seemed changed. She was no longer alone, nor fearful.
+The streets were no longer dingy nor dreary. There were still pleasant
+things in the world, kindness, and thought for others, and friendship
+and—and tea and cake! Was it wonderful that as she walked along beside
+my lord her spirits rose? That she felt an unaccountable relief, and in
+the reaction of the moment smiled and sparkled more than her wont? That
+the muddy brick pavement, the low-browed shops, the leafless trees all
+seemed brighter than before, and that even the butcher’s stall became
+almost a thing of beauty?
+
+And he responded famously. He swung his stick, he laughed, he was gay.
+“Don’t pretend!” he said. “I see that you were glad enough to meet me!”
+
+“And the tea and cake!” she replied. “After five miles who would not be
+glad to meet them?”
+
+“Exactly! It is my belief that if I had not met you, you would have
+fallen by the way. You want some one to look after you, Miss Audley.”
+The name was a caress.
+
+Nor was the pleasure all their own. Great was the excitement of the
+townsfolk as they passed. “His lordship and a young lady?” cried half
+Riddsley, running to the windows. “Quick, or you will miss them!” Some
+wondered who she could be; more had seen her at church and could
+answer. “Miss Audley? The young lady who had come to live at the
+Gatehouse? Indeed! You don’t say so?” For every soul in Riddsley, over
+twelve years old, was versed in the Audley history, knew all about the
+suit, and could tell off the degrees of kindred as easily as they could
+tell the distance from the Audley Arms to the Portcullis. “Mr. Peter
+Audley’s daughter who lived in Paris? Lady-in-waiting to a Princess.
+And now walking with his lordship as if she had known him all her life!
+What would Mr. John say? D’you see how gay he looks! Not a bit what he
+is when he speaks to us! Wonder whether there’s anything in it!” And so
+on, and so on, with tit-bits from the history of Mary’s father, and
+choice eccentricities from the life of John Audley.
+
+Mrs. Jenkinson’s amazement, as she espied them coming up the path to
+the house, was a thing by itself. It was such that she set her door
+ajar that she might see them pass through the hall. She was all of a
+twitter, she said afterwards. And poor Jane and poor Sarah—who were
+out! What a miss they were having! It was not thrice in the twelve
+months that his lordship brought a lady to the house.
+
+A greater miss, indeed, it turned out, than she thought. For to her
+gratification Lord Audley tapped at her door. He pushed it open. “Mrs.
+Jenkinson,” he said pleasantly, “this is my cousin, Miss Audley, who is
+good enough to take a cup of your excellent tea with me, if you will
+make it. She has walked in from the Gatehouse.”
+
+Mrs. Jenkinson was a combination of an eager, bright-eyed bird and a
+stout, short lady in dove-colored silk—if such a thing can be imagined;
+and the soul of good-nature. She took Mary by both hands, beamed upon
+her, and figuratively took her to her bosom. “A little cake and wine,
+my dear,” she chirruped. “After a long walk! And then tea. To be sure,
+my dear! I knew your father, Mr. Peter Audley, a dear, good gentleman.
+You would like to wash your hands? Yes, my dear! Not that you are
+not—and his lordship will wait for us upstairs. Yes, there’s a step. I
+knew your father, to be sure, to be sure. A new brush, my dear. And now
+will you let me—not that your sweet face needs any ornament! Yes, I
+talk too much—but, there, my love, when you are as old——”
+
+She was a simple soul, and because her tongue rarely stopped she might
+have been thought to see nothing. But women, unlike men, can do two
+things at once, and little escaped her twinkling spectacles. As she
+told her sister later, “My dear, I saw it was spoons from the first.
+She sparkled all over, bless her innocent heart! And he, if she had
+been a duchess, could not have waited on her more elegant—well,
+elegantly, Sally, if you like, but we can’t all talk like you. They
+thought, the dear creatures, that I saw nothing; but once he said
+something too low for me to hear and she looked up at him, and her
+pretty eyes were like stars. And he looked—well, Sally, I could not
+tell you how he looked!”
+
+“I am not sure that it would be proper,” the spinster demurred.
+
+“Ah, well, it was as pretty a thing as you’d wish to see,” the good
+creature ran on, drumming with her fingers on the lap of her silk gown.
+“And she, bless her, I dare say she was all of a twitter, but she
+didn’t show it. No airs or graces either—but there, an Audley has no
+need! Why, God bless me, I said something about the Princess and what
+company she must have seen, and what a change for her, and she up and
+said—I am sure I loved her for it!—that she had been no more than a
+governess! My dear, an Audley a governess! I fancied my lord wasn’t
+quite pleased, and very natural! But when a man is spoons——”
+
+“My dear sister!”
+
+“Vulgar? Well, perhaps so, I know I run on, but gentle or simple,
+they’re the same when they’re in love! And Jane will be glad to hear
+that she took two pieces of the sultana and two cups of tea, and he
+watching every piece she put in her mouth, and she coloring up, once or
+twice, so that it did my heart good to see them, the pretty dears. Jane
+will be pleased. And there might have been nothing but seed cake in the
+house. I shall remember more presently, but I was in such a twitter!”
+
+“What did she call him?” Miss Sarah asked.
+
+“To be sure, my dear, that was what I was going to tell you! I
+listened, and not a single thing did she call him. But once, when he
+gave her some cake, I heard him call her Mary, for all the world as if
+it was a bit of sugar in his mouth. And there came a kind of quiver
+over her pretty face, and she looked at her plate as much as to say it
+was a new thing. And I said to myself ‘Philip and Mary’—out of the old
+school-books you know, but who they were I don’t remember. But it’s my
+opinion,” Mrs. Jenkinson continued, rubbing her nose with the end of
+her spectacles, “that he had spoken just before they came in, Sally.”
+
+“You don’t say so?” Sarah cried.
+
+“If you ask me, there was a kind of softness about them both! Law, when
+I think what you and Jane missed through going to that stupid
+Institute! I am sure you’ll never forgive yourselves!”
+
+The good lady had not missed much herself, but she was mistaken in
+thinking that the two had come to an understanding. Indeed when,
+leaving the warmth of her presence behind them, they drove out of town,
+with the servant seated with folded arms behind them and Mary snugly
+tucked in beside my lord, a new constraint began to separate them. The
+excitement of the meeting had waned, the fillip of the unwonted treat
+had lost its power. A depression for which she could not account beset
+Mary as they rolled through the dull outskirts and faced the flat
+mistridden pastures and the long lines of willows. On his side doubt
+held him silent. He had found it pleasant to come to the brink, he had
+not been blind to Mary’s smiles and her rare blushes. But the one step
+farther—that could not be re-trodden, and it was in the nature of the
+man to hesitate at the last, and to consider if he were getting full
+value.
+
+So, as they drove through the dusk, now noiselessly over sodden leaves,
+now drumming along the hard road, the hint of a chill fell between
+them. Mary’s thoughts went forward to the silent house and the lonely
+rooms, and she chid herself for ingratitude. She had had her pleasure,
+she had had an unwonted treat. What was wrong with her? What more did
+she want?
+
+It was nearly dark, and not many words had passed when Lord Audley
+pulled up the horses at the old Cross. The man leapt down and was going
+to help Mary to alight, when his master bade him take the box-seat and
+the reins.
+
+Mary remonstrated. “Oh, don’t get down, please!” she cried. “Please! It
+is nothing to the house from here.”
+
+“It is half a mile if it is a yard,” he said. “And it is nearly dark. I
+am going with you.” He bade the man walk the horses up and down.
+
+She ventured another protest, but he put it aside. He threw back the
+rug and lifted her down. For a moment he stamped about and stretched
+himself. Then “Come, Mary,” he said. It was an order.
+
+She knew then what was at hand. And though she had a minute before
+looked forward with regret to the parting, all her thought now was how
+she might escape to the Gatehouse. It became a refuge. Her heart, as
+she started to walk beside him, beat so quickly that she could not
+speak. She was thankful that it was dark, and that he could not read
+her agitation in her face.
+
+He did not speak himself for some minutes. Then “Mary,” he said
+abruptly, looking straight before him, “I am rather one for taking than
+asking, and that stands in my way now. When I’ve wanted a thing I’ve
+generally taken it. Now I want a thing I can’t take—without asking. And
+I feel that I’m not good at the asking. But I want it badly, and I must
+do the best I can. I love you, Mary. I love you, and I want you for my
+wife.”
+
+She could not find a word. When he went on his tone was lower.
+
+“I’m rather a lonely man,” he said. “You didn’t know that, or think it?
+But it is true. And such an hour as we have spent to-day is not mine
+often. It lies with you to say if I am going to have more of them. I
+might tell you with truth that I haven’t much to offer my wife. That if
+I am Audley of Beaudelays, I am the poorest Audley that ever was. That
+my wife will be no great lady, and will step into no golden shoes. The
+butterflies are moths, Mary, nowadays, and if I am ever to be much she
+will have to help me. But I will tell no lies, my dear!” He turned to
+her then and stopped; and perforce, though her knees trembled, she had
+to stand also, and face him as he looked down at her. “I am not going
+to pretend that what I have to offer isn’t enough. For you are lonely
+like me; you have no one but John Audley to look to, and I am big
+enough and strong enough to take care of you. And I will take care of
+you—if you will let me. If you will say the word, Mary?”
+
+He loomed above her in the darkness. He seemed already to possess her.
+She tried to think, tried to ask herself if she loved him, if she loved
+him enough; but the fancy for him which she had had from the beginning,
+that and his masterfulness swept her irresistibly towards him. She was
+lonely—more lonely than ever of late, and to whom was she to look? Who
+else had been as good to her, as kind to her, as thoughtful for her, as
+he who now wooed her so honestly, who offered her all he had to offer?
+She hesitated, and he saw that she hesitated.
+
+“Come, we’ve got to have this out,” he said bluntly. And he put his
+hand on her shoulder. “We stand alone, both of us, you and I. We’re the
+last of the old line, and I want you for my wife, Mary! With you I can
+do something, with you I believe that I can make something of my life!
+Without you—but there, if you say no, I won’t take it! I won’t take it,
+and I am going to have you, if not to-day, to-morrow, and if not
+to-morrow, the next day! Make no mistake about that!”
+
+She tried to fence with him. “I have not a penny,” she faltered.
+
+“I don’t ask you for a penny.”
+
+Her instinct was still to escape. “You are Lord Audley,” she said, “and
+I am a poor relation. Won’t you—don’t you think that you will repent
+presently!”
+
+“That’s my business! If that be all—if there’s no one else——”
+
+“No, there’s no one else,” she admitted. “But——”
+
+“_But_ be hanged!” he cried. “If there’s no one else you are mine.” And
+he passed his arm round her.
+
+For a moment she stepped back. “No!” she protested, raising her hands
+to push him off. “Please—please let me think.”
+
+He let her be, for already he knew that he had won; and perhaps in his
+own mind he was beginning to doubt the wisdom of the step. “My uncle?
+Have you thought of him?” she asked. “What will he say?”
+
+“I have not thought of him,” he cried grandly, “and I am not going to
+think of him. I am thinking, my dear, only of you. Do you love me?”
+
+She stood silent, gazing at him.
+
+“Don’t play with me!” he said. “I’ve a right to an answer.”
+
+“I think I do,” she said softly. “Yes—I think—no, wait; that is not
+all.”
+
+“It is all.”
+
+“No,” between laughing and crying. “You are not giving me time. I want
+to think. You are carrying me by storm, sir.”
+
+“And a good way, too!” he rejoined. Then she did let him take her, and
+for a few seconds she was in his arms. He crushed her to him, she felt
+all the world turning. But before he found her lips, the crack of a
+whip startled them, the creak of a wheel sliding round the corner
+warned them, she slipped from his arms.
+
+“You little wretch!” he said.
+
+Breathless, hardly knowing what she felt, or what storm shook her, she
+could not speak. The wagon came creaking past them, the driver clinging
+to the chain of the slipper. When it was gone by she found her voice.
+“It shall be as you will,” she said, and her tone thrilled him. “But I
+want to think. It has been so sudden, I am frightened. I am frightened,
+and—yes, I think I am happy. But please to let me go now. I am safe
+here—in two minutes I shall be at home.”
+
+He tried to keep her, but “Let me go now,” she pleaded. “Later it shall
+be as you wish—always as you wish. But let me go now.”
+
+He gave way then. He said a few words while he held her hands, and he
+said them very well. Then he let her go. Before the dusk hid her she
+turned and waved her hand, and he waved his. He stood, listening. He
+heard the sound of her footsteps grow fainter and fainter as she
+climbed the hill, until they were lost in the rustle of the wind
+through the undergrowth. At last he turned and trudged down the hill.
+
+“Well, I’ve done it,” he muttered presently. “And Uncle John may find
+what he likes, damn him! After all, she’s handsome enough to turn any
+man’s head, and it makes me safe! But I’ll go slow. I’ll go slow now.
+There’s no hurry.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+BLORE UNDER WEAVER
+
+
+Gratitude and liking, and the worship of strength which is as natural
+in a woman as the worship of beauty in a man, form no bad imitation of
+love, and often pass into love as imperceptibly as the brook becomes a
+river. The morning light brought Mary no repentance. Misgivings she
+had, as what lover has not, were the truth told. Was her love as
+perfect as Etruria’s, as unselfish, as absorbing? She doubted. But in
+all honesty she hoped that it might become so; and when she dwelt on
+the man who had done so much for her, and thought so well for her, who
+had so much to offer and made so little of the offering, her heart
+swelled with gratitude, and if she did not love she fancied that she
+did.
+
+So much was changed for her! She had wondered more than once what would
+happen to her, if her uncle died. That fear was put from her. Toft—she
+had been vexed with Toft. How small a matter that seemed now! And Peter
+Basset? He had been kind to her, and a pang did pierce her heart on his
+account. But he had recovered very quickly, she reflected. He had shown
+himself cold enough and distant enough at his last visit! And then she
+smiled as she thought how differently her new lover had assailed her,
+with what force, what arrogance, what insistence—and yet with a force
+and arrogance and insistence to which it was pleasant to yield.
+
+She did not with all this forget that she would be Lady Audley, she,
+whose past had been so precarious, whose prospects had been so dark,
+whose fate it might have been to travel through life an obscure
+teacher! She had not been woman if she had not thought of this; nor if
+she had failed, when she thought of it, to breathe a prayer for the
+gallant lover who had found her and saved her, and had held it enough
+that she was an Audley. He might have chosen far and wide. He had
+chosen her.
+
+No wonder that Mrs. Toft saw a change in her. “Law, Miss,” she
+remarked, when she came in to remove the breakfast. “One would think a
+ten-mile walk was the making of you! It’s put a color into your cheeks
+that would shame a June rose! And to be sure,” with a glance at the
+young lady’s plate, “not much eaten either!”
+
+“I am not hungry, Mrs. Toft,” Mary said meekly. “I drove back to the
+foot of the hill.”
+
+“And I’d like to sort Toft for it! Ifs he who should have gone! He’s
+upstairs now, keeping out of my way, and that grim and gray you’d think
+he’d seen a ghost! And ’Truria, silly girl, she’s all of a quiver this
+morning. It’s ‘Mother, let me do this!’ and ‘Mother, I’ll do that!’ all
+because her reverend—not, as I tell her, that aught will ever come of
+it—has got a roof over his head at last.”
+
+“But that’s good news! Has Mr. Colet got some work?”
+
+“Not he, the silly man! Nor likely! There’s mighty little work for them
+as go against the gentry. For what he’s got he’s to thank Mr. Basset.”
+
+“Mr. Basset.”
+
+“To be sure,” Mrs. Toft answered, with a covert glance at the girl,
+“why not, Miss? Some talk and the wind goes by. There’s plenty of
+those. And some say naught but do—and that’s Mr. Basset. He’s took in
+Mr. Colet till he can find a church. Etruria’s that up about it, I tell
+her, smile before breakfast and sweat before night. And so she’ll find
+it, I warrant!”
+
+“It is very good of Mr. Basset,” Mary said gravely. And then, “Is that
+some one knocking, Mrs. Toft?”
+
+“It’s well to have young ears!” Mrs. Toft took out the tray, and
+returned with a letter. “It’s for you, Miss,” she said. “The postman’s
+late this morning, but cheap’s a slow traveller. When a letter was a
+letter and cost ninepence it came to hand like a gentleman!”
+
+Mary waited to hear no more. She knew the handwriting, and as quickly
+as she could she escaped from the room. No one with any claim to taste
+used an envelope in those days, and to open a letter so that no rent
+might mar its fairness called for a care which she could not exercise
+in public.
+
+Alone, in her room, she opened it, and her eyes grew serious as they
+travelled down the page, which bore signs of haste.
+
+“Sweetheart,” it began, and she thought that charming, “I do not ask if
+you reached the Gatehouse safely, for I listened and I must have heard,
+if harm befel you. I drove home as happy as a king, and grieved only
+that I had not had that of you which I had a right to have—damn that
+carter! This troubles me the more as I shall not see you again for a
+time, and if this does not disappoint you too, you’re a deceiver! My
+plans are altered by to-day’s news that Peel returns to office. In any
+event, I had to go to Seabourne’s for Christmas, now I must be there
+for a meeting to-morrow and go from there to London on the same
+business. You would not have me desert my post, I am sure? Heaven knows
+how long I may be kept, possibly a fortnight, possibly more. But the
+moment I can I shall be with you.
+
+“Write to me at the Brunswick Hôtel, Dover Street. Sweetheart, I am
+yours, as you, my darling, are
+
+“Philip’s.
+
+“_P. S_.—I must put off any communication to your uncle till I can see
+him. So for the moment, mum!”
+
+Mary read the letter twice; the first time with eager eyes, the second
+time more calmly. Nothing was more natural, she told herself, than that
+her spirits should sink—Philip was gone. The walk with him, the talk
+which was to bring them nearer, and to make them better known to one
+another, stood over. The day that was to be so bright was clouded.
+
+But beyond this the letter itself fell a little, a very little, short
+of her expectations. The beginning was charming! But after that—was it
+her fancy, or was her lover’s tone a little flippant, a little free, a
+little too easy? Did it lack that tender note of reassurance, that
+chivalrous thought for her, which she had a right to expect in a first
+letter? She was not sure.
+
+And as to her uncle. She must, of course, be guided by her lover, his
+will must be her law now; and it was reasonable that in John Audley’s
+state of health the mode of communication should be carefully weighed.
+But she longed to be candid, she longed to be open; and in regard to
+one person she would be open. Basset had let her see that her treatment
+had cured him. At their last meeting he had been cold, almost unkind;
+he had left her to deal with Toft as she could. Still she owed him, if
+any one, the truth, and, were it only to set herself right in her own
+eyes, she must tell him. If the news did nothing else it would open the
+way for his return to the Gatehouse, and the telling would enable her
+to make the _amende_.
+
+The letter was not written on that day nor the next. But on the fourth
+day after Audley’s departure it arrived at Blore, and lay for an hour
+on the dusty hall table amid spuds and powder-flasks and old
+itineraries. There Mr. Colet found it and another letter, and removed
+the two for safety to the parlor, where litter of a similar kind
+struggled for the upper hand with piles of books and dog’s-eared
+Quarterlies. The decay of the Bassets dated farther back than the
+decline of the Audleys, and the gabled house under the shadow of Weaver
+was little better, if something larger, than a farm-house. There had
+been a library, but Basset had taken the best books to the Gatehouse.
+And there were in the closed drawing-room, and in some of the bedrooms,
+old family portraits, bad for the most part; the best lay in marble in
+Blore Church. But in the parlor, which was the living-room, hung only
+paintings of fat oxen and prize sheep; and the garden which ran up to
+the walls of the house, and in summer was a flood of color, lay in
+these days dank and lifeless, ebbing away from bee-skips and
+chicken-coops. The park had been ploughed during the great war, and now
+pined in thin pasture. The whole of the valley was still Basset land,
+but undrained in the bottom and light on the slopes, it made no figure
+in a rent-roll. The present owner had husbanded the place, and paid off
+charges, and cleared the estate, but he had been able to do no more.
+The place was a poor man’s place, though for miles round men spoke to
+the owner bareheaded. He was “Basset of Blore,” as much a part of
+Staffordshire as Burton Bridge or the Barbeacon. The memories of the
+illiterate are long.
+
+He had been walking the hill that morning with a dog and a gun, and
+between yearnings for the woman he loved, and longings for some plan of
+life, some object, some aim, he was in a most unhappy mood. At one
+moment he saw himself growing old, without the energy to help himself
+or others, still toying with trifles, the last and feeblest of his
+blood. At another he thought of Mary, and saw her smiling through the
+flowering hawthorn, or bending over a book with the firelight on her
+hair. Or again, stung by the lash of her reproaches he tried to harden
+himself to do something. Should he take the land into his own hands,
+and drain and fence and breed stock and be of use, were it only as a
+struggling farmer in his own district? Or should he make that plunge
+into public life to which Colonel Mottisfont had urged him and from
+which he shrank as a shivering man shrinks from an icy bath?
+
+For there was the rub. Mary was right. He was a dreamer, a weakling,
+one in whom the strong pulse that had borne his forbears to the front
+beat but feebly. He was not equal to the hard facts of life. With what
+ease had Audley, whenever they had stood foot to foot, put him in the
+second place, got the better of him, outshone him!
+
+Old Don pointed in vain. His master shot nothing, for he walked for the
+most part with his eyes on the turf. If he raised them it was to gaze
+at the hamlet lying below him in the valley, the old house, the ring of
+buildings and cottages, the church that he loved—and that like the
+woman he loved, reproached him with his inaction.
+
+About two o’clock he turned homewards. How many more days would he will
+and not will, and end night by night where he had begun? In the main he
+was of even temper, but of late small things tried him, and when he
+entered the parlor and Colet rose at his entrance, he could not check
+his irritation.
+
+“For heaven’s sake, man, sit still!” he cried. “And don’t get up every
+time I come in! And don’t look at me like a dog! And don’t ask me if I
+want the book you are reading!”
+
+The curate stared, and muttered an apology. It was true that he did not
+wear the chain of obligation with grace.
+
+“No, it is I who am sorry!” Basset replied, quickly repenting. “I am a
+churlish ass! Get up when you like, and say what you like! But if you
+can, make yourself at home!”
+
+Then he saw the two letters lying on the table. He knew Mary’s writing
+at a glance, and he let it lie, his face twitching. He took up the
+other, made as if he would open it, then he threw it back again, and
+took Mary’s to the window, where he could read it unwatched.
+
+It was short.
+
+“Dear Mr. Basset,” she wrote, “I should be paying you a poor compliment
+if I pretended that what I am writing will not pain you. But I hope,
+and since our last meeting, I have reason to believe that that pain
+will not be lasting.
+
+“My cousin, Lord Audley, has asked me to marry him, and I have
+consented. Nothing beyond this is fixed, and no announcement will be
+made until my uncle has recovered his strength. But I feel that I owe
+it to you to let you know this at once.
+
+“I owe you something more. You crowned your kindness by doing me a
+great honor. I could not reply in substance otherwise than I did, but
+for the foolish criticisms of an inexperienced girl, I ask you to
+believe that I feel deep regret.
+
+“When we meet I hope that we may meet as friends. If I can believe this
+it will add something to the happiness of my engagement. My uncle is
+better, but little stronger than when you saw him.
+
+“I am, truly yours,
+
+“Mary Audley.”
+
+He stood looking at it for a long time, and only by an effort could he
+control the emotion that strove to master him. Then his thoughts
+travelled to the other, the man who had won her, the man who had got
+the better of him from the first, who had played the Jacob from the
+moment of their meeting on the steamer; and a passion of jealousy swept
+him away. He swore aloud.
+
+Mr. Colet leapt in his chair. “Mr. Basset!” he cried. And then, in a
+different tone, “You have bad news, I fear?”
+
+The other laughed bitterly. “Bad news?” he repeated, and Colet saw that
+his face was white and that the letter shook in his hand. “The
+Government’s out, and that’s bad news. The pig’s ill, and that’s bad
+news. Your mother’s dead, and that’s bad news!”
+
+“Swearing makes no news better,” Colet said mildly.
+
+“Not even the pig? If your—if Etruria died, and some one told you that
+she was dead, you wouldn’t swear? You wouldn’t curse God?”
+
+“God forbid!” the clergyman cried in horror.
+
+“What would you do then?”
+
+“Try so to live, Mr. Basset, that we might meet again!”
+
+“Rubbish, man!” Basset retorted rudely. “Try instead not to be a prig!”
+
+“If I could be of use?”
+
+“You cannot, nor any one else,” Basset answered. “There, say no more.
+The worst is over. We’ve played our little part and—what’s the odds how
+we played it?”
+
+“Much when the curtain falls,” the poor clergyman ventured.
+
+“Well, I’ll go and eat something. Hunger is one more grief!” And Basset
+went out.
+
+He came back ten minutes later, pale but quiet. “Sorry, Colet,” he
+said. “Very rude, I am afraid! I had bad news, but I am right now.
+Wasn’t there another letter for me?”
+
+He found the letter and read it listlessly. He tossed it across the
+table to his guest. “News is plentiful to-day,” he said.
+
+Colet took the letter and read it. It was from a Mr. Hatton, better
+known to him than to Basset, and the owner of one of the two small
+factories in Riddsley. It was an invitation to contest the borough in
+opposition to young Mottisfont.
+
+“If it were a question, respected sir,” Hatton wrote, “of Whigs and
+Tories we should not approach you. But as the result must depend upon
+the proportions in which the Tory party splits for and against Sir
+Robert Peel upon the Corn Laws, we, who are in favor of repeal,
+recognize the advantage of being represented by a moderate Tory. The
+adherence to Sir Robert of Sir James Graham in the North and of Lord
+Lincoln in the Midlands proves that there are landowners who place
+their country before their rents, and it is in the hope that you, sir,
+are of the number that we invite you to give us that assistance which
+your ancient name must afford.
+
+“We are empowered to promise you the support of the Whig party in the
+borough, conditioned only upon your support of the repeal of the Corn
+Laws, leaving you free on other points. The Audley influence has been
+hitherto paramount, but we believe that the time has come to free the
+borough from the last remnant of the Feudal system.
+
+“A deputation will wait upon you to give you such assurances as you may
+desire. But as Parliament meets on an early date, and the present
+member may at once apply for the Chiltern Hundreds, we shall be glad to
+have your answer before the New Year.”
+
+“Well?” Basset asked. “What do you think?”
+
+“It opens a wide door.”
+
+“If you wish to have your finger pinched,” Basset replied, flippantly,
+“it does. I don’t know that it is an opening to anything else.” And as
+Colet refrained from speaking, “You don’t think,” he went on, “that
+it’s a way into Parliament? A repealer has as much chance of getting in
+for Riddsley against the Audley interest as you have of being an
+archdeacon! Of course the Radicals want a fight if they can find a man
+fool enough to spend his money. But as for winning, they don’t dream of
+it.”
+
+“It is better to lose in some causes than to win in others.”
+
+Basset laughed. “Do you know why they have come to me? They think that
+I shall carry John Audley with me and divide the Audley interest.
+There’s nothing in it, but that’s the notion.”
+
+“Why look at the seamy side?” Colet objected. “I suppose there always
+is one, but I don’t think that it was at that side Sir Robert looked
+when he made up his mind to put the country first and his party second!
+I don’t think that it was at that side he looked when he determined to
+eat his words and pocket his pride, rather than be responsible for
+famine in Ireland! Believe me, Mr. Basset,” the clergyman continued
+earnestly, “it was no easy change of opinion. Before he came to that
+resolution, proud, cold man as I am told he is, many a sight and sound
+must have knocked at the door of his mind; a scene of poverty he passed
+in his carriage, a passage in some report, a speech through which he
+seemed to sleep, a begging letter—one by one they pressed the door
+inwards, till at last, with—it may be with misery, he came to see what
+he must do!”
+
+“Possibly.”
+
+“The call came, he had to answer it. Here is a call to you.”
+
+“And do you think,” the other retorted, “that I can answer it more
+cheaply than Sir Robert? So far as I have thought it out, I am with
+him. But do you think I could do this,” he tapped the letter, “without
+misery—of a different kind it may be? I am not a public man, I have
+served no apprenticeship to it, I’ve not addressed a meeting three
+times in my life, I don’t know what I should say or how I should say
+it. And for Hatton and his friends, they would rub me up a dozen times
+a day.”
+
+“_Non sine pulvere!_” Mr. Colet murmured.
+
+“Dust enough there’ll be! I don’t doubt that. And dirt. But there’s
+another thing.” He paused, and turning, knocked the fire together. He
+was nearly a minute about it, while the other waited. “There’s another
+thing,” he repeated. “I am not going into this business to pay out a
+private grudge, and I want to be clear that I am not doing that. And
+I’m not going into this simply for what I can get out of it. Ambition
+is a poor stayer with me, a washy chestnut. It would not carry me
+through, Colet. If I go into this, it will be because I believe in it.
+It seems as if I were preaching,” he continued awkwardly. “But there’s
+nothing but belief will carry me through, and unless I am clear—I’ll
+not start. I’ll not start, although I want to make a fresh start badly!
+Devilish badly, if you’ll excuse me!”
+
+“And how will you——”
+
+“Make certain? I don’t know. I must fight it out by myself—go up on the
+hill and think it out. I must believe in the thing, or I must leave it
+alone!”
+
+“Just so,” said Mr. Colet. And prudent for once he said no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+AN AGENT OF THE OLD SCHOOL
+
+
+It is doubtful if even the great Reform Bill of ’32, which shifted the
+base of power from the upper to the middle class, awoke more bitter
+feelings that did the _volte face_ of Peel in the winter of ’45. Since
+the days of Pitt no statesman had enjoyed the popularity or wielded the
+power which had been Sir Robert’s when he had taken office four years
+before. He had been more than the leader of the Tory party; he had been
+its re-creator. He had been more than the leader of the landed
+interest; he had been its pride. Men who believed that upon the welfare
+of that interest rested the stability of the constitution, men with
+historic names had walked on his right hand and on his left, had borne
+his train and carried his messages. All things, his origin, his
+formality, his pride, his quiet domestic life, even his moderation, had
+been forgiven in the man who had guided the Tories through the bad
+days, had led them at last to power, and still stood between them and
+the mutterings of this new industrial England, that hydra-like
+threatened and perplexed them.
+
+And then—he had betrayed them. Suddenly, some held; in a panic, scared
+by God knows what bugbear! Coldly and deliberately, said others,
+spreading his treachery over years, laughing in his sleeve as he led
+them to the fatal edge. Those who took the former view made faint
+excuse for him, and perhaps still clung to him. Those who held the
+latter thought no price too high, no sacrifice too costly, no effort
+too great, if they could but punish the traitor! If they could but
+pillory him for all to see.
+
+So, in a moment, in the autumn of ’45, as one drop of poison will cloud
+the fairest water, the face of public life was changed. Bitterness was
+infused into it, friend was parted from friend and son from father, the
+oldest alliances were dissolved. Men stood gaping, at a loss whither to
+turn and whom to trust. Many who had never in all their lives made up
+their own minds were forced to have an opinion and choose a side; and
+as that process is to some men as painful as a labor to a woman, the
+effect was to embitter things farther. How could one who for years past
+had cursed Cobden in all companies, and in moments of relaxation had
+drunk to a “Bloody War and a Wet Harvest,” turn round and join the
+Manchester School? It could be done, it was done, but with what a
+rending of bleeding sinews only the sufferers knew!
+
+Strange to say, few gave weight to Sir Robert’s plea of famine in
+Ireland. Still more strange, when events bore out his alarm, when in
+the course of a year or two a quarter of a million in that unhappy
+country died of want, public feeling changed little. Those who had
+remained with him, stood with him still. Those who had banded
+themselves against him, held their ground. Only a handful allowed that
+he was honest, after all. Nor was it until he, who rode his horse like
+a sack, had died like a demi-god, with a city hanging on his breath,
+and weeping women filling all the streets about the house, that the
+traitor became the patriot.
+
+But this is to anticipate. In December of ’45, few men believed in
+famine. Few thought much of dearth. The world was angry, blood was hot,
+many dreamt of vengeance. Meantime Manchester exulted, and Coal, Iron,
+Cotton toasted Peel. But even they marvelled that the man who had been
+chosen to support the Corn Laws had the courage to repeal them!
+
+Upon no one in the whole country did the news fall with more stunning
+effect than upon poor Stubbs at Riddsley. He had suspected Peel. He had
+disliked his measures, and doubted whither he was moving. He had even
+on the occasion of his resignation predicted that Sir Robert would
+support the repeal; but he had not thought worse of him than that, and
+the event left him not uncertain, nor under any stress as to making up
+his mind, but naked, as it were, in an east wind. He felt older. He
+owned that his generation was passing. He numbered the friends he had
+left and found them few. And though he continued to assert that no man
+had ever pitted himself against the land whom the land had not broken,
+doubt began to creep into his mind. There were hours when he foresaw
+the end of the warm farming days, of game and sport, of Horn and Corn,
+ay, and of the old toast, “The farmer’s best friend—the landlord,” to
+which he had replied at many an audit dinner.
+
+One thing remained—the Riddsley election. He found some comfort in
+that. He drew some pleasure from the thought that Sir Robert might do
+what he pleased at Tamworth, he might do what he pleased in the
+Cabinet, in the Commons—there were toadies and turn-coats everywhere;
+but Riddsley would have none of him! Riddsley would remain faithful!
+Stubbs steeped himself in the prospect of the election, and in
+preparations for it. A dozen times a day he thanked his stars that the
+elder Mottisfont’s weakness for Peel had provided this opening for his
+energies.
+
+Not that even on this ground he was quite happy. There was a little
+bitter in the cup. He hardly owned it to himself, he did not dream of
+whispering it to others, but at the bottom of his mind he had ever so
+faint a doubt of his employer. A hint dropped here, a word there, a
+veiled question—he could not say which of these had given him the
+notion that his lordship hung between two opinions, and even—no wonder
+that Stubbs dared not whisper it to others—was weighing which would pay
+him best!
+
+Such a thought was treason, however, and Stubbs buried it and trampled
+on it, before he went jauntily into the snug little meeting at the
+Audley Arms, which he had summoned to hear the old member’s letter read
+and to accept the son as a candidate in his father’s place. Those whom
+the agent had called were few and trusty; young Mottisfont himself, the
+rector and Dr. Pepper, Bagenal the maltster, Hogg the saddler, Musters
+the landlord, the “Duke” from the Leasows (which was within the
+borough), and two other tradesmen. Stubbs had no liking for big
+meetings. He had been bred up to believe that speeches were lost labor,
+and if they must be made should be made at the Market Ordinary.
+
+At such a gathering as this he was happy. He had the strings in his own
+hands. The work to be done was at his fingers’ ends. At this table he
+was as great a man as my lord. With young Mottisfont, who was by way of
+being a Bond Street dandy, solemn, taciturn, and without an opinion of
+his own, he was not likely to have trouble. The rector was enthusiastic
+but indolent, Pepper an old friend. The rest were Stubbs’s most
+obedient.
+
+Stubbs read the retiring member’s letter, and introduced the candidate.
+The rector boomed through a few phrases of approbation, Dr. Pepper
+seconded, the rest cried “Hear! hear!”
+
+“There’s little to say,” Stubbs went on. “I take it that we are all of
+one mind, gentlemen, to return Mr. Mottisfont in his father’s place?”
+
+“Hear! hear!” from all. “In the old interest?” Stubbs went on, looking
+round the table. “And on the clear understanding that Mr. Mottisfont is
+returned to oppose any tampering with the protection of agriculture.”
+
+“That is so,” said Mr. Mottisfont.
+
+“I will see that that is embodied in Mr. Mottisfont’s address,” Stubbs
+continued. “There must be no mistake. These are queer times——”
+
+“Sad times!” said the rector, shaking his head.
+
+“Terrible times!” said the maltster, shaking his.
+
+“Never did I dream I should live to see ’em,” said old Hayward.
+“’Tisn’t a month since a chap came on my land, ay, up to my very door,
+and said things—I’ll be damned if I did not think he’d turn the cream
+sour! And when I cried ‘Sam! fetch a pitchfork and rid me of this
+rubbish——’”
+
+“I know, Hayward,” Stubbs said, cutting him short. “I know. You told me
+about it. You did very well. But to business. It shall be a short
+address—just that one point. We are all agreed, I think, gentlemen?”
+
+All were agreed.
+
+“I’ll see that it is printed in good time,” Stubbs continued. “I don’t
+think that we need trouble you further, Mr. Mottisfont. There’s a
+fat-stock sale this day fortnight. Perhaps you’ll dine and say a few
+words? I’ll let you know if it is necessary. There’ll be no opposition.
+Hatton will have a meeting at the Institute, but nothing will come of
+it.”
+
+“That’s all then, is it?” said the London man, sticking his glass in
+his eye with a sigh of relief.
+
+“That’s all,” Stubbs replied. “If you can attend this day fortnight so
+much the better. The farmers like it, and they’ve fourteen votes in the
+borough. Thank you, gentlemen, that’s all.”
+
+“I think you’ve forgotten one thing, Mr. Stubbs,” said old Hayward,
+with a twinkle.
+
+“To be sure, I have. Ring the bell, Musters, and send up the two
+bottles of your ’20 port that I ordered and some glasses. A glass of
+Musters’ ’20 port, Mr. Mottisfont, won’t hurt you this cold day. And we
+must drink your health. And, Musters, when these gentlemen go down, see
+that they have what they call for.”
+
+The port was sipped, tasted. Mr. Mottisfont’s health was drunk, and
+various compliments were paid to his father. The rector took his two
+glasses; so did young Mottisfont, who woke up and vowed that he had
+tasted none better in St. James’s Street. “Is it Garland’s?” he asked.
+
+“It is, sir,” Musters said, much pleased.
+
+“I thought it was—none better!” said young Mottisfont, also pleased.
+“The old Duke drinks no other.”
+
+“Fine tipple! Fine tipple!” said the other “Duke.” In the end a third
+bottle was ordered, of which Musters and old Hayward drank the better
+part.
+
+At one of these meetings a sad thing had happened. A rash tradesman had
+proposed his lordship’s health. Of course he had been severely snubbed.
+It had been considered most indecent. But on this occasion no one was
+so simple as to name my lord, and Stubbs felt with satisfaction that
+all had passed as it should. So had candidates been chosen as long as
+he could remember.
+
+But call no man happy until the day closes. As he left the house
+Bagenal the maltster tacked himself on to him. “I’d a letter from
+George this morning,” he said. George was his son, articled to Mr.
+Stubbs, and now with Mr. Stubbs’s agents in town. “He saw his lordship
+one day last week.”
+
+“Ay, ay. I suppose Master George was in the West End? Wasting his time,
+Bagenal, I’ll be bound.”
+
+“I don’t know about that. Young fellows like to see things. He went
+with a lot of chaps to see the crowd outside Sir Robert’s. They’d read
+in a paper that all the nobs were to be seen going in and out. Anyway,
+he went, and the first person he saw going in was his lordship!”
+
+Mr. Stubbs walked a few yards in silence. Then, “Well, he’s no sight to
+George,” he said. “It seems to me they were both wasting their time. I
+told his lordship he’d do no good. When half the dukes in England have
+been at Peel, d—n him, it wasn’t likely he’d change his course for his
+lordship! It wasn’t to be expected, Bagenal. Did George stop to see him
+come out?”
+
+“He did. And in a thundering temper my lord looked.”
+
+“Ay, ay! Well I told him how it would be.”
+
+“They were going in and out like bees, George said.”
+
+“Ay, ay.”
+
+They parted on that, and the lawyer went into his office. But his face
+was gloomy. “Ay, like bees!” he muttered. “After the honey! I wonder
+what he asked for! Whatever it was he couldn’t have paid the price! I
+thought he knew that. I’ve a good mind—but there, we’ve held it so
+long, grandfather, father, and son—I can’t afford to give it up.”
+
+He turned into his office, but the day was spoiled for him. And the day
+was not done yet. He had barely sat down before his clerk a thin,
+gray-haired man, high-nosed, with a look of breeding run to seed, came
+in, and closed the door behind him. Farthingale was as well known in
+Riddsley as the Maypole; gossip had it that he was a by-blow of an old
+name. “I’ve heard something,” he said darkly, “and the sooner you know
+it the better. They’ve got a man.”
+
+Stubbs shrugged his shoulders. “For repeal in Riddsley?” he said.
+“You’re dreaming.”
+
+The clerk smiled. “Well, you’d best be awake,” he said. He had been
+long enough with Stubbs to take a liberty. “Who do you think it is?” he
+continued, rubbing his chin with the feather-end of a quill.
+
+“Some methodist parson!”
+
+Farthingale shook his head. “Guess again, sir,” he said. “You’re cold
+at present. It’s a bird of another feather.”
+
+“A pretty big fool whoever he is!”
+
+“Mr. Basset of Blore. I have it on good authority.”
+
+Stubbs stared. He was silent for a time, thinking hard. “Somebody’s
+fooled you,” he said at last, but in a different tone. “He’s never
+shown a sign of coming out.”
+
+The clerk looked wise. “It’s true,” he said. “It cost me four goes of
+brown brandy at the Portcullis.”
+
+“Well, you may score that to me,” Stubbs answered. “Basset, eh? Well,
+he’s throwing his money into the gutter if it’s true, and he hasn’t
+much to spare. I see Hatton’s point. He’s not the fool.”
+
+“No. He’s an old bird is Hatton.”
+
+“But I don’t see where Squire Basset comes in.”
+
+Farthingale looked wiser than ever. “Well,” he said, “he may have a
+score to pay, too. And if he has, there’s more ways than one of paying
+it!”
+
+“What score?”
+
+“Ah, I’m not saying that. Mr. John Audley’s may be—against his
+lordship.”
+
+“Umph! If you paid off yours at the Portcullis,” Stubbs retorted,
+losing his temper, “the landlord wouldn’t be sorry! Scores are a deal
+too much in your way, Farthingale!” he continued, severely, forgetting
+in his annoyance the four goes of brown brandy. “You’re too much at
+home among ’em. Don’t bring me cock-and-bull stories like this! I don’t
+believe it. And get to that lease!”
+
+But sure enough Farthingale’s story proved to be well founded, for a
+week later it was known for certain in Riddsley that Mr. Basset of
+Blore was coming out, and that there would be a fight for the borough.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+MARY IS LONELY
+
+
+Mary Audley was one of the last to hear the news. Etruria brought it
+from the town one day in January, when the evenings were beginning to
+lengthen, and the last hour of daylight was the dreariest of the
+twenty-four. It had rained, and the oaks in the park were a-drip, the
+thorn trees stood in tiny pools, the moorland lay stark under a pall of
+fog. In the vale the Trent was in flood, its pale waters swirling past
+the willow-stools, creeping over the chilled meadows, and stealing inch
+by inch up the waterside lanes. Etruria’s feet were wet, and she was
+weary with her trudge through the mud; but when Mary met her on the
+tiny landing on which their rooms opened, there was a sparkle in the
+girl’s eyes as bright as the red petticoat that showed below her
+tucked-up gown.
+
+“You didn’t forget——” Mary was beginning, and then, “Why, Etruria,” she
+exclaimed, “I believe you have seen Mr. Colet?”
+
+Etruria blushed like the dawn. “Oh no, Miss!” she said. “He’s at
+Blore.”
+
+“To be sure! Then what is it?”
+
+“I’ve heard some news, Miss,” Etruria said. “I don’t know whether
+you’ll be pleased or not.”
+
+“But it is certain that you are!” Mary replied with conviction. “What
+is it?”
+
+The girl told what she had heard: that there was to be an election at
+Riddsley in three weeks, and not only an election but a contest, and
+that the candidate who had come forward to oppose the Corn Laws was no
+other than Mr. Basset—their Mr. Basset! More, that only the evening
+before he had held his first meeting at the Institute, and though he
+had been interrupted and the meeting had been broken up, his short
+plain speech had made a considerable impression.
+
+“Indeed, Miss,” Etruria continued, carried away by the subject, “there
+was one told me that when he stood up to speak she could see his hand
+shake, and his face was the color of a piece of paper. But when they
+began to boo and shout at him, he grew as cool as cool, and the longer
+they shouted the braver he was, until they saw that if they let him go
+on he would be getting a hearing! So they put out the lights and
+stormed the platform, and there was a fine Stafford row, I’m told. Of
+course,” Etruria added simply, “the drink was in them.”
+
+Mary hardly knew what her feelings were. “Mr. Basset?” she said at
+last. “I can hardly believe it.”
+
+“Nor could I, Miss, when I first heard it. But it seems they have known
+it there for ten days and more, and the town is agog with it, everybody
+taking sides, and some so much against him as never was. It’s dreadful
+to think,” Etruria continued, “how misguided men can be. But oh, Miss,
+I’m thankful he’s on the right side, and for taking the burden off the
+bread! I’m sure it will be returned to him, win or lose. They’re
+farmers’ friends here, and they’re saying shameful things of him in the
+market! But there’s many a woman will bless him, and the lanes and
+alleys, they’ve no votes, but they’ll pray for him! Sometimes,” Etruria
+added shyly, “I think it is Mr. Colet has brought him to it.”
+
+“Mr. Colet?” Mary repeated—she did not know why she disliked the
+notion. “Why do you think that?”
+
+“He’s been at Blore,” Etruria murmured. “Mr. Basset has been so good to
+him.”
+
+“Mr. Basset has a mind of his own,” Mary answered sharply. “He is quite
+capable of forming his own opinion.”
+
+“Of course. Miss,” Etruria said, abashed. “I should have known that.”
+
+“Yes,” Mary repeated. “But what was it they were saying of Mr. Basset
+in the market, Etruria? Not that it matters.”
+
+“Well, Miss,” Etruria explained, reluctantly. “They were saying it was
+some grudge Mr. Basset or the Master had against his lordship that
+brought Mr. Basset out.”
+
+“Against Lord Audley?” Mary cried. And she blushed suddenly and
+vividly. “Why? What has he to do with it?”
+
+“Well, Miss, it’s his lordship’s seat,” Etruria answered naïvely; “what
+he wishes has always been done in Riddsley. And he’s for Mr.
+Mottisfont.”
+
+Mary walked to a window and looked out. “Oh,” she said, “I did not know
+that. But you’d better go now, Etruria, and change your shoes. Your
+feet must be wet.”
+
+Etruria went, and Mary continued to gaze through the window. What
+strange news! And what a strange situation! The lover whom she had
+rejected and the lover whom she had taken, pitted against one another!
+And her words—she could hardly doubt it—the spur which had brought
+Basset to the post!
+
+So thinking, so pondering, she grew more and more ill at ease. Her
+sympathies should have been wholly with her betrothed, but they were
+not. She should have resented Basset’s action. She did not. Instead she
+thought of his shaking hand and his pale face, and of the courage that
+had grown firmer in the face of opposition; and she found something
+fine in that, something that appealed to her. And the cause he had
+adopted? It was the cause to which she naturally inclined. She might be
+wrong, he might be wrong. Lord Audley knew so much more of these things
+and looked at them from so enlightened a standpoint, that they must be
+wrong. And yet—her heart warmed to that cause.
+
+She turned from the window in some trouble, wondering if she were
+disloyal, wondering why she felt as she did; wondering a little, too,
+why she had lost the first rapture of her love, and was less happy in
+it than she had been.
+
+True, she had not seen her lover again, and that might account for it.
+He had been detained at Lord Seabourne’s, and in London; he had been
+occupied for days together with the crisis. But she had had three
+letters from him, busy as he was; three amusing letters, full of gossip
+and sprinkled with anecdotes of the great world. She had opened the
+first in something of a tremor; but her fingers had soon grown steady,
+and if she had blushed it had been for her expectation of a vulgar
+love-letter such as milkmaids prize. She had been silly to suppose that
+he would write in that strain.
+
+And yet she had felt a degree of disappointment. He might have written
+with less reserve, she thought; he might have discussed their plans and
+hopes, he might have let the fire peep somewhere through the chinks.
+But there, again, what a poor thing she was if her love must be fed
+with sweetmeats. How weak her trust, how poor her affection, if she
+could not bear a three weeks’ parting! He had come to her, he had
+chosen her, what more did she want? Did she expect him to put aside the
+calls and the duties of his station, that he might hang on her
+apron-strings?
+
+Still, she was not in good spirits, and she felt her loneliness. The
+house, this gray evening, with the shadows gathering in the corners,
+weighed on her. Mrs. Toft was far away in her cosey kitchen, Etruria
+also had gone thither. Toft was with Mr. Audley in the other wing—he
+had been much with his master of late. So Mary was alone. She was not
+nervous, but she was depressed. The cold stairs, the austere parlor
+with its dim portraits, the matted hall, the fireless library—all
+struck a chill. She remembered other times and other evenings; cosey
+evenings, when the glow of the wood-fire had vied with the shaded
+lights, when the three heads had bent over the three tables, when the
+rustle of turning pages had blended with the snoring of the old hound,
+when the pursuit of some trifle had sped the pleasant hours. Alas,
+those evenings were gone, as if they had never been. The house was dull
+and melancholy.
+
+She might have gone to her uncle, but during the afternoon he had told
+her that he wished to be alone; he should go to bed betimes. So about
+seven o’clock she took her meal by herself, and when it was done she
+felt more at a loss than ever. Presently her thoughts went again to
+John Audley.
+
+Had she neglected him of late? Had she left him too much to Toft, and
+let her secret, which she hated to keep secret, come between them? Why
+should she not, even now, see him before he slept? She could take him
+the news of Mr. Basset’s enterprise. It would serve for an excuse.
+
+Lest her courage should fail she went at once, shivering as she passed
+through the shadowy library, where a small lamp, burning on a table,
+did no more than light her to the staircase. She ran up the stairs and
+was groping for the handle of Mr. Audley’s door when the door opened
+abruptly and Toft stepped out, a candle in his hand. She was so close
+to him that he all but touched her, and he was, if anything, more
+startled than she was. He stood gaping at her.
+
+Through the narrow opening she had a glimpse of her uncle, who was on
+his feet before the fire. He was fully dressed.
+
+That surprised her, for, even before this last attack, he had spent
+most of his time in his dressing-gown. Still more surprising was Toft’s
+conduct. He shut the door and held it. “The master is going to bed,
+Miss,” he said.
+
+“I see that he is dressed!” she replied. And she looked at Toft in such
+a way that the man gave way, took his hand from the door, and stood
+aside. She pushed the door open and went in. Her uncle, standing with
+his back to her, was huddling on his dressing-gown.
+
+“What is it?” he cried, his face averted. “Who is it?”
+
+“It is only I, sir,” she replied. “Mary.” She closed the door.
+
+“But I thought I told you that I didn’t want you!” he retorted
+pettishly. “I am going to bed.” He turned, having succeeded in girding
+on his dressing-gown. “Going to bed,” he repeated. “Didn’t I tell you
+so?”
+
+“I’m very sorry, sir,” she said, “but I had news for you. News that has
+surprised me. I thought that you would like to hear it.”
+
+He looked at her, his furtive eyes giving the lie to his plump face,
+which sagged more than of old. “News,” he muttered, peevishly. “What
+news? I wish you wouldn’t startle me. You ought to remember that—that
+excitement is bad for me. And you come at this time of night with news!
+What is it?” He was not looking at her. He seemed to be seeking
+something. “What is it?”
+
+“It’s nothing very terrible,” she answered, smiling. “Nothing to alarm
+you, uncle. Won’t you sit down?”
+
+He looked about him like a man driven into a corner. “No, no, I don’t
+want to sit down!” he said. “I ought to be in bed! I ought to be there
+now.”
+
+“Well, I shall not keep you long,” she answered, trying to humor his
+mood, while all the time she was wondering why he was dressed at this
+time, he whom she had not seen dressed for a fortnight. And why had
+Toft tried to keep her out? “It is only,” she continued, “that I heard
+to-day that there is to be a contest at Riddsley. And that Mr. Basset
+is to be one of the candidates.”
+
+“Is that all?” he said. “News, you said? That’s no news! Bigger fool
+he, unless he does more for himself than he does for his friends! Peter
+the Hermit become Peter the Great! He’ll soon find himself Peter the
+Piper, who picked a peck of pepper! Hot pepper he’ll find it, d—n him!”
+with sudden spite. “He’s no better than the rest! He’s all for himself!
+All for himself!” he repeated, his voice rising in his excitement.
+
+“But——”
+
+“There, don’t agitate me!” He wiped his brow with a shaking hand, while
+his eyes, avoiding hers, continued to look about him as if he sought
+something. “I knew how it would be. You’ve no thought for me. You don’t
+remember how weak I am! Hardly able to crawl across the floor, to put
+one foot before another. And you come chattering! chattering!”
+
+She had thought him odd before, but never so odd as this evening; and
+she was sorry that she had come. She was going to say what she could
+and escape, when he began again. “You’re the last person who should
+upset me! The very last!” he babbled. “When it’s all for you! It’s
+little good it can do me. And Basset, he’d the ball at his foot, and
+wouldn’t kick it! But I’ll show you, I’ll show you all!” he continued,
+gesticulating with a violence that distressed Mary. “Ay, and I’ll show
+_him_ what I am! He thinks he’s safe, d—n him! He thinks he’s safe!
+He’s spending my money and adding up my balance! He’s walking on my
+land and sleeping in my bed! He’s peacocking in my name! But—but——” he
+stopped, struggling for words. For an instant he turned on her over his
+shoulder a face distorted by passion.
+
+Thoroughly alarmed, she tried to soothe him. “But I am sure, sir,” she
+said, “Mr. Basset would never——”
+
+“Basset!”
+
+“I’m sure he never dreamt——”
+
+“Basset!” he repeated. “No! but Audley! Lord Audley, Audley of
+Beaudelays, Audley of nowhere and nothing! And no Audley! no Audley!”
+he repeated furiously, while again he fought for breath, and again he
+mastered himself and lowered his tone. “No Audley!” he whispered,
+pointing a hand at her, “but Jacob, girl! Jacob the supplanter, Jacob
+the changeling, Jacob the baseborn! And he thinks I lie awake of
+nights, hundreds of nights, for nothing! He thinks I dream of him—for
+nothing! He thinks I go out with the bats—for nothing! He thinks I have
+a canker here! Here!” And he clapped his hand to his breast, a
+grotesque, yet dreadful figure in his huddled dressing-gown, his
+flaccid cheeks quivering with rage. “For nothing! But I’ll show him!
+I’ll ruin him! I’ll——”
+
+His voice, which had risen to a scream, stopped. Toft had opened the
+door. “Sir! Mr. Audley!” he cried. “For God’s sake be calm! For God’s
+sake have a care, sir! And you, Miss,” he continued; “you see what you
+have done! If you’ll leave him I’ll get him to bed. I’ll get him to bed
+and quiet him—if I can.”
+
+Mary was shocked, and yet she felt that she could not go without a
+word. “Dear uncle,” she said, “you wish me to go?”
+
+He had clutched one of the posts of the bed and was supporting himself
+by it. The fire had died down in him, he was no more now than a feeble,
+shaking old man. He wiped his brow and his lips. “Yes, go,” he
+whispered. “Go.”
+
+“I am very sorry I disturbed you,” she said. “I won’t do it again. You
+were right, Toft. Good-night.”
+
+The man said “Good-night, Miss.” Her uncle said nothing. He had let
+himself down on the bed, but he still clung to the post. Mary looked at
+him in sorrow, grieved to leave him in this state. But she had no
+choice, and she went out and, closing the door behind her, groped her
+way down the narrow staircase.
+
+It was a little short of ten when she reached the parlor, but she was
+in no mood for reading. What she had seen had shocked and frightened
+her. She was sure now that her uncle was not sane; and while she was
+equally sure that Toft exercised a strong influence over him, she had
+her misgivings as to that. Something must be done. She must consult
+some one. Life at the Gatehouse could not go on on this footing. She
+must see Dr. Pepper.
+
+Unluckily when she had settled this to her mind, and sought her bed,
+she could not sleep. Long after she had heard Etruria go to her room,
+long after she had heard the girl’s shoes fall—familiar sound!—Mary lay
+awake, thinking now of her uncle’s state and her duty towards him, nor
+of her own future, that future which seemed for the moment to have lost
+its brightness. Doubts that the sun dismisses, fears at which daylight
+laughs, are Giants of Despair in the dark watches. So it was with her.
+Misgivings which she would not have owned in the daylight, rose up and
+put on grisly shapes. Her uncle and his madness, her lover and his
+absence, passed in endless procession through her brain. In vain she
+tossed and turned, sat up in despair, tried the cooler side of the
+pillow. She could not rest.
+
+The door creaked. She fancied a step on the staircase, a hand on the
+latch. Far away in the depths of the house a clock struck. It was three
+o’clock—only three o’clock! And it would not be light before eight—not
+much before eight. Oh dear! Oh dear!
+
+And then she slept.
+
+When she awoke it was morning, the light was filtering in through the
+white dimity curtains, and some one was really at her door. Some one
+was knocking. She sat up. “What is it?” she cried.
+
+“Can I come in, Miss?”
+
+The voice was Mrs. Toft’s, and Mary needed no second warning. She knew
+in a moment that the woman brought bad news. She sprang out of bed, put
+on a dressing-gown, and with bare feet she went to the door. She
+unlocked it. “What is it, Mrs. Toft?” she said.
+
+“Maybe not much,” the woman answered cautiously. “I hope not, Miss, but
+I had to tell you. The Master is missing.”
+
+“Missing?” Mary exclaimed, the blood leaving her face. “Impossible!
+Why, I saw him, I was in his room last evening after nine o’clock.”
+
+“Toft was with him up to eleven,” Mrs. Toft answered. Her face was
+grave. “But he’s gone now?”
+
+“You mean that he is not in his room!” Mary said. “But have you
+looked——” and she named places where her uncle might be—places in the
+house.
+
+“We’ve looked there,” Mrs. Toft answered. “Toft’s been everywhere. The
+Master’s not in the house. We’re well-nigh sure of that. And the door
+in the courtyard was open this morning. I am afraid he’s gone, Miss.”
+
+“In his state and at night? Why, it’s——” The girl broke off and took
+hold of herself. “Very well,” she said. “I shall not be more than five
+minutes. I will come down.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+MISSING
+
+
+Mary scrambled into her clothes without pausing to do more than knot up
+her hair. She tried to steady her nerves and to put from her the
+thought that it was her visit which had upset her uncle. That thought
+would only flurry her, and she must be cool. In little more than the
+five minutes that she had named she was in the hall, and found Mrs.
+Toft waiting for her. The door into the courtyard stood open, the bleak
+light and raw air of a January morning poured in, but neither of them
+heeded this. Their eyes met, and Mary saw that the woman, who was
+usually so placid, was frightened.
+
+“Where is Toft?” Mary asked.
+
+“He’s away this ten minutes,” Mrs. Toft replied. “He’s gone to the Yew
+Walk, where you found the Master before. But law, Miss, if he’s there
+in this weather!” She lifted up her hands.
+
+Mary controlled herself. “And Etruria?” she asked.
+
+“She’s searching outside the house. If she does not find him she is to
+run over to Petch the keeper, and bring him.”
+
+“Quite right,” Mary said. “Did Toft take any brandy?”
+
+“He did. Miss. And the big kettle is on, if there is a bath wanted, and
+I’ve put a couple of bricks to heat in the oven.”
+
+“You’re sure you’ve looked everywhere in the house?”
+
+“As sure as can be, Miss! More by token, I’ve some coffee ready for you
+in the parlor.”
+
+But Mary said, “Bring it here, Mrs. Toft.” And snatching up a shawl and
+folding it about her, she stepped outside. It was a gray, foggy
+morning, and the flagged court wore a desolate air. In one corner a
+crowd of dead leaves were circling in the gusts of wind, in another a
+little pile of snow had drifted, and between the monsters that flanked
+the Gateway, the old hound, deaf and crippled, stood peering across the
+park. Mary fancied that the dog descried Toft returning, and she ran
+across the court. But no one was in sight. The park with its clumps of
+dead bracken, its naked trees and gnarled blackthorns, stretched away
+under a thin sprinkling of snow. Shivering she returned to the hall,
+where Mrs. Toft awaited her with the coffee.
+
+“Now,” Mary said, “tell me about it, please—from the beginning.”
+
+“Toft had left Mr. Audley about eleven,” Mrs. Toft explained. “The
+Master had been a bit put out, and that kept him. But he’d settled
+down, and when Toft left him he was much as usual. It could not have
+been before eleven,” Mrs. Toft continued, rubbing her nose, “for I
+heard the kitchen clock strike eleven, and I was asleep when Toft came
+in. The next I remember was finding Toft had got out of bed. ‘What is
+it?’ says I. He didn’t answer, and I roused up and was going to get a
+light. But he told me not to make a noise, he’d been woke by hearing a
+door slam, and thought that some one had crossed the court. He was at
+the window then, looking out, but we heard nothing, and after a while
+Toft came back to bed.”
+
+“What time was that?”
+
+“I couldn’t say, Miss, and I don’t suppose Toft could. It was dark and
+before six, because when I woke again it was on six. But God knows it
+was a thousand pities we didn’t search then, for it’s on my mind that
+it was the poor Master. And if we’d known, Toft would have stopped
+him.”
+
+“Well?” Mary said gravely. “And when did you miss him?”
+
+“Most mornings Etruria’d let me into the house. But this morning she
+found the door unlocked; howsomever she thought nothing of it, for Toft
+has a key as well, and since the Master’s illness and him coming and
+going at all hours, he has not always locked the door; so she made no
+remark. A bit before eight Toft came down—I didn’t see him but I heard
+him—and at eight he took up the Master’s cup of tea. Toft makes it in
+the pantry and takes it up.”
+
+Mrs. Toft paused heavily—not without enjoyment.
+
+“Yes,” Mary said anxiously, “and then?”
+
+“I suppose it was five minutes after, he came out to me—I was in the
+kitchen getting our breakfast—and he was shaking all over. I don’t know
+that I ever saw a man more upset. ‘He’s gone!’ he said. ‘Law, Toft,’ I
+said. ‘What’s the matter? Who’s gone?’ ‘The Master!’ he said.
+‘Fiddlesticks!’ says I. ‘Where should he go?’ And with that I went into
+the house and up to the Master’s room. When I saw it was empty you
+could have knocked me down with a feather! I looked round a bit, and
+then I went up to Mr. Basset’s room that’s over, and down again to the
+library, and so forth. By that time Toft was there, gawpin about. ‘He’s
+gone!’ he kept saying. I don’t know as I ever saw Toft truly upset
+before.”
+
+“And what then?” Mary asked. Twice she had looked through the door, but
+to no purpose.
+
+“Well,” I said, “if he’s not here he can’t be far! Don’t twitter, man,
+but think! It’s my belief he’s away sleepwalking or what not, to the
+place you found him before. On that I gave Toft some brandy and he went
+off.”
+
+“Shouldn’t he be back by now?”
+
+“He should, Miss, if he’s not found him,” Mrs. Toft answered. “But, if
+he’s found him, he couldn’t carry him! Toft’s not all that strong. And
+if the Master’s lain out long, it’s not all the brandy in the world
+will bring him round!”
+
+Mary shuddered, and moved by a common impulse the two went out and
+crossed the court. The old hound was still at gaze in the gateway,
+still staring with purblind eyes down the vistas of the park. “Maybe he
+sees more than we see,” Mrs. Toft muttered. “He’d not stand there,
+would the old dog, as he’s stood twenty minutes, for nothing.”
+
+She was right, for the next moment three figures appeared hurrying
+across the park towards them. It was impossible to mistake Toft’s lanky
+figure. The others were Etruria, with a shawl about her head, and the
+keeper Petch.
+
+Mary scanned them anxiously. “Have they found him?” she murmured.
+
+“No,” Mrs. Toft said. “If they’d found him, one would have stopped with
+him.”
+
+“Of course,” Mary said. And heedless of the cold, searching wind that
+swung their skirts and carried showers of dead leaves sailing past
+them, they waited until Toft and the others, talking together, came up.
+Mary saw that, in spite of the pace at which he had walked, Toft’s face
+was colorless. He was almost livid. His daughter wore an anxious look,
+while the keeper was pleasantly excited.
+
+As soon as the three were within hearing, “You’ve not found him?” Mary
+cried.
+
+“No, Miss,” Etruria answered.
+
+“Nor any trace?”
+
+“No, Miss. My father has been as far as the iron gate, and found it
+locked. It was no use going on.”
+
+“He could not have walked farther without help,” Mrs. Toft said. “If
+the Master’s not between us and the gardens he’s not that way.”
+
+“Then where is he?” Mary cried, aghast. She looked from one to the
+other. “Where can he be, Toft?”
+
+Toft raised his hands and let them fall. It was clear that he had given
+up hope.
+
+But his wife was of different mettle. “That’s to be seen,” she said
+briskly. “Anyway, you’ll be perished here, Miss, and I don’t want
+another invalid on my hands. We’ll go in, if you please.”
+
+Mary gave way. They turned to go in, but it was noticeable that as they
+moved towards the house each, stirred by the same thought, swept the
+extent of the park with eyes that clung to it, and were loth to leave
+it. Each hung for a moment, searching this alley or that, fancying a
+clue in some distant object, or taking a clump of gorse, or a jagged
+stump for the fallen man. All were harassed by the thought that they
+might be abandoning him; that in turning their backs on the bald,
+wintry landscape they might be carrying away with them his last chance.
+
+“’T would take a day to search the park,” the keeper muttered. “And a
+dozen men, I’m afeared, to do it thoroughly.”
+
+“Why not take a round yourself!” Mrs. Toft replied. “And if you find
+nothing be at the house in an hour, Petch, and we’ll know better what’s
+to do. The poor gentleman’s off his head, I doubt, and there’s no
+saying where he’d wander. But he can’t be far, and I’m beginning to
+think he’s in the house after all.”
+
+The man agreed willingly, and strode away across the turf. The others
+entered the hall. Mary was for pausing there, but Mrs. Toft swept them
+all into the parlor where a good fire was burning. “You’ll excuse me,
+Miss,” she said, “but Toft will be the better for this,” and without
+ceremony she poured out a cup of coffee, jerked into it a little brandy
+from the decanter on the sideboard, and handed it to her husband.
+“Drink that,” she said, “and get your wits together, man! You’re no
+better than a wisp of paper now, and it’s only you can help us. Now
+think! You know him best. Where can he be? Did he say no word last
+night to give you a clue?”
+
+A little color came back to Toft’s face. He sighed and passed his hand
+across his forehead. “If I’d never left him!” he said. “I never ought
+to have left him!”
+
+“It’s no good going over that!” Mrs. Toft replied impatiently. “He
+means, Miss, that up to three nights ago he slept in the Master’s room.
+Then when the Master seemed better Toft came back to his bed.”
+
+“I ought to have stayed with him,” Toft repeated. That seemed the one
+thought in his mind.
+
+“But where is he?” Mary cried. “Where? Every moment we stand
+talking—can’t you think where he might go? Are there no hiding—places
+in the house? No secret passages?”
+
+Mrs. Toft raised her hands. “Lord’s sake!” she exclaimed. “There’s the
+locked closet in his room where he keeps his papers. I never looked
+there. It’s seldom opened, and——”
+
+She did not finish. With one accord they hurried through the library
+and up the stairs to the old tapestried room, where Mr. Audley had
+slept and for the last month had lived. The others had been in it since
+his disappearance, Mary had not; and she felt a thrill of awe as she
+passed the threshold. The angular faces, the oblique eyes, of the
+watchers in the needlework on the wall, that from generation to
+generation had looked down on marriage and birth and death—what had
+they seen during the past night? On what had they gazed, she asked
+herself. Mrs. Toft, less fanciful or more familiar with the room, had
+no such thoughts. She crossed the floor to a low door which was
+outlined for those who knew of its existence, by rough cuts in the
+arras. It led into a closet, contained in one of the turrets.
+
+Mrs. Toft tried the door, shook it, knocked on it. Finally she set her
+eye to the keyhole. “He’s not there,” she said. “There’s no key in the
+lock. He’d not take out the key, that’s certain.”
+
+Mary scanned the disordered room. Books lay in heaps on the deep
+window-seats, and even on the floor. A table by one of the windows was
+strewn with papers and letters; on another beside the bed-head stood a
+tray with night drinks, a pair of candles, an antique hour-glass, a
+steel pistol. The bedclothes were dragged down, as if the bed had been
+slept in, and over the rail at the foot, half hidden by the heavy
+curtains, hung a nightgown. She took this up and found beneath it a
+pair of slippers and a shoehorn.
+
+“He was dressed then?” she exclaimed.
+
+Toft eyed the things. “Yes, Miss, I’ve no doubt he was,” he said
+despondently. “His overcoat’s gone.”
+
+“Then he meant to leave the house?” Mary cried.
+
+“God save us!”
+
+“He’s taken his silver flask too,” Etruria said in a low voice. She was
+examining the dressing-table. “And his watch.”
+
+“His watch?”
+
+“Yes, Miss.”
+
+“But that’s odd,” Mary said, fixing her eyes on Toft. “Don’t you think
+that’s odd? If my uncle had rambled out in some nightmare or—or
+wandering, would he have taken his flask and his watch, Toft? Are his
+spectacles there?”
+
+Toft inspected the table, raised the pillow, felt under the bolster.
+“No, Miss,” he said; “he’s taken them.”
+
+“Ah!” Mary replied; “then I have hope. Wherever he is, he is in his
+senses. Now, Toft!”—she looked hard at the man—“think again! Surely
+since he had this in his mind last night he must have let something
+drop? Some word?”
+
+The man shook his head. “Not that I heard, Miss,” he said.
+
+Mary sighed. But Mrs. Toft was less patient. She exploded. “You gaby!”
+she cried. “Where’s your senses? It’s to you we’re looking, and a poor
+stick you are in time of trouble! I couldn’t have believed it! Find
+your tongue, Toft, say something! You knew the Master down to his shoe
+leather. Let’s hear what you do think! He couldn’t walk far! He
+couldn’t walk a mile without help. Where is he? Where do you think he
+is?”
+
+Toft’s answer silenced them. If one of the mute, staring figures on the
+walls—that watched as from the boxes of a theatre the living actors—had
+stepped down, it would hardly have affected them more deeply. The man
+sat down on the bed, covered his face with his hands, and rocking
+himself to and fro broke into a passion of weeping. “The poor Master!”
+he cried between his sobs. “The poor Master!”
+
+Quickly at that Mary’s feelings underwent a change. As if she had stood
+already beside her uncle’s grave, sorrow took the place of perplexity.
+His past kindness dragged at her heart-strings. She forgot that she had
+never been able to love him, she forgot that behind the man whom she
+had known she had been ever conscious of another being, vague,
+shifting, inhuman. She remembered only the help he had given, the home
+he had offered, the rare hours of sympathy. “Don’t, Toft, don’t!” she
+cried, tears in her voice. She touched the man on the shoulder. “Don’t
+give up hope!”
+
+As for Mrs. Toft, surprise silenced her. When she found her voice,
+“Well,” she said, looking round her with a sort of pride, “who’ll say
+after this that Toft’s a hard man? Why, if the Master was lying on that
+bed ready for burial—and we’re some way off that, the Lord be
+thanked!—he couldn’t carry on more! But there, let’s look now, and weep
+afterwards! Pull yourself together, Toft, or who’s the young lady to
+depend on? If you take my advice, Miss,” she continued, “we’ll get out
+of this room. It always did give me the fantods with them Egyptians
+staring at me from the walls, and to-day it’s worse than a hearse! Now
+downstairs——”
+
+“You are quite right, Mrs. Toft,” Mary said. “We’ll go downstairs.” She
+shared to the full Mrs. Toft’s distaste for the room. “We’re doing no
+good here, and your husband can follow us when he is himself again.
+Petch should be back by this time, and we ought to arrange what is to
+be done outside.”
+
+Toft made no demur, and they went down. They found the keeper waiting
+in the hall. He had made no discovery, and Mary, to whom Toft’s
+breakdown had given fresh energy, took things into her own hands. She
+gave Petch his orders. He must get together a dozen men, and search the
+park and every place within a mile of the Gatehouse. He must report by
+messenger every two hours to the house, and in the meantime he must
+send a man on horseback to the town for Dr. Pepper.
+
+“And Mr. Basset?” Mrs. Toft murmured.
+
+“I will write a note to Mr. Basset,” Mary said, “and the man must send
+it by post-horses from the Audley Arms. I will write it now.” She sat
+down in the library, cold as the room was, and scrawled three lines,
+telling Basset that her uncle had disappeared during the night, and
+that, ill as he was, she feared the worst.
+
+Then, when Petch had gone to get his men together—a task which would
+take time as there were no farms at hand—she and Mrs. Toft searched the
+house room by room, while Etruria and her father went again through the
+outbuildings. But the quest was as fruitless as the former search had
+been.
+
+Mary had known many unhappy days in Paris, days of anxiety, of
+loneliness, of apprehension, when she had doubted where she would lodge
+or what she would eat for her next meal. Now she had a source of
+strength in her engagement and her love, which should have been
+inexhaustible. But she never forgot the misery of this day, nor ever
+looked back on it without a shudder. Probably there were moments when
+she sat down, when she took a tasty meal, when she sought Mrs. Toft in
+her warm kitchen or talked with Etruria before her own fire. But as she
+remembered the day, she spent the long hours gazing across the wintry
+park; now catching a glimpse of the line of beaters as it appeared for
+a moment crossing a glade, now watching the approach of the messenger
+who came to tell her that they had found nothing; or again straining
+her eyes for the arrival of Dr. Pepper, who, had she known it, was at
+the deathbed of an old patient, ten miles on the farther side of
+Riddsley.
+
+Now and again a hailstorm swept across the park, and Mrs. Toft came out
+and scolded her into shelter; or a farmer, whose men had been borrowed,
+“happened that way,” and after a gruff question touched his hat and
+went off to join the searchers. Once a distant cry seemed to herald a
+discovery, and she tried to steady her leaping pulses. But nothing came
+of it except some minutes of anxiety. And once her waiting ear caught
+the clang of the bell that hung in the hall and she flew through the
+house to the front door, only to learn that the visitor was the carrier
+who three times a week called for letters on his way to town. The
+dreary house with its open doors, its cold draughts, its unusual
+aspect, the hurried meals, the furtive glances, the hours of suspense
+and fear—these stamped the day for ever on Mary’s memory: as sometimes
+an hour of loneliness prints itself on the mind of a child who all his
+life long hears with distaste the clash of wedding bells.
+
+At length the wintry day with its gusts of snow began to draw in.
+Before four Petch sent in to say that he had beaten the park and also
+the gardens at the Great House, but had found nothing. Half his men
+were now searching the slope on either side of the Riddsley road. With
+the other half he was going to explore, while the light lasted, the
+fringe of the Chase towards Brown Heath.
+
+That left Mary face to face with the night; with the long hours of
+darkness, which inaction must render infinitely worse than those of the
+day. She had visions of the windswept park, the sullen ponds, the
+frozen moorland; they spread before her fraught with some brooding
+terror. She had never much marked, she had seldom felt the loneliness
+of the house. Now it pressed itself upon her, isolated her, menaced
+her. It made the thought of the night, that lay before her, almost
+unbearable.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+A FOOTSTEP IN THE HALL
+
+
+Mrs. Toft bringing in candles, and looking grave enough herself,
+noticed the girl’s pale face and chid her gently. “I don’t believe that
+you’ve sat down this blessed day, Miss!” she said. “Nor no more than
+looked at good food. But tea you shall have and sit down to it, or my
+name’s not Anne Toft! Fretting’s no manner of use, and fasting’s a poor
+stick to beat trouble with!”
+
+“But, Mrs. Toft,” Mary said, her face piteous, “it’s the thought that
+he may be lying out there, helpless and dying, while we sit here——”
+
+“Steady, Miss! Giving way does no good, and too much mind’s worse than
+none. If he’s out there he’s gone, poor gentleman, long ago. And Dr.
+Pepper’ll say the same. It’s not in reason he should be alive if he’s
+in the open. And, God knows, if he’s under cover it’s little better.”
+
+“But then if he is alive!” Mary cried. “Think of another night!”
+
+“Ay, I know,” Mrs. Toft said. “And hard it is! But you’ve been a model
+all this blessed day, and it’s no time to break down now. Where that
+dratted doctor is, beats me, though he could do no more than we’ve
+done! But there, Mr. Basset will be with us to-morrow, and he’ll find
+the poor gentleman dead or alive! There’s some as are more to look at
+than the Squire, but there’s few I’d put before him at a pinch!”
+
+“Where’s Toft?” Mary asked.
+
+“He went to join Petch two hours ago,” Mrs. Toft explained. “And there
+again, take Toft. He’s a good husband, but there’s no one would say he
+was a man to wear his heart outside. But you saw how hard he took it? I
+don’t know,” Mrs. Toft continued thoughtfully, “as I’ve seen Toft shed
+a tear these twenty years—no, nor twice since we went to church!”
+
+“You don’t think,” Mary asked, “that he knows more than he has told
+us?”
+
+The question took Mrs. Toft aback. “Why, Miss,” she said, “you don’t
+mean as you think he was putting on this morning?”
+
+“No,” Mary answered. “But is it possible that he knows the worst and
+does not tell us?”
+
+“And why shouldn’t he tell us? It would be strange if he wouldn’t tell
+his own wife? And you that’s Mr. Audley’s nearest!”
+
+“It’s all so strange,” Mary pleaded. “My uncle is gone. Where has he
+gone?”
+
+Mrs. Toft did not answer the question. She could not. And there came an
+interruption. “That’s Petch’s voice,” she said. “They’re back.”
+
+The men trooped into the hall. They advanced to the door of the parlor,
+Petch leading, a man whom Mary did not know next to him, after these a
+couple of farmers and Toft, in the background a blur of faces vaguely
+seen.
+
+“We’ve found something, Miss,” Petch said. “At least Tom has. But I’m
+not sure it lightens things much. He was going home by the Yew Tree
+Walk and pretty close to the iron gate, when what should he see lying
+in the middle of the walk but this!”
+
+Petch held out a silver flask.
+
+“It’s the Master’s, sure enough,” Mrs. Toft said.
+
+“Ay,” Petch answered. “But the odd thing is, I searched that place
+before noon, a’most inch by inch, looking for footprints, and I went
+over it again when we were beating the Yew Tree Walk this afternoon,
+and I’m danged if that flask was there then!”
+
+“I don’t think as you could ha’ missed it, Mr. Petch,” the finder said,
+“it was that bright and plain!”
+
+“But isn’t the grass long there?” Mary asked. She had already as much
+mystery as she could bear and wanted no addition to it.
+
+“Not that long,” said Tom.
+
+“No, not that long, the lad’s right,” Petch added. “I warrant I must
+have seen it.”
+
+“That you must, Mr. Petch,” a lad in the background said. “I was next
+man, and I wondered when you’d ha’ done that bit.”
+
+“But I don’t understand,” Mary answered. “If it was not there, this
+morning——”
+
+“I don’t understand neither, lady,” the keeper rejoined. “But it is on
+my mind that there’s foul play!”
+
+“Oh, but,” Mary protested, “who—why should any one hurt my uncle?”
+
+“I can’t say as to that,” Petch replied, darkly. “I don’t know anybody
+as would. But there’s the flask, and flasks don’t travel without hands.
+If he took it out of the house with him——”
+
+“May he not have dropped it—this afternoon?” Mary suggested. “Suppose
+he wandered that way after you passed?”
+
+The keeper shook his head. “If he had passed that way this afternoon it
+isn’t one but six pairs of eyes would ha’ seen him.”
+
+There was a murmur of assent. The searchers were keenly enjoying the
+drama, taking in every change that appeared on the girl’s face. They
+were men into whose lives not much of drama entered.
+
+“But I cannot think that what you say is likely!” Mary protested. She
+had held her own stoutly through the day, but now with the eyes of all
+these men upon her she grew bewildered. The rows of faces, the bashful
+hands twisting caps, the blurred white of smocked frocks—grew and
+multiplied and became misty. She had to grasp the table to steady
+herself.
+
+Mrs. Toft saw how it was, and came to the rescue. “What’s Toft say
+about it?” she asked.
+
+“Ay, to be sure, missus,” Petch agreed. “I dunno as he’s said anything
+yet.”
+
+“I don’t think the Master could have passed and not been seen,” Toft
+replied. His tone was low, and in the middle of his speech he shivered.
+“But I’m not saying that the flask wasn’t there this morning. It’s a
+small thing.”
+
+“It couldn’t have been overlooked, Mr. Toft,” the keeper replied
+firmly. “I speak as I know!”
+
+Again Mrs. Toft intervened. “I’m sure nobody would ha’ laid a hand on
+the Master!” she said. “Nobody in these parts and nobody foreign, as I
+can fancy. I’ve no doubt at all the poor gentleman awoke with some
+maggot in his brain and wandered off, not knowing. The question is,
+what can we do? The young lady’s had a sad day, and it’s time she was
+left to herself.”
+
+“There’s nothing we can do now,” Petch said flatly. “It stands to
+reason if we’ve found nothing in the daylight we’ll find nothing in the
+dark. We’ll be back at eight in the morning. Whether we’d ought to let
+his lordship know——”
+
+“Sho!” said Mrs. Toft with scorn. “What’s he in it, I’d like to know?
+But there, you’ve said what you come to say and it’s time we left the
+young lady to herself.”
+
+Mary raised her head. “One moment,” she said. “I want to thank you all
+for what you’ve done. And for what Petch says about the flask, he’s
+right to speak out, but I can’t think any one would touch my uncle.
+Only—can we do nothing? Nothing more? Nothing at all? If we don’t find
+him to-night——” She broke off, overcome by her feelings.
+
+“I’m afraid not, Miss,” Petch said gently. “We’d all be willing, but we
+don’t know where to look. I own I’m fair beat. Still Tom and I’ll stay
+an hour or two with Toft in case of anything happening. Good-night,
+Miss. You’re very welcome, I’m sure.”
+
+The others murmured their sympathy as they trooped out into the
+darkness. Mrs. Toft bustled away for the tea, and Mary was left alone.
+
+Suspense lay heavy on her. She felt that she ought to be doing
+something and she did not know what to do. Dr. Pepper did not come, the
+Tofts were but servants. They could not take the onus, they could not
+share her burden; and Toft was a broken reed. Meanwhile time pressed.
+Hours, nay, minutes might make all the difference between life and
+death.
+
+When Etruria came in with Mary’s tea she found her mistress bending
+over the fire in an attitude of painful depression, and she said a few
+words, trying to impart to her something of her own patience. That
+patience was a fine thing in Etruria because it was natural. But Mary
+was of sterner stuff. She had a more lively imagination, and she could
+not be blind to the issues, or to the value of every moment that
+passed. Even while she listened to Etruria she saw with the eyes of
+fancy a hollow amid a clump of trees not far from a pool that she knew.
+In summer it was a pleasant dell, clothed with mosses and ferns and the
+flowers of the bog-bean; in winter a dank, sombre hollow. There she saw
+her uncle lie, amid the decaying leaves, the mud, the rank grass; and
+the vision was too much for her. What if he were really lying there,
+while she sat here by the fire? Sat here in this home which he—he had
+given her, amid the comforts which he had provided!
+
+The thought was horrible, and she turned fiercely on the comforter.
+“Don’t!” she cried. “You don’t think! You don’t understand! We can’t go
+through the night like this! They must go on looking! Fetch your
+father! And bring Petch! Bring them here!” she cried.
+
+Etruria went, alarmed by her excitement, but almost as quickly she came
+back. Toft had gone out with Petch and the other man. They would not be
+long.
+
+Mary cried out on them, but could do no more than walk the room, and
+after a time Etruria coaxed her to sit down and eat; and tea and food
+restored her balance. Still, as she sat and ate she listened—she
+listened always. And Etruria, taught by experience, let her be and said
+nothing.
+
+At last, “How long they are!” Mary cried. “What are they doing? Are
+they never——”
+
+She stopped. The footsteps of two men coming through the hall had
+reached her ears, and she recognized the tread of one—recognized it
+with a rush of relief so great, of thankfulness so overwhelming that
+she was startled and might well have been more than startled, had she
+been free to think of anything but the lost man. It was Basset’s step,
+and she knew it—she would have known it, she felt, among a hundred! He
+had come! An instant later he stood in the doorway, booted and
+travel-stained, his whip in his hand, just as he had dropped from the
+saddle—and with a face grave indeed, but calm and confident. He seemed
+to her to bring relief, help, comfort, safety, all in one!
+
+“Oh!” she cried. “You are here! How—how good of you!”
+
+“Not good at all,” he answered, advancing to the table and quietly
+taking off his gloves. “Your messenger met me half-way to Blore. I was
+coming into Riddsley to a meeting. I had only to ride on. Of course I
+came.”
+
+“But the meeting?” she asked fearfully. Was he only come to go again?
+
+“D—n the meeting!” he answered, moved to anger by the girl’s pale face.
+“Will you give me a cup of tea, Toft? I will hear Miss Audley’s account
+first. Keep Petch and the other man. We shall want them. In twenty
+minutes I’ll talk to you. That will do.”
+
+Ah, with what gratitude, with what infinite relief, did Mary hear his
+tone of authority! He watched Toft out of the room and, alone with her,
+he looked at her. He saw that her hand shook as she filled the teapot,
+that her lips quivered, that she tried to speak and could not. And he
+felt an infinite love and pity, though he drove both out of his voice
+when he spoke. “Yes, tea first,” he said coolly, as he took off his
+riding coat. “I’ve had a long journey. You must take another cup with
+me. You can leave things to me now. Yes, two lumps, please, and not too
+strong.” He knocked together the logs, and warmed his hands, stooping
+over the fire with his back to her. Then he took his place at the
+table, and when he had drunk half a cup of tea, “Now,” he said, “will
+you tell me the story from the beginning. And take time. More haste,
+less speed, you know.”
+
+With a calmness that surprised herself, Mary told the tale. She
+described the first alarm, the hunt through the house, the discoveries
+in the bedroom, Toft’s breakdown, last of all the search through the
+park and the finding of the flask.
+
+He listened gravely, asking a question now and then. When she had done,
+“What of Toft?” he inquired. “Not been very active, has he? Not given
+you much help?”
+
+“No! But how did you guess?” she asked in surprise.
+
+“I’m afraid that Toft knows more than he has told you. For the rest,”
+he looked at her kindly, “I want you to give up the hope of finding
+your uncle alive. I have none. But I think I can promise you that there
+has been no suffering. If it turns out as I imagine, he was dead before
+he was missed. What the doctor expected has happened. That is all.”
+
+“I don’t understand,” she said.
+
+“And I don’t want to say more until I know for certain. May I ring for
+Toft?” She nodded. He rang, and after a pause, during which he stood,
+silent and waiting, the servant came in. He shot a swift glance at
+them, and dropped his eyes.
+
+“Tell Petch and the other man to be ready to start with us in five
+minutes,” Basset said. “Let them fetch a hurdle, and do you put a
+mattress on it. I suppose—you made sure he was dead, Toft, before you
+left him?”
+
+The man flinched before the sudden question, but he showed less emotion
+than Mary. Perhaps he had expected it. After a pause, during which
+Basset did not take his eyes from him, “I made sure,” he said in a low
+voice. “As God sees me, I did! But if you think I raised a hand to
+him——”
+
+“I don’t!” Basset said sternly. “I don’t think so badly of you as that.
+But nothing but frankness can save you now. Is he in the Great House?”
+
+Toft opened his mouth, but he seemed unable to speak. He nodded.
+
+“What about the flask?”
+
+“I dropped it,” the man muttered. He turned a shade paler. “I could not
+bear to think he was lying there. I thought it would lead the
+search—that way, and they would find him.”
+
+“I see. That’s enough now. Be ready to start at once.”
+
+The man went out. “Good heavens!” Mary cried. She was horror-stricken.
+“And he has known it all this time! Do you think that he—he had any
+part——”
+
+“Oh no. He was alone with Mr. Audley when he collapsed, and he lost his
+head. They were together in the Great House—it was a difficult
+position—and he did not see his way to explain. He may have seen some
+advantage in gaining time—I don’t know. The first thing to be done is
+to bring your uncle home. I will see to that. You have borne up
+nobly—you have done your part. Do you go to bed now.”
+
+Something in his tone, and in his thought for her, brought old times to
+Mary’s mind and the blood to her pale cheek. She did not say no, but
+she would not go to bed. She made Etruria come to her, and the two
+girls sat in the parlor listening and waiting, moving only when it was
+necessary to snuff the candles. It was a grim vigil. An hour passed,
+two hours. At length they caught the first distant murmur, the tread of
+men who moved slowly and heavily under a burden—there are few who have
+not at one time or another heard that sound. Little by little the
+shuffling feet, the subdued orders, the jar of a stumbling bearer, drew
+nearer, became more clear. A gust of wind swept through the hall, and
+moaned upwards through the ancient house. The candles on the table
+flickered. And still the two sat spell-bound, clasping cold hands, as
+the unseen procession passed over the threshold, and for the last time
+John Audley came home to sleep amid his books—heedless now of right or
+claim, or rank or blood.
+
+* * * * *
+
+A few minutes later Basset entered the parlor. His face betrayed his
+fatigue, and his first act was to go to the sideboard and drink a glass
+of wine. Mary saw that his hand shook as he raised the glass, and
+gratitude for what he had done for her brought the tears to her eyes.
+He stood a moment, leaning in utter weariness against the wall—he had
+ridden far that day. And Mary had been no woman if she had not drawn
+comparisons.
+
+Opportunity had served him, and had not served the other. Nor, had her
+betrothed been here, could he have helped her in this pinch. He could
+not have taken Basset’s place, nor with all the will in the world could
+he have done what Basset had done.
+
+That was plain. Yet deep down in her there stirred a faint resentment,
+a complaint hardly acknowledged. Audley was not here, but he might have
+been. It was his doing that she had not told her uncle, and that John
+Audley had passed away in ignorance. It was his doing that in her
+trouble she had had to lean on the other. It was not the first time
+during the long hours of the day that the thought had come to her; and
+though she had put it away, as she put it away now, the opening flower
+of love is delicate—the showers pass but leave their mark.
+
+When Etruria had slipped out, and left them, Basset came forward, and
+warmed himself at the fire. “Perhaps it is as well you did not go to
+bed,” he said. “You can go now with an easy mind. It was as I
+thought—he lay on the stairs of the Great House and he had been dead
+many hours. Dr. Pepper will tell us more to-morrow, but I have no doubt
+that he died of syncope brought on by exertion. Toft had tried to give
+him brandy.”
+
+Shocked and grieved, yet sensible of relief, she was silent for a time.
+She had known John Audley less than a year, but he had been good to her
+in his way and she sorrowed for him. But at least she was freed from
+the nightmare which had ridden her all day. Or was she? “May I know
+what took him there?” she asked in a low voice. “And Toft?”
+
+“He believed that there were papers in the Great House, which would
+prove his claim. It was an obsession. He asked me more than once to go
+with him and search for them, and I refused. He fell back on Toft. They
+had begun to search—so Toft tells me—when Mr. Audley was taken ill.
+Before he could get him down the stairs, the end came. He sank down and
+died.”
+
+With a shudder Mary pictured the scene in the empty house. She saw the
+light of the lantern fall on the huddled group, as the panic-stricken
+servant strove to pour brandy between the lips of the dying man; and
+truly she was thankful that in this strait she had Basset to support
+her, to assist her, to advise her! “It is very dreadful,” she said. “I
+do not wonder that Toft gave way. But had he—had my uncle—any right to
+be there?”
+
+“In his opinion, yes. And if the papers were there, they were his
+papers, the house was his, all was his. In my opinion he was wrong. But
+if he believed anything, he believed that he was justified in what he
+did.”
+
+“I am glad of that!”
+
+“There must be an inquest, I am afraid,” Basset continued. “One or two
+will know, and one or two more will guess what Mr. Audley’s errand was.
+But Lord Audley will have nothing to gain by moving in it. And if only
+for your sake—but you must go to bed. Etruria is waiting in the hall. I
+will send her to you. Good-night.”
+
+She stood up. She wished to thank him, she longed to say something,
+anything, which would convey to him what his coming had been to her.
+But she could not find words, she was tongue-tied. And Etruria came in.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+THE NEWS FROM RIDDSLEY
+
+
+The business which had taken Audley away on the morrow of his
+engagement had been no mere pretext. The crisis in political life which
+Peel’s return to office had brought about was one of those upheavals
+which are of rare promise to the adventurous. The wise foresaw that the
+party which Sir Robert had led would be riven from top to bottom. Old
+allies would be flung into opposing camps, and would be reaching out
+every way for support. New men would be learning their value, and to
+those who dared, all things might be added. Places, prizes, honors, all
+might be the reward of those who knew how to choose their side with
+prudence and to support it with courage. The clubs were like hives of
+bees. All day long and far into the winter night Pall Mall roared under
+the wheels of carriages. About the doors of Whitehall Gardens, where
+Peel lived, men gathered like vultures about the prey. And, lo, in a
+twinkling and as by magic the Conservative party vanished in a cloud of
+dust, to reappear a few days later in the guise of Peelites and
+Protectionists—Siamese twins, who would not live together, and could
+not live apart.
+
+At such a time it was Audley’s first interest to be as near as possible
+to the hub of things and to place himself in evidence as a man
+concerned. He had a little influence in the Foreign Office, he had his
+vote in the House of Lords. And though he did not think that these
+would suffice, he trusted that, reinforced by the belief that he
+carried the seat at Riddsley in his pocket, they might be worth
+something to him.
+
+Unfortunately he could deal with one side only. If Stubbs were right he
+could pass for the owner of the borough only as long as he opposed Sir
+Robert. He could return the younger Mottisfont and have the credit of
+returning him, in the landed interest; but however much it might suit
+his book—and it was of that book he was thinking as he travelled to
+Lord Seabourne’s—he could not, if Stubbs were right, return a member in
+the other interest.
+
+Now when a man can sell to one party only, tact is needed if he is to
+make a good bargain. Audley saw this. But he knew his own qualities and
+he did not despair. The occasion was unique, and he thought that it
+would be odd if he could not pluck from the confusion something worth
+having; some place under the Foreign Office, a minor embassy, a
+mission, something worth two, or three, or even four thousand a year.
+
+He travelled up to town thinking steadily of the course he would
+pursue, and telling himself that he must be as cunning as the serpent
+and as gentle as the dove. He must let no whip cajole him, and no Tory
+browbeat him. For he had only this to look to now: a rich marriage was
+no longer among the possibilities. Not that he regretted his decision
+in that matter as yet, but at times he wondered at it. He told himself
+that he had been impulsive, and setting this down to the charms of his
+mistress he gave himself credit for disinterested motives. And then,
+too, he had made himself safe!
+
+Still there were difficulties in the way of his ambition, which
+appeared more clearly at Seabourne Castle, where Lady Adela was a
+fellow-guest, and in London than at Riddsley; difficulties of shrewd
+whips, who knew the history of the borough by heart, and had figures at
+their fingers’ ends; difficulties of arrogant leaders, who talked of
+his duty to the land and assumed that duty was its own reward. Above
+all, there was the difficulty that he could only sell to the party that
+was out of office and must pay in promises—bills drawn at long dates
+and for which no discounters could be found. For who could say when the
+landed interest, made up of stupid bull-headed men like Lord George
+Bentinck and Stubbs, a party without a leader and with divided
+counsels, would be in power? They were a mob rather than a party, and
+like every other mob were ready to sacrifice future prospects to
+present revenge.
+
+That was a terrible difficulty, and his lordship did not see how he was
+to get over it. To the Peelites who could pay, cash down, in honors and
+places, he could not sell. Nor to the Liberals under little Lord John,
+though to their promises some prospect of office gave value. So that at
+times he almost despaired. For he had only this to look to now; if he
+failed in this he would have love and he would have Mary, and he would
+have safety, but very little besides. If his word had not been given to
+Mary, he might almost have reconsidered the matter.
+
+The die was cast, however. Yet many a man has believed this, and then
+one fine morning he has begun to wonder if it is so—the cast was such
+an unlucky, if not an unfair one! And presently he has seen that at the
+cost of a little pride, or a little consistency, or what not, he might
+call the game drawn. That is, he might—if he were not the soul of honor
+that he is!
+
+By and by under the stress of circumstances his lordship began to
+consider that point. He did not draw back, he did not propose to draw
+back; but he thought that he would keep the door behind him ajar. To
+begin with, he did not overwhelm Mary with letters—his public
+engagements were so many; and when he wrote he wrote on ordinary
+matters. His pen ran more glibly on party gossip than on their joint
+future; he wrote as he might have written to a cousin rather than to
+his sweetheart. But he told himself that Mary was not versed in love
+letters, nor very passionate. She would expect no more.
+
+Then one fine morning he had a letter from Stubbs, which told him that
+there was to be a real contest in Riddsley, that the Horn and Corn
+platform was to be challenged, and that the assailant was Peter Basset.
+Stubbs added that the Working Men’s Institute was beside itself with
+joy, that Hatton’s and Banfield’s hands were solid for repeal, and that
+the fight would be real, but that the issue was a foregone conclusion.
+
+The news was not altogether unwelcome. The contest gave value to the
+seat, and increased my lord’s claim; on that party, unfortunately, they
+could only pay in promises. It also tickled my lord’s vanity. His
+rival, unhorsed in the lists of love, had betaken himself, it seemed,
+to other lists, in which he would as surely be beaten.
+
+“Poor beggar!” Audley thought. “He was always a day late! Always came
+in second! I don’t know that I ever knew anything more like him than
+this! From the day I first saw him, standing behind John Audley’s
+counsel at the suit, right to this day, he has always been a loser!”
+
+And he smiled as he recalled the poor figure Basset had cut as a squire
+of dames.
+
+A week later Stubbs wrote again, and this time his news was startling.
+John Audley was dead. Stubbs wrote in the first alarm of the discovery,
+word of which had just been brought into the town. He knew no
+particulars, but thought that his lordship should be among the first to
+learn the fact. He added a hasty postscript, in which he said that Mr.
+Basset was proving himself a stronger candidate than either side had
+expected, and that not only were the brass-workers with him but a few
+of the smaller fry of tradesmen, caught by his cry of cheap bread.
+Stubbs closed, however, with the assurance that the landed interest
+would carry it by a solid majority.
+
+“D—n their impudence!” Lord Audley exclaimed. And after that he gave no
+further heed to the postscript. As long as the issue was certain, the
+election was Mottisfont’s and Stubbs’s affair. As for Basset, the more
+money he chose to waste the better.
+
+But John Audley’s death was news—it was great news! So he was gone at
+last—the man whom he had always regarded as a menace! Whom he had
+feared, whose very name had rung mischief in his ears, by whom, during
+many a sleepless night, he had seen himself ousted from all that he had
+gained from title, income, lands, position! He was gone at last; and
+gone with him were the menace, the danger, the night alarms, the whole
+pile of gloomy fancies which apprehension had built up!
+
+The relief was immense. Audley read the letter twice, and it seemed to
+him that a weight was lifted from him. John Audley was dead. In his
+dressing-gown and smoking-cap my lord paced his rooms at the Albany and
+said again and again, “He’s dead! By gad, he’s dead!” Later, he could
+not refrain from the thought that if the death had taken place a few
+weeks earlier, in that first attack, he would have been under no
+temptation to make himself safe. As it was—but he did not pursue the
+thought. He only reflected that he had followed love handsomely!
+
+A day later a third letter came from Stubbs, and one from Mary. The
+tidings they brought were such that my lord’s face fell as he read
+them, and he swore more than once over them. John Audley, the lawyer
+wrote, had been found dead in the Great House. He had been found lying
+on the stairs, a lantern beside him. Stubbs had visited the house the
+moment the facts became known. He had examined the muniment room and
+found part of the wall broken down, and in the room two boxes of papers
+which had been taken from a recess which the breach had disclosed. One
+of the boxes had been broken open. At present Stubbs could only say
+that the papers had been disturbed, he could not say whether any were
+missing. He begged his lordship—he was much disturbed, it was clear—to
+come down as quickly as possible. In the meantime, he would go through
+the papers and prepare a report. They appeared to be family documents,
+old, and not hitherto known to his lordship’s advisers.
+
+Audley was still swearing, when his man came in. “Will you wear the
+black velvet vest, my lord?” he asked, “or the flowered satin?”
+
+“Go to the devil!” his master cried—so furiously that the man fled
+without more.
+
+When he was gone Audley read the letter again, and came to the
+conclusion that in making himself safe he had builded more wisely than
+he knew. For who could say what John Audley had found? Or who, through
+those papers, had a hold on him? He remembered the manservant’s visit,
+and the thing looked black. Very black. Alive or dead, John Audley
+threatened him.
+
+Then he felt bitterly angry with Stubbs. There had been the most
+shocking carelessness. Had he not himself pointed out what was going
+on? Had he not put it to Stubbs that the place should be guarded? But
+the lawyer, stubborn in his belief that there were no papers there, had
+done nothing. Nothing! And this had come of it! This which might spell
+ruin!
+
+Or, no. Stubbs had indeed done his best to ruin him, but he had saved
+himself. He turned with relief to Mary’s letter.
+
+It was written sadly, and it was rather cold. He noticed this, but her
+tone did not alarm him, because he set it down to the reserve of his
+own letters.
+
+He took care to answer this letter, however, by that day’s post, and he
+wrote more affectionately than before—as if her trouble had broken down
+a reserve natural to him. He wrote with tact, too. He could not attend
+the funeral; the dead man’s feelings towards him forbade that he
+should. But his agent would attend, and his carriage and servants. When
+he had written the letter he was satisfied with it: more than satisfied
+when he had added a phrase implying that their happiness would not long
+be postponed.
+
+After he had posted the letter he wondered if she would expect him to
+come to her. It was a lonely house and with death in it—but no, in the
+circumstances it was not possible. He would go down to The Butterflies
+next day. That would be the most that could be expected of him. He
+would be at hand if she needed anything.
+
+But when the next day came he did not go. A letter from a man belonging
+to the inner circle of politics reached him. The great man, who had
+been and might be again in the Cabinet, suggested a meeting. Nothing
+came of the meeting—it was one of those will-of-the-wisps that draw the
+unwary on until they find themselves committed. But it kept Audley in
+London, and it was not until the evening of Monday, the day of the
+funeral, that, chilled and out of temper, after posting the last stage
+from Stafford, he reached his quarters at The Butterflies, and gave
+short answers to Mrs. Jenkinson’s inquiries after his health.
+
+“Poor dear young man!” she said, when she rejoined her sisters. “He has
+a kind heart and he feels it. Mr. John was Mr. John, and odd, very odd.
+But still he was an Audley!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+THE AUDLEY BIBLE
+
+
+Angry with Stubbs as he was—and with some reason—Lord Audley was not
+the man to bite off his nose to spite his face. He pondered long what
+he would say to him, and more than once he rehearsed the scene, toning
+down this phrase and pruning that. For he knew that after all Stubbs
+was a good agent. He was honest, he thought much and made much of the
+property, and nothing would be gained by changing him. Then his
+influence in the borough was such that even if my lord quarrelled with
+him, Mottisfont would hardly venture to discard him.
+
+For these reasons Audley had no mind to break with his agent. But he
+did wish to punish him. He did wish to make his displeasure felt. And
+he wished this the more because he began to suspect that if Stubbs had
+been less bigoted, he might have carried the borough the way he
+wished—the way that would pay him best.
+
+Stubbs on his side foresaw an unpleasant quarter of an hour. He had
+been too easy. He had paid too little heed to John Audley’s trespasses,
+and had let things pass that he should have stopped. Then, too, he had
+been over-positive that there were no more documents at the Great
+House. Evil had not come of this, but it might have; and he made up his
+mind to hear some hard words.
+
+But when he obeyed my lord’s summons his reception tried his patience.
+A bright fire burned in the grate, half a dozen wax candles shed a
+softened light on the room. The wine stood at Audley’s elbow, and his
+glass was half full. But he did not give Stubbs even two fingers, nor
+did he ask him to take wine. And his tone was colder than Stubbs had
+ever known it. He made it plain that he was receiving a servant, and a
+servant with whom he was displeased.
+
+Still he was Lord Audley, something of divine right survived in him,
+and Stubbs knew that he had been himself in the wrong. He took the bull
+by the horns. “You are displeased, my lord,” he said, as he took the
+seat to which the other pointed. “And I admit with some cause. I have
+been mistaken and, perhaps, a little remiss! But it is the exception,
+and it will be a lesson to me. I am sorry, my lord,” he added frankly.
+“I can say no more than that.”
+
+“And much good that will do us,” my lord growled, “in certain events,
+Mr. Stubbs!”
+
+“At any rate it will be a sharp lesson to me,” Stubbs replied. “It has
+cost Mr. Audley his life.”
+
+“He had no right to be there!”
+
+“No, my lord, he had no right to be there. But he would not have been
+there if I had seen that the place was properly secured. I take all the
+blame.”
+
+“Unfortunately,” the other flung at him contemptuously, “you cannot pay
+the penalty; that may fall upon me. Anyway, it was a d—d silly thing,
+Mr. Stubbs, to leave the place open, and you see what has come of it.”
+
+“I cannot deny it, my lord,” Stubbs said patiently. “But I hope that
+nothing will come of it. I will tell your lordship first what my own
+observations were. I made a careful examination of the two chests of
+papers and I came to the conclusion that Mr. Audley had done little
+more than open the first when he was taken ill. One chest showed some
+disturbance. The upper layer had been taken out and replaced. The other
+box had not been opened.”
+
+“What if he found what he wanted and searched no further?” Audley asked
+grimly. “But the point of the matter does not lie there. It lies in
+another direction, as I should have thought any lawyer would see.”
+
+“My lord?”
+
+“Who was with him?” Lord Audley rapped the table with his fingers.
+“That’s the point, sir! Who was with him?”
+
+“I think I have ascertained that,” Stubbs replied, less put out than
+his employer expected. “I have little doubt that his man-servant, a man
+called Toft, was with him.”
+
+“Ha!” the other exclaimed, “I expected that!”
+
+Stubbs raised his eyebrows. “You know him, my lord?”
+
+“I know him for a d—d blackmailing villain!” Audley broke out. Then he
+remembered himself. He had not told Stubbs of the blackmailing. And,
+after all, what did it matter? He had made himself safe. Whatever
+papers he had found, John Audley was dead, and John Audley’s heiress
+was going to be his wife! The danger to him was naught, and the
+blackmailer was already disarmed. Still he was not going to spare
+Stubbs by telling him that. Instead, “What did the boxes contain?” he
+asked ungraciously.
+
+“Nothing of any value when I examined them, my lord. Old surrenders,
+fines, and recoveries with some ancient terriers. I could find no
+document among them that related to the title.”
+
+“That may be,” Audley retorted. “But John Audley expected to find
+something that related to the title! He knew more than we knew. He knew
+that those boxes existed, and he knew what he expected to find in
+them.”
+
+“No doubt. And if your lordship had given me a little more time I
+should have explained before this that he was disappointed in his
+expectation; nay, more, that it was that disappointment—as I have
+little doubt—that caused his collapse and death.”
+
+“How the devil do you know that?”
+
+“If your lordship will have patience I will explain,” Stubbs said, a
+gleam of malice in his eyes. He rose from his seat and took from a
+chair beside the door a parcel which he had laid there on his entrance.
+“I have here that which he found, and that which I don’t doubt caused
+his death.”
+
+“The deuce you have!” Audley cried, rising to his feet in his surprise.
+And he watched with all his eyes while the lawyer slowly untied the
+tape and spread wide the wrappers. The action disclosed a thick quarto
+volume bound in blue leather, sprinkled on the sides with silver
+butterflies, and stamped with the arms of Audley. “Good G—d!” Audley
+continued, “the Family Bible!”
+
+“Yes, the Family Bible,” the lawyer answered, gazing at it
+complacently, “about which there was so much talk at the opening of the
+suit. It was identified by a score of references, called for by both
+sides, sought for high and low, and never produced!”
+
+“And here it is!”
+
+“Here it is. Apparently at some time or other it went out of fashion,
+was laid aside and lost sight of, and eventually bricked up with a mass
+of old and valueless papers.”
+
+Audley steadied his voice with difficulty. “And what is its effect?” he
+asked.
+
+“Its effect, my lord, is to corroborate our case in every particular,”
+the lawyer answered proudly. “Its entries form a history of the family
+for a long period, and amongst them is an entry of the marriage of
+Peter Paravicini Audley on the date alleged by us; an entry made in the
+handwriting of his father, and one of eleven made by the same hand.
+This entry agrees in every particular with the suspected statement in
+the register which we support, and fully bears out our case.”
+
+“And John Audley found that?” my lord cried, after a moment of pregnant
+silence. He had regained his composure. His eyes were shining.
+
+“Yes, and it killed him,” Stubbs said gravely. “Doubtless he came on it
+at the moment when he thought success was within his grasp, and the
+shock was too much for him.”
+
+“Good Lord! Good Lord! And how did you get it?”
+
+“From Mr. Basset.”
+
+“Basset?”
+
+“Who obtained it, I have no doubt, from the man, Toft, either by
+pressure or purchase.”
+
+“The rascal! The d—d rascal! He ought to be prosecuted!”
+
+“Possibly,” the lawyer agreed. “But he was only an accomplice, and we
+could not prosecute him without involving others; without bringing Mr.
+John’s name into it—and he is dead. As a fact, I have passed my word to
+Mr. Basset that no steps should be taken against him, and I think your
+lordship will agree with me that I could not do otherwise.”
+
+“Still—the man ought to be punished!”
+
+“He ought, but if any one has paid for his silence or for this book, it
+is not we.”
+
+After that there was a little more talk about the Bible, which my lord
+examined with curiosity, about the singularity of its discovery, about
+the handwriting of the entries, which the lawyer said he could himself
+prove. Stubbs was made free of the decanter, and of everything but my
+lord’s mind. For Audley said nothing of his engagement to Mary—the
+moment was hardly opportune; and nothing—it was too late in the day—of
+Toft’s former exploit. He stood awhile absorbed and dreaming, staring
+through the haze of the candles. Here at last was final and complete
+relief. No more fears, no more calculations. Here was an end at last of
+the feeling that there was a mine under him. Traditions, when they are
+bred in the bone, die slowly, and many a time he had been hard put to
+it to resist the belief, so long whispered, that his branch was
+illegitimate. At last the tradition was dead. There was no more need to
+play for safety. What he had he had, and no one could take it from him.
+
+And presently the talk passed to the election.
+
+“There’s no doubt,” Stubbs said, “that Mr. Basset is a stronger
+candidate than either side expected.”
+
+“But he’s no politician! He has no experience!”
+
+The lawyer sat forward, with his legs apart and a hand on either knee.
+“No,” he said. “But the truth is, though it is beyond me how a
+gentleman of his birth can be so misled, he believes what he says—and
+it goes down!”
+
+“Is he a speaker?”
+
+“He is and he isn’t! I slipped in myself one night at the back of one
+of the new-fangled meetings his precious League has started. I wanted
+to see, my lord, if any of our people were there. I heard him for ten
+minutes, and at the start he was so jumpy I thought that he would break
+down. But when he got going—well, I saw how it was and what took the
+people. He believes what he says, and he says it plain. The way he
+painted Peel giving up everything, sacrificing himself, sacrificing his
+party, sacrificing his reputation, sacrificing all to do what he
+thought was right—the devil himself wouldn’t have known his own!”
+
+“He almost converted you?”
+
+The lawyer laughed disdainfully. “Not a jot!” he said. “But I saw that
+he would convert some. Not many,” Stubbs continued complacently.
+“There’s some that mean to, but will think better of it at the last.
+And some would but daren’t! Two or three may. Still, he’s such a
+candidate as we’ve not had against us before, my lord. And with cheap
+bread and the preachings of this plaguy League—I shall be glad when it
+is over.”
+
+Audley rose and poked the fire. “You’re not going to tell me,” he said,
+in a voice that was unnaturally even, “that he’s going to beat us?
+You’re not going, after all the assurances you’ve given me——”
+
+“God forbid,” Stubbs replied. “No, no, my lord! Mr. Mottisfont will
+hold the seat! I mean only that it will be a nearer thing—a nearer
+thing than it has been.”
+
+He had no idea that his patron was fighting a new spasm of anger; that
+the thought that he might, after all, have dealt with Sir Robert, the
+thought that he might, after all, have bargained with the party in
+power, was almost too much for the other’s self-command. It was too
+late now, of course. It was too late. But if the contest was to be so
+close, surely if he had cast his weight on the other side, he might
+have carried it!
+
+And what if the seat were lost? Then this stubborn, confident fool, who
+was as bigoted in his faith as the narrowest Leaguer of them all, had
+done him a deadly injury! My lord bit off an oath, and young as he was,
+his face wore a very apoplectic look as he turned round, after laying
+down the poker.
+
+“That reminds me,” the lawyer resumed, blandly unconscious of the
+crisis, and of the other’s anger. “I meant to ask your lordship what’s
+to be done about the two Boshams. You remember them, my lord? They’ve
+had the small holding by the bridge with the water meadow time out of
+mind—for seven generations they say. They pay eighteen pounds as joint
+tenants, and have votes as old freemen.”
+
+“What of them?” the other asked impatiently.
+
+“Well, I’m afraid they’ll not support us.”
+
+“Do you mean that they’ll not vote for Mottisfont?”
+
+“I’m afraid not,” Stubbs answered. “They’re as stubborn as their own
+pigs! I’ve spoken to them myself and told them that they’ve only one
+thing to expect if they go against their landlord.”
+
+“And that is, to go out!” Audley said. “Well, make that quite clear to
+them, Stubbs, and depend upon it—they’ll see differently.”
+
+“I’m afraid they won’t, my lord, and that is why I trouble you. They
+voted against the last lord—twice, I am told—and the story goes that he
+laid his stick about Ben Bosham’s shoulders in the street—that would be
+in ’31, I fancy. But he didn’t turn them out—they’d been in the holding
+so long.”
+
+“Two votes may have been nothing to him,” Audley replied coldly. “They
+are something to me. They will vote for Mottisfont or they will go,
+Stubbs. That is flat, and do you see to it. There, I’m tired now,” he
+continued, rising from his seat.
+
+Stubbs rose. “I don’t know if your lordship’s heard about Mr. John’s
+will!”
+
+“No!” My lord straightened himself. Earlier in the day he had given
+some thought to this, and had weighed Mary Audley’s chances of
+inheriting what John Audley had. “No!” he said. And he waited.
+
+“He has left the young lady eight thousand pounds.”
+
+“Eight thousand!” Audley ejaculated. “Do you mean—he must have had more
+than that? He wasted a small fortune in that confounded suit. But he
+must have had—four times that, man!”
+
+“The residue goes to Mr. Basset.”
+
+“Basset!” Audley cried, his face flushed with passion. “To Basset?” he
+repeated. “Good G—d!”
+
+“So I’m told, my lord,” the lawyer answered, staggered by the temper in
+which his employer received the news.
+
+“But Miss Audley was his own niece! Basset? He was no relation to him!”
+
+“They were very old friends.”
+
+“That’s no reason why he should leave him thirty thousand pounds of
+Audley money! Money taken straight out of the Audley property! Thirty
+thousand——”
+
+“Not thirty, my lord,” Stubbs ventured. “Not much above twenty, I
+should say. If you put it——”
+
+“If I put it that you were—something of a fool at times,” the angry man
+cried, “I shouldn’t be far wrong! But there, there, never mind!
+Good-night! Can’t you see I’m dead tired and hardly know what I am
+saying? Come to-morrow! Come at eleven in the morning.”
+
+Stubbs hardly knew how to take it. But after a moment’s hesitation, he
+made the best of the apology, muttered something, and got out of the
+room. On the stairs he relieved his feelings by a word or two. In the
+street he wondered what had taken the man so suddenly. Surely he had
+not expected to get the money!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+A FRIEND IN NEED
+
+
+Basset had obtained the missing Bible very much in the way the lawyer
+had indicated—partly by purchase and partly by pressure. Shocked as
+Toft had been by his master’s sudden death, he had had the presence of
+mind to remember that he might make something of what they had
+discovered could he secrete it; and with every nerve quivering the man
+had fought down panic until he had hidden the parcel which had caused
+John Audley’s collapse. Then he had given way. He had turned his back
+on the Great House, and shuddering, clutched at by grisly hands,
+pursued by phantom feet, he had fled through the night and the Yew
+Walk, to hide, for the present at least, his part in the tragedy.
+
+Basset, however, had known too much for him, and the servant, shaken by
+what had happened, had not been able to persist in his denials. But to
+tell and to give were two things, and it is doubtful whether he would
+have released his plunder if Basset had not in the last resort
+disclosed to him Miss Audley’s engagement to her cousin.
+
+The change which this news wrought in Toft had astonished Basset. The
+man had gone down under it as under a blow on the head. The spirit had
+gone out of him, and he had taken with thankfulness the sum which
+Basset, as John Audley’s representative, had offered him—rather out of
+pity than because it seemed necessary. He had given up the parcel on
+the night before the funeral.
+
+The book in his hands, Basset had hastened to be rid of it. Cynically
+he had told himself that he did so, lest he too might give way to the
+ignoble impulse to withhold it. Audley was his rival, but that he might
+have forgiven, as men forgive great wrongs and in time smile on their
+enemies. But the little wrongs, who can forgive these—the slight, the
+sneer, the assumption of superiority, the upper hand lightly taken and
+insolently held?
+
+Not Peter Basset, at a moment when he was being tried almost beyond
+bearing. For every day, between the finding of the body and the
+funeral, and often more than once in the day he had to see Mary, he had
+to advise her, he had—for there was no one else—to explain matters to
+her, to bear her company. He had to quit this meeting and that
+Ordinary—for election business stops for no man—and to go to her. He
+had to find her alone and to see her face light up at his entrance; he
+had to look back, and to see her watch him as he rode from the door.
+Nor when he was absent from the Gatehouse was it any better; nay, it
+was worse. For then he was forced to think of her as alone and sad, he
+had to picture her brooding over the fire, he had to fancy her at her
+solitary meals. And alike, with her or away from her, he had to damp
+down the old passion, as well as the new regret that each day and each
+hour and every kind look on her part fanned into a flame. Nor was even
+this all; every day he saw that she grew more grave, daily he saw her
+color fading, and he did not know what qualms she masked, what
+nightmares she might be suffering in that empty house—nay, what cause
+for unhappiness she might be hiding. At last—it was the afternoon
+before the funeral—he could bear it no longer, and he spoke.
+
+“You ought not to be here!” he said bluntly. “Why doesn’t Audley fetch
+you away?” He was standing before the fire drawing on his gloves as he
+prepared to leave. The room was full of shadows, for he had chosen a
+time when she could not see his face.
+
+She tried to fence with him. “I am afraid,” she said, “that some
+formalities will be necessary before he can do that.”
+
+“Then why is he not here?” he retorted. “Or why doesn’t he send some
+one to be with you? You ought not to be alone. Mrs. Jenkinson at The
+Butterflies—she’s a good soul—you know her?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“She’d come at a word. I know it’s not my business——”
+
+“Or you would go about it, I am sure,” she replied gently, “with as
+much respect to my wishes as Lord Audley shows.”
+
+“Your wishes? But why—why do you wish——”
+
+“Why do I wish to be alone?” she answered. “Because I owe something to
+my uncle. Because I owe him a little thought and some remembrance. He
+made my old life for me—would you have me begin the new one before he
+is in the grave? This was his house—would you have me entertain Lord
+Audley in it?” She stood up, slender and straight, with the table
+between them—and he did not guess that her knees were trembling.
+“Please to understand,” she continued, “that Lord Audley and I are
+entirely at one in this. We have our lives before us, and it were
+indeed selfish of us, and ungrateful of me, if we grudged a few days to
+remembrance. As selfish,” she continued bravely—and he did not know
+that she braced herself anew—“as if I were ever to forget the friend
+who was _his_ friend, whose kindness has never failed me, whose loyalty
+has never—” she broke down there. She could not go on.
+
+“Add, too,” he said gruffly, “who has robbed you of the greater part of
+your inheritance! Don’t forget that!” He had been explaining the effect
+of John Audley’s will to her. It had been opened that morning.
+
+His roughness helped her to recover herself. “I do not know what you
+mean by ‘inheritance,’” she said. “My uncle has left me the portion his
+wife brought to him. I am more than satisfied. I am very grateful. My
+only fear is that, had he known of my engagement, he would not have
+wished me to have this.”
+
+“The will was made before you came to live here,” Basset said. “The
+eight thousand was left to you because you were his brother’s child. It
+was the least he could do for you, and had he made a new will he would
+doubtless have increased it. But,” breaking off, “I must be going.” Yet
+he still stood, and he still tapped the table with the end of his
+riding-crop. “When is Audley coming?” he asked suddenly. “To-morrow?”
+
+“Yes, to-morrow.”
+
+“Well he ought to,” he replied, without looking at her. “You should not
+be here a day longer by yourself. It is not fitting. I shall see you in
+the morning before we start for the church, but the lawyer will be here
+and I shall not be able to come again. But I must be sure that there is
+some one here.” He spoke almost harshly, partly to impress her, partly
+to hide his own feelings; and he did not suspect that she, too, was
+fighting for calmness; that she was praying that he would go, before
+she showed more clearly how much the parting tried her—before every
+kind word, every thoughtful act, every toilsome journey taken on her
+behalf, rose to her remembrance and swept away the remnants of her
+self-control.
+
+She had not imagined that she would feel the leave-taking as she did.
+She could not speak, and she was thankful that it was too dark for him
+to see her face. Would he never go? And still the slow tap-tap of his
+whip on the table went on. It seemed to her that she would never forget
+the sound! And if he touched her——
+
+But he had no thought of touching her.
+
+“Good-night,” he said at last. He turned, moved away, lingered. At the
+door he looked back. “I am going into the library,” he said. “The
+coffin will be closed in the morning.”
+
+“Yes, good-night,” she muttered, thankful that the thought of the dead
+man steadied her and gave her power to speak. “I shall see him in the
+morning.”
+
+He closed the door, and she crept blindly to a chair, and covered by
+the darkness she gave way. She told herself that she was thinking of
+her uncle. But she knew that she deceived herself. She knew that her
+uncle had little to do with her tears, or with the feeling of
+loneliness that overcame her. Once more she had lost her friend—and a
+friend so good, so kind. Only now did she know his value!
+
+Five minutes later Basset crossed the court in search of his horse.
+Mrs. Toft’s door stood open and a stream of firelight and candlelight
+poured from it and cut the January fog. She was hard at work, cooking
+funeral meats with the help of a couple of women; for quietly as John
+Audley had lived, he could not be buried without some stir. Odd people
+would come, drawn by the Audley name, squires who boasted some distant
+connection with the line, a few who had been intimate with him in past
+days. And the gentry far and wide would send their carriages, and the
+servants must be fed. Still the preparations jarred on Basset as he
+crossed the court. He felt the bustle an outrage on the mourning girl
+he had left, and on his own depression.
+
+Probably Mrs. Toft had set the door open that she might waylay him, for
+as he went by she came out and stopped him. “Mr. Basset, sir!” she said
+in a low voice. “Is this true, what Toft tells me? I declare, when I
+heard it, you could ha’ knocked me down with a common dip!” She was
+wiping her hands on her apron. “That the young lady is to marry his
+lordship?”
+
+“I believe it is true,” Basset said coldly. “But you had better let her
+take her own time to make it known. Toft should not have told you.”
+
+“Never fear, sir, I’ll not let on. But, Lord’s sakes, who’d ha’ thought
+it? And she’ll be my lady! Not that she’s not an Audley, and there’s
+small differ, and she’ll make none, or I don’t know her! Well, indeed,
+I hope she’s wise, but wedding cake, make it as rich as you like, it’s
+soon stale. And for him, I don’t know what the Master would have said
+if he’d known it! I thought things would come out,” with a quick look
+at Basset, “quite otherways! And wished it, too!”
+
+“Thank you, Mrs. Toft,” he said quietly.
+
+“Just so, sir, you’ll excuse me. Well, it’s not many months since the
+young lady came, and look at the changes! With the old Master dead, and
+you going in for elections—drat ’em, I say, plaguy things that set
+folks by the ears—and Mr. Colet gone and ’Truria that unsettled, and
+Toft for ever wool-gathering, I shall be glad when tomorrow’s over and
+I can sit down and sort things out a bit!”
+
+“Yes, Mrs. Toft.”
+
+“And speaking of elections reminds me. You know they two Boshams of the
+Bridge End, sir?”
+
+“I know them. Yes.”
+
+Mrs. Toft sniffed. “They’re sort of kin to me, and middling honest as
+town folks go. But two silly fellows, always meddling and making and
+gandering with things they’d ought to leave to the gentry! The old lord
+was soft with them, and so they’ve a mind now to see who is the
+stronger, they or his lordship.”
+
+“If you mean that they have promised to vote for me——”
+
+“That’s it, sir! Vote their living away, they will, and leave ’em
+alone! Votes are for poor men to make a bit of money by, odd times; but
+they two Boshams I’ve no patience with. Sally, Ben’s wife, was with me
+to-day, and the long and the short of it is, Mr. Stubbs has told them
+that if they vote for you they’ll go into the street.”
+
+“It’s a hard case,” Basset said. “But what can I do?”
+
+“Don’t ha’ their votes. What’s two votes to you? For the matter of
+that,” Mrs. Toft continued, thoroughly wound up, “what’s all the
+votes—put together? Bassets and Audleys, Audleys and Bassets were
+knights of the shire, time never was, as all the country knows! But for
+this little borough—place it’s what your great-grandfather wouldn’t ha’
+touched with a pair of gloves! I’d leave it to the riff-raff that’s got
+money and naught else, and builds Institutes and such like!”
+
+“But you’d like cheap bread?” Basset said, smiling.
+
+“Bread? Law, Mr. Basset, what’s elections to do wi’ bread? It’s not
+bread they’re thinking of, cheap or dear. It’s beer! Swim in it they
+do, more shame to you gentry! I’ll be bound to say there’s three goes
+to bed drunk in the town these days for two that goes sober! But there,
+you speak to they Boshams, Mr. Basset, sir, and put some sense into
+them!”
+
+“I’m afraid I can’t promise,” he answered. “I’ll see!”
+
+But it was not of the Boshams he thought as he rode down the hill with
+a tight rein—for between fog and frost the road was treacherous. He was
+thinking of the man who had been his friend and of whose face,
+sphinx-like in death, he had taken farewell in the library. And solemn
+thoughts, thoughts such as at times visit most men, calmed his spirit.
+The fret of the contest, the strivings of the platform, the rubs of
+vanity flitted to a distance, they became small things. Even passion
+lost its fever and love its selfishness; and he thought of Audley with
+patience and of Mary as he would think of her in years to come, when
+time had enshrined her, and she was but a memory, one of the things
+that had shaped his life. He knew, indeed, that this mood would pass;
+that passion would surge up again, that love would reach out to its
+object, that memory would awake and wound him, that pain and
+restlessness would be his for many days. But he knew also—in this hour
+of clear views—that all these things would have an end, and only the
+love,
+
+
+That seeketh not itself to please
+Nor of itself hath any care,
+
+
+would remain with him.
+
+Already it had carried him some way. In the matter of the election,
+indeed, he might be wrong. He might have entered on it too
+hastily—often he thought that he had—he might be of fibre too weak for
+the task. It cost him much to speak, and the occasional failure, the
+mistake, the rebuff, worried him for hours and even days. Trifles, too,
+that would not have troubled another, troubled his conscience;
+side-issues that were false, but that he must not the less support,
+workers whom he despised and must still use, tools that soiled his
+hands but were the only tools. Then the vulgar greeting, the tipsy
+grasp, the friend in the market-place:—
+
+
+The man who hails you Tom or Jack
+And proves by thumps upon your back
+
+How he esteems your merit!
+
+Who’s such a friend that one had need
+Be very much his friend indeed
+
+To pardon or to bear it!
+
+
+these humiliated him. But worse, far worse, than all was his unhappy
+gift of seeing the merits of the other side and of doubting the cause
+which he had set out to champion. He had fits of lowness when he was
+tempted to deny that honesty existed anywhere in politics; when Sir
+Robert Peel no less than Lord George Bentinck—who was coming to the
+front as the spokesman of the land—Cobden the Radical no less than Lord
+John Russell, seemed to be bent only on their own advancement, when
+all, he vowed, were of the School of the Cynics!
+
+But were he right or wrong in his venture—and right or wrong he had
+small hope of winning—he would not the less cling to the thing which
+Mary had given him—the will to make something of his life, the
+determination that he would leave the world, were it only the few
+hundred acres that he owned, or the hamlet in which he lived, better
+than he had found them. The turmoil of the election over, he would
+devote himself to his property at Blore. There John Audley’s twenty
+thousand pounds opened a wide door. He would build, drain, manure, make
+roads, re-stock. He would make all things new. From him as from a
+centre comfort should flow. He saw himself growing old in the middle of
+his people, a lonely, but not an unhappy man.
+
+As he passed the bridge at Riddsley he thought of the Boshams, and
+weary as he was, he drew rein at their door. Ben Bosham came out,
+bare-headed; a short, elderly man with a bald forehead and a dirty
+complexion, a man who looked like a cobbler rather than the cow-keeper
+he was.
+
+“Shut your door, Bosham,” Basset said. “I want a word with you.”
+
+And when the man had done this, he stooped from the saddle and said a
+few words to him in a low voice.
+
+“Well, I’m dommed!” the other answered, peering up through the
+darkness. “It be you, Squire, bain’t it? But you’re not meaning it?”
+
+“I am,” Basset replied in a low voice. “I’d not say, vote for him,
+Bosham. But leave it alone. You’re not called upon to ruin yourself.”
+
+“But ha’ you thought,” the man exclaimed, “that our two votes may make
+the differ? That they may make you or mar you, Squire!”
+
+“Well, I’d rather be marred than see you put out of your place,” Basset
+answered. “Think it over, Bosham.”
+
+But Bosham repudiated even thought of it. This vote and his use of it,
+this defiance of a lord, was, for the time, his very life. “I’ll not do
+it,” he declared. “I couldn’t do it! Nor I won’t!” he repeated. “We’re
+freemen o’ Riddsley, and almost the last of the freemen that has votes
+as freemen! And while free we are, free we’ll be, and vote as we
+choose, Squire! Vote as we choose! I’d not show my face in the town
+else! Mr. Stubbs may talk as gallus as he likes—and main ashamed of
+himself he looked yesterday—he may talk as gallus as never was, we’ll
+not bend to no landlord, nor to no golden image!”
+
+“Then there’s no more to be said,” Basset answered, feeling that he cut
+a poor figure. “I don’t wish you to do anything against your
+conscience, Bosham, and I’m obliged to you and your brother for your
+staunchness. I only wanted you to know that I should understand if you
+stayed away.”
+
+“I’d chop my foot off first!” cried the patriot.
+
+After which Basset had no choice but to leave him and to ride on,
+feeling that he was himself too soft for the business—that he was a
+round man in a square hole. He wondered what his committee would think
+of him if they knew, and what Bosham thought of him—who did know. For
+Bosham seemed to him at this moment a man of principle, a patriot, nay,
+a very Brutus: whereas, Ben was in truth no better than a small man of
+large conceit, whose vote was his one road to fame.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+BEN BOSHAM
+
+
+It was Tuesday, market-day at Riddsley, and farmers’ wives, cackling as
+loudly as the poultry they carried, elbowed one another on the brick
+pavements or clustered before the windows of the low-browed shops.
+Farmers in white great-coats, with huge handkerchiefs about their
+necks, streamed from the yards of the Packhorse and the Barley Mow, and
+meeting a friend planted themselves in the roadway as firmly as if they
+stood in their own pastures. Now and again a young spark, fancying all
+eyes upon his four-year-old, sidled through the throng with many a
+“Whoa!” and “Where be’st going, lad?” While on the steps of the
+Market-Cross and about the long line of carts that rested on their
+shafts in the open street, hucksters chaffered and house-wives haggled
+over the rare egg or the keg of salted butter.
+
+The quacking of ducks, the neighing of horses, the singsong of rustic
+voices filled the streets. It was common talk that the place was as
+full as at the March Fair. The excitement of the Election had gone
+abroad, the cry that the land was at stake had brought in some, others
+had come to see what was afoot. Many a stout tenant was here who at
+other times left the marketing to his womenfolk; and shrewd glances he
+cast at the gentry, as he edged past the justices who lounged before
+the Audley Arms and killed in gossip the interval between the
+Magistrates’ Meeting, at which they had just assisted, and the Ordinary
+at which they were to support young Mottisfont.
+
+The great men talked loudly and eagerly, were passionate, were in
+earnest. Occasionally one of the younger of them would step aside to
+look at a passing hackney, or an older man would speak to a favorite
+tenant whom he called by his first name. But, for the most part, they
+clung together, fine upstanding figures, in high-collared riding-coats
+and top-boots. They were keen to a man; the farmers keen also, but not
+so keen. For the argument that high wheat meant high rents, and that
+most of the benefits of protection went to the landlords had got about
+even in Riddsley. The squires complained that the farmers would only
+wake up when it was too late!
+
+Still in such a place, and on market-day, four out of five were in the
+landed interest; four-fifths of the squires, four-fifths of the
+parsons, almost four-fifths of the tenants; for the laborers, no one
+asked what they thought of it—they had ten shillings a week and no
+votes. “Peel—’od rot him!” cried the majority, “might shift as often as
+his own spinning-jenny! But not they! No Manchester man, and no
+Tamworth man either, should teach them their business! Who would die if
+there were no potatoes? It was a flam, a bite, but it wouldn’t
+bamboozle Stafford farmers!”
+
+Meanwhile Stubbs, moving quietly through the throng, spoke with one
+here and there. He had the same word for all. “Listen to me, John,” he
+would say, his hand on the yeoman’s shoulder. “Peel says he’s been
+wrong all these years and is only right now. Then, if you believe him,
+he’s a fool; and if you don’t believe him, he’s a knave. Not a very
+good vet., John, eh? Not the vet. for the old gray mare, eh?”
+
+This had a great effect. John went away and repeated it to himself, and
+presently grasped the dilemma and chuckled over it. Ten minutes later
+he imparted it, with the air of a Solomon, to the “Duke,” who mouthed
+it and liked it and rolled it off to the first he met. It went the
+round of the inns and about four o’clock a farmer fresh from the “tap”
+put it to Stubbs and convinced him; and that night men, travelling home
+market-peart in the charge of their wives, bore it to many a snug
+homestead set in orchards of hard cider apples.
+
+Had the issue of the Election lain with the Market, indeed, it had been
+over. But of the hundred and ninety voters no more than fifteen were
+farmers, and though the main trade of the town sided with them, the two
+factories were in opposition; and cheap bread had its charms for the
+lesser fry. But the free traders were too wise to flaunt their views on
+market-day, and it was left for little Ben Bosham, whose vote was
+pretty near his all, to distinguish himself in the matter.
+
+He, too, had been at the tap, and about noon his voice was heard
+issuing from a group who stood near the Audley Arms. “Be I free, or
+bain’t I?” he bawled. “Answer me that, Mr. Bagenal!”
+
+A knot of farmers had edged him into a corner and were disposed to bait
+him. A stubby figure in a velveteen coat and drab breeches, his hand on
+an ash-plant, he held his ground among them, tickled by the attention
+he excited and fired by his own importance. “Be I free, or bain’t I?”
+he repeated.
+
+“Free?” Bagenal answered contemptuously. “You be free to make a fool of
+yourself, Ben! I’m thinking you’d ha’ us all lay down the ground to
+lazy pasture and live by milk, as you do!”
+
+“Milk?” ejaculated a stout man of many acres, whose contempt for such
+traffic was above speech.
+
+“You’ll be free to go out of Bridge End,” cried a third. “That’s what
+you’ll be free to do! And where’ll your vote be then, Ben?”
+
+But there Bosham was sure of himself. “That’s where you be wrong, Mr.
+Willet,” he retorted with gusto. “My vote dunno come o’ my landlord,
+and in the Bridge End or out of the Bridge End, I’ve a vote while I’ve
+a breath! ’Tain’t the landlord’s vote, and why’d I give it to he? Free
+I be—not like you, begging your pardon! Freeman, old freeman, I be, of
+this borough! Freeman by marriage!”
+
+“Then you be a very rare thing!” Bagenal retorted slyly. “There’s a
+many lose their freedom that way, but you be the first I ever heard of
+that got it!”
+
+“And a hard bargain, too, as I hear,” said Willet.
+
+This drew a roar of laughter. The crowd grew thicker and the little
+man’s temper grew short, for his wife was no beauty. He began to see
+that they were playing with him.
+
+“You leave me alone, Mr. Willet,” he said angrily, “and I’ll leave you
+alone!”
+
+“Leave thee alone!” said the farmer who had turned up his nose at milk.
+“So I would, same as any other lump o’ dirt! But yo’ don’t let us. Yo’
+set up to know more than your betters! Pity the old lord ain’t alive to
+put his stick about your back!”
+
+“Did it smart, Ben?” cried a lad who had poked himself in between his
+betters.
+
+“You let me catch you,” Ben cried, “and I’ll make you smart. You be all
+a set of slaves! You’d set your thatch afire if squires’d tell you! Set
+o’ slaves, set o’ slaves you be!”
+
+“And what be you, Bosham?” said a man who had just joined the group.
+“Head of the men, bain’t you? Cheap bread and high wages, that’s your
+line, ain’t it!”
+
+“That’s his line, be it?” said the old farmer slowly. “Bit of a rascal
+it seems yo’ be? Don’t yo’ let me find you in my boosey pasture talking
+to no men o’ mine, or I’ll make yo’ smart a sight more than his
+lordship did!”
+
+“Ay, that’s Ben’s line,” said the new-comer.
+
+“You’re a liar!” Ben shrieked. “A dommed liar you be! I see you not
+half an hour agone coming out of Stubbs’s office! I know who told you
+to say that, you varmint! I’ll have the law of you!”
+
+“Ben Bosham, the laborers’ friend!” the man retorted.
+
+Ben was furious, for he was frightened. There was no feud so bitter in
+the ’forties as the feud between farmer and laborer. The laborer had no
+vote, he had lost his common rights, his wood, his cow-feed; he was
+famished, he was crushed by the new Poor Law, and so he was often in an
+ugly mood, as singed barns and burning stacks went to show. Bosham knew
+that he might flout the squires, and at worst be turned out of his
+holding; but woe betide him if he got the name of the laborers’ friend.
+Moreover, there was just so much truth in the accusation as made it
+dangerous. Ben and his brother eked out the profits of the dairy by
+occasional labor, and Ben had sometimes vapored in tap-rooms where he
+had better have held his tongue. He shrieked furiously, therefore, at
+the false witness, and even tried to reach him with his ash-plant. “Who
+be you?” he screamed. “You be a lawyer’s pup, you be! You’d ruin me,
+you would! Let me get a hold of you and I’ll put a mark on you! You be
+lying!”
+
+“I don’t know about that,” said the big farmer slowly and weightily.
+“I’m feared yo’re a bit of a rascal, Ben.”
+
+“Ay, and fine he’ll look in front of Stafford Gaol some morning!” said
+Willet. “At the end of a rope.”
+
+On that in a happy moment for Ben, while he gaped for a retort and
+found none, two carriers’ vans, huge wooden vehicles festooned with
+rabbits and market-baskets and drawn by three horses abreast, lumbered
+through the crowd and scattered it. In a twinkling Ben was left alone,
+an angry man, aware that he had cut but a poor figure!
+
+He had been frightened, too, and he resented it. He thirsted for some
+chance of setting himself right, of proving to others that he was a
+freeman and not as other men. And in the nick of time he saw a
+chance—if only he had the courage to rise to it. He saw moving towards
+him through the press a mail-phaeton and pair. On the box, caped and
+gloved, the pink of fashion, sat no less a person than his lordship
+himself. A servant in the well-known livery, a white coat with a blue
+collar, sat behind him.
+
+The vans which had freed Ben blocked the great man’s way, and he was
+moving at a walk. All heads were bared as he passed, and he was
+acknowledging the courtesy with his whip when Ben stepped before the
+horses and lifted his hand. In an instant a hundred eyes were on the
+man and he knew that he had burned his boats. Bravado was now his only
+chance.
+
+“My lord,” he cried, waving his hat impudently. “I want to know what
+you be going to do about me?”
+
+My lord hardly caught his words and did not catch his meaning, but he
+saw that the man was almost under the horses’ feet and he checked them.
+Ben stood aside then but, as the carriage passed him, he laid his hand
+on the splashboard and walked beside it. He looked up at the great man
+and in the same impudent tone, “Be you agoing to turn me out, my lord?”
+he cried. “That’s what I want to know.”
+
+“I don’t understand you,” Audley said coldly. He guessed that the man
+referred to the Election, and what was the use of understrappers like
+Stubbs if he was to be exposed to this?
+
+“I’m Ben Bosham of the Bridge End, my lord, that’s who I be,” Ben
+replied brazenly. “I’m not ashamed of my name. I want to know whether
+you be agoing to turn me out, and my wife and my child! That’s what I
+want to——”
+
+Then a farmer seized him and dragged him back, and others laid hands on
+him, though he still shouted. “Dunno be a fool!” cried the farmer,
+deeply shocked. “Drive on, drive on, my lord! Never heed him. He’ve had
+a glass too much!”
+
+“Packhorse beer, my lord,” explained a second in stentorian
+tones—though he knew that Ben was fairly sober. “Ought to be ashamed of
+himself!” cried a third, and he shook the aggressor. Ben was in a
+minority of one, and those who held him were inclined to be rough.
+
+Audley waved his whip good-humoredly. “Take care of him!” he said.
+“Don’t hurt him!” And he drove on, outwardly unmoved though inwardly
+fuming. Still had it ended there little harm would have been done. But
+word of the brawl outran the carriage and, as it chanced, reached the
+door of Hatton’s Works as the men came out to dinner. Ben Bosham had
+spoken his mind to his lordship! His lordship had driven over him! The
+farmers had beaten him! The news passed from one to another like flame,
+and the hands stood, some two score of them, and hooted my lord loudly,
+shouting “Shame!” and jeering at him.
+
+Now had Audley been the candidate he would have thought nothing of it.
+He would have laughed in the men’s faces and taken it as part of the
+day’s work; or had he been the old lord, he would have flung a curse at
+the men and cut at the nearest with his whip—and forgotten it.
+
+But he was not the old lord, times were changed, and the thing angered
+him. It was in an ill-temper that he drove on along the road that rose
+by gentle degrees to the Great Chase.
+
+For the matter of that, he had been in a black mood for some time,
+because he could not make up his mind. Night and morning ambition
+whispered to him to put the vessel about; to steer the course which
+experience told him that it behooved a man to steer who was not steeped
+in romance, nor too greedy for the moment’s enjoyment; the course
+which, beyond all doubt, he would have steered were he now starting!
+
+But he was not starting; and when he thought of shifting the helm he
+foresaw difficulties. He did not think that he was a soft-hearted man,
+yet he feared that when it came to the point he would flinch. Besides,
+he told himself that he was a man of honor; and the change was a little
+at odds with this. But there again, he reflected that truth was honor
+and in the end would cause less pain.
+
+Eight thousand pounds was so very small a portion! And for safety, he
+no longer needed to play for it. John Audley was dead and the Bible was
+in his hands; his case was beyond cavil or question, while the
+political situation was such that he saw no opening, no chance of
+enrichment in that direction. To make Mary, handsome, good, attractive
+as she was—to make her the wife of a poor peer, of a discontented,
+dissatisfied man—this, if he could only find it in his heart to tell
+her the truth, would be a cruel kindness.
+
+As he drove along the road, angry with the wretched Bosham, angry with
+Stubbs, angry with the fools who had hooted him, he was not sorry to
+feel his ill-temper increase. He might not find it so difficult to
+speak to her. A little effort and the thing would be done. Eight
+thousand pounds? The interest would barely dress her. Whereas, if she
+had played her cards well and been heir to her uncle’s thirty
+thousand—the case would have been different. After all, the fault lay
+with her.
+
+He roused the off-horse with a sharp cut, and a moment later discerned
+at the end of a long, straight piece of road, the moss-clad steps of
+the old Cross and standing beside them a figure he knew.
+
+He was moved, even while, in his irritation, he was annoyed that she
+had come to meet him at a place that had recollections for him. It
+seemed to him that in doing this she was putting an undue, an unfair
+burden on him.
+
+She waved her hand and he raised his hat. The day was bright and cold,
+and the east wind had whipped a fine color into her cheeks. Perhaps
+that, too, was unfair. Perhaps that too was putting an undue burden on
+him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+MARY MAKES A DISCOVERY
+
+
+But his face was not one to betray his thoughts, and as he drew up
+beside Mary, horses fretting, polechains jingling, the silver of the
+harness glittering from a score of points, he made a gallant show. The
+most eager lover, Apollo himself in the chariot of the sun, had
+scarcely made a better approach to his mistress, had hardly carried it
+more finely over a mind open to appearances.
+
+With a very fair show of haste he bade his man take the reins, and as
+the servant swung himself into the front seat the master sprang to the
+ground. His hand met Mary’s, his curly-brimmed hat was doffed, his eyes
+smiled into hers. “Well, better late than never!” he said.
+
+“Yes,” she answered. But she spoke more soberly than he expected and
+her face was grave. “You have been a long time away.”
+
+That was their meeting. The servant was there; under his eyes it could
+not be warmer. Whether one or the other had foreseen this need not be
+asked.
+
+He spoke to the man, who, possessed by a natural curiosity, was all
+ears. “Keep them moving,” he said. “Drive back a mile or two and
+return.” Then to Mary, his hat still in his hand, “A long time away?
+Longer than I expected, and far longer than I hoped, Mary. Shall we go
+up the hill a little?”
+
+“I thought you would propose that,” she said. “I am so glad that it is
+fine.”
+
+The man had turned the horses. Audley took her hand again and pressed
+it, looking in her face, telling himself that she grew more handsome
+every day. Why hadn’t she thirty thousand pounds? Aloud he said, “So am
+I, very glad. Otherwise you could not have met me, and I fancied that
+you might not wish me to come to the house? Was that so, dear?”
+
+“I think it was,” she said. “He has been gone so very short a time.
+Perhaps it was foolish of me.”
+
+“Not at all!” he answered, admiring the purity of her complexion. “It
+was like you.”
+
+“If we had told him, it would have been different.”
+
+“On the other hand,” he said deftly, as he drew her hand through his
+arm, “it might have troubled his last days? And now, tell me all, Mary,
+from the beginning. You have gone through dark days and I have not
+been—I could not be with you. But I want to share them.”
+
+She told the story of John Audley’s disappearance, her cheeks growing
+pale as she described the alarm, the search, the approach of night and
+her anguish at the thought that her uncle might be lying in some place
+which they had overlooked! Then she told him of Basset’s arrival, of
+the discovery, of the manner in which Peter had arranged everything and
+saved her in every way. It seemed to her that to omit this, to say
+nothing of him, would be as unfair to the one as uncandid to the other.
+
+My lord’s comment was cordial, yet it jarred on her. “Well done!” he
+said. “He was made to be of use, poor chap! If it were any one else I
+should be jealous of him!” And he laughed, pressing her arm to his
+side.
+
+She was quivering with the memories which her story had called up, and
+it was only by an effort that she checked the impulse to withdraw her
+hand. “Had you been there——”
+
+“I hope I should have done as much,” he replied complacently. “But it
+was impossible.”
+
+“Yes,” she said. And though she knew that her tone was cold, she could
+not help it. For many, many times during the last month she had
+pondered over his long absence and the chill of his letters. Many times
+she had told herself that he was treating her with scant affection,
+scant confidence, almost with scant respect. But then again she had
+reflected that she must be mistaken, that she brought him nothing but
+herself, and that if he did not love her he would not have sought her.
+And telling herself that she expected too much of love, too much of her
+lover, she had schooled herself to be patient, and had resolved that
+not a word of complaint should pass her lips.
+
+But to assume a warmth which she did not feel was another matter. This
+was beyond her.
+
+He, for his part, set down her manner to a natural depression. “Poor
+child!” he said, “you have had a sad time. Well, we must make up for
+it. As soon as we can make arrangements you must leave that gloomy
+house where everything reminds you of your uncle and—and we must make a
+fresh start. Do you know where I am taking you?”
+
+She saw that they had turned off the road and were following a track
+that scrambled upwards through the scrub that clothed the slope below
+the Gatehouse. It slanted in the direction of the Great House. “Not to
+Beaudelays?” she said.
+
+“Yes—to Beaudelays. But don’t be afraid. Not to the house.”
+
+“Oh no!” she cried. “I don’t think I could bear to go there to-day!”
+
+“I know. But I want you to see the gardens. I want you to see what
+might have been ours, what we might have enjoyed had fortune been more
+kind to us! Had we been rich, Mary! It is hard to believe that you have
+never seen even the outside of the Great House.”
+
+“I have never been beyond the Iron Gate.”
+
+“And all these months within a mile!”
+
+“All these months within a mile. But he did not wish it. It was one of
+the first things he made me understand.”
+
+“Ah! Well, there is an end of that!” And again so matter-of-fact was
+his tone that she had to struggle against the impulse to withdraw her
+arm. “Now, if there is any one who has a right to be there, it is you!
+And I want to be the one to take you there. I want you to see for
+yourself that it is only fallen grandeur that you are marrying, Mary,
+the thing that has been, not the thing that is. By G—d! I don’t know
+that there is a creature in the world—certainly there is none in my
+world—more to be pitied than a poor peer!”
+
+“That’s nothing to me,” she said. And, indeed, his words had brought
+him nearer to her than anything he had said. So that when, taking
+advantage of the undergrowth which hid them from the road below, he put
+his arm about her and assisted her in her climb, she yielded readily.
+“To think,” he said, “that you have never seen this place! I wonder
+that after we parted you did not go the very next morning to visit it!”
+
+“Perhaps I wished to be taken there by you.”
+
+“By Jove! Do you know that that is the most lover-like thing you have
+said.”
+
+“I may improve with practice,” she rejoined. “Indeed, it is possible,”
+she continued demurely, “that we both need practice!”
+
+She had not a notion that he was in two minds; that one half of him was
+revelling in the hour, pleased with possession, enjoying her beauty,
+dwelling on the dainty curves of her figure, while the other uncertain,
+wavering, was asking continually, “Shall I or shall I not?” But if she
+did not guess thoughts to which she had no clue he was sharp enough to
+understand hers. “Ah! you are there, are you?” he said. “Wait!
+Presently, when we are out of sight of that cursed road——”
+
+“I didn’t find fault!”
+
+On that there was a little banter between them, gallant and smiling on
+his part, playful and defensive on hers, which lasted until they
+reached a door leading into the lower garden. It was a rusty,
+damp-stained door, once painted green, and masked by trees somewhat
+higher than the underwood through which they had climbed. Ivy hung from
+the wall above it, rank grass grew against it, the air about it was
+dank, and in summer sent up the smell of wild leeks. Once
+under-gardeners had used it to come and go, and many a time on moonlit
+nights maids had stolen through it to meet their lovers in the coppice
+or on the road.
+
+Audley had brought the key and he set it in the lock and turned it. But
+he did not open the door. Instead, he turned to Mary with a smile.
+“This is my surprise,” he said. “Shut your eyes and open them when I
+tell you. I will guide you.”
+
+She complied without suspicion, and heard the door squeak on its rusty
+hinges. Guided by his hand she advanced three or four paces. She heard
+the door close behind her. He put his arm round her and drew her on.
+“Now?” she asked, “May I look?”
+
+“Yes, now!” he answered. As he spoke he drew her to him, and, before
+she knew what to expect, he had crushed her to his breast and was
+pressing kisses on her face and lips.
+
+She was taken by surprise and so completely, that for a moment she was
+helpless, without defence. Then the instinctive impulse to resist
+overcame her, and she struggled fiercely; and, presently, she released
+herself. “Oh, you shouldn’t have done it!” she cried. “You shouldn’t
+have done it!”
+
+“My darling!”
+
+“You—you hurt me!” she panted, her breath coming short and quick. She
+was as red now as she had for a moment been white. Her lips trembled,
+and there were tears in her eyes. He thought that he had been too rough
+with her, and though he did not understand, he stayed his impulse to
+seize her again. Instead, he stood looking down at her, a little put
+out.
+
+She tried to smile, tried bravely to pass it off; but she was put to
+it, he could see, not to burst into tears. “Perhaps I am foolish,” she
+faltered, “but please don’t do it again.”
+
+“I can’t promise—for always,” he answered, smiling. But, none the less,
+he was piqued. What a prude the girl was! What a Sainte-ni-touche! To
+make such a fuss about a few kisses!
+
+She tried to take the same tone. “I know I am silly,” she said, “but
+you took me by surprise.”
+
+“You were very innocent, then, my dear. Still, I’ll be good, and next
+time I will give you warning. Now, don’t be afraid, take my arm, and
+let us——”
+
+“If I could sit down?” she murmured. Then he saw that the color had
+again left her cheeks.
+
+There was an old wheelbarrow inside the door, half full of dead leaves.
+He swept it clear, and she sat down on the edge of it. He stood by her,
+puzzled, and at a loss.
+
+Certainly he had played a trick on her, and he had been a little rough
+because he had felt her impulse to resist. But she must have known that
+he would kiss her sooner or later. And she was no child. Her convent
+days were not of yesterday. She was a woman. He did not understand it.
+
+Alas, she did understand it. It was not her lover’s kisses, it was not
+his passion or his roughness that had shaken Mary. She was not a prude
+and she was a woman. That which had overwhelmed her was the knowledge,
+the certainty forced on her by his embrace, that she did not love him!
+That, however much she might have deluded herself a few weeks earlier,
+however far she might have let the lure of love mislead her, she did
+not love this man! And she was betrothed to him, she was promised to
+him, she was his! On her engagement to him, on her future with him had
+been based—a moment before—all her plans and all her hopes for the
+future.
+
+No wonder that the color was struck from her face, that she was shaken
+to the depths of her being. For, indeed, she knew something more—that
+she had had her warning and had closed her eyes to it. That evening,
+when she had heard Basset’s step come through the hall, that moment
+when his presence had lifted the burden of suspense from her, should
+have made her wise. And for an instant the veil had been lifted, and
+she had been alarmed. But she reflected that the passing doubt was due
+to her lover’s absence and his coldness; and she had put the doubt from
+her. When Audley returned all would be well, she would feel as before.
+She was hipped and lonely and the other was kind to her—that was all!
+
+Now she knew that that was not all. She did not love Audley and she did
+love some one else. And it was too late. She had misled herself, she
+had misled the man who loved her, she had misled that other whom she
+loved. And it was too late!
+
+For a time that was short, yet seemed long to her companion, who stood
+watching her, she sat lost in thought and unconscious of his presence.
+At length he could bear it no longer. Pale cheeks and dull eyes had no
+charm for him! He had not come, he had not met her, for this.
+
+“Come!” he said, “come, Mary, you will catch cold sitting there! One
+might suppose I was an ogre!”
+
+She smiled wanly. “Oh no!” she said, “It is I—who am foolish. Please
+forgive me.”
+
+“If you would like to go back?”
+
+But her ear detected temper in his tone, and with a newborn fear of him
+she hastened to appease him. “Oh no!” she said. “You were going to show
+me the gardens!”
+
+“Such as they are. Well, so you will see what there is to be seen. It
+is a sorry sight, I can tell you.” She rose and, taking her arm, he led
+her some fifty yards along the alley in which they were, then, turning
+to the right, he stopped. “There,” he said. “What do you think of it?”
+
+They had before them the long, dank, weed-grown walk, broken midway by
+the cracked fountain and closed at the far end by the broad flight of
+broken steps that led upward to the terrace and so to the great lawn.
+When Audley had last stood on this spot the luxuriance of autumn had
+clothed the neglected beds. A tangle of vegetation, covering every foot
+of soil with leaf and bloom, had veiled the progress of neglect. Now,
+as by magic, all was changed. The sun still shone, but coldly and on a
+bald scene. The roses that had run riot, the spires of hollyhocks that
+had risen above them, the sunflowers that had struggled with the
+encroaching elder, nay, the very bindweed that had strangled all alike
+in its green embrace, were gone, or only reared naked stems to the cold
+sky. Gone, too, were the Old Man, the Sweet William, the St. John’s
+Wort, the wilderness of humbler growths that had pressed about their
+feet; and from the bare earth and leafless branches, the fountain and
+the sundial alone, like mourners over fallen grandeur, lifted gray
+heads.
+
+There is no garden that has not its sad season, its days of stillness
+and mourning, but this garden was sordid as well as sad. Its dead lay
+unburied.
+
+Involuntarily Mary spoke. “Oh, it is terrible!” she cried.
+
+“It is terrible,” he answered gloomily.
+
+Then she feared that, preoccupied as she was with other thoughts, she
+had hurt him. She was trying to think of something to comfort him, when
+he repeated, “It is terrible! But, d—n it, let us see the rest of it!
+We’ve come here for that! Let us see it!”
+
+Together they went slowly along the walk. They came by and by to the
+sundial. She hung a moment, wishing to read the inscription, but he
+would not stay. “It’s the old story,” he said. “We are gay fellows in
+the sunshine, but in the shadow—we are moths.”
+
+He did not explain his meaning. He drew her on. They mounted the wide
+flight which had once, flanked by urns and nymphs and hot with summer
+sunshine, echoed the tread of red-heeled shoes and the ring of spurs.
+Now, elder grew between the shattered steps, weeds clothed them, the
+nymphs mouldered, lacking arms and heads, the urns gaped.
+
+Mary felt his depression and would have comforted him, but her brain
+was numbed by the discovery which she had made; she was unable to
+think, without power to help. She shared, she more than shared, his
+depression. And it was not until they had surmounted the last flight
+and stood gazing on the Great House that she found her voice. Then, as
+the length and vastness of the pile broke upon her, she caught her
+breath. “Oh,” she cried. “It is immense!”
+
+“It’s a nightmare,” he replied. “That is Beaudelays! That is,” with
+bitterness, “the splendid seat of Philip, fourteenth Lord Audley—and a
+millstone about his neck! It is well, my dear, that you should see it!
+It is well that you should know what is before you! You see your home!
+And what you are marrying—if you think it worth while!”
+
+If she had loved him she would have been strong to comfort him. If she
+had even fancied that she loved him, she would have known what to
+answer. As it was, she was dumb; she scarcely took in the significance
+of his words. Her mind—so much of it as she could divert from
+herself—was engaged with the sight before her, with the long rows of
+blank and boarded windows, the smokeless chimneys, the raw, unfinished
+air that, after eighty years, betrayed that this had never been a home,
+had never opened its doors to happy brides, nor heard the voices of
+children.
+
+At last she spoke. “And this is Beaudelays?” she said.
+
+“This is my home,” he replied. “That’s the place I’ve come to own! It’s
+a pleasant possession! It promises a cheerful homecoming, doesn’t it?”
+
+“Have you never thought of—of doing anything to it?” she asked timidly.
+
+“Do you mean—have I thought of completing it? Of repairing it?”
+
+“I suppose I meant that,” she replied.
+
+“I might as well think,” he retorted, “of repairing the Tower of
+London! All I have in the world wouldn’t do it! And I cannot pull it
+down. If I did, the lawyers first and the housebreakers afterwards,
+would pull down all I have with it! There is no escape, my dear,” he
+continued slowly. “Once I thought there was. I had my dream. I’ve stood
+on this lawn on summer days and I’ve told myself that I would build it
+up again, and that the name of Audley should not be lost. But I am a
+peer, what can I do? I cannot trade, I cannot plead. For a peer there
+is but one way—marriage. And there were times when I had visions of
+repairing the breach—in that way; when I thought that I could set the
+old name first and my pleasure second; when I dreamed of marrying a
+great dowry that should restore us to the place we once enjoyed.
+But—that is over! That is over,” he repeated in a sinking voice. “I had
+to choose between prosperity and happiness; I made my choice. God grant
+that we may never repent it!”
+
+He sank into silence, waiting for her to speak; he waited with
+exasperation. She did not, and he looked down at her. Then, “I
+believe,” he said, “that you have not heard a word I have said!”
+
+She glanced up, startled. “I am afraid I have not,” she answered
+meekly. “Please forgive me. I was thinking of my uncle, and wondering
+where he died.”
+
+It was all that Audley could do to check the oath that rose to his
+lips. For he had spoken with intention; he had given her, as he
+thought, a lead, an opening; and he had wasted his pains. He could
+hardly believe that she had not heard. He could almost believe that she
+was playing with him. But in truth she had barely recovered from the
+shock of her discovery, and the thing before her eyes—the house—held
+her attention.
+
+“I believe that you think more of your uncle than of me!” he cried.
+
+“No,” she replied, “but he is gone and I have you.” She was beginning
+to be afraid of him; afraid of him, because she felt that she was in
+fault.
+
+“Yes,” he replied. “But you must be more kind to me—or I don’t know
+that you will keep me.”
+
+She thought that he spoke in jest, and she pressed his arm.
+
+“You don’t want to go into the house?”
+
+“Oh no! I could not bear it to-day.”
+
+“Then you must not mind if I leave you for a moment. I have to look to
+something inside. I shall not be more than five minutes. Will you walk
+up and down?”
+
+She assented, thankful to be alone with her thoughts; and he left her.
+A burly, stately figure, he passed across the lawn and disappeared
+round the corner of the old wing where the yew trees grew close to the
+walls. He let himself into the house. He wished to examine the
+strong-room for himself and to see what traces were left of the tragedy
+which had taken place there.
+
+But when he stood inside and felt the icy chill of the house, where
+each footstep awoke echoes, and a ghostly tread seemed to follow him,
+he went no farther than the shadowy drawing-room with its mouldering
+furniture and fallen screen. There, placing himself before an
+unshuttered pane, he stood some minutes without moving, his hands
+resting on the head of his cane, his eyes fixed on Mary. The girl was
+slowly pacing the length of the terrace, her head bent.
+
+Whether the lonely figure, with its suggestion of sadness, made its
+appeal, or the attraction of a grace that no depression could mar,
+overcame the dictates of prudence, he hesitated. At last, “I can’t do
+it!” he muttered, “hanged if I can! I suppose I ought not to have
+kissed her if I meant to do it to-day. No, I can’t do it.”
+
+And when, half an hour later, he parted from her at the old Cross at
+the foot of the hill, he had not done it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+THE MEETING AT THE MAYPOLE
+
+
+Within twenty-four hours there were signs that Bosham’s brush with his
+lordship and the show of feeling outside Hatton’s Works had set a
+sharper edge on the fight. Trifles as these were, the farmers about
+Riddsley took them up and resented them. The feudal feeling was not
+quite extinct. Their landlord was still a great man to them, and even
+those who did not love him believed that he was fighting their battle.
+An insult to him seemed, in any case, a portent, but that such a poor
+creature as Bosham—Ben Bosham of the Bridge End—should insult him, went
+beyond bearing.
+
+Moreover, it was beginning to be whispered that Ben was tampering with
+the laborers. One heard that he was preaching higher wages in the
+public houses, another that he was asking Hodge what he got out of dear
+bread, a third that he was vaporing about commons and enclosures. The
+farmers growled. The farmers’ sons began to talk together outside the
+village inn. The farmers’ wives foresaw rick-burning, maimed cattle,
+and empty hen coops, and said that they could not sleep in their beds
+for Ben.
+
+Meanwhile those who, perhaps, knew something of the origin of these
+rumors, and could size up the Boshams to a pound, were not unwilling to
+push the matter farther. Men who fancied with Stubbs that repeal of the
+corn-taxes meant the ruin of the country-side, were too much in earnest
+to pick and choose. They believed that this was a fight between the
+wholesome country and the black, sweating town, between the open life
+of the fields and the tyranny of mill and pit; and that the only aim of
+the repealer was to lower wages, and so to swell the profits that
+already enabled him to outshine the lords of the soil. They were prone,
+therefore, to think that any stick was good enough to beat so bad a
+dog, and if the stout arms of the farmers could redress the balance,
+they were in no mood to refuse their help.
+
+Nor were sharpeners wanting on the other side. The methods of the
+League were brought into play. Women were sent out to sing through the
+streets of an evening, and the townsfolk ate their muffins to the
+doleful strains of:
+
+
+Child, is thy father dead?
+
+Father is gone.
+
+Why did they tax his bread?
+
+God’s will be done!
+
+
+And as there were enthusiasts on this side, too, who saw the work of
+the Corn Laws in the thin cheeks of children and the coffins of babes,
+the claims of John Barley-corn, roared from the windows of the
+Portcullis and the Packhorse, did not seem a convincing answer. A big
+loaf and a little loaf, carried high through the streets, made a wide
+appeal to non-voters; and a banner with, “You be taxing, we be
+starving!” had its success. Then, on the evening of the market-day, a
+band of Hatton’s men, fresh from the Three Tailors, came to blows with
+a market-peart farmer, and a “hand” was not only knocked down, but
+locked up. Hatton’s and Banfield’s men were fired with indignation at
+this injustice, and Hatton himself said a little more at the Institute
+than Basset thought prudent.
+
+These things had their effect, and more, perhaps, than was expected.
+For Stubbs, going back to his office one afternoon, suffered an
+unpleasant shock. Bosham’s impudence had not moved him, nor the jeers
+of Hatton’s men. But this turned out to be another matter. Farthingale,
+the shabby clerk with the high-bred nose, had news for him which he
+kept until the office door was locked. And the news was so bad that
+Stubbs stood aghast.
+
+“What? All nine?” he cried. “Impossible, man! The woman’s made a fool
+of you!”
+
+But Farthingale merely looked at him over his steel-rimmed spectacles.
+“It’s true,” he said.
+
+“I’ll never believe it!” cried the lawyer.
+
+Farthingale shook his head. “That won’t alter it,” he said patiently.
+“It’s true.”
+
+“Dyas the butcher! Why, he served me for years! For years! I go to him
+at times now.”
+
+“Only for veal,” replied the clerk, who knew everything “Pitt, of the
+sausage shop, and Badger, the tripeman, are in his pocket—buy his
+offal. With the other six, it’s mainly the big loaf—Lake has a sister
+with seven children, and Thomas a father in the almshouse. Two more
+have big families, and the women have got hold of them!”
+
+“But they’ve always voted right!” Stubbs urged, with a sinking heart.
+“What’s taken them?”
+
+“If you ask me,” the clerk answered, “I should say it was partly Squire
+Basset—he talks straight and it takes. And partly the split. When a
+party splits you can’t expect to keep all. I doubted Dyas from the
+first. He’s the head. They were all at his house last night and a prime
+supper he gave them.”
+
+Stubbs groaned. At last, “How much?” he asked.
+
+Farthingale shook his head. “Nix,” he said. “You may be shaking Dyas’s
+hand and find it’s Hatton’s. If you take my advice, you’ll leave it
+alone.”
+
+“Well,” the lawyer cried, “of all the d—d ingratitude I ever heard of!
+The money Dyas has had from me!”
+
+Farthingale’s lips framed the words “only veal,” but no sound came.
+Devoted as he was to his employer, he was enjoying himself. Election
+times were meat and drink—especially drink—to him. At such times his
+normal wage was royally swollen by Election extras, such as: “To
+addressing one hundred circulars, one guinea. To folding and closing
+the same, half a guinea. To watering the same, half a guinea. To
+posting the same, half a guinea.” A whole year’s score, chalked up
+behind the door at the Portcullis, vanished as by magic at this season.
+
+And then he loved the importance of it, and the secrecy, and the
+confidence that was placed in him and might safely be placed. The
+shabby clerk who had greased many a palm was himself above bribes.
+
+But Stubbs was aghast. Scarcely could he keep panic at bay. He had
+staked his reputation for sagacity on the result. He had made himself
+answerable for success, to his lordship, to the candidate, to the
+party. Not once, but twice, he had declared in secret council that
+defeat was impossible—impossible! Had he not done so, the contest,
+which his own side had invited, might have been avoided.
+
+And then, too, his heart was in the matter. He honestly believed that
+these poor creatures, these weaklings whose defection might cost so
+much, were voting for the ruin of their children, for the
+impoverishment of the town. They would live to see the land pass into
+the hands of men who would live on it, not by it. They would live to
+see the farmers bankrupt, the country undersold, the town a desert!
+
+The lawyer had counted on a safe majority of twenty-two on a register
+of a hundred and ninety voters. And twenty-two had seemed a buckler,
+sufficient against all the shafts and all the spite of fortune. But a
+majority of four—for that was all that remained if these nine went
+over—a majority of four was a thing to pale the cheek. Perspiration
+stood on his brow as he thought of it. His hand shook as he shuffled
+the papers on his desk, looking for he knew not what. For a moment he
+could not face even Farthingale, he could not command his eye or his
+voice.
+
+At last, “Who could get at Dyas?” he muttered.
+
+Farthingale pondered for a time, but shook his head. “No one,” he said.
+“You might try Hayward if you like. They deal.”
+
+“What’s to be done, then?”
+
+“There’s only one way that I can think of,” the clerk replied, his eyes
+on his master’s face. “Rattle them! Set the farmers on them! Show them
+that what they’re doing will be taken ill. Show ’em we’re in earnest.
+Badger’s a poor creature and Thomas’s wife’s never off the twitter. I’d
+try it, if I were you. You’d pull some back.”
+
+They talked for a time in low voices and before he went into the
+Portcullis that night Farthingale ordered a gig to be ready at
+daylight.
+
+It might have been thought that with this unexpected gain, Basset would
+be in clover. But he, too, had his troubles and vexations. John
+Audley’s death and Mary’s loneliness had made drafts on his time as
+well as on his heart. For a week he had almost withdrawn from the
+contest, and when he returned to it it was to find that the extreme
+men—as is the way of extreme men—had been active. In his address and in
+his speeches he had declared himself a follower of Peel. He had posed
+as ready to take off the corn-tax to meet an emergency, but not as
+convinced that free trade was always and everywhere right. He had
+striven to keep the question of Irish famine to the front, and had
+constantly stated that that which moved his mind was the impossibility
+of taxing food in one part of the country while starvation reigned in
+another. Above all, he had tried to convey to his hearers his notion of
+Peel. He had pictured the statesman’s dilemma as facts began to coerce
+him. He had showed that in the same position many would have preferred
+party to country and consistency to patriotism. He had painted the
+struggle which had taken place in the proud man’s mind. He had praised
+the decision to which Peel had come, to sacrifice his name, his credit,
+and his popularity to his country’s good.
+
+But when Basset returned to his Committee Room, he found that the men
+to whom Free Trade was the whole truth, and to whom nothing else was
+the truth, had stolen a march on him. They had said much which he would
+not have said. They had set up Cobden where he had set up Peel. To
+crown all, they had arranged an open-air meeting, and invited a man
+from Lancashire—whose name was a red rag to the Tories—to speak at it.
+
+Basset was angry, but he could do nothing. He had an equal distaste for
+the man and the meeting, but his supporters, elated by their prospects,
+were neither to coax nor hold. For a few hours he thought of retiring.
+But to do so at the eleventh hour would not only expose him to obloquy
+and injure the cause, but it would condemn him to an inaction from
+which he shrank.
+
+For all that he had seen of Mary, and all that he had done for her, had
+left him only the more restless and more unhappy. To one in such a mood
+success, which began to seem possible, promised something—a new sphere,
+new interests, new friends. In the hurly-burly of the House and amid
+the press of business, the wound that pained him would heal more
+quickly than in the retirement of Blore; where the evenings would be
+long and lonely, and many a time Mary’s image would sit beside his fire
+and regret would gnaw at his heart.
+
+The open-air meeting was to be held at the Maypole, in the wide street
+bordered by quaint cottages, that served the town for a cattle-market.
+The day turned out to be mild for the season, the meeting was a
+novelty, and a few minutes before three the Committee began to assemble
+in strength at the Institute, which stood no more than a hundred yards
+from the Maypole, but in another street. Hatton was entertaining
+Brierly, the speaker from Lancashire, and in making him known to the
+candidate, betrayed a little too plainly that he thought that he had
+scored a point.
+
+“You’ll see something new now, sir,” he said, rubbing his hands.
+“What’s wanting, he’ll win! He’s addressed as many as four thousand
+persons at one time, Mr. Brierly has!”
+
+“Ay, and not such as are here, Squire,” Brierly boomed. He was a tall,
+bulky man with an immense chin, who moved his whole body when he turned
+his head. “Not country clods, but Lancashire men! No throwing dust i’
+their eyes!”
+
+“Still, I hope you’ll deal with us gently,” Basset said. “Strong meat,
+Mr. Brierly, is not for babes. We must walk before we can run.”
+
+“Nay, but the emptier the stomach, the more need o’ meat!” Brierly
+replied, and he rumbled with laughter. “An’ a bellyful I’ll give them!
+Truth’s truth and I’m no liar!”
+
+“But to different minds the same words do not convey the same thing,”
+Basset urged.
+
+The man stared over his stiff neck-cloth. “That’ud not go down i’
+Todmorden,” he said. “Nor i’ Burnley nor i’ Bolton! We’re down-right
+chaps up North, and none for chopping words. Hands off the hands’ loaf,
+is Lancashire gospel, and we’re out to preach it! We’re out to preach
+it, and them that clems folk and fats pheasants may make what mouth
+o’er it they like!”
+
+Fortunately the order to start came at this moment, and Basset had to
+fall in and move forward with Hatton, the chairman of the day. Banfield
+followed with the stranger, and the rest of the Committee came on two
+by two, the smaller men enjoying the company in which they found
+themselves. So they marched solemnly into the street, a score of
+Hatton’s men forming a guard of honor, and a long tail of the riff-raff
+of the town falling in behind with orange flags and favors. These at a
+certain signal set up a shrill cheer, a band struck up “See, the
+Conquering Hero Comes!” and the sixteen gentlemen marched, some proudly
+and some shamefacedly, into the wider street, wherein a cart drawn up
+at the foot of the Maypole awaited them.
+
+On such occasions Englishmen out of uniform do not show well. The
+daylight streamed without pity on the Committee as they stalked or
+shambled along in their Sunday clothes, and Basset at least felt the
+absurdity of the position. With the tail of his eye he discerned that
+the stranger was taking off a large white hat, alternately to the right
+and left, in acknowledgment of the cheers of the crowd, while ominous
+sniggers of laughter mingled here and there with the applause.
+Banfield’s men, with another hundred or so of the town idlers, were
+gathered about the cart, but of the honest and intelligent voters there
+were scanty signs.
+
+The crowd greeted the appearance of each of the principals with cheers
+and a shaft or two of Stafford wit.
+
+“Hooray! Hooray!” shouted Hatton’s men as he climbed into the cart.
+
+“Hatton’s a great man now!” a bass voice threw in.
+
+“But he’s never lost his taste for tripe!” squeaked a shrill treble.
+The gibe won roars of laughter, and the back of the chairman’s neck
+grew crimson.
+
+“Hurrah for Banfield and the poor man’s loaf!” shouted his supporters,
+as he mounted in his turn.
+
+“It’s little of the crumb he’ll leave the poor man!” squeaked the
+treble.
+
+It was the candidate’s turn to mount next. “Hooray! Hooray!” shouted
+the crowd with special fervor. Handkerchiefs were waved from windows,
+the band played a little more of the Conquering Hero.
+
+As the music ceased, “What’s he doing, Tommy, along o’ these chaps?”
+asked the treble voice.
+
+“He’s waiting for that there Samaritan, Sammy?” answered the bass.
+
+“Ay, ay? And the wine and oil, Sammy?”
+
+It took the crowd a little time to digest this, but in time they did
+so, and the gust of laughter that followed covered the appearance of
+the stranger. He was not to escape, however, for as the noise ceased,
+“Is this the Samaritan, Sammy?” asked the bass.
+
+“Where’s your eyes?” whined the treble. “He’s the big loaf! and, lor,
+ain’t he crumby!”
+
+“If I were down there——” the Burnley man began, leaning over the side
+of the cart.
+
+“He’s crusty, too!” cried the wit.
+
+But this was too much for the chairman. “Silence! Silence!” he cried,
+and, as at a signal, there was a rush, the two interrupters were seized
+and, surrounded by a gang of hobbledehoys, were hustled down the road,
+fighting furiously and shouting, “Blues! Blues!”
+
+The chairman made use of the lull to step to the edge of the cart and
+take off his hat. He looked about him, pompous and important.
+
+“Gentlemen,” he began, “free and independent electors of our ancient
+borough! At a crisis such as this, a crisis the most momentous—the most
+momentous——” he paused and looked into his hat, “that history has
+known, when the very staff of life is, one may say, the apple of
+discord, it is an honor to me to take the chair!”
+
+“The cart you mean!” cried a voice, “you’re in the cart!”
+
+The speaker cast a withering glance in the direction whence the voice
+came, lost his place and, failing to find it, went on in a different
+strain. “I’m a business man,” he said, “you all know that! I’m a
+business man, and I’m not ashamed of it. I stick to my business and my
+business to-day——”
+
+“Better go on with it!”
+
+But he was getting set, and he was not to be abashed. “My business
+to-day,” he repeated, “is to ask your attention for the distinguished
+candidate who seeks your suffrages, and for the—the distinguished
+gentleman on my left who will presently follow me.”
+
+A hollow groan checked him at this point, but he recovered himself.
+“First, however,” he continued, “I propose, with your permission, to
+say a word on the—the great question of the day—if I may call it so. It
+is to the food of the people I refer!”
+
+He paused for cheers, under cover of which Banfield murmured to his
+neighbor that Hatton was set now for half an hour. He had yet to learn
+that open-air meetings have their advantages.
+
+“The food of the people!” Hatton repeated, uplifted by the applause.
+“It is to me a sacred thing! My friends, it is to me the Ark of the
+Covenant. The bread is the life. It should go straight, untaxed,
+untouched from the field of the farmer to the house of—of the widow and
+the orphan!”
+
+“Hear! Hear! Hear! Hear!” Then, “What about the miller?”
+
+“It should go from where it is grown,” Hatton repeated, “to where it is
+needed; from where it is grown to the homes of the poor! And to the
+man,” slipping easily and fatally into his Sunday vein, “that lays his
+’and upon it, let him be whom he may, I say with the Book, ‘Thou shalt
+not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn!’ The Law, ay, and the
+Prophets——”
+
+“Ay, Hatton’s profits! Hands off them!” roared the bass voice.
+
+“Low bread and high profits!” shrieked the treble. “Hatton and thirty
+per cent!”
+
+A gust of laughter swept all away for a time, and when the speaker
+could again get a hearing he had lost his thread and his temper.
+“That’s a low insinuation!” he cried, crimson in the face. “A low
+insinuation! I scorn to answer it!”
+
+“Regular old Puseyite you be,” shouted a new tormentor. “Quoting
+Scripture.”
+
+Hatton shook his fist at the crowd. “A low, dirty insinuation!” he
+cried. “I scorn——”
+
+“You don’t scorn the profits!”
+
+“Listen! Silence!” Then, “I shall not say another word! You’re not
+worth it! You’re below it! I call on Mr. Brierly of Manchester to
+propose a resolution.”
+
+And casting vengeful glances here and there where he fancied he
+detected an opponent, he stood back. He began for the first time to
+think the meeting a mistake. Basset, who had held that opinion from the
+first, scanned the crowd and had his misgivings.
+
+The man from Manchester, however, had none. He stood forward, a smile
+on his broad face, his chest thrown forward, a something easy in his
+air, as became one who had confronted thousands and was not to be put
+out of countenance by a few hisses. He waited good-humoredly for
+silence. Nor could he see that, behind the cart, there had been
+gathering for some time a band of men of a different air from those who
+faced the platform. These men were still coming up by twos and threes,
+issuing from side-streets; men clad in homespun and with ruddy faces,
+men in smocked frocks, men in velveteens; a few with belcher
+neckerchiefs and slouched felts, whom their mothers would not have
+known. When Brierly raised his hand and opened his mouth there were
+over two score of these men—and they were still coming up.
+
+But Brierly was unaware of them, and, complacent and confident of the
+effect he would produce, he opened his mouth.
+
+“Gentlemen,” he began. His voice, strong and musical, reached the edge
+of the meeting. “Gentlemen, free electors! And I tell you straight no
+man is free, no man had ought to be free——”
+
+Boom! and again, Boom! Boom! Not four paces behind him a drum rolled
+heavily, drowning his voice. He stopped, his mouth open; for an instant
+surprise held the crowd also. Then laughter swept the meeting and
+supplied a treble to the drum’s persistent bass.
+
+And still the drum went on, Boom! Boom! amid cheers, yells, laughter.
+Then, as suddenly as it had started, it stopped. More slowly, the
+hurrahs, yells, laughter, died down, the laughter the last to fail, for
+not only had the big man’s face of surprise tickled the crowd, but the
+drum had so nicely taken the pitch of his voice that the interruption
+seemed even to his friends a joke.
+
+He seized the opportunity, but defiance not complacency was now his
+note. “Gentlemen,” he said, “it’s funny, but you don’t drum me down,
+let me tell you! You don’t drum me down! What I said I’m going to say
+again, and shame the devil and the landlords! Free men——”
+
+But he did not say it. Boom, boom, rolled the drum, drowning his voice
+beyond hope. And this time, with the fourth stroke, a couple of fifes
+struck into a sprightly measure, and the next moment three score lively
+voices were roaring:
+
+
+You’ve here the little Peeler,
+
+Out of place he will not go!
+
+But to keep it, don’t he turn about
+
+And jump Jim Crow!
+
+
+
+But to keep it see him turn about
+
+And jump Jim Crow!
+
+Turn about, and wheel about
+
+And do just so!
+
+
+
+
+_Chorus_
+
+
+
+The only dance Sir Robert knows
+
+Is Jump Jim Crow!
+
+The only dance Sir Robert knows
+
+Is Jump Jim Crow!
+
+
+For a verse or two the singers had it their own way. Then the band of
+the meeting struck in with “See, the Conquering Hero Comes!” and as the
+airs clashed in discord, the stalwarts of the two parties clashed also
+in furious struggle. In a twinkling and as by magic the scene changed.
+Women, children, lads, fled every way, screaming and falling. Shrieks
+of alarm routed laughter. The crowd swayed stormily, flowed this way,
+ebbed that way. The clatter of staves on clubs rang above oaths and
+shouts of defiance, as the Yellows made a rush for the drum. Men were
+down, men were trampled on, men strove to scale the cart, others strove
+to descend from it. But to descend from it was to descend into a mêlée
+of random fists and falling sticks, and the man from Manchester
+bellowed to stand fast; while Hatton shouted to “clear out these
+rogues,” and Banfield called on his men to charge. Basset alone stood
+silent, measuring the conflict with his eyes. With an odd exultation he
+felt his spirits rise to meet the need.
+
+He saw quickly that the orange favors were outnumbered, and were giving
+way; and almost as quickly that, so far as mischief was meant, it was
+aimed at the Manchester man. He was a stranger, he was the delegate of
+the League, he was a marked man. Already there were cries to duck him.
+Basset tapped Banfield on the shoulder.
+
+“They’ll not touch us,” he shouted in the man’s ear, “but we must get
+Brierly away. There’s Pritchard’s house opposite. We must fight our way
+to it. Pass the word!” Then to Brierly, “Mr. Brierly, we must get you
+away. There’s a gang here means mischief.”
+
+“Let them come on!” cried the Manchester man, “I’m not afraid.”
+
+“No, but I am,” Basset replied. “We’re responsible, and we’ll not have
+you hurt here. Down all!” he cried raising his voice, as he saw the
+band whom he had already marked, pressing up to the cart through the
+mêlée—they moved with the precision of a disciplined force, and most of
+their faces were muffled. “Down all!” he shouted. “Yellows to the
+rescue! Down before they upset us!”
+
+The leaders scrambled out of the cart, some panic-stricken, some
+enjoying the scuffle. They were only just in time. The Yellows were in
+flight, amid yells and laughter, and before the last of the platform
+was over the side, the cart was tipped up by a dozen sturdy arms.
+Hatton and another were thrown down, but a knot of their men, the last
+with fight in them, rallied to the call, plucked the two to their feet,
+and, striking out manfully, covered the rear of the retreating force.
+
+The men with the belcher neckerchiefs pressed on silently, brandishing
+their clubs, and twice with cries of “Down him! Down him!” made a rush
+for Brierly, striking at him over the shoulders of his companions. But
+it was plain that the assailants shrank from coming to blows with the
+local magnates; and Basset seeing this handed Brierly over to an older
+man, and himself fell back to cover the retreat.
+
+“Fair play, men,” he cried, good humoredly. And he laughed in their
+faces as he fell back before them. “Fair play! You’re too many for us
+to-day, but wait till the polling-day!”
+
+They hooted him. “Yah! Yah!” they cried. “You’d ruin the land that bred
+you! You didn’t ought to be there!” “Give us that fustian rascal! We’ll
+club him!”
+
+“Who makes cloth o’ devil’s dust?” yelled another. “Yah! You d—d
+cotton-spawn!”
+
+Basset laughed in their faces, but he was not sorry when the friendly
+doorway received his party. The country gang, satisfied with their
+victory, began to fall back after breaking a dozen panes of glass; and
+the panting and discomfited Yellows, thronging the passage and pulling
+their coats into shape, were free to exchange condolences or
+recriminations as they pleased. More than one had been against the
+open-air meeting, and Hatton, a sorry figure, hatless, and with a
+sprained knee, was not likely to hear the end of it. Two or three had
+black eyes, one had lost two teeth, another his hat, and Brierly his
+note-book.
+
+But almost before a word had been exchanged, a man pushed his way among
+them. He had slipped into the house by the back way. “For God’s sake,
+gentlemen,” he cried, “get the constable, or there’ll be murder!”
+
+“What is it?” asked a dozen voices.
+
+“They’ve got Ben Bosham, half a hundred of them! They’re away to the
+canal with him. They’re that mad with him they’ll drown him!”
+
+So far Basset had treated the affair as a joke. But Bosham’s plight in
+the hands of a mob of angry farmers seemed more than a joke. Murder
+might really be done. He snatched a thick stick from a corner—he had
+been hitherto unarmed—and raised his voice. “Mr. Banfield,” he said,
+“go to Stubbs and tell him what is doing! He can control them if any
+one can. And do some of you, gentlemen, come with me! We must get him
+from them.”
+
+“But we’re not enough,” a man protested.
+
+“The man must not be murdered,” Basset replied. “Come, gentlemen,
+they’ll not dare to touch us who know them, and we’ve the law with us!
+Come on!”
+
+“Well done, Squire!” cried Brierly. “You’re a man!”
+
+“Ay, but I’m not man enough to take you!” Basset retorted. “You stay
+here, please!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+BY THE CANAL
+
+
+It was noon on that day, the day of the meeting at Riddsley, and Mary
+was sitting in the parlor at the Gatehouse. She was stooping over the
+fire with her eyes on the embers. The old hound lay beside her with his
+muzzle resting on her shoe, and Mrs. Toft, solidly poised on her feet,
+on the farther side of the table, rolled her apron about her arms and
+considered the pair.
+
+“It’s given us all a rare shock,” she said as she marked the girl’s
+listless pose, “the poor Master’s death! That sudden and queer, too! I
+don’t know that I’m better for it, myself, and Toft goes up and down
+like a toad under a harrow, he’s that restless! For ’Truria, she’s
+fairly mazed. Her body’s here and her thoughts are lord knows where.
+Toft, he seems to think something will come of her and her reverend——”
+
+“I hope so,” Mary said gently.
+
+“But it’s beyond me what Toft thinks these days. I asked him
+point—blank yesterday, ‘Toft,’ I says, ‘are we going or are we
+staying?’ And, bless the man, he looks at me as if he’d eat me. ‘Take
+time and you’ll know,’ he says. ‘But whose is the house?’ I asks, ‘and
+who’s to pay us?’ ‘God knows!’ he says, and whiffs out of the room like
+one of these lucifers!”
+
+“I think that the house is Mr. Basset’s,” Mary explained, “for the rest
+of the lease; that’s about three years.”
+
+“But you’ll not be staying, begging your pardon, Miss? I suppose you’ll
+be naming the day soon? The Master’s gone and his lordship will be
+wanting you somewhere else than here.”
+
+“Yes, Mrs. Toft,” Mary said quietly. “I suppose so.”
+
+Mrs. Toft looked for a blush and saw none, and she drew her
+conclusions. She went on another tack. “There’s like to be a fine
+rumpus in the town to-day,” she said comfortably. “The Squire’s brought
+a foreigner down to trim their nails, and there’s to be a wagon and
+speaking and such like foolishness at the Maypole. As if all the
+speeches of all the fools in Staffordshire would lower the quartern
+loaf! Anyway, if what Petch says is true, the farmers are that mad
+there’s like to be lives lost!”
+
+Mary stooped and carefully put a piece of wood on the fire.
+
+“And, to be sure, they’re a rough lot,” Mrs. Toft continued, dropping
+her apron. “I’m not forgetting what happened to the reverend Colet, and
+I wish the young master safe out of it. It’s all give and no take with
+him, too much for others and too little for himself! I’m thinking if
+anybody’s hurt he’ll be there or thereabouts.”
+
+Mary turned. “Is Petch—couldn’t Petch go down and——”
+
+“La, Miss,” Mrs. Toft answered—the girl’s face told her all that she
+wished to know—“Petch don’t dare, with his lordship on the other side!
+But, all said and done, I’ll be bound the young master’ll come through.
+It’s a pity, though,” she continued thoughtfully, as she began to dust
+the sideboard, “as people don’t know their own minds. There’s the
+Squire, now. He’s lived quiet and pleasant all these years and now he
+must dip his nose into this foolishness, same as if he dipped it into
+hot worts when Toft’s a-brewing! I don’t know what’s come to him. He
+goes riding up to Blore these winter nights, twenty miles if it’s a
+furlong, when this house is his! He’s more like to take his death that
+way, if I’m a judge.”
+
+“Is he doing that?” Mary asked in a small voice.
+
+“To be sure,” Mrs. Toft returned. “What else! Which reminds me, Miss,
+are those papers to go to the bank to-day?”
+
+“I believe so.”
+
+“Well, you’re looking that peaky, you’d best take a jaunt with them.
+Why not? It’s a fine day, and if there is a bit of a clash there’s none
+will hurt you. Do you go, Miss, and get a little color in your cheeks.
+At worst, you’ll bring back the news and I’m sure we’re that dead-alive
+and moped a little’s a godsend!”
+
+“I think I will go,” Mary said.
+
+So when the gig, which was to convey the boxes to the bank, arrived
+about three, she mounted beside the driver. Here, were it only for an
+hour, was distraction and a postponement of that need to decide, to
+choose between two courses, which was crushing her under its weight.
+
+For Mary was very unhappy. That moment which had proved to her that she
+did not love the man she was to marry and did love another, had stamped
+itself on her memory, never to be wiped from it. In Audley’s company,
+and for a time after they had parted, the shock had numbed her mind and
+dulled her feelings. But once alone and free to think, she had grasped
+all that the discovery meant—to her and to him; and from that moment
+she had not known an instant of ease.
+
+She saw that she had made a terrible mistake, and one so vital that, if
+nothing could be done, it must wreck her happiness and another’s
+happiness. And what was she to do? What ought she to do? In a moment of
+emotion, led astray by that love of love which is natural to women, and
+something swayed—so she told herself in scorn—by
+
+
+Those glories of our blood and state,
+
+
+which to women are not shadows, she had made this mistake, and now,
+self-tricked, she had only herself to blame if
+
+
+Sceptre and crown
+Were tumbled down
+
+And in the dust were lesser made
+Than the poor crooked scythe and spade!
+
+
+But to see her folly did not avail. What was she to do?
+
+Ought she to tell the truth, however painful it might be, to the man
+whom she had deceived? Or ought she to go through with it, to do her
+duty and save him at least from hurt? Either way, she had wrecked her
+own craft, but she might still hope to save his. Or—might she hope? She
+was not certain even of this.
+
+What was she to do? Hour after hour she asked herself the question,
+sometimes looking through the windows with eyes that saw nothing, at
+others pacing her room in a fever of anxiety. What was she to do? She
+could not decide. Now she thought one thing, now another. And time was
+passing. No wonder that she was glad even of the distraction of this
+journey to Riddsley that at another time had been so dull an adventure!
+It was, at least, a reprieve, a respite from the burden of decision.
+
+She would not own, even to herself, that she had any other thought in
+going, or that anxiety had any part in her restlessness. From that side
+of the battle she turned her eyes with all the strength of her will.
+Her conduct had been that of a silly girl rather than that of a woman
+who had seen and suffered; but she was not light—and besides Basset was
+cured. She was only unfortunate, and desperately unhappy.
+
+As they drove by the old Cross at the foot of the hill she averted her
+eyes. Surely it must have been in some other life that she had made it
+the object of a walk, and had told herself that she would never forget
+it.
+
+Alas, she had been right. She would never forget it!
+
+The man who drove saw that her face matched her mourning, and he left
+her to her thoughts, so that hardly a word passed between them until
+they were close upon the outskirts of the town. Then the driver, to
+whom the dull winter landscape, the lines of willows, and the low
+water-logged fields, were no novelty, pricked up his ears.
+
+“Dang me!” he said, “they’ve started! There’s a fine rumpus in the
+town. Do you hear ’em, Miss? That’s a band I’m thinking?”
+
+“I hope no one will be hurt.”
+
+The man winked at his horse. “None of the right side, Miss,” he said
+slyly. “But it might be a hanging, front o’ Stafford gaol, by the roar!
+I met a tidy lot going in as I came out, a right tidy lot! I’m blest,”
+after listening a moment, “if they’re not coming this way!”
+
+“I hope they won’t do anything to——”
+
+“La, Miss,” the man answered, misreading her anxiety and interrupting
+her, “they’ll never touch us. And for the old nag, he’s yeomanry. He’d
+not start if he met a mile o’ funerals!”
+
+Certainly the noise was growing. But the lift of the canal bridge and
+bank, which crossed the road a hundred yards before them, hid all of
+the town from them save a couple of church towers, some tiled roofs,
+and the brick gable of Hatton’s Works. The man whipped up his horse.
+
+“Teach they Manchester chaps a trick!” he muttered. “Shouldn’t wonder
+if there’ll be work for the crowner out of this! Gee-up, old nag, let’s
+see what’s afoot! ’Pears to me,” as the shouting grew plainer, “we’ll
+be in at the death yet, Miss!”
+
+Mary winced at the word, but if the man feared that she would refuse to
+go on, he was mistaken. On the contrary, she looked eagerly to the
+front as the old horse, urged by the whip, took the rise of the bridge
+at a canter, and, having reached the crown, relapsed into an
+absent-minded walk.
+
+“Dang me!” cried the driver, greatly excited, “but they do mean
+business! It’s in knee in neck with ’em! Never thought it would come to
+this. And who is’t they’ve got, Miss?”
+
+Certainly there was something out of the common on foot. Moving to meet
+the gig, and filling the road from ditch to ditch, appeared a
+disorderly crowd of two or three hundred persons. Cheering, hooting,
+and brandishing sticks, they came on at something between a walk and a
+run, although in the heart of the mass there was a something that now
+and again checked the movement, and once brought it to a stand. When
+this happened the crowd eddied and flowed about the object in its
+centre and presently swept on again with the same hooting and laughter.
+
+But in the laughter, as in the hooting, there was, after each of these
+pauses, a more savage note.
+
+“What is it?” Mary cried, as the driver, scared by the sight, pulled up
+his horse. “What is it?”
+
+“D—n me,” the man replied, forgetting his manners, “if I don’t think
+it’s Ben Bosham they’ve got! It is Ben! And they’re for ducking him!
+It’s mortal deep by the bridge there, and s’help me, if it’s not ten to
+one they drown him!”
+
+“Ben Bosham?” Mary repeated. Then she recalled the name. She remembered
+what Mrs. Toft had said of him—that the man had a wife and would bring
+her to ruin. The crowd was not fifty yards from them now and was still
+coming on. To the left a track ran down to the towing-path and the
+canal, and already the leaders of the mob were swerving in that
+direction. As they did so—and were once more checked for a moment—Mary
+espied among them a man’s bald head twisting this way and that, as he
+strove to escape. The man was struggling desperately, his clothes
+almost torn from his back, but he was helpless in the hands of a knot
+of stout fellows, and after a brief resistance he was hauled forcibly
+on. A hundred jeering voices rose about him, and a something cruel in
+the sound chilled Mary’s blood. The dreary scene, the sluggish canal,
+the flat meadows, the rising mist, all pressed on her mind and deepened
+the note of tragedy.
+
+But on that she broke the spell. The blood in her spoke. She clutched
+the driver’s arm and shook it. “Go on!” she cried. “Go on! Drive into
+them!”
+
+The man hesitated—he saw that the crowd was in no jesting mood. But the
+old horse felt the twitch on the reins and started, and having the
+slope with him, trotted gently forward as if the road were empty before
+him. The crowd waved and shouted, and cursed the driver. But the horse,
+thinking perhaps that this was some new form of parade, only cocked his
+ears and ambled on till he reached the foremost. Then a man seized the
+rein, jerked it, and stopped him.
+
+In a moment Mary sprang down, heedless of the fact that she was one
+woman among a hundred men. She faced the crowd, her eyes bright with
+indignation. “Let that man go,” she cried. “Do you hear? Do you want to
+murder him?” And, advancing a step, she laid her hand on Ben Bosham’s
+ragged, filthy sleeve—he had been down more than once and been rolled
+in the mud. “Let him go!” she continued imperiously. “Do you know who I
+am, you cowards? Let him go!”
+
+“Yah!” shouted the crowd, and drowned her voice and pressed roughly
+about her, threatened her. One of the foremost asked her what she would
+do, another cried that she had best make herself scarce! Furious faces
+surrounded her, fists were shaken at her. But Mary was not daunted. “If
+you don’t let him go, I shall go to Lord Audley!” she said.
+
+“You’re a fool meddling in this!” cried a voice. “We’re only going to
+wash the devil!”
+
+“You will let him go!” she replied, facing them all without fear and,
+advancing a step, she actually plucked the man from the hands that held
+him. “I am Miss Audley! If you do not let him go——”
+
+“We’re only going to wash him, lady,” whined one of the men who held
+him.
+
+“That’s all, lady!” chimed in half-a-dozen. “He wants it!”
+
+But Ben was not of that opinion, or he did not value cleanliness.
+“They’re going to drown me!” he spluttered, his eyes wild. All the
+fight had been knocked out of him. “They’re paid to do it! They’ll
+drown me!”
+
+“And sarve him right!” shouted half-a-dozen at the rear of the crowd.
+“Sarve him right, the devil!”
+
+“They will not do it!” Mary said firmly. “They’ll not lay another hand
+on you. Get in! Get in here!” And then to the crowd, “For shame!” she
+cried. “Stand back!”
+
+The man was so shaken that he could not help himself, but she pushed,
+the driver pulled, and in a trice, before the mob had recovered from
+its astonishment, Ben was above their heads, on the seat of the gig—a
+blubbering, ragged, mud-caked figure with a white face and bleeding
+lips. “Go on!” Mary said in the same tone, and the gig moved forward,
+the old yeomanry horse tossing its head. She moved on beside it with
+her hand on the rail.
+
+The mob let them pass, but closed in behind them, and after a pause
+began to jeer—a little in amusement, a little to cover its defeat. In a
+moment farce took the place of tragedy; the danger was over. “We’ll
+tell your wife, Ben!” screamed a youth, and the crowd laughed and
+followed. Other wits took their turn. “You’ll want a new coat for the
+wedding, Ben!” cried one. And now and again amid the laughter a sterner
+note survived. “We’ll ha’ you yet, Ben!” a man would cry. “You’re not
+out of the wood yet, Ben!”
+
+Mary’s face burned, but she stuck to her post, plodding on beside the
+gig, and after this fashion the queer procession, heralded by a score
+of urchins crying the news, entered the streets of the town. On either
+side women thronged the doorways and steps, and while some cried,
+“Bravo, Miss!” others laughed and called to their neighbors to come out
+and see the sight. And still the crowd clung to the rear of the gig,
+and hooted and laughed and pretended to make forays on it.
+
+Mary had hoped to shake them off, but as they persisted in following
+and no relief came—for Basset and his rescue party had gone to the
+canal by another road—she saw nothing for it but to go on to Lord
+Audley’s. With a curt word she made the man turn that way.
+
+The crowd still attended, curious, amused. It had doubled its numbers,
+nay, had trebled them. There were friends as well as foes among them
+now, some of Hatton’s men, some of Banfield’s, yellow favors as well as
+blue. If Mary had known it, she might have set Ben down and not a hand
+would have been laid upon him. Even the leaders of the riot were now
+thankful that they had not carried the matter farther. Enough had been
+done.
+
+But Mary did not know this. She thought that the man was still in
+peril. She did not dream of leaving him. And it was at the head of a
+crowd of three or four hundred of the riff-raff of Riddsley that she
+broke in upon the quiet of the suburban road in which The Butterflies
+stood. Tumultuously, followed by laughter and hooting and cheers, she
+swept along it with her train, and came to a halt before the house.
+
+No house was ever more surprised. Mrs. Wilkinson’s scared face peered
+above one blind, her sisters’ caps showed above another. Was it an
+accident? Was it a riot? Was it a Puseyite protest? What was it? Every
+servant, every neighbor, Lord Audley himself came to the windows.
+
+Mary signed to the driver to help Ben down, and the moment the man’s
+foot touched the ground she grasped his arm. With a burning face, but
+with her head in the air, she guided his stumbling footsteps through
+the gate and along the paved walk. They came together to the door. They
+went in.
+
+The crowd formed up five deep along the railings, and waited in
+wondering silence to see what would happen. What would his lordship
+say? What would his lordship do? This was bringing the election to his
+doors with a vengeance, and there were not a few of the better sort who
+saw the fun of the situation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+MY LORD SPEAKS OUT
+
+
+Mary had passed through twenty minutes of tense excitement. The risk
+had been slight, after the first moment of intervention, but she had
+not known this, and she was still trembling with indignation, a
+creature all fire and passion, when the door of The Butterflies opened
+to admit her. Leaving Ben Bosham on the threshold she lost not a
+moment, but with her story on her lips, hurried up the stairs, and on
+the landing came plump upon Lord Audley.
+
+From the window he had seen something of what was afoot below. He had
+recognized Mary and the tattered Bosham, and he had read the riddle,
+grasped the facts, and cursed the busybody, all within thirty seconds.
+“D—n it! this passes everything,” he had muttered to himself as he
+turned from the window in disgust. “This is altogether too much!” And
+he had opened the door—ready also to open his mind to her!
+
+“What in the world is it?” he asked. He held the door for her to enter.
+“What has happened? I could not believe my eyes when I saw you in
+company with that wretched creature!” he continued. “And all the tagrag
+and bobtail in the place behind you? What is it, Mary?”
+
+She felt the check, and the color, which excitement had brought to her
+cheeks, faded. But she thought that it was only that he did not
+understand, and, “That wretched creature, as you call him,” she cried,
+“has just escaped from death. They were going to murder him!”
+
+“Murder him?” Audley repeated. He raised his eyebrows. “Murder him?”
+coldly. “My dear girl, don’t be silly! Don’t let yourself be carried
+away. You’ve lost your head. And, pardon me for saying it, I am afraid
+have made a fool of yourself! And of me!”
+
+“But they were going to throw him into the canal!” she protested.
+
+“Going to wash him!” he replied cynically. “And a good thing too! It’s
+a pity they left the job undone. The man is a low, pestilent fellow!”
+he continued severely, “and obnoxious to me and to all decent people.
+The idea of bringing him, and that pleasant tail, to my house—my dear
+girl, it’s absurd!”
+
+He made no attempt to soften his tone or suppress his annoyance, and
+she stared at him in astonishment. Yet she still thought, or she strove
+to think, that he did not understand, and tried to make the facts
+clear. “But you don’t know what they were like,” she protested. “You
+were not there. They had torn the clothes from his back——”
+
+“I can see that.”
+
+“And he was so terrified that it was dreadful to see him! They were
+handling him brutally, horribly! And then I came up and——”
+
+“And lost your head!” he said. “I dare say you thought all this. But do
+you know anything about elections?”
+
+“No——”
+
+“Have you ever see an election in progress before?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Just so,” he replied dryly. “Well, if you had, you would know that
+brawls of this kind are common things, the commonest of things at such
+a time, and that sensible people turn their backs on them. You’ve
+chosen to turn the farce into a tragedy, and in doing so you’ve made
+yourself ridiculous—and me too!”
+
+“If you had seen them,” she said, “I do not think you would speak as
+you are speaking.”
+
+“My dear girl,” he replied, and shrugged his shoulders, “I have seen
+many such things, many. But there is one thing I have never seen, and
+that is a man killed in an election squabble! The whole thing is
+childish—silly! The least knowledge of the world—”
+
+“Would have saved me from it?”
+
+“Exactly! Would have saved you from it!” he answered austerely. “And me
+from a very annoying incident! Peers have nothing to do with elections,
+as you ought to know; and to bring this mob of all sorts to my door as
+if the matter touched me, is to compromise me. It is past a joke!”
+
+Mary stared. She was trying to place herself. Certainly this was the
+room in which she had taken tea, and this was the man who had welcomed
+her, who had hung over her, whose eyes had paid her homage, who had
+foreseen her least want, who had lapped her in observance. This was the
+man and this the room, and there was the chair in which good Mrs.
+Wilkinson had sat and beamed on her.
+
+But there was a change somewhere; and the change was in the man. Could
+it mean that he, too, had made a mistake and now recognized it? That
+he, too, had found that he did not love? But in that case this was not
+the way to confess an error. His tone, his manner, which held no
+respect for the woman and no softness for the sweetheart, were far from
+the tone of one in the wrong. On the contrary, they presented a side of
+him which had been hitherto hidden from her; a phase of the strength
+that she had admired, which shocked her even while, as deep calls to
+deep, it roused her pride. She remembered that she was his betrothed,
+and that he had wooed her, he had chosen her. And on slight provocation
+he spoke to her in this strain!
+
+She sought the clue, she fancied that she held it, and from this moment
+she was on her guard. She was quiet, but there was a smouldering fire
+in her eyes. “Perhaps I was wrong,” she said. “I have had little
+experience of these things. But are not you, on your side, making too
+much of this? Too much of a very small, a very natural mistake? Isn’t
+it a trifle after all?”
+
+“Not so much of a trifle as you think!” he retorted. “A man in my
+position has to follow a certain line of conduct. A girl in yours
+should be careful to guide herself by my views. Instead, out of a
+foolish sentimentality, you run directly counter to them! It is too
+late to consider your relation to me when the harm is done, my dear.”
+
+“Perhaps we have neither of us considered the relation quite enough?”
+she said.
+
+“I am not sure that we have.” And again, “I am not sure, Mary, that we
+have,” he repeated more soberly.
+
+She knew what he meant now—knew what was in his mind almost as clearly
+as if, instead of grasping his conclusion, she had been a party to his
+reasons. And she closed her lips, a spot of color in each cheek. In
+other circumstances she would have taken on herself a full, nay, the
+main share, of the blame. She would have been quick to admit that she,
+too, had made a mistake, and that no harm was done.
+
+But his manner opened her eyes to many things that had been a puzzle to
+her. Thought is swift, and in a flash her mind had travelled over the
+whole course of their engagement, had recalled his long absence, the
+chill of his letters, the infrequency of his visits; and she saw by
+that light that this was no sudden shift, but an occasion sought and
+seized. Therefore she would not help him. She at least had been honest,
+she at least had been in earnest. She had tricked, not him only, but
+herself!
+
+She closed her lips and waited, therefore. And he, knowing that he had
+now burned his boats, had to go on. “I am not sure that we did think
+enough about it?” he said doggedly. “I have suspected for some time
+that I acted hastily in—in asking you to be my wife, Mary.”
+
+“Indeed?” she said.
+
+“Yes. And what has happened to-day, proving that we look at things so
+differently, has confirmed my suspicion. It has convinced me—” he
+looked down at his table, avoiding her eyes, but continued firmly—“that
+we are not suited to one another. The wife of a man, placed as I am,
+should have an idea of values, a certain reserve, that comes of a
+knowledge of the world; above all, no sentimental notions such as lead
+to mistakes like this.” He indicated the street by a gesture. “If I was
+mistaken a while ago in listening to my feelings rather than to my
+prudence, if I gave you credit for knowledge which you had had no means
+of gaining, I wronged you, Mary, and I am sorry for it. But I should be
+doing you a far greater wrong if I remained silent now.”
+
+“Do you mean,” she asked in a low voice, “that you wish it to be at an
+end between us? That you wish to—to throw me over?”
+
+He smiled awry. “That is an unpleasant way of putting it, isn’t it?” he
+said. “However, I am in the wrong, and I have no right to quarrel with
+a word. I do think that to break off our engagement at once is the best
+and wisest thing for both of us.”
+
+“How long have you felt this?” she asked.
+
+“For some time,” he replied, measuring his words, “I have been coming
+slowly—to that conclusion.”
+
+“That I am not fitted to be your wife?”
+
+“If you like to put it so.”
+
+Then her anger, hitherto kept under, flamed up. “Then what right,” she
+cried, “if that was in your mind, had you to treat me as you treated me
+at Beaudelays—in the garden? What right had you to kiss me? Rather,
+what right had you to insult me? For it was an insult—it was an insult,
+if you were not going to marry me! Don’t you know, sir, that it was
+vile? That it was unforgivable?”
+
+She had never looked more handsome, never more attractive than at this
+moment. The day was failing, but the glow of the fire fell on her face,
+and on her eyes sparkling with anger. He took in the picture, he owned
+her charm, he even came near to repenting. But it was too late, and “It
+may have been vile—and you may not forgive it,” he answered hardily,
+“but I’d do it again, my dear, on the same provocation!”
+
+“You would——”
+
+“I would do it again,” he repeated coolly. “Don’t you know that you are
+handsome enough to turn any man’s head? And what is a kiss after all?
+We are cousins. If you were not such a prude, I would kiss you now?”
+
+She was furiously angry—or she fancied that she was. But it may be
+that, deep down in her woman’s mind, she was not truly angry. And,
+indeed, how could she be angry when in her heart a little bird was
+beginning to sing—was telling her that she was free, that presently
+this cloud would be behind her, and that the sky would be blue? Already
+the message was making itself heard, already she was finding it hard to
+keep up appearances, to frown upon him and play her part.
+
+Yet she flashed out at him. Was he not going too fast, was he not
+riding off too lightly? “Oh!” she cried, “You dare to say that! Even
+while you break off with me!”
+
+But his selfish, masterful nature had now the upper hand. He had eaten
+his leek and he was anxious to be done with it. “And what then?” he
+said. “I believe that you know that I am right. I believe that you know
+that we are not suited to one another.”
+
+“And you think I will let you go at a word?”
+
+“I think you will let me go,” he said, “because you are not a fool,
+Mary. You know as well as I do that you might be ‘my lady’ at too high
+a price. I’m not the most manageable of men. I’d make a decent husband,
+all being well. But I’m not meek and I’d make a very unhandy husband
+_malgré moi_.”
+
+The threat exasperated her. “I know this at least,” she retorted, “that
+I would not marry you now, if you were twenty times my lord! You have
+behaved meanly, and I believe falsely! Not to-day! You are speaking the
+truth to-day. But I believe that from the start you had this in your
+mind, that you foresaw this, and were careful not to commit yourself
+too publicly! What I don’t understand is why you ever asked me to be
+your wife—at all?”
+
+“Look in the glass!” he answered impudently.
+
+She put that aside. “But I suppose that you had a reason!” she
+returned. “That you loved me, that you felt for me anything worthy of
+the name of love is impossible! For the rest, let me tell you this! If
+I ever felt thankful for anything I am thankful for the chance that
+brought me to your house to-day—and brought me to the truth!”
+
+“Anything more to say?” he asked flippantly. The way she was taking it
+suited him better than if she had wept and appealed. And then she was
+so confoundedly good-looking in her tantrums!
+
+“Nothing more,” she said. “I think that we understand one another now.
+At any rate, I understand you. Perhaps you will kindly see if I can
+leave the house without annoyance.”
+
+He looked into the street. Dusk had fallen, the lamplighter was going
+his rounds. Of the crowd that had attended Mary to the house no more
+than a handful remained; the nipping air, the attractions of free beer,
+the sound of the muffin-bell, had drawn away the rest. The driver of
+the gig was moving to and fro, now looking disconsolately at the
+windows, now beating his fingers on his chest.
+
+“I think you can leave with safety,” Audley said with irony. “I will
+see you downstairs.”
+
+“I will not trouble you,” she answered.
+
+“But, surely, we may still be friends?”
+
+She looked him in the face. “We need not be enemies,” she answered.
+“And, perhaps, some day I may be able to think more kindly of you. If
+that day comes I will tell you. Good-bye.” She went out without
+touching his hand. She went down the stairs.
+
+She drove through the dusky, dimly-lighted streets in a kind of dream,
+seeing all things through a pleasant haze. The bank was closed and to
+deliver up her papers she had to go into the bank-house. The glimpse
+she had of the cheerful parlor, of the manager’s wife, of his two
+children playing the Royal Game of Goose at a round table, enchanted
+her. Presently she was driving again through the darkling streets,
+passing the Maypole, passing the quaint, low-browed shops, lit only by
+an oil lamp or a couple of candles. The Audley Arms, the Packhorse, the
+Portcullis, were all alight and buzzing with the voices of those who
+fought their battles over again or laid bets on this candidate or that.
+What the speaker had said to Lawyer Stubbs and what Lawyer Stubbs had
+said to the speaker, what the “Duke” thought, who would have to pay for
+the damage, and the odds the stout farmer would give that wheat
+wouldn’t be forty shillings a quarter this day twelvemonth if the
+Repeal passed—scraps of these and the like poured from the doorways as
+she drove by.
+
+All fell in delightfully with her mood and filled her with a sense of
+well-being. Even when the streets lay behind her, and the driver
+hunched his shoulders to meet the damp night-fog and the dreary stretch
+that lay beyond the canal-bridge, Mary found the darkness pleasant and
+the chill no more than bracing. For what were that night, that chill
+beside the numbing grip from which she had just—oh, thing
+miraculous!—escaped! Beside the fetters that had been lifted from her
+within the last hour! O foolish girl, O ineffable idiot, to have ever
+fancied that she loved that man!
+
+No, for her it was a charming night! The owl that, far away towards the
+Great House, hooted dolefully above the woods—no nightingale had been
+more tuneful. Ben Bosham—she laughed, thinking of his plight—blessings
+on his bare, bald head and his ragged shoulders! The old horse plodding
+on, with the hill that mounts to the Gatehouse sadly on his mind—he
+should have oats, if oats there were in the Gatehouse stables! He
+should have oats in plenty, or what he would if oats failed!
+
+“What do you give him when he’s tired?” she asked.
+
+“Well,” the driver replied with diplomacy, “times a quart of ale, Miss.
+He’ll take it like a Christian.”
+
+“Then a quart of ale he shall have to-night!” she said with a happy
+laugh. “And you shall have one, too, Simonds.”
+
+Her mood held to the end, so that before she was out of her wraps, Mrs.
+Toft was aware of the change in her. “Why, Miss,” she said, “you look
+like another creature! It isn’t the bank, I’ll be bound, has put that
+color in your cheeks!”
+
+“No!” Mary answered, “I’ve had an adventure, Mrs. Toft. And briefly she
+told the tale of Ben Bosham’s plight and of her gallant rescue. She
+began herself to see the comic side of it.
+
+“He always was a fool, was Ben!” Mrs. Toft commented. “And that,” she
+continued shrewdly, “was how you come to see his lordship was it,
+Miss?”
+
+“How did you know I saw him?” Mary asked in surprise. “But you’re
+right, I did.” Then, as she entered the parlor, “Perhaps I’d better
+tell you, Mrs. Toft,” she said, “that the engagement between my cousin
+and myself is at an end. You were one of the very few who knew of it,
+and so I tell you.”
+
+Mrs. Toft showed no surprise. “Indeed, Miss,” she answered, stooping to
+the hearth to light the candles with a piece of wood. “Well, one
+thing’s certain, and many a time my mother’s drummed it into me,
+‘Better a plain shoe than one that pinches!’ And again, ‘Better live at
+the bottom of the hill than the top,’ she’d say. ‘You see less but you
+believe more.’”
+
+Neither she nor Mary saw Toft. But Toft, who had entered the hall a
+moment before, was within hearing, and Mary’s statement, so coolly
+received by his wife, had an extraordinary effect on the man-servant.
+He stood an instant, his lank figure motionless. Then he opened the
+door beside him, slipped out into the chill and the darkness, and
+silently, but with extravagant gestures, he broke into a dance, now
+waving his thin arms in the air, now stooping with his hands locked
+between his knees. Whether he thus found vent for joy or grief was a
+secret which he kept to himself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+THE RIDDSLEY ELECTION
+
+
+The riot at Riddsley found its way into the London Press, and gained
+for the contest a certain amount of notoriety. The _Morning Chronicle_
+pointed out that the election had been provoked by the Protectionists
+in a constituency in Sir Robert’s own country; and the writer inferred
+that, foreseeing defeat, the party of the land were now resorting to
+violence. The _Morning Herald_ rejoiced that there were still places
+which would not put up with the incursions of the Manchester League,
+“the most knavish, pestilent body of men that ever plagued this or any
+country!” In the House, where the tempest of the Repeal debate already
+raged, and the air was charged with the stern invective of Disraeli, or
+pulsed to the cheering of Peel’s supporters—even here men discussed the
+election at Riddsley, considered it a clue to the feeling in the
+country, and on the one side hardly dared to hope, on the other refused
+to fear. What? cried the Land Party. Be defeated in an agricultural
+borough? Never!
+
+For a brief time, then, the contest filled the public eye and presented
+itself as a thing of more than common interest. Those who knew little
+weighed the names and the past of the candidates; those behind the
+scenes whispered of Lord Audley. Whips gave thought to him, and that
+one to whom his lordship was pledged, wrote graciously, hinting at the
+pleasant things that might happen if all went well, and the present
+winter turned to a summer of fruition.
+
+Alas, Audley felt that the Whip’s summer, and
+
+
+The friendly beckon towards Downing Street,
+Which a Premier gives to one who wishes
+To taste of the Treasury loaves and fishes,
+
+
+were very remote, whereas, if the other Whip, he who had the honors
+under his hand and the places in his power, had written so! But that
+cursed Stubbs had blocked his play in that direction by asserting that
+it was hopeless, though Audley himself began at this late hour to
+suspect that it had not been hopeless! That it had been far from
+hopeless!
+
+In his chagrin my lord tore the Whip’s letter across and across, and
+then prudently gummed it together again and locked it away. Certainly
+the odds were long that it would never be honored; on the one side
+stood Peel with four-fifths of his Cabinet and half his party, with all
+the Whigs, all the Radicals, all the League, and the Big Loaf: on the
+other stood the landed interest! Just the landed interest led by Lord
+George Bentinck, handsome and debonair, the darling of the Turf, the
+owner of Crucifix; but hitherto a silent member, and one at whom, as a
+leader, the world gaped. Only, behind this Joseph there lurked a
+Benjamin, one whose barbed shafts were many a time to clear the field.
+The lists were open, the lances were levelled, the slogan of Free Trade
+was met by the cry of “The Land and the Constitution!” and while old
+friendships were torn asunder and old allies cut adrift, town and
+country, forge and field, met in a furious grapple that promised to be
+final.
+
+If, amid the dust of such a conflict, the riot at Riddsley obtained a
+passing notice in London, intense it may be believed was the excitement
+which it caused in the borough. Hatton and Banfield and their men went
+about, vowing to take vengeance at the hustings. The mayor went about,
+swearing in constables. The farmers and their allies went about
+grinning. Fights took place nightly behind the Packhorse and the
+Portcullis, while very old ladies, peering over their blinds, talked of
+the French Revolution, and very young ones thought that the Militia,
+adequately officered, should be brought into the town.
+
+The spirit of which Basset had given proof was blazoned about; and he
+gained in another way. He was one of those to whom a spice of danger is
+a fillip, whom a little peril shakes out of themselves. On the day
+after the riot he came upon a score of people collected round a Cheap
+Jack in the market. The man presently closed his patter and his stall,
+and, on the impulse of the moment, Basset took his place and made the
+crowd a speech as short as it was simple. He told them that in his
+opinion it was impossible to keep food out of the country by a tax
+while Ireland was threatened by famine. Secondly, that the sacrifice
+which Peel was making of his party, his reputation, and his consistency
+was warrant that in his view the change was urgently needed. Thirdly,
+he asked them whether the farmers were so prosperous and the laborers
+so comfortable that change must be for the worse. But here he came on
+delicate ground; murmurs arose and some hisses, and he broke off
+good-humoredly, thanked the crowd, which had grown to a good size, and,
+stepping down from his barrow, he walked away amid plaudits. The thing
+was reported, and though the Tories sneered at it as a hole-and-corner
+meeting, Farthingale held another view. He told Mr. Stubbs that it was
+a neat thing—very well done.
+
+Stubbs grunted. “Will it change a vote?” he growled.
+
+“Change a——”
+
+“Will it change a vote, man? You heard what I said.”
+
+“Lord, no!” the clerk answered. “I never said it would!”
+
+“Then why trouble about it?” Stubbs retorted fretfully. “Get on with
+those poll-cards! I don’t pay you a guinea a day at election time to
+praise monkey-tricks.”
+
+For Stubbs was not happy. He knew, indeed, that the breaking-up of the
+open-air meeting had been fairly successful. It had brought back two
+votes to the fold; and he calculated that the seat would be held. But
+by a majority how narrow, how fallen, how discreditable! He blushed to
+think of it.
+
+And other things made him unhappy. Those who are politicians by trade
+are like cardplayers, who play for the game’s sake; one game lost, they
+cut and deal as keenly as before. Behind the politicians, however, are
+a few to whom the stake is something; and of these was Stubbs. To him,
+as we know, the Corn-Tax was no mere toll, but the protection of
+agriculture, the well-head that guarded the pure waters, the fence that
+saved from smoke and steam, from slag-heap and brickfield, the smiling
+face of England. For him, the home of his fathers, the land of field
+and stubble, of plough and pinfold, was at stake; nay, was passing,
+wasted by men who thought in percentages and saw no farther than the
+columns of their ledgers. To that England of his memory—whether it had
+ever existed in fact or no—a hundred associations bound the lawyer;
+things tender and things true; quaint memories of his first turkey’s
+nest, of the last load of the harvest, of the loosened plough horses
+straying to the water at the close of day, of the flat paintings of the
+Durham Ox and the Coke Ram that adorned the farm parlor.
+
+To the men who bade him look up and see that in his Elysium the farmer
+struggled and the laborer starved, his answer was short. “Better ten
+shillings and fresh air, than shoddy dust and a pound a week!”
+
+In the country as a whole—and as time went on—he despaired of success.
+But he found Lord George a leader after his own heart, and many an
+evening he pored over the long paragraphs of his long-winded speeches.
+When he heard that the owner of Crucifix had dismissed his trainers,
+released his jockeys, sold his stud, and turned his back on the turf,
+he could have wept. Lord George and Stubbs, indeed, were the true
+country party. For Lord George’s sake Stubbs was prepared to taken even
+the “Jew boy” to his heart.
+
+As to the potato famine, he did not believe a word of it. He called the
+Premier, “Potato Peel!”
+
+The rains of February are apt to damp enthusiasm, but before eleven
+o’clock on the nomination day Riddsley was like a hive of bees about to
+swarm. The throng in the streets was such that Mottisfont could hardly
+pass through it. He made his entry into the borough on horseback at the
+head of a hundred mounted farmers wearing blue sashes and favors.
+Before him reeled a huge banner upheld by eight men and bearing on one
+side the legend, “The Land and the Constitution,” on the other,
+“Mottisfont the Farmers’ Friend!” Behind the horsemen, and surrounded
+by a guard of laborers in smocked frocks, moved a plough mounted on a
+wain and drawn by eight farm horses. Flags with “Speed the Plough,”
+“England’s Share is England’s Fare,” and “Peace and Plenty,” streamed
+from it. Three bands of varying degrees of badness found their places
+where they could, and thumped and blared against one another until the
+panes rattled in the deafened streets. The butchers, with marrow-bones
+and cleavers, brought up the rear, and in comparison were tuneful.
+
+Had Basset got his way, he would have dispensed with pomp and walked
+the hundred yards which separated his quarters at the Swan from the
+hustings. But he was told that this would never do. What would the
+landlord of the Swan say, who kept postchaises? And the postboys who
+looked for a golden tip? And the men who would hand him in and hand him
+out, and the men who would open the door and shut the door, and the men
+who would raise the steps and lower the steps, who would all look for
+the same tip? So, perforce, he drove in state to the Town Hall—before
+which the hustings stood—in a barouche and four accompanied by Banfield
+and Hatton and his agent. The rest of his Committee followed in
+postchaises. A bodyguard of “hands” escorted them, and they, too, had
+their bands—of equal badness—and their yellow banners with “Down with
+the Corn Laws,” “Vote for Basset the Poor Man’s Friend,” and “No Bread
+Taxes.” The great and little loaf pranced in front of him on spears,
+and if his procession was not quite so fine or so large as his
+opponent’s, it must be admitted that the blackguards of the town showed
+no preference and that he could boast about an equal number of the
+tagrag and bobtail.
+
+The left hand of the hustings was allotted to him, the right hand to
+Mottisfont, and by a little after eleven both parties had crammed and
+crushed,
+
+
+With blustering, bullying, and brow-beating,
+A little pummelling and maltreating,
+And elbowing, jostling and cajoling,
+
+
+into their places in front of the platform, the bullies and
+truncheon-men being posted well to the fore, or craftily ranged where
+the frontiers met. The bands boomed and blared, the men huzzaed, the
+air shook, the banners waved, every window that looked out upon the
+seething mob was white with faces, every ’vantage-point was occupied.
+It was such a day and such a contest as Riddsley had never seen. The
+eyes of the country, it was felt, were upon it! Fights took place every
+five minutes, oaths and bets flew like hail over the heads of the
+crowd, coarse wit met coarser nicknames, and now and again shrieks
+varied the hubbub as the huge press of people, gathered from miles
+round, swayed under the impact of some vicious rush.
+
+“Hurrah! Hurrah! Mottisfont for ever! Basset! Basset and the Big Loaf!
+Basset! Basset! Hurrah! Mottisfont! Hurrah!”
+
+Then, in a short-lived silence, “Ten to one on Mottisfont! Three cheers
+for the Duke!” and a roar of laughter.
+
+Or a hundred voices would raise
+
+
+John Barley-corn, my Joe, John!
+When we were first acquaint!
+
+
+but never got beyond the first two lines, either because they were
+howled down or they knew no more of the words. The Peelites answered
+with their mournful,
+
+
+Child, is thy father dead?
+
+Father is gone!
+
+Why did they tax his bread?
+
+God’s will be done!
+
+
+or with the quicker,
+
+
+Oh, landlords’ devil take
+
+Thy own elect I pray!
+
+Who taxed our cake, and took our cake,
+
+And threw our cake away!
+
+
+On this would ensue a volley of personalities. “What would you be
+without your starch, Hayward?” “How’s your dad, Farthingale?” “Who
+whopped his wife last Saturday?” “Hurrah! Hurrah! Who said Potatoes?”
+
+For nearly an hour this went on, the blare of the bands, the uproar,
+the cheering, the abuse never ceasing. Then the town-crier appeared
+upon the vacant hustings. He rang his bell for silence and for a moment
+obtained it. On his heels entered, first the mayor and his assistants,
+then the candidates, the proposers, the seconders. Each, as he made his
+appearance, was greeted with a storm of groans, cheers, and cat-calls.
+Each put on to meet it such a show of ease as he could, some smiling,
+some affecting ignorance. The candidates and their supporters filed to
+either side, while the flustered mayor took his stand in the middle
+with the town clerk at his elbow.
+
+Basset, nearly at the end of his troubles, sought comfort in looking
+beyond the present moment. He feared that he was not likely to win, but
+he had done his duty, he had made his effort, and soon he would be free
+to repeat that effort on a smaller stage. Soon, these days, that in
+horror rivalled the middle passage of the slave trade, would be over,
+and if he were not elected he would be free to retire to Blore, and to
+spend days, lonely and sad indeed, but clean, in the improvement of his
+acres and his people. His eyes dwelt upon the sea of faces, and from
+time to time he smiled; but his mind was far away. He thought with
+horror of elections, and with loathing of the sordid round of flattery
+and handshaking, of bribery and intimidation from which he emerged.
+Thank God, the morrow would see the end! He would have done his best,
+and played his part. And it would be over.
+
+What the mayor said and what the town clerk said is of no importance,
+for no one heard them. The proposers, the seconders, the candidates,
+all spoke in dumb show. Basset dwelt briefly on the crisis in Ireland,
+the integrity of Peel, and the doubtful wisdom of taxing that which, to
+the poorest, was a necessity of life. If bread were cheaper all would
+have more to spend on other things and the farmer would have a wider
+market for his meat, his wool, and his cheese. It read well in the
+local paper.
+
+But one man was heard. This was a man who was not expected to speak,
+whose creed it had ever been that speeches were useless, and whom
+tradition almost forbade to speak, for he was an agent. At the last
+moment, when a seconder for a formal motion was needed, he thrust
+himself forward to the astonishment of all. The same astonishment
+stilled the mob as they gazed on the well-known figure. For a minute or
+two, curiosity and the purpose in the man’s face, held even his
+opponents silent.
+
+The man was Stubbs; and from the moment he showed himself it was plain
+that he was acting under the stress of great emotion. The very fuglemen
+forgot to interrupt him. They scented something out of the common.
+
+“I have never spoken on the hustings in my life,” he said. “I speak now
+to warn you. I believe that you, the electors of Riddsley, are going to
+sell the birthright of health which you have received; and the heritage
+of freedom which this land has enjoyed for generations and on which the
+power of Bonaparte broke as on a rock. You think you are going to have
+cheap bread, and, maybe, you are! But at what a cost! Cheap bread is
+foreign bread. To you, the laborers, I say that foreign bread means
+that the fields you till will be laid to grass and you will go to work
+in Dudley and Walsall and Bury and Bolton, in mills and pits and smoke
+and dust! And your children will be dwarfed and wizened and puny!
+Foreign bread means that. And it means that the day will come when war
+will cut off your bread and you will starve; or the will of the
+foreigner who feeds you will cut it off—for he will be your master. I
+say, grow your own bread and eat your own bread, and you will be free
+men. Eat foreign bread and in time you will be slaves! No land that is
+fed by another land——”
+
+His last words were lost. Signals from furious principals roused the
+fuglemen, and he was howled down, and stood back ashamed of the impulse
+which had moved him and little less astonished than those about him.
+Young Mottisfont clapped him on the back and affected to make much of
+him. But even he hardly knew how to take it. Some said that Stubbs had
+had tears in his eyes, while the opposing agent whispered to his
+neighbor that the lawyer was breaking and would never handle another
+contest. Sober men shook their heads; agents should hardly be seen,
+much less heard!
+
+But Stubbs’s words were marked, and when the bad times came thirty
+years later, aged farmers recalled them and thought over them. Nor were
+they without fruit at the time. For next morning when the poll opened,
+Basset’s people suffered a shock. Two men on whom he had counted
+appeared and voted short and sharp for Mottisfont. Basset’s agent asked
+them pleasantly if they were not making a mistake; and then less
+pleasantly had the Bribery Oath administered to them. But they stuck to
+their guns, the votes were recorded, and Mottisfont shook hands with
+them. Later in the day when the two were fuddled they denied that they
+had voted for Mottisfont. They had voted for old Stubbs—and they would
+do it again and fight any man who said to the contrary. Their desire in
+this direction was quickly met, and both, to the indignation of the
+Tories, were fined five shillings at the next petty sessions.
+
+Whether this start gave the Protectionists a fillip or no, they were in
+great spirits, and Mottisfont was up and down shaking hands all the
+morning. At noon the figures as exhibited outside the Mottisfont
+Committee-room—amid tremendous cheering—were:
+
+Mottisfont . . . 41
+Basset . . . . 30
+
+though Basset outside his Committee-room claimed one more. Soon after
+twelve Hatton brought up the two Boshams in his carriage, and Ben,
+recovered from his fright, flung his hat before him into the booth,
+danced a war-dance on the steps, and gave three cheers for Basset as he
+came down. Banfield brought up three more voters in his carriage and
+thence onward until one o’clock the polling was rapid. The one o’clock
+board showed:
+
+Mottisfont . . . 60
+Basset . . . . 57
+
+with seventy votes to poll. The Mottisfont party began to look almost
+as blue as their favors, but Stubbs, returned to his senses, continued
+to read his newspaper in a closet behind the Committee-room, as if
+there were no contest within a hundred miles of Riddsley.
+
+During the next three hours little was done. The poll-clerks sent out
+for pots of beer, the watchers drowsed, the candidates were
+invisible—some said that they had gone to dine with the mayor. The
+bludgeon-men and blackguards went home to sleep off their morning’s
+drink, and to recruit themselves for the orgy of the Chairing. The
+crowd before the polling booth shrank to a knot of loafing lads and a
+stray dog. At four Mottisfont still held the lead with 64 to 61.
+
+But as the clock struck four the town awoke. Word went round that a
+message from Sir Robert Peel would be read outside Basset’s
+Committee-room. Hearers were whipped up, and the message, having been
+read with much parade, was posted up through the town and as promptly
+pulled down. Animated by the message, and making as much of it as if it
+had not been held back for the purpose, the Peelites polled
+five-and-twenty votes in rapid succession, and at half-past four issued
+a huge placard with:
+
+Basset . . . . 87
+Mottisfont . . . 83
+
+Vote for Basset and the Big Loaf!
+
+Basset wins!
+
+Great was the enthusiasm, loud the cheering, vast the stir outside
+their Committee-room. The Big and the Little Loaf waltzed out on their
+poles. The placard, mounted as a banner, was entrusted to the two
+Boshams. The band was ready, a dozen flares were ready, the Committee
+were ready, all was ready for a last rally which might decide the one
+or two doubtful voters. All was ready, but where was Mr. Basset? Where
+was the candidate?
+
+He could not be found, and great was the hubbub, vast the running to
+and fro. “The Candidate? Where’s the Candidate?” One ran to the Swan,
+another to the polling-booth, a third to his agent’s office. He could
+not be found. All that was known of him or could be learned was that a
+tall man, who looked like an undertaker, had stopped him near the
+polling-booth and had kept him in talk for some minutes. From that time
+he had been seen by no one.
+
+Foul play was talked of, and the search went on, but meantime the
+procession—the poll closed at half-past six—must start if it was to do
+any good. It did so, and with its flares, its swaying placard, its
+running riff-raff, now luridly thrown up by the lights, now lost in
+shadow, formed the most picturesque scene that the election had
+witnessed. The absence of the candidate was a drawback, and some shook
+their heads over it. But the more knowing put their tongues in their
+cheeks, aware that whether he were there or not, and whether they
+marched or stayed at home, neither side would be a vote the better!
+
+At half—past five the figures were,
+
+Basset . . . . 87
+Mottisfont . . . 86
+
+There were still fourteen votes to poll, and on the face of things
+victory hung in the balance.
+
+But at that hour Stubbs moved. He laid down his newspaper, gave
+Farthingale an order, took up a slip of paper and his hat, and went by
+way of the darkest street to The Butterflies. He walked thoughtfully,
+with his chin on his breast, as if he had no great appetite for the
+interview before him. By the time he reached the house the poll stood
+at
+
+Mottisfont . . . 96
+Basset . . . . 87
+
+And long and loud was the cheering, wild the triumph of the landed
+interest. The town was fuller than ever, for during the last hour the
+farmers and their men had trooped in, Brown Heath had sent its
+colliers, and a crowd filling every yard of space within eye-shot of
+the polling-booth greeted the news. To hell with Peel! Down with
+Cobden! Away with the League! Hurrah! Hurrah! Stubbs, had he been
+there, would have been carried shoulder-high. Old Hayward was lifted
+and carried, old Musters of the Audley Arms, one or two of the
+Committee. It was known that four votes only remained unpolled, so that
+Mottisfont’s victory was secure.
+
+At The Butterflies, whither the cheering of the crowd came in gusts
+that rose and fell by turns, Stubbs nodded to the maid and went up the
+stairs unannounced. Audley was writing at a side-table facing the room.
+He looked up eagerly. “Well?” he said, putting down his quill. “Is it
+over?”
+
+Stubbs laid the slip of paper before him. “It’s not over, my lord,” he
+answered soberly. “But that is the result. I am sorry that it is no
+better.”
+
+Audley looked at the paper. “Nine!” he exclaimed. He looked at Stubbs,
+he looked again at the paper. “Nine? Good G—d, man, you don’t mean it?
+You can’t mean it! You don’t mean that that is the best we could do?”
+
+“We hold the seat, my lord,” Stubbs said.
+
+“Hold the seat!” Audley replied, staring at him with furious eyes.
+“Hold the seat? But I thought that it was a safe seat? I thought that
+it was a seat that couldn’t be lost! When five, only five, votes would
+have cast it the other way! Why, man, you cannot have known anything
+about it! No more about it than the first man in the street!”
+
+“My lord——”
+
+“Not a jot more!” Audley repeated. He had been prepared for something
+like this, but the certainty that if he had cast his weight on the
+other side, the side that had sinecures and places and pensions, he
+would have turned the scale—this was too much for his temper. “Nine!”
+he rapped out with another oath. “I can only think that the Election
+has been mismanaged! Grievously, grievously mismanaged, Mr. Stubbs!”
+
+“If your lordship thinks so——”
+
+“I do!” Audley retorted, his certainty that the man before him had
+thwarted his plans, carrying him farther than he intended. “I do! Nine!
+Good G—d, man! When you assured me——”
+
+“Whatever I assured your lordship,” Stubbs said firmly, “I believed.
+And—no, my lord, you must allow me to speak now—what I promised would
+have been borne out—fully borne out by the result in normal times. But
+I did not allow enough for the split in the party, nor for the wave of
+madness——”
+
+“As you think it!”
+
+“And surely as your lordship also thinks it!” Stubbs rejoined smartly,
+“that has swept over the country! In these circumstances it is
+something to hold the seat, which a return to sanity will certainly
+assure to us at the next election.”
+
+“The next election!” Audley muttered scornfully. For the moment he was
+too angry to play a part or to drape his feelings.
+
+“But if your lordship is dissatisfied——”
+
+“Dissatisfied? I am d—nably dissatisfied.”
+
+“Then your lordship has the power,” Stubbs said slowly, “to dispense
+with my services.”
+
+“I know that, sir.”
+
+“And if you do not think fit to take that step, my lord——”
+
+“I shall consider it!”
+
+Another word or two and the deed had been done, for both men were too
+angry to fence. But before that last word was spoken Audley’s man
+entered. He handed a card to his master and waited.
+
+Audley looked at the card longer than was necessary and under cover of
+the pause regained control of himself. “Who brought this?” he asked.
+
+“A messenger from the Swan, my lord.”
+
+“Tell him——” He broke off. Holding out the card for Stubbs to take, “Do
+you know anything about this?” he asked.
+
+Stubbs returned the card. “No, my lord,” he said coldly. “I know
+nothing.”
+
+“Business of great importance to me? D—n his impudence, what business
+important to me can he have?” Audley muttered. Then, “My compliments to
+Mr. Basset and I am leaving in the morning, but I shall be at home this
+evening at nine.”
+
+The servant retired. Audley looked askance at his agent. “You’d better
+be here,” he muttered ungraciously. “We can settle what we were talking
+about later.”
+
+“Very good, my lord,” Stubbs answered. And nothing more being said, he
+took himself off.
+
+He was not sorry that they had been interrupted. Much of his income and
+more of his importance sprang from the Audley agency, but rather than
+be treated as if he were a servant, he would surrender both—in his way
+he was a proud man. Still he did not want to give up either; and if
+time were given he thought that his lordship would think better of the
+matter.
+
+As he returned to his office, choosing the quiet streets by which he
+had come, he had a glimpse, through an opening, of the distant
+Market-place. A sound of cheering, a glare of smoky light, a medley of
+leaping, running forms, a something uplifted above the crowd, moved
+across his line of vision. Almost as quickly it vanished, leaving only
+the reflection of retreating torches. “Hurrah! Hurrah for Mottisfont!
+Hurrah!” Still the cheering came faintly to his ears.
+
+He sighed. Riddsley had remained faithful-by nine! But he did not
+deceive himself. It was the writing on the wall. The Corn Laws were
+doomed, and with them much that he had loved, much that he cherished,
+much in which he believed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+A TURN OF THE WHEEL
+
+
+Audley was suspicious and ill at ease. Standing on the hearth-rug with
+his back to the fire, he fixed the visitor with his eyes, and with
+secret anxiety asked himself what he wanted. The possibility that
+Basset came to champion Mary had crossed his mind more than once; if
+that were so he would soon dispose of him! In the meantime he took
+civility for his cue, exchanged an easy word or two about the poll and
+the election, and between times nodded to Stubbs to be seated. Through
+all, his eyes were watchful and he missed nothing.
+
+“I asked Mr. Stubbs to be here,” he said when a minute or two had been
+spent in this by-play, “as you spoke of business. You don’t object?”
+
+“Not at all,” Basset replied. His face was grave. “I should tell you at
+once, Audley,” he added, “that my mission is not a pleasant one.”
+
+The other raised his eyebrows. “You are sure that it concerns me?”
+
+“It certainly concerns you. Though, as things stand, not very
+materially. I knew nothing of the matter myself until three o’clock
+to-day, and at first I doubted if it was my duty to communicate it. But
+the facts are known to a third person, they may be used to annoy you in
+the future, and though the task is unpleasant, I decided that I had no
+option.”
+
+Audley set his broad shoulders against the mantel-shelf. “But if the
+facts don’t affect me?” he said.
+
+“In a way they do. Not as they might under other circumstances. That is
+all.”
+
+“And yet you are making our hair stand on end! I confess you puzzle me.
+Well, let us have it. What is it all about?”
+
+“A little time ago you recovered, if you remember, your Family Bible.”
+“Well? What of that?”
+
+“I have just learned that the man did not hand over all that he had. He
+kept back—it now appears—certain papers.”
+
+“Ah!” Audley’s voice was stern. “Well, he has had his chance. This
+time, I can promise him a warrant will follow.”
+
+“Perhaps you will hear me out first?”
+
+“No,” was the sharp reply. Audley’s temper was getting the better of
+him. “Last time, my dear fellow, you compounded with him; your motive
+an excellent one I don’t doubt. But if he now thinks to get more money
+from me—and for other papers—I can promise him that he will see the
+inside of Stafford gaol. Besides, my good friend, you gave us to
+understand that he had surrendered all he had.”
+
+“I am afraid I did, and I fear I was wrong. Why he deceived me, and has
+now turned about, I know no more than you do!”
+
+“I think I can enlighten you,” the other answered—his fears as well as
+his temper were aroused. “The rogue is shallow. He thinks to be paid
+twice. Once by you and once by me. But you can tell him that this time
+he will be paid in other coin.”
+
+“I’m afraid that there is more in it than that,” Basset said. “The fact
+is the papers he now produces, Audley, are of another character.”
+
+“Oh! The wind blows in that quarter, does it?” my lord replied. “You
+don’t mean that you’ve come here—why, d—n it, man,” with sudden
+passion, “either you are very simple, or you are art and part——”
+
+“Steady, steady, my lord,” Stubbs said, interposing discreetly.
+Hitherto he had not spoken. “There’s no need to quarrel! I am sure that
+Mr. Basset’s intentions are friendly. It will be better if he just
+tells us what these documents are which are now put forward. We shall
+then be able to judge where we stand.”
+
+“Go ahead,” Audley said, averting his face and sulkily relapsing
+against the mantel-shelf. “Put your questions! And, for God’s sake,
+let’s get to the point!”
+
+“The paper that is pertinent is a deed,” Basset explained. “I have the
+heads of it here. A deed made between Peter Paravicini Audley, your
+ancestor, the Audley the date of whose marriage has been always in
+issue—between him on the one side, and his father and two younger
+brothers on the other.”
+
+“What is the date?” Stubbs asked.
+
+“Seventeen hundred and four.”
+
+“Very good, Mr. Basset.” Stubbs’s tone was now as even as he could make
+it, but an acute listener would have detected a change in it. “Proceed,
+if you please.”
+
+Before Basset could comply, my lord broke in. “What’s the use of this?
+Why the d—l are we going into it?” he cried. “If this man is out for
+plunder I will make him smart as sure as my name is Audley! And any one
+who supports him. In the meantime I want to hear no more of it!”
+
+Basset moved in his chair as if he would rise. Stubbs intervened.
+
+“That is one way of looking at it, my lord,” he said temperately. “And
+I’m not saying that it is the wrong way. But I think we had better hear
+what Mr. Basset has to say. He is probably deceived——”
+
+“He has let himself be used as a catspaw!” Audley cried. His face was
+flushed and there was an ugly look in his eyes.
+
+“But he means us well, I am sure,” the lawyer interposed. “At present I
+don’t see”—he turned and carefully snuffed one of the candles—“I don’t
+see——”
+
+“I think you do!” Basset answered. He had had a long day and he had
+come on an unpleasant business. His own temper was not too good. “You
+see this, at any rate, Mr. Stubbs, that such a deed may be of vital
+import to your client.”
+
+“To me?” Audley exclaimed. Was it possible that the thing he had so
+long feared—and had ceased to fear—was going to befall him? Was it
+possible that at the eleventh hour, when he had burnt his boats, when
+he had thought all danger at an end—no, it was impossible! “To me?” he
+repeated passionately.
+
+“Yes,” Basset replied. “Or, rather, it would be of vital import to you
+in other circumstances.”
+
+“In what other circumstances? What do you mean?”
+
+“If you were not about to marry the only person who, with you, is
+interested.”
+
+Audley cut short, by a tremendous effort, the execration that burst
+from his lips. His face, always too fleshy for his years, swelled till
+it was purple. Then, and as quickly, the blood ebbed, leaving it gray
+and flabby. He would have given much, very much at this moment to be
+able to laugh or to utter a careless word. But he could do neither. The
+blow had been too sudden, too heavy, too overwhelming. Only in his
+nightmares had he seen what he saw now!
+
+Meanwhile Stubbs, startled by the half-uttered oath and a little out of
+his depth—for he had heard nothing of the engagement—intervened. “I
+think, my lord,” he said, “you had better leave this to me. I think you
+had, indeed. We are quite in the dark and we are not getting forward.
+Let us have the facts, Mr. Basset. What is the gist of this deed? Or,
+first, have you seen it?”
+
+“I have.”
+
+“And read it?”
+
+“I have.”
+
+“It appears to you—I only say it appears—to be genuine?”
+
+“I have no doubt that it is genuine,” Basset replied. “It bears the
+marks of age, and it was found in the chest with the old Bible. If the
+book is genuine——”
+
+The lawyer raised his hand. “Too fast,” he said. “You say it was found!
+You mean that this man says it was found?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Precisely. But there is a difference. Still, we have cleared the
+ground. Now, what does this deed purport to be?”
+
+Basset produced a slip of paper. “An agreement,” he read from it,
+“between Peter Paravicini Audley and his father and his two younger
+brothers. After admitting that the entry of the marriage in the
+register is misleading and that no marriage took place until after the
+birth of his son, Peter Paravicini undertakes that, in consideration of
+his father and his brothers taking no action and making no attack upon
+his wife’s reputation, she being their cousin, he will not set up for
+the said son, or the issue of the said son, any claim to the title or
+estates.”
+
+Audley listened to the description, so clear and so precise, and he
+recognized that it tallied with the deed which tradition had always
+held to exist but of which John Audley had been able to give no proof.
+He heard, he understood; yet while he listened and understood, his mind
+was working to another end, and viewing with passion the tragedy which
+fate had prepared for him. Too late! Too late! Had this become known a
+week, only a week, earlier, how lightly had the blow fallen! How
+impotently! But he had cut the rope, he had severed the strands once
+carefully twisted, that bound him to safety! And then the irony, the
+bitterness, the cruelty of those words of Basset’s, “in other
+circumstances!” They bit into his mind.
+
+Still he suffered in silence, and only his stillness and his unhealthy
+color betrayed the despair that gripped and benumbed his soul. Stubbs
+did not look at him; perhaps he was careful not to look at him. The
+lawyer sat thinking and drumming gently with his fingers on the table.
+“Just so, just so,” he said presently. “On the face of it, the document
+of which Mr. John Audley tried to give secondary evidence, and which a
+person fraudulently inclined would of course concoct. That touch of the
+cousin well brought in!”
+
+“But the lady was his cousin,” Basset said.
+
+“All the world knows it,” the lawyer retorted coolly, “and use has been
+made of the knowledge. But, of course, there are a hundred things to be
+proved before any weight can be given to this document; its origin, the
+custody from which it comes, the signatures, the witnesses. Its
+production by a man who has once endeavored to blackmail is alone
+suspicious. And the deed itself is at variance with the evidence of the
+Bible.”
+
+“But that variance bears out the deed, which is to secure the younger
+sons’ rights while covering the reputation of the lady.”
+
+The lawyer shook his head. “Very clever,” he said. “But, frankly, the
+matter has an ugly look, Mr. Basset.”
+
+“Lord Audley says nothing,” Basset replied, nettled by the lawyer’s
+phrase.
+
+“And will say nothing,” Stubbs rejoined genially, “if he is advised by
+me. In the circumstances, as I understand them, he is not affected as
+he might be, but this is still a serious matter. We are not quarrelling
+with you for coming to us, Mr. Basset. On the contrary. But I would
+like to know why the man came to you.”
+
+“The answer is simple,” Basset explained. “I am Mr. Audley’s executor.
+On his account, I am obliged to be interested. The moment I learned
+this I saw that, be it true or false, I must disclose it to Miss
+Audley. But I thought it fair to open it to Lord Audley first that he
+might tell the young lady himself, if he preferred to do so.”
+
+Stubbs nodded. “Very proper,” he replied. “And where, in the meantime,
+is this—precious document?”
+
+“I lodged it with Mr. Audley’s bankers this afternoon.”
+
+Stubbs nodded again. “Also very proper,” he said. “Just so.”
+
+Basset rose. “I’ve told you what I know. If there is nothing more?” he
+said. He looked at Audley, who had turned his back on them and, with
+his hands in his pockets and one foot on the fender, was gazing into
+the fire.
+
+“I think that’s all,” Stubbs hastened to say. “I am sure that his
+lordship is obliged to you, Mr. Basset, though it is a hundred to one
+that there is nothing in this.”
+
+At that, however, Audley turned about. He had pulled himself together,
+and his manner was excellent. “I would like to say that for myself,” he
+said frankly, “I owe you many thanks for the straightforward course you
+have taken, Basset. You must pardon my momentary annoyance. Perhaps you
+will kindly keep this business to yourself for—shall we say—three days?
+I will speak myself to my cousin, but I should like to make one or two
+inquiries first.”
+
+Basset agreed willingly. He hated the whole thing and his part in it.
+It forced him to champion, or to seem to champion, Mary against her
+betrothed; and so set him in that kind of opposition to his rival which
+he loathed. It was only after some hesitation that he had determined to
+see Audley, and now that he had seen him, the sooner he was clear of
+the matter the happier he would be. So, “Certainly,” he repeated,
+thinking that the other was taking it very well. “And now, as I have
+had a hard day, I will say good-night.”
+
+“Good-night, and believe me,” my lord added warmly, “we recognize the
+friendliness of your action.”
+
+Outside, in the darkness of the road, Basset drew a breath of relief.
+He had had a hard day and he was utterly weary. But he had come now,
+thank God, to an end of many things; of the canvass he had detested and
+the contest in which he had been beaten; of his relations with Mary,
+whom he had lost; of this imbroglio, which he hated; of Riddsley and
+the Gatehouse and the old life there! He could go to his inn and sleep
+the clock round. In his bed he would be safe, he would be free from
+troubles. It seemed to him a refuge. Till the morrow he need think of
+nothing, and when he came forth again it would be to a new life.
+Henceforth Blore, his old house and his starved acres must bound his
+ambitions. With the money which John Audley had left him he would dig
+and drain and fence and build, and be by turns Talpa the mole and
+Castor the beaver. In time, as he began to see the fruit of his toil,
+he would win to some degree of content, and be glad, looking back, that
+he had made this trial of his powers, this essay towards a wider
+usefulness. So, in the end, he would come through to peace.
+
+But at this point the current of his thoughts eddied against Toft, and
+he cursed the man anew. Why had he played these tricks? Why had he kept
+back this paper? Why had he produced it now and cast on others this
+unpleasant task?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+TOFT’S LITTLE SURPRISE
+
+
+Toft had gone into Riddsley on the polling-day, but had returned before
+the result was known. “What the man was thinking of,” his wife declared
+in wrath, “beats me! To be there hours and hours and come out no wiser
+than he went, and we waiting to hear—a babe would ha’ had more sense!
+The young master that we’ve known all our lives, to be in or out, and
+we to know nothing till morning! It passes patience!”
+
+Mary had her own feelings, but she concealed them. “He must know how it
+was going when he left?” she said.
+
+“He doesn’t know an identical thing!” Mrs. Toft replied. “And all he’d
+say was, ‘There, there, what does it matter?’ For all the world as if
+he spoke to a child! ‘What else matters, man?’ says I. ‘What did you go
+for?’ But there, Miss, he’s beyond me these days! I believe he’s going
+like the poor master, that had a bee in his bonnet, God forgive me for
+saying it! But what’d one not say, and we to wait till morning not
+knowing whether those plaguy Repealers are in or out!”
+
+“But Mr. Basset is for Repeal,” Mary said.
+
+“What matter what he’s for, if he’s in?” Mrs. Toft replied loftily.
+“But to wait till morning to know—the man’s no better than a numps!”
+
+In the end, it was Mr. Colet who brought the news to the Gatehouse. He
+brought it to Etruria and so much of moment with it that before noon
+the election result had been set aside as a trifle, and Mary found
+herself holding a kind of court in the parlor—Mr. Colet plaintiff,
+Etruria defendant, Mrs. Toft counsel for the defence. Absence had but
+strengthened Mr. Colet’s affection, and he came determined to come to
+an understanding with his mistress. He saw his way to making a small
+income by writing sermons for his more indolent brethren, and, in the
+meantime, Mr. Basset was giving him food and shelter; in return he was
+keeping Mr. Basset’s accounts, and he was saving a little, a very
+little, money. But the body of his plea rested not on these counts, but
+on the political change. Repeal was in the air, repeal was in the
+country. Vote as Riddsley might, the Corn Laws were doomed. His
+opinions would no longer be banned; they would soon be the opinions of
+the majority, and with a little patience he might find a new curacy.
+When that happened he wished to marry Etruria.
+
+“And why not?” Mary asked.
+
+“I will never marry him to disgrace him,” Etruria replied. She stood
+with bowed head, her hands clasped before her, her beautiful eyes
+lowered.
+
+“But you love him?” Mary said, blushing at her own words.
+
+“If I did not love him I might marry him,” Etruria rejoined. “I am a
+servant, my father’s a servant. I should be wronging him, and he would
+live to know it.”
+
+“To my way o’ thinking, ’Truria’s right,” her mother said. “I never
+knew good come of such a marriage! He’s poor, begging his reverence’s
+pardon, but, poor or rich, his place is there.” She pointed to the
+table. “And ’Truria’s place is behind his chair.”
+
+“But you forget,” Mary said, “that when she is Mr. Colet’s wife her
+place will be by his side.”
+
+“And much good that’ll do him with the parsons and such like, as are
+all gleg together! If he’s in their black books for preaching too
+free—and when you come to tithes one parson is as like another as pigs
+o’ the same litter—he’ll not better himself by taking such as Etruria,
+take my word for it, Miss!”
+
+“I will never do it,” said Etruria.
+
+“But,” Mary protested, “Mr. Colet need not live here, and in another
+part people will not know what his wife has been. Etruria has good
+manners and some education, Mrs. Toft, and what she does not know she
+will learn. She will be judged by what she is. If there is a drawback,
+it is that such a marriage will divide her from you and from her
+father. But if you are prepared for that?”
+
+Mrs. Toft rubbed her nose. “We’d be willing if that were all,” she
+said. “She’d come to us sometimes, and there’d be no call for us to go
+to her.”
+
+Mr. Colet looked at Etruria. “If Etruria will come to me,” he said, “I
+will be ashamed neither of her nor her parents.”
+
+“Bravely said!” Mary cried.
+
+“But there’s more to it than that,” Mrs. Toft objected. “A deal more.
+Mr. Colet nor ’Truria can’t live upon air. And it’s my opinion that if
+his reverence gets a curacy, he’ll lose it as soon as it’s known who
+his wife is. And he can’t dig and he can’t beg, and where’ll they be
+with the parsons all sticking to one another as close as wax?”
+
+“He’ll not need them!” replied a new speaker, and that speaker was
+Toft. He had entered silently, none of them had seen him, and the
+interruption took them aback. “He’ll not need them,” he repeated, “nor
+their curacies. He’ll not need to dig nor beg. There’s changes coming.
+There’s changes coming for more than him, Miss. If Mr. Colet’s willing
+to take my girl she’ll not go to him empty-handed.”
+
+“I will take her as she stands,” Mr. Colet said, his eyes shining. “She
+knows that.”
+
+“Well, you’ll take her, sir, asking your pardon, with what I give her,”
+Toft answered. “And that’ll be five hundred pounds that I have in hand,
+and five hundred more that I look to get. Put ’em together and they’ll
+buy what’s all one with a living, and you’ll be your own rector and may
+snap your fingers at ’em!”
+
+They stared at the man, while Mrs. Toft, in an awestruck tone, cried,
+“You’re out of your mind, Toft! Five hundred pounds! Whoever heard of
+the like of us with that much money?”
+
+“Silence, woman,” Toft said. “You know naught about it.”
+
+“But, Toft,” Mary said, “are you in earnest? Do you understand what a
+large sum of money this is?”
+
+“I have it,” the man replied, his sallow cheek reddening. “I have it,
+and it’s for Etruria.”
+
+“If this be true,” Mr. Colet said slowly, “I don’t know what to say,
+Toft.”
+
+“You’ve said all that is needful, sir,” Toft replied. “It’s long I’ve
+looked forward to this. She’s yours, and she’ll not come to you
+empty-handed, and you’ll have no need to be ashamed of a wife that
+brings you a living. We’ll not trouble except to see her at odd times
+in the year. It will be enough for her mother and me that she’ll be a
+lady. She never was like us.”
+
+“Hear the man!” cried Mrs. Toft between admiration and protest. “You’d
+suppose she wasn’t our child!”
+
+But Mary went to him and gave him her hand. “That’s very fine, Toft,”
+she said. “I believe Etruria will be as happy as she is good, and Mr.
+Colet will have a wife of whom he may be proud. But Etruria will not be
+Etruria if she forgets her parents or your gift. Only you are sure that
+you are not deceiving yourself?”
+
+“There’s my bank-book to show for half of it,” Toft replied. “The other
+half is as certain if I live three months!”
+
+“Well, I declare!” Mrs. Toft cried. “If anybody’d told me yesterday
+that I’d have—’Truria, han’t you got a word to say?”
+
+Etruria’s answer was to throw her arms round her father’s neck. Yet it
+is doubtful if the moment was as much to her as to the ungainly,
+grim—visaged man, who looked so ill at ease in her embrace.
+
+The contrast between them was such that Mary hastened to relieve the
+sufferer. “Etruria will have more to say to Mr. Colet,” she said, “than
+to us. Suppose we leave them to talk it over.”
+
+She saw the Tofts out after another word or two, and followed them.
+“Well, well, well!” said Mrs. Toft, when they stood in the hall. “I’m
+sure I wish that everybody was as lucky this day—if all’s true as Toft
+tells us.”
+
+“There’s some in luck that don’t know it!” the man said oracularly. And
+he slid away.
+
+“If he said black was white, I’d believe him after this,” his wife
+exclaimed, “asking your pardon, Miss, for the liberties we’ve taken!
+But you’d always a fancy for ’Truria. Anyway, if there’s one will be
+pleased to hear the news, it’s the Squire! If I’d some of those nine
+here that voted against him I’d made their ears burn!”
+
+“But perhaps they thought that Mr. Basset was wrong,” Mary said.
+
+“What business had they o’ thinking?” Mrs. Toft replied. “They had
+ought to vote; that’s enough for them.”
+
+“Well, it does seem a pity,” Mary allowed. And then, because she
+fancied that Mrs. Toft looked at her with meaning, she went upstairs
+and, putting on her hat and cloak, went out. The day was cold and
+bright, a sprinkling of snow lay on the ground, and a walk promised her
+an opportunity of thinking things over. Between the Butterflies, at the
+entrance to the flagged yard, she hung a moment in doubt, then she set
+off across the park in the direction of the Great House.
+
+At first her thoughts were busy with Etruria’s fortunes and the
+mysterious windfall which had enriched Toft. How had he come by it? How
+could he have come by it? And was the man really sane? But soon her
+mind took another turn. She had strayed this way on the morning after
+her arrival at the Gatehouse, and, remembering this, she looked across
+the gray, frost-bitten park, with its rows of leafless trees and its
+naked vistas. Her mind travelled back to that happy morning, and
+involuntarily she glanced behind her.
+
+But to-day no one followed her, no one was thinking of her. Basset was
+gone, gone for good, and it was she who had sent him away. The May
+morning when he had hurried after her, the May sunshine, gay with the
+songs of larks and warm with the scents of spring were of the past.
+To-day she looked on a bare, cold landscape and her thoughts matched
+it. Yet she had no ground to complain, she told herself, no reason to
+be unhappy. Things might have been worse, ah, so much worse, she
+reflected. For a week ago she had been a captive, helpless, netted in
+her own folly! And now she was free.
+
+Yes, she ought to be happy, being free; and, more than free,
+independent.
+
+But she must go from here. And for many reasons the thought of going
+was painful to her. During the nine months which she had spent at the
+Gatehouse it had become a home. Its panelled rooms, its austerity, its
+stillness, the ancient woodlands about it were endeared to her by the
+memory of lamp-lit evenings and long summer days. The very plainness
+and solitude of the life, which had brought the Tofts and Etruria so
+near to her, had been a charm. And if her sympathy with her uncle had
+been imperfect, still he had been her uncle and he had been kind to
+her.
+
+All this she must leave, and something else which she did not define;
+which was bound up with it, and which she had come to value when it was
+too late. She had taken brass for gold, and tin for silver! And now it
+was too late. So that it was no wonder that when she came to the
+hawthorn-tree where she had gathered her may that morning, a sob rose
+in her throat. She knew the tree! She had marked it often. But to-day
+there was no one to follow her, no one to call her back, no one to say
+that she should go no farther. Basset was gone, her uncle was dead.
+
+Telling herself that, as she would never see it again, she would go as
+far as the Great House, she pushed on to the Yew Walk. Its recesses
+showed dark, the darker for the sprinkling of snow that lay in the
+park. But it was high noon, there was nothing to fear, and she pursued
+the path until she came to the crumbling monster that tradition said
+was a butterfly.
+
+She was still viewing it with awe, thinking now of the duel which had
+taken place there, now of her uncle’s attack, when a bird moved in the
+copse and she glanced nervously behind her, expecting she knew not
+what. The dark yews shut her in, and involuntarily she shivered. What
+if, in this solitary place—and then through the silence the sharp click
+of the Iron Gate reached her ear.
+
+The stillness and the associations shook her nerves. She heard
+footsteps and, hardly knowing what she feared, she slipped among the
+trees and stood half-hidden. A moment passed and a man appeared. He
+came from the Great House. He crossed the opening slowly, his chin sunk
+upon his breast, his eyes bent on the path before him. A moment and he
+was gone, the way she had come, without seeing her.
+
+It was Lord Audley, and foolish as the impulse to hide herself had
+been, she blessed it. Nothing pleasant, nothing good, could have come
+of their meeting; and into her thoughts of him had crept so much of
+distaste that she was glad that she had not met him in this lonely
+spot. She went on to the Iron Gate, and viewed for a few moments the
+desolate lawn and the long, gaunt front. Then, reflecting that if she
+turned back at once she might meet him, she took a side-path through
+the plantation, and emerged on the park at another point.
+
+She was careful not to reach home until late in the day and then she
+learned that he had called, that he had waited, and that in the end
+Toft had seen him; and that he had departed in no good temper. “What
+Toft said to him,” Mrs. Toft reported, “I know no more than the moon,
+but whatever it was his lordship marched off, Miss, as black as
+thunder.”
+
+After that nothing happened, and of the four at the Gatehouse Etruria
+alone was content. Mrs. Toft was uneasy about the future—what were they
+going to do?—and perplexed by Toft’s mysterious fortune—how had he come
+by it? Toft himself was on the rack, looking for things to happen—and
+nothing happened. And Mary knew that she must take action. She could
+not stay at the Gatehouse, she could not remain as the guest either of
+Basset or of Lord Audley.
+
+But she did not know where to go, and no suggestion reached her. At
+length she wrote, two days after Lord Audley’s visit, to Quebec Street,
+to the house where she had stayed with her father many years before. It
+was the only address of the kind that she knew. But she received no
+answer, and her heart sank. The difficulty, small as it was, harassed
+her; she had no adviser, and ten times a day, to keep up her spirits,
+she had tell herself that she was independent, that she had eight
+thousand pounds, that the whole world was open to her, and that
+compared with the penniless girl who had lived on the upper floor of
+the Hôtel Lambert she was fortunate!
+
+But in the Hôtel Lambert she had had work to do, and here she had none!
+
+She thought of taking rooms in Riddsley, but Lord Audley was there and
+she shrank from meeting him. She would wait another week for the answer
+from London, and then, if none came, she must decide what she would do.
+But in her room that night the thought that Basset had abandoned her,
+that he no longer cared, no longer desired to come near her, broke her
+down. Of course, he was not to blame. He fancied her still engaged to
+her cousin and receiving from him all the advice, all the help, all the
+love, she needed. He fancied her happy and content, in no need of him.
+And, alas, there was the pinch. She had written to him to tell him of
+her engagement. She could not write to him to tell him that it was at
+an end!
+
+And then, by the morrow’s post, there came a long letter from Basset,
+and in the letter the whole astonishing, overwhelming story of the
+discovery of the document which John Audley had sought so long, and in
+the end so disastrously.
+
+“No doubt,” the writer added, “Lord Audley has made you acquainted with
+the facts, but I think it my duty as your uncle’s executor to lay them
+before you in detail and also to advise you that in your interest and
+in view of the change in your position—and in Lord Audley’s—which this
+imports, it is proper that you should have independent advice.”
+
+The blood ebbed and left Mary pale; it returned in a flood as with a
+bounding heart and shaking fingers she read and turned and re-read this
+letter. At length she grasped its meaning, and truly what astounding,
+what overwhelming news! What a shift of fortune! What a reversal of
+expectations! And how strangely, how singularly had all things shaped
+themselves to bring this about—were it true!
+
+Unable to sit still, unable to control her excitement—and no wonder—she
+rose and paced the floor. If she were indeed Lady Audley! If this were
+indeed all hers! This dear house and the Great House! This which had
+seemed to its possessor so small, so meagre, so cramping an
+inheritance, but was to her fortune, an old name, a great place, a firm
+position in the world! A position that offered so many opportunities
+and so much power for good!
+
+She walked the room with throbbing pulses, the letter now crushed in
+her hand, now smoothed out that she might assure herself of its
+meaning, might read again some word or some sentence, might resolve
+some doubt. Oh, it was a wonderful, it was a marvellous, it was an
+incredible turn of fortune! And presently her mind began to deal with
+and to sift the past. And, enlightened, she understood many of the
+things that had perplexed her, and read many of the riddles that had
+baffled her. And her cheeks burned, her heart was hot with indignation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+THE DEED OF RENUNCIATION
+
+
+Basset moved in his chair. He was unhappy and ill at ease. He looked at
+the fire, he looked askance at Mary. “But do you mean,” he said, “that
+you knew nothing about this until you had my letter?”
+
+“Nothing,” Mary answered, “not a word.” She, too, found it more easy to
+look at the fire.
+
+“You must have been very much surprised?”
+
+“I was. It was for that reason that I asked you to bring me the
+papers—to bring me everything, so that I might see for myself how it
+was.”
+
+“I don’t understand why Audley did not tell you. He said he would.”
+
+It was the question Mary had foreseen and dreaded. She had slept two
+nights upon the letter and given a long day’s thought to it, and she
+had made up her mind what she would do and how she would do it. But
+between the planning and the doing there were passages which she would
+fain have shunned, fain have omitted, had it been possible; and this
+was one of them. She saw that there was nothing else for it,
+however—the thing must be told, and told by her. She tried, and not
+without success, to command her voice. “He did not tell me,” she said.
+“Indeed I have not seen him. And I ought to say, Mr. Basset, you ought
+to know in these circumstances—that the engagement between my cousin
+and myself is at an end.”
+
+He may have started—he might well be astonished, in view of the
+business which brought him there. But he did not speak, and Mary could
+not tell what effect it had on him. She only knew that the silence
+seemed age-long, the pause cruel, and that her heart was beating so
+loudly that it seemed to her that he must hear it. At last, “Do you
+mean,” he asked, his voice muffled and uncertain, “that it is all over
+between you?”
+
+“It is quite over between us,” she answered soberly. “It was a mistake
+from the beginning.”
+
+“When—when did he——”
+
+“Oh, before this arose. Some time before this arose.” She spoke
+lightly, but her cheeks were hot.
+
+“He did not tell me.”
+
+“No?”
+
+“No,” Basset repeated. He spoke angrily, as if he felt this a
+grievance, but in no other way could he have masked his emotion.
+Perhaps he did not mask it altogether, for she was observing him—ah,
+how keenly was she observing him! “On the contrary, he led me to
+believe,” he continued, “that things were as before between you, and
+that he would tell you this himself. It was for that reason that I let
+a week go by before I wrote to you.”
+
+“Just so,” she said, squeezing her handkerchief into a ball, and
+telling herself that the worst was over now, the story told, that in
+another minute this would be done and past. “Just so, I quite
+understand. At any rate there is no longer any question of that, Mr.
+Basset. And now,” briskly, “may I see this famous deed which is to do
+so much. You brought it with you, I hope?”
+
+“Yes, I brought it,” he answered heavily. He took a packet of papers
+from his breast-pocket, and it did not escape her—she was cooler
+now—that his fingers were not as steady as a man’s fingers should be.
+The packet he brought out was tied about with old and faded green
+ribbon, and bore a docket on the outside. She looked at it with
+curiosity. That ribbon had been tied by a long-dead hand in the reign
+of Queen Anne! Those yellowish papers had lain in damp and darkness a
+hundred and forty years, that in the end they might take John Audley’s
+life! “I brought them from the bank this afternoon,” he explained.
+“They have been in the bank’s custody since they were handed to me, and
+I must return them to the bank to-night.”
+
+“Everything depends upon them, I suppose?”
+
+“Everything.”
+
+“But I thought that it was a deed—just one paper?” she said.
+
+“The actual instrument is a deed. This one!” He took it from the series
+as he untied the packet. “The other papers are of value as
+corroboration. They are letters, original letters, bearing on the
+preparation of the agreement. They were found all together as they are
+now, and in the same order. I did not disclose the letters to Audley,
+or to his lawyer, because I had not then gone through them; nor was it
+necessary to disclose them. I have since examined them, and they
+provide ample proof of the genuineness of the deed.”
+
+“So that you think...?”
+
+“I do not think that it can be contested. I am sure that it cannot—with
+success. And if it be admitted, your opponent’s case is gone. It was
+practically common ground in the former suit that if this agreement
+could be produced and proved his claim fell to the ground. Yours
+remains. I do not suppose,” Basset concluded, “that he will contest it,
+save as a matter of form.”
+
+“I am sorry for him,” she said thoughtfully. And almost for the first
+time her eyes met his. But he was not responsive. He shrugged his
+shoulders. “He has had it long enough to feel the loss of it,” she
+continued, still bidding for his sympathy. “May I look at that now—the
+deed?” She held out her hand.
+
+He gave it to her. It was a folded sheet of parchment, yellow with age
+and not very large, perhaps ten inches square. Three or four seals of
+green wax on ribbon ends dangled from it. It was written all over in a
+fine and curious penmanship, its initial letter adorned with a portrait
+of Queen Anne; altogether a pretty and delicate thing, but small—so
+small, she thought, to effect so great a change, to carry, to wreck, to
+make the fortunes of a house!
+
+She handled it gently, almost fearfully, with awe and a little
+distaste. She turned it, she read the signatures. They were clear but
+faint. The ink had turned brown.
+
+“Peter Paravicini Audley,” she murmured. “He must have signed it sadly,
+to save his wife, his cousin, a young girl, a girl of my age perhaps!
+To save her name!” There was a quaver in her voice. Basset moved
+uncomfortably.
+
+“They are all dead,” he said.
+
+“Yes, they are all dead,” she agreed. “And their joys and failings,
+hopes and fears—all dead! It seems a pity that this should live to
+betray them.”
+
+“Not a pity on your account.”
+
+“No. You are glad, of course?”
+
+“That you should have your rights?” he said manfully. “Of course I am.”
+
+“And you congratulate me?” She rose and held out her hand. Her eyes
+were shining, there were tears in them, and her face was marvellously
+soft. “You will be the first, won’t you, to congratulate me? You who
+have done so much for me, you who have been my friend through all? You
+who have brought me this? You will wish me joy?”
+
+He was deeply moved; how deeply he could not hide from her, and her
+last doubt faded. He took her hand—his own was cold—but he could not
+speak. At last, “May you be very happy! It is my one wish, Lady
+Audley!”
+
+She let his hand fall. “Thank you,” she said gently. “I think that I
+shall be happy. And now—now,” in a firmer tone, “will you do something
+for me, Mr. Basset? It is not much. Will you deal with Toft for me? You
+told me in your letter that he held my uncle’s note for £800, to be
+paid in the event of the discovery of these papers? And that £300,
+already paid, might be set off against this?”
+
+“That is so.”
+
+“The money should be paid, of course.”
+
+“I fear it must be paid.”
+
+“Will you see him and tell him that it shall be. I—I am fond of
+Etruria, but I am not so fond of Toft, and I would rather not—would you
+see him about this?”
+
+“I quite understand,” Basset answered. “Of course I will do it.” They
+had both regained the ordinary plane of feeling and he spoke in his
+usual tone. “You would like me to see him now?”
+
+“If you please.”
+
+He went from the room. There were other things that as executor he must
+arrange, and when he had dealt with Toft, and not without a hard word
+or two that went home, had settled that matter, he went round the house
+and gave the orders he had to give. The light was beginning to fail and
+shadows to fill the corners, and as he glanced into this room and that
+and viewed the long-remembered places and saw ghosts and heard the
+voices of the dead, he knew that he was taking leave of many things, of
+things that had made up a large part of his life.
+
+And he had other thoughts hardly more cheering. Mary’s engagement was
+broken off. But how? By whom? Had she freed herself? Or had Audley,
+_immemor Divum_, and little foreseeing the discovery that trod upon his
+threshold, freed her? And if so, why? He was in the dark as to this and
+as to all—her attitude, her thoughts, her feelings. He knew only that
+while her freedom trebled the moment of the news he had brought, the
+gifts of fortune which that news laid at her feet, rose insuperable
+between them and formed a barrier he could not pass.
+
+For he could never woo her now. Whatever dawn of hope crept quivering
+above the horizon—and she had been kind, ah, in that moment of softness
+and remembrance she had been kind!—he could never speak now.
+
+The dusk was far advanced and firelight was almost the only light when,
+after half an hour’s absence, he returned to the parlor. Mary was
+standing before the hearth, her slender figure darkly outlined against
+the blaze. She held the poker in her hand, and she was stooping
+forward; and something in her pose, something in the tense atmosphere
+of the room, drew his gaze—he never knew why—to the table on which he
+had left the papers. It was bare. He looked round, he could not see
+them, a cry broke from him. “Mary!”
+
+“They don’t burn easily,” she said, a quaver of exultation and defiance
+in her tone. “Parchment is so hard to burn—it burns so slowly, though I
+made a good fire on purpose!”
+
+“D—n!” he cried, and he was going to seize, he tried to seize her arm.
+But he saw the next moment that it was useless, he saw that it was too
+late. “Are you mad? Are you mad?” he cried. Frantically, he went down
+on his knees, he raked among the embers. But he knew that it was
+futile, he had known it before he knelt, and he stood up again with a
+gesture of despair. “My G—d!” he said. “Do you know what you have done?
+You have destroyed what cannot be replaced! You have ruined your claim!
+You must have been mad! Mad, to do it!”
+
+“Why, mad? Because I do not wish to be Lady Audley?” she said, facing
+him calmly, with her hands behind her.
+
+“Mad!” he repeated, bitter self-reproach in his voice. For he felt
+himself to blame, he felt the full burden of his responsibility. He had
+left the papers with her, the true value of which she might not have
+known! And she had done this dreadful, this fatal, this irreparable
+thing!
+
+She faced his anger without a quiver. “Why, mad!” she repeated. She was
+quite at her ease now. “Because, having been jilted by my cousin, I do
+not wish for this common, this vulgar, this poor revenge? Because I
+will not stoop to the game he plays and has played? Because I will not
+take from him what is little to me who have not had it, but much, nay
+all, to him who has?”
+
+“But your uncle?” he cried. He was striving desperately to collect
+himself, trying to see the thing all round and not only as she saw it,
+but in its consequences. “Your uncle, whose one aim, whose one object
+in life——”
+
+“Was to be Lord Audley? Believe me,” she replied gently, “he sees more
+clearly now. And he is dead.”
+
+“But there are still—those who come after you?”
+
+“Will they be better, happier, more useful?” she answered. “Will they
+be less Audleys, with less of ancient blood running in their veins
+because of what I have done? Because I have refused to rake up this
+old, pitiful, forgotten stain, this scandal of Queen Elizabeth? No, a
+thousand times no! And do not think, do not think,” she continued more
+soberly, “that I have acted in haste or on impulse. I have not had this
+out of my thoughts for a moment since I knew the truth. I have weighed,
+carefully weighed, the price, and as carefully decided to pay it. My
+duty? I can do it, I hope, as well in one station as another. For the
+rest there is only one who will lose by it”—she faced him bravely
+now—“only one who will have the right to blame me—ever.”
+
+“I may have no right——”
+
+“No you have no right at present.”
+
+“Still——”
+
+“When you have the right—when you have gained the right, if ever—you
+may blame me.”
+
+Was he deceived? Was it the fact or only his fancy, a mere
+will-o’-the-wisp inviting him to trouble that led him to imagine that
+she looked at him queerly? With a mingling of raillery and tenderness,
+with a tear and a smile, with something in her eyes that he had never
+seen in them before? With—with—but her face was in shadow, she had her
+back to the blaze that filled the room with dancing lights, and his
+thoughts were in a turmoil of confusion. “I wish I knew,” he said in a
+low voice, “what you meant by that?”
+
+“By what?”
+
+“By what you have just said. Did you mean that now that he—now that
+Audley is out of the way, there was a chance for me?”
+
+“A chance for you?” she repeated. She stared at him in seeming
+astonishment.
+
+“Don’t play with me!” he cried, advancing upon her. “You understand me?
+You understand me very well! Yes, or no, Mary?”
+
+She did not flinch. “There is no chance for you,” she answered slowly,
+still confronting him. “If there be a second chance for me——”
+
+“Ah!”
+
+“For me, Peter?” And with that her tone told him all, all there was to
+tell. “If you are willing to take me second-hand,” she continued, with
+a tremulous laugh, “you may take me. I don’t deserve it, but I know my
+own mind now. I have known it since the day my uncle died and I heard
+your step come through the hall. And if you are still willing?”
+
+He did not answer her, but he took her. He held her to him, his heart
+too full for anything but a thankfulness beyond speech, while she,
+shaken out of her composure, trembled between tears and laughter.
+“Peter! Peter!” she said again and again. And once, “We are the same
+height, Peter!” and so showed him a new side of her nature which
+thrilled him with surprise and happiness.
+
+That she brought him no title, no lands, that by her own act she had
+flung away her inheritance and came to him almost empty-handed was no
+pain to him, no subject for regret. On the contrary, every word she had
+said on that, every argument she had used, came home to him now with
+double force. It had been a poor, it had been a common, it had been a
+pitiful revenge! It had mingled the sordid with the cup, it had cast
+the shadow of the Great House on their happiness. In that room in which
+they had shared their first meal on that far May morning, and where the
+light of the winter fire now shone on the wainscot, now brought life to
+the ruffed portraits above it, there was no question of name or
+fortune, or more or less.
+
+So much so, that when Mrs. Toft came in with the tea she well-nigh
+dropped the tray in her surprise. As she said afterwards, “The sight of
+them two as close as chives in a barrel, I declare you might ha’
+knocked me down with a straw! God bless ’em!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL
+“LET US MAKE OTHERS THANKFUL”
+
+
+A man can scarcely harbor a more bitter thought than that he has lost
+by foul play what fair play would have won for him. This for a week was
+Lord Audley’s mood and position; for masterful as he was he owned the
+power of Nemesis, he felt the force of tradition, nor, try as he might,
+could he convince himself that in face of this oft-cited deed his
+chance of retaining the title and property was anything but desperate.
+He made the one attempt to see Mary of which we know; and had he seen
+her he would have done his best to knot again the tie which he had cut.
+But missing her by a hair’s breadth, and confronted by Toft who knew
+all, he had found even his courage unequal to a second attempt. The
+spirit in which Mary had faced the breach had shown his plan to be from
+the first a counsel of despair, and despairing he let her go. In a dark
+mood he sat down to wait for the next step on the enemy’s part, firmly
+resolved that whatever form it might take he would contest the claim to
+the bitter end.
+
+And Stubbs was scarcely in happier case. At the time, and face to face
+with Basset, he had borne up well, but the production of the fateful
+deed had none the less fallen on him with stunning effect. He
+appreciated—none better and more clearly now—what the effect of his
+easiness would have been had Lord Audley not been engaged to his
+cousin; nor did his negligence appear in a less glaring light because
+his patron was to escape its worst results. He foresaw that whatever
+befel he must suffer, and that the agency which his family had so long
+enjoyed—that, that at any rate was forfeit.
+
+This was enough to make him a most unhappy, a most miserable man. But
+it did not stand alone. Everything seemed to him to be going wrong. All
+good things, public and private, seemed to be verging on their end. The
+world as he had known it for sixty years was crumbling about his ears.
+It was time that he was gone.
+
+Certainly the days of that Protection with which he believed the
+welfare of the land to be bound up, were numbered. In the House Lord
+George and Mr. Disraeli—those strangest of bedfellows!—might rage, the
+old Protectionist party might foam, invective and sarcasm, taunt and
+sneer might rain upon the traitor as he sat with folded arms and hat
+drawn down to his eyes, rectors might fume and squires swear; the end
+was certain, and Stubbs saw that it was. Those rascals in the North,
+they and their greed and smoke, that stained the face of England, would
+win and were winning. He had saved Riddsley by nine—but to what end?
+What was one vote among so many? He thought of the nut-brown ale, the
+teeming stacks, the wagoner’s home,
+
+
+Hard-by, a cottage chimney smokes
+From betwixt two aged oaks.
+
+
+He thought of the sweet cow-stalls, the brook where he had bent his
+first pin, and he sighed. Half the country folk would be ruined, and
+Shoddy from Halifax and Brass from Bury would buy their lands and walk
+in gaiters where better men had foundered. The country would be full of
+new men—Peels!
+
+Well, it would last his time. But some day there would rise another
+Buonaparte and they would find Cobden with his calico millennium a poor
+stay against starvation, his lean and flashy songs a poor substitute
+for wheat. It was all money now; the kindly feeling, the Christmas
+dole, the human ties, where father had worked for father and son for
+son, and the thatch had covered three generations—all these were past
+and gone. He found one fault, it is true, in the past. He had one
+regret, as he looked back. The laborers’ wage had been too low; they
+had been left outside the umbrella of Protection. He saw that now;
+there was the weak point in the case. “That’s where they hit us,” he
+said more than once, “the foundation was too narrow.” But the knowledge
+came too late.
+
+Naturally he buried his private mishap—and my lord’s—in silence. But
+his mien was changed. He was an altered, a shaken man. When he passed
+through the streets, he walked with his chin on his breast, his
+shoulders bowed. He shunned men’s eyes. Then one day Basset entered his
+office and for a long time was closeted with him.
+
+When he left Stubbs left also, and his bearing was so subtly changed as
+to impress all who met him; while Farthingale, stepping out in his
+absence, drank his way through three brown brandies in a silence which
+grew more portentous with every glass. At The Butterflies, whither the
+lawyer hastened, Audley met him with moody and repellent eyes, and in
+the first flush of the news which the lawyer brought refused to believe
+it. It was not only that the tidings seemed too good to be true, the
+relief from the nightmare which weighed upon him too great to be
+readily accepted. But the thing that Mary had done was so far out of
+his ken and so much beyond his understanding that he could not rise to
+it, or credit it. Even when he at last took in the truth of the story
+he put upon it the interpretation that was natural to him.
+
+“It was a forgery!” he cried with an oath. “You may depend upon it, it
+was a forgery and they discovered it.”
+
+But Stubbs would not agree to that. Stubbs was very stout about it, and
+giving details of his conversation with Basset gradually persuaded his
+patron. In one way, indeed, the news coming through him wrought a
+benefit which neither Mary nor Basset had foreseen. It once more
+commended him to Audley, and by and by healed the breach which had
+threatened to sever the long connection between the lawyer and
+Beaudelays. If Stubbs’s opinion of my lord could never again be wholly
+what it had been, if Audley still had hours of soreness when the
+other’s negligence recurred to his mind, at least they were again at
+one as to the future. They were once more free to look forward to a
+time when a marriage with Lady Adela, or her like, would rebuild the
+fortunes of the Great House. Of Audley, whose punishment if short had
+been severe, one thing at least may be ventured with safety—and beyond
+this we need not inquire; that to the end his first, last, greatest
+thought would be—himself!
+
+Late in June, the Corn Laws were repealed. On the same day Sir Robert
+Peel, in the eyes of some the first, in the eyes of others the last of
+men, was forced to resign. Thwarted by old friends and abandoned by new
+ones, he fell by a manœuvre which even his enemies could not defend.
+Whether he was more to be blamed for blindness than he was to be
+praised for rectitude, are questions on which party spirit has much to
+say, nor has history as yet pronounced a final decision. But if his
+hand gave the victory to the class from which he sprang, he was at
+least free from the selfishness of that class. He had ideals, he was a
+man,
+
+
+He nothing common did nor mean,
+Upon that memorable scene,
+
+But bowed his comely head,
+Down as upon a bed.
+
+
+Nor is it possible, even for those who do not agree with him, to think
+of his dramatic fall without sympathy.
+
+In the same week Basset and Mary were married. They spent their
+honeymoon after a fashion of their own, for they travelled through the
+north of England, and beginning with the improvements which Lord
+Francis Egerton was making along the Manchester Canal, they continued
+their quiet journey along the inland waterways which formed in the
+’forties a link, now forgotten, between the great cities. In this
+way—somewhat to the disgust of Mary’s new maid, whose name was
+Joséphine—they visited strange things; the famous land-warping upon the
+Humber, the Doncaster drainage system in Yorkshire, the Horsfall
+dairies. They brought back to the old gabled house at Blore some ideas
+which were new even to old Hayward—though the “Duke” would never have
+admitted this.
+
+“Now that we are not protected, we must bestir ourselves,” Basset said
+on the last evening before their return. “I’ll inquire about a seat, if
+you like,” he added reluctantly.
+
+Mary was standing behind him. She put her hand on his shoulder. “You
+are paying me out, Peter,” she said. “I know now that I don’t know as
+much as I thought I knew.”
+
+“Which means?” Basset said, smiling.
+
+“That once I thought that nothing could be done without an earthquake.
+I know now that it can be done with a spade.”
+
+“So that where Mary was content with nothing but a gilt coach, Mrs.
+Basset is content with a nutshell.”
+
+“If you are in the nutshell,” Mary answered softly, “only—for what we
+have received, Peter—let us make other people thankful.”
+
+“We will try,” he answered.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT HOUSE ***
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
+be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
+United States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
+the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
+of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
+copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
+easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
+of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
+Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
+do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
+by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
+license, especially commercial redistribution.
+
+START: FULL LICENSE
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
+person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
+1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
+Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country other than the United States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
+on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+ most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
+ United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
+ you are located before using this eBook.
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
+other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
+Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+provided that:
+
+* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
+ works.
+
+* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+
+* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
+the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
+forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
+www.gutenberg.org
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
+Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
+to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
+and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
+widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
+state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+
+Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
+facility: www.gutenberg.org
+
+This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
diff --git a/39294-0.zip b/39294-0.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7e46059
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39294-0.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39294-h.zip b/39294-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c60a4fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39294-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39294-h/39294-h.htm b/39294-h/39294-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..99b1edf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39294-h/39294-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,20039 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Great House, by Stanley J. Weyman</title>
+<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
+<style type="text/css">
+
+body { margin-left: 20%;
+ margin-right: 20%;
+ text-align: justify; }
+
+div.chapter {page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em;}
+
+hr {width: 80%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;}
+
+p {text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: 0.25em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+
+.center {margin: auto; text-align:center; margin-top:24pt; margin-bottom:24pt}
+
+p.right {text-align:right; margin-right:20%;}
+
+p.continue {text-indent: 0in; margin-top:9pt;}
+
+.poem2 {
+ margin-top: 24pt; margin-left: 20%;
+ margin-right: 20%; text-align: left;
+ margin-bottom: 24pt; font-size:90%}
+
+.poem3 {
+ margin-top: 24pt; margin-left: 30%;
+ margin-right: 30%; text-align: left;
+ margin-bottom: 24pt; font-size:90%}
+
+.t0 {margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px; margin-left:0em; margin-right:0px;}
+.t1 {margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px; margin-left:1em; margin-right:0px;}
+.t2 {margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px; margin-left:2em; margin-right:0px;}
+.t3 {margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px; margin-left:3em; margin-right:0px;}
+.t8 {margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px; margin-left:8em; margin-right:0px;}
+
+h1,h2,h3,h4,h5 {text-align: center;}
+
+span.sc {font-variant: small-caps; font-size:110%;}
+span.sc2 {font-variant: small-caps; font-size:90%;}
+
+hr.W20 {width:20%; color:black; margin-top:12pt; margin-bottom:12pt}
+
+div.fig { display:block;
+ margin:0 auto;
+ text-align:center;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;}
+
+a:link {color:blue; text-decoration:none}
+a:visited {color:blue; text-decoration:none}
+a:hover {color:red}
+
+</style>
+
+</head>
+
+<body>
+
+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Great House, by Stanley J. Weyman</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Great House</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Stanley J. Weyman</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 28, 2012 [eBook #39294]<br />
+[Most recently updated: June 16, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Charles Bowen</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT HOUSE ***</div>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:75%;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="[Illustration]" />
+</div>
+
+<h2>THE GREAT HOUSE</h2>
+
+<h4>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</h4>
+
+<hr class="W20" />
+
+<div style="margin-left:30%">
+<p class="continue">THE HOUSE OF THE WOLF</p>
+
+<p class="continue">THE NEW RECTOR</p>
+
+<p class="continue">THE STORY OF FRANCIS CLUDDE</p>
+
+<p class="continue">A GENTLEMAN OF FRANCE</p>
+
+<p class="continue">THE MAN IN BLACK</p>
+
+<p class="continue">UNDER THE RED ROBE</p>
+
+<p class="continue">MY LADY ROTHA</p>
+
+<p class="continue">MEMOIRS OF A MINISTER OF FRANCE</p>
+
+<p class="continue">THE RED COCKADE</p>
+
+<p class="continue">SHREWSBURY</p>
+
+<p class="continue">THE CASTLE INN</p>
+
+<p class="continue">SOPHIA</p>
+
+<p class="continue">COUNT HANNIBAL</p>
+
+<p class="continue">IN KINGS&rsquo; BYWAYS</p>
+
+<p class="continue">THE LONG NIGHT</p>
+
+<p class="continue">THE ABBESS OF VLAYE</p>
+
+<p class="continue">STARVECROW FARM</p>
+
+<p class="continue">CHIPPINGE</p>
+
+<p class="continue">LAID UP IN LAVENDER</p>
+
+<p class="continue">THE WILD GEESE</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h1>THE GREAT HOUSE</h1>
+
+<h5>BY</h5>
+
+<h2>STANLEY J. WEYMAN</h2>
+
+<h5>Author of &ldquo;The Castle Inn,&rdquo; &ldquo;Chippinge,&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;A Gentleman of France,&rdquo; etc., etc.</h5>
+
+<h4>NEW YORK</h4>
+
+<h3>LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.</h3>
+
+<h4>FOURTH AVENUE AND 30th STREET</h4>
+
+<h3>1919</h3>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc2">Copyright, 1919<br/>
+BY</span><br/>
+STANLEY J. WEYMAN</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. <span class="sc">The Hôtel Lambert&mdash;Upstairs.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. <span class="sc">The Hôtel Lambert&mdash;Downstairs.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. <span class="sc">The Lawyer Abroad.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. <span class="sc">Homeward Bound.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. <span class="sc">The London Packet.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. <span class="sc">Field and Forge.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. <span class="sc">Mr. John Audley.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. <span class="sc">The Gatehouse.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. <span class="sc">Old Things.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. <span class="sc">New Things.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. <span class="sc">Tact and Temper.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. <span class="sc">The Yew Walk.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII. <span class="sc">Peter Pauper.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV. <span class="sc">The Manchester Men.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV. <span class="sc">Strange Bedfellows.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI. <span class="sc">The Great House at Beaudelays.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII. <span class="sc">To the Rescue.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII. <span class="sc">Masks and Faces.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX. <span class="sc">The Corn Law Crisis.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX. <span class="sc">Peter&rsquo;s Return.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI. <span class="sc">Toft at the Butterflies.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII. <span class="sc">My Lord Speaks.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII. <span class="sc">Blore Under Weaver.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap24">CHAPTER XXIV. <span class="sc">An Agent of the Old School.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap25">CHAPTER XXV. <span class="sc">Mary is Lonely.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap26">CHAPTER XXVI. <span class="sc">Missing.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap27">CHAPTER XXVII. <span class="sc">A Footstep in the Hall.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap28">CHAPTER XXVIII. <span class="sc">The News from Riddsley.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap29">CHAPTER XXIX. <span class="sc">The Audley Bible.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap30">CHAPTER XXX. <span class="sc">A Friend in Need.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap31">CHAPTER XXXI. <span class="sc">Ben Bosham.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap32">CHAPTER XXXII. <span class="sc">Mary Makes a Discovery.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap33">CHAPTER XXXIII. <span class="sc">The Meeting at the Maypole.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap34">CHAPTER XXXIV. <span class="sc">By the Canal.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap35">CHAPTER XXXV. <span class="sc">My Lord Speaks Out.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap36">CHAPTER XXXVI. <span class="sc">The Riddsley Election.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap37">CHAPTER XXXVII. <span class="sc">A Turn of the Wheel.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap38">CHAPTER XXXVIII. <span class="sc">Toft&rsquo;s Little Surprise.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap39">CHAPTER XXXIX. <span class="sc">The Deed of Renunciation.</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap40">CHAPTER XL. <span class="sc">&ldquo;Let Us Make Others Thankful.&rdquo;</span></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>THE GREAT HOUSE</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I<br/>
+THE HÔTEL LAMBERT&mdash;UPSTAIRS</h2>
+
+<p>
+On an evening in March in the &rsquo;forties of last century a girl looked down
+on the Seine from an attic window on the Ile St. Louis. The room behind
+her&mdash;or beside her, for she sat on the window-ledge, with her back against
+one side of the opening and her feet against the other&mdash;was long,
+whitewashed from floor to ceiling, lighted by five gaunt windows, and as cold
+to the eye as charity to the recipient. Along each side of the chamber ran ten
+pallet beds. A black door broke the wall at one end, and above the door hung a
+crucifix. A painting of a Station of the Cross adorned the wall at the other
+end. Beyond this picture the room had no ornament; it is almost true to say
+that beyond what has been named it had no furniture. One bed&mdash;the bed
+beside the window at which the girl sat&mdash;was screened by a thin curtain
+which did not reach the floor. This was her bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in early spring no window in Paris looked on a scene more cheerful than
+this window; which as from an eyrie commanded a shining reach of the Seine
+bordered by the lawns and foliage of the King&rsquo;s Garden, and closed by the
+graceful arches of the Bridge of Austerlitz. On the water boats shot to and
+fro. The quays were gay with the red trousers of soldiers and the coquettish
+caps of soubrettes, with students in strange cloaks, and the twinkling wheels
+of yellow cabriolets. The first swallows were hawking hither and thither above
+the water, and a pleasant hum rose from the Boulevard Bourdon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet the girl sighed. For it was her birthday, she was twenty this twenty-fifth
+of March, and there was not a soul in the world to know this and to wish her
+joy. A life of dependence, toned to the key of the whitewashed room and the
+thin pallets, lay before her; and though she had good reason to be thankful for
+the safety which dependence bought, still she was only twenty, and springtime,
+viewed from prison windows, beckons to its cousin, youth. She saw family groups
+walking the quays, and father, mother, children, all, seen from a distance,
+were happy. She saw lovers loitering in the garden or pacing to and fro, and
+romance walked with every one of them; none came late, or fell to words. She
+sighed more deeply; and on the sound the door opened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Hola!</i>&rdquo; cried a shrill voice, speaking in French, fluent,
+but oddly accented. &ldquo;Who is here? The Princess desires that the English
+Mademoiselle will descend this evening.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; the girl in the window replied pleasantly. &ldquo;At
+the same hour, Joséphine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not, Mademoiselle?&rdquo; A trim maid, with a plain face and the
+faultless figure of a Pole, came a few steps into the room. &ldquo;But you are
+alone?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The children are walking. I stayed at home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be alone? As if I did not understand that! To be alone&mdash;it is
+the luxury of the rich.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl nodded. &ldquo;None but a Pole would have thought of that,&rdquo; she
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, the crafty English Miss!&rdquo; the maid retorted. &ldquo;How she
+flatters! Perhaps she needs a touch of the tongs to-night? Or the loan of a
+pair of red-heeled shoes, worn no more than thrice by the Princess&mdash;and
+with the black which is convenable for Mademoiselle, oh, so neat! Of the
+<i>ancien régime</i>, absolutely!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other laughed. &ldquo;The <i>ancien régime</i>, Joséphine&mdash;and
+this!&rdquo; she replied, with a gesture that embraced the room, the pallets,
+her own bed. &ldquo;A curled head&mdash;and this! You are truly a
+cabbage&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But Mademoiselle descends!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A cabbage of&mdash;foolishness!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, well, if I descended, you would see,&rdquo; the maid retorted.
+&ldquo;I am but the Princess&rsquo;s second maid, and I know nothing! But if I
+descended it would not be to this dormitory I should return! Nor to the
+tartines! Nor to the daughters of Poland! Trust me for that&mdash;and I know
+but my prayers. While Mademoiselle, she is an artist&rsquo;s daughter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There spoke the Pole again,&rdquo; the girl struck in with a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The English Miss knows how to flatter,&rdquo; Joséphine laughed.
+&ldquo;That is one for the touch of the tongs,&rdquo; she continued, ticking
+them off on her fingers. &ldquo;And one for the red-heeled shoes. And&mdash;but
+no more! Let me begone before I am bankrupt!&rdquo; She turned about with a
+flirt of her short petticoats, but paused and looked back, with her hand on the
+door. &ldquo;None the less, mark you well, Mademoiselle, from the whitewash to
+the ceiling of Lebrun, from the dortoir of the Jeunes Filles to the Gallery of
+Hercules, there are but twenty stairs, and easy, oh, so easy to descend! If
+Mademoiselle instead of flattering Joséphine, the Cracovienne, flattered some
+pretty gentleman&mdash;who knows? Not I! I know but my prayers!&rdquo; And with
+a light laugh the maid clapped to the door and was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl in the window had not throughout the parley changed her pose or moved
+more than her head, and this was characteristic of her. For even in her
+playfulness there was gravity, and a measure of stillness. Now, left alone, she
+dropped her feet to the floor, turned, and knelt on the sill with her brow
+pressed against the glass. The sun had set, mists were rising from the river,
+the quays were gray and cold. Here and there a lamp began to shine through the
+twilight. But the girl&rsquo;s thoughts were no longer on the scene beneath her
+eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There goes the third who has been good to me,&rdquo; she pondered.
+&ldquo;First the Polish lodger who lived on the floor below, and saved me from
+that woman. Then the Princess&rsquo;s daughter. Now Joséphine. There are still
+kind people in the world&mdash;God grant that I may not forget it! But how much
+better to give than to take, to be strong than to be weak, to be the mistress
+and not the puppet of fortune! How much better&mdash;and, were I a man, how
+easy!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But on that there came into her remembrance one to whom it had not been easy,
+one who had signally failed to master fortune, or to grapple with
+circumstances. &ldquo;Poor father!&rdquo; she whispered.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II<br/>
+THE HÔTEL LAMBERT&mdash;DOWNSTAIRS</h2>
+
+<p>
+When ladies were at home to their intimates in the Paris of the &rsquo;forties,
+they seated their guests about large round tables with a view to that common
+exchange of wit and fancy which is the French ideal. The mode crossed to
+England, and in many houses these round tables, fallen to the uses of the
+dining-room or the nursery, may still be seen. But when the Princess
+Czartoriski entertained in the Hôtel Lambert, under the ceiling painted by
+Lebrun, which had looked down on the arm-chair of Madame de Châtelet and the
+tabouret of Voltaire, she was, as became a Pole, a law to herself. In that
+beautiful room, softly lit by wax candles, her guests were free to follow their
+bent, to fall into groups, or to admire at their ease the Watteaus and Bouchers
+which the Princess&rsquo;s father-in-law, old Prince Adam, had restored to
+their native panels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thanks to his taste and under her rule the gallery of Hercules presented on
+this evening a scene not unworthy of its past. The silks and satins of the old
+régime were indeed replaced by the high-shouldered coats, the stocks, the pins
+and velvet vests of the dandies; and Thiers beaming through his glasses, or
+Lamartine, though beauty, melted by the woes of Poland, hung upon his lips,
+might have been thought by some unequal to the dead. But they were now what
+those had been; and the women peacocked it as of old. At any rate the effect
+was good, and a guest who came late, and paused a moment on the threshold to
+observe the scene, thought that he had never before done the room full justice.
+Presently the Princess saw him and he went forward. The man who was talking to
+her made his bow, and she pointed with her fan to the vacant place.
+&ldquo;Felicitations, my lord,&rdquo; she said. She held out her gloved hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A thousands thanks,&rdquo; he said, as he bent over it. &ldquo;But on
+what, Princess?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On the success of a friend. On what we have all seen in the
+<i>Journal</i>. Is it not true that you have won your suit?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I won, yes.&rdquo; He shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;But what, Madame? A
+bare title, an empty rent-roll.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For shame!&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;But I suppose that this is your
+English phlegm. Is it not a thing to be proud of&mdash;an old title? That which
+money cannot buy and the wisest would fain wear? M. Guizot, what would he not
+give to be Chien de Race? Your Peel, also?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your Thiers?&rdquo; he returned, with a sly glance at the little man
+in the shining glasses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He, too! But he has the passion of humanity, which is a title in itself.
+Whereas you English, turning in your unending circle, one out, one in, one in,
+one out, are but playing a game&mdash;marking time! You have not a desire to go
+forward!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Surely, Princess, you forget our Reform Bill, scarce ten years
+old.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which bought off your cotton lords and your fat bourgeois, and left the
+people without leaders and more helpless than before. No, my lord, if your
+Russell&mdash;Lord John, do you call him?&mdash;had one jot of M. Thiers&rsquo;
+enthusiasm! Or your Peel&mdash;but I look for nothing there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;I admit,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that M.
+Thiers has an enthusiasm beyond the ordinary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You do? Wonderful!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But,&rdquo; with a smile, &ldquo;it is, I fancy, an enthusiasm of which
+the object is&mdash;M. Thiers!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; she cried, fanning herself more quickly. &ldquo;Now there
+spoke not Mr. Audley, the attaché&mdash;he had not been so imprudent!
+But&mdash;how do you call yourself now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On days of ceremony,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;Lord Audley of
+Beaudelays.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There spoke my lord, unattached! Oh, you English, you have no
+enthusiasm. You have only traditions. Poor were Poland if her fate hung on
+you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There are still bright spots,&rdquo; he said slyly. And his glance
+returned to the little statesman in spectacles on whom the Princess rested the
+hopes of Poland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried vividly. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say it again or I shall
+be displeased. Turn your eyes elsewhere. There is one here about whom I wish to
+consult you. Do you see the tall girl in black who is engaged with the
+miniatures?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I saw her some time ago.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose so. You are a man. I dare say you would call her
+handsome?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think it possible, were she not in this company. What of her,
+Princess?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you notice anything beyond her looks?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The picture is plain&mdash;for the frame in which I see her. Is she one
+of the staff of your school?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, but with an air&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly&mdash;an air!&rdquo; He nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, she is a countrywoman of yours and has a history. Her father, a
+journalist, artist, no matter what, came to live in Paris years ago. He went
+down, down, always down; six months ago he died. There was enough to bury him,
+no more. She says, I don&rsquo;t know&rdquo;&mdash;the Princess indicated doubt
+with a movement of her fan&mdash;&ldquo;that she wrote to friends in England.
+Perhaps she did not write; how do I know? She was at the last sou, the street
+before her, a hag of a concierge behind, and withal&mdash;as you see
+her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not wearing that dress, I presume?&rdquo; he said with a faint smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. She had passed everything to the Mont de Piété; she had what she
+stood up in&mdash;yet herself! Then a Polish family on the floor below, to whom
+my daughter carried alms, told Cécile of her. They pitied her, spoke well of
+her, she had done&mdash;no matter what for them&mdash;perhaps nothing. Probably
+nothing. But Cécile ascended, saw her, became enamoured, <i>enragée!</i> You
+know Cécile&mdash;for her all that wears feathers is of the angels! Nothing
+would do but she must bring her here and set her to teach English to the
+daughters during her own absence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Princess is away?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For four weeks. But in three days she returns, and you see where I am.
+How do I know who this is? She may be this, or that. If she were French, if she
+were Polish, I should know! But she is English and of a calm, a
+reticence&mdash;ah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And of a pride too,&rdquo; he replied thoughtfully, &ldquo;if I mistake
+not. Yet it is a good face, Princess.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She fluttered her fan. &ldquo;It is a handsome one. For a man that is the
+same.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;With all this you permit her to appear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be of use. And a little that she may be seen by some English friend,
+who may tell me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I talk to her?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you will be so good. Learn, if you please, what she is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your wishes are law,&rdquo; he rejoined. &ldquo;Will you present
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not necessary,&rdquo; the Princess answered. She beckoned to a
+stout gentleman who wore whiskers trimmed à la mode du Roi, and had laurel
+leaves on his coat collar. &ldquo;A thousand thanks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He lingered a moment to take part in the Princess&rsquo;s reception of the
+Academician. Then he joined a group about old Prince Adam Czartoriski, who was
+describing a recent visit to Cracow, that last morsel of free Poland, soon to
+pass into the maw of Austria. A little apart, the girl in black bent over the
+case of miniatures, comparing some with a list, and polishing others with a
+square of silk. Presently he found himself beside her. Their eyes met.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am told,&rdquo; he said, bowing, &ldquo;that you are my countrywoman.
+The Princess thought that I might be of use to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl had read his errand before he spoke and a shade flitted across her
+face. She knew, only too well, that her hold on this rock of safety to which
+chance had lifted her&mdash;out of a gulf of peril and misery of which she
+trembled to think&mdash;was of the slightest. Early, almost from the first, she
+had discovered that the Princess&rsquo;s benevolence found vent rather in
+schemes for the good of many than in tenderness for one. But hitherto she had
+relied on the daughter&rsquo;s affection, and a little on her own usefulness.
+Then, too, she was young and hopeful, and the depths from which she had escaped
+were such that she could not believe that Providence would return her to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she was quick-witted, and his opening frightened her. She guessed at once
+that she was not to be allowed to await Cécile&rsquo;s return, that her fate
+hung on what this Englishman, so big and bland and forceful, reported of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She braced herself to meet the danger. &ldquo;I am obliged to the
+Princess,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But my ties with England are slight. I came
+to France with my father when I was ten years old.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you lost him recently?&rdquo; He found his task less easy than
+it should have been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He died six months ago,&rdquo; she replied, regarding him gravely.
+&ldquo;His illness left me without means. I was penniless, when the young
+Princess befriended me and gave me a respite here. I am no part of this,&rdquo;
+with a glance at the salon and the groups about them. &ldquo;I teach upstairs.
+I am thankful for the privilege of doing so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Princess told me as much,&rdquo; he said frankly. &ldquo;She thought
+that, being English, I might advise you better than she could; that possibly I
+might put you in touch with your relations?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shook her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or your friends? You must have friends?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Doubtless my father had&mdash;once,&rdquo; she said in a low voice.
+&ldquo;But as his means diminished, he saw less and less of those who had known
+him. For the last two years I do not think that he saw an Englishman at home.
+Before that time I was in a convent school, and I do not know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are a Roman Catholic, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. And for that reason&mdash;and for another, that my account was not
+paid&rdquo;&mdash;her color rose painfully to her face&mdash;&ldquo;I could not
+apply to the Sisters. I am very frank,&rdquo; she added, her lip trembling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I encroach,&rdquo; he answered, bowing. &ldquo;Forgive me! Your
+father was an artist, I believe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He drew for an Atelier de Porcelaine&mdash;for the journals when he
+could. But he was not very successful,&rdquo; she continued reluctantly.
+&ldquo;The china factory which had employed him since he came to Paris, failed.
+When I returned from school he was alone and poor, living in the little street
+in the Quartier, where he died.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But forgive me, you must have some relations in England?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only one of whom I know,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;My father&rsquo;s
+brother. My father had quarrelled with him&mdash;bitterly, I fear; but when he
+was dying he bade me write to my uncle and tell him how we were placed. I did
+so. No answer came. Then after my father&rsquo;s death I wrote again. I told my
+uncle that I was alone, that I was without money, that in a short time I should
+be homeless, that if I could return to England I could live by teaching French.
+He did not reply. I could do no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was outrageous,&rdquo; he answered, flushing darkly. Though well
+under thirty he was a tall man and portly, with one of those large faces that
+easily become injected. &ldquo;Do you know&mdash;is your uncle also in narrow
+circumstances?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know no more than his name,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;My father never
+spoke of him. They had quarrelled. Indeed, my father spoke little of his
+past.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But when you did not hear from your uncle, did you not tell your
+father?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It could do no good,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;And he was dying.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was not sentimental, this big man, whose entrance into a room carried with
+it a sense of power. Nor was he one to be lightly moved, but her simplicity and
+the picture her words drew for him of the daughter and the dying man touched
+him. Already his mind was made up that the Czartoriski should not turn her
+adrift for lack of a word. Aloud, &ldquo;The Princess did not tell me your
+name,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;May I know it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Audley,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Mary Audley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stared at her. She supposed that he had not caught the name. She repeated
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Audley? Do you really mean that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; she asked, surprised in her turn. &ldquo;Is it so
+uncommon a name?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he replied slowly. &ldquo;No, but it is a coincidence. The
+Princess did not tell me that your name was Audley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl shook her head. &ldquo;I doubt if she knows,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;To her I am only &lsquo;the English girl.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your father was an artist, resident in Paris? And his name?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter Audley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He nodded. &ldquo;Peter Audley,&rdquo; he repeated. His eyes looked through her
+at something far away. His lips were more firmly set. His face was grave.
+&ldquo;Peter Audley,&rdquo; he repeated softly. &ldquo;An artist resident in
+Paris!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But did you know him?&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He brought his thoughts and his eyes back to her. &ldquo;No, I did not know
+him,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But I have heard of him.&rdquo; And again it was
+plain that his thoughts took wing. &ldquo;John Audley&rsquo;s brother, the
+artist!&rdquo; he muttered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In her impatience she could have taken him by the sleeve and shaken him.
+&ldquo;Then you do know John Audley?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;My uncle?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again he brought himself back with an effort. &ldquo;A thousand pardons!&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;You see the Princess did not tell me that you were an Audley.
+Yes, I know John Audley&mdash;of the Gatehouse. I suppose it was to him you
+wrote?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And he did not reply?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed, as at something whimsical. It was not a kindly laugh, it jarred a
+little on his listener. But the next moment his face softened, he smiled at
+her, and the smile of such a man had its importance, for in repose his eyes
+were hard. It was clear to her that he was a man of position, that he belonged
+of right to this keen polished world at which she was stealing a glance. His
+air was distinguished, and his dress, though quiet, struck the last note of
+fashion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I am keeping you in suspense,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I must tell
+you, Miss Audley, why it surprised me to learn your name. Because I, too, am an
+Audley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You!&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;What is more, I am akin to you. The
+kinship is remote, but it happens that your father&rsquo;s name, in its place
+in a pedigree, has been familiar to me of late, and I could set down the
+precise degree of cousinship in which you stand to me. I think your father was
+my fourth cousin.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She colored charmingly. &ldquo;Is it possible?&rdquo; she exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a fact, proved indeed, recently, in a court of law,&rdquo; he
+answered lightly. &ldquo;Perhaps it is as well that we have that warrant for a
+conversation which I can see that the Princess thinks long. After this she will
+expect to hear the whole of your history.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear that she may be displeased,&rdquo; the girl said, wincing a
+little. &ldquo;You have been very kind&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who should be kind,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;if not the head of your
+family? But have no fear, I will deal with the Princess. I shall be able to
+satisfy her, I have no doubt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you&rdquo;&mdash;she looked at him with appeal in her
+eyes&mdash;&ldquo;will you be good enough to tell me who you are?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am Lord Audley. To distinguish me from another of the same name, I am
+called Audley of Beaudelays.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of Beaudelays?&rdquo; she repeated. He thought her face, her whole
+bearing, singularly composed in view of his announcement.
+&ldquo;Beaudelays?&rdquo; she repeated thoughtfully. &ldquo;I have heard the
+name more than once. Perhaps from my father.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It were odd if you had not,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is the name of my
+house, and your uncle, John Audley, lives within a mile of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she said. The name of the uncle who had ignored her appeals
+fell on her like a cold douche.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not say more now,&rdquo; Lord Audley continued. &ldquo;But you
+shall hear from me. To&mdash;morrow I quit Paris for three or four days, but
+when I return have no fear. You may leave the matter in my hands in full
+confidence that I shall not fail&mdash;my cousin.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He held out his hand and she laid hers in it. She looked him frankly in the
+face. &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I little thought when I
+descended this evening that I should meet a kinsman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And a friend,&rdquo; he answered, holding her hand a little longer than
+was needful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And a friend,&rdquo; she repeated. &ldquo;But there&mdash;I must go now.
+I should have disappeared ten minutes ago. This is my way.&rdquo; She inclined
+her head, and turning from him she pushed open a small door masked by a
+picture. She passed at once into a dark corridor, and threading its windings
+gained the great staircase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As she flitted upwards from floor to floor, skirting a long procession of
+shadowy forms, and now ogled by a Leda whose only veil was the dusk, now
+threatened by the tusks of the great boar at bay, she was not conscious of
+thought or surprise. It was not until she had lighted her taper outside the
+dormitory door, and, passing between the rows of sleeping children, had gained
+her screened corner, that she found it possible to think. Then she set the
+light in her tiny washing-basin&mdash;such was the rule&mdash;and seated
+herself on her bed. For some minutes she stared before her, motionless and
+unwinking, her hands clasped about her knees, her mind at work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it true, or a dream? Had this really happened to her since she had viewed
+herself in the blurred mirror, had set a curl right and, satisfied, had turned
+to go down? The danger and the delivery from it, the fear and the friend in
+need? Or was it a Cinderella&rsquo;s treat, which no fairy godmother would
+recall to her, with which no lost slipper would connect her? She could almost
+believe this. For no Cinderella, in the ashes of the hearth, could have seemed
+more remote from the gay ball-room than she crouching on her thin mattress,
+with the breathing of the children in her ears, from the luxury of the famous
+salon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Or, if it was true, if it had happened, would anything come of it? Would Lord
+Audley remember her? Or would he think no more of her, ignoring to-morrow the
+poor relation whom it had been the whim of the moment to own? That would be
+cruel! That would be base! But if Mary had fallen in with some good people
+since her father&rsquo;s death, she had also met many callous, and a few cruel
+people. He might be one. And then, how strange it was that her father had never
+named this great kinsman, never referred to him, never even, when dying,
+disclosed his name!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light wavered in the draught that stole through the bald, undraped window.
+A child whimpered in its sleep, awoke, began to sob. It was the youngest of the
+daughters of Poland. The girl rose, and going on tip-toe to the child, bent
+over it, kissed it, warmed it in her bosom, soothed it. Presently the little
+waif slept again, and Mary Audley began to make ready for bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But so much turned for her on what had happened, so much hung in the balance,
+that it was not unnatural that as she let down her hair and plaited it in two
+long tails for the night, she should see her new kinsman&rsquo;s face in the
+mirror. Nor strange that as she lay sleepless and thought-ridden in her bed the
+same face should present itself anew relieved against the background of
+darkness.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III<br/>
+THE LAWYER ABROAD</h2>
+
+<p>
+Half an hour later Lord Audley paused in the hall at Meurice&rsquo;s, and
+having given his cloak and hat to a servant went thoughtfully up the wide
+staircase. He opened the door of a room on the first floor. A stout man with a
+bald head, who had been for some time yawning over the dying fire, rose to his
+feet and remained standing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley nodded. &ldquo;Hallo, Stubbs!&rdquo; he said carelessly, &ldquo;not in
+bed yet?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, my lord,&rdquo; the other answered. &ldquo;I waited to learn if your
+lordship had any orders for England.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, sit down now. I&rsquo;ve something to tell you.&rdquo; My lord
+stooped as he spoke and warmed his hands at the embers; then rising, he stood
+with his back to the hearth. The stout man sat forward on his chair with an air
+of deference. His double chin rested on the ample folds of a soft white stock
+secured by a gold pin in the shape of a wheat-sheaf. He wore black
+knee-breeches and stockings, and his dress, though plain, bore the stamp of
+neatness and prosperity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a minute or two Audley continued to look thoughtfully before him. At
+length, &ldquo;May I take it that this claim is really at an end now?&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;Is the decision final, I mean?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Unless new evidence crops up,&rdquo; Stubbs answered&mdash;he was a
+lawyer&mdash;&ldquo;the decision is certainly final. With your lordship&rsquo;s
+signature to the papers I brought over&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But the claimant might try again?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. John Audley might do anything,&rdquo; Stubbs returned. &ldquo;I
+believe him to be mad upon the point, and therefore capable of much. But he
+could only move on new evidence of the most cogent nature. I do not believe
+that such evidence exists.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His employer weighed this for some time. At length, &ldquo;Then if you were in
+my place,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you would not be tempted to hedge?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To hedge?&rdquo; the lawyer exclaimed, as if he had never heard the word
+before. &ldquo;I am afraid I don&rsquo;t understand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will explain. But first, tell me this. If anything happens to me
+before I have a child, John Audley succeeds to the peerage? That is
+clear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly! Mr. John Audley, the claimant, is also your
+heir-at-law.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To title and estates&mdash;such as they are?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To both, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then follow me another step, Stubbs. Failing John Audley, who is the
+next heir?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Peter Audley,&rdquo; Stubbs replied, &ldquo;his only brother, would
+succeed, if he were alive. But it is common ground that he is dead. I knew Mr.
+Peter, and, if I may say it of an Audley, my lord, a more shiftless, weak,
+improvident gentleman never lived. And obstinate as the devil! He married into
+trade, and Mr. John never forgave it&mdash;never forgave it, my lord. Never
+spoke of his brother or to his brother from that time. It was before the Reform
+Bill,&rdquo; the lawyer continued with a sigh. &ldquo;There were no railways
+then and things were different. Dear, dear, how the world changes! Mr. Peter
+must have gone abroad ten years ago, but until he was mentioned in the suit I
+don&rsquo;t think that I had heard his name ten times in as many years. And he
+an Audley!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He had a child?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only one, a daughter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would she come in after Mr. John?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, my lord, she would&mdash;if living.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been talking to her this evening.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; The lawyer was not so simple as he seemed, and for a minute
+or two he had foreseen the <i>dénouement</i>. &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he repeated,
+thoughtfully rubbing his plump calf. &ldquo;I see, my lord. Mr. Peter
+Audley&rsquo;s daughter? Really! And if I may venture to ask, what is she
+like?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley paused before he answered. Then, &ldquo;If you have painted the father
+aright, Stubbs, I should say that she was his opposite in all but his
+obstinacy. A calm and self-reliant young woman, if I am any judge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And handsome?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, with a look of breeding. At the same time she is penniless and
+dependent, teaching English in a kind of charity school, cheek by jowl with a
+princess!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God bless my soul!&rdquo; cried the lawyer, astonished at last. &ldquo;A
+princess!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who is a good creature as women go, but as likely as not to send her
+adrift to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tut-tut-tut!&rdquo; muttered the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;However, I&rsquo;ll tell you the story,&rdquo; Audley concluded. And he
+did so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he had done, &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Stubbs exclaimed, &ldquo;for a
+coincidence&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, there,&rdquo; the young man broke in, &ldquo;I fancy, all&rsquo;s
+not said. I take it the Princess noted the name, but was too polite to question
+me. Anyway, the girl is there. She is dependent, friendless; attractive, and
+well-bred. For a moment it did occur to me&mdash;she is John Audley&rsquo;s
+heiress&mdash;that I might make all safe by&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; His voice
+dropped. His last words were inaudible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The chance is so very remote,&rdquo; said the lawyer, aware that he was
+on delicate ground, and that the other was rather following out his own
+thoughts than consulting him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is. The idea crossed my mind only for a moment&mdash;of course
+it&rsquo;s absurd for a man as poor as I am. There is hardly a poorer peer out
+of Ireland&mdash;you know that. Fourteenth baron without a roof to my house or
+a pane of glass in my windows! And a rent-roll when all is told
+of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little short of three thousand,&rdquo; the lawyer muttered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Two thousand five hundred, by God, and not a penny more! If any man
+ought to marry money, I am that man, Stubbs!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Stubbs, staring at the fire with a hand on each knee, assented
+respectfully. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always hoped that you would, my lord,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;though I&rsquo;ve not ventured to say it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes! Well&mdash;putting that aside,&rdquo; the other resumed,
+&ldquo;what is to be done about her? I&rsquo;ve been thinking it over, and I
+fancy that I&rsquo;ve hit on the right line. John Audley&rsquo;s given me
+trouble enough. I&rsquo;ll give him some. I&rsquo;ll make him provide for her,
+d&mdash;n him, or I don&rsquo;t know my man!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to know, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs ventured thoughtfully,
+&ldquo;why he didn&rsquo;t answer her letters. He hated her father, but it is
+not like Mr. John to let the young lady drift. He&rsquo;s crazy about the
+family, and she is his next heir. He&rsquo;s a lonely man, too, and there is
+room at the Gatehouse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley paused, half-way across the room. &ldquo;I wish we had never leased the
+Gatehouse to him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not everybody&rsquo;s house, my lord. It&rsquo;s lonely
+and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s too near Beaudelays!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If your lordship were living at the Great House, quite so,&rdquo; the
+lawyer agreed. &ldquo;But, as it is, the rent is useful, and the lease was made
+before our time, so that we have no choice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall always believe that he had a reason for going there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He had an idea that it strengthened his claim,&rdquo; the lawyer said
+indulgently. &ldquo;Nothing beyond that, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ve made up my mind to increase his family by a
+niece!&rdquo; the other replied. &ldquo;He shall have the girl whether he likes
+it or not. Take a pen, man, and sit down. He&rsquo;s spoiled my breakfast many
+a time with his confounded Writs of Error, or whatever you call them, and for
+once I&rsquo;ll be even with him. Say&mdash;yes, Stubbs, say this:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;I am directed by Lord Audley to inform you that a young lady,
+believed to be a daughter of the late Mr. Peter Audley, and recently living in
+poverty in an obscure&rsquo;&mdash;yes, Stubbs, say obscure&mdash;&lsquo;part
+of Paris, has been rescued by the benevolence of a Polish lady. For the present
+she is in the lady&rsquo;s house in a menial capacity, and is dependent on her
+charity. Lord Audley is informed that the young lady made application to you
+without result, but this report his lordship discredits. Still, he feels
+himself concerned; and if those to whom she naturally looks decline to aid her,
+it is his lordship&rsquo;s intention to make such provision as may enable her
+to live respectably. I am to inform you that Miss Audley&rsquo;s address is the
+Hôtel Lambert, Ile St. Louis, Paris. Letters should be addressed &ldquo;Care of
+the Housekeeper.&rdquo;&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t like the last touch!&rdquo; the young man continued, with
+a quiet chuckle. &ldquo;If that does not touch him on the raw, I&rsquo;ll yield
+up the title to-morrow. And now, Stubbs, good-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Stubbs did not take the hint. &ldquo;I want to say one word, my lord, about
+the borough&mdash;about Riddsley,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We put in Mr.
+Mottisfont at the last election, your lordship&rsquo;s interest just tipping
+the scale. We think, therefore, that a word from you may set right what is
+going wrong.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a strong feeling,&rdquo; the lawyer answered, his face
+serious, &ldquo;that the party is not being led aright. And that Mr.
+Mottisfont, who is old&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is willing to go with the party, eh, Stubbs?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, my lord, with the party leaders. Which is a different thing. Sir
+Robert Peel&mdash;the land put him in, but, d&mdash;n me, my
+lord&rdquo;&mdash;the lawyer&rsquo;s manner lost much of its deference and he
+spoke bluntly and strongly&mdash;&ldquo;it looks as if he were going to put the
+land out! An income-tax in peace time, we&rsquo;ve taken that. And less
+protection for the farmer, very good&mdash;if it must be. But all this taking
+off of duties, this letting in of Canadian corn&mdash;I tell you, my lord,
+there&rsquo;s an ugly feeling abroad! There are a good many in Riddsley say
+that he is going to repeal the Corn Laws altogether; that he&rsquo;s sold us to
+the League, and won&rsquo;t be long before he delivers us!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The big man sitting back in his chair smiled. &ldquo;It seems to me,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;that you are travelling rather fast and rather far, Stubbs!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s just what we fear Sir Robert is doing!&rdquo; the lawyer
+retorted smartly, the other&rsquo;s rank forgotten. &ldquo;And you may take it
+from me the borough won&rsquo;t stand it, my lord, and the sooner Mr.
+Mottisfont has a hint the better. If he follows Peel too far, the bottom will
+fall out of his seat. There&rsquo;s no Corn Law leaguer will ever sit for
+Riddsley!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;With your help, anyway, Stubbs,&rdquo; my lord said with a smile. The
+lawyer&rsquo;s excitement amused him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, my lord! Never with my help! I believe that on the landed interest
+rests the stability of the country! It was the landed interest that supported
+Pitt and beat Bony, and brought us through the long war. It was the landed
+interest that kept us from revolution in the dark days after the war. And now
+because the men that turn cotton and iron and clay into money by the help of
+the devil&rsquo;s breath&mdash;because they want to pay lower
+wages&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The ark of the covenant is to be overthrown, eh?&rdquo; the young man
+laughed. &ldquo;Why, to listen to you, Stubbs, one would think that you were
+the largest landowner in the county!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, my lord,&rdquo; the lawyer answered. &ldquo;But it&rsquo;s the
+landowners have made me what I am. And it&rsquo;s the landowners and the
+farmers that Riddsley lives by and is going to stand by! And the sooner Mr.
+Mottisfont knows that the better. He was elected as a Tory, and a Tory he must
+stop, whether Sir Robert turns his coat or not!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You want me to speak to Mottisfont?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We do, my lord. Just a word. I was at the Ordinary last fair day, and
+there was nothing else talked of. Free Canadian corn was too like free French
+corn and free Belgian corn for Stafford wits to see much difference. And Peel
+is too like repeal, my lord. We are beginning to see that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;The party is satisfied,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;And Mottisfont? I can&rsquo;t drive the man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, but a word from you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll think about it. But I fancy you&rsquo;re overrunning
+the scent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then the line is not straight!&rdquo; the lawyer retorted shrewdly.
+&ldquo;However, if I have been too warm, I beg pardon, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bear it in mind,&rdquo; Audley answered. &ldquo;Very good.
+And now, good-night, Stubbs. Don&rsquo;t forget to send the letter to John
+Audley as soon as you reach London.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs replied that he would, and took his leave. He had said his say on the
+borough question, lord or no lord; which to a Briton&mdash;and he was a typical
+Briton&mdash;was a satisfaction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But half an hour later, when he had drawn his nightcap down to his ears and
+stood, the extinguisher in his hand, he paused. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a sober hand
+for a young man,&rdquo; he thought, &ldquo;a very sober hand. I warrant he will
+never run his ship on the rocks for lack of a good look-out!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV<br/>
+HOMEWARD BOUND</h2>
+
+<p>
+In the corner of the light diligence, seating six inside, which had brought her
+from Montreuil, Mary Audley leant forward, looking out through the dingy panes
+for the windmills of Calais. Joséphine slept in the corner facing her, as she
+had slept for two hours past. Their companions, a French shopkeeper and her
+child, and an English bagman, sighed and fidgeted, as travellers had cause to
+sigh and fidget in days when he was lucky who covered the distance from Paris
+to Calais in twenty-five hours. The coach rumbled on. The sun had set, a small
+rain was falling. The fading light tinged the plain of the Pas de Calais with a
+melancholy which little by little dyed the girl&rsquo;s thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was on her way to her own country, to those on whom she might be dependent
+without shame. And common sense, of which she had a large share, told her that
+she had cause, great cause to be thankful. But the flush of relief, to which
+the opening prospect had given rise, was ebbing. The life before her was new,
+those amongst whom she must lead that life were strange; nor did the cold
+phrases of her uncle&rsquo;s invitation, which ignored both her father and the
+letters that she had written, promise an over-warm welcome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still, &ldquo;Courage!&rdquo; Mary murmured to herself, &ldquo;Courage!&rdquo;
+And she recalled a saying which she had learned from the maid, &ldquo;At the
+worst, ten fingers!&rdquo; Then, seeing that at last they were entering the
+streets of the town and that the weary journey was over&mdash;she had left
+Paris the day before&mdash;she touched Joséphine. &ldquo;We are there,&rdquo;
+she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The maid awoke with her eyes on the bagman, who was stout. &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;
+she muttered. &ldquo;In England they are like that! No wonder that they travel
+seeing that their bones are so padded! But, for me I am one ache.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They jolted over the uneven pavement, crossed a bridge, lumbered through
+streets scarcely wider than the swaying diligence, at last with a great
+cracking of whips they swerved to the left and drew up amid the babel of the
+quay. In a twinkling they were part of it. Porters dragged down, fought for,
+snatched up their baggage. English-speaking touts shook dirty cards in their
+faces. Tide-waiters bawled questions in their ears. The postilion, the
+conductor, all the world stretched greedy palms under their noses. Other
+travellers ran into them, and they ran into other travellers. All this, in the
+dusk, in the rain, while the bell on the deck overhead clanged above the roar
+of the escaping steam, and a man shouted without ceasing, &ldquo;Tower steamer!
+Tower steamer! Any more for England?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joséphine, after one bitter exchange of words with a lad who had seized her
+handbag, thrust her fingers into her ears and resigned herself. Even Mary for a
+moment was aghast. She was dragged this way and that, she lost one article and
+recovered it, lost another and recovered that, she lost her ticket and rescued
+it from a man&rsquo;s hand. At last, her baggage on board, she found herself
+breathless at the foot of the ladder, with three passengers imploring her to
+ascend, and six touts clinging to her skirts and crying for drink-money. She
+had barely time to make her little gift to the kind-hearted maid&mdash;who was
+returning to Paris by the night coach&mdash;and no time to thank her, before
+they were parted. Mary was pushed up the ladder. In a moment she was looking
+down from the deck on the wet, squalid quay, the pale up-turned faces, the
+bustling crowd.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She picked out the one face which she knew, and which it pained her to lose. By
+gestures and smiles, with a tear in the eye, she tried to make amends to
+Joséphine for the hasty parting, the half-spoken words. The maid on her side
+was in tears, and after the French fashion was proud of them. So the last
+minute came. The paddles were already turning, the ship was going slowly
+astern, when a man pushed his way through the crowd. He clutched the ladder as
+it was unhooked, and at some risk and much loss of dignity he was bundled on
+board. There was a lamp amidships, and, as he regained his balance, Mary,
+smiling in spite of herself, saw that he was an Englishman, a man about thirty,
+and plainly dressed. Then in her anxiety to see the last of Joséphine she
+crossed the deck as the ship went about, and she lost sight of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She continued to look back and to wave her handkerchief, until nothing remained
+but a light or two in a bank of shadow. That was the last she was to see of the
+land which had been her home for ten years; and chilled and lonely she turned
+about and did what, had she been an older traveller, she would have done
+before. She sought the after-cabin. Alas, a glance from the foot of the
+companion was enough! Every place was taken, every couch occupied, and the air,
+already close, repelled her. She climbed to the deck again, and was seeking
+some corner where she could sit, sheltered from the wind and rain, when the
+captain saw her and fell foul of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, young lady,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;no woman&rsquo;s allowed on deck
+at night!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but,&rdquo; she protested, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s no room
+downstairs!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t do,&rdquo; he answered roughly. &ldquo;Lost a woman
+overboard once, and as much trouble about her as about all the men, drunk or
+sober, I&rsquo;ve ever carried. All women below, all women below, is the order!
+Besides,&rdquo; more amicably, as he saw by a ray of lantern-light that she was
+young and comely, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s wet, my dear, and going to be d&mdash;d
+wet, and as dark as Wapping!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ve a cloak,&rdquo; she petitioned, &ldquo;if I sit quite
+still, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A tall form loomed up at the captain&rsquo;s elbow. &ldquo;This is the lady I
+am looking for,&rdquo; the new-comer said. &ldquo;It will be all right, Captain
+Jones.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain turned sharply. &ldquo;Oh, my lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I
+didn&rsquo;t know; but with petticoats and a dark night, blest if you know
+where you are! I&rsquo;m sure I beg the young lady&rsquo;s pardon. Quite right,
+my lord, quite right!&rdquo; With a rough salute he went forward and the
+darkness swallowed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord Audley?&rdquo; Mary said. She spoke quietly, but to do so she had
+to steady her voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I knew that you were crossing to-night,
+and as I had to go over this week I chose this evening. I&rsquo;ve reserved a
+cabin for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but,&rdquo; she remonstrated, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think you should
+have done that! I don&rsquo;t know that I can&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Afford it?&rdquo; he said coolly. &ldquo;Then&mdash;as it is a matter of
+some shillings&mdash;your kinsman will presume to pay for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a small thing, and she let it pass. &ldquo;But who told you,&rdquo; she
+asked, &ldquo;that I was crossing to-night?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Princess. You don&rsquo;t feel, I suppose, that as you are crossing,
+it was my duty to stay in France?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no!&rdquo; she protested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you are not sure whether you are more pleased or more vexed? Well,
+let me show you where your cabin is&mdash;it is the size of a milliner&rsquo;s
+box, but by morning you will be glad of it, and that may turn the scale.
+Moreover,&rdquo; as he led the way across the deck, &ldquo;the steward&rsquo;s
+boy, when he is not serving gin below, will serve tea above, and at sea tea is
+not to be scorned. That&rsquo;s your number&mdash;7. And there is the boy.
+Boy!&rdquo; he called in a voice that ensured obedience, &ldquo;Tea and bread
+and butter for this lady in number 7 in an hour. See it is there, my
+lad!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She smiled. &ldquo;I think the tea and bread and butter may turn the
+scale,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Right,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;Then, as it is only eight
+o&rsquo;clock, why should we not sit in the shelter of this tarpaulin? I see
+that there are two seats. They might have been put for us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it possible that they were?&rdquo; she asked shrewdly. &ldquo;Well,
+why not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had no reason to give&mdash;and the temptation was great. Five minutes
+before she had been the most lonely creature in the world. The parting from
+Joséphine, the discomfort of the boat, the dark sea and the darker horizon, the
+captain&rsquo;s rough words, had brought the tears to her eyes. And then, in a
+moment, to be thought of, provided for, kindly entreated, to be lapped in
+attentions as in a cloak&mdash;in very fact, in another second a warm cloak was
+about her&mdash;who could expect her to refuse this? Moreover, he was her
+kinsman; probably she owed it to him that she was here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At any rate she thought that it would be prudish to demur, and she took one of
+the seats in the lee of the screen. Audley tucked the cloak about her, and took
+the other. The light of a lantern fell on their faces and the few passengers
+who still tramped the windy deck could see the pair, and doubtless envied him
+their shelter. &ldquo;Are you comfortable?&rdquo; he inquired&mdash;but before
+she could answer he whistled softly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; Mary asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not much.&rdquo; He laughed to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she saw coming along the deck towards them a man who had not found his
+sea-legs. As he approached he took little runs, and now brought up against the
+rail, now clutched at a stay. Mary knew the man again. &ldquo;He nearly missed
+the boat,&rdquo; she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did he?&rdquo; her companion answered in the same tone. &ldquo;Well, if
+he had quite missed it, I&rsquo;d have forgiven him. He is going to be ill,
+I&rsquo;ll wager!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the man was close to them he reeled, and to save himself he grasped the
+end of their screen. His eyes met theirs. He was past much show of emotion, but
+his voice rose as he exclaimed, &ldquo;Audley. Is that you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is. We are in for a rough night, I&rsquo;m afraid.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And&mdash;pardon me,&rdquo; the stranger hesitated, peering at them,
+&ldquo;is that Miss Audley with you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Mary said, much surprised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is Mr. Basset,&rdquo; Audley explained. Mary stared at the
+stranger. The name conveyed nothing to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I came to meet you,&rdquo; he said, speaking with difficulty, and now
+and again casting a wild eye abroad as the deck heaved under him. &ldquo;But I
+expected to find you at the hotel, and I waited there until I nearly missed the
+boat. Even then I felt that I ought to learn if you were on board, and I came
+up to see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am very much obliged to you,&rdquo; Mary answered politely, &ldquo;but
+I am quite comfortable, thank you. It is close below, and Lord Audley found
+this seat for me. And I have a cabin.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh yes!&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I think I will go down then if
+you&mdash;if you are sure you want nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, thank you,&rdquo; Mary answered with decision.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I&mdash;I&rsquo;ll go, then. Good-night!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that he went, making desperate tacks in the direction of the companion.
+Unfortunately what he gained in speed he lost in dignity, and before he reached
+the hatch Lord Audley gave way to laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; Mary cried. &ldquo;He will hear you. And it was
+kind of him to look for me when he was not well.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Audley only laughed the more. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t catch the full flavor
+of it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s come three hundred miles to meet you,
+and he&rsquo;s too ill to do anything now he&rsquo;s here!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Three hundred miles to meet me!&rdquo; she cried in astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Every yard of it! Don&rsquo;t you know who he is? He&rsquo;s Peter
+Basset, your uncle&rsquo;s nephew by marriage, who lives with him. He&rsquo;s
+come, or rather your uncle has sent him, all the way from Stafford to meet
+you&mdash;and he&rsquo;s gone to lie down! He&rsquo;s gone to lie down!
+There&rsquo;s a squire of dames for you! Upon my honor, I never knew anything
+richer!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And my lord&rsquo;s laughter broke out anew.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V<br/>
+THE LONDON PACKET</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mary laughed with him, but she was not comfortable. What she had seen of the
+stranger, a man plain in feature and ordinary in figure, one whom the eye would
+not have remarked in a crowd, did not especially commend him. And certainly he
+had not shown himself equal to a difficult situation. But the effort he had
+made to come to her help appealed to her generosity, and she was not sure how
+far she formed a part of the comedy. So her laughter was from the lips only,
+and brief. Then, &ldquo;My uncle&rsquo;s nephew?&rdquo; she asked thoughtfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;His wife&rsquo;s nephew. Your uncle married a Basset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why did he send him to meet me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For a simple reason&mdash;I should say that he had no one else to send.
+Your uncle is not a man of many friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I understood that some one would meet the boat in London,&rdquo; she
+said. &ldquo;But I expected a woman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fancy the woman would be to seek,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;And Basset
+is a kind of tame cat at the Gatehouse. He lives there a part of the year,
+though he has an old place of his own up the country. He&rsquo;s a
+Staffordshire man born and bred, and I dare say a good fellow in his way, but a
+dull dog! a dull dog! Are you sure that the wind does not catch you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She said that she was very comfortable, and they were silent awhile, listening
+to the monotonous slapping of a rope against the mast and the wash of the waves
+as they surged past the beam. A single light at the end of the breakwater shone
+in the darkness behind them. She marked the light grow smaller and more
+distant, and her thoughts went back to the convent school, to her father, to
+the third-floor where for a time they had been together, to his care for
+her&mdash;feeble and inefficient, to his illness. And a lump rose in her
+throat, her hands gripped one another as she strove to hide her feelings. In
+her heart she whispered a farewell. She was turning her back on her
+father&rsquo;s grave. The last tendril which bound her to the old life was
+breaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light vanished, and gradually the girl&rsquo;s reflections sought a new
+channel. They turned from the past to the present, and dwelt on the man beside
+her, who had not only thought of her comfort, who had not only saved her from
+some hours of loneliness, but had probably wrought this change in her life.
+This was the third time only that she had seen him. Once, some days after that
+memorable evening, he had called at the Hôtel Lambert, and her employer had
+sent for her. He had greeted her courteously in the Princess&rsquo;s presence,
+had asked her kindly if she had heard from England, and had led her to believe
+that she would hear. And she remembered with a blush that the Princess had
+looked from one to the other with a smile, and afterwards had had another
+manner for her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the man wondered what she was thinking, and waited for her to give
+him the clue. But she was so long silent that his patience wore thin. It was
+not for this, it was not to sit silent beside her, that he had taken a night
+journey and secured these cosey seats.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; he said at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned to him, her eyes wet with tears. &ldquo;It seems so strange,&rdquo;
+she murmured, &ldquo;to be leaving all and going into a world in which I know
+no one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Except the head of your family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Except you! I suppose that I owe it to you that I am here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should be happy if I thought so,&rdquo; he replied, with careful
+reticence. &ldquo;But we set a stone rolling, we do not know where it falls.
+You will soon learn&mdash;Basset will tell you, if I don&rsquo;t&mdash;that
+your uncle and I are not on good terms. Therefore it is unlikely that he was
+moved by what I said.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you said something?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I did,&rdquo; he answered, smiling, &ldquo;it was against the
+grain&mdash;who likes to put his finger between the door and the jamb? And let
+me caution you. Your uncle will not suffer meddling on my part, still less a
+reminder of it. Therefore, as you are going to owe all to him, you will do well
+to be silent about me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was sure that she owed all to him, and she might have said so, but at that
+moment the boat changed its course and the full force of the wind struck them.
+The salt spray whipped and stung their faces. Her cloak flew out like a
+balloon, her scarf pennon-wise, the tarpaulin flapped like some huge bird. He
+had to spring to the screen, to adjust it to the new course, to secure and tuck
+in her cloak&mdash;and all in haste, with exclamations and laughter, while
+Mary, sharing the joy of the struggle, and braced by the sting of the salt
+wind, felt her heart rise. How kind he was, and how strong. How he towered
+above ordinary men. How safe she felt in his care.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they were settled anew, she asked him to tell her something about the
+Gatehouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a lonely place,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is quite out of the
+world. I don&rsquo;t know, indeed, how you will exist after the life you have
+led.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The life I have led!&rdquo; she protested. &ldquo;But that is absurd!
+Though you saw me in the Princess&rsquo;s salon, you know that my life had
+nothing in common with hers. I was downstairs no more than three or four times,
+and then merely to interpret. My life was spent between whitewashed walls, on
+bare floors. I slept in a room with twenty children, ate with forty&mdash;onion
+soup and thick tartines. The evening I saw you I wore shoes which the maid lent
+me. And with all that I was thankful, most thankful, to have such a refuge. The
+great people who met at the Princess&rsquo;s&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And who thought that they were making history!&rdquo; he laughed.
+&ldquo;Did you know that? Did you know that the Princess was looking to them to
+save the last morsel of Poland?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I did not know. I am very ignorant. But if I
+were a man, I should love to do things like that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe you would!&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;Well, there are crusades
+in England. Only I fear that you will not be in the way of them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am not a princess! But tell me, please, what are they?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will not be long before you come upon one,&rdquo; he replied, a hint
+of derision in his tone. &ldquo;You will see a placard in the streets,
+&lsquo;<i>Shall the people&rsquo;s bread be taxed?</i>&rsquo; Not quite so
+romantic as the independence of Poland? But I can tell you that heads are quite
+as likely to be broken over it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;there can be only one answer to
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; he replied dryly. &ldquo;But what is the answer? The
+land claims high prices that it may thrive; the towns claim cheap bread that
+they may live. Each says that the country depends upon it. &lsquo;England
+self-supporting!&rsquo; says one. &lsquo;England the workshop of the
+world!&rsquo; says the other.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I begin to see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;The land is the strength of the country,&rsquo; argues the
+squire. &lsquo;Down with monopoly,&rsquo; cries the cotton lord. Then each arms
+himself with a sword lately forged and called &lsquo;Philanthropy,&rsquo; and
+with that he searches for chinks in the other&rsquo;s armor. &lsquo;See how
+factories work the babes, drive the women underground, ruin the race,&rsquo;
+shout the squires. &lsquo;Vote for the land and starvation wages,&rsquo; shout
+the mill-owners.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But does no one try to find the answer?&rdquo; she asked timidly.
+&ldquo;Try to find out what is best for the people?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he rejoined, &ldquo;if by the people you mean the lower
+classes, they cry, &lsquo;Give us not bread, but votes!&rsquo; And the squires
+say that that is what the traders who have just got votes don&rsquo;t mean to
+give them; and so, to divert their attention, dangle cheap bread before their
+noses!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary sighed. &ldquo;I am afraid that I must give it up,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;I am so ignorant.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he replied thoughtfully. &ldquo;Many are puzzled which side
+to take, and are waiting to see how the cat jumps. In the meantime every fence
+is placarded with &lsquo;Speed the Plough!&rsquo; on one side, and &lsquo;The
+Big Loaf!&rsquo; on the other. The first man you meet thinks the landlord a
+devourer of widows&rsquo; houses; to the next the mill-owner is an ogre
+grinding men&rsquo;s bones to make his bread. Even at the Gatehouse I doubt if
+you will escape the excitement, though there is not a field of wheat within a
+mile of it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To me it is like a new world,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, when you are in the new world,&rdquo; he replied, smiling as he
+rose, &ldquo;do not forget Columbus! But here is the lad to tell you that your
+tea is ready.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He repented when Mary had left him that he had not made better use of his time.
+It had been his purpose to make such an impression on the girl as might be of
+use in the future, and he wondered why he had not devoted himself more singly
+to this; why he had allowed minutes which might have been given to intimate
+subjects to be wasted in a dry discussion. But there was a quality in Mary that
+did not lightly invite to gallantry&mdash;a gravity and a balance that, had he
+looked closely into the matter, might have explained his laches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in fact he had builded better than he knew, for while he reproached
+himself, Mary, safe within the tiny bathing machine which the packet company
+called a cabin, was giving much thought to him. The dip-candle, set within a
+horn lantern, threw its light on the one comfortable object, the tea-tray,
+seated beside which she reviewed what had happened, and found it all
+interesting; his meeting with her, his thought for her, the glimpses he had
+given her of things beyond the horizon of the convent school, even his
+diversion into politics. He was not on good terms with her uncle, and it was
+unlikely that she would see more of him. But she was sure that she would always
+remember his appearance on the threshold of her new life, that she would always
+recall with gratitude this crossing and the kindness which had lapped her about
+and saved her from loneliness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In her eyes he figured as one of the brilliant circle of the Hôtel Lambert. For
+her he played a part in great movements and high enterprises such as those
+which he had revealed to her. His light treatment of them, his air of
+detachment, had, indeed, chilled her at times; but these were perhaps natural
+in one who viewed from above and from a distance the ills which it was his task
+to treat. How ignorant he must think her! How remote from the plane on which he
+lived, the standards by which he judged, the objects at which he aimed! Yet he
+had stooped to explain things to her and to make them clear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She spent an hour deep in thought, and, strange as the life of the ship was to
+her, she was deaf to the creaking of the timbers, and the surge of the waves as
+they swept past the beam. At intervals hoarse orders, a rush of feet across the
+deck, the more regular tramp of rare passengers, caught her attention, only to
+lose it as quickly. It was late when she roused herself. She saw that the
+candle was burning low, and she began to make her arrangements for the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Midway in them she paused, and colored, aware that she knew his tread from the
+many that had passed. The footstep ceased. A hand tapped at her door.
+&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall be in the river by daybreak,&rdquo; Audley announced. &ldquo;I
+thought that you might like to come on deck early. You ought not to miss the
+river from the Nore to the Pool.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t miss it,&rdquo; he persisted. &ldquo;Greenwich
+especially!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall be there,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;It is very good of you.
+Good-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went away. After all, he was the only man on board shod like a gentleman; it
+had been odd if she had not known his step! And for going on deck early, why
+should she not? Was she to miss Greenwich because Lord Audley went to a good
+bootmaker?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So when Peter Basset, still pale and qualmish, came on deck in the early
+morning, a little below the Pool, the first person he saw was the girl whom he
+had come to escort. She was standing high above him on the captain&rsquo;s
+bridge, her hands clasping the rail, her hair blown about and shining golden in
+the sunshine. Lord Audley&rsquo;s stately form towered above her. He was
+pointing out this and that, and they were talking gaily; and now and again the
+captain spoke to them, and many were looking at them. She did not see Basset;
+he was on the deck below, standing amid the common crowd, and so he was free to
+look at her as he pleased. He might be said not to have seen her before, and
+what he saw now bewildered, nay, staggered him. Unwillingly, and to please his
+uncle, he had come to meet a girl of whom they knew no more than this, that,
+rescued from some backwater of Paris life, into which a weak and shiftless
+father had plunged her, she had earned her living, if she had earned it at all,
+in a dependent capacity. He had looked to find her one of two things; either
+flashy and underbred, with every fault an Englishman might consider French, or
+a nice mixture of craft and servility. He had not been able to decide which he
+would prefer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instead he saw a girl tall, slender, and slow of movement, with eyes set under
+a fine width of brow and grave when they smiled, a chin fuller than perfect
+beauty required, a mouth a little large, a perfect nose. Auburn hair, thick and
+waving, drooped over each temple, and framed a face as calm as it was fair.
+&ldquo;Surely a pearl found on a midden!&rdquo; he thought. And as the thought
+passed through his mind, Mary looked down. Her eyes roved for a moment over the
+crowded deck, where some, like Basset, returned her gaze with interest, while
+others sought their baggage or bawled for missing companions. He was not a man,
+it has been said, to stand out in a crowd, and her eyes travelled over him
+without seeing him. Audley spoke to her, she lifted her eyes, she looked ashore
+again. But the unheeding glance which had not deigned to know him stung Basset!
+He dubbed her, with all her beauty, proud and hard. Still&mdash;to be such and
+to have sprung from such a life! It was marvellous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knew nothing of the convent school with its hourly discipline lasting
+through years. He did not guess that the obstinacy which had been weakness in
+the father was strength in the child. Much less could he divine that the
+improvidence of that father had become a beacon, warning the daughter off the
+rocks which had been fatal to him! Mary was no miracle, but neither was she
+proud or hard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had passed Erith, and Greenwich with its stately pile and formal gardens
+glittering in the sunshine of an April morning. The ripple of a westerly wind,
+meeting the flood, silvered the turbid surface. A hundred wherries skimmed like
+water-flies hither and thither, long lines of colliers fringed the wharves,
+tall China clippers forged slowly up under a scrap of foresail, dumb barges
+deep laden with hay or Barclay&rsquo;s Entire, moved mysteriously with the
+tide. On all sides hoarse voices bawled orders or objurgations. Charmed with
+the gayety, the movement, the color, Mary could not take her eyes from the
+scene. The sunshine, the leap of life, the pulse of spring, moved in her blood
+and put to flight the fears that had weighed on her at nightfall. She told
+herself with elation that this was England, this was her native land, this was
+her home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Audley&rsquo;s mind took another direction. He reflected that in a
+few minutes he must part from the girl, and must trust henceforth to the
+impression he had made. For some hours he had scarcely given a thought to
+Basset, but he recalled him now, and he searched for him in the throng below.
+He found him at last, pressed against the rail between a fat woman with a
+basket and a crying child. Their eyes met. My lord glanced away, but he could
+not refrain from a smile as he pictured the poor affair the other had made of
+his errand. And Basset saw the smile and read its meaning, and though he was
+not self&mdash;assertive, though he was, indeed, backward to a fault, anger ran
+through his veins. To have travelled three hundred miles in order to meet this
+girl, to have found her happy in another&rsquo;s company, and to have accepted
+the second place&mdash;the position had vexed him even under the qualms of
+illness. This morning, and since he had seen her, it stirred in him an unwonted
+resentment. He d&mdash;d Audley under his breath, disengaged himself from the
+basket which the fat woman was thrusting into his ribs, lifted the child aside.
+He escaped below to collect his effects.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in a short time he recovered his temper. When the boat began to go about in
+the crowded Pool and Mary reluctantly withdrew her eyes from the White Tower,
+darkened by the smoke and the tragedies of twenty generations, she found him
+awaiting them at the foot of the ladder. He was still pale, and the
+girl&rsquo;s conscience smote her. For many hours she had not given him a
+thought. &ldquo;I hope you are better,&rdquo; she said gently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Horrid thing, <i>mal de mer!</i>&rdquo; remarked my lord, with a gleam
+of humor in his eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you, I am quite right this morning,&rdquo; Basset answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You go from Euston Grove, I suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. The morning train starts in a little over an hour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No more was said, and they went ashore together. Audley, an old traveller, and
+one whose height and presence gave weight to his orders, saw to Mary&rsquo;s
+safety in the crowd, shielded her from touts and tide-waiters, took the upper
+hand. He watched the aproned porters disappearing with the baggage in the
+direction of the Custom House, and a thought struck him. &ldquo;I am sorry that
+my servant is not here,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He would see our things through
+without troubling us.&rdquo; His eyes met Basset&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset disdained to refuse. &ldquo;I will do it,&rdquo; he said. He received
+the keys and followed the baggage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley looked at Mary and laughed. &ldquo;I think you&rsquo;ll find him
+useful,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Takes a hint and is not too forward.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For shame!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;It is very good of him to go.&rdquo;
+But she could not refrain from a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well trained,&rdquo; Audley continued in a whimsical tone,
+&ldquo;fetches and carries, barks at the name of Peel and growls at the name of
+Cobden, gives up a stick when required, could be taught to beg&mdash;by the
+right person.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed&mdash;she could not resist his manner. &ldquo;But you are not very
+kind,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Please to call a&mdash;whatever we need. He shall
+not do everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Everything?&rdquo; Lord Audley echoed. &ldquo;He should do
+nothing,&rdquo; in a lower tone, &ldquo;if I had my way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary blushed.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI<br/>
+FIELD AND FORGE</h2>
+
+<p>
+The window of the clumsy carriage was narrow, but Mary gazed through it as if
+she could never see enough of the flying landscape, the fields, the woods, the
+ivy-clad homes and red-roofed towns that passed in procession before her. The
+emotions of those who journeyed for the first time on a railway at a speed four
+times as great as that of the swiftest High-flier that ever devoured the road
+are forgotten by this generation. But they were vivid. The thing was a miracle.
+And though by this time men had ceased to believe that he who passed through
+the air at sixty miles an hour must of necessity cease to breathe, the novice
+still felt that he could never tire of the panorama so swiftly unrolled before
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it was not only wonder, it was admiration that held Mary chained to the
+window. Her infancy had been spent in a drab London street, her early youth in
+the heart of a Paris which was still gloomy and mediæval. Some beautiful things
+she had seen on fête days, the bend of the river at Meudon or St. Germain, and
+once the Forest of Fontainebleau; on Sundays the Bois. But the smiling English
+meadows, the gray towers of village churches, the parks and lawns of
+manor-houses, the canals with their lines of painted barges, and here and there
+a gay packet boat&mdash;she drank in the beauty of these, and more than once
+her eyes grew dim. For a time Basset, seated in the opposite corner, did not
+exist for her; while he, behind the <i>Morning Chronicle</i>, made his
+observations and took note of her at his leisure. The longer he looked the more
+he marvelled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He asked himself with amusement what John Audley would think of her when he,
+too, should see her. He anticipated the old man&rsquo;s surprise on finding her
+so remote from their preconceived ideas of her. He wondered what she would
+think of John Audley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And while he pondered, and now scanned his paper without reading it, and now
+stole another glance at her, he steeled himself against her. She might not have
+been to blame, it might not have been her fault; but, between them, the two on
+the boat had put him in his place and he could not forget it. He had cut a poor
+figure, and he resented it. He foresaw that in the future she would be
+dependent on him for society, and he would be a fool if he then forgot the
+lesson he had learned. She had a good face, but probably her up-bringing had
+been anything but good. Probably it had taught her to make the most of the
+moment and of the man of the moment, and he would be foolish if he let her
+amuse herself with him. He had seen in what light she viewed him when other
+game was afoot, and he would deserve the worst if he did not remember this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently an embankment cut off the view, and she withdrew her eyes from the
+window. In her turn she took the measure of her companion. It seemed to her
+that his face was too thoughtful for his years, and that his figure was
+insignificant. The eye which had accustomed itself to Lord Audley&rsquo;s port
+and air found Basset slight and almost mean. She smiled as she recalled the
+skill with which my lord had set him aside and made use of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still, he was a part of the life to which she was hastening, and curiosity
+stirred in her. He was in possession, he was in close relations with her uncle,
+he knew many things which she was anxious to know. Much of her comfort might
+depend on him. Presently she asked him what her uncle was like.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will see for yourself in a few hours,&rdquo; he replied, his tone
+cold and almost ungracious. &ldquo;Did not Lord Audley describe him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. And you seem,&rdquo; with a faint smile, &ldquo;to be equally on
+your guard, Mr. Basset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; he retorted. &ldquo;But I think it better to leave
+you to judge for yourself. I have lived too near to Mr. Audley to&mdash;to
+criticise him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She colored.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me give you one hint, however,&rdquo; he continued in the same dry
+tone; &ldquo;you will be wise not to mention Lord Audley to him. They are not
+on good terms.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sorry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;It cannot be said to be unnatural, after what
+has happened.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She considered this. &ldquo;What has happened?&rdquo; she asked after a pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, the claim to the peerage, if nothing else&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What claim?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;Whose claim? What peerage? I am
+quite in the dark.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stared. He did not believe her. &ldquo;Your uncle&rsquo;s claim,&rdquo; he
+said curtly. Then as she still looked a question, &ldquo;You must know,&rdquo;
+he continued, &ldquo;that your uncle claimed the title which Lord Audley bears,
+and the property which goes with it. And that the decision was only given
+against him three months ago.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know nothing of it,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I never heard of the
+claim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Really?&rdquo; he replied. He hardly deigned to veil his incredulity.
+&ldquo;Yet if your uncle had succeeded you were the next heir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then her face shook his unbelief. She turned slowly and painfully red.
+&ldquo;Is it possible?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You are not playing with
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly I am not. Do you mean that Lord Audley never told you that?
+Never told you that you were interested?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never! He only told me that he was not on good terms with my uncle, and
+that for that reason he would leave me to learn the rest at the
+Gatehouse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, that was right,&rdquo; Basset answered. &ldquo;It is as well,
+since you have to live with Mr. Audley, that you should not be prejudiced
+against him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; she said dryly. &ldquo;But I do not understand why he
+did not answer my letters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you write to him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Twice.&rdquo; She was going to explain the circumstances, but she
+refrained. Why appeal to the sympathies of one who seemed so cold, so distant,
+so indifferent?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He cannot have had the letters,&rdquo; Basset decided after a pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then how did he come to write to me at last?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord Audley sent your address to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I supposed so.&rdquo; With an air of
+finality she turned to the window, and for some time she was silent. Her mind
+had much upon which to work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was silent for so long that before more was said they were running through
+the outskirts of Birmingham, and Mary awoke with a shock to another and sadder
+side of England. In place of parks and homesteads she saw the England of the
+workers&mdash;workers at that time exploited to the utmost in pursuance of a
+theory of economy that heeded only the wealth of nations, and placed on that
+wealth the narrowest meaning. They passed across squalid streets, built in
+haste to meet the needs of new factories, under tall chimneys the smoke of
+which darkened the sky without hindrance, by vile courts, airless and almost
+sunless. They looked down on sallow children whose only playground was the
+street and whose only school-bell was the whistle that summoned them at dawn to
+premature toil. Haggard women sat on doorsteps with puling babes in their arms.
+Lines of men, whose pallor peered through the grime, propped the walls, or
+gazed with apathy at the train. For a few minutes Mary forgot not only her own
+hopes and fears, but the aloofness and even the presence of her companion. When
+they came to a standstill in the station, where they had to change on to the
+Grand Junction Railway, Basset had to speak twice before she understood that he
+wished her to leave the carriage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a dreadful place!&rdquo; she exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it is not beautiful,&rdquo; Basset admitted. &ldquo;One does not
+look for beauty in Birmingham and the Black Country.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He got her some tea, and marshalled her carefully to the upper line. But his
+answer had jarred upon her, and when they were again seated, Mary kept her
+thoughts to herself. Beyond Birmingham their route skirted towns rather than
+passed through them, but she saw enough to deepen the impression which the
+lanes and alleys of that place had made upon her. The sun had set and the cold
+evening light revealed in all their meanness the rows of naked cottages, the
+heaps of slag and cinders, the starveling horses that stood with hanging heads
+on the dreary lands. As darkness fell, fires shone out here and there, and
+threw into Dantesque relief the dark forms of half-naked men toiling with fury
+to feed the flames. The change which an hour had made in all she saw seemed
+appalling to the girl; it filled her with awe and sadness. Here, so near the
+paradise of the country and the plough, was the Inferno of the town, the forge,
+the pit! Here, in place of the thatched cottage and the ruddy faces, were
+squalor and sunken cheeks and misery and dearth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought of the question which Lord Audley had raised twenty-four hours
+before, and which he had told her was racking the minds of men&mdash;should
+food be taxed? And she fancied that there was, there could be, but one answer.
+These toiling masses, these slaves of the hammer and the pick, must be fed,
+and, surely, so fed that a margin, however small, however meagre, might be
+saved out of which to better their sordid lot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We call this the Black Country,&rdquo; Basset explained, feeling the
+silence irksome. After all, she was in his charge, in a way she was his guest.
+He ought to amuse her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is well named,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Is there anything in
+England worse than this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, round Hales Owen and Dudley,&rdquo; he rejoined, &ldquo;it may be
+worse. And at Cradley Heath it may be rougher. More women and children are
+employed in the pits; and where women make chains&mdash;well, it&rsquo;s pretty
+bad.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had spoken dryly to hide her feelings. He replied in a tone as
+matter-of-fact, through lack of feeling. For this he was not so much to blame
+as she fancied, for that which horrified her was to him an everyday matter, one
+of the facts of life with which he had been familiar from boyhood. But she did
+not understand this. She judged him and condemned him. She did not speak again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By and by, &ldquo;We shall be at Penkridge in twenty minutes,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;After that a nine-miles drive will take us to the Gatehouse, and your
+journey will be over. But I fear that you will find the life quiet after
+Paris.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was very quiet in Paris.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you were in a large house.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was at the Princess Czartoriski&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course. I suppose it was there that you met Lord Audley?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, after that kind of life, I am afraid that the Gatehouse will have
+few charms for you. It is very remote, very lonely.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She cut him short with impatience, the color rising to her face. &ldquo;I
+thought you understood,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that I was in the
+Princess&rsquo;s house as a governess? It was my business to take care of a
+number of children, to eat with them, to sleep with them, to see that they
+washed their hands and kept their hair clean. That was my position, Mr. Basset.
+I do not wish it to be misunderstood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if that were so,&rdquo; he stammered, &ldquo;how did
+you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Meet Lord Audley,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Very simply. Once or twice
+the Princess ordered me to descend to the salon to interpret. On one of these
+occasions Lord Audley saw me and learned&mdash;who I was.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I see.&rdquo; Perhaps he had had it in
+his mind to test her and the truth of Audley&rsquo;s letter, which nothing in
+her or in my lord&rsquo;s conduct seemed to confirm. He did not know if this
+had been in his mind, but in any case the result silenced him. She was either
+very honest or very clever. Many girls, he knew, would have slurred over the
+facts, and not a few would have boasted of the Princess&rsquo;s friendship and
+the Princess&rsquo;s society, and the Princess&rsquo;s hôtel, and brought up
+her name a dozen times a day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She is very clever, he thought, or she is&mdash;good. But for the moment he
+steeled himself against the latter opinion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No other travellers alighted at Penkridge, and he went away to claim the
+baggage, while she waited, cold and depressed, on the little platform which,
+lit by a single oil lamp, looked down on a dim churchyard. Dusk was passing
+into night, and the wind, sweeping across the flat, whipped her skirts and
+chilled her blood. Her courage sank. A light or two betrayed the nearness of
+the town, but in every other direction dull lines of willows or pale stretches
+of water ran into the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Five minutes before she had resented Basset&rsquo;s company, now she was glad
+to see him return. He led the way to the road in silence. &ldquo;The carriage
+is late,&rdquo; he muttered, but even as he spoke the quick tramp of a pair of
+horses pushed to speed broke on them, lights appeared, a moment later a fly
+pulled up beside them and turned. &ldquo;You are late,&rdquo; Basset said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There!&rdquo; the man replied. &ldquo;Minutes might be guineas since
+trains came in, dang &rsquo;em! Give me the days when five minutes made neither
+man nor mouse, and gentry kept their own time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, let us get off now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I ask no better, Squire. Please yourself and you&rsquo;ll please
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they were shut in, Basset laughed. &ldquo;Stafford manners!&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll become used to them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is this my uncle&rsquo;s carriage?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he replied, smiling in the darkness. &ldquo;He does not keep
+one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She said no more. Though she could not see him, her shoulder touched his, and
+his nearness and the darkness in which they sat troubled her, though she was
+not timid. They rode thus for a minute or two, then trundled through a narrow
+street, dimly lit by shop windows; again they were in the dark and the country.
+Presently the pace dropped to a walk as they began to ascend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She fancied, peering out on her side, that they were winding up through woods.
+Branches swept the sides of the carriage. They jolted into ruts and jolted out
+of them. By and by they were clear of the trees and the road seemed to be
+better. The moon, newly risen, showed her a dreary upland, bare and endless,
+here dotted with the dark stumps of trees, there of a deeper black as if fire
+had swept over it and scarred it. They met no one, saw no sign of habitation.
+To the girl, accustomed all her life to streets and towns, the place seemed
+infinitely desolate&mdash;a place of solitude and witches and terror and
+midnight murder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is this?&rdquo; she asked, shivering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the Great Chase,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Riddsley, on the farther
+side, is our nearest town, but since the railway was opened we use Penkridge
+Station.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His practical tone steadied her, but she was tired, and the loneliness which
+she had felt while she waited on the bleak platform weighed heavily on her. To
+what was she going? How would her uncle receive her? This dreary landscape, the
+gaunt signpost that looked like a gibbet and might have been one, the skeleton
+trees that raised bare arms to heaven, the scream of a dying rabbit, all added
+to the depression of the moment. She was glad when at last the carriage stopped
+at a gate. Basset alighted and opened the gate. He stepped in again, they went
+on. There were now shadowy trees about them, sparsely set. They jolted unevenly
+over turf.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are we there?&rdquo; she asked, a tremor in her voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very nearly,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Another mile and we shall be there.
+This is Beaudelays Park.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She called pride to her aid, and he did not guess&mdash;for all day he had
+marked her self-possession&mdash;that she was trembling. Vainly she told
+herself that she was foolish, that nothing could happen to her, nothing that
+mattered. What, after all, was a cold reception, what was her uncle&rsquo;s
+frown beside the poverty and the hazards from which she had escaped? Vainly she
+reassured herself; she could not still the rapid beating of her heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He might have said a word to cheer her. But he did not know that she was
+suffering, and he said no word. She came near to hating him for his stolidity
+and his silence. He was inhuman! A block!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She peered through the misty glass, striving to see what was before them. But
+she could make out no more than the dark limbs of trees, and now and then a
+trunk, which shone as the light of the lamp slipped over it, and as quickly
+vanished. Suddenly they shot from turf to hard road, passed through an open
+gateway, for an instant the lamp on her side showed a grotesque
+pillar&mdash;they wheeled, they stopped. Within a few feet of her a door stood
+open, and in the doorway a girl held a lantern aloft in one hand, and with the
+other screened her eyes from the light.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII<br/>
+MR. JOHN AUDLEY</h2>
+
+<p>
+An hour later Basset was seated on one side of a wide hearth, on the other John
+Audley faced him. The library in which they sat was the room which Basset loved
+best in the world. It was a room of silence and large spaces, and except where
+four windows, tall and narrow, broke one wall, it was lined high with the
+companions of silence&mdash;books. The ceiling was of black oak, adorned at the
+crossings of the joists and beams with emblems, butterflies, and Stafford knots
+and the like, once bright with color, and still soberly rich. A five-sided bay
+enlarged each of the two inner corners of the room and broke the outlines. One
+of these bays shrined a window, four-mullioned, the other a spiral staircase.
+An air of comfort and stateliness pervaded the whole; here the great scutcheon
+over the mantel, there the smaller coats on the chair-backs blended their or
+and gules with the hues of old rugs and the dun bindings of old folios. There
+were books on the four or five tables, and books on the Cromwell chairs; and
+charts and deeds, antique weapons and silver pieces, all the tools and toys of
+the antiquary, lay broadcast. Against the door hung a blazoned pedigree of the
+Audleys of Beaudelays. It was six feet long and dull with age.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Basset, as he faced his companion, was not thinking of the room, or of the
+pursuits with which it was connected in his mind, and which, more than
+affection and habit, bound him to John Audley. He moved restlessly in his
+chair, then stretched his legs to meet the glow of the wood fire. &ldquo;All
+the same,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I think you would have done well to see her
+to-night, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pooh! pooh!&rdquo; John Audley answered with lazy good humor.
+&ldquo;Why? It doesn&rsquo;t matter what I think of her or she thinks of me.
+It&rsquo;s what Peter thinks of Mary and Mary thinks of Peter that matters.
+That&rsquo;s what matters!&rdquo; He chuckled as he marked the other&rsquo;s
+annoyance. &ldquo;She is a beauty, is she?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t say so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you think it. You don&rsquo;t deceive me at this time of day. And
+stand-off, is she? That&rsquo;s for the marines and innocent young fellows like
+you who think women angels. I&rsquo;ll be bound that she&rsquo;s her
+mother&rsquo;s daughter, and knows her value and will see that she fetches it!
+Trading blood will out!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the eye that looked and glanced away John Audley, lolling in his chair, in a
+quilted dressing-gown with silk facings, was a plump and pleasant figure. His
+face was fresh-colored, and would have been comely if the cheeks had not been a
+little pendulous. His hair was fine and white and he wore it long, and his
+hands were shapely and well cared for. As he said his last word he poured a
+little brandy into a glass and filled it up with water. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s to
+the wooing that&rsquo;s not long adoing!&rdquo; he said, his eyes twinkling. He
+seemed to take a pleasure in annoying the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was so far successful that Basset swore softly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s silly to
+talk like that,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when I have hardly known the girl
+twenty-four hours and have scarcely said ten times as many words to her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you&rsquo;re going to say a good many more words to her!&rdquo;
+Audley retorted, grinning. &ldquo;Sweet, pretty words, my boy! But there,
+there,&rdquo; he continued, veering between an elfish desire to tease and a
+desire equally strong to bring the other to his way of thinking.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m only joking. I know you&rsquo;ll never let that devil have his
+way! You&rsquo;ll never leave the course open for <i>him!</i> I know that. But
+there&rsquo;s no hurry! There&rsquo;s no hurry. Though, lord, how I sweated
+when I read his letter! I had never a wink of sleep the night after.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t suppose that he&rsquo;s given a thought to her in that
+way,&rdquo; Basset answered. &ldquo;Why should he?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley leant forward, and his face underwent a remarkable change. It
+became a pale, heavy mask, out of which his eyes gleamed, small and malevolent.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk like a fool!&rdquo; he said harshly. &ldquo;Of course
+he means it. And if she&rsquo;s fool enough all my plans, all my pains, all my
+rights&mdash;and once you come to your senses and help me I shall have my
+rights&mdash;all, all, all will go for nothing. For nothing!&rdquo; He sank
+back in his chair. &ldquo;There! now you&rsquo;ve excited me. You&rsquo;ve
+excited me, and you know that I can&rsquo;t bear excitement!&rdquo; His hand
+groped feebly for his glass, and he raised it to his lips. He gasped once or
+twice. The color came back to his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sorry,&rdquo; Basset said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay. But be a good lad. Be a good lad. Make up your mind to help me
+at the Great House.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To help me, and twenty-four hours&mdash;only twenty-four hours,
+man&mdash;may make all the difference! All the difference in the world to
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have told you my views about it,&rdquo; Basset said doggedly. He
+shifted uneasily in his chair. &ldquo;I cannot do it, sir, and I
+won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley groaned. &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+say no more now. I&rsquo;ll say no more now. When you and she have made it
+up&rdquo;&mdash;in vain Basset shook his head&mdash;&ldquo;you&rsquo;ll see the
+question in another light. Ay, believe me, you will. It&rsquo;ll be your
+business then, and your interest, and nothing venture, nothing win!
+You&rsquo;ll see it differently. You&rsquo;ll help the old man to his rights
+then.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset shrugged his shoulders, but thought it useless to protest. The other
+sighed once or twice and was silent also. At length, &ldquo;You never told me
+that you had heard from her,&rdquo; Basset said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That I&rsquo;d&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; John Audley broke off. &ldquo;What
+is it, Toft?&rdquo; he asked over his shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man-servant, tall, thin, lantern-jawed, had entered unseen. &ldquo;I came to
+see if you wanted anything more, sir?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, nothing, Toft. Good-night!&rdquo; He spoke impatiently, and he
+watched the man out before he went on. Then, &ldquo;Perhaps I heard from her,
+perhaps I didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s some time ago. What
+of it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She was in great distress when she wrote.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley raised his eyebrows. &ldquo;What of it!&rdquo; he repeated.
+&ldquo;She was that woman&rsquo;s daughter. When Peter married a
+tradesman&rsquo;s daughter&mdash;married a&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He did not
+continue. His thoughts trickled away into silence. The matter was not worthy of
+his attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But by and by he roused himself. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve ridiculous
+scruples,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Absurd scruples. But,&rdquo; briskly,
+&ldquo;there&rsquo;s that much of good in this girl that I think she&rsquo;ll
+put an end to them. You must brighten up, my lad, and spark it a little!
+You&rsquo;re too grave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Damn!&rdquo; said Basset. &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, don&rsquo;t begin
+it all again. I&rsquo;ve told you that I&rsquo;ve not the least
+intention&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll see to that if she&rsquo;s what I think her,&rdquo; John
+Audley retorted cheerfully. &ldquo;If she&rsquo;s her mother&rsquo;s daughter!
+But very well, very well! We&rsquo;ll change the subject. I&rsquo;ve been
+working at the Feathers&mdash;the Prince&rsquo;s Feathers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you gone any farther?&rdquo; Basset asked, forcing an interest
+which would have been ready enough at another time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might have, but I had a visitor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Visitors were rare at the Gatehouse, and Basset wondered. &ldquo;Who was
+it?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bagenal the maltster from Riddsley. He came about some political
+rubbish. Some trouble they are having with Mottisfont. D&mdash;n Mottisfont!
+What do I care about him? They think he isn&rsquo;t running straight&mdash;that
+he&rsquo;s going in for corn-law repeal. And Bagenal and the other fools think
+that that will be the ruin of the town.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But Mottisfont is a Tory,&rdquo; Basset objected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So is Peel. They are both in Bagenal&rsquo;s bad books. Bagenal is sure
+that Peel is going back to the cotton people he came from. Spinning Jenny
+spinning round again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I asked him,&rdquo; Audley continued, rubbing his knees with sly
+enjoyment, &ldquo;what Stubbs the lawyer was doing about it. He&rsquo;s the
+party manager. Why didn&rsquo;t he come to me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset smiled. &ldquo;What did he say to that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hummed and hawed. At last he said that owing to Stubbs&rsquo;s
+connection with&mdash;you know who&mdash;it was thought that he was not the
+right person to come to me. So I asked him what Stubbs&rsquo;s employer was
+going to do about it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t know what to say to that, the ass! Thought I should go
+the other way, you see. So I told him&rdquo;&mdash;John Audley laughed
+maliciously as he spoke&mdash;&ldquo;that, for the landed interest, the law had
+taken away my land, and, for politics, I would not give a d&mdash;n for either
+party in a country where men did not get their rights! Lord! how he
+looked!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you didn&rsquo;t hide your feelings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why should I?&rdquo; John Audley asked cheerfully. &ldquo;What will they
+do for me? Nothing. Will they move a finger to right me? No. Then a plague on
+both their houses!&rdquo; He snapped his fingers in schoolboy fashion and rose
+to his feet. He lit a candle, taking a light from the fire with a spill.
+&ldquo;I am going to bed now, Peter. Unless&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he paused, the
+candlestick in his hand, and gazed fixedly at his companion. &ldquo;Lord, man,
+what we could do in two or three hours! In two or three hours. This very
+night!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve told you that I will have nothing to do with it!&rdquo;
+Basset repeated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley sighed, and removing his eyes, poked the wick of the candle with
+the snuffers. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;good-night. We must look to
+bright eyes and red lips to convert you. What a man won&rsquo;t do for another
+he will do for himself, Peter. Good-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Left alone, Basset stared fretfully at the fire. It was not the first time by
+scores that John Audley had tried him and driven him almost beyond bearing. But
+habit is a strong tie, and a common taste is a bond even stronger. In this
+room, and from the elder man, Basset had learned to trace a genealogy, to read
+a coat, to know a bar from a bend, to discourse of badges and collars under the
+guidance of the learned Anstie or the ingenious Le Neve. There he had spent
+hours flitting from book to book and chart to chart in the pursuit, as
+thrilling while it lasted as any fox-chase, of some family link, the origin of
+this, the end of that, a thing of value only to those who sought it, but to
+them all-important. He could recall many a day so spent while rain lashed the
+tall mullioned windows or sunlight flooded the window-seat in the bay; and
+these days had endeared to him every nook in the library from the folio shelves
+in the shadowy corner under the staircase to the cosey table near the hearth
+which was called &ldquo;Mr. Basset&rsquo;s,&rdquo; and enshrined in a long
+drawer a tree of the Bassets of Blore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For he as well as Audley came of an ancient and shrunken stock. He also could
+count among his forbears men who had fought at Blore Heath and Towton, or had
+escaped by a neck from the ruin of the Gunpowder Plot. So he had fallen early
+under the spell of the elder man&rsquo;s pursuits, and, still young, had
+learned from him to live in the past. Later the romantic solitude of the
+Gatehouse, where he had spent more of the last six years than in his own house
+at Blore, had confirmed him in the habit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under the surface, however, the two men remained singularly unlike. While a
+fixed idea had narrowed John Audley&rsquo;s vision to the inhuman, the younger
+man, under a dry and reserved exterior&mdash;he was shy, and his undrained
+acres, his twelve hundred a year, poorly supported an ancient name&mdash;was
+not only human, but in his way was something of an idealist. He dreamed dreams,
+he had his secret aspirations, at times ambition of the higher kind stirred in
+him, he planned plans and another life than this. But always&mdash;this was a
+thing inbred in him&mdash;he put forward the commonplace, as the cuttle-fish
+sheds ink, and hid nothing so shyly as the visions which he had done nothing to
+make real. On those about him he made no deep impression, though from one
+border of Staffordshire to the other his birth won respect. Politics viewed as
+a game, and a selfish game, had no attraction for him. Quarter Sessions and the
+Bench struck no spark from him. At the Races and the County Ball richer men
+outshone him. But given something to touch his heart and fire his ambition, he
+had qualities. He might still show himself in another light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something of this, for no reason that he could imagine, some feeling of regret
+for past opportunities, passed through his mind as he sat fretting over John
+Audley&rsquo;s folly. But after a time he roused himself and became aware that
+he was tired; and he rose and lit a candle. He pushed back the smouldering logs
+and slowly and methodically he put out the lights. He gave a last thought to
+John Audley. &ldquo;There was always one maggot in his head,&rdquo; he
+muttered, &ldquo;now there&rsquo;s a second. What I would not do to please him,
+he thinks I shall do to please another! Well, he does not know her yet!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went to bed.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br/>
+THE GATEHOUSE</h2>
+
+<p>
+It is within the bounds of imagination that death may make no greater change in
+our inner selves than is wrought at times by a new mood or another outlook.
+When Mary, an hour before the world was astir on the morning after her arrival,
+let herself out of the Gatehouse, and from its threshold as from a ledge saw
+the broad valley of the Trent stretched before her in all the beauty of a May
+morning, her alarm of the past night seemed incredible. At her feet a sharp
+slope, clothed in gorse and shrub, fell away to meet the plain. It sank no more
+than a couple of hundred feet, but this was enough to enable her to follow the
+silver streak of the river winding afar between park and coppice and under many
+a church tower. Away to the right she could see the three graceful spires of
+Lichfield, and southward, where an opal haze closed the prospect, she could
+imagine the fringe of the Black Country, made beautiful by distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In sober fact few parts of England are less inviting than the low lands of
+Staffordshire, when the spring floods cover them or the fogs of autumn cling to
+the cold soil. But in spring, when larks soar above them and tall, lop-sided
+elms outline the fields, they have their beauty; and Mary gazed long at the
+fair prospect before she turned her back on it and looked at the house that was
+fated to be her home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was what its name signified, a gatehouse; yet by turns it could be a sombre
+and a charming thing. Some Audley of noble ideas, a man long dead, had built it
+to be the entrance to his demesne. The park wall, overhung by trees, still ran
+right and left from it, but the road which had once passed through the archway
+now slid humbly aside and entered the park by a field gate. A wide-latticed
+Tudor tower, rising two stories above the arch and turreted at the four
+corners, formed the middle. It was buttressed on either hand by a lower
+building, flush with it and of about the same width. The tower was of yellowish
+stone, the wings were faced with stained stucco. Right and left of the whole a
+plot of shrubs masked on the one hand the stables, on the other the
+kitchens&mdash;modern blocks set back to such a distance that each touched the
+old part at a corner only.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He who had planned the building had set it cunningly on the brow of the Great
+Chase, so that, viewed from the vale, it rose against the skyline. On dark days
+it broke the fringe of woodland and stood up, gloomy and forbidding, the portal
+of a Doubting Castle. On bright days, with its hundred diamond panes a-glitter
+in the sunshine, it seemed to be the porch of a fairy palace, the silent home
+of some Sleeping Beauty. At all times it imposed itself upon men below and
+spoke of something beyond, something unseen, greater, mysterious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To Mary Audley, who saw it at its best, the very stains of the plaster
+glorified by the morning light, it was a thing of joy. She fancied that to live
+behind those ancient mullioned windows, to look out morning and evening on that
+spacious landscape, to feel the bustle of the world so remote, must in itself
+be happiness. For a time she could not turn from it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But presently the desire to explore her new surroundings seized her and she
+re-entered the house. A glance at the groined roof of the hall&mdash;many a
+gallant horseman had ridden under it in his time&mdash;proved that it was
+merely the archway closed and fitted with a small door and window at either
+end. She unlocked the farther door and passed into a paved court, in which the
+grass grew between the worn flags. In the stables on the left a dog whined. The
+kitchens were on the other hand, and before her an opening flanked by tall
+heraldic beasts broke a low wall, built of moss-grown brick. She ventured
+through it and uttered a cry of delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Near at hand, under cover of a vast chestnut tree, were traces of domestic
+labor: a grindstone, a saw-pit, a woodpile, coops with clucking hens. But
+beyond these the sward, faintly lined at first with ruts, stretched away into
+forest glades, bordered here by giant oaks brown in bud, there by the
+yellowish-green of beech trees. In the foreground lay patches of gorse, and in
+places an ancient thorn, riven and half prostrate, crowned the russet of last
+year&rsquo;s bracken with a splash of cream. Heedless of the spectator, rabbits
+sat making their toilet, and from every brake birds filled the air with a riot
+of song.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To one who had seen little but the streets of Paris, more sordid then than now,
+the scene was charming. Mary&rsquo;s eyes filled, her heart swelled. Ah, what a
+home was here! She had espied on her journey many a nook and sheltered dell,
+but nothing that could vie with this! Heedless of her thin shoes, with no more
+than a handkerchief on her head, she strayed on and on. By and by a track,
+faintly marked, led her to the left. A little farther, and old trees fell into
+line on either hand, as if in days long gone, before age thinned their ranks,
+they had formed an avenue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a time she sat musing on a fallen trunk, then the hawthorn that a few paces
+away perfumed the spring air moved her to gather an armful of it. She forgot
+that time was passing, almost she forgot that she had not breakfasted, and she
+might have been nearly a mile from the Gatehouse when she was startled by a
+faint hail that seemed to come from behind her. She looked back and saw Basset
+coming after her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, too, was hatless&mdash;he had set off in haste&mdash;and he was out of
+breath. She turned with concern to meet him. &ldquo;Am I very late, Mr.
+Basset?&rdquo; she asked, her conscience pricking her. What if this first
+morning she had broken the rules?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no,&rdquo; he said. And then, &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve not been farther
+than this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. I am afraid my uncle is waiting?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no. He breakfasts in his own room. But Etruria told me that you had
+gone this way, and I followed. I see that you are not empty-handed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No.&rdquo; And she thrust the great bunch of may under his
+nose&mdash;who would not have been gay, who would not have lost her reserve in
+such a scene, on such a morning? &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it fresh? Isn&rsquo;t it
+delicious?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he stooped to the flowers his eyes met hers smiling through the hawthorn
+sprays, and he saw her as he had not seen her before. Her gravity had left her.
+Spring laughed in her eyes, youth fluttered in the tendrils of her hair, she
+was the soul of May. And what she had found of beauty in the woodland, of music
+in the larks&rsquo; songs, of perfume in the blossoms, of freshness in the
+morning, the man found in her; and a shock, never to be forgotten, ran through
+him. He did not speak. He smelled the hawthorn in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a few seconds later&mdash;as men reckon time&mdash;he took note of his
+feelings, and he was startled. He had not been prepared to like her, we know;
+many things had armed him against her. But before the witchery of her morning
+face, the challenge of her laughing eyes, he awoke to the fact that he was in
+danger. He had to own that if he must live beside her day by day and would
+maintain his indifference, he must steel himself. He must keep his first
+impressions of her always before him, and be careful. And be very
+careful&mdash;if even that might avail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a hundred paces he walked at her side, listening without knowing what she
+said. Then his coolness returned, and when she asked him why he had come after
+her without his hat he was ready.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I had better tell you,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;this path is little
+used. It leads to the Great House, and your uncle, owing to his quarrel with
+Lord Audley, does not like any one to go farther in that direction than the Yew
+Tree Walk. You can see the Walk from here&mdash;the yews mark the entrance to
+the gardens. I thought that it would be unfortunate if you began by displeasing
+him, and I came after you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was very good of you,&rdquo; she said. Her face was not gay now.
+&ldquo;Does Lord Audley live there&mdash;when he is at home?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No one lives there,&rdquo; he explained soberly. &ldquo;No one has lived
+there for three generations. It&rsquo;s a ruin&mdash;I was going to say, a
+nightmare. The greater part of the house was burnt down in a carouse held to
+celebrate the accession of George the Third. The Audley of that day rebuilt it
+on a great scale, but before it was finished he gave a housewarming, at which
+his only son quarrelled with a guest. The two fought at daybreak, and the son
+was killed beside the old Butterfly in the Yew Walk&mdash;you will see the spot
+some day. The father sent away the builders and never looked up again. He
+diverted much of his property, and a cousin came into the remainder and the
+title, but the house was never finished, the windows in the new part were never
+glazed. In the old part some furniture and tapestry decay; in the new are only
+bats and dust and owls. So it has stood for eighty years, vacant in the midst
+of neglected gardens. In the sunlight it is one of the most dreary things you
+can imagine. By moonlight it is better, but unspeakably melancholy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How dreadful,&rdquo; she said in a low voice. &ldquo;I almost wish, Mr.
+Basset, that you had not told me. They say in France that if you see the dead
+without touching them, you dream of them. I feel like that about the
+house.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It crossed his mind that she was talking for effect. &ldquo;It is only a house
+after all,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But our house,&rdquo; with a touch of pride. Then, &ldquo;What are
+those?&rdquo; she asked, pointing to the gray shapeless beasts, time-worn and
+weather-stained, that flanked the entrance to the courtyard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are, or once were, Butterflies, the badge of the Audleys. These
+hold shields. You will see the Butterflies in many places in the Gatehouse. You
+will find them with men&rsquo;s faces and sometimes with a fret on the wings.
+Your uncle says that they are not butterflies, but moths, that have eaten the
+Audley fortunes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a thought that matched the picture he had drawn of the deserted house,
+and Mary felt that the morning had lost its brightness. But not for long.
+Basset led her into a room on the right of the hall, and the sight drew from
+her a cry of pleasure. On three sides the dark wainscot rose eight feet from
+the floor; above, the walls were whitewashed to the ceiling and broken by dim
+portraits, on stretchers and without frames. On the fourth side where the
+panelling divided the room from a serving-room, once part of it, it rose to the
+ceiling. The stone hearth, the iron dogs, the matted floor, the heavy chairs
+and oak table, all were dark and plain and increased the austerity of the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the end of the table places were laid for three, and Toft, who had set on
+the breakfast, was fixing the kettle amid the burning logs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is Mr. Audley coming down?&rdquo; Basset asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He bade me lay for him,&rdquo; Toft replied dryly. &ldquo;I doubt if he
+will come. You had better begin, sir. The young lady,&rdquo; with a searching
+look at her, &ldquo;must want her breakfast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid I do,&rdquo; Mary confessed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, we will begin,&rdquo; Basset said. He invited her to make the tea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they were seated, &ldquo;You like the room?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I love it,&rdquo; she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So do I,&rdquo; he rejoined, more soberly. &ldquo;The panelling is
+linen&mdash;pattern of the fifteenth century&mdash;you see the folds? It was
+saved from the old house. I am glad you like it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I love it,&rdquo; she said again. But after that she grew thoughtful,
+and during the rest of the meal she said little. She was thinking of what was
+before her; of the unknown uncle, whose bread she was eating, and upon whom she
+was going to be dependent. What would he be like? How would he receive her? And
+why was every one so reticent about him&mdash;so reticent that he was beginning
+to be something of an ogre to her? When Toft presently appeared and said that
+Mr. Audley was in the library and would see her when she was ready, she lost
+color. But she answered the man with self-possession, asked quietly where the
+library was, and had not Basset&rsquo;s eyes been on her face he would have had
+no notion that she was troubled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As it was, he waited for her to avow her misgiving&mdash;he was prepared to
+encourage her. But she said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+None the less, at the last moment, with her hand on the door of the library,
+she hesitated. It was not so much fear of the unknown relative whom she was
+going to see that drove the blood from her cheek, as the knowledge that for her
+everything depended upon him. Her new home, its peace, its age, its woodland
+surroundings, fascinated her. It promised her not only content, but happiness.
+But as her stay in it hung upon John Audley&rsquo;s will, so her pleasure in
+it, and her enjoyment of it, depended upon the relations between them. What
+would they be? How would he receive her? What would he be like? At last she
+called up her courage, turned the handle, and entered the library.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment she saw no one. The great room, with its distances and its
+harmonious litter, appeared to be empty. Then, &ldquo;Mary, my dear,&rdquo;
+said a pleasant voice, &ldquo;welcome to the Gatehouse!&rdquo; And John Audley
+rose from his seat at a distant table and came towards her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The notion which she had formed of him vanished in a twinkling, and with it her
+fears. She saw before her an elderly gentleman, plump and kindly, who walked
+with a short tripping step, and wore the swallow-tailed coat with gilt buttons
+which the frock-coat had displaced. He took her hand with a smile, kissed her
+on the forehead, and led her to a chair placed beside his own. He sat for a
+moment holding her hand and looking at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I see the likeness,&rdquo; he said, after a moment&rsquo;s
+contemplation. &ldquo;But, my dear, how is this? There are tears in your eyes,
+and you tremble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I was a little afraid of you,
+sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you are not afraid now,&rdquo; he replied cheerfully. &ldquo;And
+you won&rsquo;t be again. You won&rsquo;t be again. My dear, welcome once more
+to the Gatehouse. I hope that it may be your home until another is offered you.
+Things came between your father and me&mdash;I shall never mention them again,
+and don&rsquo;t you, my dear!&rdquo;&mdash;this a little
+hurriedly&mdash;&ldquo;don&rsquo;t you; all that is buried now, and I must make
+it up to you. Your letters?&rdquo; he continued, patting her hand. &ldquo;Yes,
+Peter told me that you wrote to me. I need not say that I never had them. No,
+never had them&mdash;Toft, what is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The change in his voice struck her. The servant had come in quietly. &ldquo;Mr.
+Basset, sir, has lost&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Another time!&rdquo; John Audley replied curtly. &ldquo;Another time! I
+am engaged now. Go!&rdquo; Then when the door had closed behind the servant,
+&ldquo;No, my dear,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;I need not say that I never had
+them, so that I first heard of your troubles through a channel upon which I
+will not dwell. However, many good things come by bad ways, Mary. I hope you
+like the Gatehouse?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is charming!&rdquo; she cried with enthusiasm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It has only one drawback,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was clever enough to understand that he referred to its owner, and to
+escape from the subject. &ldquo;This room,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is
+perfection. I have never seen anything like it, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a pleasant room,&rdquo; he said, looking round him. &ldquo;There
+is our coat over the mantel, gules, a fret or; like all old coats, very simple.
+Some think it is the Lacy Knot; the Audley of Edward the First&rsquo;s time
+married a Lacy. But we bore our old coat of three Butterflies later than that,
+for before the fall of Roger Mortimer, who was hung at Tyburn, he married his
+daughter to an Audley, and the escheaters found the wedding chamber in his
+house furnished with our Butterflies. Later the Butterfly survived as our
+badge. You see it there!&rdquo; he continued, pointing it out among the
+mouldings of the ceiling. &ldquo;There is the Stafford Knot, the badge of the
+great Dukes of Buckingham, the noblest of English families; it is said that the
+last of the line, a cobbler, died at Newport, not twenty miles from here. We
+intermarried with them, and through them with Peter&rsquo;s people, the
+Bassets. That is the Lovel Wolf, and there is the White Wolf of the
+Mortimers&mdash;all badges. But you do not know, I suppose, what a badge
+is?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid not,&rdquo; she said, smiling. &ldquo;But I am as proud of
+our Butterfly, and as proud to be an Audley, sir, as if I knew more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter must give you some lessons in heraldry,&rdquo; he answered.
+&ldquo;We live in the past here, my dear, and we must indoctrinate you with a
+love of our pursuits or you will be dull.&rdquo; He paused to consider.
+&ldquo;I am afraid that we cannot allot you a drawing-room, but you must make
+your room upstairs as comfortable as you can. Etruria will see to that. And
+Peter shall arrange a table for you in the south bay here, and it shall be your
+table and your bay. That is his table; this is mine. We are orderly, and so we
+do not get in one another&rsquo;s way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thanked him gratefully, and with tears in her eyes, she said something to
+which he would not listen&mdash;he only patted her hand&mdash;as to his
+kindness, his great kindness, in receiving her. She could not, indeed, put her
+relief into words, so deep was it. Nowhere, she felt, could life be more
+peaceful or more calm than in this room which no sounds of the outer world
+except the songs of birds, no sights save the swaying of branches disturbed;
+where the blazoned panes cast their azure and argent on lines of russet books,
+where an aged hound sprawled before the embers, and the measured tick of the
+clock alone vied with the scratching of the pen. She saw herself seated there
+during drowsy summer days, or when firelight cheered the winter evenings. She
+saw herself sewing beside the hearth while her companions worked, each within
+his circle of light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, she also was an Audley. She also had her share in the race which had
+lived long on this spot. Already she was fired with the desire to know more of
+them, and that flame John Audley was well fitted to fan. For he was not of the
+school of dry-as-dust antiquaries. He had the knack of choosing the picturesque
+in story, he could make it stand out for others, he could impart life to the
+actors in it. And, anxious to captivate Mary, he bent himself for nearly an
+hour to the display of his knowledge. Taking for his text one or other of the
+objects about him, he told her of great castles, from which England had been
+ruled, and through which the choicest life of the country had passed, that now
+were piles of sherds clothed with nettles. He told her of that woodland country
+on the borders of three counties, where the papists had long lived undisturbed
+and where the Gunpowder Plot had had its centre. He told her of the fashion
+which came in with Richard the Second, of adorning the clothes with initials,
+reading and writing having become for the first time courtly accomplishments;
+and to illustrate this he showed her the Westminster portrait of Richard in a
+robe embroidered with letters of R. He quoted Chaucer:
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+And thereon hung a broch of gold ful schene<br/>
+On which was first i-written a crowned A<br/>
+And after that, Amor vincit omnia.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Then, turning his back on her, he produced from some secret place a key, and
+opening a masked cupboard in the wall, he held out for her inspection a small
+bowl, bent and mis-shapen by use, and supported by two fragile butterflies. The
+whole was of silver so thin that to modern eyes it seemed trivial. Traces of
+gilding lingered about some parts of it, and on each of the wings of the
+butterflies was a capital A.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was charmed. &ldquo;Of all your illustrations,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;I
+prefer this one! It is very old, I suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is of the fifteenth century,&rdquo; he said, turning it about.
+&ldquo;We believe that it was made for the Audley who fell early in the Wars of
+the Roses. Pages and knights, maids and matrons, gloves of silk and gloves of
+mail, wrinkled palms and babies&rsquo; fingers, the men, the women, the
+children of twelve generations of our race, my dear, have handled this. Once,
+according to an old inventory, there were six; this one alone remains.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It must be very rare?&rdquo; she said, her eyes sparkling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is very rare,&rdquo; he said, and he handled it as if he loved it. He
+had not once allowed it to go out of his fingers. &ldquo;Very rare. I doubt if,
+apart from the City Companies, there is another in the hands of the original
+owners.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it came to you by descent, sir?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paused in the act of returning it to its hiding-place. &ldquo;Yes, that is
+how it came to me,&rdquo; he said in a muffled tone. But he seemed to be a long
+time putting it away; and when he turned with the key in his hand his face was
+altered, and he looked at her&mdash;well, had she done anything to anger him,
+she would have thought he was angry. &ldquo;To whom besides me could it
+descend!&rdquo; he asked, his voice raised a tone. &ldquo;But there, I must not
+grow excited. I think&mdash;I think you had better go now. Go, my dear, now.
+But come back presently.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary went. But the change in tone and face had been such as to startle her and
+to dash the happy mood of a few moments earlier. She wondered what she had said
+to annoy him.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>CHAPTER IX<br/>
+OLD THINGS</h2>
+
+<p>
+The Gatehouse, placed on the verge of the upland, was very solitary. Cut off
+from the vale by an ascent which the coachmen of the great deemed too rough for
+their horses, it was isolated on the other three sides by Beaudelays Park and
+by the Great Chase, which flung its barren moors over many miles of table-land.
+In the course of the famous suit John Audley had added to the solitude of the
+house by a smiling aloofness which gave no quarter to those who agreed with his
+rival. The result was that when Mary came to live there, few young people would
+have found the Gatehouse a lively abode.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But to Mary during the quiet weeks that followed her arrival it seemed a
+paradise. She spent long hours in the open air, now seated on a fallen trunk in
+some glade of the park, now watching the squirrels in the clear gloom of the
+beech-wood, or again, lying at length on the carpet of thyme and heather that
+clothed the moor. She came to know by heart every path through the
+park&mdash;except that which led to the Great House; she discovered where the
+foxgloves clustered, where the meadow-sweet fringed the runlet, where the rare
+bog-bean warned the traveller to look to his footing. Even the Great Chase she
+came to know, and almost daily she walked to a point beyond the park whence she
+could see the distant smoke of a mining village. That was the one sign of life
+on the Chase; elsewhere it stretched vast and unpeopled, sombre under a livid
+sky, smiling in sunshine, here purple with ling, there scarred by
+fire&mdash;always wide under a wide heaven, raised high above the common world.
+Now and again she met a shepherd or saw a gig, lessened by distance, making its
+slow way along a moorland track. But for days together she might wander there
+without seeing a human being.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wide horizon became as dear to her as the greenwood. Pent as she had been
+in cities, straitened in mean rooms where sight and smell had alike been
+outraged, she revelled in this sweet and open life. The hum of bees, the scent
+of pines, the flight of the ousel down the water, the whistle of the curlew,
+all were to her pleasures as vivid as they were new.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime Basset made no attempt to share her excursions. He was fighting a
+battle with himself, and he knew better than to go out of his way to aid the
+enemy. And for her part she did not miss him. She did not dislike him, but the
+interest he excited in her was feeble. The thought of comparing him with Lord
+Audley, with the man to whose intervention she owed this home, this peace, this
+content, never occurred to her. Of Audley she did think as much perhaps as was
+prudent, sometimes with pensive gratitude, more rarely with a smile and a blush
+at her folly in dwelling on him. For always she thought of him as one, high and
+remote, whom it was not probable that she would ever see again, one whose
+course through life lay far from hers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, it is not to be denied, Basset began to grow upon her. He was there.
+He was part of her life. Morning and evening she had to do with him. Often she
+read or sewed in the same room with him, and in many small ways he added to her
+comfort. Sometimes he suggested things which would please her uncle; sometimes
+he warned her of things which she would do well to avoid. Once or twice he
+diverted to himself a spirt of John Audley&rsquo;s uncertain temper; and though
+Mary did not always detect the man&#339;uvre, though she was far from
+suspecting the extent of his vigilance or the care which he cast about her, it
+would have been odd if she had not come to think more kindly of him, and to see
+merits in him which had escaped her at first.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile he thought of her with mingled feelings. At first with doubt&mdash;it
+was never out of his mind that she had made much of Lord Audley and little of
+him. Then with admiration which he withstood more feebly as time went on, and
+the cloven hoof failed to appear. Later, with tenderness, which, hating the
+scheme John Audley had formed, he masked even from himself, and which he was
+sure that he would never have the courage to express in her presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Basset was conscious that, aspire as he might, he was not a hero. The clash
+of life, the shock of battle, had no attraction for him. The library at the
+Gatehouse was, he owned it frankly, his true sphere. She, on the other hand,
+had had experiences. She had sailed through unknown seas, she had led a life
+strange to him. She had seen much, done much, suffered much, had held her own
+among strangers. Before her calmness and self-possession he humbled himself. He
+veiled his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not attempt, therefore, to accompany her abroad, but at home he had no
+choice save to see much of her. There was only one living room for all, and she
+glided with surprising ease into the current of the men&rsquo;s occupations. At
+first she was astray on the sea of books. Her knowledge was not sufficient to
+supply chart or compass, and it fell to Basset to point the way, to choose her
+reading, to set in a proper light John Audley&rsquo;s vivid pictures of the
+past, to teach her the elements of heraldry and genealogy. She proved, however,
+an apt scholar, and very soon she dropped into the position of her
+uncle&rsquo;s secretary. Sometimes she copied his notes, at other times he set
+her on the track of a fact, a relationship, a quotation, and she would spend
+hours in a corner, embedded in huge tomes of the county histories. Dugdale,
+Leland, Hall, even Polydore Vergil, became her friends. She pored over the
+Paston Letters, probed the false pedigrees of Banks, and could soon work out
+for herself the famous discovery respecting the last Lovel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a young girl it was an odd pursuit. But the past was in the atmosphere of
+the house, it went with the fortunes of a race whose importance lay in days
+long gone. Then all was new to her, enthusiasm is easily caught, and Mary,
+eager to please her uncle, was glad to be of use. She found the work restful
+after the suspense of the past year. It sufficed for the present, and she asked
+no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She never forgot the lamplit evenings of that summer; the spacious room, the
+fluttering of the moths that entered by the open windows, the flop of the old
+dog as it sought a cooler spot, the whisper of leaves turned ceaselessly in the
+pursuit of a fact or a fancy. In the retrospect all became less a picture than
+a frame containing a past world, a fifteenth-century world of color and
+movement, of rooms stifled in hangings and tapestries, of lines of spear-points
+and rows of knights in surcoats, of tolling bells and praying monks, of
+travellers kneeling before wayside shrines, of strange changes of fortune. For
+says the chronicler:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I saw one of them, who was Duke of Exeter (but he concealed his name)
+following the Duke of Burgundy&rsquo;s train barefoot and bare-legged, begging
+his bread from door to door&mdash;this person was the next of the House of
+Lancaster and had married King Edward&rsquo;s sister.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="continue">
+And of dark sayings:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thys sayde Edward, Duke of Somerset, had herde a fantastyk prophecy that
+he sholde dy under a Castelle, wherefore he, as meche as in him was, he lete
+the King that he sholde not come in the Castelle of Wynsore, dredynge the sayde
+prophecy; but at Seint Albonys there was an hostelry havyng the sygne of a
+Castelle, and before that hostelry he was slayne.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;His badge was a Portcullis,&rdquo; her uncle said, when she read this to
+him, &ldquo;so it was natural that he should fall before a castle. He used the
+Beanstalk, too, and if his name had been John, a pretty thing might have been
+raised upon it. But you&rsquo;re divagating, my dear,&rdquo; he continued,
+smiling&mdash;and seldom had Mary seen him in a better
+humor&mdash;&ldquo;you&rsquo;re divagating, whereas I&mdash;I believe that I
+have solved the problem of the Feathers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Prince of Wales&rsquo;s? No!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe so. Of course there is no truth in the story which traces them
+to the blind King of Bohemia, killed at Crécy. His crest was two vulture
+wings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what of Arderne, who was the Prince&rsquo;s surgeon?&rdquo; Basset
+objected. &ldquo;He says clearly that the Prince gained it from the King of
+Bohemia.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not at all!&rdquo; John Audley replied arrogantly&mdash;at this moment
+he was an antiquary and nothing more. &ldquo;Where is the Arderne extract?
+Listen. &lsquo;Edward, son of Edward the King, used to wear such a feather, and
+gained that feather from the King of Bohemia, whom he slew at Crécy, and so
+assumed to himself that feather which is called an ostrich feather which the
+first-named most illustrious King, used to wear on his crest.&rsquo; Now who
+was the first-named most illustrious King, who before that used to wear
+it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The King of Bohemia.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rubbish! Arderne means his own King, &lsquo;Edward the King.&rsquo; He
+means that the Black Prince, after winning his spurs by his victory over the
+Bohemian, took his father&rsquo;s insignia. He had only been knighted six weeks
+and waited to wear his father&rsquo;s crest until he had earned it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By Jove, sir!&rdquo; Basset exclaimed, &ldquo;I believe you are
+right!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course I am! The evidence is all that way. The Black Prince&rsquo;s
+brothers wore it; surely not because their brother had done something, but
+because it was their father&rsquo;s crest, probably derived from their mother,
+Philippa of Hainault? If you will look in the inventory of jewels made on the
+usurpation of Henry the Fourth you will see this item, &lsquo;A collar of the
+livery of the Queen, on whom God have mercy, with an ostrich.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that,&rdquo; Basset interposed, &ldquo;was Queen Anne of
+Bohemia&mdash;she died seven years before. There you get Bohemia again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Compare this other entry,&rdquo; replied the antiquary, unmoved:
+&ldquo;&lsquo;A collar of the livery of Queen Anne, of branches of
+rosemary.&rsquo; Now either Queen Anne of Bohemia had two liveries&mdash;which
+is unlikely&mdash;or the inventory made by order of Henry IV. quotes verbatim
+from lists made during the lifetime of Queen Anne; if this be the case, the
+last deceased Queen, on whom God have mercy, would be Philippa of Hainault; and
+we have here a clear statement that her livery was an ostrich, of which ostrich
+her husband wore a feather on his crest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset clapped his hands. Mary beat applause on the table.
+&ldquo;Hurrah!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Audley for ever!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Audley,&rdquo; Basset said, &ldquo;Toft shall bring in hot water,
+and we will have punch!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Audley!&rdquo; her uncle exclaimed, with a wrinkling nose.
+&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you call her Mary? And why, child, don&rsquo;t you call
+him Peter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary curtseyed. &ldquo;Why not, my lord?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Peter it shall
+be&mdash;Peter who keeps the keys that you discover!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Peter laughed. But he saw that she used his name without a blush or a
+tremor, whereas he knew that if he could force his lips to frame her name, the
+word would betray him. For by this time, from his seat at his remote table, and
+from the ambush of his book, he had watched her too often for his peace, and
+too closely not to know that she was indifferent to him. He knew that at the
+best she felt a liking for him, the growth of habit, and tinged, he feared,
+with contempt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was so far right that there were three persons in the house who had a larger
+share of the girl&rsquo;s thoughts than he had. The first was John Audley. He
+puzzled her. There were times when she could not doubt his affection, times
+when he seemed all that she could desire, kind, good-humored, frank, engaged
+with the simplicity of a child in innocent pursuits, and without one thought
+beyond them. But touch a certain spot, approach with steps ever so delicate a
+certain subject&mdash;Lord Audley and his title&mdash;and his manner changed,
+the very man changed, he became secretive, suspicious, menacing. Nor, however
+quickly she might withdraw from the danger-line, could the harm be undone at
+once. He would remain for hours gloomy and thoughtful, would eye her covertly
+and with suspicion, would sit silent through meals, and at times mutter to
+himself. More rarely he would turn on her with a face which rage made inhuman,
+a face that she did not know, and with a shaking hand he would bid her
+go&mdash;go, and leave the room!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first time that this happened she feared that he might follow up his words
+by sending her away. But nothing ensued, then or later. For a while after each
+outburst he would appear ill at ease. He would avoid her eyes, and look away
+from her in a manner almost as unpleasant as his violence; later, in a
+shamefaced way, he would tell her that she must not excite him, she must not
+excite him, it was bad for him. And the man-servant meeting her in the hall,
+would take the liberty of giving her the same advice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft, indeed, was the second who puzzled her. He was civil, with the civility
+of the trained servant, but always there was in his manner a reserve. And she
+fancied that he watched her. If she left the house and glanced back she was
+certain to see his face at a window, or his figure in a doorway. Within doors
+it was the same. He slept out, living with his wife in the kitchen wing, which
+had a separate entrance from the courtyard. But he was everywhere at all hours.
+Even his master appeared uneasy in his presence, and either broke off what he
+was saying when the man entered, or continued the talk on another note. More
+rarely he turned on Toft and without rhyme or reason would ask him harshly what
+he wanted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The third person to share Mary&rsquo;s thoughts, but after a more pleasant
+fashion, was Toft&rsquo;s daughter, Etruria. &ldquo;I hope you will like her,
+my dear,&rdquo; John Audley had said. &ldquo;She will give you such attendance
+as you require, and will share the south wing with you at night. The two
+bedrooms there are on a separate staircase. I sleep above the library in this
+wing, and Peter in the tower room&mdash;we have our own staircase. I have
+brought her into the house because I thought you might not like to sleep alone
+in that wing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary had thanked him, and had said how much she liked the girl. And she had
+liked her, but for a time she had not understood her. Etruria was all that was
+good and almost all that was beautiful. She was simple, kindly, helpful, having
+the wide low brow, the placid eyes, and perfect complexion of a Quaker
+girl&mdash;and to add to these attractions she was finely shaped, though rather
+plump than slender; and she was incredibly neat. Nor could any Quaker girl have
+been more gentle or more demure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she might have had no tongue, she was so loth to use it; and a hundred
+times Mary wondered what was behind that reticence. Sometimes she thought that
+the girl was merely stupid. Sometimes she yoked her with her father in the
+suspicions she entertained of him. More often, moved by the girl&rsquo;s meek
+eyes, she felt only a vague irritation. She was herself calm by nature, and
+reserved by training, the last to gossip with a servant, even with one whose
+refinement appeared innate. But Etruria&rsquo;s dumbness was beyond her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day in a research which she was making she fancied that she had hit on a
+discovery. It happened that Etruria came into the room at the moment, and in
+the fulness of her heart Mary told her of it. &ldquo;Etruria,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve made a discovery all by myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Something that no one has known for hundreds of years! Think of
+that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Provoked, Mary took a new line. &ldquo;Etruria,&rdquo; she asked, &ldquo;are
+you happy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl did not answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you hear me? I asked if you were happy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am content, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not ask that. Are you happy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then, moved on her side, perhaps, by an impulse towards confidence, Etruria
+yielded. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think that we can any of us be happy,
+Miss,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;with so much sorrow about us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You strange girl!&rdquo; Mary cried, taken aback. &ldquo;What do you
+mean?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Etruria was silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; Mary insisted. &ldquo;You must tell me what you
+mean.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Miss,&rdquo; the girl answered reluctantly, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sad
+and loth to think of all the suffering in the world. It&rsquo;s natural that
+you should not think of it, but I&rsquo;m of the people, and I&rsquo;m sad for
+them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Balaam when the ass spoke was scarcely more surprised than Mary.
+&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl pointed to the open window. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve all we could ask,
+Miss&mdash;light and air and birds&rsquo; songs and sunshine. We&rsquo;ve all
+we need, and more. But I come of those who have neither light nor air, nor
+songs nor sunshine, who&rsquo;ve no milk for children nor food for mothers!
+Who, if they&rsquo;ve work, work every hour of the day in dust and noise and
+heat. Who are half clemmed from year&rsquo;s end to year&rsquo;s end, and see
+no close to it, no hope, no finish but the pauper&rsquo;s deals! It&rsquo;s for
+them I&rsquo;m sad, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Etruria!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve no teachers and no time to care,&rdquo; Etruria continued
+in desperate earnest now that the floodgates were raised. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re
+just tools to make money, and, like the tools, they wear out and are cast
+aside! For there are always more to do their work, to begin where they began,
+and to be worn out as they were worn out!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; Mary cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria was silent, but two large tears rolled down her face. And Mary
+marvelled. So this mild, patient girl, going about her daily tasks, could
+think, could feel, could speak, and upon a plane so high that the listener was
+sensible of humiliation as well as surprise! For a moment this was the only
+effect made upon her. Then reflection did its part&mdash;and memory. She
+recalled that glimpse of the under-world which she had had on her journey from
+London. She remembered the noisome alleys, the cinder wastes, the men toiling
+half-naked at the furnaces, the pinched faces of the women; and she remembered
+also the account which Lord Audley had given her of the fierce contest between
+town and country, plough and forge, land-lord and cotton-lord, which had struck
+her so much at the time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the charms of her new life, in her new interests, these things had faded
+from her mind. They recurred now, and she did not again ask Etruria what she
+meant. &ldquo;Is it as bad as that?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not as bad as it has been,&rdquo; Etruria answered. &ldquo;Three
+years ago there were hundreds of thousands out of work. There are thousands,
+scores of thousands, still; and thousands have no food but what&rsquo;s given
+them. And charity is bitter to many,&rdquo; she added, &ldquo;and the poorhouse
+is bitter to all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what has caused things to be so bad?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Some say one thing and some another. But most that machines lower wages,
+Miss, and the bread-tax raises food.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; Mary said. And she looked more closely at the girl who knew
+so much that was at odds with her station.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Others,&rdquo; Etruria continued, a faint color in her cheeks,
+&ldquo;think that it is selfishness, that every one is for himself and no one
+for one another, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; Mary said, seeing that she hesitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that if every one thought as much of his neighbor as of himself, or
+even of his neighbor as well as of himself, it would not be machines nor
+corn-taxes nor poorhouses would be strong enough to take the bread out of the
+children&rsquo;s mouths or the work out of men&rsquo;s hands!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary had an inspiration. &ldquo;Etruria,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;some one has
+been teaching you this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl blushed. &ldquo;Well, Miss,&rdquo; she said simply, &ldquo;it was at
+church I learned most of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At church? What church? Not Riddsley?&rdquo; For it was to Riddsley, to
+a service as dull as it was long, that they proceeded on Sundays in a chaise as
+slow as the reader.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Miss, not Riddsley,&rdquo; Etruria answered. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s at
+Brown Heath on the Chase. But it&rsquo;s not a real church, Miss. It&rsquo;s a
+room.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Mary replied. &ldquo;A meeting-house!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For some reason Etruria&rsquo;s eyes gleamed. &ldquo;No, Miss,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the curate at Riddsley has a service in a room at Brown Heath
+on Thursdays.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you go?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When I can, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea of attending church on a week-day was strange to Mary; as strange as
+to that generation was the zeal that passed beyond the common channel to
+refresh those whom migrations of population or changes in industry had left
+high and dry. The Tractarian movement was giving vigor not only to those who
+supported it, but to those who withstood it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you&rsquo;ve a sermon?&rdquo; Mary said. &ldquo;What was the text
+last Thursday, Etruria?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl hesitated, considered, then looked with appeal at her mistress. She
+clasped her hands. &ldquo;&lsquo;Two are better than one,&rsquo;&rdquo; she
+replied, &ldquo;&lsquo;because they have good reward for their labor. For if
+they fall, one will lift up his fellow, but woe to him that is alone when he
+falleth, for he hath not another to lift him up.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gracious, Etruria!&rdquo; Mary cried. &ldquo;Is that in the
+Bible?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what did your preacher say about it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That the employer and the workman were fellows, and if they worked
+together and each thought for the other they would have a good reward for their
+labor; that if one fell, it was the duty of the other to help him up. And
+again, that the land and the mill were fellows&mdash;the town and the
+country&mdash;and if they worked together in love they would have a good
+return, and if trouble came to one the other should bear with him. But all the
+same,&rdquo; Etruria added timidly, &ldquo;that the bread-taxes were
+wrong.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Etruria,&rdquo; Mary said. &ldquo;To-morrow is Thursday. I shall go with
+you to Brown Heath.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>CHAPTER X<br/>
+NEW THINGS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mary Audley, crossing the moor to a week-day service, was but one of many who
+in the &rsquo;forties were venturing on new courses. In religion there were
+those who fancied that by a return to primitive forms they might recapture the
+primitive fervor; and those again who, like the curate whom Mary was going to
+hear, were bent on pursuing the beaten path into new places. Some thought that
+they had found a panacea for the evils of the day in education, and put their
+faith in workmen&rsquo;s institutes and night schools. Others were satisfied
+with philanthropy, and proclaimed that infants of seven ought not to toil for
+their living, that coal-pits were not fit places for women, and that what paid
+was not the only standard of life. A few dreamt of a new England in which
+gentle and simple were to mix on new-old terms; and a multitude, shrewd and
+hard-headed, believed in the Corn Law League, whose speakers travelled from
+Manchester to carry the claims of cheap bread to butter crosses and market
+towns, and there bearded the very landlord&rsquo;s agent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The truth was that the country was lying sick with new evils, and had perforce
+to find a cure, whether that cure lay in faith, or in the primer, or in the
+Golden Rule, or in Adam Smith. For two generations men had been quitting the
+field for the mill, the farm for the coal-pit. They had followed their work
+into towns built haphazard, that grew presently into cities. There, short of
+light, of air, of water, lacking decency, lacking even votes&mdash;for the
+Reform Bill, that was to give everything to everybody, had stopped at the
+masters&mdash;lacking everything but wages, they swarmed in numbers stupendous
+and alarming to the mind of that day. And then the wages failed. Machines
+pushed out hands, though
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+Tools were made, and born were hands,<br/>
+Every farmer understands.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+Machines lowered wages, machines glutted the markets. Men could get no work,
+masters could sell no goods. On the top of this came bad seasons and dear
+bread. Presently hundreds of thousands were living on public charity, long
+lists of masters were in the <i>Gazette</i>. In the gloomy cities of the North,
+masses of men heaved and moaned as the sea when the south-west wind falls upon
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All but the most thoughtless saw danger as well as unhappiness in this, and
+called on their gods. The Chartists proclaimed that safety lay in votes. The
+landed interest thought that a little more protection might mend matters. The
+Golden Rulers were for shorter hours. But the men who were the loudest and the
+most confident cried that cheap bread would mend all. The poor, they said,
+would have to eat and to spend. They would buy goods, the glut would cease. The
+wheels would turn again, there would be work and wages. The Golden Age would
+return. So preached the Manchester men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the meantime the doctors wrangled, and the patient grew a little, not much,
+better. And Mary Audley and Etruria walked across the moorland in the evening
+sunshine, with a light breeze stirring the bracken, and waves of shadow moving
+athwart the stretches of purple ling. They seemed very far, very remote from
+the struggle for life and work and bread that was passing in the world below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently they dropped into a fern-clad dingle and saw below them, beside the
+rivulet that made music in its bottom, a house or two. Descending farther, they
+came on more houses, crawling up the hill slopes, and on a few potato patches
+and ash-heaps. As the sides of the valley rose higher and closed in above the
+walkers cottages fell into lines on either side of the brook, and began to show
+one behind the other in rough terraces, with middens that slid from the upper
+to the lower level. The valley bent to the left, and quickly tall chimneys
+became visible, springing from a huddle of mean roofs through which no other
+building of size, no tower, no steeple, rose to break the ugly sameness. This
+was Brown Heath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a rough place,&rdquo; Etruria said as they picked their way.
+&ldquo;But don&rsquo;t be afraid, Miss. I&rsquo;m often passing, and they know
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still it was a rough place. The roadway was a cinder-track, and from the alleys
+and lanes above it open drains wormed their way across the path and into the
+stream, long grown foul. The air was laden with smoke, coal dust lay
+everywhere; the most cleanly must have despaired. Men seated, pipe in mouth, on
+low walls, watched the two go by&mdash;not without some rude banter; frowsy
+women crouching on door-steps and nursing starveling babes raised sullen faces.
+Lads in clogs made way for them unwillingly. In one place a crowd seethed from
+a side street and, shouting and struggling, overflowed the roadway before them
+and threatened to bar their path.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a dog-fight,&rdquo; Etruria said. &ldquo;They are rare and
+fond of them, Miss. We&rsquo;d best get by quickly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They passed in safety, passed, too, a brawl between two colliers, the air about
+them thick with oaths, passed a third eddy round two women fighting before a
+public-house. &ldquo;The chaps are none so gentle,&rdquo; Etruria said, falling
+unconsciously into a commoner way of speaking. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re all for
+fighting, dogs or men, and after dark I&rsquo;m not saying we&rsquo;d be safe.
+But we&rsquo;ll be over the moor by dusk, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They came, as she spoke, to a triangular space, sloping with the hill, skirted
+by houses, and crossed by an open sewer. It was dreary and cinder-covered, but
+five publics looked upon it and marked it for the centre of Brown Heath.
+Etruria crossed the triangle to a building a little cleaner than its neighbors;
+it was the warehouse, she told her mistress, of a sack-maker who had failed.
+She entered, and her companion followed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary found herself in a bare barn-like room, having two windows set high in the
+walls, the light from which fell coldly on a dozen benches ranged one behind
+the other, but covering only a portion of the floor. On these were seated, when
+they entered, about twenty persons, mainly women, but including three or four
+men of the miner class. No attempt had been made to alter the character of the
+place, and of formality there was as little. The two had barely seated
+themselves before a lean young man, with a long pale face and large nose, rose
+from the front bench, and standing before the little congregation, opened his
+book. He wore shabby black, but neither surplice nor gown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The service lasted perhaps twenty minutes, and Mary was not much moved by it.
+The young man&rsquo;s voice was weak, the man himself looked under-fed. She
+noticed, however, that as the service went on the number in the room grew, and
+when it closed she found that all the seats were filled, and that there were
+even a few men&mdash;some of them colliers fresh from the pit&mdash;standing at
+the back. Remembering the odd text that the clergyman had given out the week
+before, she wondered what he would choose to-day, and, faintly amused, she
+stole a glance at her companion. But Etruria&rsquo;s rapt face was a reproach
+to her levity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young clergyman pushed back the hair from his forehead. His posture was
+ungainly, he did not know what to do with his hands, he opened his mouth and
+shut it again. Then with an effort he began. &ldquo;My text, my friends,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;is but one word, &lsquo;Love.&rsquo; Where will you find it in
+the Scriptures? In every chapter and in every verse. In the dark days of old
+the order was &lsquo;Thou shalt live!&rsquo; The new order in these days is
+&lsquo;Thou shalt love!&rsquo;&rdquo; He began by describing the battle of life
+in the animal and vegetable world, where all things lived at the cost of
+others; and he admitted that the struggle for life, for bread, for work, as
+they saw it around them, resembled that struggle. In moving terms he enlarged
+on the distress, on the vast numbers lately living on the rates, on the
+thousands living, where even the rates fell short, on Government aid. He
+described the fireless homes, the foodless children, the strong men hopeless.
+And he showed them that others were stricken, that masters suffered, tradesmen
+were ruined, the country languished. &ldquo;The worst may be past,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;You are working half-time, you are living on half-wages, you are
+thankful that things are better.&rdquo; Then he told them that for his part he
+did not presume to say what was at the root of these unhappy conditions, but
+that of one thing he felt sure&mdash;and this was his message to
+them&mdash;that if the law of love, if the golden rule of preferring another to
+one&rsquo;s self, if the precept of that charity,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+Which seeketh not itself to please<br/>
+Nor for itself hath any care,<br/>
+But for another gives its ease,
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+if that were followed by all, then all
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+Might build a heaven in hell&rsquo;s despair.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+And in words more eloquent than he had yet compassed he begged them to set that
+example of brotherhood, in the certainty that the worst social evils, nay, all
+evils save pain and death, would be cured by the love that thought for others,
+that in the master preferred the servant&rsquo;s welfare and in the servant put
+first his master&rsquo;s interests. Finally he quoted his old text, &ldquo;Let
+two work together, for if they fall, one will lift up his fellow!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed as if he had done. He was silent; his hearers waited. Then with an
+effort he continued:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have a word to say about something which fell from me in this place
+last week. While I did not venture, unskilled as I am, to say where lies the
+cause of our distress, I did say that I found it hard to believe that the
+system which taxes the bread you earn in the sweat of your brow, which takes a
+disproportionate part from the scanty crust of the widow and from the food of
+the child, was in accordance with the law of love. I repeat that now; and
+because I have been told that I dare not say in the pulpit of Riddsley church
+what I say here, I shall on the first opportunity state my belief there. You
+may ask why I have not done so; my answer is, that I am there the
+representative of another, whereas in this voluntary work I am myself more
+responsible. In saying that I ask you to judge me, as we should judge all, with
+that charity which believeth no evil.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later Mary, deeply moved, was passing out with the crowd. As she
+stood, caught in the press by the door, an old man in horn-rimmed glasses, who
+was waiting there, held out his hand. She was going to take it, when she saw
+that it was not meant for her, but for the young clergyman who was following at
+her heels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Master, dunno you do it,&rdquo; the old fellow growled.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll break your pick, and naught gotten. Naught gotten,
+that&rsquo;ll serve. Your gaffer&rsquo;ll not abide it, and you&rsquo;ll lose
+your job!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you have me take it,&rdquo; the young man answered, &ldquo;and not
+do the work, Cluff? Never fear for me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dunno you be rash, master!&rdquo; the other rejoined, clutching his
+sleeve and detaining him. &ldquo;You be sure&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary heard no more. She felt Etruria&rsquo;s hand pressing her arm.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;d best lose no time,&rdquo; the girl whispered. And she drew
+Mary onward, across the triangle and into the lane which led to the moor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are we so late?&rdquo; The sun had set, but it was still light.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;d best hurry,&rdquo; Etruria persisted, increasing her speed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary looked at her and saw that she was troubled, but at the moment she set
+this down to the influence of the sermon, and her own mind went back to it.
+&ldquo;I am glad you brought me, Etruria,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I shall
+always be glad that I came.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;d best be getting home now,&rdquo; was Etruria&rsquo;s only
+answer, but this time Mary&rsquo;s ear caught the sound of footsteps behind
+them, and she turned. The young clergyman was hastening after them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Etruria!&rdquo; he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment Mary fancied that Etruria did not hear. The girl hurried on. But
+Mary saw no occasion to run away, and she halted. Then Etruria, with a gesture
+of despair, stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is no use,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man came up with them. His head was bare, his hat was in his hand,
+his long plain face was aglow with the haste he had made. He had heard
+Etruria&rsquo;s words, and &ldquo;It is of every use,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is&mdash;my mistress,&rdquo; Etruria said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Audley?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am Miss Audley,&rdquo; Mary announced, wondering much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought that it might be so,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I have waited
+for such an occasion. I am Mr. Colet, the curate at Riddsley. Etruria and I
+love one another,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;We are going to be married, if
+ever my means allow me to marry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, we are not,&rdquo; the girl rejoined sharply. &ldquo;Mr. Colet knows
+my mind,&rdquo; she continued, her eyes turned away. &ldquo;I have told him
+many times that I am a servant, the daughter of a servant, in a different class
+from his, and I&rsquo;ll never be the one to ruin him and be a disgrace to him!
+I&rsquo;ll never marry him! Never!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I have told Etruria,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;that I will never
+take that answer. We love one another. It is nothing to me that she is a
+servant. My work is to serve. I am as poor as it is possible to be, with as
+poor prospects as it is possible to have. I shall never be anything but what I
+am, and I shall think myself rich when I have a hundred pounds a year. I who
+have so little, who look for so little, am I to give up this happiness because
+Etruria has less? I, too, say, Never!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary, standing between them, did not know what to answer, and it was Etruria
+who replied. &ldquo;It is useless,&rdquo; she said. And then, in a tone of
+honest scorn, &ldquo;Who ever heard,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;of a clergyman
+who married a servant? Or who ever heard of good coming of it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary had an inspiration. &ldquo;Does Etruria&rsquo;s father know?&rdquo; she
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He knows and approves,&rdquo; the young man replied, his eyes bent
+fondly on his mistress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary too looked at Etruria&mdash;beautiful, patient, a servant, loved. And she
+wondered. All these weeks she had been rubbing elbows with this romance, and
+she had not discerned it! Now, while her sympathies flew to the lover&rsquo;s
+side, her prejudices rose up against him. They echoed Etruria&rsquo;s words,
+&ldquo;Who ever heard of good coming of such a match?&rdquo; The days had been,
+as Mary knew, when the chaplain had married the lady&rsquo;s maid. But those
+days were gone. Meantime the man waited, and she did not know what to say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;After all,&rdquo; she said at last, &ldquo;it is for Etruria to
+decide.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, it is for us both to decide,&rdquo; he replied. And then, as if he
+thought that he had sufficiently stated his case, &ldquo;I ask your pardon,
+Miss Audley, for intruding,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;I am keeping you, and
+as I am going your way that is needless. I have had a message from a sick
+woman, and I am on my way to see her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took permission for granted, and though Etruria&rsquo;s very shoulders
+forbade him, he moved on beside them. &ldquo;Conditions are better here than in
+many places,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but in this village you would see much to
+sadden you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have seen enough,&rdquo; Mary answered, &ldquo;to know that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ten years ago there was not a house here. Now there is a population of
+two thousand, no church, no school, no gentry, no one of the better class.
+There is a kind of club, a centre of wild talk; better that, perhaps, than
+apathy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it in Riddsley parish?&rdquo; Mary asked. They were nearly clear of
+the houses, and the slopes of the hill, pale green in the peaceful evening
+light, began to rise on either side. It was growing dusk, and from the moorland
+above came the shrill cries of plovers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, it is in Riddsley parish,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;but many miles
+from the town, and as aloof from it&mdash;Riddsley is purely
+agricultural&mdash;as black from white. In such places as this&mdash;and there
+are many of them in Staffordshire, as raw, as rough, and as new&mdash;there is
+work for plain men and plain women. In these swarming hives there is no room
+for any refinement but true refinement. And the Church must learn to do her
+work with plain tools, or the work will pass into other hands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may cut cheese with an onion knife,&rdquo; Etruria said coldly.
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know that people like it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know nothing better than onions in the right place,&rdquo; he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s not in cheese,&rdquo; she rejoined, to Mary&rsquo;s
+amusement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The poor get little cheese,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and the main thing is
+to cut their bread for them. But here I must leave you. My errand is to that
+cottage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pointed to a solitary house, standing a few score paces above the road on
+the hillside. Mary shook hands with him, but Etruria turned her shoulder
+resolutely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-bye, Etruria,&rdquo; he said. And then to Mary, &ldquo;I hope that
+I have made a friend?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you have,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I am sure that you deserve
+one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He colored, raised his hat, and turned away, and the two went on, without
+looking back; darkness was coming apace, and they were still two miles from
+home. Mary kept silence, prudently considering how she should deal with the
+matter, and what she should say to her companion. As it fell out, events
+removed her difficulty. They had not gone more than two hundred yards, and were
+still some way below the level of the Chase, when a cry reached them. It came
+out of the dusk behind them, and might have been the call of a curlew on the
+moor. But first one, and then the other stood. They turned, and listened, and
+suddenly Etruria, more anxious or sharper of eye than her mistress, uttered a
+cry and broke away at a run across the sloping turf towards the solitary
+cottage. Alarmed, Mary looked intently in that direction, and made out three or
+four figures struggling before the door of the house. She guessed then that the
+clergyman was one of them, and that the cry had come from him, and without a
+thought for herself she set off, running after Etruria as fast as she could.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Twice Etruria screamed as she ran, and Mary echoed the cry. She saw that the
+man was defending himself against the onset of three or four&mdash;she could
+hear the clatter of sticks on one another. Then she trod on her skirt and fell.
+When she had got, breathless, to her feet again, the clergyman was down and the
+men appeared to be raining blows on him. Etruria shrieked once more and the
+next moment was lost amid the moving figures, the brandished sticks, the
+struggle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary ran on desperately. She caught sight of the girl on her knees over the
+fallen man, she saw her fend off more than one blow, she heard more than one
+blow fall with a sickening thud. She came up to them. With passion that drove
+out fear, she seized the arm of the nearest and dragged him back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You coward!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You coward! I am Miss Audley! Do
+you hear! Leave him! Leave him, I say!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her appearance, the surprise, checked the man; her fearlessness, perhaps her
+name, gave the others pause. They retreated a step. The man she had grasped
+shook himself free, but did not attempt to strike her. &ldquo;Oh, d&mdash;n the
+screech-owls!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;The place is alive with them! Hold your
+noise, you fools! We&rsquo;ll have the parish on us!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am Miss Audley!&rdquo; Mary repeated, and in her indignation she
+advanced on him. &ldquo;How dare you?&rdquo; Etruria, still on her knees,
+continued to shriek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re like to get a wipe over the head, dang you!&rdquo; the man
+growled, &ldquo;whoever you be! Go to&mdash;&mdash; and mind your own brats!
+He&rsquo;ll know better now than to preach against them as he gets his living
+by! You be gone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Mary stood her ground. She declared afterwards that, brutally as the man
+spoke, the fight had gone out of him. Etruria, on the contrary, maintained
+that, finding only women before them, the ruffians would have murdered them.
+Fortunately, while the event hung in the balance, &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+some one shouted from the road below. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter
+there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Murder!&rdquo; cried Etruria shrilly. &ldquo;Help! Help!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Help!&rdquo; cried Mary. She still kept her face to the men, but for the
+first time she began to know fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Footsteps thudded softly on the turf, figures came into view, climbing the
+slope. It needed no more. With a volley of oaths the assailants turned tail and
+made off. In a trice they were round the corner of the house and lost in the
+dusk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later two men, equally out of breath and each carrying a gun, reached
+the spot. &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said the bigger of the two, &ldquo;What is
+it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke as if he had not come very willingly, but Mary did not notice this.
+The crisis over, her knees shook, she could barely stand, she could not speak.
+She pointed to the fallen man, over whom Etruria still crouched, her hair
+dragged down about her shoulders, her neckband torn, a ghastly blotch on her
+white cheek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is he dead?&rdquo; the new-comer asked in a different tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, dead!&rdquo; Etruria echoed. &ldquo;Dead!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortunately the curate gave the lie to the word. He groaned, moved, with an
+effort he raised himself on his elbow. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m&mdash;all right!&rdquo;
+he gasped. &ldquo;All right!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria sprang to her feet. She stepped back as if the ground had opened before
+her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not&mdash;hurt,&rdquo; Colet added weakly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was evident that he was hurt, even if no bones were broken. When they
+came to lift him he could not stand, and he seemed to be uncertain where he
+was. After watching him a moment, &ldquo;He should see a doctor,&rdquo; said
+the man who had come up so opportunely. &ldquo;Petch,&rdquo; he continued,
+addressing his companion, who wore a gamekeeper&rsquo;s dress, &ldquo;we must
+carry him to the trap and get him down to Brown Heath. Who is he, do you know?
+He looks like a parson.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s Mr. Colet of Riddsley,&rdquo; Mary said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man turned and looked at her. &ldquo;Hallo!&rdquo; he exclaimed. And then
+in the same tone of surprise, &ldquo;Miss Audley!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;At
+this time of night?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary collected herself with an effort. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and
+very fortunately, for if we had not been here the men would have murdered him.
+As it is, you share the credit of saving him, Lord Audley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The credit of saving you is a good deal more to me,&rdquo; he answered
+gallantly. &ldquo;I did not think that we should meet after this
+fashion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>CHAPTER XI<br/>
+TACT AND TEMPER</h2>
+
+<p>
+He looked at Etruria, and Mary explained who she was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid that she is hurt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl&rsquo;s temple was bruised and there was blood on her cheek; more than
+one of the blows aimed at her lover had fallen on her. But she said eagerly
+that it was &ldquo;Nothing! Nothing!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you sure, Etruria?&rdquo; Mary asked with concern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is nothing, indeed, Miss,&rdquo; the girl repeated. She was trying
+with shaking fingers to put up her hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then the sooner,&rdquo; Audley rejoined, &ldquo;we get this&mdash;this
+gentleman to my dogcart, the better. Take his other arm, Petch. Miss Audley,
+can you carry my gun?&mdash;it is not loaded. And you,&rdquo; he continued to
+Etruria, &ldquo;if you are able, take Petch&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They took the guns, and the little procession wound down the path to the road,
+where they found a dogcart awaiting them, and, peering from the cart, two
+setters, whining and fretting. The dogs were driven under the seat, and the
+clergyman, still muttering that he was all right, was lifted in. &ldquo;Steady
+him, Petch,&rdquo; Audley said; &ldquo;and do you drive slowly,&rdquo; he
+added, to the other man. &ldquo;You will be at the surgeon&rsquo;s at Brown
+Heath in twenty minutes. Stay with him, Petch, and send the cart back for
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But are you not going?&rdquo; Mary cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not going to leave you in the dark with only your maid,&rdquo; he
+answered with severity. &ldquo;One adventure a night is enough, Miss
+Audley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She murmured a word or two, but submitted. The struggle had shaken her; she
+could still see the men&rsquo;s savage faces, still hear the thud of their
+blows. And she and Etruria had nearly a mile to go before they reached the
+park.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they were fairly started, &ldquo;How did it happen?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary told the story, but said no word of Etruria&rsquo;s romance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you were not with him when they set on him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, we had parted.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you went back?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course we did!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was imprudent,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;very imprudent. If we had not
+come up at that moment you might have been murdered.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if we had not gone back, Mr. Colet might have been murdered!&rdquo;
+she answered. &ldquo;What he had done to offend them&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I can tell you that. He&rsquo;s the curate at Riddsley,
+isn&rsquo;t he? Who&rsquo;s been preaching up cheap bread and preaching down
+the farmers?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps so,&rdquo; Mary answered. &ldquo;He may be. But is he to be
+murdered for that? From your tone one might think so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he replied slowly, &ldquo;he is not to be murdered for it.
+But whether he is wise to preach cheap bread to starving men, whether he is
+wise to tell them that they would have it but for this man or that man, this
+class or that class&mdash;is another matter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was not convinced&mdash;the sermon had keyed her thoughts to a high pitch.
+But he spoke reasonably, and he had the knack of speaking with authority, and
+she said no more. And on his side he had no wish to quarrel. He had come down
+to Riddsley partly to shoot, partly to look into the political situation, but a
+little&mdash;there was no denying it&mdash;to learn how Mary Audley fared with
+her uncle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For he had thought much of her since they had parted, and much of the fact that
+she was John Audley&rsquo;s heir. Her beauty, her spirit, her youth, had caught
+his fancy. He had looked forward to renewing his acquaintance with her, and he
+was in no mood, now he saw her, to spoil their meeting by a quarrel. He thought
+Colet, whose doings had been reported to him, a troublesome, pestilent fellow,
+and he was not sorry that he had got his head broken. But he need not tell her
+that. Circumstances had favored him in bringing them together and giving him
+the beau rôle, and he was not going to cross his luck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, &ldquo;Fire is an excellent thing of course,&rdquo; he continued with an
+air of moderation, &ldquo;but, believe me, it&rsquo;s not safe amid young trees
+in a wind. Whatever your views, to express them in all companies may be honest,
+but is not wise. I have no doubt that a parson is tried. He sees the trouble.
+He is not always the best judge of the remedy. However, enough of that. We
+shall agree at least in this, that our meetings are opportune?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Most opportune,&rdquo; Mary answered. &ldquo;And from my point of view
+very fortunate!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There really is a sort of fate in it. What but fate could have brought
+about our meeting at the Hôtel Lambert? What but fate could have drawn us to
+the same spot on the Chase to-night?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a tone in his voice that brought the blood to her cheek and warned
+her to keep to the surface of things. &ldquo;The chance that men call
+fate,&rdquo; she answered lightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or the fate that fools call chance,&rdquo; he urged, half in jest, half
+in earnest. &ldquo;We have met by chance once, and once again&mdash;with
+results! The third time&mdash;what will the third time bring? I wonder.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a fright like this, I hope!&rdquo; Mary answered, remaining
+cheerfully matter of fact. &ldquo;Or if it does,&rdquo; with a flash of
+laughter, &ldquo;I trust that the next time you will come up a few moments
+earlier!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ungrateful!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I?&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;But it was Etruria who was in
+danger!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the peril had left her with a sense of exhilaration, of lightness, of ease.
+She was pleased to feel that she could hold her own with him, relieved that she
+was not afraid of him. And she was glad&mdash;she was certainly glad&mdash;to
+see him again. If he were inclined to make the most of his advantage, well, a
+little gallantry was quite in the picture; she was not deceived, and she was
+not offended. While he on his side, as they walked over the moor, thought of
+her as a clever little witch who knew her value and could keep her head; and he
+liked her none the less for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they came at last to the gap in the wall that divided the Chase from the
+park, a figure, dimly outlined, stood in the breach waiting for them. &ldquo;Is
+that you?&rdquo; a voice asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The voice was Basset&rsquo;s, and Mary&rsquo;s spirits sank. She felt that the
+meeting was ill-timed. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unluckily, Peter was one of those whose anxiety takes an irritable form.
+&ldquo;What in the world has happened?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t
+believe that you were still out. It&rsquo;s really not safe. Hallo!&rdquo;
+breaking off and speaking in a different tone, &ldquo;is some one with
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Mary said. They were within touch now and could see one
+another. &ldquo;We have had an adventure. Lord Audley was passing, he came to
+our rescue, and has very kindly seen us home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord Audley!&rdquo; Basset was taken by surprise and his tone was much
+as if he had said, &ldquo;The devil!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By good fortune, Basset,&rdquo; Audley replied. He may have smiled in
+the darkness&mdash;we cannot say. &ldquo;I was returning from shooting, heard
+cries for help, and found Miss Audley playing the knight-errant, encircled by
+prostrate bodies!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset could not frame a word, so great was his surprise, so overwhelming his
+chagrin. Was this man to spring up at every turn? To cross him on every
+occasion? To put him in the background perpetually? To intrude even on the
+peace and fellowship of the Gatehouse? It was intolerable!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he did not answer, &ldquo;It was not I who was the knight-errant,&rdquo;
+Mary said. &ldquo;It was Etruria. She is a little the worse for it, I fear, and
+the sooner she is in bed the better. As Mr. Basset is here,&rdquo; she
+continued, turning to Audley, &ldquo;we must not take you farther. Your cart is
+no doubt waiting for you. But you will allow us to thank you again. We are most
+grateful to you&mdash;both Etruria and I.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She spoke more warmly, perhaps she let her hand rest longer in his, to make up
+for Basset&rsquo;s silence. For that silence provoked her. She had gathered
+from many things that Basset did not love the other; but to stand mute and
+churlish on such an occasion, and find no word of acknowledgment&mdash;this was
+too bad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Basset knew, he too knew that he ought to thank Audley. But the black dog
+was on his back, and while he hesitated, the other made his adieux. He said a
+pleasant word to Etruria, tossed a careless &ldquo;Good-night&rdquo; to the
+other man, turned away, and was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For awhile the three who remained trudged homewards in silence. Then,
+&ldquo;What happened to you?&rdquo; Basset asked grudgingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vexed and indignant, Mary told the story.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not know that you knew Mr. Colet!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When a man is being murdered,&rdquo; she retorted, &ldquo;one does not
+wait for an introduction.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a good fellow, but jealousy was hot within him, and he could not bridle
+his tongue. &ldquo;Oh, but murdered?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that
+rather absurd? Who would murder Colet?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary did not deign to reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Baffled, he sought for another opening. &ldquo;I do not know what your uncle
+will say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because we rescued Mr. Colet? And perhaps saved his life?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or because Lord Audley rescued us?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He will certainly not be pleased to hear that,&rdquo; he retorted
+maliciously. He knew that he was misbehaving, but he could not refrain.
+&ldquo;If you take my advice you will not mention it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall tell him the moment I reach the house,&rdquo; she declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will be very unwise if you do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall be honest at least! For the rest I would rather not discuss the
+matter, Mr. Basset. I am a good deal shaken by what we have gone through, and I
+am very tired.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He muttered humbly that he was sorry&mdash;that he only meant&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Please leave it there,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Enough has been
+said.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Too late the anger and the spirit died out of the unlucky man, and he would
+have grovelled before her, he would have done anything to earn his pardon. But
+Etruria&rsquo;s presence tied his tongue, and gloomy and wretched&mdash;oh, why
+had he not gone farther to meet them, why had he not been the one to rescue
+her?&mdash;he walked on beside them, cursing his unhappy temper. It was dark,
+the tired girls lagged, Etruria hung heavily on her mistress&rsquo;s arm; he
+longed to help them. But he did not dare to offer. He knew too well that Mary
+would reject the offer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria had her own dreams, and in spite of an aching head was happy. But to
+Mary, fatigued by the walk, and vexed by Basset&rsquo;s conduct, the way seemed
+endless. At last the house loomed dark above them, their steps rang hard on the
+flagged court. The outer door stood ajar, and entering, they found a lamp
+burning in the hall; but the silence which prevailed, above and below, struck a
+chill. Silence and an open door go ill together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria at Mary&rsquo;s bidding went up at once to her room. Basset called
+angrily for Toft. But no Toft appeared, and Mary, resentment still hot in her,
+opened the door of the library and went in to see her uncle. She felt that the
+sooner her story was told the better.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the library was empty. Lights burned on the several tables, the wood fire
+smouldered on the hearth, the tall clock ticked in the silence, the old hound
+flopped his tail. But John Audley was not there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where is my uncle?&rdquo; she asked, as she stood in the open doorway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset looked over her shoulder. He saw that the room was empty. &ldquo;He may
+have gone to look for us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Toft?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Toft, too, I suppose.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why should my uncle go to look for us?&rdquo; she asked, aghast at
+the thought&mdash;he troubled himself so little for others, he lived so
+completely his own life!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He might,&rdquo; Basset replied. He stood for a moment, thinking.
+Then&mdash;for the time they had forgotten their quarrel&mdash;&ldquo;You had
+better get something to eat and go to bed,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I will send
+Mrs. Toft to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had not the strength to resist. &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;Are you going to look for them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps Mrs. Toft will know where they are.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took her candle and went slowly up the narrow winding staircase that led to
+her room and to Etruria&rsquo;s. As she passed, stair by stair, the curving
+wainscot of dull wood which so many generations had rubbed, she carried with
+her the picture of Basset standing in thought in the middle of the hall, his
+eyes on the doorway that gaped on the night. Then a big man with a genial face
+usurped his place; and she smiled and sighed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later she went into Etruria&rsquo;s room to learn how she was, and
+caught the girl rising from her knees. &ldquo;Oh, Miss,&rdquo; she said,
+coloring as she met Mary&rsquo;s eyes, &ldquo;if we had not been there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet&mdash;you won&rsquo;t marry him, you foolish girl?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no, no!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Although you love him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Love him!&rdquo; Etruria murmured, her face burning. &ldquo;It is
+because I love him, Miss, that I will never, never marry him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary wondered. &ldquo;And yet you love him?&rdquo; she said, raising the candle
+so that its light fell on the other&rsquo;s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria looked this way and that way, but there was no escape. In a very small
+voice she said,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0" style="text-indent: -6pt">
+&ldquo;Love seeketh not itself to please<br/>
+Nor for itself hath any care!&rdquo;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+She covered her hot cheeks with her hands. But Mary took away the hands and
+kissed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Miss!&rdquo; Etruria exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary went out then, but on the threshold of her own room she paused to snuff
+her candle. &ldquo;So that is love,&rdquo; she thought. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s very
+interesting, and&mdash;and rather beautiful!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>CHAPTER XII<br/>
+THE YEW WALK</h2>
+
+<p>
+Basset had been absent the greater part of the day, and returning at sunset had
+learned that Miss Audley had not come back from Brown Heath. The servant had
+hinted alarm&mdash;the Chase was lonely, the hour late; and Basset had hurried
+off without more, not doubting that John Audley was in the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now he was sure that John Audley had been abroad at the time, and he suspected
+that Toft had known it, and had kept it from him. He stood for a moment in
+thought, then he crossed the court to Toft&rsquo;s house. Mrs. Toft was cooking
+something savory in a bonnet before the fire, and the contrast between her warm
+cheerful kitchen and the stillness of the house from which he came struck him
+painfully. He told her that her daughter had received a blow on the head, and
+that Miss Audley needed supper&mdash;she had better attend to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft was a stout woman, set by a placid and even temper above small
+surprises. She looked at the clock, a fork in her hand. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t
+hurry it, Mr. Basset,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You may be Sir Robert Peel
+himself, but meat&rsquo;s your master and will have its time. A knock on the
+head?&rdquo; she continued, with a faint stirring of anxiety. &ldquo;You
+don&rsquo;t say so? Lor, Mr. Basset, who&rsquo;d go to touch Etruria?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better go and see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But where&rsquo;s Toft?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset&rsquo;s temper gave way at that. &ldquo;God knows!&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;He ought to be here&mdash;and he&rsquo;s not!&rdquo; He went out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft stared after him, and by and by she let down her skirt and prepared
+to go into the house. &ldquo;On the head?&rdquo; she ruminated. &ldquo;Well,
+&rsquo;Truria&rsquo;s a tidy lot of hair! And I will say this, if there&rsquo;s
+few points a man gives a woman, hair&rsquo;s one of them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Basset had struck across the court and taken in the darkness the
+track which led in the direction of the Great House. The breeze, light but of
+an autumn coldness, swept the upland, whispering through the dying fern, and
+rustling in the clumps of trees by which he steered his course. He listened
+more than once, hoping that he might hear approaching footsteps, but he heard
+none, and presently he came to the yew-trees that masked the entrance to the
+gardens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The trees formed a wall of blackness exceeding that of the darkest night, and
+Basset hesitated before he plunged into it. The growth of a century had long
+trespassed on the walk, a hundred and fifty yards long, which led through the
+yew-wood, and had been in its time a stately avenue trimmed to the neatness of
+a bowling green. Now it was little better than a tunnel, dark even at noon, and
+at night bristling with a hundred perils. Basset peered into the blackness,
+listened, hesitated. But he was honestly anxious on John Audley&rsquo;s
+account, and contenting himself with exclaiming that the man was mad, he began
+to grope his way along the path.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was no pleasant task. If he swerved from his course he stumbled over roots,
+branches swept his cheek, jagged points threatened his eyes, and more than once
+he found himself in the hedge. Half-way through the wood he came to a circular
+clearing, some twenty yards across; and here a glimmer of light enabled him to
+avoid the crumbling stone Butterfly that crouched on its mouldering base in the
+centre of the clearing&mdash;much as a spider crouches in its web. It seemed in
+that dim light to be the demon of this underworld, a monster, a thing of evil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same gleam, however, disclosed the opposite opening, and for another
+seventy yards he groped his way onward, longing to be clear of the stifling
+air, and the brooding fancies that dwelt in it, longing to plant his feet on
+something more solid than this carpet of rotting yew. At last he came to the
+tall, strait gate, wrought of old iron, that admitted to the pleasance. It was
+ajar. He passed through it, and with relief he felt the hard walk under his
+feet, the fresh air on his face. He crossed the walk, and stepping on to the
+neglected lawn, he halted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Great House loomed before him, a hundred yards away. The moon had not
+risen, but the brightness which goes before its rising lightened the sky behind
+the monstrous building. It outlined the roof but left the bulk in gloom. No
+light showed in any part, and it was only the watcher&rsquo;s memory that
+pictured the quaint casements of the north wing, or filled in the bald rows of
+unglazed windows, which made of the new portion a death-mask. In that north
+wing just eighty years before, in a room hung with old Cordovan leather, the
+fatal house-warming had been held. The duel had been fought at sunrise within a
+pace or two of the moss-grown Butterfly that Basset had passed; and through the
+gate of ironwork, wood-smelted and wrought with the arms of Audley, which had
+opened at his touch, they had carried the dead heir back to his father.
+Tradition had it that the servant who bore in the old lord&rsquo;s morning
+draught of cool ale had borne also the tragic news to his bedside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset remembered that the hinges of the gate, seldom as it was used, had not
+creaked, and he felt sure that he was on the right track. He scanned the dark
+house, and tried to sift from the soughing of the wind any sound that might
+inform him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently he moved forward and scrutinized with care the north wing, which
+abutted on the yew-wood. There lay between the two only a strip of formal
+garden, once set with rows of birds and beasts cut in yew. Time had turned
+these to monsters, huge, amorphous, menacing, amidst which rank grass rioted
+and elder pushed. Even in daylight it seemed as if the ancient trees stretched
+out arms to embrace and strangle the deserted house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the north wing remained as dark as the bulk of the house, and Basset
+uttered a sigh of relief. Ill-humor began to take the place of misgiving. He
+called himself a fool for his pains and anticipated with distaste a return
+through the yew-walk. However, the sooner he undertook the passage the sooner
+it would be over, and he was turning on his heel when somewhere between him and
+the old wing a stick snapped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under a foot, he fancied; and he waited. In two or three minutes the moon would
+rise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again he caught a faint sound. It resembled the stealthy tread of some one
+approaching from the north wing, and Basset, peering that way, was striving to
+probe the darkness, when a gleam of light shot across his eyes. He turned and
+saw in the main building a bright spark. It vanished. He waited to see it
+again, and while he waited a second stick snapped. This time the sound was
+behind him, and near the iron gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been outflanked, and he had now to choose which he would stalk, the
+footstep or the light. He chose the latter, the rather as while he stood with
+his eyes fixed on the house the upper edge of a rising moon peeped above the
+roof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stepped back to the gate, and in the shadow of the trees he waited. Two or
+three minutes passed. The moon rose clear of the roof, outlining the stately
+chimneys and gables and flooding with cold light the lower part of the lawn.
+With the rising of the moon the air grew more chilly. He shivered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length a dull sound reached him&mdash;the sound of a closing door or a
+shutter cast back. A minute later he heard the footsteps of some one moving
+along the walk towards him. The man trod with care, but once he stumbled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset advanced. &ldquo;Is that you, sir?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;D&mdash;n!&rdquo; John Audley replied out of the darkness. He halted,
+breathing quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say d&mdash;n, too!&rdquo; Basset replied. As a rule he was patient
+with the old man, but to-night his temper failed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other came on. &ldquo;Why did you follow me?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;What
+is the use? What is the use? If you are willing to help me, good! But if not,
+why do you follow me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To see that you don&rsquo;t come to harm,&rdquo; Basset retorted.
+&ldquo;As you certainly will one of these nights if you come here alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I haven&rsquo;t come to harm to-night! On the
+contrary&mdash;&mdash; But there, there, man, let us get back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The sooner the better,&rdquo; Basset replied. &ldquo;I nearly put out an
+eye as I came.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley laughed. &ldquo;Did you come through the yews in the dark?&rdquo;
+he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I brought a lantern.&rdquo; He removed as he spoke the cap of a
+small bull&rsquo;s-eye lantern and threw its light on the path.
+&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s the fool now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us get home,&rdquo; Basset snapped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley locked the iron gate behind them and they started. The light
+removed their worst difficulties and they reached the open park without mishap.
+But long before they gained the house the elder man&rsquo;s strength failed,
+and he was glad to lean on Basset&rsquo;s arm. On that a sense of weakness on
+the one side and of pity on the other closed their differences. &ldquo;After
+all,&rdquo; Audley said wearily, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what I should have
+done if you had not come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d have stayed there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that would have been&mdash;Heavens, what a pity that would have
+been!&rdquo; Audley paused and struck his stick on the ground. &ldquo;I must
+take care of myself, I must take care of myself! You don&rsquo;t know, Basset,
+what I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I don&rsquo;t want to know&mdash;here!&rdquo; Basset replied.
+&ldquo;When you are safe at home, you may tell me what you like.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the courtyard they came on Toft, who was looking out for them with a
+lantern. &ldquo;Thank God, you&rsquo;re safe, sir,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I was
+growing alarmed about you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where were you,&rdquo; Basset asked sharply, &ldquo;when I came
+in?&rdquo; John Audley was too tired to speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I had stepped out at the front to look for the master,&rdquo; Toft
+replied. &ldquo;I fancied that he had gone out that way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset did not believe him, but he could not refute the story. &ldquo;Well, get
+the brandy,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and bring it to the library. Mr. Audley has
+been out too long and is tired.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went into the library and Toft pulled off his master&rsquo;s boots and
+brought his slippers and the spirit-tray. That done, he lingered, and Basset
+thought that he was trying to divine from the old man&rsquo;s looks whether the
+journey had been fruitful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the end, however, the man had to go, and Audley leant forward to speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; Basset muttered. &ldquo;He is coming back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How do you know?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset raised his hand. The door opened. Toft came in. &ldquo;I forgot to take
+your boots, sir,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, take them now,&rdquo; his master replied peevishly. When the man
+had again withdrawn, &ldquo;How did you know?&rdquo; he asked, frowning at the
+fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I saw him go to take your boots&mdash;and leave them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley was silent for a time, then &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;he has
+been with me many years and I think he is faithful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To his own interests. He dogged you to-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So did you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, but I did not hide! And he did, and hid from me, too, and lied
+about it. How long he had been watching you, I cannot say, but if you think
+that you can break through all your habits, sir, and be missing for two hours
+at night and a man as shrewd as Toft suspect nothing, you are mistaken. Of
+course he wonders. The next time he thinks it over. The third time he follows
+you. Presently whatever you know he will know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Confound him!&rdquo; Audley turned to the table and jerked some brandy
+into a glass. Then, &ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t asked yet,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;what I&rsquo;ve done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I am to choose,&rdquo; Basset replied, &ldquo;I would rather not
+know. You know my views.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know that you didn&rsquo;t think I should do it? Well, I&rsquo;ve done
+it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean that&mdash;you&rsquo;ve found the evidence?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it likely?&rdquo; the other replied petulantly. &ldquo;No, but
+I&rsquo;ve been in the Muniment Room. It is fifty years since I heard my father
+describe its position, but I could have gone to it blindfold! I was a boy then,
+and the name&mdash;he was telling a story of the old lord&mdash;took my fancy.
+I listened. In time the thing faded, but one day when I was at the
+lawyer&rsquo;s and some one mentioned the Muniment Room, the story came back to
+me so clearly, that I could almost repeat my father&rsquo;s words.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you&rsquo;ve been in the room?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been in it. Why not? A door two inches thick and studded with
+iron, and a lock that one out of any dozen big keys would open!&rdquo; He
+rubbed his calves in his satisfaction. &ldquo;In twenty minutes I was
+inside.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it was empty?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was empty,&rdquo; the other agreed, with a cunning smile. &ldquo;As
+bare as a board. A little whitewashed room, just as my father described
+it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They had removed the papers?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To the bank, or to London, or to Stubbs&rsquo;s. The place was as clean
+as a platter! Not a length of green tape or an end of parchment was
+left!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then what have you gained?&rdquo; Basset asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley looked slyly at him, his head on one side. &ldquo;Ay, what?&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll tell you my father&rsquo;s story. At one time the
+part of the room under the stairs was crumbling and the rats got in. The
+steward told the old lord and he went to see it. &lsquo;Brick it up!&rsquo; he
+said. The steward objected that there would not be room&mdash;the place was
+full; there were boxes everywhere, some under the stairs. The old lord tapped
+one of the boxes with his gold-headed cane. &lsquo;What&rsquo;s in
+these!&rsquo; he asked. &lsquo;Old papers,&rsquo; the steward explained.
+&lsquo;Of no use, my lord, but curious; old leases for lives, and
+terriers.&rsquo; &lsquo;Terriers?&rsquo; cried the old lord. &lsquo;Then, by
+G&mdash;d, brick &rsquo;em up with the rats!&rsquo; And that day at dinner he
+told my father the story and chuckled over it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that&rsquo;s what you&rsquo;ve had in your mind all this
+time?&rdquo; Basset said. &ldquo;Do you think it was done?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The old lord bricked up many a pipe of port, and I think that he would
+do it for the jest&rsquo;s sake. And&rdquo;&mdash; John Audley turned and
+looked in his companion&rsquo;s face&mdash;&ldquo;the part under the stairs
+<i>is bricked up</i>, and the room is as square and as flush as the family
+vault&mdash;and very like it. The old lord,&rdquo; he added sardonically,
+&ldquo;knows what it is to be bricked up himself now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And still there may be nothing there to help you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley rose from his chair. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say it!&rdquo; he cried
+passionately. &ldquo;Or I&rsquo;ll say that there&rsquo;s no right in the
+world, no law, no providence, no God! Don&rsquo;t dare to say it!&rdquo; he
+continued, his cheeks trembling with excitement. &ldquo;If I believed that I
+should go mad! But it is there! It is there! Do you think that it was for
+naught I heard that story? That it was for naught I remembered it, for naught
+I&rsquo;ve carried the story in my mind all these years? No, they are there,
+the papers that will give me mine and give it to Mary after me! They are there!
+And you must help me to get them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I cannot do it, sir,&rdquo; Basset replied firmly. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+think that you understand what you ask. To break into Audley&rsquo;s house like
+any common burglar, to dig down his wall, to steal his
+deeds&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley shook his fist in the young man&rsquo;s face. &ldquo;His
+house!&rdquo; he shrieked. &ldquo;His wall! His deeds! No, fool, but my house,
+my wall, my deeds! my deeds! If the papers are there all&rsquo;s mine! All! And
+I am but taking my own! Can&rsquo;t you see that? Can&rsquo;t you see it? Have
+I no right to take what is my own?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if the papers are not there?&rdquo; Basset replied gravely.
+&ldquo;No, sir, if you will take my advice you will tell your story, apply to
+the court, and let the court examine the documents. That&rsquo;s the
+straightforward course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley flung out his arms. &ldquo;Man!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+you know that as long as he is in possession he can sit on his deeds, and no
+power on earth can force him to show them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset drew in his breath. &ldquo;If that is so,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it is
+hard. Very hard! But to go by night and break into his house&mdash;sticks in my
+gizzard, sir. I&rsquo;m sorry, but that is the way I look at it. The
+man&rsquo;s here too. I saw him this evening. The fancy might have taken him to
+visit the house, and he might have found you there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley&rsquo;s color faded, he seemed to shrink into himself. &ldquo;Where did
+you see him?&rdquo; he faltered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset told the story. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t suppose that the girls were really
+in danger,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;but they thought so, and Audley came to
+the rescue and brought them as far as the park gap.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other took out his silk handkerchief and wiped his brow. &ldquo;As near as
+that,&rdquo; he muttered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, and if he had found you at the house, he might have guessed your
+purpose.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley held out a hand trembling with passion. &ldquo;I would have killed
+him!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I would have killed him&mdash;before he should
+have had what is there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Exactly,&rdquo; Basset replied. &ldquo;And that is why I will have
+nothing to do with the matter! It&rsquo;s too risky, sir. If you take my advice
+you will give it up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley did not answer. He sat awhile, his shoulders bowed, his eyes fixed on
+the hearth, while the other wondered for the hundredth time if he were sane. At
+length, &ldquo;What is he doing here?&rdquo; the old man asked in a lifeless
+tone. The passion had died out of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shooting, I suppose. But there was some talk in Riddsley of his coming
+down to stir up old Mottisfont.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Against the corn-law repeal, I suppose.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley nodded. But after a while, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a pretext,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;And so is the shooting. He has followed the girl.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset started. &ldquo;Followed Mary!&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What else? I have looked for it from the first. I&rsquo;ve pressed you
+to come to an understanding with her for that reason. Why the devil can&rsquo;t
+you? If you leave it much longer you&rsquo;ll be too late! Too late! And, by
+G&mdash;d, I&rsquo;ll never forgive you!&rdquo; with a fresh spirt of passion.
+&ldquo;Never! Never, man!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve not said that I meant to do it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve not said!&rdquo; Audley replied contemptuously. &ldquo;Do
+you think that I don&rsquo;t know that she&rsquo;s all the world to you? Do you
+think that I&rsquo;ve no eyes? Do you think that when you sit there watching
+her from behind your book by the hour together, I have not my sight? Man,
+I&rsquo;m not a fool! And I tell you that if you&rsquo;re not to lose her you
+must speak! You must speak! Stand by another month, wait a little longer, and
+Philip Audley will put in his oar, and I&rsquo;ll not give that for your
+chances!&rdquo; He snapped his fingers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why should he put in his oar?&rdquo; Basset asked sullenly. His face had
+turned a dull red.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Audley shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;Do you think that she is without
+attractions?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But Audley lives in another world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The more likely to have attractions for her!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But surely he&rsquo;ll look for&mdash;for something more,&rdquo; Basset
+stammered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For a rich wife? For an alliance, as the saying is? And sleep ill of
+nights? And have bad dreams? No, he is no fool, if you are. He sees that if he
+marries the girl he makes himself safe. He makes himself safe! After me, it
+lies between them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I take it that he does think himself safe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not he!&rdquo; Audley replied. He was stooping over the ashes, warming
+his hands, but at that he jumped up. &ldquo;Not he! he knows better than you!
+And fears! And sleeps ill of nights, d&mdash;n him! And dreams! But there, I
+must not excite myself. I must not excite myself. Only, if he once begins,
+he&rsquo;ll be no laggard in love as you are! He&rsquo;ll not sit puling and
+peeping and looking at the back of her head by the hour together! He&rsquo;ll
+be up and at her&mdash;I know what that big jowl means! And she&rsquo;ll be in
+his arms in half the time that you&rsquo;ve taken to count her
+eyelashes!&rdquo; He turned in a fresh fit of fury and seized his candle.
+&ldquo;In his arms, I tell you, fool, while you are counting her eyelashes.
+Well, lose her, lose her, and I never want to see you again, or her! Never!
+I&rsquo;ll curse you both!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stumbled to the door and went out, a queer, gibbering, shaking figure; and
+Basset had no doubt at such moments that he was mad. But on this occasion he
+was afraid&mdash;he was very much afraid, as he sat pondering in his chair,
+that there was method in his madness!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>CHAPTER XIII<br/>
+PETER PAUPER</h2>
+
+<p>
+The impression which the events of the evening had made on Mary&rsquo;s mind
+was still lively when she awoke next day. It was not less clear, because like
+the feminine letter of the &rsquo;forties, crossed and recrossed, it had
+stamped itself in two layers on her mind, of which the earlier was the more
+vivid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The solitude in which her days had of late been spent had left her peculiarly
+open to new ideas, while the quiet and wholesome life of the Gatehouse had
+prepared her to answer any call which those ideas might make upon her. Rescued
+from penury, lifted above anxiety about bed and board, no longer exposed to the
+panic-fears which in Paris had beset even her courageous nature, Mary had for a
+while been content simply to rest. She had taken the sunshine, the beauty, the
+ease and indolence of her life as a convalescent accepts idleness, without
+scruple or question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this could not last. She was young, nature soon rallied in her, and she had
+seen things and done things during the last two years which forbade her to
+accept such a limited horizon as satisfied most of the women of that day.
+Unlike them, she had viewed the world from more than one standpoint; through
+the grille of a convent school, from the grimy windows of a back-street in
+Paris; again, as it moved beneath the painted ceilings of a French salon. And
+now, as it presented itself in this retired house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Therefore she could not view things as those saw them whose standpoint had
+never shifted. She had suffered, she still had twinges&mdash;for who, with her
+experience, could be sure that the path would continue easy? And so to her Mr.
+Colet&rsquo;s sermon had made a strong appeal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It left the word which Mr. Colet had taken for his text sounding in her ears.
+Borne upward on the eloquence which earnestness had lent to the young preacher,
+she looked down on a world in torment, a world holding up piteous hands,
+craving, itself in ignorance, the help of those who held the secret, and whose
+will might make that secret sufficient to save. Love! To do to others as she
+would have others do to her! With every day, with every hour, with every minute
+to do something for others! Always to give, never to take! Above all to give
+herself, to do her part in that preference of others to self, which could alone
+right these mighty wrongs, could find work for the idle, food for the hungry,
+roofs for the homeless, knowledge for the blind, healing for the sick! Which
+could save all this world in torment, and could
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0" style="text-indent:-6pt">
+&ldquo;Build a Heaven in Hell&rsquo;s despair!&rdquo;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+It was a beautiful vision, and in this her first glimpse of it, Mary&rsquo;s
+fancy was not chilled by the hard light of experience. It seemed so plain that
+if the workman had his master&rsquo;s profit at heart, and the master were as
+anxious for the weal of his men, the interests of the two would be one. Equally
+plain it seemed that if they who grew the food aimed at feeding the greatest
+number, and they who ate had the same desire to reward the grower, if every man
+shrank from taking advantage of other men, if the learned lived to spread their
+knowledge, and the strong to help the weak, if no man wronged his neighbor, but
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0" style="text-indent:-6pt">
+&ldquo;Each for another gave his ease,&rdquo;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+then it seemed equally plain that love would indeed be lord of all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later, she might discover that it takes two to make a bargain; that charity
+does bless him who gives but not always him who takes; even, that cheap bread
+might be a dear advantage&mdash;that at least it might have its drawbacks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But for the moment it was enough for Mary that the vision was beautiful and, as
+a theory, true. So that, gazing upward at the faded dimity of her tester, she
+longed to play her part in it. That world in torment, those countless hands
+stretched upward in appeal, that murmur of infinite pain, the cry of the
+hungry, of the widow, of men sitting by tireless hearths, of children dying in
+mill and mine&mdash;the picture wrought on her so strongly, that she could not
+rest. She rose, and though the hoar frost was white on the grass and the fog of
+an autumn morning still curtained the view, she began to dress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps the chill of the cold water in which she washed sobered her. At any
+rate, with the comb in one hand and her hair in the other, she drifted down
+another line of thought. Lord Audley&mdash;how strange was the chance which had
+again brought them together! How much she owed him, with what kindness had he
+seen to her comfort, how masterfully had he arranged matters for her on the
+boat. And then she smiled. She recalled Basset&rsquo;s ill-humor, or
+his&mdash;jealousy. At the thought of what the word implied, Mary colored.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There could be nothing in the notion, yet she probed her own feelings.
+Certainly she liked Lord Audley. If he was not handsome, he had that air of
+strength and power which impresses women; and he had ease and charm, and the
+look of fashion which has its weight with even the most sensible of her sex. He
+had all these and he was a man, and she admired him and was grateful to him.
+And yesterday she might have thought that her feeling for him was love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this morning she had gained a higher notion of love. She had learned from
+Etruria how near to that pattern of love which Mr. Colet preached the love of
+man and woman could rise. She had a new conception of its strength and its
+power to expel what was selfish or petty. She had seen it in its noblest form
+in Etruria, and she knew that her feeling for Lord Audley was not in the same
+world with Etruria&rsquo;s feeling for the curate. She laughed at the notion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor Etruria!&rdquo; she meditated. &ldquo;Or should it be, happy
+Etruria? Who knows? I only know that I am heart-whole!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she knotted up her hair and, Diana-like, went out into the pure biting air
+of the morning, along the green rides hoary with dew and fringed with bracken,
+under the oak trees from which the wood-pigeons broke in startled flight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But if the energy of her thoughts carried her out, fatigue soon brought her to
+a pause. The evening&rsquo;s excitement, the strain of the adventure had not
+left her, young as she was, unscathed. The springs of enthusiasm waned with her
+strength, and presently she felt jaded. She perceived that she would have done
+better had she rested longer; and too late the charms of bed appealed to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was at the breakfast table when Basset&mdash;he, too, had had a restless
+night and many thoughts&mdash;came down. He saw that she was pale and that
+there were shadows under her eyes, and the man&rsquo;s tenderness went out to
+her. He longed, he longed above everything to put himself right with her; and
+on the impulse of the moment, &ldquo;I want you to know,&rdquo; he said,
+standing meekly at her elbow, &ldquo;that I am sorry I lost my temper last
+evening.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she was out of sympathy with him. &ldquo;It is nothing,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;We were all tired, I think. Etruria is not down yet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I want to ask your&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh dear, dear!&rdquo; she cried, interrupting him with a gesture of
+impatience. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let us rake it up again. If my uncle has not
+suffered, there is no harm done. Please let it rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he could not let it rest. He longed to put his neck under her foot, and he
+did not see that she was in the worst possible mood for his purpose.
+&ldquo;Still,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you must let me say&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; she cried. She put her hands to her ears. Then,
+seeing that she had wounded him, she dropped them and spoke more kindly.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let us make much of little, Mr. Basset. It was all natural
+enough. You don&rsquo;t like Lord Audley&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you did not understand that we had been terribly frightened, and had
+good reason to be grateful to him. I am sure that if you had known that, you
+would have behaved differently. There!&rdquo; with a smile. &ldquo;And now that
+I have made the amende for you, let us have breakfast. Here is your
+coffee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knew that she was holding him off, and all his alarms of the night were
+quickened. Again and again had John Audley&rsquo;s warning recurred to him and
+as often he had striven to reject it, but always in vain. And gradually,
+slowly, it had kindled his resolution, it had fired him to action. Now, the
+very modesty which had long kept him silent and withheld him from enterprise
+was changed&mdash;as so often happens with diffident man&mdash;into rashness.
+He was as anxious to put his fate to the test as he had before been unwilling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, &ldquo;You will not need to tell your uncle about Lord
+Audley,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve done it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope you told him,&rdquo; she answered gravely, &ldquo;that we were
+indebted to Lord Audley for our safety.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t trust me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say things like that!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;It is
+foolish. I have no doubt that in telling my uncle you meant to relieve me. You
+have helped me more than once in that way. But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But this is a special occasion?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him. &ldquo;If you wish us to be friends&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he answered roughly. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to
+be friends with you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, ambiguous as his words were, she saw where she stood, and she mustered
+her presence of mind. She rose from her seat. &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;am not going to quarrel with you, Mr. Basset. I am going now to learn
+how Etruria is. And then I shall see my uncle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She escaped before he could answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once or twice it had crossed her mind that he looked at her with intention; and
+once reading that look in his eyes she had felt her color rise, and her heart
+beat more quickly. But the absence on her side of any feeling, except that
+which a sister might feel for a kind brother, this and the reserve of his
+manner had nipped the fancy as soon as it budded. And if she had given it a
+second thought, it had been only to smile at her vanity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now she had no doubt of the fact, no doubt that it was jealousy that moved him,
+and her uppermost, almost her only feeling was vexation. Because they had lived
+in the same house for five months, because he had been useful and she had been
+grateful, because they were man and woman, how foolish it was! How absurd! How
+annoying! She foresaw from it many, many, inconveniences; a breach in their
+pleasant intercourse, displeasure on her uncle&rsquo;s part, trouble in the
+house that had been so peaceful&mdash;oh, many things. But that which vexed her
+most was the fear that she had, all unwittingly, encouraged him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She believed that she had not. But while she talked to Etruria, and later, as
+she went down the stairs to interview her uncle, she had this weight on her
+mind. She strove to recall words and looks, and upon the whole she was sure
+that she could acquit herself, sure that of this evil no part lay at her door.
+But it was very, very vexatious!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the threshold of the library she wrested her thoughts back to the present,
+and paused a moment, considering what she should say to her uncle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She need not have troubled herself, for he was not there. At the first glance
+she took the room to be empty; a second showed her Basset. She turned to
+retire, but too late; he stepped between her and the door and closed it. He was
+a little paler than usual, and his air of purpose was not to be mistaken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stiffened. &ldquo;I came to see my uncle,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am the bearer of a message from him,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;He
+asked me to say that he considers the matter at an end. He does not wish it to
+be mentioned again. Of course he does not blame you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, Mr. Basset&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he would not let her speak. &ldquo;That was his message,&rdquo; he
+continued, &ldquo;and I am glad to be the messenger because it gives me a
+chance of speaking to you. Will you sit down?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But we have only just parted,&rdquo; she remonstrated, struggling
+against her fate. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand what you
+want&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To say? No, I am going to explain it&mdash;if you will sit down.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat down then with the feeling that she was trapped. And since it was clear
+that she must go through with it, she was glad that his insistence hardened her
+heart and dried up the springs of pity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went to the fire, stooped and moved the wood. &ldquo;You won&rsquo;t come
+nearer?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied. How foolish to trap her like this if he thought
+to get anything from her!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned to her and his face was changed. Under his wistful look she
+discovered that it was not so easy to be hard, not so easy to maintain her
+firmness. &ldquo;You would rather escape?&rdquo; he said, reading her mind.
+&ldquo;I know. But I can&rsquo;t let you escape. You are thinking that I have
+trapped you? And you are fearing that I am going to make you unhappy
+for&mdash;for half an hour perhaps? I know. And I am fearing that you are going
+to make me unhappy for&mdash;always.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No, she could not retain her hardness. She knew that she was going to feel pity
+after all. But she would not speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have only hope,&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;There is only one thing I am
+clinging to. I have read that when a man loves a woman very truly, very deeply,
+as I love you, Mary&rdquo;&mdash;she started violently, and blushed to the
+roots of her hair, so sudden was the avowal&mdash;&ldquo;as I love you,&rdquo;
+he repeated sorrowfully, &ldquo;I have read that she either hates him or loves
+him. His love is a fire that either warms her or scorches her, draws her or
+repels her. I thought of that last night, as I thought of many things, and I
+was sure, I was confident that you did not hate me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no,&rdquo; she answered, unsteadily. &ldquo;Indeed, indeed, I
+don&rsquo;t! I am very grateful to you. But the other&mdash;I don&rsquo;t think
+it is true.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No?&rdquo; he said, keeping his eyes on her face. &ldquo;And then, you
+don&rsquo;t doubt that I love you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No.&rdquo; The flush had faded from her face and left her pale. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t doubt that&mdash;now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is so true that&mdash;you know that you have sometimes called me
+Peter? Well, I would have given much, very much to call you Mary. But I did not
+dare. I could not. For I knew that if I did, only once, my voice would betray
+me, and that I should alarm you before the time! I knew that that one
+word&mdash;that word alone&mdash;would set my heart upon my sleeve for all to
+see. And I did not want to alarm you. I did not want to hurry you. I thought
+then that I had time, time to make myself known to you, time to prove my
+devotion, time to win you, Mary. I thought that I could wait. Now, since last
+night, I am afraid to wait. I doubt, nay I am sure, that I have no time, that I
+dare not wait.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not answer, but the color mounted again to her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned and knocked the fire together with his foot. Then he took a step
+towards her. &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;have I any chance? Any
+chance at all, Mary?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shook her head; but seeing then that he kept his eyes fixed on her and
+would not take that for an answer, &ldquo;None,&rdquo; she said as kindly as
+she could. &ldquo;I must tell you the truth. It is useless to try to break it.
+I have never once, not once thought of you but as a friend, Peter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;cannot you regard me
+differently&mdash;now! Now that you know? Cannot you begin to think of me
+as&mdash;a lover?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Mary said frankly and pitifully. &ldquo;I should not be
+honest if I said that I could. If I held out hopes. You have been always good
+to me, kind to me, a dear friend, a brother when I had need of one. And I am
+grateful, Mr. Basset, honestly, really grateful to you. And fond of
+you&mdash;in that way. But I could not think of you in the way you desire. I
+know it for certain. I know that there is no chance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood for a moment without speaking, and seeing how stricken he looked, how
+sad his face, her eyes filled with tears. Then, &ldquo;Is there any one
+else?&rdquo; he asked slowly, his eyes on her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not answer. She rose to her feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is there any one else?&rdquo; he repeated, a new note in his voice. He
+moved forward a step.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have no right to ask that,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have every right,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;What?&rdquo; he continued,
+moving still nearer to her, his whole bearing changed in a moment by the sting
+of jealousy. &ldquo;I am condemned, I am rejected, and I am not to ask
+why?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I do ask!&rdquo; he retorted with a passion which surprised and
+alarmed her; he was no longer the despondent lover of five minutes before, but
+a man demanding his rights. &ldquo;Have you no heart? Have you no feeling for
+me? Do you not consider what this is to me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I consider,&rdquo; Mary replied with a warmth almost equal to his own,
+&ldquo;that if I answered your question I should humiliate myself. No one, no
+one has a right, sir, to ask that question. And least of all you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am to be cast aside, I am to be discarded without a reason?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That word &ldquo;discarded&rdquo; seemed so unjust, and so uncalled for, seeing
+that she had given him no encouragement, that it stung her to anger.
+&ldquo;Without a reason?&rdquo; she retorted. &ldquo;I have given you a
+reason&mdash;I do not return your love. That is the only reason that you have a
+right to know. But if you press me, I will tell you why what you propose is
+impossible. Because, if I ever love a man I hope, Mr. Basset, that it will be
+one who has some work in the world, something to do that shall be worth the
+doing, a man with ambitions above mere trifling, mere groping in the dust of
+the past for facts that, when known, make no man happier, and no man better,
+and scarce a man wiser! Do you ever think,&rdquo; she continued, carried away
+by the remembrance of Mr. Colet&rsquo;s zeal, &ldquo;of the sorrow and pain
+that are in the world? Of the vast riddles that are to be solved? Of the work
+that awaits the wisest and the strongest, and at which all in their degree can
+help? My uncle is an old man, it is well he should play with the past. I am a
+girl, it may serve for me. But what do you here?&rdquo; She pointed to his
+table, laden with open folios and calf-bound volumes. &ldquo;You spend a week
+in proving a Bohun marriage that is nothing to any one. Another, in raking up a
+blot that is better forgotten! A third in tracing to its source some ancient
+tag! You move a thousand books&mdash;to make one knight! Is that a man&rsquo;s
+work?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At least,&rdquo; he said huskily, &ldquo;I do no harm.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No harm?&rdquo; Mary replied, swept away by her feelings. &ldquo;Is that
+enough? Because in this quiet corner, which is home to my uncle and a refuge to
+me, no call reaches you, is it enough that you do no harm? Is there no good to
+be done? Think, Mr. Basset! I am ignorant, a woman. But I know that to-day
+there are great questions calling for an answer, wrongs clamoring to be
+righted, a people in travail that pleads for ease! I know that there is work in
+England for men, for all! Work, that if there be any virtue left in ancient
+blood should summon you as with a trumpet call!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not answer. Twice, early in her attack he had moved as if he would
+defend himself. Then he had let his chin fall and he had listened with his eyes
+on the table. And&mdash;but she had not seen it&mdash;he had more than once
+shivered under her words as under a lash. For he loved her and she scourged
+him. He loved her, he desired her, he had put her on a pedestal, and all the
+time she had been viewing him with the clear merciless eyes of youth, trying
+him by the standard of her dreams, probing his small pretensions, finding him a
+potterer in a library&mdash;he who in his vanity had raised his eyes to her and
+sought to be her hero!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a cruel lesson, cruelly given; and it wounded him to the heart. So that
+she, seeing too late that he made no reply, seeing the grayness of his face,
+and that he did not raise his eyes, had a too-late perception of what she had
+done, of how cruel she had been, of how much more she had said than she had
+meant to say. She stood conscience-stricken, remorseful, ashamed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then, &ldquo;Oh, I am sorry!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I am sorry! I should
+not have said that! You meant to honor me and I have hurt you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked up then, but neither the shadow nor the grayness left his face.
+&ldquo;Perhaps it was best,&rdquo; he said dully. &ldquo;I am sure that you
+meant well.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I did! But I was wrong. Utterly
+wrong!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you were not wrong. The truth was
+best.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But perhaps it was not the truth,&rdquo; she replied, anxious at once,
+miserably anxious to undo what she had done, to unsay what she had said, to
+tell him that she was conceited, foolish, a mere girl! &ldquo;I am no
+judge&mdash;after all what do I know of these things? What have I done that I
+should say anything?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid that what is said is said,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I have
+always known that I was no knight-errant. I have never been bold until
+to-day&mdash;and it has not answered,&rdquo; with a sickly smile. &ldquo;But we
+understand one another now&mdash;and I relieve you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He passed her on his way to the door, and she thought that he was going to hold
+it open for her to go out. But when he reached the door he fumbled for the
+handle, found it as a blind man might find it, and went out himself, without
+turning his head.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>CHAPTER XIV<br/>
+THE MANCHESTER MEN</h2>
+
+<p>
+Basset knew every path that crossed the Chase, and had traversed them at all
+seasons, and in all weathers. But when, some hours later, he halted on a
+scarred and blackened waste that stretched to the horizon on every side, he
+would have been hard put to it to say how he came to be there. He wore his hat,
+he carried his stick, but he could not remember how he had become possessed of
+either.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a time the shock of disappointment, the numbing sense of loss had dulled
+his mind. He had walked as in a dream, repeating over and over again that that
+was what she thought of him&mdash;and he had loved her. It was possible that in
+the interval he had sworn at fate, or shrieked against the curlews, or cursed
+the inhuman sky that mocked him with its sameness. But he did not think that he
+had. He felt the life in him too low for such outbursts. He told himself that
+he was a poor creature, a broken thing, a failure. He loved her, and&mdash;and
+that was what she thought of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat on the stump of an ancient thorn-tree that had been a landmark on the
+burnt heath longer than the oldest man could remember, and he began to put
+together what she had said. He was trifling away his life, picking stray finds
+from the dust-heap of the past, making no man wiser and no man better, doing
+nothing for any one! Was she right? The Bohun pedigree, at which he had worked
+so long? He had been proud of his knowledge of Norman descents, proud of the
+research which had won that knowledge, proud of his taste for following up
+recondite facts. Were the knowledge, the research, the taste, all things for
+which he ought to blush? Certainly, tried by the test, <i>cui bono?</i> they
+came off but poorly. And perhaps, to sit down at his age, content with such
+employments, might seem unworthy and beneath him, if there were other calls
+upon him. But were there other calls?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Time had been when his family had played a great part, not in Staffordshire
+only but in England; and then doubtless public service had been a tradition
+with them. But the tradition had waned with their fortunes. In these days he
+was only a small squire, a little more regarded than the new men about him; but
+with no ability to push his way in a crowd, no mastery among his fellow-men,
+one whom character and position alike cast for a silent part.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course she knew none of these things, but with the enthusiasm of youth she
+looked to find in every man the qualities of the leading role. He who seldom
+raised his voice at Quarter Sessions or on the Grand Jury&mdash;to which his
+birth rather than his possessions called him&mdash;she would have had him
+figure among the great, lead causes, champion the oppressed! It was pitiful, if
+it had not been absurd!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He walked on by and by, dwelling on the pity of it, a very unhappy man. He
+thought of the evenings in the library when she had looked over his shoulder,
+and one lamp had lighted them; of the mornings when the sun had gilded her hair
+as she bent over the task she was even then criticizing; of afternoons when the
+spirit of the chase had been theirs, and the sunshine and the flowers had had
+no charm strong enough to draw them from the pursuit of&mdash;alas! something
+that could make no man better or wiser. He had lost her; and if aught mattered
+apart from that, she had for ever poisoned the springs of content, muddied the
+wells of his ordered life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beyond doubt she loved the other, for had she not, she would have viewed things
+differently. Beyond doubt in her love for the other lay the bias that weighted
+her strictures. And yet, making all allowance for that, there was so much of
+truth in what she had said, so much that hit the mark, that he could never be
+the same again, never give himself with pleasure to his former pursuits, never
+find the old life a thing to satisfy!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And still, like the tolling of a death bell above the city&rsquo;s life, two
+thoughts beat on his mind again and again, and gave him intolerable pain. That
+was what she thought of him! And he had lost her! That was what she thought of
+him! And he had lost her! Her slender gracious figure, her smiling eyes, the
+glint in her hair, her goodness, her very self&mdash;all were for another! All
+were lost to him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the day began to draw in, and fagged and hopeless he turned and began
+to make his way back. His road lay through Brown Heath, the mining village,
+where in all the taverns and low-browed shops they were beginning to light
+their candles. He crossed the Triangle, and made his way along the lane, deep
+in coal-dust and foul with drains, that ran upwards to the Chase. A pit, near
+at hand, had just turned out its shift, and in the dusk tired men, swinging
+tins in their hands, were moving by twos and threes along the track. With his
+bent shoulders and weary gait he was lost among them, he walked one with them;
+yet here and there an older man espied the difference, recognized him, and
+greeted him with rough respect. Presently the current slackened; something, he
+could not see what, dammed the stream. A shrewish voice rose in the darkness
+before him, and other voices, angry, clamant, protesting, struck in. A few of
+the men pushed by the trouble, others stood, here and there a man added a taunt
+to the brawl. In his turn Basset came abreast of the quarrel. He halted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A farm cart blocked the roadway. Over the tail hung three or four wailing
+children; into it a couple of sturdy men were trying to lift an old woman,
+seated in a chair. A dingy beadle and a constable, who formed the escort and
+looked ill at ease, stood beside the cart, and round it half a score of
+slatternly women pushed and shrieked and gesticulated. On the group and the
+whole dreary scene nightfall cast a pallid light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; Basset asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;re shifting Nan Oates to the poorhouse,&rdquo; a man
+answered. &ldquo;Her son died of the fever, and there&rsquo;s none to keep her
+or the little uns. She&rsquo;ve done till now, but they&rsquo;ll not give her
+bite nor sup out of the House&mdash;that&rsquo;s the law now&rsquo;t seems. So
+the House it be!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Her&rsquo;d rather die than go!&rdquo; cried a girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;D&mdash;n them and their Bastilles!&rdquo; exclaimed a younger man.
+&ldquo;Are we free men, or are we not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Free men?&rdquo; shrieked a woman, who had seized the horse&rsquo;s rein
+and was loudest in her outcry. &ldquo;No, nor Staffordshire men, nor
+Englishmen, nor men at all, if you let an old woman that&rsquo;s always lived
+decent go to their stone jug this way. Give me Stafford Gaol&mdash;&rsquo;tis
+miles afore it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, you&rsquo;re at home there, Bet!&rdquo; a voice in the crowd struck
+in, and the laugh that followed lightened matters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset looked with pity at the old woman. Her head sunk upon her breast, her
+thin shawl tucked about her shoulders, her gray hair in wisps on her cheeks,
+she gazed in tearless grief upon the hovel which had been home to her.
+&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s to support her,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;if she stays?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For the bite and sup there&rsquo;s neighbors,&rdquo; a man answered.
+&ldquo;Reverend Colet he said he might do something. But he&rsquo;s been
+lammed. And there&rsquo;s the rent. The boy&rsquo;s ten, and he made four
+shilling a week in the pit, but the new law&rsquo;s stopped the young uns
+working.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, d&mdash;n all new laws!&rdquo; cried another. &ldquo;Poor laws and
+pit laws we&rsquo;re none but the worse for them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men were preparing to move the cart. The woman who held the rein clung to
+it. &ldquo;Now, Bet, have a care!&rdquo; said the constable. &ldquo;Or
+you&rsquo;ll go home by Weeping Cross again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cross? I&rsquo;ll cross you!&rdquo; the termagant retorted.
+&ldquo;Selling up widows&rsquo; houses is your bread and meat! May the devil,
+hoof and horn, with his scythe on his back, go through you! If there were three
+men here, ay, men as you&rsquo;d call men&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Easy, woman, easy!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Woman, dang you! You call me woman&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, let go, Bet! You&rsquo;ll be in trouble else!&rdquo; some one said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she held on, and the crowd were beginning to jostle the men in charge when
+Basset stepped forward. &ldquo;Steady, a moment,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Will
+the guardians let the woman stop if the rent is provided?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who be you, master?&rdquo; the constable asked. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d best
+let us do our duty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dang it, man,&rdquo; an old fellow interposed, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s Squire
+Basset of Blore. Dunno you know him? Keep a civil tongue in your head, will
+you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; chimed in another, pushing forward with a menacing gesture.
+&ldquo;You be careful, Jack! You be Jack in office, but &rsquo;twon&rsquo;t
+always be so! &rsquo;Twon&rsquo;t always be so!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Colet knows the old woman?&rdquo; Basset asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure, sir, the curate knows her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll find the rent,&rdquo; Basset said, addressing the
+constable, &ldquo;if you&rsquo;ll let her be. I&rsquo;ll see the overseer about
+her in the morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So long as she don&rsquo;t come on the rates, sir?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll not come on the rates for six months,&rdquo; Basset said.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be answerable for so much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men had little stomach for their task, and with a good excuse they were
+willing enough to desist. A woman fetched a stub of a pen and a drop of ink and
+Basset wrote a word for their satisfaction. While he did so, &ldquo;O&rsquo;d
+Staffordshire! O&rsquo;d Staffordshire!&rdquo; a man explained in the
+background. &ldquo;Bassets of Blore&mdash;they be come from an Abbey and come
+to a Grange, as the saying is. You never heard of the Bassets of Blore, you be
+neither from Mixen nor Moor!&rdquo; In old Stafford talk the rich lands of
+Cheshire stood for the &ldquo;mixen&rdquo; as against the bare heaths of the
+home county.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In five minutes the business was done, the woman freed, and Basset was trudging
+away through the gathering darkness. But the incident had done him good. It had
+lightened his heart. It had changed ever so little the direction of his
+thoughts. Out of his own trouble he had stretched a hand to another; and
+although he knew that it was not by stray acts such as this that he could lift
+himself to Mary&rsquo;s standard, though the battle over the new Poor Law had
+taught him, and many others, that charity may be the greatest of evils, what he
+had done seemed to bring him nearer to her. A hardship of the poor, which he
+might have seen with blind eyes, or viewed from afar as the inevitable result
+of the stay of outdoor relief, had come home to him. As he plodded across the
+moor he carried with him a picture of the old woman with her gray hair falling
+about her wrinkled face, and her hands clasped in hopeless resignation. And he
+felt that his was not the only trouble in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he had passed the wall of Beaudelays Park, Basset struck&mdash;not far
+from the Gatehouse&mdash;into the road leading down to the Vale, and a couple
+of hours after dark he plodded into Riddsley. He made for the Audley Arms, a
+long straggling house on the main street, in one part of two stories, in
+another of three, with a big bay window at the end. Entering the yard by the
+archway he ordered a gig to go to the Gatehouse for his portmanteau. Then he
+turned into the inn, and scribbled a note to John Audley, stating that he was
+called away, and would explain matters when he wrote again. He sent it by the
+driver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was eight o&rsquo;clock. &ldquo;I am afraid, Squire,&rdquo; the landlord
+said, &ldquo;that there&rsquo;s no fire upstairs. If you&rsquo;d not mind our
+parlor for once, there&rsquo;s no one there and it&rsquo;s snug and
+warm.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do that, Musters,&rdquo; he said. He was cold and famished
+and he was not sorry to avoid the company of his own thoughts. In the parlor,
+next door to the Snug, he might be alone or listen to the local gossip as he
+pleased.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ten minutes later he sat in front of a good plain meal, and for the time the
+pangs of appetite overcame those of disappointment. About nine the landlord
+entered on some errand. &ldquo;I suppose, sir,&rdquo; he said, lingering to see
+that his guest had all that he wanted, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ve heard this about Mr.
+Mottisfont?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Musters, what is it? Get a clean glass and tell me about it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s to resign, sir, I hear. And his son is to stand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Along o&rsquo; this about Sir Robert Peel, I understand. They have it
+that Sir Robert&rsquo;s going to repeal the corn taxes&mdash;some say that
+he&rsquo;s been for it all through, and some talk about a potato failure. Mr.
+Mottisfont sees that that&rsquo;ll never do for Riddsley, but he don&rsquo;t
+want to part from his leader, after following him all these years; so
+he&rsquo;ll go out and the young gentleman will take his place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you think it is true about Peel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;re saying it, and Mr. Stubbs, he believes it. But it&rsquo;ll
+never go down in Riddsley, Squire. We&rsquo;re horn and corn men here, two to
+one of us. There&rsquo;s just the two small factories on the other side, and
+most of the hands haven&rsquo;t votes. But here&rsquo;s Mr. Stubbs
+himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer had looked into the room in passing. Seeing Basset he removed his
+hat. &ldquo;Pardon, Squire,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I did not know that you were
+here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; Basset answered. He knew the lawyer locally, and had
+seen him often&mdash;at arm&rsquo;s length&mdash;in the peerage suit.
+&ldquo;Will you take a glass of wine with me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs said that he would with pleasure, if he might take it standing&mdash;his
+time was short. The landlord was for withdrawing, but Stubbs detained him.
+&ldquo;No, John, with Mr. Basset&rsquo;s leave I&rsquo;ve a bone to pick with
+you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Who are these men who are staying here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Musters&rsquo;s face fell. &ldquo;Lord, Mr. Stubbs,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;have
+you heard of them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hear most things,&rdquo; the lawyer answered. &ldquo;But repealers
+talking treason at the Audley Arms is a thing I never thought to hear. They
+must go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlord rubbed his head. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t turn &rsquo;em out,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;They&rsquo;d have the law of me. His lordship couldn&rsquo;t
+turn &rsquo;em out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about that,&rdquo; Stubbs replied. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
+a good landlord, but he likes his own way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what can I do?&rdquo; the stout man protested. &ldquo;When they came
+I knew no more about them than a china babe. When they began to talk, so glib
+that no one could answer them, I was more took aback than anybody. Seems like
+the world&rsquo;s coming to an end with Manchester men coming here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps it is,&rdquo; Basset said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs met his eye and took his meaning. Later the lawyer maintained that he
+had his suspicions from that moment. At the time he only answered, &ldquo;Not
+in our day, Mr. Basset. Peel or Repeal, there&rsquo;s no one has attacked the
+land yet but the land has broken them. And so it will be this time. John, the
+sooner those two are out of your house the better.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, dang me, sir, what am I to do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Put &rsquo;em in the horse trough for what I care!&rdquo; the lawyer
+replied. &ldquo;Good-evening, Squire. I hope the Riddsley parliament
+mayn&rsquo;t disturb you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlord followed him out, after handing something through the hatch, which
+opened into the Snug. He left the hatch a little ajar when he had done so, and
+the voices of those who gathered there nightly, as to a club, reached Basset.
+At first he caught no more than a word here or there, but as the debate grew
+warm the speakers raised their voices.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All mighty fine,&rdquo; some one said, laying down the law, &ldquo;but
+you&rsquo;re like the rest, you Manchester chaps. You&rsquo;ve your eyes on
+your own rack and manger!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not denying it,&rdquo; came the answer in a Lancashire accent,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not saying that cheap bread won&rsquo;t suit us. But it
+isn&rsquo;t for that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, of course not,&rdquo; the former speaker replied with heavy
+irony&mdash;Basset thought that the voice belonged to Hayward of the Leasows, a
+pompous old farmer, dubbed behind his back &ldquo;The Duke.&rdquo; &ldquo;You
+don&rsquo;t want low wages i&rsquo; your mills, of course!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cheap bread doesn&rsquo;t make low wages,&rdquo; the other rejoined.
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where you mistake, sir. Let me put it to you. You&rsquo;ve
+known wheat high?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was seventy-seven shillings seven years back,&rdquo; the farmer
+pronounced. &ldquo;And I ha&rsquo; known it a hundred shillings a quarter for
+three years together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I suppose the wages at that time were the highest you&rsquo;ve ever
+known?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, no,&rdquo; the farmer admitted, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not saying
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And seven years ago when wheat was seventy-seven&mdash;it is fifty-six
+now&mdash;were wages higher then than now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; the Duke answered reluctantly, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know as
+they were, mister, not to take notice of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Think it out for yourself, sir,&rdquo; the other replied. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t think you&rsquo;ll find that wages are highest when wheat is
+highest, nor lowest when wheat is lowest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The farmer, more weighty than ready, snorted. But another speaker took up the
+cudgels. &ldquo;Ay, but one minute,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the price
+of wheat fixes the lowest wages. If it&rsquo;s two pound of bread will keep a
+man fit to work&mdash;just keep him so and no more&mdash;it&rsquo;s the price
+of bread fixes whether the lowest wages is eightpence a day or a shilling a
+day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, but by G&mdash;d, he&rsquo;s got you there!&rdquo; the Duke cried,
+and smacked his fat thigh in triumph. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve some sense i&rsquo;
+Riddsley yet. Here&rsquo;s your health and song, Dr. Pepper!&rdquo; At which
+there was some laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, sir, I&rsquo;ll not say yes, nor no, to that,&rdquo; the
+Lancashire man replied, as soon as he could get a hearing. &ldquo;But,
+gentlemen, it&rsquo;s not low wages we want. I&rsquo;ll tell you the two things
+we do want, and why we want cheap bread; first, that your laborers after they
+have bought bread may have something over to buy our woollens, and our cottons,
+and your pots. And secondly, if we don&rsquo;t take foreign wheat in payment
+how are foreigners to pay for our goods?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But at this half a dozen were up in arms. &ldquo;How?&rdquo; cried the Duke,
+&ldquo;why wi&rsquo; money like honest men at home! But there it is!
+There&rsquo;s the devil&rsquo;s hoof! It&rsquo;s foreign corn you&rsquo;re
+after! And with foreign corn coming in at forty shillings where&rsquo;ll we
+be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No wheat will ever be grown at that price,&rdquo; declared the free
+trader with solemnity, &ldquo;here or abroad!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So you say!&rdquo; cried Hayward. &ldquo;But put it at forty-five.
+We&rsquo;ll be on the rates, and our laborers, where&rsquo;ll they be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like such talk in my house!&rdquo; said Musters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;d certainly like an answer to that,&rdquo; Pepper the surgeon
+said. &ldquo;If the farmers are broke where&rsquo;ll their laborers be but
+flocking to your mills to put down wages there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The laborers? Well, they&rsquo;re protected now, that&rsquo;s
+true.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lucky for them!&rdquo; cried two or three.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are protected now,&rdquo; the stranger repeated slowly. &ldquo;And
+I&rsquo;ll tell you what one of them said to me last year. &lsquo;I be
+protected,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;and I be starving!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dang his impudence!&rdquo; muttered old Hayward. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the
+kind of thing they two Boshams at the Bridge talk. Firebrands they be!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the shot had told; no one else spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That man&rsquo;s wages,&rdquo; the Manchester man continued, &ldquo;were
+six shillings a week&mdash;it was in Wiltshire. And you are protected too,
+sir,&rdquo; he continued, turning suddenly on the Duke. &ldquo;Have you made a
+fortune, sir, farming?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know as I have,&rdquo; the farmer answered
+sulkily&mdash;and in a lower voice, &ldquo;Dang his impudence again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not? Because you are paying a protected rent. Because you pay high
+for feeding-stuff. Because you pay poor-rates so high you&rsquo;d be better off
+paying double wages. There&rsquo;s only one man benefits by the corn-tax, sir,
+there&rsquo;s only one who is truly protected, and that is the landlord!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But to several in the room this was treason, and they cried out upon it.
+&ldquo;Ay, that&rsquo;s the bottom of it, mister,&rdquo; one roared,
+&ldquo;down with the landlords and up with the cotton lords!&rdquo;
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s your Reform Bill,&rdquo; shouted another,
+&ldquo;we&rsquo;ve put the beggars on horseback, and none&rsquo;s to ride but
+them now!&rdquo; A third protested that cheap bread was a herring drawn across
+the track. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re for cheap bread for the poor man, but no votes!
+Votes would make him as good as them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Anyway,&rdquo; the stranger replied patiently, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s clear
+that neither the farmer nor the laborer grows fat on Protection. Your wages are
+nine shillings&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ten and eleven!&rdquo; cried two or three.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your farmers are smothered in rates. If that&rsquo;s all you get by
+Protection I&rsquo;d try another system.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Anyways, I&rsquo;ll ask you to try it out of my house,&rdquo; Musters
+said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve a good landlord and I&rsquo;ll not hear him
+abused!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hear! Hear! Musters! Quite right!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve not said an uncivil word,&rdquo; the Manchester man rejoined.
+&ldquo;I shall leave your house to-morrow, not an hour before. I&rsquo;ll add
+only one word, gentlemen. Bread is the staff of life. Isn&rsquo;t it the last
+thing you should tax?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True,&rdquo; Mr. Pepper replied. &ldquo;But isn&rsquo;t agriculture the
+staple industry? Isn&rsquo;t it the base on which all other industries stand?
+Isn&rsquo;t it the mainstay of the best constitution in the world? And
+wasn&rsquo;t it the land that steadied England, and kept it clear of Bonaparte
+and Wooden Shoes&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, wooden ships against wooden shoes for ever!&rdquo; broke in old
+Hayward, in great excitement. &ldquo;Where were the oaks grown as beat Bony!
+No, master, protect the oak and protect the wheat, and England&rsquo;ll never
+lack ships nor meat! Your cotton-printers and ironfounders they&rsquo;re great
+folks now, great folks, with their brass and their votes, and so they&rsquo;ve
+a mind to upset the gentry. It&rsquo;s the town against the country, and new
+money against the old acres that have fed us and our fathers before us world
+without end! But put one of my lads in your mills, and amid your muck, and in
+twelve months he&rsquo;d not pitch hay, no not three hours of the day!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset could hear the free trader&rsquo;s chair grate on the sanded floor as he
+pushed it back. &ldquo;Well, gentlemen,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not
+quarrel with you. I wish you all the protection you deserve&mdash;and I think
+Sir Robert will give it you! For us, I&rsquo;m not saying that we are not
+thinking of our own interests.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Devil a doubt of that!&rdquo; muttered the farmer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And some of us may have been cold-shouldered by my lord. But you may
+take it from me that there&rsquo;s some of us, too, are as anxious to better
+the poor man&rsquo;s lot&mdash;ay, as Lord Ashley himself! That&rsquo;s all!
+Good-night, gentlemen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was gone, &ldquo;Gi&rsquo; me a coal for my pipe, John,&rdquo; said the
+Duke. &ldquo;I never heard the like of that in Riddsley. He&rsquo;s a gallus
+glib chap that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t say,&rdquo; said Mr. Pepper cautiously, &ldquo;that
+there&rsquo;s nothing in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Plenty in it for the cotton people and the coal people, and the potters.
+But not for us!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if Sir Robert sees it that way?&rdquo; queried the surgeon,
+delicately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then if Sir Robert were member for Riddsley,&rdquo; Hayward answered
+stubbornly, &ldquo;he&rsquo;d get his notice to quit, Dr. Pepper! You may bet
+your hat on that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s one got a lesson last night,&rdquo; a new-comer chimed in.
+&ldquo;Parson Colet got so beaten on the moor he&rsquo;s in bed I am told.
+He&rsquo;s been speaking free these last two months, and I thought he&rsquo;d
+get it. Three lads from your part I am told, Hayward.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; the farmer replied with philosophy.
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s good in Colet, and maybe it&rsquo;ll be a lesson to him!
+Anyway, good or bad, he&rsquo;s going.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going?&rdquo; cried two or three, speaking at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I met Rector not two hours back. He&rsquo;d a letter from Colet saying
+he was going to preach the same rubbish here as he&rsquo;s fed &rsquo;em with
+at Brown Heath&mdash;cheap bread and the rest of it. Rector&rsquo;s been to
+him&mdash;he wouldn&rsquo;t budge, and he got his notice to quit right
+straight. Rector was fit to burst when I saw him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Colet be a born fool!&rdquo; cried Musters. &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s like to
+employ him after that? Wheat is tithe and the parsons are as fond of their
+tithe as any man. You may look a long way before you&rsquo;ll find a parson
+that&rsquo;s a repealer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Serves Colet right!&rdquo; said one. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;m sorry for him
+all the same. There&rsquo;s worse men than the Reverend Colet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset could never say afterwards what moved him at this point, but whatever it
+was he got up and went out. The boots was lounging at the door of the inn. He
+asked the man where Mr. Colet lodged, and learning that it was in Stream
+Street, near the Maypole, he turned that way.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap15"></a>CHAPTER XV<br/>
+STRANGE BEDFELLOWS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Had any one told Basset, even that morning, that before night he would seek the
+advice of the Riddsley curate, he would have met the suggestion with unmeasured
+scorn. Probably he had not since his college days spent an hour in intimate
+talk with a man so far from him in fortune and position, and so unlike him in
+those things which bring men together. Nor in the act of approaching
+Colet&mdash;under the impulse of a few casual words and a sudden
+thought&mdash;was he able to understand or to justify himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when he rose to his feet after an hour spent beside the curate&rsquo;s
+dingy hearth&mdash;over the barber&rsquo;s shop in Stream Street&mdash;he did
+not need to justify the step. He had said little but he had heard much.
+Colet&rsquo;s tongue had been loosened by the sacrifice he had made, and
+inspired by that love of his kind which takes refuge in the most unlikely
+shapes, he had poured forth at length his beliefs and his aspirations. And
+Basset, whose world had tottered since morning, for whom common things had lost
+their poise and life its wonted aspect, began to think that he had found in the
+other&rsquo;s aims a new standpoint and the offer of a new beginning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dip candles, which had been many times snuffed, were burning low when the
+two rose. The curate, whose pale cheeks matched his bandaged head, had a last
+word to say. &ldquo;Of the need I am sure,&rdquo; he repeated, as
+Basset&rsquo;s eye sought the cheap clock on the mantelpiece. &ldquo;If I have
+not proved that, the fault, sir, is mine. But the means&mdash;they are a
+question for you; almost any man may see them more clearly than I do. By votes,
+it may be, and so through the people working out their own betterment. Or by
+social measures, as Lord Ashley thinks, through the classes that are fitted by
+education to judge for all. Or by the wider spread, as I hold, of
+self-sacrifice by all for all&mdash;to me, the ideal. But of one thing I am
+convinced; that this tax upon the commonest food, which takes so much more in
+proportion from the poor than from the rich, is wrong. Certainly wrong, Mr.
+Basset,&mdash;unless the gain and the loss can be equally spread. That&rsquo;s
+another matter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not say any more now,&rdquo; Basset answered cautiously,
+&ldquo;than that I am inclined to your view. But for yourself, are there not
+others who will not pay so dearly for maintaining it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A redness spread over the curate&rsquo;s long horse-face. &ldquo;No, Mr.
+Basset,&rdquo; he rejoined, &ldquo;if I left my duty to others I should pay
+still more dearly. I am my own man. I will remain so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what will you do when you leave here?&rdquo; Basset inquired,
+casting his eyes round the shabby room. He did not see it as he had seen it on
+his entrance. He discerned that, small as it was, and shabby as it was, it
+might be a man&rsquo;s home. &ldquo;I fear that there are few incumbents who
+hold your views.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There are absentees,&rdquo; Colet replied with a smile, &ldquo;who are
+not so particular; and in the north there are a few who think as I think. I
+shall not starve.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have an old house on the Derbyshire border twenty miles from
+here,&rdquo; Basset said. &ldquo;A servant and his wife keep it, and during
+some months of the year I live there. It is an out-of-the-way place, Mr. Colet,
+but it is at your service&mdash;if you don&rsquo;t get work?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The curate seemed to shrink into himself. &ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t trespass on
+you,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope you will,&rdquo; Basset replied. &ldquo;In the meantime, who was
+the man you quoted a few minutes ago?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Francis Place. He is a good man though not as we&rdquo;&mdash;he touched
+his threadbare cloth&mdash;&ldquo;count goodness. He is something of a
+Socialist, something of a Chartist&mdash;he might frighten you, Mr. Basset. But
+he has the love of the people in him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will see him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has been a tailor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That hit Basset fairly in the face. &ldquo;Good heavens!&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;A tailor?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Colet replied, smiling. &ldquo;But a very uncommon tailor.
+Let me tell you why I quoted him. Because, though he is not a Christian, he has
+ideals. He aims higher than he can shoot, while the aims of the Manchester
+League, though I agree with them upon the corn-tax, seem to me to be bounded by
+the material and warped by their own interests.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset nodded. &ldquo;You have thought a good deal on these things,&rdquo; he
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I live among the poor. I have them always before me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I have thought so little that I need time. You must think no worse
+of me if I wait a while. And now, good-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the other did not take the hand held out to him. He was staring at the
+candle. &ldquo;I am not clear that I have been quite frank with you,&rdquo; he
+said awkwardly. &ldquo;You have offered me the shelter of your house though I
+am a stranger, Mr. Basset, and though you must suspect that to harbor me may
+expose you to remark. Well, I may be tempted to avail myself of your kindness.
+But I cannot do so unless you know more of my circumstances.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know all that is necessary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know what I am going to tell you,&rdquo; Colet
+persisted. &ldquo;And I think that you should. I am going to marry the daughter
+of your uncle&rsquo;s servant, Toft.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good Lord!&rdquo; cried Basset. This was a second and more serious blow.
+It brought him down from the clouds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That shocks you, Mr. Basset,&rdquo; the curate continued with dignity,
+&ldquo;that I should marry one in her position? Well, I am not called upon to
+justify it. Why I think her worthy, and more than worthy to share my life, is
+my business. I only trouble you with the matter because you have made me an
+offer which you might not have made had you known this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset did not deny the fact. He could not, indeed. His taste, his prejudice,
+his traditions all had received a blow, all were up in arms; and, for the
+moment, at any rate he repented of his visit. He felt that in stepping out of
+the normal round he had made a mistake. He should have foreseen, he should have
+known that he would meet with such shocks. &ldquo;You have certainly astonished
+me,&rdquo; he said after a pause of dismay. &ldquo;I cannot think the match
+suitable, Mr. Colet. May I ask if my uncle knows of this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Audley knows of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But&mdash;you cannot yourself think it suitable!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have,&rdquo; Colet replied dryly, &ldquo;or rather I had seventy
+pounds a year. What girl, born in comfort, gently bred, sheltered from
+childhood could I ask to share that? How could I, with so little in the present
+and no prospects, ask a gentlewoman to share my lot?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset did not reply, but he was not convinced. A clergyman to marry a servant,
+good and refined as Etruria was! It seemed to him to be unseemly, to be
+altogether wrong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colet too was silent a moment. Then, &ldquo;I am glad I have told you
+this,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I shall not now trespass on you. On the other
+hand, I hope that you may still do something&mdash;and with your name, you can
+do much&mdash;for the good cause. If rumor goes for anything, many will in the
+next few months examine the ground on which they stand. It will be much, if
+what I have said has weight with you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke with constraint, but he spoke like a man, and Basset owned his
+equality while he resented it. He felt that he ought to renew his offer of
+hospitality, but he could not&mdash;reserve and shyness had him again in their
+grip. He muttered something about thinking it over, added a word or two of
+thanks&mdash;which were cut short by the flickering out of the candle&mdash;and
+a minute later he was in the dark deserted street, and walking back to his
+inn&mdash;not over well content with himself, if the truth be told.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Either he should not have gone, he felt, or he should have gone the whole way,
+sunk his ideas of caste, and carried the thing through. What was it to him if
+the man was going to marry a servant?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But that was a detail. The main point was that he should not have gone. It had
+been a foolish impulse&mdash;he saw it now&mdash;which had taken him to the
+barber&rsquo;s shop; and one which he might have known that he would repent. He
+ought to have foreseen that he could not place himself on Colet&rsquo;s level
+without coming into collision with him; that he could not draw wisdom from him
+without paying toll.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An impossible person, he thought, a man of ideas quite unlike his own! And yet
+the man had spoken well and ably, and spoken from experience. He had told the
+things that he had seen as he passed from house to house, hard, sad facts, the
+outcome of rising numbers and falling wages, of over-production, of mouths
+foodless and unwanted. And all made worse, as he maintained, by this tax on
+bread, that barely touched the rich man&rsquo;s income, yet took a heavy toll
+from the small wage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he recalled some of the things that he had heard, Basset felt his interest
+revive. Colet had dealt with facts; he had attempted no oratory, he had cast no
+glamour over them. But he had brought to bear upon them the light of an
+ideal&mdash;the Christian ideal of unselfishness; and his hearer, while he
+doubted, while he did not admit that the solution was practical, owned its
+beauty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For he too, as we know, had had his aspirations, though he had rarely thought
+of turning them into action. Instead, he had hidden them behind the
+commonplace; and in this he had matched the times, which were commonplace. For
+the country lay in the trough of the wave. Neither the fine fury of the
+generation which had adored the rights of man, nor the splendid endurance which
+the great war had fostered, nor the lesser ardors of the Reform era, which
+found its single panacea in votes, touched or ennobled it. Great wealth and
+great poverty, jostling one another, marked a material age, seeking remedies in
+material things, despising arms, decrying enthusiasm; an age which felt, but
+hardly bowed as yet, to the breath of the new spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Basset&mdash;perhaps because the present offered no great prospect to the
+straitened squire&mdash;had had his glimpses of a life higher and finer,
+devoted to something above the passing whim and the day&rsquo;s indulgence, a
+life that should not be useless to those who came after him. Was it possible
+that he now heard the call? Could this be the crusade of which he had idly
+dreamed? Had the trumpet sounded at the moment of his utmost need?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If only it were so! During the evening he had kept his sorrow at bay as well as
+he could, distracting his thoughts with passing objects. Now, as the boots
+ushered him up the close-smelling stairs to the inn&rsquo;s best room, and he
+stood in his hat and coat, looking on the cold bare aspect and the unfamiliar
+things&mdash;he owned himself desolate. The thought of Mary, of his hopes and
+plans and of the end of these, returned upon him in an irresistible flood. The
+waters which he had stemmed all day, though all day they had lapped his lips,
+overwhelmed him with their bitterness. Mary! He had loved her and she&mdash;he
+knew what she thought of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He could not take up the old life. She had made an end of that, the rather as
+from this time onward the Gatehouse would be closed to him by her presence. And
+the old house near Wootton where he had been wont to pass part of his time?
+That hardly met his needs or his aspirations. Unhappy as he was, he could not
+see himself sitting down in idleness, to brood and to rust in a home so remote,
+so quiet, so lost among the stony hills that the country said of it,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0" style="text-indent:-6pt">
+&ldquo;Wootton under Weaver<br/>
+Where God came never!&rdquo;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+No, he could hardly face that. Hitherto he had not been called upon to say what
+he would do with his life. Now the question was put to him and he had to answer
+it. He had to answer it. For many minutes he sat on the bed staring before him.
+And from time to time he sighed.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap16"></a>CHAPTER XVI<br/>
+THE GREAT HOUSE AT BEAUDELAYS</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was about a week after this that two men stood on the neglected lawn,
+contemplating the long blind front of Beaudelays House. With all its grandeur
+the house lacked the dignity of ruin, for ruin presumes a past, and the larger
+part of the Great House had no past. The ancient wing that had welcomed brides,
+and echoed the laughter of children and given back the sullen notes of the
+passing-bell did not suffice to redeem the whole. By night the house might
+pass; the silent bulk imposed on the eye. By day it required no effort of fancy
+to see the scaffold still clinging to the brickwork, or to discern that the
+grand entrance had never opened to guest or neighbor, that everyday life had
+never gazed through the blank windows of the long façade.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The house, indeed, was not only dead. It had never lived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certainly Nature had done something to shroud the dead. The lawn was knee-deep
+in weeds, and the evergreens about it had pushed out embracing arms to narrow
+the vista before the windows. At the lower end of the lawn a paved terrace, the
+width of the house, promised a freer air, but even here grass sprouted between
+the flags, and elders labored to uproot the stately balustrade that looked on
+the lower garden. This garden, once formal, was now a tangle of vegetation, a
+wilderness amid whose broad walks Venuses slowly turned to Dryads, and classic
+urns lay in fragments, split by the frosts of some excessive winter. Only the
+prospect of the Trent Valley and the Derbyshire foot-hills, visible beyond the
+pleasance, still pleased; and this view was vague and sad and distant. For the
+Great House, as became its greatness, shunned the public eye, and, lying far
+back, set a wide stretch of park between its bounds and the verge of the
+upland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the two men was the owner. The other who bore a bunch of keys was
+Stubbs. Both had a depressed air. It would have been hard to say which of the
+two entered more deeply into the sadness of the place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently my lord turned his back on the house. &ldquo;The view is fine,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;The only fine thing about the place,&rdquo; he added bitterly.
+&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t there a sort of Belvedere below the garden?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is, my lord. But I fear that it is out of repair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like everything else! There, don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m blaming you for
+it, man. You cannot make bricks without straw. But let us look at this
+Belvedere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They descended the steps, and passed slowly along the grass-grown walk, now and
+again stepping aside to avoid the clutch of a straggling rose bough, or the
+fragments of a broken pillar. They paused to inspect the sundial, a giant
+Butterfly with closed wings, a replica of the stone monster in the Yew Walk.
+Lord Audley read the inscription, barely visible through the verdigris that
+stained the dial-plate:
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+&ldquo;Non sine sole volo!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;A short life and a merry one!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few paces farther along the walk they stopped to examine the basin of the
+great fountain. Cracked from edge to centre, and become a shallow bed of clay
+and weeds, it was now as unsightly as it had been beautiful in the days when
+fair women leaning over it had fed the gold fish, or viewed their mirrored
+faces in its waters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The fortunes of the Audleys in a nutshell!&rdquo; muttered the unlucky
+owner. And turning on his heel, &ldquo;Confound it, Stubbs,&rdquo; he cried,
+&ldquo;I have had as much of this as I can stand! A little more and I shall go
+back and cut my throat! It is beginning to rain, too. D&mdash;n the Belvedere!
+Let us go into the house. That cannot be as bad as this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without waiting for an answer, or looking behind him, he strode back the way
+they had come. Stubbs followed in silence, and they regained the lawn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tell you what it is,&rdquo; Audley continued, letting the agent come
+abreast of him. &ldquo;You must find some vulgarian to take the
+place&mdash;iron man or cotton man, I don&rsquo;t care who he is, if he has got
+the cash I You must let it, Stubbs. You must let it! It&rsquo;s a white
+elephant, it&rsquo;s the d&mdash;ndest White Elephant man ever had!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer shook his head. &ldquo;You may be sure, my lord,&rdquo; he said
+mildly, &ldquo;I should have advised that long ago, if it were possible. But we
+couldn&rsquo;t let it in its present state&mdash;for a short term; and we have
+no more power to lease it for a long one than, as your lordship knows, we have
+power to sell it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other swore. At the outset he had scarcely felt his poverty. But he was
+beginning to feel it. There were moments such as this when his withers were
+wrung; when the consequence which the title had brought failed to soften the
+hardships of his lot&mdash;a poor peer with a vast house. Had he tried to keep
+the Great House in repair it would have swallowed the whole income of the
+peerage&mdash;a sum which, as it was, barely sufficed for his needs as a
+bachelor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Already Stubbs had hinted that there was one way out&mdash;a rich marriage. And
+Audley had received the hint with the easiness of a man who was in no haste to
+marry and might, likely enough, marry where money was. But once or twice during
+the last few days, which they had been spending in a review of the property, my
+lord had shown irritation. When an old farmer had said to his face, that he
+must bring home a bride with a good fat chest, &ldquo;and his lordship would be
+what his forbears had been,&rdquo; the great man, in place of a laughing
+answer, had turned glumly away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the two halted at the door of the north wing. Stubbs unlocked it and
+pushed it open. They entered an ante-room of moderate size.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faugh!&rdquo; Audley cried. &ldquo;Open a window! Break one if
+necessary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs succeeded in opening one, and they passed on into the great hall, a room
+sixty feet long and open to the roof, a gallery running round it. A
+withdrawing-room of half the length opened at one end, and midway along the
+inner side a short passage led to a second hall&mdash;the servants&rsquo;
+hall&mdash;the twin of this. Together they formed an H, and were probably a
+Jacobean copy of a Henry the Eighth building. A long table, some benches, and a
+score of massive chairs furnished the room. Between the windows hung a few
+ragged pictures, and on either side of the farther door a piece of tapestry
+hung askew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley looked about him. In this room eighty years before the old lord had held
+his revels. The two hearths had glowed with logs, a hundred wax-lights had
+shone on silver and glass and the rosy tints of old wine. Guests in satin and
+velvet, henchmen and led captains, had filled it with laughter and jest, and
+song. With a foot on the table they had toasted the young king&mdash;not stout
+Farmer George, not the old, mad monarch, but the gay young sovereign. To-day
+desolation reigned. The windows gray with dirt let in a grisly light. All was
+bare and cold and rusty&mdash;the webs of spiders crossed the very hearths. The
+old lord, mouldering in his coffin, was not more unlike that Georgian reveller
+than was the room of to-day unlike the room of eighty years before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps the thought struck his descendant. &ldquo;God! What a
+charnel-house!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;To think that men made merry in this
+room. It&rsquo;s a vault, it&rsquo;s a grave! Let us get away from it.
+What&rsquo;s through, man?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They passed into the withdrawing-room, where panels of needlework of Queen
+Anne&rsquo;s time, gloomy with age, filled the wall spaces, and a few pieces of
+furniture crouched under shrouds of dust. As they stood gazing two rats leapt
+from a screen of Cordovan leather that lay in tatters on the floor. The rats
+paused an instant to stare at the intruders, then fled in panic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The younger man advanced to one of the panels in the wall. &ldquo;A hunting
+scene?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;These may be worth money some day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer looked doubtful. &ldquo;It will be a long day first, I am
+afraid,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s funereal stuff at the best, my
+lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At any rate it is out of reach of the rats,&rdquo; Lord Audley answered.
+He cast a look of distaste at the shreds of the screen. He touched them with
+his foot. A third rat sprang out and fled squeaking to covert. &ldquo;Oh,
+d&mdash;n!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Let us see something else.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer led the way upstairs to the ghostly, echoing gallery that ran round
+the hall. They glanced into the principal guest-room, which was over the
+drawing-room. Then they went by the short passage of the H to the range of
+bedrooms over the servants&rsquo; hall. For the most part they opened one from
+the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The parents slept in the outer and the young ladies in the inner,&rdquo;
+Audley said, smiling. &ldquo;Gad! it tells a tale of the times!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs opened the nearest door and recoiled. &ldquo;Take care, my lord!&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;Here are the bats!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faugh! What a smell! Can&rsquo;t you keep them out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We tried years ago&mdash;I hate them like poison&mdash;but it was of no
+use. They are in all these upper rooms.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were. For when Stubbs, humping his shoulders as under a shower, opened a
+second door, the bats streamed forth in a long silent procession, only to
+stream back again as silently. In a dusky corner of the second room a cluster,
+like a huge bunch of grapes, hung to one of the rafters. Now and again a bat
+detached itself and joined the living current that swept without a sound
+through the shadowy rooms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing beyond these rooms?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then let us go down. Rats and bats and rottenness! <i>Non sine sole
+volo!</i> We may not, but the bats do. Let us go down! Or no! I was forgetting.
+Where is the Muniment Room?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This way, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs replied, turning with suspicious
+readiness&mdash;the bats were his pet aversion. &ldquo;I brought a candle and
+some of the new lucifers. This way, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He led the way down to a door set in a corner of the ante-room. He unlocked
+this and they found themselves at the foot of a circular staircase. On the
+farther side of the stairfoot was another door which led, Stubbs explained,
+into the servants&rsquo; quarters. &ldquo;This turret,&rdquo; he added,
+&ldquo;is older even than the wing, and forms no part of the H. It was retained
+because it supplied a second staircase, and also a short cut from the
+servants&rsquo; hall to the entrance. The Muniment Room is over this lobby on
+the first floor. Allow me to go first, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The air was close, but not unpleasant, and the stairs were clean. On the first
+floor a low-browed door, clamped and studded with iron, showed itself. Stubbs
+halted before it. There was a sputter. A light shone out. &ldquo;Wonderful
+invention!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Electric telegraph not more wonderful, though
+marvellous invention that, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the other answered dryly. &ldquo;But&mdash;when were you
+here last, Stubbs?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not for a twelvemonth, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Leave your candle?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then what&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; The young man pointed to something that
+lay in the angle between a stair and the wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God bless my soul!&rdquo; the lawyer cried. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a
+candle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And clean. It has not been there a week. Who has been here, my
+friend?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs reflected. &ldquo;No one with my authority,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But
+if the devil himself has been here,&rdquo; he continued, stoutly recovering
+himself, &ldquo;he can have done no harm. I can prove that in five minutes, my
+lord&mdash;if you will kindly hold the light.&rdquo; He inserted a large key in
+the lock, and with an effort, he shot back the bolts. He pushed open the door
+and signed to Lord Audley to enter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did so, and Stubbs followed. They stood and looked about them. They were in
+a whitewashed chamber twelve feet square, clean, bare, empty. The walls gave
+back the light so that the one candle lit the place perfectly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s as good as air-tight,&rdquo; Stubbs said with pride.
+&ldquo;And you see, my lord, we swept it as bare as the palm of my hand. I can
+answer for it that not a shred of paper or a piece of wax was left.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley, gazing about him, seemed satisfied. His face relaxed.
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you could not overlook anything in a place
+like this. I&rsquo;m glad I&rsquo;ve seen it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was turning to go when a thought struck him. He lowered the light and
+scanned the floor. &ldquo;All the same, somebody has been here!&rdquo; he
+exclaimed. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s one of the things you are so pleased
+with&mdash;a lucifer!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs stooped and looked. &ldquo;A lucifer?&rdquo; he repeated. He picked up
+the bit of charred wood and examined it. &ldquo;Now how did that come here? I
+never used one till six months ago.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord frowned. &ldquo;Who is it?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Some one, I fear, who has had a key made,&rdquo; the agent answered,
+shaking his head,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can see that for myself. But has he learned anything?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs stared. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing to learn, my lord,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;You can see that. Whoever he is, he has cracked the nut and found no
+kernel!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man looked round him again. He nodded. &ldquo;I suppose so,&rdquo; he
+said. But he seemed ill at ease and inclined to find fault. He threw the light
+of the candle this way and that, as if he expected the clean white walls to
+tell a tale. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; he asked suddenly. &ldquo;A
+crack? Or what?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs looked, passed his hand over the mark on the wall, effaced it.
+&ldquo;No, my lord, a cobweb,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no more to be seen, yet Audley seemed loth to go. At length he turned
+and went out. Stubbs closed and locked the door behind them, then he took the
+candle from his lordship and invited him to go down before him. Still the young
+man hesitated. &ldquo;I suppose we can learn nothing more?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs answered. &ldquo;To tell you the truth,
+I have long thought Mr. John mad, and it is possible that his madness has taken
+this turn. But I am equally sure that there is nothing for him to discover, if
+he spends every day of his life here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All the same I don&rsquo;t like it,&rdquo; the owner objected.
+&ldquo;Whoever has been here has no right here. It is odd that I had some
+notion of this before we came. You may depend upon it that this was why he
+fixed himself at the Gatehouse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He may have had something of the sort in his mind,&rdquo; Stubbs
+admitted. &ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t think so, my lord. More probably, being here
+and idle, he took to wandering in for lack of something to do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And by and by, had a key made and strayed into the Muniment Room! No,
+that won&rsquo;t do, Stubbs. And frankly there should be closer supervision
+here. It should not have remained for me to discover this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He began to descend, leaving Stubbs to digest the remark; who for his part
+thought honestly that too much was being made of the matter. Probably the
+intruder was John Audley; the man had a bee in his bonnet, and what more likely
+than that he should be taken with a craze to haunt the house which he believed
+was his own? But the agent was too prudent to defend himself while the young
+man&rsquo;s vexation was fresh. He followed him down in silence, and before
+many minutes had passed, they were in the open air, and had locked the door
+behind them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clouds hung low on the tops of the trees, mist veiled the view, and a small
+rain was falling on the wet lawn. Nevertheless the young man moved into the
+open. &ldquo;Come this way,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer turned up the collar of his coat and followed him unwillingly.
+&ldquo;Where does he get in?&rdquo; my lord asked. It seemed as if the longer
+he dwelt on the matter the less he liked it. &ldquo;Not by that door&mdash;the
+lock is rusty. The key had shrieked in it. Probably he enters by one of the
+windows in the new part.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He walked towards the middle of the lawn and Stubbs, thankful that he wore
+Wellington boots, followed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer thought that he had never seen the house wear so dreary an aspect as
+it wore under the gray weeping sky. But his lordship was more practical.
+&ldquo;These windows look the most likely,&rdquo; he said after a short survey:
+and he dragged his unwilling attendant to the point he had marked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A nearer view strengthened his suspicions. On the sill of one of the windows
+were scratches and stains. &ldquo;You see?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It should not
+have been left to me to discover this! Probably John Audley comes from the
+Gatehouse by the Yew Walk.&rdquo; He turned to measure the distance with his
+eye, the distance which divided the spot from the Iron Gate.
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;he comes&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, &ldquo;Good G&mdash;d!&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;Look! Look!&rdquo;
+Stubbs looked. They both looked. Beyond the lawn, on the farther side of the
+iron grille and clinging to it with both hands, a man stood bareheaded under
+the rain. Whether he had come uncovered, or his hat had been jerked from him by
+some movement caused by their appearance, they could not tell; nor how long he
+had stood thus, gazing at them through the bars. But they could see that his
+eyes never wavered, that his hands gripped the iron, and the two knew by
+instinct that in the intensity of his hate, the man was insensible alike to the
+rain that drenched him, and to the wind that blew out the skirts of his thin
+black coat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even Stubbs held his breath. Even he felt that there was something uncanny and
+ominous in the appearance. For the gazer was John Audley.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap17"></a>CHAPTER XVII<br/>
+TO THE RESCUE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs was the first to collect himself, but a minute elapsed before he spoke.
+Then, &ldquo;He must be mad,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;mad, to expose himself to
+the weather at his age. If I had not seen it, I couldn&rsquo;t believe
+it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose it is John Audley?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; Then raising his voice, &ldquo;My lord! I don&rsquo;t think
+I would go to him now!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Audley was already striding across the lawn towards the gate. The lawyer
+hesitated, gave way, and followed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were within twenty paces of the silent watcher when he moved&mdash;up to
+that time he might have been a lay figure. He shook one hand in the air, as if
+he would beat them off, then he turned and walked stiffly away. Half a dozen
+steps took him out of sight. The Yew Walk swallowed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, quickly as he vanished, the lawyer had had time to see that he staggered.
+&ldquo;I fear, my lord, he is ill,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He will never reach
+the Gatehouse in that state. I had better follow him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why the devil did he come here?&rdquo; Audley retorted savagely. The
+watcher&rsquo;s strange aspect, his face, white against the dark yews, his
+stillness, his gesture, a something ominous in all, had shaken him. &ldquo;If
+he had stopped at home&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;D&mdash;n him, it&rsquo;s his affair!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still we cannot leave him if he has fallen, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs
+replied with decision. And without waiting for his employer&rsquo;s assent he
+tried the gate. It was locked, but in a trice he found the key on his bunch,
+turned it, and pushed back the gate. Audley noticed that it moved silently on
+its hinges.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs, the gate open, began to feel ashamed of his impulse. Probably there was
+nothing amiss after all. But he had hardly looked along the path before he
+uttered a cry, and hurrying forward, stooped over a bundle of clothes that lay
+in the middle of the walk. It was John Audley. Apparently he had tripped over a
+root and lain where he had fallen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs&rsquo;s cry summoned the other, who followed him through the gate, to
+find him on his knees supporting the old man&rsquo;s head. The sight recalled
+Audley to his better self. The mottled face, the staring eyes, the helpless
+limbs shocked him. &ldquo;Good G&mdash;d!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;you were
+right, Stubbs! He might have died if we had left him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He would have died,&rdquo; Stubbs answered. &ldquo;As it is&mdash;I am
+not sure.&rdquo; He opened the waistcoat, felt for the beating of the heart,
+bent his ear to it. &ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t think he&rsquo;s gone,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;but the heart is feeble, very feeble. We must have brandy! My
+lord, you are the more active. Will you go to the Gatehouse&mdash;there is no
+nearer place&mdash;and get some? And something to carry him home! A hurdle if
+there is nothing better, and a couple of men?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Right!&rdquo; Audley cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And don&rsquo;t lose a minute, my lord! He&rsquo;s nearly gone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley stripped off his overcoat. &ldquo;Wrap this about him!&rdquo; he said.
+And before the other could answer he had started for the Gatehouse, at a pace
+which he believed that he could keep up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pad, pad, my lord ran under the yew trees, swish, swish across the soaking
+grass, about the great Butterfly. Pad, pad, again through the gloom under the
+yews! Not too fast, he told himself&mdash;he was a big man and he must save
+himself. Now he saw before him the opening into the park, and the light falling
+on the pale turf. And then, at a point not more than twenty yards short of the
+open ground, he tripped over a root, tried to recover himself, struck another
+root, and fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fall shook him, but he was young, and he was quickly on his feet. He paused
+an instant to brush the dirt from his hands and knees; and it was during that
+instant that his inbred fear of John Audley, and the certainty that if John
+Audley died he need fear no more, rose before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, if he died&mdash;this man who was even now plotting against
+him&mdash;there was an end of that fear! There was an end of uneasiness, of
+anxiety, of the alarm that assailed him in the small hours, of the forebodings
+that showed him stripped of title and income and consequence. Stripped of all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Five seconds passed, and he still stood, engaged with his hands. Five more; it
+was his knees he was brushing now&mdash;and very carefully. Another
+five&mdash;the sweat broke out on his brow though the day was cold. Twenty
+seconds, twenty-five! His face showed white in the gloom. And still he stood.
+He glanced behind him. No one could see him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the movement discovered the man to himself, and with an oath he broke away.
+He thrust the damning thought from him, he sprang forward. He ran. In ten
+strides he was in the open park, and trotting steadily, his elbows to his
+sides, across the sward. The blessed light was about him, the wind swept past
+his ears, the cleansing rain whipped his face. Thank God, he had left behind
+him the heavy air and noisome scent of the yews. He hated them. He would cut
+them all down some day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For in a strange way he associated them with the temptation which had assailed
+him. And he was thankful, most thankful, that he had put that temptation from
+him&mdash;had put it from him, when most men, he thought, would have succumbed
+to it. Thank God, he had not! The farther he went, indeed, the better he felt.
+By the time he saw the Gatehouse before him, he was sure that few men, exposed
+to that temptation, would have overcome it. For if John Audley died what a
+relief it would be! And he had looked very ill; he had looked like a man at the
+point of death. The brandy could not reach him under&mdash;well, under half an
+hour. Half an hour was a long time, when a man looked like that.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do my best,&rdquo; he thought. &ldquo;Then if he dies, well
+and good. I&rsquo;ve always been afraid of him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not spare himself, but he was not in training, and he was well winded
+when he reached the Gatehouse. A last effort carried him between the
+Butterflies, and he halted on the flags of the courtyard. A woman, whose skirts
+were visible, but whose head and shoulders were hidden by an umbrella, was
+standing in the doorway on his left, speaking to some one in the house. She
+heard his footsteps and turned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord Audley!&rdquo; she exclaimed&mdash;for it was Mary Audley. Then
+with a woman&rsquo;s quickness, &ldquo;You have come from my uncle?&rdquo; she
+cried. &ldquo;Is he ill?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley nodded. &ldquo;I am come for some brandy,&rdquo; he gasped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not waste a moment. She sped into the house, and to the dining-room.
+&ldquo;I had missed him,&rdquo; she cried over her shoulder. &ldquo;The
+man-servant is away. I hoped he might be with him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a trice she had opened a cellarette and taken from it a decanter of brandy.
+Then she saw that he could not carry this at any speed, and she turned to the
+sideboard and took a wicker flask from a drawer. With a steady hand and without
+the loss of a minute&mdash;he found her presence of mind admirable&mdash;she
+filled this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As she corked it, Mrs. Toft appeared, wiping her hands on her apron.
+&ldquo;Dear, dear, miss,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is the master bad? But
+it&rsquo;s no wonder when he, that doesn&rsquo;t quit the fire for a week
+together, goes out like this? And Toft away and all!&rdquo; She stared at his
+lordship. Probably she knew him by sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you get his bed warmed, Mrs. Toft,&rdquo; Mary answered. She gave
+Lord Audley the flask. &ldquo;Please don&rsquo;t lose a moment,&rdquo; she
+urged. &ldquo;I am following&mdash;oh yes, I am. But you will go faster.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had not a thought, he saw, for the disorder of her dress, or for her hair
+dishevelled by the wind, and scarce a thought for him. He decided that he had
+never seen her to such advantage, but it was no time for compliments, nor was
+she in the mood for them. Without more he nodded and set off on his return
+journey&mdash;he had not been in the house three minutes. By and by he looked
+back, and saw that Mary was following on his heels. She had snatched up a
+sun-bonnet, discarded the umbrella, and, heedless of the rain, was coming after
+him as swiftly and lightly as Atalanta of the golden apple. &ldquo;Gad,
+she&rsquo;s not one of the fainting sort!&rdquo; he reflected; and also that if
+he had given way to that d&mdash;d temptation he could not have looked her in
+the face. &ldquo;As it is,&rdquo; his mind ran, &ldquo;what are the odds the
+old boy&rsquo;s not dead when we get there? If he is&mdash;I am safe! If he is
+not, I might do worse than think of her. It would checkmate him finely.
+More&rdquo;&mdash;he looked again over his shoulder&mdash;&ldquo;she&rsquo;s a
+fine mover, by Gad, and her figure&rsquo;s perfect! Even that rag on her head
+don&rsquo;t spoil her!&rdquo; Whereupon he thought of a certain Lady Adela with
+whom he was very friendly, who had political connections and would some day
+have a plum. The comparison was not, in the matter of fineness and figure, to
+Lady Adela&rsquo;s advantage. Her lines were rather on the Flemish side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Mary was feeling anything but an Atalanta. Wind and rain and wet
+grass, loosened hair and swaying skirts do not make for romance. But in her
+anxiety she gave small thought to these. Her one instinct was to help. With all
+his oddity her uncle had been kind to her, and she longed to show him that she
+was grateful. And he was her one relative. She had no one else in the world. He
+had given her what of home he had, and ease, and a security which she had never
+known before. Were she to lose him now&mdash;the mere fancy spurred her to
+fresh exertions, and in spite of a pain in her side, in spite of clinging
+skirts, and shoes that threatened to leave her feet, she pushed on. She was not
+far behind Audley when he reached the Yew Walk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw him plunge into it, she followed, and was on the scene not many seconds
+later. When she caught sight of the little group kneeling about the prostrate
+man, that sense of tragedy, and of the inevitable, which assails at such a
+time, shook her. The thing always possible, never expected, had happened at
+last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the coolness which women find in these emergencies returned. She knelt
+between the men, took the insensible head on her arm, held out her other hand
+for the cup. &ldquo;Has he swallowed any?&rdquo; she asked, taking command of
+the situation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Toft answered&mdash;and she became aware that the man with
+Lord Audley was the servant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She waited for no more, she tilted the cup, and by some knack she succeeded
+where Toft had failed. A little of the spirit was swallowed. She improvised a
+pillow and laid the head down on it. &ldquo;The lower the better,&rdquo; she
+murmured. She felt the hands and began to rub one. &ldquo;Rub the other,&rdquo;
+she said to Toft. &ldquo;The first thing to do is to get him home! Have you a
+carriage? How near can you bring it, Lord Audley?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We can bring it to the park at the end of the walk,&rdquo; he answered.
+&ldquo;My agent has gone to fetch it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you hasten it?&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Toft will stay with me.
+And bring something, please, on which you can carry him to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At once,&rdquo; Audley answered, and he went off in the direction of the
+Great House.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen him as bad before, Miss,&rdquo; Toft said. &ldquo;I
+found that he had gone out without his hat and I followed him, but I could not
+trace him at once. I don&rsquo;t think you need feel alarmed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certainly the face had lost its mottled look, the eyes were now shut, the limbs
+lay more naturally. &ldquo;If he were only at home!&rdquo; Mary answered.
+&ldquo;But every moment he is exposed to the cold is against him. He must be
+wet through.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She induced the patient to swallow another mouthful of brandy, and with their
+eyes on his face the two watched for the first gleam of consciousness. It came
+suddenly. John Audley&rsquo;s eyes opened. He stared at them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His mind, however, still wandered. &ldquo;I knew it!&rdquo; he muttered.
+&ldquo;They could not be there and I not know it! But the wall! The wall is
+thick&mdash;thick and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He was silent again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rambling mind is to those who are not wont to deal with it a most uncanny
+thing, and Mary looked at Toft to see what he made of it. But the servant had
+eyes only for his master. He was gazing at him with an absorbed face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, a thick wall!&rdquo; the sick man murmured. &ldquo;They may look and
+look, they&rsquo;ll not see through it.&rdquo; He was silent a moment, then,
+&ldquo;All bare!&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;All bare!&rdquo; He chuckled
+faintly, and tried to raise himself, but sank back. &ldquo;Fools!&rdquo; he
+whispered, &ldquo;fools, when in ten minutes if they took out a
+brick&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The servant cut him short. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s his lordship!&rdquo; he cried.
+He spoke so sharply that Mary looked up in surprise, wondering what was amiss.
+Lord Audley was within three or four paces of them&mdash;the carpet of yew
+leaves had deadened his footsteps. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s his lordship,
+sir!&rdquo; Toft repeated in the same tone, his mouth close to John
+Audley&rsquo;s ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The servant&rsquo;s manner shocked Mary. &ldquo;Hush, Toft!&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;Do you want to startle him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;His lordship will startle him,&rdquo; Toft retorted. He looked over his
+shoulder, and without ceremony he signed to Lord Audley to stand back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bare, quite bare!&rdquo; John Audley muttered, his mind still far away.
+&ldquo;But if they took out&mdash;if they took out&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft waved his hand again&mdash;waved it wildly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, I understand,&rdquo; Lord Audley said. He had not at first
+grasped what was wanted, but the man&rsquo;s repeated gestures enlightened him.
+He retired to a position where he was out of the sick man&rsquo;s sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The servant wiped the sweat from his brow. &ldquo;He mustn&rsquo;t see
+him!&rdquo; he repeated insistently. &ldquo;Lord! what a turn it gave me. I ask
+your pardon, Miss,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;but I know the master so
+well.&rdquo; He cast an uneasy glance over his shoulder. &ldquo;If the
+master&rsquo;s eyes lit on him once, only once, when he&rsquo;s in this state,
+I&rsquo;d not answer for his life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary reproached herself. &ldquo;You are quite right, Toft,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;I ought to have thought of that myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He must not see any strangers!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He shall not. You are quite right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Toft was still uneasy. He looked round. Stubbs and a man who had been
+working in the neighborhood were bringing up a sheep-hurdle, and again the
+butler&rsquo;s anxiety overcame him. &ldquo;D&mdash;n!&rdquo; he said: and he
+rose to his feet. &ldquo;I think they want to kill him amongst them! Why
+can&rsquo;t they keep away?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hush! Toft. Why&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He mustn&rsquo;t see the lawyer! He must not see him on any
+account.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary nodded. &ldquo;I will arrange it!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Only don&rsquo;t
+excite him. You will do him harm that way if you are not careful. I will speak
+to them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She went to meet them and explained, while Stubbs, who had not seen her before,
+considered her with interest. So this was Miss Audley, Peter Audley&rsquo;s
+daughter! She told them that she thought it better that her uncle should not
+find strangers about him when he came to himself. They agreed&mdash;it seemed
+quite natural&mdash;and it was arranged that Toft and the man should carry him
+as far as the carriage, while Mary walked beside him; and that afterwards she
+and Toft should travel with him. The carriage cushions were placed on the
+hurdle, and the helpless man was lifted on to them. Toft and the laborer raised
+their burden, and slowly and heavily, with an occasional stagger, they bore it
+along the sodden path. Mary saw that the sweat sprang out on Toft&rsquo;s
+sallow face and that his knees shook under him. Clearly the man was taxing his
+strength to the utmost, and she felt some concern&mdash;she had not given him
+credit for such fidelity. However, he held out until they reached the carriage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Babbling a word now and again, John Audley was moved into the vehicle. Mary
+mounted beside him and supported his head, while Toft climbed to the box, and
+at a footpace they set off across the sward, the laborer plodding at the tail
+of the carriage, and Lord Audley and Stubbs following a score of paces behind.
+The rain had ceased, but the clouds were low and leaden, the trees dripped
+sadly, and the little procession across the park had a funereal look. To Mary
+the way seemed long, to Toft still longer. With every moment his head was
+round. His eyes were now on his master, now jealously cast on those who brought
+up the rear. But everything comes to an end, and at length they swung into the
+courtyard, where Mrs. Toft, capable and cool, met them and took a load off
+Mary&rsquo;s shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s that bad is he?&rdquo; she said calmly. &ldquo;Then the
+sooner he&rsquo;s in his bed the better. &rsquo;Truria&rsquo;s warming it. How
+will we get him up? I could carry him myself if that&rsquo;s all. If
+Toft&rsquo;ll take his feet, I&rsquo;ll do the rest. No need for another soul
+to come in!&rdquo; with a glance at Lord Audley. &ldquo;But if they would fetch
+the doctor I&rsquo;d not say no, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll ask them to do that,&rdquo; Mary said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And don&rsquo;t you worrit, Miss,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft continued, eyeing the
+sick man judicially. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s been nigh as bad as this before and been
+about within the week. There&rsquo;s some as when they wool-gathers,
+there&rsquo;s no worse sign. But the master he&rsquo;s never all here, nor all
+there, and like a Broseley butter-pot another touch of the kiln will neither
+make him nor break him. Now, Toft, wide of the door-post, and steady,
+man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lord Audley and Stubbs had remained outside, but when they saw Mary coming
+towards them, the young man left Stubbs and went to meet her. &ldquo;How is
+he?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mrs. Toft thinks well of him. She has seen him nearly as ill before, she
+says. But if he recovers,&rdquo; Mary continued gratefully, &ldquo;we owe his
+life to you. Had you not found him he must have died. And if you had lost a
+moment in bringing the news, I am sure that we should have been too
+late.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man might have given some credit to Stubbs, but he did not; perhaps
+because time pressed, perhaps because he felt that his virtue in resisting a
+certain temptation deserved its reward. Instead he looked at Mary with a
+sympathy so ardent that her eyes fell. &ldquo;Who would not have done as
+much?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If not for him&mdash;for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you add one kindness then?&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Will you
+send Dr. Pepper as quickly as possible?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Without the loss of a minute,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But one thing
+before I go. I cannot come here to inquire, yet I should like to know how he
+goes on. Will you walk a little way down the Riddsley road at noon to-morrow,
+and tell me how he fares?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary hesitated. But when he had done so much for them, when he had as good as
+saved her uncle&rsquo;s life, how could she be churlish? How could she play the
+prude? &ldquo;Of course I will,&rdquo; she said frankly. &ldquo;I hope I shall
+bring a good report.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Until to-morrow!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap18"></a>CHAPTER XVIII<br/>
+MASKS AND FACES</h2>
+
+<p>
+Cherbuliez opens one of his stories with the remark that if the law of
+probabilities ruled, the hero and heroine would never have met, seeing that the
+one lived in Venice and the other seldom left Paris. That in spite of this they
+fell in with one another was enough to suggest to the lady that Destiny was at
+work to unite them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He put into words a thought which has entertained millions of lovers. If in
+face of the odds of three hundred and sixty-four to one Phyllis shares her
+birthday with Corydon, if Frederica sprains her ankle and the ready arm belongs
+to a Frederic, if Mademoiselle has a <i>grain de beauté</i> on the right ear,
+and Monsieur a plain mole on the left&mdash;here is at once matter for reverie,
+and the heart is given almost before the hands have met.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was the fourth occasion on which Audley had come to Mary&rsquo;s rescue,
+and, sensible as she was, she was too thoroughly woman to be proof against the
+suggestion. On three of the four occasions the odds had been against his
+appearance. Yet he had come. To-day in particular, as if no pain that
+threatened her could be indifferent to him, as if no trouble approached her but
+touched a nerve in him, he had risen from the very ground to help and sustain
+her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Could the coldest decline to feel interest in one so strangely linked with her
+by fortune? Could the most prudent in such a case abstain from day dreams, in
+which love and service, devotion and constancy, played their parts?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sic itur ad astra!</i> So men and women begin to love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She spent the morning between the room in which John Audley was making a slow
+recovery, and the deserted library which already wore a cold and unused aspect.
+In the one and the other she felt a restlessness and a disturbance which she
+was fain to set down to yesterday&rsquo;s alarm. The old interests invited her
+in vain. Do what she would, she could not keep her mind off the appointment
+before her. Her eyes grew dreamy, her thoughts strayed, her color came and
+went. At one moment she would plunge into a thousand attentions to her uncle,
+at another she opened books only to close them. She looked at the
+clock&mdash;surely the hands were not moving! She looked again&mdash;it could
+not be as late as that! The truth was that Mary was not in love, but she was
+ready to be in love. She was glad and sorry, grave and gay, without reason;
+like a stream that dances over the shallows, and rippling and twinkling goes
+its way through the sunshine, knowing nothing of the deep pool that awaits it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, acting upon some impulse, she opened a drawer in one of the tables.
+It contained a portrait in crayons of Peter Basset, which John Audley had shown
+her. She took out the sketch and set it against a book where the light fell
+upon it, and she examined it. At first with a smile&mdash;that he should have
+been so mad as to think what he had thought! And then with a softer look. How
+hard she had been to him! How unfeeling! Nay, how cruel!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat for a long time looking at the portrait. But in fact she had forgotten
+that it was before her, when the clock, striking the half&mdash;hour before
+noon, surprised her. Then she thrust the portrait back into its drawer, and
+went with a composed face to put on her hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The past summer had been one of the wettest ever known, for rain had fallen on
+five days out of seven. But to-day it was fine, and as Mary descended the road
+that led from the house towards Riddsley, a road open to the vale on one side
+and flanked on the other by a rising slope covered with brushwood, a watery sun
+was shining. Its rays, aided by the clearness of the air, brought out the
+colors of stubble and field, flood and coppice, that lay below. And men looking
+up from toil or pleasure, leaning on spades or pausing before they crossed a
+stile, saw the Gatehouse transformed to a fairy lodge, gray, clear&mdash;cut,
+glittering, breaking the line of forest trees&mdash;saw it as if it had stood
+in another world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary looked back, looked forward, admired, descended. She had made up her mind
+that Lord Audley would meet her at a turn near the foot of the hill, where a
+Cross had once stood, and where the crumbling base and moss-clothed steps still
+bade travellers rest and be thankful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was there, and Mary owned the attraction of the big smiling face and the
+burly figure, that in a rough, caped riding-coat still kept an air of fashion.
+He on his side saw coming to meet him, through the pale sunshine, not as
+yesterday an Atalanta, but a cool Dian, with her hands in a large muff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You bring a good report, I hope?&rdquo; he cried before they met.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; Mary replied, sparkling a little as she looked at
+him&mdash;was not the sun shining? &ldquo;My uncle is much better this morning.
+Dr. Pepper says that it was mainly exertion acting on a weak heart. He expects
+him to be downstairs in a week and to be himself in a fortnight. But he will
+have to be more careful in future.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is good!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He says, too, that if you had not acted so promptly, my uncle must have
+died.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, he was pretty far gone, I must say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So, as he will not thank you himself, you must let me thank you.&rdquo;
+And Mary held out the hand she had hitherto kept in her muff. She was
+determined not to be a prude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pressed it discreetly. &ldquo;I am glad,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Very glad.
+Perhaps after this he may think better of me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think that there is a chance of it,&rdquo;
+she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No? Well, I suppose it was foolish, but do you know, I did hope that
+this might bring us together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may dismiss it,&rdquo; she answered, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Then tell me this. How in the world did he
+come to be there? Without a hat? Without a coat? And so far from the
+house?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary hesitated. He had turned, they were walking side by side. &ldquo;I am not
+sure that I ought to tell you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What I know I gathered
+from a word that Mr. Audley let fall when he was rambling. He seems to have had
+some instinct, some feeling that you were there and to have been forced to
+learn if it was so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But forced? By what?&rdquo; Lord Audley asked. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+understand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand either,&rdquo; Mary answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He could not know that we were there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But he seems to have known.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Strange,&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;Does he often stray away like
+that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He does, sometimes,&rdquo; she admitted reluctantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; Audley was silent a moment. Then, &ldquo;Well, I am glad he
+is better,&rdquo; he said in the tone of one who dismisses a subject.
+&ldquo;Let us talk of something else&mdash;ourselves. Are you aware that this
+is the fourth time that I have come to your rescue?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know that it is the fourth time that you have been very useful,&rdquo;
+she admitted. She wished that she had been able to control her color, but
+though he spoke playfully there was meaning in his voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I, too, have a second sense it seems,&rdquo; he said, almost purring as
+he looked at her. &ldquo;Did you by any chance think of me, when you missed
+your uncle?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not for a moment,&rdquo; she retorted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps&mdash;you thought of Mr. Basset?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, nor of Mr. Basset. Had he been at the Gatehouse I might have. But he
+is away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Away, is he? Oh!&rdquo; He looked at her with a whimsical smile.
+&ldquo;Do you know that when he met us the other evening I thought that he was
+a little out of temper? It was not a continuance of that which took him away, I
+suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary would have given the world to show an unmoved face at that moment. But she
+could not. Nor could she feel as angry as she wished. &ldquo;I thought we were
+going to talk of ourselves,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought that we were talking of you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On that, &ldquo;I am afraid that I must be going back,&rdquo; she said. And she
+stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I am going back with you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you? Well, you may come as far as the Cross.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, hang the Cross!&rdquo; he answered with a masterfulness of which
+Mary owned the charm, while she rebelled against it. &ldquo;I shall come as far
+as I like! And hang Basset too&mdash;if he makes you unhappy!&rdquo; He
+laughed. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll talk of&mdash;what shall we talk of, Mary? Why, we
+are cousins&mdash;does not that entitle me to call you
+&lsquo;Mary&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would rather you did not,&rdquo; she said, and this time there was no
+lack of firmness in her tone. She remembered what Basset had said about her
+name and&mdash;and for the moment the other&rsquo;s airiness displeased her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But we are cousins.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you can call me cousin,&rdquo; she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed. &ldquo;Beaten again!&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I can call you cousin,&rdquo; she said sedately. &ldquo;Indeed, I am
+going to treat you as a cousin. I want you, if not to do, to think of doing
+something for me. I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; nervously, &ldquo;whether I am
+asking more than I ought&mdash;if so you must forgive me. But it is not for
+myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You frighten me!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s about Mr. Colet, the curate whom you helped us to save from
+those men at Brown Heath. He has been shamefully treated. What they did to him
+might be forgiven&mdash;they knew no better. But I hear that because he
+preaches what is not to everybody&rsquo;s taste, but what thousands and
+thousands are saying, he is to lose his curacy. And that is his livelihood. It
+seems most wicked to me, because I am told that no one else will employ him.
+And what is he to do? He has no friends&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has one eloquent friend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t laugh at me!&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not laughing,&rdquo; he answered. He was, in fact, wondering how he
+should deal with this&mdash;this fad of hers. A little, too, he was wondering
+what it meant. It could not be that she was in love with Colet. Absurd! He
+recalled the look of the man. &ldquo;I am not laughing,&rdquo; he repeated more
+slowly. &ldquo;But what do you want me to do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To use your influence for him,&rdquo; Mary explained, &ldquo;either with
+the rector to keep him or with some one else to employ him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He only did what he thought was his duty. And&mdash;and because he did
+it, is he to pay with all he has in the world?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems a hard case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is more, it is an abominable injustice!&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said slowly. &ldquo;It seems so. It certainly seems hard.
+But let me&mdash;don&rsquo;t be angry with me if I put another side.&rdquo; He
+spoke with careful moderation. &ldquo;It is my experience that good, easy men,
+such as I take the rector of Riddsley to be, rarely do a thing which seems
+cruel, without reason. A clergyman, for instance; he has generally thought out
+more clearly than you or I what it is right to say in the pulpit; how far it is
+lawful, and then again how far it is wise to deal with matters of debate. He
+has considered how far a pronouncement may offend some, and so may render his
+office less welcome to them. That is one consideration. Probably, too, he has
+considered that a statement, if events falsify it, will injure him with his
+poorer parishioners who look up to him as wiser than themselves. Well, when
+such a man has laid down a rule and finds a younger clergyman bent upon
+transgressing it, is it unreasonable if he puts his foot down?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I had not looked at it in that way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that, perhaps, is not all,&rdquo; he resumed. &ldquo;You know that a
+thing may be true, but that it is not always wise to proclaim it. It may be too
+strong meat. It may be true, for instance, that corn-dealers make an unfair
+profit out of the poor; but it is not a truth that you would tell a hungry
+crowd outside the corn-dealer&rsquo;s shop on a Saturday night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Mary allowed reluctantly. &ldquo;Perhaps not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And again&mdash;I have nothing to say against Colet. It is enough for me
+that he is a friend of yours&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have a reason for being interested in him. I am sure that if you heard
+him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might be carried away? Precisely. But is it not possible that he has
+seen much of one side of this question, much of the poverty for which a cure is
+sought, without being for that reason fitted to decide what the cure should
+be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary nodded. &ldquo;Have you formed any opinion yourself?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he was too prudent to enter on a discussion. He saw that so far he had
+impressed her with what he had said, and he was not going to risk the advantage
+he had gained. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am weighing the matter at
+this moment. We are on the verge of a crisis on the Corn Laws, and it is my
+duty to consider the question carefully. I am doing so. I have hitherto been a
+believer in the tax. I may change my views, but I shall not do so hastily. As
+for your friend, I will consider what can be done, but I fear that he has been
+imprudent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sometimes,&rdquo; she ventured, &ldquo;imprudence is a virtue.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And its own reward!&rdquo; he retorted. They had passed the Cross, they
+were by this time high on the hill, with one accord they came to a stand.
+&ldquo;However, I will think it over,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;I will think
+it over, and what a cousin may, a cousin shall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A cousin may much when he is Lord Audley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A poor man in a fine coat! A butterfly in an east wind.&rdquo; He
+removed his curly-brimmed hat and stood gazing over the prospect, over the wide
+valley that far and near gleamed with many a sheet of flood-water. &ldquo;Have
+you ever thought, Mary, what that means?&rdquo; he continued with feeling.
+&ldquo;To be the shadow of a name! A ghost of the past! To have for home a
+ruin, and for lands a few poor farms&mdash;in place of all that we can see from
+here! For all this was once ours. To live a poor man among the rich! To have
+nothing but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Opportunities!&rdquo; she answered, her voice betraying how deeply she
+was moved&mdash;for she too was an Audley. &ldquo;For, with all said and done,
+you start where others end. You have no need to wait for a hearing. Doors stand
+open to you that others must open. Your name is a passport&mdash;is there a
+Stafford man who does not thrill to it? Surely these things are something.
+Surely they are much?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You would make me think so!&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Believe me, they are.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They would be if I had your enthusiasm!&rdquo; he answered, moved by her
+words. &ldquo;And, by Jove,&rdquo; gazing with admiration at her glowing face,
+&ldquo;if I had you by me to spur me on there&rsquo;s no knowing, Mary, what I
+might not try! And what I might not do!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Womanlike, she would evade the crisis which she had provoked. &ldquo;Or fail to
+do!&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Perhaps the most worthy would be left undone.
+But I must go now,&rdquo; she continued. &ldquo;I have to give my uncle his
+medicine. I fear I am late already.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When shall I see you again?&rdquo; he asked, trying to detain her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Some day, I have no doubt. But good-bye now! And don&rsquo;t forget Mr.
+Colet! Good-bye!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood awhile looking after her, then he turned and went down the hill. By
+the time he was at the place where he had met her he was glad that she had
+broken off the interview.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might have said too much,&rdquo; he reflected. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s
+handsome enough to turn any man&rsquo;s head! And not so cold as she looks. And
+she spells safety. But there&rsquo;s no hurry&mdash;and she&rsquo;s inclined to
+be kind, or I am mistaken! That clown, Basset, too, has got his dismissal, I
+fancy, and there&rsquo;s no one else!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently his thoughts took another turn. &ldquo;What maggots women get into
+their heads!&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;That pestilent Colet&mdash;I&rsquo;m
+glad the rector acted on my hint. But there it is; when a woman meddles with
+politics she&rsquo;s game for the first spouter she comes across! Fine eyes,
+too, and the Audley blood! With a little drilling she would hold her own
+anywhere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altogether, he found the walk to the place where he had left his carriage
+pleasant enough and his thoughts satisfactory. With Mary and safety on one
+side, and Lady Adela and a plum on the other&mdash;it would be odd if he did
+not bring his wares to a tolerable market.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap19"></a>CHAPTER XIX<br/>
+THE CORN LAW CRISIS</h2>
+
+<p>
+He had been right in his forecast when he told Mary that a political crisis was
+at hand. That which had been long whispered, was beginning to be stated openly
+in club and market-place. The Corn Laws, the support of the country, the
+mainstay, as so many thought, of the Constitution, were in danger; and behind
+closed doors, while England listened without, the doctors were met to decide
+their fate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Potatoes! The word flew from mouth to mouth that wet autumn, from town to
+country, from village to village. Potatoes! The thing seemed incredible. That
+the lordly Corn Laws, the bulwark of the landed interest, the prop of
+agriculture, that had withstood all attacks for two generations, and maintained
+themselves alike against high prices and the Corn Law League&mdash;that these
+should go down because a vulgar root like the potato had failed in
+Ireland&mdash;it was a thing passing belief. It couldn&rsquo;t be. With the
+Conservatives in power, it seemed impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet it was certain that the position was grave, if not hopeless. Never since
+the Reform Bill had there been such meetings of the Cabinet, so frequent, so
+secret. And strange things were said. Some who had supported Peel yet did not
+trust him, maintained that this was the natural sequel of his measures, the
+point to which he had been moving through all the years of his Ministry.
+Potatoes&mdash;bah! Others who still supported him, yet did not trust him,
+brooded nervously over his action twenty years before, when he had first
+resisted and then accepted the Catholic claims. Tories and Conservatives alike,
+wondered what they were there to conserve, if such things were in the wind;
+they protested, but with growing misgiving, that the thing could not be. While
+those among them who had seats to save and majorities to guard, met one another
+with gloomy looks, whispered together in corners and privately asked themselves
+what they would do&mdash;if he did. Happy in these circumstances were those who
+like Mottisfont, the father, were ready to retire; and still happier those who
+like Mottisfont, the son, knew the wishes of their constituents and could sing
+&ldquo;John Barleycorn, my Joe, John,&rdquo; with no fear of being jilted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their anxieties&mdash;they were politicians&mdash;were mainly
+personal&mdash;and selfish. But there were some, simple people like Mr. Stubbs
+at Riddsley, who really believed, when these rumors reached them, that the
+foundations of things were breaking up, and that the world in which they had
+lived was sinking under their feet. Already in fancy they saw the glare of
+furnaces fall across the peaceful fields. Already they heard the tall mill jar
+and quiver where the cosey homestead and the full stackyard sprawled. They saw
+a weakly race, slaves to the factory bell, overrun the land where the ploughman
+still whistled at his work and his wife suckled healthy babes. To these men, if
+the rumors they heard were true, if Peel had indeed sold the pass, it meant the
+loss of all. It meant the victory of coal and cotton, the ruling of all after
+the Manchester pattern, the reign of Cash, the Lord, and ten per cent. his
+profit. It meant the end of the old England they had loved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not that Stubbs said this at Riddsley, or anything like it. He smiled and kept
+silence, as became a man who knew much and was set above common rumor. The
+landlord of the Audley Arms, the corndealer, the brewer, the saddler went away
+from him with their fears allayed merely by the way in which he shrugged his
+shoulders. At the farmers&rsquo; ordinary he had never been more cheerful. He
+gave the toast of &ldquo;Horn and Corn, gentlemen! And when potatoes take their
+place you may come and tell me!&rdquo; And he gave it so heartily that the
+farmers went home, market-peart and rejoicing, laughed at their doubting
+neighbors, and quoted a hundred things that Lawyer Stubbs had not said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a day or two later the lawyer sustained an unpleasant shock. He had been
+little moved by Lord John&rsquo;s manifesto&mdash;the declaration in which the
+little Whig Leader, seeing that the Government hesitated, had plumped for total
+repeal. That was in the common course of things. It had heartened him, if
+anything. It was natural. It would bring the Tories into line and put an end to
+trimming. But this&mdash;this which confronted him one morning when he opened
+his London paper was different. He read it, he held his breath, he stood aghast
+a long minute, he swore. After a few minutes he took his hat and the newspaper,
+and went round to the house in which Lord Audley lived when he was at Riddsley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a handsome Georgian house, built of brick with stone facings, and partly
+covered with ivy. A wide smooth lawn divided it from the road. The occupant was
+a curate&rsquo;s widow who lived there with her two sisters and eked out their
+joint means by letting the first floor to her landlord. For &ldquo;The
+Butterflies&rdquo; was Audley property, and the clergyman&rsquo;s widow was
+held to derogate in no way by an arrangement which differed widely from a
+common letting of lodgings. Mrs. Jenkinson was stout, short, and fussy, her
+sisters were thin, short, and precise, but all three overflowed with words as
+kindly as their deeds. Good Mrs. Jenkinson, in fact, who never spoke of his
+lordship behind his back but with distant respect, sometimes forgot in his
+presence that he was anything but a &ldquo;dear young man,&rdquo; and when he
+had a cold, would prescribe a posset or a warming-pan with an insistence which
+at times amused and more often bored him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs found his lordship just risen from a late lunch, and in his excitement,
+the lawyer forgot his manners. &ldquo;By G&mdash;d, my lord!&rdquo; he cried,
+&ldquo;he&rsquo;s resigned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley looked at him with displeasure. &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s resigned?&rdquo; he
+asked coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peel!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Against that news the young man was not proof. He caught the infection.
+&ldquo;Impossible!&rdquo; he said, rising to his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s true! It&rsquo;s in the <i>Morning Post</i>, my lord! He saw
+the Queen yesterday. She&rsquo;s sending for Lord John. It&rsquo;s black
+treachery! It&rsquo;s the blackest of treachery! With a majority in the House,
+with the peers in his pocket, the country quiet, trade improving, everything in
+his favor, he&rsquo;s sold us&mdash;sold us to Cobden on some d&mdash;d pretext
+of famine in Ireland!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley did not answer at once. He stood deep in thought, his eyes on the floor,
+his hands in his pockets. At length, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t follow it,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;How is Russell, who is in a minority, to carry repeal?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peel&rsquo;s promised his support!&rdquo; Stubbs cried. Like most honest
+men, he was nothing if not thorough. &ldquo;You may depend upon it, my lord, he
+has! He won&rsquo;t deceive me again. I know him through and through, now.
+He&rsquo;ll take with him Graham and Gladstone and Herbert, his old tail,
+Radicals at heart every man of them, and he&rsquo;s the biggest!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Audley said slowly, &ldquo;he might have done one thing
+worse. He might have stayed in and passed repeal himself!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good G&mdash;d!&rdquo; the lawyer cried, &ldquo;Judas wouldn&rsquo;t
+have done that! All he could do, he has done. He has let in corn from Canada,
+cattle from Heaven knows where, he has let in wool. All that he has done. But
+even he has a limit, my lord! Even he! The man who was returned to support the
+Corn Laws&mdash;to repeal them. Impossible!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Audley said. &ldquo;There&rsquo;ll be an election, I
+suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The sooner the better,&rdquo; Stubbs answered vengefully. &ldquo;And we
+shall see what the country thinks of this. In Riddsley we&rsquo;ve been ready
+for weeks&mdash;as you know, my lord. But a General Election? Gad! I only hope
+they will put up some one here, and we will give them such a beating as
+they&rsquo;ve never had!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley pondered. &ldquo;I suppose Riddsley is safe,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As safe as Burton Bridge, my lord!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other rattled the money in his pocket. &ldquo;As long as you give them a
+lead, Stubbs, I suppose? But if you went over? What then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs opened his eyes. &ldquo;Went over?&rdquo; he ejaculated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t mean,&rdquo; my lord said airily, &ldquo;that
+you&rsquo;re not as staunch as Burton Bridge. But supposing you took the other
+side&mdash;it would make a difference, I suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a jot!&rdquo; the lawyer answered sturdily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not even if the two Mottisfonts sided with Peel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If they did the old gentleman would never see Westminster again,&rdquo;
+Stubbs cried, &ldquo;nor the young one go there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or,&rdquo; Audley continued, setting his shoulders against the
+mantel-shelf, and smiling, &ldquo;suppose I did? If the Beaudelays interest
+were cast for repeal? What then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What then?&rdquo; Stubbs answered. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll pardon me, my
+lord, if I am frank. Then the Beaudelays influence, that has held the borough
+time out of mind, that returned two members before &rsquo;32, and has returned
+one since&mdash;there&rsquo;d be an end of it! It would snap like a rotten
+stick. The truth is we hold the borough while we go with the stream. In fair
+weather when it is a question of twenty votes one way or the other, we carry
+it. And you&rsquo;ve the credit, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley moved his shoulders restlessly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all I get by
+it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If I could turn the credit into a snug place of two
+thousand a year, Stubbs&mdash;it would be another thing. Do you know,&rdquo; he
+continued, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve often wondered why you feel so strongly on the
+corn-taxes?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You asked me that once before, my lord,&rdquo; the agent answered
+slowly. &ldquo;All that I can say is that more things than one go to it.
+Perhaps the best answer I can make is that, like your lordship&rsquo;s
+influence in the borough, it&rsquo;s part sentiment and part tradition. I have
+a picture in my mind&mdash;it&rsquo;s a picture of an old homestead that my
+grandfather lived in and died in, and that I visited when I was a boy. That
+would be about the middle nineties; the French war going, corn high, cattle
+high, a good horse in the gig and old ale for all comers. There was comfort
+inside and plenty without; comfort in the great kitchen, with its floor as
+clean as a pink, and greened in squares with bay leaves, its dresser bright
+with pewter, its mantel with Toby jugs! There was wealth in the stackyard, with
+the poultry strutting and scratching, and more in the byres knee-deep in straw,
+and the big barn where they flailed the wheat! And there were men and maids
+more than on two farms to-day, some in the house, some in thatched cottages
+with a run on the common and wood for the getting. I remember, as if they were
+yesterday, hot summer afternoons when there&rsquo;d be a stillness on the farm
+and all drowsed together, the bees, and the calves, and the old sheep-dog, and
+the only sounds that broke the silence were the cluck of a hen, or the clank of
+pattens on the dairy-floor, while the sun fell hot on the orchard, where a
+little boy hunted for damsons! That&rsquo;s what I often see, my lord,&rdquo;
+Stubbs continued stoutly. &ldquo;And may Peel protect me, if I ever raise a
+finger to set mill and furnace, devil&rsquo;s dust and slave-grown cotton, in
+place of that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord concealed a yawn. &ldquo;Very interesting, Stubbs,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;Quite a picture! Peace and plenty and old ale! And little Jack Horner
+sitting in a corner! No, don&rsquo;t go yet, man. I want you.&rdquo; He made a
+sign to Stubbs to sit down, and settling his shoulders more firmly against the
+mantel-shelf, he thrust his hands deeper into his trouser-pockets.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not easy in my mind about John Audley,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not sure that he has not found something.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs stared. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing to find,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;Nothing, my lord! You may be sure of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He goes there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a craze.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a confoundedly unpleasant one!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But harmless, my lord. Really harmless.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The younger man&rsquo;s impatience darkened his face, but he controlled
+it&mdash;a sure sign that he was in earnest. &ldquo;Tell me this,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;What evidence would upset us? You told me once that the claim
+could be reopened on fresh evidence. On what evidence?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I regard the case as closed,&rdquo; Stubbs answered stubbornly.
+&ldquo;But if you put the question&mdash;&rdquo; he seemed to
+reflect&mdash;&ldquo;the point at issue, on which the whole turned, was the
+legitimacy of your great-grandfather, my lord, Peter Paravicini Audley&rsquo;s
+son. Mr. John&rsquo;s great-grandfather was Peter Paravicini&rsquo;s younger
+brother. The other side alleged, but could not produce, a family agreement
+admitting that the son was illegitimate. Such an agreement, if Peter Paravicini
+was a party to it, if it was proved, and came from the proper custody, would be
+an awkward document and might let in the next brother&rsquo;s
+descendants&mdash;that&rsquo;s Mr. John. But in my opinion, its existence is a
+fairy story, and in its absence, the entry in the register stands good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But such a document would be fatal?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If it fulfilled the conditions it would be serious,&rdquo; the lawyer
+admitted. &ldquo;But it does not exist,&rdquo; he added confidently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet&mdash;I&rsquo;m not comfortable, Stubbs,&rdquo; Audley rejoined.
+&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t get John Audley&rsquo;s face out of my mind. If ever man
+looked as if he had his enemy by the throat, he looked it; a d&mdash;d
+disinheriting face I thought it! I don&rsquo;t mind telling you,&rdquo; the
+speaker continued, some disorder in his own looks, &ldquo;that I awoke at three
+o&rsquo;clock this morning, and I saw him as clearly as I see you now, and at
+that moment I wouldn&rsquo;t have given a thousand pounds for my chance of
+being Lord Audley this time two years!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Liver!&rdquo; said Stubbs, unmoved. &ldquo;Liver, my lord, asking your
+pardon! Nothing else&mdash;and the small hours. I&rsquo;ve felt like that
+myself. Still, if you are really uneasy there is always a way out, though it
+may be impertinent of me to mention it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The old way?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You might marry Miss Audley. A handsome young lady, if I may presume to
+say so, of your own blood and name, and no disparagement except in fortune.
+After Mr. John, she is the next heir, and the match once made would checkmate
+any action on his part.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid I could not afford such a marriage,&rdquo; Audley said
+coldly. &ldquo;But I am to you. As for this news&mdash;&rdquo; he flicked the
+newspaper that lay on the table&mdash;&ldquo;it may be true or it may not. If
+it is true, it will alter many things. We shall see. If you hear anything fresh
+let me know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs said that he would and took his leave, wondering a little, but having
+weightier things on his mind. He sought his home by back ways, for he did not
+wish to meet Dr. Pepper or Bagenal the brewer, or even the saddler, until he
+had considered what face he would put on Peel&rsquo;s latest move. He felt that
+his reputation for knowledge and sagacity was at stake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile his employer, left alone, fell to considering, not what face he
+should put upon the matter, but how he might at this crisis turn the matter and
+the borough to the best account. Certainly Stubbs was discouraging, but Stubbs
+was a fool. It was all very well for him; he drew his wages either way. But a
+man of the world did not cling to the credit of owning a borough for the mere
+name of the thing. If he were sensible he looked to get something more from it
+than that. And it was upon occasions such as this that the something more was
+to be had by those who knew how to go about the business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, in fact, was the moment, if he was the man.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap20"></a>CHAPTER XX<br/>
+PETER&rsquo;S RETURN</h2>
+
+<p>
+Not a word or hint of John Audley&rsquo;s illness had come to Basset&rsquo;s
+ears. At the time of the alarm he had been in London, and it was not until some
+days later that he took his seat in the morning train to return to Stafford. On
+his way to town, and for some days after his arrival, he had been buoyed up by
+plans, nebulous indeed, but sufficient. He came back low in his mind and in
+poor spirits. The hopes, if not the aspirations, which Colet&rsquo;s enthusiasm
+had generated in him had died down, and the visit to Francis Place had done
+nothing to revive them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some greatness in the man, a largeness of ideas, an echo of the revolutionary
+days when the sanest saw visions, Basset was forced to own. But the two stood
+too far apart, the inspired tailor and the country squire, for sympathy. They
+were divided by too wide a gulf of breeding and prejudice to come together.
+Basset was not even a Radical, and his desire to improve things, and to better
+the world, fell very far short of the passion of humanity which possessed the
+aged Republican&mdash;the man who for half a century had been so forward in all
+their movements that his fellows had christened him the &ldquo;<i>Old
+Postilion</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing but disappointment, therefore, had come of the meeting. The two had
+parted with a little contempt on the one side, a sense of failure on the other.
+If a man could serve his neighbors only in fellowship with such, if the cause
+which for a few hours had promised to fill the void left by an unhappy love,
+could be supported only by men who held such opinions, then Basset felt that
+the thing was not for him. For six or seven days he went up and down London at
+odds with himself and his kind, and ever striving to solve a puzzle, the answer
+to which evaded him. Was the hope that he might find a mission and found a
+purpose on Colet&rsquo;s lines, was it just the desire to set the world right
+that seized on young men fresh from college? And if this were so, if this were
+all, what was he to do? Whither was he to turn? How was he going to piece
+together the life which Mary had broken? How was he going to arrange his future
+so that some thread of purpose might run through it, so that something of
+effort might still link together the long bede-roll of years?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He found no answer to the riddle. And it was in a gloomy, unsettled mood,
+ill-content with himself and the world, that he took his seat in the train.
+Alas, he could not refrain from recalling the May morning on which he had taken
+his seat in the same train with Mary. How ill had he then appreciated her
+company, how little had he understood, how little had he prized his good
+fortune! He who was then free to listen to her voice, to meet her eyes, to
+follow the changes of her mood from grave to gay! To be to her&mdash;all that
+he could! And that for hours, for days, for weeks!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He swore under his breath and sat back in the shadow of the corner. And a man
+who entered late, and saw that he kept his eyes shut, fancied that he was ill;
+and when he muttered a word under his breath, asked him if he spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Basset replied rather curtly. And that he might be alone with
+his thoughts he took up a newspaper and held it before him. But not a word did
+he read. After a long interval he looked over the journal and met the
+other&rsquo;s eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Surprising news this,&rdquo; the stranger said. He had the look of a
+soldier, and the bronzed face of one who had lived under warm skies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset murmured that it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Whigs have a fine opportunity,&rdquo; the other pursued. &ldquo;But
+I am not sure that they will use it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are a Whig, perhaps?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger smiled. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I am not. I have
+lived so long abroad that I belong to no party. I am an Englishman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah?&rdquo; Basset rejoined, curiosity beginning to stir in him.
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s rather a fine idea.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Apparently it&rsquo;s a novel one. But it seems natural to me. I have
+lived for fifteen years in India and I have lost touch with the cant of
+parties. Out there, we do honestly try to rule for the good of the people;
+their prosperity is our interest. Here, during the few weeks I have spent in
+England I see things done, not because they are good, but because they suit a
+party, or provide a cry, or put the other side in a quandary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a good deal of that, I suppose.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still,&rdquo; the stranger continued, &ldquo;I know a great man, and I
+know a fine thing when I see them. And I fancy that I see them here!&rdquo; He
+tapped his paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Has Lord John formed his ministry, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I am not sure that he will. I am not thinking of him, I am thinking
+of Peel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! Of Peel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has done a fine thing! As every man does who puts what is right
+before what is easy. May I tell you a story of myself?&rdquo; the Indian
+continued. &ldquo;Some years ago in the Afghan war I was unlucky enough to
+command a small frontier post. My garrison consisted of two companies and six
+or seven European officers. The day came when I had to choose between two
+courses. I must either hold my ground until our people advanced, or I must
+evacuate the post, which had a certain importance&mdash;and fall back into
+safety. The men never dreamed of retiring. The officers were confident that we
+could hold out. But we were barely supplied for forty days, and in my judgment
+no reinforcement was possible under seventy. I made my choice, breached the
+place, and retired. But I tell you, sir, that the days of that retreat, with
+sullen faces about me, and hardly a man in my company who did not think me a
+poltroon, were the bitterest of my life. I knew that if the big-wigs agreed
+with them I was a ruined man, and after ten years service I should go home
+disgraced. Fortunately the General saw it as I saw it, and all was well.
+But&mdash;&rdquo; he looked at Basset with a wry smile&mdash;&ldquo;it was a
+march of ten days to the base, and to-day the sullen looks of those men come
+back to me in my dreams.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you think,&rdquo; Basset said&mdash;the other&rsquo;s story had won
+his respect&mdash;&ldquo;that Peel has found himself in such a position?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To compare great issues with small, I do. I suspect that he has gone
+through an agony&mdash;that is hardly too strong a word&mdash;such as I went
+through. My impression is that when he came into office he was in advance of
+his party. He saw that the distress in the country called for measures which
+his followers would accept from no one else. He believed that he could carry
+them with him. Perhaps, even then, he held a repeal of the Corn Laws possible
+in some remote future; perhaps he did not, I don&rsquo;t know. For suddenly
+there came on him the fear of this Irish famine&mdash;and forced his
+hand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But don&rsquo;t you think,&rdquo; Basset asked, &ldquo;that the alarm is
+premature?&rdquo; A dozen times he had heard the famine called a flam, a sham,
+a bite, anything but a reality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have never seen a famine?&rdquo; the other replied gravely.
+&ldquo;You have never had to face the impossibility of creating food where it
+does not exist, or of bringing it from a distance when there are no roads. I
+have had that experience. I have seen people die of starvation by hundreds,
+women, children, babes, when I could do nothing because steps had not been
+taken in time. God forbid that that should happen in Ireland! If the fear does
+not outrun the dearth, God help the poor! Now I am told that Peel witnessed a
+famine in Ireland about &rsquo;17 or &rsquo;18, and knows what it is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have had interesting experiences?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The experience of every Indian officer. But the burden which rests on us
+makes us alive to the difficulties of a statesman&rsquo;s position. I see Peel
+forced&mdash;forced suddenly, perhaps, to make a choice; to decide whether he
+shall do what is right or what is consistent. He must betray his friends, or he
+must betray his country. And the agony of the decision is the greater if he has
+it burnt in on his memory that he did this thing once before, that once before
+he turned his back on his party&mdash;and that all the world knows!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If a man in that position puts self, consistency, reputation all behind
+him&mdash;believe me, he is doing a fine thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset assented. &ldquo;But you speak,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;as if Sir Robert
+were going to do the thing himself&mdash;instead of merely standing aside for
+others to do it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A distinction without much difference,&rdquo; the other rejoined.
+&ldquo;Possibly it will turn out that he is the only man who can do it. If so,
+he will have a hard row to hoe. He will need the help of every moderate man in
+the country, if he is not to be beaten. For whether he succeeds or fails,
+depends not upon the fanatics, but upon the moderate men. I don&rsquo;t know
+what your opinions are?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Basset said frankly, &ldquo;I am not much of a party-man
+myself. I am inclined to agree with you, so far.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then if you have any influence, use it. Unfortunately, I am out of it
+for family reasons.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset looked at the stranger. &ldquo;You are not by any chance Colonel
+Mottisfont?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am. You know my brother? He is member for Riddsley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. My name is Basset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of Blore? Indeed. I knew your father. Well, I have not cast my seed on
+stony ground. Though you are stony enough about Wootton under Weaver.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True, worse luck. Your brother is retiring, I hear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, he has just horse sense, has Jack. He won&rsquo;t vote against
+Peel. His lad has less and will take his place and vote old Tory. But there, I
+mustn&rsquo;t abuse the family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had still half an hour to spend together before Basset got out at
+Stafford. He had time to discover that the soldier was faced by a problem not
+unlike his own. His service over, he had to consider what he would do.
+&ldquo;All I know,&rdquo; the Colonel said breezily, &ldquo;is that I
+won&rsquo;t do nothing. Some take to preaching, others to Bath, but neither
+will suit me. But I&rsquo;ll not drift. I kept from brandy pawnee out there,
+and I am going to keep from drift here. For you, you&rsquo;re a young man,
+Basset, and a hundred things are open to you. I am over the top of the hill.
+But I&rsquo;ll do something.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have done something to-day,&rdquo; Basset said. &ldquo;You have done
+me good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later he had time to think it over during the long journey from Stafford to
+Blore. He drove by twisting country roads, under the gray walls of Chartley, by
+Uttoxeter and Rocester. Thence he toiled uphill to the sterile Derbyshire
+border, the retreat of old families and old houses. He began to think that he
+had gained some ideas with which he could sympathize, ideas which were at one
+with Mary Audley&rsquo;s burning desire to help, while they did not clash with
+old prejudices. If he threw himself into Peel&rsquo;s cause, he would indeed be
+seen askance by many. He would have to put himself forward after a fashion that
+gave him the goose-flesh when he thought of it. A landowner, he would have to
+go against the land. But he would not feel, in his darker moods, that he was
+the dupe of cranks and fanatics. He saw Peel as Mottisfont had pictured him, as
+a man putting all behind him except the right; and his heart warmed to the
+picture. Many would fall away, few would be staunch. From this ship, as from
+every sinking ship, the rats would flee. But so much the stronger was the call.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The result was that the Peter Basset who descended at the porch of the old
+gabled house, that sat low and faced east in the valley under Weaver, was a
+more hopeful man than he who had entered the train at Euston. A purpose, a
+plan&mdash;he had gained these, and the hope that springs from them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had barely doffed his driving-coat, however, before his thoughts were swept
+in another direction. On the hall table lay two letters. He took up one. It was
+from Colet and written in deep dejection. &ldquo;The barber was a Tory and had
+given him short notice. Feeling ran high in the town, and other lodgings were
+not to be had. The Bishop had supported the rector&rsquo;s action, and he saw
+no immediate prospect of further work.&rdquo; He did not ask for shelter, but
+it was plain that he was at his wit&rsquo;s end, and more than a little
+surprised by the storm which he had raised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset threw down the letter. &ldquo;He shall come here,&rdquo; he thought.
+&ldquo;What is it to me whom he marries?&rdquo; Many solitary hours spent in
+the streets of London had gone some way towards widening Peter&rsquo;s outlook.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took up the second letter. It was from John Audley, and before he had read
+three lines, he rang the bell and ordered that the post-chaise which had
+brought him from Stafford should be kept: he would want it in the morning. John
+Audley wrote that he had been very ill&mdash;he was still in bed. He must see
+Basset. The matter was urgent, he had something to tell him. He hinted that if
+he did not come quickly it might be too late.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset could not refuse to go; summoned after this fashion, he must go. But he
+tried to believe that he was not glad to go. He tried to believe that the
+excitement with which he looked forward to the journey had to do with his
+uncle. It was in vain; he knew that he tricked himself. Or if he did not know
+this then, his eyes were opened next day, when, after walking up the hill to
+spare the horses&mdash;and a little because he shrank at the last from the
+meeting&mdash;he came in sight of the Gatehouse, and saw Mary Audley standing
+in the doorway. The longing that gripped him then, the emotion that unmanned
+him, told him all. It was of Mary he had been thinking, towards Mary he had
+been travelling, of her work it was that the miles had seemed leagues! He was
+not cured. He was not in the way to be cured. He was the same love-sick fool
+whom she had driven from her with contumely an age&mdash;it seemed an age, ago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He bent his head as he approached, that she might not see his face. His knees
+shook and a tremor ran through him. Why had he come back? Why had he come back
+to face this anguish?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he mastered himself; indeed he took himself the more strongly in hand for
+the knowledge he had gained. When they met at the door it was Mary, not he,
+whose color came and went, who spoke awkwardly, and rushed into needless
+explanations. The man listened with a stony face, and said little, almost
+nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the first awkward greeting, &ldquo;Your room has been airing,&rdquo; she
+continued, avoiding his eyes. &ldquo;My uncle has been expecting you for some
+days. He has asked for you again and again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He explained that he had been in London&mdash;hence the delay; and, further,
+that he must return to Blore that day. She felt that she was the cause of this,
+and she colored painfully. But he seemed to be indifferent. He noticed a
+trifling change in the hall, asked a question or two about his uncle&rsquo;s
+state, and inquired what had caused his sudden illness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She told the story, giving details. He nodded. &ldquo;Yes, I have seen him in a
+similar attack,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But he gets older. I am afraid it
+alarmed you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She forced herself to describe Lord Audley&rsquo;s part in the matter&mdash;and
+Mr. Stubbs&rsquo;s, and was conscious that she was dragging in Mr. Stubbs more
+often than was necessary. Basset listened politely, remarked that it was
+fortunate that Audley had been on the spot, added that he was sure that
+everything had been done that was right.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he had gone upstairs to see John Audley she escaped to her room. Her
+cheeks were burning, and she could have cried. Basset&rsquo;s coldness, his
+distance, the complete change in his manner all hurt her more than she could
+say. They brought home to her, painfully home to her what she had done. She had
+been foolish enough to fling away the friend, when she need only have discarded
+the lover!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she must face it out now, the thing was done, and she must put up with it.
+And by and by, fearing that Basset might suppose that she avoided him, she came
+down and waited for him in the deserted library. She had waited some minutes,
+moving restlessly to and fro and wishing the ordeal of luncheon were over, when
+her eyes fell on the door of the staircase that led up to her uncle&rsquo;s
+room. It was ajar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stared at it, for she knew that she had closed it after Basset had gone up.
+Now it was ajar. She reflected. The house was still, she could hear no one
+moving. She went out quickly, crossed the hall, looked into the dining-room.
+Toft was not there, nor was he in the pantry. She returned to the library, and
+went softly up the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So softly that she surprised the man before he could raise his head from the
+keyhole. He saw that he was detected, and for an instant he scowled at her in
+the half-light of the narrow passage, uncertain what to do. Mary beckoned to
+him, and went down before him to the library.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There she turned on him. &ldquo;Shut the door,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You were
+listening! Don&rsquo;t deny it. You have acted disgracefully, and it will be my
+duty to tell Mr. Audley what has happened.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man, sallow with fear, tried to brave it out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will only make mischief, Miss,&rdquo; he said sullenly.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll come near to killing the master.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very good!&rdquo; Mary said, quivering with indignation. &ldquo;Then
+instead of telling Mr. Audley I shall tell Mr. Basset. It will be for him to
+decide whether Mr. Audley shall know. Go now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Toft held his ground. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be doing a bad day&rsquo;s work,
+Miss,&rdquo; he said earnestly. &ldquo;I want to run straight.&rdquo; He raised
+his hand to his forehead, which was wet with perspiration. &ldquo;I swear I do!
+I want to run straight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Straight!&rdquo; Mary cried in scorn. &ldquo;And you listen at
+doors!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man made a last attempt to soften her. &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, be
+warned, Miss!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t drive me. If you knew as much
+as I do&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should not listen to learn the rest!&rdquo; replied Mary without pity.
+&ldquo;That is enough. Please to see that lunch is ready.&rdquo; She pointed to
+the door. She was not an Audley for nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft gave way and went, and she remained alone, perplexed as well as angry.
+Mrs. Toft and Etruria were good simple folk; she liked them. But Toft had
+puzzled her from the first. He was so silent, so secretive, he was for ever
+appearing without warning and vanishing without noise. She had often suspected
+that he spied on his master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she had never caught him in the act, and the certainty that he did so,
+filled her with dismay. It was fortunate, she thought, that Basset was there,
+and that she could consult him. And the instant that he appeared, forgetting
+their quarrel and the strained relations between them, she poured out her
+story. Toft was ungrateful, treacherous, a danger! With Mr. Audley so helpless,
+the house so lonely, it frightened her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was only when she had run on for some time that Basset&rsquo;s air of
+detachment struck her. He listened, with his back to the fire, and his eyes
+bent on the floor, but he did not speak until she had told her story, and
+expressed her misgivings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he did, &ldquo;I am not surprised,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+suspected this for some time. But I don&rsquo;t know that anything can be
+done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean that&mdash;you would do nothing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The truth is,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;Toft is pretty far in his
+master&rsquo;s confidence. And what he does not know he wishes to know. When he
+knows it, he will find it a mare&rsquo;s nest. The truth&mdash;as I see it at
+any rate&mdash;is that your uncle is possessed by a craze. He wants me to help
+him in it. I cannot. I have told him so, firmly and finally, to-day. Well, I
+suspect that he will now turn to Toft. I hope not, but he may, and if we report
+the man&rsquo;s misconduct, it will only precipitate matters and hasten an
+understanding. That is the position, and if I were you, I should let the matter
+rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You mean that?&rdquo; she exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But&mdash;but I have spoken to Toft!&rdquo; Her eyes were bright with
+anger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He kept his on the floor. It was only by maintaining the distance between them
+that he could hope to hide what he felt. &ldquo;Still I would let him
+be,&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;I do not think that Toft is dangerous. He has
+surprised one half of a secret, and he wishes to learn the other half. That is
+all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am to take no notice?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe that will be your wisest course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was shocked, and she was still more hurt. He pushed her aside, he pushed
+her out of his confidence, out of her uncle&rsquo;s confidence! His manner, his
+indifference, his stolidity showed that she had not only killed his fancy for
+her at a stroke, but that he now disliked her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And still she protested. &ldquo;But I must tell my uncle!&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I would not,&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;But there&mdash;&rdquo;
+he paused and looked at his watch&mdash;&ldquo;I am afraid that if you are
+going to give me lunch I must sit down. I&rsquo;ve a long journey before
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she saw that no more could be said, and with an effort she repressed her
+feelings. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I was forgetting. You must be
+hungry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She led the way to the dining-room, and sat down with him, Toft waiting on them
+with the impassive ease of the trained man. While they ate, Basset talked of
+indifferent things, of his journey from town, of the roads, of London, of
+Colonel Mottisfont&mdash;an interesting man whom he had met in the train. And
+as he talked, and she made lifeless answers, her indignation cooled, and her
+heart sank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She could have cried, indeed. She had lost her friend. He was gone to an
+immense distance. He was willing to leave her to deal with her troubles and
+difficulties, it might be, with her dangers. In killing his love with cruel
+words&mdash;and how often had she repented, not of the thing, but of the
+manner!&mdash;she had killed every feeling, every liking, that he had
+entertained for her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was clear that this was so, for to the last he maintained his coldness and
+indifference. When he was gone, when the sound of the chaise-wheels had died in
+the distance, she felt more lonely than she had ever felt in her life. In her
+Paris days she had had no reason to blame herself, and all the unturned leaves
+of life awaited her. Now she had turned over one page, and marred it, she had
+won a friend and lost him, she had spoiled the picture, which she had not
+wished to keep!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her uncle lay upstairs, ready to bear, but hardly welcoming her company. He had
+his secrets, and she stood outside them. She sat below, enclosed in and menaced
+by the silence of the house. Yet it was not fear that she felt so much as a
+sadness, a great depression, a gray despondency. She craved something, she did
+not know what. She only knew that she was alone&mdash;and sad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She tried to fight against the feeling. She tried to read, to work, even to
+interest herself in Toft and his mystery. She failed. And at last she gave up
+the attempt and with her elbows on her knees and her eyes on the fire she fell
+to musing, the ticking of the tall clock and the fall of the embers the only
+sounds that broke the stillness of the shadowy room.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap21"></a>CHAPTER XXI<br/>
+TOFT AT THE BUTTERFLIES</h2>
+
+<p>
+Basset&rsquo;s view of Toft, if it did not hit, came very near the mark. For
+many years the man had served his master with loyalty, the relations between
+them being such as were common in days when servants stayed long in a place and
+held themselves a part of the family. The master had been easy, the man had had
+no ambitions beyond those of his fellows, and no temptations except those which
+turned upon the cellar-book.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a year before Mary Audley&rsquo;s arrival two things had happened. First
+the curate had fallen in love with Etruria, and the fact had become known to
+her father, to whom the girl was everything. Her refinement, her beauty, her
+goodness were his secret delight. And the thought that she might become a lady,
+that she might sit at the table at which he served had taken hold of the
+austere man&rsquo;s mind and become a passion. He was ready to do anything and
+to suffer anything to bring this about. Nor was he deceived when Etruria put
+the offer aside. She was nothing if not transparent, and he was too fond of her
+not to see that her happiness was bound up with the man who had stooped to woo
+her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was not blind to the difficulties or to the clergyman&rsquo;s poverty. But
+he saw that Colet, poor as he was, could raise his daughter in the social
+scale; and he spent long hours in studying how the marriage might be brought
+about. He hugged the matter to him, and brooded over it, but he never
+discovered his thoughts or his hopes either to his wife, or to Etruria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then one day the sale of a living happened to be discussed in his presence, and
+as he went, solemn and silent, round the table he listened. He learned that
+livings could be bought. He learned that the one in question, with its house
+and garden and three hundred a year, had fetched a thousand guineas, and from
+that day Toft&rsquo;s aim was by hook or crook to gain a thousand guineas. He
+revelled in impossible dreams of buying a living, of giving it to Etruria, and
+of handing maid and dowry to the fortunate man who was to make her a lady.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There have been more sordid and more selfish ambitions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a thousand guineas was a huge sum to the manservant. True, he had saved a
+hundred and twenty pounds, and for his position in life he held himself a rich
+man. But a thousand guineas? He turned the matter this way and that, and
+sometimes he lost hope, and sometimes he pinned his faith to a plan that
+twenty-four hours showed to be futile. All the time his wife who lay beside
+him, his daughter who waited on him, his master on whom he waited, were as far
+from seeing into his mind as if they had lived in another planet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the second thing happened. He surprised, wholly by chance, a secret which
+gave him a hold over John Audley. Under other circumstances he might have been
+above using the advantage; as it was, he was tempted. He showed his hand, a sum
+of four hundred pounds was named; for a week he fancied that he had performed
+half his task. Then his master explained with a gentle smile that to know and
+to prove were two things, and that whereas Toft had for a time been able to do
+both, John Audley had now destroyed the evidence. The master had in fact been
+too sly for the man, and Toft found himself pretty well where he had been. In
+the end Audley thought it prudent to give him a hundred pounds, which did but
+whet his desire and sharpen his wits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For he had now tasted blood. He had made something by a secret. There might be
+others to learn. He kept his eyes open, and soon he became aware of his
+master&rsquo;s disappearances. He tracked him, he played the spy, he discovered
+that John Audley was searching for something in the Great House. The words that
+the old man let fall, while half-conscious in the Yew Walk, added to his
+knowledge, and at the same time scared him. A moment later, and Lord Audley
+might have known as much as he knew&mdash;and perhaps more!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For he did not as yet know all, and it was in the attempt to complete his
+knowledge that Mary had caught him listening at the door. The blow was a sharp
+one. He was still so far unspoiled, still so near the old Toft that he could
+not bear that his wife and daughter should learn the depth to which he had
+fallen. And John Audley? What would he do, if Mary told him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft could not guess. He knew that his master was barely sane, if he was sane;
+but he knew also that he was utterly inhuman. John Audley would put him and his
+family to the door without mercy if that seemed to him the safer course. And
+that meant an end of all his plans for Etruria, for Colet, for them all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+True, he might use such power as he had. But it was imperfect, and in its use
+he must come to grips with one who had shown himself his better both in courage
+and cunning. He had imbibed a strong fear of his master, and he could not
+without a qualm contemplate a struggle with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a week after his detection by Mary, he went about his work in a fever of
+anxiety. And nothing happened; it was that which tried him. More than once he
+was on the point of throwing himself at her feet, of telling her all he knew,
+of imploring her pardon. It was only her averted eyes and cold tone that held
+him back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such a crisis makes a man either better or worse, and it made Toft worse. At
+the end of three days a chance word put a fine point on his fears and stung him
+to action. He might not know enough to face John Audley, but he thought that he
+knew enough to sell his secret&mdash;in the other camp. His lordship was young
+and probably malleable. He would go to him and strike a bargain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arrived at this point the man did not hide from himself that he was going to do
+a hateful thing. He thought of his wife and her wonder could she know. He
+thought of Etruria&rsquo;s mild eyes and her goodness. And he shivered. But it
+was for her. It was for them. Within twenty-four hours he was in Riddsley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he passed the Maypole, where Mr. Colet had his lodgings, he noticed that the
+town wore an unusual aspect. Groups of men stood talking in the doorway, or on
+the doorsteps. A passing horseman was shouting to a man at a window. Nearer the
+middle of the town the stir was greater. About the saddler&rsquo;s door, about
+the steps leading up to the Audley Arms, and round the yard of the inn, knots
+of men argued and gesticulated. Toft asked the saddler what it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t you heard?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. What&rsquo;s the news?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The General Election&rsquo;s off!&rdquo; The saddler proclaimed it with
+an inflamed look. &ldquo;Peel&rsquo;s in again! And damn me, after this,&rdquo;
+he continued, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s nothing I won&rsquo;t swallow! He come in in
+the farming interest, and the hunting interest, and the racing interest, and
+the gentlemanly interest, that I live by, and you too, Mr. Toft! And it was bad
+enough when he threw it up! But to go in again and to take our money and do the
+Radicals&rsquo; work!&rdquo; The saddler spat on the brick pavement.
+&ldquo;Why, there was never such a thing heard of in the &rsquo;varsal world!
+Never! If Tamworth don&rsquo;t blush for him and his pigs turn pink, I&rsquo;m
+d&mdash;d, and that&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft had to ask half a dozen questions before he grasped the position.
+Gradually he learned that after Peel had resigned the Whigs had tried to form a
+government; that they had failed, and that now Peel was to come in again,
+expressly to repeal the Corn Laws. The Corn Laws which he had taken office to
+support, and to the maintenance of which his party was pledged!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thing was not much in Toft&rsquo;s way, nor his interest in it great, but
+as he passed along he caught odds and ends of conversation. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t believe a word of it!&rdquo; cried an angry man. &ldquo;The
+Radicals have invented it!&rdquo; &ldquo;Like enough!&rdquo; replied another.
+&ldquo;Like enough! There&rsquo;s naught they wouldn&rsquo;t do!&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Well, after all,&rdquo; suggested a third in a milder tone, &ldquo;cheap
+bread is something.&rdquo; &ldquo;What? If you&rsquo;ve got no money to buy it?
+You&rsquo;re a fool! I tell you it&rsquo;ll be the ruin of Riddsley!&rdquo;
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right there, Joe!&rdquo; answered the first speaker.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right! There&rsquo;ll be no farmer for miles round&rsquo;ll
+pay his way!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the door of Mr. Stubbs&rsquo;s office three excited clients were clamoring
+for entrance; an elderly clerk with a high bridge to his nose was withstanding
+them. Before the Mechanics&rsquo; Institute the secretary, a superior person of
+Manchester views, was talking pompously to a little group. &ldquo;We must take
+in the whole field,&rdquo; Toft heard him say. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;ll read Mr.
+Carlyle&rsquo;s tract on&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Toft lost the rest. The Institute
+readers belonged mainly to Hatton&rsquo;s Works or Banfield&rsquo;s, and the
+secretary taught in an evening school. He was darkly suspected of being a
+teetotaller, but it had never been proved against him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft began to wonder if he had chosen his time well, but he was near The
+Butterflies and he hardened his heart; to retreat now were to dub himself
+coward. He told the maid that he came from the Gatehouse, and that he was
+directed to deliver a letter into his lordship&rsquo;s own hand, and in a
+moment he found himself mounting the shallow carpeted stairs. In comparison
+with the Gatehouse, the house was modern, elegant, luxurious, the passages were
+warm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was ushered in, his lordship, a dressing-gown cast over a chair beside
+him as if he had just put on his coat, was writing near the fireplace. After an
+interval that seemed long to Toft, who eyed his heavy massiveness with a
+certain dismay, he laid down his pen, sat back, and looked at the servant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;From the Gatehouse?&rdquo; he asked, after a leisurely survey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, my lord,&rdquo; Toft answered respectfully. &ldquo;I was with Mr.
+Audley when he was taken ill in the Yew Walk.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure! I thought I knew your face. You&rsquo;ve a letter for
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft hesitated. &ldquo;I wished to see you, my lord,&rdquo; he said. The thing
+was not as easy as he had hoped it would be; the man was more formidable.
+&ldquo;On a matter of business.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley raised his eyebrows. &ldquo;Business?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t
+it Mr. Stubbs you want to see?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, my lord,&rdquo; Toft answered. But the sweat broke out on his
+forehead. What if his lordship took a high tone, ordered him out, and reported
+the matter to his master? Too late it struck Toft that a gentleman might take
+that line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, be quick,&rdquo; Audley replied. Then in a different tone,
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t come from Miss Audley?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then what is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft turned his hat in his hands. &ldquo;I have information&rdquo;&mdash;it was
+with difficulty he could control his voice&mdash;&ldquo;which it is to your
+lordship&rsquo;s interest to have.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pregnant pause. &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; the young man said at last.
+&ldquo;And you come&mdash;to sell it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft nodded, unable to speak. Yet he was getting on as well as could be
+expected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rather an unusual position, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The information should be unusual?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lord Audley smiled. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll say
+this, my man. If you are going to sell me a spavined horse, don&rsquo;t! It
+will not be to your advantage. What&rsquo;s it all about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Audley&rsquo;s claim, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley had expected this, yet he could not quite mask the effect which the
+statement made upon him. The thing that he had foreseen and feared, that had
+haunted him in the small hours and been as it were a death&rsquo;s-head at his
+feast, was taking shape. But he was quick to recover himself, and
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, is it! Don&rsquo;t you know
+that that&rsquo;s all over, my man?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The peer took up a paper-knife and toyed with it. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;what is it? Come, I don&rsquo;t buy a pig in a poke.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Audley has found&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Found, eh?&rdquo; raising his eyebrows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft corrected himself. &ldquo;He has in his power papers that upset your
+lordship&rsquo;s case. I can still enable you to keep those papers in your
+hands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley threw down the paper-cutter. &ldquo;They are certainly worthless,&rdquo;
+he said. His voice was contemptuous, but there was a hard look in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Audley thinks otherwise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But he has not seen them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He knows what&rsquo;s in them, my lord. He has been searching for them
+for weeks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man weighed this, and Toft&rsquo;s courage rose, and his confidence.
+The trumps were in his hand, and though for a moment he had shrunk before the
+other&rsquo;s heavy jaw he was glad now that he had come; more glad when the
+big man after a long pause asked quietly, &ldquo;What do you want?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Five hundred pounds, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other laughed, and Toft did not like the laugh. &ldquo;Indeed? Five hundred
+pounds? That&rsquo;s a good deal of money!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The information is worth that, or it is worth nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I quite agree!&rdquo; the peer answered lightly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a
+wit, my man. But that&rsquo;s not saying you&rsquo;ve a good case. However,
+I&rsquo;ll put you to the test. You know where the papers are?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very good. There&rsquo;s a piece of paper. Write on one side the precise
+place where they lie. I will write on the other a promise to pay £500 if the
+papers are found in that place, and are of the value you assert. That is a fair
+offer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft stood irresolute. He thought hard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord pushed the paper across. &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;write! Or
+I&rsquo;ll write first, if that is your trouble.&rdquo; With decision he seized
+a quill, held it poised a moment, then he wrote four lines and signed them with
+a flourish, added the date, and read them to himself. With a grim smile he
+pushed the paper across to Toft. &ldquo;There,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What more
+do you want, my man, than that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft took the paper and read what was written on it, from the &ldquo;In
+consideration of,&rdquo; that began the sentence, to the firm signature
+&ldquo;Audley of Beaudelays&rdquo; that closed it. He did not speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come! You can&rsquo;t want anything more than that!&rdquo; my lord said.
+&ldquo;You have only to write, read me the secret, and keep the paper until it
+is redeemed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then take the pen. Of course the place must be precise. I am not going
+to pull down Beaudelays House to find a box of papers that I do not believe is
+there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft&rsquo;s face was gray, the sweat stood on his lip. &ldquo;I did not
+say,&rdquo; he muttered, the paper rustling in his unsteady hand, &ldquo;that
+they were in Beaudelays House.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No?&rdquo; Audley replied. &ldquo;Perhaps not. And for the matter of
+that, it is not a question of saying anything. It is a question of writing. You
+can write, I suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft did not speak. He could not speak. He had supposed that the power to put
+his lordship on the scent would be the same as pulling down the fox. When he
+had said that the papers were in the house, that they were behind a wall, that
+Mr. Audley knew where they were, he would have earned&mdash;he
+thought&mdash;his money!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he had not known the man with whom he had to deal. And challenged to set
+down the place where the papers lay, he knew that he could not do it. In the
+house? Behind a wall? He saw now that that would not do. That would not satisfy
+the big smiling gentleman who sat opposite him, amused at the dilemma in which
+he found himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knew that he was cornered, and he lost his countenance and his manners. He
+swore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man laughed. &ldquo;The biter bit,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Five
+hundred pounds you said, didn&rsquo;t you? I wonder whether I ought to send for
+the constable? Or tell Mr. Audley? That would be wiser perhaps? What do you
+think you deserve, my man?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft stretched out a shaking arm towards the paper. But my lord was before him.
+His huge hand fell on it. He tore it across and across, and threw the pieces
+under the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that won&rsquo;t do! You will write at a
+venture and if you are right you will claim the money, and if you are wrong you
+will have this paper to show that I bargained with you. But I never meant to
+bargain with you, my good rascal. I knew you were a fraud. I knew it from the
+beginning. And now I&rsquo;ve only one thing to say. Either you will tell me
+freely what you know, and in that case I shall say nothing. Or I report you to
+your master. That&rsquo;s my last word.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft shook from head to foot. He had done a hateful thing, he had been
+defeated, and exposure threatened him. As far as his master was concerned he
+could face it. But his wife, his daughter? Who thought him honest, loyal, who
+thought him a man! Who believed in him! How could he, how would he face them,
+if this tale were told?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord saw the change in him, saw how he shrank, and, smiling, he fancied that
+he had the man in his grasp, fancied that he would tell what he knew, and tell
+it for nothing. And twice Toft opened his lips to speak, and twice no words
+came. For at the last moment, in this strait, what there was of good in
+him&mdash;and there was good&mdash;rose up, and had the better; had the better,
+reinforced perhaps by his hatred of the heavy smiling face that gloated upon
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For at the last moment, &ldquo;No, my lord,&rdquo; he said desperately,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not speak. I&rsquo;m d&mdash;d if I do! You may do what you
+like.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And before his lordship, taken by surprise, could interpose, the servant had
+turned and made for the door. He was half-way down the stairs before the other
+had risen from his seat. He had escaped. He was clear for the time, and safe in
+the road he breathed more freely. But he had gone a hundred yards on his way
+before he remarked that he was in the open air, or bethought himself to put on
+his hat.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap22"></a>CHAPTER XXII<br/>
+MY LORD SPEAKS</h2>
+
+<p>
+For a few moments Audley had certainly hoped that he was going to learn all
+that Toft knew, and to learn it for nothing. He had been baulked in this. But
+when he came to think over the matter he was not ill content with himself, nor
+with his conduct of the interview. He had dealt with the matter with presence
+of mind, and in the only safe way; and he had taught the man a lesson.
+&ldquo;He knows by this time,&rdquo; he reflected, &ldquo;that if I am a lord,
+I am not a fool!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this mood did not last long, and it was succeeded by one less cheerful. The
+death&rsquo;s-head had never been wanting at his feast. The family tradition
+which had come down to him with his blood had never ceased to haunt him, and in
+the silence of the night he had many a time heard John Audley at work seeking
+for the means to displace him. Even the great empty house had seemed to mock
+his pretensions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But until the last month his fears had been vague and shadowy, and in his busy
+hours he had laughed at them. He was Lord Audley, he sat, he voted, the doors
+of White&rsquo;s, of Almack&rsquo;s were open to him. In town he was a
+personage, in the country a divinity still hedged him, no tradesman spoke to
+him save hat in hand. Then, lately, the traces which he had found in the Great
+House had given a shape to his fears; and within the last hour he had learned
+their solidity. Sane or mad, John Audley was upon his track, bent upon
+displacing him, bent upon ruining him; and this very day the man might be
+laying his hand upon the thing he needed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley did not doubt the truth of Toft&rsquo;s story. It confirmed his fears
+only too well; and the family tradition&mdash;that too weighed with him. He sat
+for a long time staring before him, then, uneasy and restless, he rose and
+paced the floor. He went to and fro, to and fro, until by-and-by he came to a
+stand before one of the windows. He drummed with his fingers on the glass.
+There was one way, certainly. Stubbs had said so, and Stubbs was right. There
+was one way, if he could make up his mind to the limitations it would impose
+upon him. If he could make up his mind to be a poor man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The window at which he stood looked on a road of quiet dignity, a little
+removed from the common traffic of the town. But the windows, looking sideways,
+commanded also a more frequented thoroughfare which crossed this street. His
+thoughts far away and sombrely engaged, the young man watched the stream of
+passers, as it trickled across the distant opening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly his eyes recalled his mind to the present. He started, turned, in
+three strides he was beside the hearth. He rang the bell twice, the signal for
+his man. He waited impatiently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My hat and coat!&rdquo; he cried to the servant. &ldquo;Quick, I&rsquo;m
+in a hurry!&rdquo; Like most men who have known vicissitudes he had a
+superstitious side, and the figure which he had seen pass across the end of the
+road had appeared so aptly, so timely, had had so much the air of an answer to
+his doubts that he took it for an inspiration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ran down the stairs, but he knew that his comings and goings were marked,
+and once outside the house he controlled his impatience. He walked slowly,
+humming a tune and swaying his cane, and it was a very stately gentleman taking
+the air and acknowledging with courtesy the respectful salutations of the
+passers, who came on Mary Audley as she turned from Dr. Pepper&rsquo;s door in
+the High Street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood. &ldquo;Miss Audley!&rdquo; he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary was flushed with exercise, ruffled by the wind, travel-stained. But she
+would have cared little for these things if she could have governed the blood
+that rose to her cheeks at his sudden appearance. To mask her confusion she
+rushed into speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You cannot be more surprised than I am,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;My uncle
+is not so well to-day, and in a panic about his medicine. Toft, who should have
+come in to town to fetch it, was not to be found, so I had to come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you have walked in?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smiling, she showed him her boots. &ldquo;And I am presently going to walk
+out,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will never do it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Before dark? No, perhaps not!&rdquo; She raised her hand and put back a
+tress of hair which had strayed from its fellows. &ldquo;And I shall be tired.
+But I shall be much surprised if I cannot walk ten miles at a pinch.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall be surprised if you walk ten miles to-day,&rdquo; he retorted.
+&ldquo;My plans for you are quite different. Have you got what you came to
+fetch?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had steadied herself, and was by this time at her ease. She made a little
+grimace. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It will not be ready for quarter of
+an hour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rang Dr. Pepper&rsquo;s bell. An awestruck apprentice, who had watched the
+interview through the dusty window of the surgery, showed himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be good enough to send the medicine for Miss Audley to Mrs.
+Jenkinson&rsquo;s,&rdquo; Audley said. &ldquo;You understand?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, my lord! Certainly, my lord!&rdquo; She was going to protest. He
+turned to her, silenced her. &ldquo;And now I take possession of you,&rdquo; he
+said, supremely careless what the lad heard. &ldquo;You are coming to The
+Butterflies to take tea, or sherry, or whatever you take when you have walked
+five miles.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Lord Audley!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And then I am going to drive you as far as the old Cross, and walk up
+the hill with you&mdash;as far as I choose.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but I cannot!&rdquo; Mary cried, coloring charmingly, but whether
+with pleasure or embarrassment she could not tell. She only knew that his
+ridiculous way of taking possession of her, the very masterfulness of it, moved
+her strangely. &ldquo;I cannot indeed. What would my uncle say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know, and I don&rsquo;t care!&rdquo; he replied, swinging
+his walking cane, and smiling as he towered above her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He may go hang&mdash;for once!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hesitated. &ldquo;It is very good of you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I confess
+I did not look forward to the walk back. But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no&mdash;but,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;And no walk back! It is
+arranged. It is time&mdash;&rdquo; his eyes dwelt kindly on her as she turned
+with him&mdash;&ldquo;it is time that some one took it in hand to arrange
+things for you. Five miles in and five miles out over dirty roads on a winter
+afternoon&mdash;and Miss Audley! No, no! And now&mdash;this way, please!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She yielded, she could not tell why, except that it was difficult to resist
+him, and not unpleasant to obey him. And after all, why should she not go with
+him? She had been feeling fagged and tired, depressed, moreover, by her
+uncle&rsquo;s fears. The low-lying fields, the town, the streets, all dingy
+under a gray autumn sky, had given her no welcome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And her thoughts, too, had been dun-colored. She had felt very lonely the last
+few days, doubtful of the future, without aim, hipped. And now in a moment all
+seemed changed. She was no longer alone, nor fearful. The streets were no
+longer dingy nor dreary. There were still pleasant things in the world,
+kindness, and thought for others, and friendship and&mdash;and tea and cake!
+Was it wonderful that as she walked along beside my lord her spirits rose? That
+she felt an unaccountable relief, and in the reaction of the moment smiled and
+sparkled more than her wont? That the muddy brick pavement, the low-browed
+shops, the leafless trees all seemed brighter than before, and that even the
+butcher&rsquo;s stall became almost a thing of beauty?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he responded famously. He swung his stick, he laughed, he was gay.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t pretend!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I see that you were glad
+enough to meet me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And the tea and cake!&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;After five miles who
+would not be glad to meet them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Exactly! It is my belief that if I had not met you, you would have
+fallen by the way. You want some one to look after you, Miss Audley.&rdquo; The
+name was a caress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor was the pleasure all their own. Great was the excitement of the townsfolk
+as they passed. &ldquo;His lordship and a young lady?&rdquo; cried half
+Riddsley, running to the windows. &ldquo;Quick, or you will miss them!&rdquo;
+Some wondered who she could be; more had seen her at church and could answer.
+&ldquo;Miss Audley? The young lady who had come to live at the Gatehouse?
+Indeed! You don&rsquo;t say so?&rdquo; For every soul in Riddsley, over twelve
+years old, was versed in the Audley history, knew all about the suit, and could
+tell off the degrees of kindred as easily as they could tell the distance from
+the Audley Arms to the Portcullis. &ldquo;Mr. Peter Audley&rsquo;s daughter who
+lived in Paris? Lady-in-waiting to a Princess. And now walking with his
+lordship as if she had known him all her life! What would Mr. John say?
+D&rsquo;you see how gay he looks! Not a bit what he is when he speaks to us!
+Wonder whether there&rsquo;s anything in it!&rdquo; And so on, and so on, with
+tit-bits from the history of Mary&rsquo;s father, and choice eccentricities
+from the life of John Audley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Jenkinson&rsquo;s amazement, as she espied them coming up the path to the
+house, was a thing by itself. It was such that she set her door ajar that she
+might see them pass through the hall. She was all of a twitter, she said
+afterwards. And poor Jane and poor Sarah&mdash;who were out! What a miss they
+were having! It was not thrice in the twelve months that his lordship brought a
+lady to the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A greater miss, indeed, it turned out, than she thought. For to her
+gratification Lord Audley tapped at her door. He pushed it open. &ldquo;Mrs.
+Jenkinson,&rdquo; he said pleasantly, &ldquo;this is my cousin, Miss Audley,
+who is good enough to take a cup of your excellent tea with me, if you will
+make it. She has walked in from the Gatehouse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Jenkinson was a combination of an eager, bright-eyed bird and a stout,
+short lady in dove-colored silk&mdash;if such a thing can be imagined; and the
+soul of good-nature. She took Mary by both hands, beamed upon her, and
+figuratively took her to her bosom. &ldquo;A little cake and wine, my
+dear,&rdquo; she chirruped. &ldquo;After a long walk! And then tea. To be sure,
+my dear! I knew your father, Mr. Peter Audley, a dear, good gentleman. You
+would like to wash your hands? Yes, my dear! Not that you are not&mdash;and his
+lordship will wait for us upstairs. Yes, there&rsquo;s a step. I knew your
+father, to be sure, to be sure. A new brush, my dear. And now will you let
+me&mdash;not that your sweet face needs any ornament! Yes, I talk too
+much&mdash;but, there, my love, when you are as old&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was a simple soul, and because her tongue rarely stopped she might have
+been thought to see nothing. But women, unlike men, can do two things at once,
+and little escaped her twinkling spectacles. As she told her sister later,
+&ldquo;My dear, I saw it was spoons from the first. She sparkled all over,
+bless her innocent heart! And he, if she had been a duchess, could not have
+waited on her more elegant&mdash;well, elegantly, Sally, if you like, but we
+can&rsquo;t all talk like you. They thought, the dear creatures, that I saw
+nothing; but once he said something too low for me to hear and she looked up at
+him, and her pretty eyes were like stars. And he looked&mdash;well, Sally, I
+could not tell you how he looked!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not sure that it would be proper,&rdquo; the spinster demurred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, well, it was as pretty a thing as you&rsquo;d wish to see,&rdquo;
+the good creature ran on, drumming with her fingers on the lap of her silk
+gown. &ldquo;And she, bless her, I dare say she was all of a twitter, but she
+didn&rsquo;t show it. No airs or graces either&mdash;but there, an Audley has
+no need! Why, God bless me, I said something about the Princess and what
+company she must have seen, and what a change for her, and she up and
+said&mdash;I am sure I loved her for it!&mdash;that she had been no more than a
+governess! My dear, an Audley a governess! I fancied my lord wasn&rsquo;t quite
+pleased, and very natural! But when a man is spoons&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear sister!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Vulgar? Well, perhaps so, I know I run on, but gentle or simple,
+they&rsquo;re the same when they&rsquo;re in love! And Jane will be glad to
+hear that she took two pieces of the sultana and two cups of tea, and he
+watching every piece she put in her mouth, and she coloring up, once or twice,
+so that it did my heart good to see them, the pretty dears. Jane will be
+pleased. And there might have been nothing but seed cake in the house. I shall
+remember more presently, but I was in such a twitter!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What did she call him?&rdquo; Miss Sarah asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure, my dear, that was what I was going to tell you! I listened,
+and not a single thing did she call him. But once, when he gave her some cake,
+I heard him call her Mary, for all the world as if it was a bit of sugar in his
+mouth. And there came a kind of quiver over her pretty face, and she looked at
+her plate as much as to say it was a new thing. And I said to myself
+&lsquo;Philip and Mary&rsquo;&mdash;out of the old school-books you know, but
+who they were I don&rsquo;t remember. But it&rsquo;s my opinion,&rdquo; Mrs.
+Jenkinson continued, rubbing her nose with the end of her spectacles,
+&ldquo;that he had spoken just before they came in, Sally.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t say so?&rdquo; Sarah cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you ask me, there was a kind of softness about them both! Law, when I
+think what you and Jane missed through going to that stupid Institute! I am
+sure you&rsquo;ll never forgive yourselves!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The good lady had not missed much herself, but she was mistaken in thinking
+that the two had come to an understanding. Indeed when, leaving the warmth of
+her presence behind them, they drove out of town, with the servant seated with
+folded arms behind them and Mary snugly tucked in beside my lord, a new
+constraint began to separate them. The excitement of the meeting had waned, the
+fillip of the unwonted treat had lost its power. A depression for which she
+could not account beset Mary as they rolled through the dull outskirts and
+faced the flat mistridden pastures and the long lines of willows. On his side
+doubt held him silent. He had found it pleasant to come to the brink, he had
+not been blind to Mary&rsquo;s smiles and her rare blushes. But the one step
+farther&mdash;that could not be re-trodden, and it was in the nature of the man
+to hesitate at the last, and to consider if he were getting full value.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, as they drove through the dusk, now noiselessly over sodden leaves, now
+drumming along the hard road, the hint of a chill fell between them.
+Mary&rsquo;s thoughts went forward to the silent house and the lonely rooms,
+and she chid herself for ingratitude. She had had her pleasure, she had had an
+unwonted treat. What was wrong with her? What more did she want?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was nearly dark, and not many words had passed when Lord Audley pulled up
+the horses at the old Cross. The man leapt down and was going to help Mary to
+alight, when his master bade him take the box-seat and the reins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary remonstrated. &ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t get down, please!&rdquo; she cried.
+&ldquo;Please! It is nothing to the house from here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is half a mile if it is a yard,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And it is
+nearly dark. I am going with you.&rdquo; He bade the man walk the horses up and
+down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She ventured another protest, but he put it aside. He threw back the rug and
+lifted her down. For a moment he stamped about and stretched himself. Then
+&ldquo;Come, Mary,&rdquo; he said. It was an order.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She knew then what was at hand. And though she had a minute before looked
+forward with regret to the parting, all her thought now was how she might
+escape to the Gatehouse. It became a refuge. Her heart, as she started to walk
+beside him, beat so quickly that she could not speak. She was thankful that it
+was dark, and that he could not read her agitation in her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not speak himself for some minutes. Then &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; he said
+abruptly, looking straight before him, &ldquo;I am rather one for taking than
+asking, and that stands in my way now. When I&rsquo;ve wanted a thing
+I&rsquo;ve generally taken it. Now I want a thing I can&rsquo;t
+take&mdash;without asking. And I feel that I&rsquo;m not good at the asking.
+But I want it badly, and I must do the best I can. I love you, Mary. I love
+you, and I want you for my wife.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She could not find a word. When he went on his tone was lower.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m rather a lonely man,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t
+know that, or think it? But it is true. And such an hour as we have spent
+to-day is not mine often. It lies with you to say if I am going to have more of
+them. I might tell you with truth that I haven&rsquo;t much to offer my wife.
+That if I am Audley of Beaudelays, I am the poorest Audley that ever was. That
+my wife will be no great lady, and will step into no golden shoes. The
+butterflies are moths, Mary, nowadays, and if I am ever to be much she will
+have to help me. But I will tell no lies, my dear!&rdquo; He turned to her then
+and stopped; and perforce, though her knees trembled, she had to stand also,
+and face him as he looked down at her. &ldquo;I am not going to pretend that
+what I have to offer isn&rsquo;t enough. For you are lonely like me; you have
+no one but John Audley to look to, and I am big enough and strong enough to
+take care of you. And I will take care of you&mdash;if you will let me. If you
+will say the word, Mary?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He loomed above her in the darkness. He seemed already to possess her. She
+tried to think, tried to ask herself if she loved him, if she loved him enough;
+but the fancy for him which she had had from the beginning, that and his
+masterfulness swept her irresistibly towards him. She was lonely&mdash;more
+lonely than ever of late, and to whom was she to look? Who else had been as
+good to her, as kind to her, as thoughtful for her, as he who now wooed her so
+honestly, who offered her all he had to offer? She hesitated, and he saw that
+she hesitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, we&rsquo;ve got to have this out,&rdquo; he said bluntly. And he
+put his hand on her shoulder. &ldquo;We stand alone, both of us, you and I.
+We&rsquo;re the last of the old line, and I want you for my wife, Mary! With
+you I can do something, with you I believe that I can make something of my
+life! Without you&mdash;but there, if you say no, I won&rsquo;t take it! I
+won&rsquo;t take it, and I am going to have you, if not to-day, to-morrow, and
+if not to-morrow, the next day! Make no mistake about that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She tried to fence with him. &ldquo;I have not a penny,&rdquo; she faltered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t ask you for a penny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her instinct was still to escape. &ldquo;You are Lord Audley,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;and I am a poor relation. Won&rsquo;t you&mdash;don&rsquo;t you think
+that you will repent presently!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s my business! If that be all&mdash;if there&rsquo;s no one
+else&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, there&rsquo;s no one else,&rdquo; she admitted.
+&ldquo;But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>But</i> be hanged!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;If there&rsquo;s no one
+else you are mine.&rdquo; And he passed his arm round her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment she stepped back. &ldquo;No!&rdquo; she protested, raising her
+hands to push him off. &ldquo;Please&mdash;please let me think.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He let her be, for already he knew that he had won; and perhaps in his own mind
+he was beginning to doubt the wisdom of the step. &ldquo;My uncle? Have you
+thought of him?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;What will he say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have not thought of him,&rdquo; he cried grandly, &ldquo;and I am not
+going to think of him. I am thinking, my dear, only of you. Do you love
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood silent, gazing at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t play with me!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve a right to
+an answer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I do,&rdquo; she said softly. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;I think&mdash;no,
+wait; that is not all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; between laughing and crying. &ldquo;You are not giving me
+time. I want to think. You are carrying me by storm, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And a good way, too!&rdquo; he rejoined. Then she did let him take her,
+and for a few seconds she was in his arms. He crushed her to him, she felt all
+the world turning. But before he found her lips, the crack of a whip startled
+them, the creak of a wheel sliding round the corner warned them, she slipped
+from his arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You little wretch!&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Breathless, hardly knowing what she felt, or what storm shook her, she could
+not speak. The wagon came creaking past them, the driver clinging to the chain
+of the slipper. When it was gone by she found her voice. &ldquo;It shall be as
+you will,&rdquo; she said, and her tone thrilled him. &ldquo;But I want to
+think. It has been so sudden, I am frightened. I am frightened, and&mdash;yes,
+I think I am happy. But please to let me go now. I am safe here&mdash;in two
+minutes I shall be at home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tried to keep her, but &ldquo;Let me go now,&rdquo; she pleaded.
+&ldquo;Later it shall be as you wish&mdash;always as you wish. But let me go
+now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He gave way then. He said a few words while he held her hands, and he said them
+very well. Then he let her go. Before the dusk hid her she turned and waved her
+hand, and he waved his. He stood, listening. He heard the sound of her
+footsteps grow fainter and fainter as she climbed the hill, until they were
+lost in the rustle of the wind through the undergrowth. At last he turned and
+trudged down the hill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ve done it,&rdquo; he muttered presently. &ldquo;And Uncle
+John may find what he likes, damn him! After all, she&rsquo;s handsome enough
+to turn any man&rsquo;s head, and it makes me safe! But I&rsquo;ll go slow.
+I&rsquo;ll go slow now. There&rsquo;s no hurry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap23"></a>CHAPTER XXIII<br/>
+BLORE UNDER WEAVER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Gratitude and liking, and the worship of strength which is as natural in a
+woman as the worship of beauty in a man, form no bad imitation of love, and
+often pass into love as imperceptibly as the brook becomes a river. The morning
+light brought Mary no repentance. Misgivings she had, as what lover has not,
+were the truth told. Was her love as perfect as Etruria&rsquo;s, as unselfish,
+as absorbing? She doubted. But in all honesty she hoped that it might become
+so; and when she dwelt on the man who had done so much for her, and thought so
+well for her, who had so much to offer and made so little of the offering, her
+heart swelled with gratitude, and if she did not love she fancied that she did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So much was changed for her! She had wondered more than once what would happen
+to her, if her uncle died. That fear was put from her. Toft&mdash;she had been
+vexed with Toft. How small a matter that seemed now! And Peter Basset? He had
+been kind to her, and a pang did pierce her heart on his account. But he had
+recovered very quickly, she reflected. He had shown himself cold enough and
+distant enough at his last visit! And then she smiled as she thought how
+differently her new lover had assailed her, with what force, what arrogance,
+what insistence&mdash;and yet with a force and arrogance and insistence to
+which it was pleasant to yield.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not with all this forget that she would be Lady Audley, she, whose past
+had been so precarious, whose prospects had been so dark, whose fate it might
+have been to travel through life an obscure teacher! She had not been woman if
+she had not thought of this; nor if she had failed, when she thought of it, to
+breathe a prayer for the gallant lover who had found her and saved her, and had
+held it enough that she was an Audley. He might have chosen far and wide. He
+had chosen her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No wonder that Mrs. Toft saw a change in her. &ldquo;Law, Miss,&rdquo; she
+remarked, when she came in to remove the breakfast. &ldquo;One would think a
+ten-mile walk was the making of you! It&rsquo;s put a color into your cheeks
+that would shame a June rose! And to be sure,&rdquo; with a glance at the young
+lady&rsquo;s plate, &ldquo;not much eaten either!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not hungry, Mrs. Toft,&rdquo; Mary said meekly. &ldquo;I drove back
+to the foot of the hill.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I&rsquo;d like to sort Toft for it! Ifs he who should have gone!
+He&rsquo;s upstairs now, keeping out of my way, and that grim and gray
+you&rsquo;d think he&rsquo;d seen a ghost! And &rsquo;Truria, silly girl,
+she&rsquo;s all of a quiver this morning. It&rsquo;s &lsquo;Mother, let me do
+this!&rsquo; and &lsquo;Mother, I&rsquo;ll do that!&rsquo; all because her
+reverend&mdash;not, as I tell her, that aught will ever come of it&mdash;has
+got a roof over his head at last.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that&rsquo;s good news! Has Mr. Colet got some work?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not he, the silly man! Nor likely! There&rsquo;s mighty little work for
+them as go against the gentry. For what he&rsquo;s got he&rsquo;s to thank Mr.
+Basset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Basset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft answered, with a covert glance at the girl,
+&ldquo;why not, Miss? Some talk and the wind goes by. There&rsquo;s plenty of
+those. And some say naught but do&mdash;and that&rsquo;s Mr. Basset. He&rsquo;s
+took in Mr. Colet till he can find a church. Etruria&rsquo;s that up about it,
+I tell her, smile before breakfast and sweat before night. And so she&rsquo;ll
+find it, I warrant!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is very good of Mr. Basset,&rdquo; Mary said gravely. And then,
+&ldquo;Is that some one knocking, Mrs. Toft?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s well to have young ears!&rdquo; Mrs. Toft took out the tray,
+and returned with a letter. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s for you, Miss,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;The postman&rsquo;s late this morning, but cheap&rsquo;s a slow
+traveller. When a letter was a letter and cost ninepence it came to hand like a
+gentleman!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary waited to hear no more. She knew the handwriting, and as quickly as she
+could she escaped from the room. No one with any claim to taste used an
+envelope in those days, and to open a letter so that no rent might mar its
+fairness called for a care which she could not exercise in public.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alone, in her room, she opened it, and her eyes grew serious as they travelled
+down the page, which bore signs of haste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sweetheart,&rdquo; it began, and she thought that charming, &ldquo;I do
+not ask if you reached the Gatehouse safely, for I listened and I must have
+heard, if harm befel you. I drove home as happy as a king, and grieved only
+that I had not had that of you which I had a right to have&mdash;damn that
+carter! This troubles me the more as I shall not see you again for a time, and
+if this does not disappoint you too, you&rsquo;re a deceiver! My plans are
+altered by to-day&rsquo;s news that Peel returns to office. In any event, I had
+to go to Seabourne&rsquo;s for Christmas, now I must be there for a meeting
+to-morrow and go from there to London on the same business. You would not have
+me desert my post, I am sure? Heaven knows how long I may be kept, possibly a
+fortnight, possibly more. But the moment I can I shall be with you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Write to me at the Brunswick Hôtel, Dover Street. Sweetheart, I am
+yours, as you, my darling, are
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+&ldquo;Philip&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>P. S</i>.&mdash;I must put off any communication to your uncle till I
+can see him. So for the moment, mum!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary read the letter twice; the first time with eager eyes, the second time
+more calmly. Nothing was more natural, she told herself, than that her spirits
+should sink&mdash;Philip was gone. The walk with him, the talk which was to
+bring them nearer, and to make them better known to one another, stood over.
+The day that was to be so bright was clouded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But beyond this the letter itself fell a little, a very little, short of her
+expectations. The beginning was charming! But after that&mdash;was it her
+fancy, or was her lover&rsquo;s tone a little flippant, a little free, a little
+too easy? Did it lack that tender note of reassurance, that chivalrous thought
+for her, which she had a right to expect in a first letter? She was not sure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as to her uncle. She must, of course, be guided by her lover, his will must
+be her law now; and it was reasonable that in John Audley&rsquo;s state of
+health the mode of communication should be carefully weighed. But she longed to
+be candid, she longed to be open; and in regard to one person she would be
+open. Basset had let her see that her treatment had cured him. At their last
+meeting he had been cold, almost unkind; he had left her to deal with Toft as
+she could. Still she owed him, if any one, the truth, and, were it only to set
+herself right in her own eyes, she must tell him. If the news did nothing else
+it would open the way for his return to the Gatehouse, and the telling would
+enable her to make the <i>amende</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The letter was not written on that day nor the next. But on the fourth day
+after Audley&rsquo;s departure it arrived at Blore, and lay for an hour on the
+dusty hall table amid spuds and powder-flasks and old itineraries. There Mr.
+Colet found it and another letter, and removed the two for safety to the
+parlor, where litter of a similar kind struggled for the upper hand with piles
+of books and dog&rsquo;s-eared Quarterlies. The decay of the Bassets dated
+farther back than the decline of the Audleys, and the gabled house under the
+shadow of Weaver was little better, if something larger, than a farm-house.
+There had been a library, but Basset had taken the best books to the Gatehouse.
+And there were in the closed drawing-room, and in some of the bedrooms, old
+family portraits, bad for the most part; the best lay in marble in Blore
+Church. But in the parlor, which was the living-room, hung only paintings of
+fat oxen and prize sheep; and the garden which ran up to the walls of the
+house, and in summer was a flood of color, lay in these days dank and lifeless,
+ebbing away from bee-skips and chicken-coops. The park had been ploughed during
+the great war, and now pined in thin pasture. The whole of the valley was still
+Basset land, but undrained in the bottom and light on the slopes, it made no
+figure in a rent-roll. The present owner had husbanded the place, and paid off
+charges, and cleared the estate, but he had been able to do no more. The place
+was a poor man&rsquo;s place, though for miles round men spoke to the owner
+bareheaded. He was &ldquo;Basset of Blore,&rdquo; as much a part of
+Staffordshire as Burton Bridge or the Barbeacon. The memories of the illiterate
+are long.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been walking the hill that morning with a dog and a gun, and between
+yearnings for the woman he loved, and longings for some plan of life, some
+object, some aim, he was in a most unhappy mood. At one moment he saw himself
+growing old, without the energy to help himself or others, still toying with
+trifles, the last and feeblest of his blood. At another he thought of Mary, and
+saw her smiling through the flowering hawthorn, or bending over a book with the
+firelight on her hair. Or again, stung by the lash of her reproaches he tried
+to harden himself to do something. Should he take the land into his own hands,
+and drain and fence and breed stock and be of use, were it only as a struggling
+farmer in his own district? Or should he make that plunge into public life to
+which Colonel Mottisfont had urged him and from which he shrank as a shivering
+man shrinks from an icy bath?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For there was the rub. Mary was right. He was a dreamer, a weakling, one in
+whom the strong pulse that had borne his forbears to the front beat but feebly.
+He was not equal to the hard facts of life. With what ease had Audley, whenever
+they had stood foot to foot, put him in the second place, got the better of
+him, outshone him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Old Don pointed in vain. His master shot nothing, for he walked for the most
+part with his eyes on the turf. If he raised them it was to gaze at the hamlet
+lying below him in the valley, the old house, the ring of buildings and
+cottages, the church that he loved&mdash;and that like the woman he loved,
+reproached him with his inaction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About two o&rsquo;clock he turned homewards. How many more days would he will
+and not will, and end night by night where he had begun? In the main he was of
+even temper, but of late small things tried him, and when he entered the parlor
+and Colet rose at his entrance, he could not check his irritation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For heaven&rsquo;s sake, man, sit still!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;And
+don&rsquo;t get up every time I come in! And don&rsquo;t look at me like a dog!
+And don&rsquo;t ask me if I want the book you are reading!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The curate stared, and muttered an apology. It was true that he did not wear
+the chain of obligation with grace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, it is I who am sorry!&rdquo; Basset replied, quickly repenting.
+&ldquo;I am a churlish ass! Get up when you like, and say what you like! But if
+you can, make yourself at home!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he saw the two letters lying on the table. He knew Mary&rsquo;s writing at
+a glance, and he let it lie, his face twitching. He took up the other, made as
+if he would open it, then he threw it back again, and took Mary&rsquo;s to the
+window, where he could read it unwatched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was short.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<span class="sc">Dear Mr. Basset</span>,&rdquo; she wrote, &ldquo;I
+should be paying you a poor compliment if I pretended that what I am writing
+will not pain you. But I hope, and since our last meeting, I have reason to
+believe that that pain will not be lasting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My cousin, Lord Audley, has asked me to marry him, and I have consented.
+Nothing beyond this is fixed, and no announcement will be made until my uncle
+has recovered his strength. But I feel that I owe it to you to let you know
+this at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I owe you something more. You crowned your kindness by doing me a great
+honor. I could not reply in substance otherwise than I did, but for the foolish
+criticisms of an inexperienced girl, I ask you to believe that I feel deep
+regret.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When we meet I hope that we may meet as friends. If I can believe this
+it will add something to the happiness of my engagement. My uncle is better,
+but little stronger than when you saw him.
+</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent:50%">
+&ldquo;I am, truly yours,
+</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent:60%">
+&ldquo;<span class="sc">Mary Audley</span>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood looking at it for a long time, and only by an effort could he control
+the emotion that strove to master him. Then his thoughts travelled to the
+other, the man who had won her, the man who had got the better of him from the
+first, who had played the Jacob from the moment of their meeting on the
+steamer; and a passion of jealousy swept him away. He swore aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Colet leapt in his chair. &ldquo;Mr. Basset!&rdquo; he cried. And then, in
+a different tone, &ldquo;You have bad news, I fear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other laughed bitterly. &ldquo;Bad news?&rdquo; he repeated, and Colet saw
+that his face was white and that the letter shook in his hand. &ldquo;The
+Government&rsquo;s out, and that&rsquo;s bad news. The pig&rsquo;s ill, and
+that&rsquo;s bad news. Your mother&rsquo;s dead, and that&rsquo;s bad
+news!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Swearing makes no news better,&rdquo; Colet said mildly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not even the pig? If your&mdash;if Etruria died, and some one told you
+that she was dead, you wouldn&rsquo;t swear? You wouldn&rsquo;t curse
+God?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God forbid!&rdquo; the clergyman cried in horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What would you do then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Try so to live, Mr. Basset, that we might meet again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rubbish, man!&rdquo; Basset retorted rudely. &ldquo;Try instead not to
+be a prig!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I could be of use?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You cannot, nor any one else,&rdquo; Basset answered. &ldquo;There, say
+no more. The worst is over. We&rsquo;ve played our little part
+and&mdash;what&rsquo;s the odds how we played it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Much when the curtain falls,&rdquo; the poor clergyman ventured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll go and eat something. Hunger is one more grief!&rdquo;
+And Basset went out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came back ten minutes later, pale but quiet. &ldquo;Sorry, Colet,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;Very rude, I am afraid! I had bad news, but I am right now.
+Wasn&rsquo;t there another letter for me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He found the letter and read it listlessly. He tossed it across the table to
+his guest. &ldquo;News is plentiful to-day,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colet took the letter and read it. It was from a Mr. Hatton, better known to
+him than to Basset, and the owner of one of the two small factories in
+Riddsley. It was an invitation to contest the borough in opposition to young
+Mottisfont.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If it were a question, respected sir,&rdquo; Hatton wrote, &ldquo;of
+Whigs and Tories we should not approach you. But as the result must depend upon
+the proportions in which the Tory party splits for and against Sir Robert Peel
+upon the Corn Laws, we, who are in favor of repeal, recognize the advantage of
+being represented by a moderate Tory. The adherence to Sir Robert of Sir James
+Graham in the North and of Lord Lincoln in the Midlands proves that there are
+landowners who place their country before their rents, and it is in the hope
+that you, sir, are of the number that we invite you to give us that assistance
+which your ancient name must afford.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are empowered to promise you the support of the Whig party in the
+borough, conditioned only upon your support of the repeal of the Corn Laws,
+leaving you free on other points. The Audley influence has been hitherto
+paramount, but we believe that the time has come to free the borough from the
+last remnant of the Feudal system.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A deputation will wait upon you to give you such assurances as you may
+desire. But as Parliament meets on an early date, and the present member may at
+once apply for the Chiltern Hundreds, we shall be glad to have your answer
+before the New Year.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Basset asked. &ldquo;What do you think?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It opens a wide door.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you wish to have your finger pinched,&rdquo; Basset replied,
+flippantly, &ldquo;it does. I don&rsquo;t know that it is an opening to
+anything else.&rdquo; And as Colet refrained from speaking, &ldquo;You
+don&rsquo;t think,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;that it&rsquo;s a way into
+Parliament? A repealer has as much chance of getting in for Riddsley against
+the Audley interest as you have of being an archdeacon! Of course the Radicals
+want a fight if they can find a man fool enough to spend his money. But as for
+winning, they don&rsquo;t dream of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is better to lose in some causes than to win in others.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset laughed. &ldquo;Do you know why they have come to me? They think that I
+shall carry John Audley with me and divide the Audley interest. There&rsquo;s
+nothing in it, but that&rsquo;s the notion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why look at the seamy side?&rdquo; Colet objected. &ldquo;I suppose
+there always is one, but I don&rsquo;t think that it was at that side Sir
+Robert looked when he made up his mind to put the country first and his party
+second! I don&rsquo;t think that it was at that side he looked when he
+determined to eat his words and pocket his pride, rather than be responsible
+for famine in Ireland! Believe me, Mr. Basset,&rdquo; the clergyman continued
+earnestly, &ldquo;it was no easy change of opinion. Before he came to that
+resolution, proud, cold man as I am told he is, many a sight and sound must
+have knocked at the door of his mind; a scene of poverty he passed in his
+carriage, a passage in some report, a speech through which he seemed to sleep,
+a begging letter&mdash;one by one they pressed the door inwards, till at last,
+with&mdash;it may be with misery, he came to see what he must do!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Possibly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The call came, he had to answer it. Here is a call to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And do you think,&rdquo; the other retorted, &ldquo;that I can answer it
+more cheaply than Sir Robert? So far as I have thought it out, I am with him.
+But do you think I could do this,&rdquo; he tapped the letter, &ldquo;without
+misery&mdash;of a different kind it may be? I am not a public man, I have
+served no apprenticeship to it, I&rsquo;ve not addressed a meeting three times
+in my life, I don&rsquo;t know what I should say or how I should say it. And
+for Hatton and his friends, they would rub me up a dozen times a day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Non sine pulvere!</i>&rdquo; Mr. Colet murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dust enough there&rsquo;ll be! I don&rsquo;t doubt that. And dirt. But
+there&rsquo;s another thing.&rdquo; He paused, and turning, knocked the fire
+together. He was nearly a minute about it, while the other waited.
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s another thing,&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;I am not going
+into this business to pay out a private grudge, and I want to be clear that I
+am not doing that. And I&rsquo;m not going into this simply for what I can get
+out of it. Ambition is a poor stayer with me, a washy chestnut. It would not
+carry me through, Colet. If I go into this, it will be because I believe in it.
+It seems as if I were preaching,&rdquo; he continued awkwardly. &ldquo;But
+there&rsquo;s nothing but belief will carry me through, and unless I am
+clear&mdash;I&rsquo;ll not start. I&rsquo;ll not start, although I want to make
+a fresh start badly! Devilish badly, if you&rsquo;ll excuse me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how will you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Make certain? I don&rsquo;t know. I must fight it out by myself&mdash;go
+up on the hill and think it out. I must believe in the thing, or I must leave
+it alone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; said Mr. Colet. And prudent for once he said no more.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap24"></a>CHAPTER XXIV<br/>
+AN AGENT OF THE OLD SCHOOL</h2>
+
+<p>
+It is doubtful if even the great Reform Bill of &rsquo;32, which shifted the
+base of power from the upper to the middle class, awoke more bitter feelings
+that did the <i>volte face</i> of Peel in the winter of &rsquo;45. Since the
+days of Pitt no statesman had enjoyed the popularity or wielded the power which
+had been Sir Robert&rsquo;s when he had taken office four years before. He had
+been more than the leader of the Tory party; he had been its re-creator. He had
+been more than the leader of the landed interest; he had been its pride. Men
+who believed that upon the welfare of that interest rested the stability of the
+constitution, men with historic names had walked on his right hand and on his
+left, had borne his train and carried his messages. All things, his origin, his
+formality, his pride, his quiet domestic life, even his moderation, had been
+forgiven in the man who had guided the Tories through the bad days, had led
+them at last to power, and still stood between them and the mutterings of this
+new industrial England, that hydra-like threatened and perplexed them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then&mdash;he had betrayed them. Suddenly, some held; in a panic, scared by
+God knows what bugbear! Coldly and deliberately, said others, spreading his
+treachery over years, laughing in his sleeve as he led them to the fatal edge.
+Those who took the former view made faint excuse for him, and perhaps still
+clung to him. Those who held the latter thought no price too high, no sacrifice
+too costly, no effort too great, if they could but punish the traitor! If they
+could but pillory him for all to see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, in a moment, in the autumn of &rsquo;45, as one drop of poison will cloud
+the fairest water, the face of public life was changed. Bitterness was infused
+into it, friend was parted from friend and son from father, the oldest
+alliances were dissolved. Men stood gaping, at a loss whither to turn and whom
+to trust. Many who had never in all their lives made up their own minds were
+forced to have an opinion and choose a side; and as that process is to some men
+as painful as a labor to a woman, the effect was to embitter things farther.
+How could one who for years past had cursed Cobden in all companies, and in
+moments of relaxation had drunk to a &ldquo;Bloody War and a Wet
+Harvest,&rdquo; turn round and join the Manchester School? It could be done, it
+was done, but with what a rending of bleeding sinews only the sufferers knew!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strange to say, few gave weight to Sir Robert&rsquo;s plea of famine in
+Ireland. Still more strange, when events bore out his alarm, when in the course
+of a year or two a quarter of a million in that unhappy country died of want,
+public feeling changed little. Those who had remained with him, stood with him
+still. Those who had banded themselves against him, held their ground. Only a
+handful allowed that he was honest, after all. Nor was it until he, who rode
+his horse like a sack, had died like a demi-god, with a city hanging on his
+breath, and weeping women filling all the streets about the house, that the
+traitor became the patriot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this is to anticipate. In December of &rsquo;45, few men believed in
+famine. Few thought much of dearth. The world was angry, blood was hot, many
+dreamt of vengeance. Meantime Manchester exulted, and Coal, Iron, Cotton
+toasted Peel. But even they marvelled that the man who had been chosen to
+support the Corn Laws had the courage to repeal them!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon no one in the whole country did the news fall with more stunning effect
+than upon poor Stubbs at Riddsley. He had suspected Peel. He had disliked his
+measures, and doubted whither he was moving. He had even on the occasion of his
+resignation predicted that Sir Robert would support the repeal; but he had not
+thought worse of him than that, and the event left him not uncertain, nor under
+any stress as to making up his mind, but naked, as it were, in an east wind. He
+felt older. He owned that his generation was passing. He numbered the friends
+he had left and found them few. And though he continued to assert that no man
+had ever pitted himself against the land whom the land had not broken, doubt
+began to creep into his mind. There were hours when he foresaw the end of the
+warm farming days, of game and sport, of Horn and Corn, ay, and of the old
+toast, &ldquo;The farmer&rsquo;s best friend&mdash;the landlord,&rdquo; to
+which he had replied at many an audit dinner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One thing remained&mdash;the Riddsley election. He found some comfort in that.
+He drew some pleasure from the thought that Sir Robert might do what he pleased
+at Tamworth, he might do what he pleased in the Cabinet, in the
+Commons&mdash;there were toadies and turn-coats everywhere; but Riddsley would
+have none of him! Riddsley would remain faithful! Stubbs steeped himself in the
+prospect of the election, and in preparations for it. A dozen times a day he
+thanked his stars that the elder Mottisfont&rsquo;s weakness for Peel had
+provided this opening for his energies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not that even on this ground he was quite happy. There was a little bitter in
+the cup. He hardly owned it to himself, he did not dream of whispering it to
+others, but at the bottom of his mind he had ever so faint a doubt of his
+employer. A hint dropped here, a word there, a veiled question&mdash;he could
+not say which of these had given him the notion that his lordship hung between
+two opinions, and even&mdash;no wonder that Stubbs dared not whisper it to
+others&mdash;was weighing which would pay him best!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such a thought was treason, however, and Stubbs buried it and trampled on it,
+before he went jauntily into the snug little meeting at the Audley Arms, which
+he had summoned to hear the old member&rsquo;s letter read and to accept the
+son as a candidate in his father&rsquo;s place. Those whom the agent had called
+were few and trusty; young Mottisfont himself, the rector and Dr. Pepper,
+Bagenal the maltster, Hogg the saddler, Musters the landlord, the
+&ldquo;Duke&rdquo; from the Leasows (which was within the borough), and two
+other tradesmen. Stubbs had no liking for big meetings. He had been bred up to
+believe that speeches were lost labor, and if they must be made should be made
+at the Market Ordinary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At such a gathering as this he was happy. He had the strings in his own hands.
+The work to be done was at his fingers&rsquo; ends. At this table he was as
+great a man as my lord. With young Mottisfont, who was by way of being a Bond
+Street dandy, solemn, taciturn, and without an opinion of his own, he was not
+likely to have trouble. The rector was enthusiastic but indolent, Pepper an old
+friend. The rest were Stubbs&rsquo;s most obedient.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs read the retiring member&rsquo;s letter, and introduced the candidate.
+The rector boomed through a few phrases of approbation, Dr. Pepper seconded,
+the rest cried &ldquo;Hear! hear!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s little to say,&rdquo; Stubbs went on. &ldquo;I take it
+that we are all of one mind, gentlemen, to return Mr. Mottisfont in his
+father&rsquo;s place?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hear! hear!&rdquo; from all. &ldquo;In the old interest?&rdquo; Stubbs
+went on, looking round the table. &ldquo;And on the clear understanding that
+Mr. Mottisfont is returned to oppose any tampering with the protection of
+agriculture.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is so,&rdquo; said Mr. Mottisfont.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will see that that is embodied in Mr. Mottisfont&rsquo;s
+address,&rdquo; Stubbs continued. &ldquo;There must be no mistake. These are
+queer times&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sad times!&rdquo; said the rector, shaking his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Terrible times!&rdquo; said the maltster, shaking his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never did I dream I should live to see &rsquo;em,&rdquo; said old
+Hayward. &ldquo;&rsquo;Tisn&rsquo;t a month since a chap came on my land, ay,
+up to my very door, and said things&mdash;I&rsquo;ll be damned if I did not
+think he&rsquo;d turn the cream sour! And when I cried &lsquo;Sam! fetch a
+pitchfork and rid me of this rubbish&mdash;&mdash;&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know, Hayward,&rdquo; Stubbs said, cutting him short. &ldquo;I know.
+You told me about it. You did very well. But to business. It shall be a short
+address&mdash;just that one point. We are all agreed, I think,
+gentlemen?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All were agreed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see that it is printed in good time,&rdquo; Stubbs continued.
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think that we need trouble you further, Mr. Mottisfont.
+There&rsquo;s a fat-stock sale this day fortnight. Perhaps you&rsquo;ll dine
+and say a few words? I&rsquo;ll let you know if it is necessary. There&rsquo;ll
+be no opposition. Hatton will have a meeting at the Institute, but nothing will
+come of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all then, is it?&rdquo; said the London man, sticking his
+glass in his eye with a sigh of relief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all,&rdquo; Stubbs replied. &ldquo;If you can attend this
+day fortnight so much the better. The farmers like it, and they&rsquo;ve
+fourteen votes in the borough. Thank you, gentlemen, that&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you&rsquo;ve forgotten one thing, Mr. Stubbs,&rdquo; said old
+Hayward, with a twinkle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure, I have. Ring the bell, Musters, and send up the two bottles
+of your &rsquo;20 port that I ordered and some glasses. A glass of
+Musters&rsquo; &rsquo;20 port, Mr. Mottisfont, won&rsquo;t hurt you this cold
+day. And we must drink your health. And, Musters, when these gentlemen go down,
+see that they have what they call for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The port was sipped, tasted. Mr. Mottisfont&rsquo;s health was drunk, and
+various compliments were paid to his father. The rector took his two glasses;
+so did young Mottisfont, who woke up and vowed that he had tasted none better
+in St. James&rsquo;s Street. &ldquo;Is it Garland&rsquo;s?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is, sir,&rdquo; Musters said, much pleased.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought it was&mdash;none better!&rdquo; said young Mottisfont, also
+pleased. &ldquo;The old Duke drinks no other.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fine tipple! Fine tipple!&rdquo; said the other &ldquo;Duke.&rdquo; In
+the end a third bottle was ordered, of which Musters and old Hayward drank the
+better part.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At one of these meetings a sad thing had happened. A rash tradesman had
+proposed his lordship&rsquo;s health. Of course he had been severely snubbed.
+It had been considered most indecent. But on this occasion no one was so simple
+as to name my lord, and Stubbs felt with satisfaction that all had passed as it
+should. So had candidates been chosen as long as he could remember.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But call no man happy until the day closes. As he left the house Bagenal the
+maltster tacked himself on to him. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d a letter from George this
+morning,&rdquo; he said. George was his son, articled to Mr. Stubbs, and now
+with Mr. Stubbs&rsquo;s agents in town. &ldquo;He saw his lordship one day last
+week.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay. I suppose Master George was in the West End? Wasting his time,
+Bagenal, I&rsquo;ll be bound.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about that. Young fellows like to see things. He went
+with a lot of chaps to see the crowd outside Sir Robert&rsquo;s. They&rsquo;d
+read in a paper that all the nobs were to be seen going in and out. Anyway, he
+went, and the first person he saw going in was his lordship!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Stubbs walked a few yards in silence. Then, &ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;s no
+sight to George,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It seems to me they were both wasting
+their time. I told his lordship he&rsquo;d do no good. When half the dukes in
+England have been at Peel, d&mdash;n him, it wasn&rsquo;t likely he&rsquo;d
+change his course for his lordship! It wasn&rsquo;t to be expected, Bagenal.
+Did George stop to see him come out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did. And in a thundering temper my lord looked.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay! Well I told him how it would be.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They were going in and out like bees, George said.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They parted on that, and the lawyer went into his office. But his face was
+gloomy. &ldquo;Ay, like bees!&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;After the honey! I
+wonder what he asked for! Whatever it was he couldn&rsquo;t have paid the
+price! I thought he knew that. I&rsquo;ve a good mind&mdash;but there,
+we&rsquo;ve held it so long, grandfather, father, and son&mdash;I can&rsquo;t
+afford to give it up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned into his office, but the day was spoiled for him. And the day was not
+done yet. He had barely sat down before his clerk a thin, gray-haired man,
+high-nosed, with a look of breeding run to seed, came in, and closed the door
+behind him. Farthingale was as well known in Riddsley as the Maypole; gossip
+had it that he was a by-blow of an old name. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard
+something,&rdquo; he said darkly, &ldquo;and the sooner you know it the better.
+They&rsquo;ve got a man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;For repeal in Riddsley?&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re dreaming.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The clerk smiled. &ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;d best be awake,&rdquo; he said. He
+had been long enough with Stubbs to take a liberty. &ldquo;Who do you think it
+is?&rdquo; he continued, rubbing his chin with the feather-end of a quill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Some methodist parson!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Farthingale shook his head. &ldquo;Guess again, sir,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re cold at present. It&rsquo;s a bird of another
+feather.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A pretty big fool whoever he is!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Basset of Blore. I have it on good authority.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs stared. He was silent for a time, thinking hard. &ldquo;Somebody&rsquo;s
+fooled you,&rdquo; he said at last, but in a different tone. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
+never shown a sign of coming out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The clerk looked wise. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s true,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It cost
+me four goes of brown brandy at the Portcullis.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you may score that to me,&rdquo; Stubbs answered. &ldquo;Basset,
+eh? Well, he&rsquo;s throwing his money into the gutter if it&rsquo;s true, and
+he hasn&rsquo;t much to spare. I see Hatton&rsquo;s point. He&rsquo;s not the
+fool.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. He&rsquo;s an old bird is Hatton.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t see where Squire Basset comes in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Farthingale looked wiser than ever. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;he may
+have a score to pay, too. And if he has, there&rsquo;s more ways than one of
+paying it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What score?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, I&rsquo;m not saying that. Mr. John Audley&rsquo;s may
+be&mdash;against his lordship.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Umph! If you paid off yours at the Portcullis,&rdquo; Stubbs retorted,
+losing his temper, &ldquo;the landlord wouldn&rsquo;t be sorry! Scores are a
+deal too much in your way, Farthingale!&rdquo; he continued, severely,
+forgetting in his annoyance the four goes of brown brandy. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
+too much at home among &rsquo;em. Don&rsquo;t bring me cock-and-bull stories
+like this! I don&rsquo;t believe it. And get to that lease!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But sure enough Farthingale&rsquo;s story proved to be well founded, for a week
+later it was known for certain in Riddsley that Mr. Basset of Blore was coming
+out, and that there would be a fight for the borough.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap25"></a>CHAPTER XXV<br/>
+MARY IS LONELY</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mary Audley was one of the last to hear the news. Etruria brought it from the
+town one day in January, when the evenings were beginning to lengthen, and the
+last hour of daylight was the dreariest of the twenty-four. It had rained, and
+the oaks in the park were a-drip, the thorn trees stood in tiny pools, the
+moorland lay stark under a pall of fog. In the vale the Trent was in flood, its
+pale waters swirling past the willow-stools, creeping over the chilled meadows,
+and stealing inch by inch up the waterside lanes. Etruria&rsquo;s feet were
+wet, and she was weary with her trudge through the mud; but when Mary met her
+on the tiny landing on which their rooms opened, there was a sparkle in the
+girl&rsquo;s eyes as bright as the red petticoat that showed below her
+tucked-up gown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t forget&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Mary was beginning, and
+then, &ldquo;Why, Etruria,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;I believe you have seen
+Mr. Colet?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria blushed like the dawn. &ldquo;Oh no, Miss!&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s at Blore.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure! Then what is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard some news, Miss,&rdquo; Etruria said. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t know whether you&rsquo;ll be pleased or not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But it is certain that you are!&rdquo; Mary replied with conviction.
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl told what she had heard: that there was to be an election at Riddsley
+in three weeks, and not only an election but a contest, and that the candidate
+who had come forward to oppose the Corn Laws was no other than Mr.
+Basset&mdash;their Mr. Basset! More, that only the evening before he had held
+his first meeting at the Institute, and though he had been interrupted and the
+meeting had been broken up, his short plain speech had made a considerable
+impression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, Miss,&rdquo; Etruria continued, carried away by the subject,
+&ldquo;there was one told me that when he stood up to speak she could see his
+hand shake, and his face was the color of a piece of paper. But when they began
+to boo and shout at him, he grew as cool as cool, and the longer they shouted
+the braver he was, until they saw that if they let him go on he would be
+getting a hearing! So they put out the lights and stormed the platform, and
+there was a fine Stafford row, I&rsquo;m told. Of course,&rdquo; Etruria added
+simply, &ldquo;the drink was in them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary hardly knew what her feelings were. &ldquo;Mr. Basset?&rdquo; she said at
+last. &ldquo;I can hardly believe it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor could I, Miss, when I first heard it. But it seems they have known
+it there for ten days and more, and the town is agog with it, everybody taking
+sides, and some so much against him as never was. It&rsquo;s dreadful to
+think,&rdquo; Etruria continued, &ldquo;how misguided men can be. But oh, Miss,
+I&rsquo;m thankful he&rsquo;s on the right side, and for taking the burden off
+the bread! I&rsquo;m sure it will be returned to him, win or lose.
+They&rsquo;re farmers&rsquo; friends here, and they&rsquo;re saying shameful
+things of him in the market! But there&rsquo;s many a woman will bless him, and
+the lanes and alleys, they&rsquo;ve no votes, but they&rsquo;ll pray for him!
+Sometimes,&rdquo; Etruria added shyly, &ldquo;I think it is Mr. Colet has
+brought him to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Colet?&rdquo; Mary repeated&mdash;she did not know why she disliked
+the notion. &ldquo;Why do you think that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s been at Blore,&rdquo; Etruria murmured. &ldquo;Mr. Basset has
+been so good to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Basset has a mind of his own,&rdquo; Mary answered sharply.
+&ldquo;He is quite capable of forming his own opinion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course. Miss,&rdquo; Etruria said, abashed. &ldquo;I should have
+known that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Mary repeated. &ldquo;But what was it they were saying of
+Mr. Basset in the market, Etruria? Not that it matters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Miss,&rdquo; Etruria explained, reluctantly. &ldquo;They were
+saying it was some grudge Mr. Basset or the Master had against his lordship
+that brought Mr. Basset out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Against Lord Audley?&rdquo; Mary cried. And she blushed suddenly and
+vividly. &ldquo;Why? What has he to do with it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Miss, it&rsquo;s his lordship&rsquo;s seat,&rdquo; Etruria
+answered naïvely; &ldquo;what he wishes has always been done in Riddsley. And
+he&rsquo;s for Mr. Mottisfont.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary walked to a window and looked out. &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I
+did not know that. But you&rsquo;d better go now, Etruria, and change your
+shoes. Your feet must be wet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria went, and Mary continued to gaze through the window. What strange news!
+And what a strange situation! The lover whom she had rejected and the lover
+whom she had taken, pitted against one another! And her words&mdash;she could
+hardly doubt it&mdash;the spur which had brought Basset to the post!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So thinking, so pondering, she grew more and more ill at ease. Her sympathies
+should have been wholly with her betrothed, but they were not. She should have
+resented Basset&rsquo;s action. She did not. Instead she thought of his shaking
+hand and his pale face, and of the courage that had grown firmer in the face of
+opposition; and she found something fine in that, something that appealed to
+her. And the cause he had adopted? It was the cause to which she naturally
+inclined. She might be wrong, he might be wrong. Lord Audley knew so much more
+of these things and looked at them from so enlightened a standpoint, that they
+must be wrong. And yet&mdash;her heart warmed to that cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned from the window in some trouble, wondering if she were disloyal,
+wondering why she felt as she did; wondering a little, too, why she had lost
+the first rapture of her love, and was less happy in it than she had been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+True, she had not seen her lover again, and that might account for it. He had
+been detained at Lord Seabourne&rsquo;s, and in London; he had been occupied
+for days together with the crisis. But she had had three letters from him, busy
+as he was; three amusing letters, full of gossip and sprinkled with anecdotes
+of the great world. She had opened the first in something of a tremor; but her
+fingers had soon grown steady, and if she had blushed it had been for her
+expectation of a vulgar love-letter such as milkmaids prize. She had been silly
+to suppose that he would write in that strain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet she had felt a degree of disappointment. He might have written with
+less reserve, she thought; he might have discussed their plans and hopes, he
+might have let the fire peep somewhere through the chinks. But there, again,
+what a poor thing she was if her love must be fed with sweetmeats. How weak her
+trust, how poor her affection, if she could not bear a three weeks&rsquo;
+parting! He had come to her, he had chosen her, what more did she want? Did she
+expect him to put aside the calls and the duties of his station, that he might
+hang on her apron-strings?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still, she was not in good spirits, and she felt her loneliness. The house,
+this gray evening, with the shadows gathering in the corners, weighed on her.
+Mrs. Toft was far away in her cosey kitchen, Etruria also had gone thither.
+Toft was with Mr. Audley in the other wing&mdash;he had been much with his
+master of late. So Mary was alone. She was not nervous, but she was depressed.
+The cold stairs, the austere parlor with its dim portraits, the matted hall,
+the fireless library&mdash;all struck a chill. She remembered other times and
+other evenings; cosey evenings, when the glow of the wood-fire had vied with
+the shaded lights, when the three heads had bent over the three tables, when
+the rustle of turning pages had blended with the snoring of the old hound, when
+the pursuit of some trifle had sped the pleasant hours. Alas, those evenings
+were gone, as if they had never been. The house was dull and melancholy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She might have gone to her uncle, but during the afternoon he had told her that
+he wished to be alone; he should go to bed betimes. So about seven
+o&rsquo;clock she took her meal by herself, and when it was done she felt more
+at a loss than ever. Presently her thoughts went again to John Audley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had she neglected him of late? Had she left him too much to Toft, and let her
+secret, which she hated to keep secret, come between them? Why should she not,
+even now, see him before he slept? She could take him the news of Mr.
+Basset&rsquo;s enterprise. It would serve for an excuse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lest her courage should fail she went at once, shivering as she passed through
+the shadowy library, where a small lamp, burning on a table, did no more than
+light her to the staircase. She ran up the stairs and was groping for the
+handle of Mr. Audley&rsquo;s door when the door opened abruptly and Toft
+stepped out, a candle in his hand. She was so close to him that he all but
+touched her, and he was, if anything, more startled than she was. He stood
+gaping at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through the narrow opening she had a glimpse of her uncle, who was on his feet
+before the fire. He was fully dressed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That surprised her, for, even before this last attack, he had spent most of his
+time in his dressing-gown. Still more surprising was Toft&rsquo;s conduct. He
+shut the door and held it. &ldquo;The master is going to bed, Miss,&rdquo; he
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see that he is dressed!&rdquo; she replied. And she looked at Toft in
+such a way that the man gave way, took his hand from the door, and stood aside.
+She pushed the door open and went in. Her uncle, standing with his back to her,
+was huddling on his dressing-gown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he cried, his face averted. &ldquo;Who is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is only I, sir,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Mary.&rdquo; She closed
+the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I thought I told you that I didn&rsquo;t want you!&rdquo; he
+retorted pettishly. &ldquo;I am going to bed.&rdquo; He turned, having
+succeeded in girding on his dressing-gown. &ldquo;Going to bed,&rdquo; he
+repeated. &ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t I tell you so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m very sorry, sir,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but I had news for
+you. News that has surprised me. I thought that you would like to hear
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her, his furtive eyes giving the lie to his plump face, which
+sagged more than of old. &ldquo;News,&rdquo; he muttered, peevishly.
+&ldquo;What news? I wish you wouldn&rsquo;t startle me. You ought to remember
+that&mdash;that excitement is bad for me. And you come at this time of night
+with news! What is it?&rdquo; He was not looking at her. He seemed to be
+seeking something. &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s nothing very terrible,&rdquo; she answered, smiling.
+&ldquo;Nothing to alarm you, uncle. Won&rsquo;t you sit down?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked about him like a man driven into a corner. &ldquo;No, no, I
+don&rsquo;t want to sit down!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I ought to be in bed! I
+ought to be there now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I shall not keep you long,&rdquo; she answered, trying to humor
+his mood, while all the time she was wondering why he was dressed at this time,
+he whom she had not seen dressed for a fortnight. And why had Toft tried to
+keep her out? &ldquo;It is only,&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;that I heard
+to-day that there is to be a contest at Riddsley. And that Mr. Basset is to be
+one of the candidates.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that all?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;News, you said? That&rsquo;s no
+news! Bigger fool he, unless he does more for himself than he does for his
+friends! Peter the Hermit become Peter the Great! He&rsquo;ll soon find himself
+Peter the Piper, who picked a peck of pepper! Hot pepper he&rsquo;ll find it,
+d&mdash;n him!&rdquo; with sudden spite. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s no better than the
+rest! He&rsquo;s all for himself! All for himself!&rdquo; he repeated, his
+voice rising in his excitement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There, don&rsquo;t agitate me!&rdquo; He wiped his brow with a shaking
+hand, while his eyes, avoiding hers, continued to look about him as if he
+sought something. &ldquo;I knew how it would be. You&rsquo;ve no thought for
+me. You don&rsquo;t remember how weak I am! Hardly able to crawl across the
+floor, to put one foot before another. And you come chattering!
+chattering!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had thought him odd before, but never so odd as this evening; and she was
+sorry that she had come. She was going to say what she could and escape, when
+he began again. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re the last person who should upset me! The
+very last!&rdquo; he babbled. &ldquo;When it&rsquo;s all for you! It&rsquo;s
+little good it can do me. And Basset, he&rsquo;d the ball at his foot, and
+wouldn&rsquo;t kick it! But I&rsquo;ll show you, I&rsquo;ll show you
+all!&rdquo; he continued, gesticulating with a violence that distressed Mary.
+&ldquo;Ay, and I&rsquo;ll show <i>him</i> what I am! He thinks he&rsquo;s safe,
+d&mdash;n him! He thinks he&rsquo;s safe! He&rsquo;s spending my money and
+adding up my balance! He&rsquo;s walking on my land and sleeping in my bed!
+He&rsquo;s peacocking in my name! But&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he
+stopped, struggling for words. For an instant he turned on her over his
+shoulder a face distorted by passion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thoroughly alarmed, she tried to soothe him. &ldquo;But I am sure, sir,&rdquo;
+she said, &ldquo;Mr. Basset would never&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Basset!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure he never dreamt&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Basset!&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;No! but Audley! Lord Audley, Audley
+of Beaudelays, Audley of nowhere and nothing! And no Audley! no Audley!&rdquo;
+he repeated furiously, while again he fought for breath, and again he mastered
+himself and lowered his tone. &ldquo;No Audley!&rdquo; he whispered, pointing a
+hand at her, &ldquo;but Jacob, girl! Jacob the supplanter, Jacob the
+changeling, Jacob the baseborn! And he thinks I lie awake of nights, hundreds
+of nights, for nothing! He thinks I dream of him&mdash;for nothing! He thinks I
+go out with the bats&mdash;for nothing! He thinks I have a canker here!
+Here!&rdquo; And he clapped his hand to his breast, a grotesque, yet dreadful
+figure in his huddled dressing-gown, his flaccid cheeks quivering with rage.
+&ldquo;For nothing! But I&rsquo;ll show him! I&rsquo;ll ruin him!
+I&rsquo;ll&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice, which had risen to a scream, stopped. Toft had opened the door.
+&ldquo;Sir! Mr. Audley!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake be calm!
+For God&rsquo;s sake have a care, sir! And you, Miss,&rdquo; he continued;
+&ldquo;you see what you have done! If you&rsquo;ll leave him I&rsquo;ll get him
+to bed. I&rsquo;ll get him to bed and quiet him&mdash;if I can.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary was shocked, and yet she felt that she could not go without a word.
+&ldquo;Dear uncle,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you wish me to go?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had clutched one of the posts of the bed and was supporting himself by it.
+The fire had died down in him, he was no more now than a feeble, shaking old
+man. He wiped his brow and his lips. &ldquo;Yes, go,&rdquo; he whispered.
+&ldquo;Go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am very sorry I disturbed you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t
+do it again. You were right, Toft. Good-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man said &ldquo;Good-night, Miss.&rdquo; Her uncle said nothing. He had let
+himself down on the bed, but he still clung to the post. Mary looked at him in
+sorrow, grieved to leave him in this state. But she had no choice, and she went
+out and, closing the door behind her, groped her way down the narrow staircase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a little short of ten when she reached the parlor, but she was in no
+mood for reading. What she had seen had shocked and frightened her. She was
+sure now that her uncle was not sane; and while she was equally sure that Toft
+exercised a strong influence over him, she had her misgivings as to that.
+Something must be done. She must consult some one. Life at the Gatehouse could
+not go on on this footing. She must see Dr. Pepper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unluckily when she had settled this to her mind, and sought her bed, she could
+not sleep. Long after she had heard Etruria go to her room, long after she had
+heard the girl&rsquo;s shoes fall&mdash;familiar sound!&mdash;Mary lay awake,
+thinking now of her uncle&rsquo;s state and her duty towards him, nor of her
+own future, that future which seemed for the moment to have lost its
+brightness. Doubts that the sun dismisses, fears at which daylight laughs, are
+Giants of Despair in the dark watches. So it was with her. Misgivings which she
+would not have owned in the daylight, rose up and put on grisly shapes. Her
+uncle and his madness, her lover and his absence, passed in endless procession
+through her brain. In vain she tossed and turned, sat up in despair, tried the
+cooler side of the pillow. She could not rest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The door creaked. She fancied a step on the staircase, a hand on the latch. Far
+away in the depths of the house a clock struck. It was three
+o&rsquo;clock&mdash;only three o&rsquo;clock! And it would not be light before
+eight&mdash;not much before eight. Oh dear! Oh dear!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then she slept.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she awoke it was morning, the light was filtering in through the white
+dimity curtains, and some one was really at her door. Some one was knocking.
+She sat up. &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can I come in, Miss?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The voice was Mrs. Toft&rsquo;s, and Mary needed no second warning. She knew in
+a moment that the woman brought bad news. She sprang out of bed, put on a
+dressing-gown, and with bare feet she went to the door. She unlocked it.
+&ldquo;What is it, Mrs. Toft?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maybe not much,&rdquo; the woman answered cautiously. &ldquo;I hope not,
+Miss, but I had to tell you. The Master is missing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Missing?&rdquo; Mary exclaimed, the blood leaving her face.
+&ldquo;Impossible! Why, I saw him, I was in his room last evening after nine
+o&rsquo;clock.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Toft was with him up to eleven,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft answered. Her face was
+grave. &ldquo;But he&rsquo;s gone now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You mean that he is not in his room!&rdquo; Mary said. &ldquo;But have
+you looked&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; and she named places where her uncle might
+be&mdash;places in the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve looked there,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft answered. &ldquo;Toft&rsquo;s
+been everywhere. The Master&rsquo;s not in the house. We&rsquo;re well-nigh
+sure of that. And the door in the courtyard was open this morning. I am afraid
+he&rsquo;s gone, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In his state and at night? Why, it&rsquo;s&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; The girl
+broke off and took hold of herself. &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I
+shall not be more than five minutes. I will come down.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap26"></a>CHAPTER XXVI<br/>
+MISSING</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mary scrambled into her clothes without pausing to do more than knot up her
+hair. She tried to steady her nerves and to put from her the thought that it
+was her visit which had upset her uncle. That thought would only flurry her,
+and she must be cool. In little more than the five minutes that she had named
+she was in the hall, and found Mrs. Toft waiting for her. The door into the
+courtyard stood open, the bleak light and raw air of a January morning poured
+in, but neither of them heeded this. Their eyes met, and Mary saw that the
+woman, who was usually so placid, was frightened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where is Toft?&rdquo; Mary asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s away this ten minutes,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft replied.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s gone to the Yew Walk, where you found the Master before. But
+law, Miss, if he&rsquo;s there in this weather!&rdquo; She lifted up her hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary controlled herself. &ldquo;And Etruria?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;s searching outside the house. If she does not find him she is
+to run over to Petch the keeper, and bring him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite right,&rdquo; Mary said. &ldquo;Did Toft take any brandy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did. Miss. And the big kettle is on, if there is a bath wanted, and
+I&rsquo;ve put a couple of bricks to heat in the oven.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re sure you&rsquo;ve looked everywhere in the house?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As sure as can be, Miss! More by token, I&rsquo;ve some coffee ready for
+you in the parlor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Mary said, &ldquo;Bring it here, Mrs. Toft.&rdquo; And snatching up a shawl
+and folding it about her, she stepped outside. It was a gray, foggy morning,
+and the flagged court wore a desolate air. In one corner a crowd of dead leaves
+were circling in the gusts of wind, in another a little pile of snow had
+drifted, and between the monsters that flanked the Gateway, the old hound, deaf
+and crippled, stood peering across the park. Mary fancied that the dog descried
+Toft returning, and she ran across the court. But no one was in sight. The park
+with its clumps of dead bracken, its naked trees and gnarled blackthorns,
+stretched away under a thin sprinkling of snow. Shivering she returned to the
+hall, where Mrs. Toft awaited her with the coffee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; Mary said, &ldquo;tell me about it, please&mdash;from the
+beginning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Toft had left Mr. Audley about eleven,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft explained.
+&ldquo;The Master had been a bit put out, and that kept him. But he&rsquo;d
+settled down, and when Toft left him he was much as usual. It could not have
+been before eleven,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft continued, rubbing her nose, &ldquo;for I
+heard the kitchen clock strike eleven, and I was asleep when Toft came in. The
+next I remember was finding Toft had got out of bed. &lsquo;What is it?&rsquo;
+says I. He didn&rsquo;t answer, and I roused up and was going to get a light.
+But he told me not to make a noise, he&rsquo;d been woke by hearing a door
+slam, and thought that some one had crossed the court. He was at the window
+then, looking out, but we heard nothing, and after a while Toft came back to
+bed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What time was that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t say, Miss, and I don&rsquo;t suppose Toft could. It was
+dark and before six, because when I woke again it was on six. But God knows it
+was a thousand pities we didn&rsquo;t search then, for it&rsquo;s on my mind
+that it was the poor Master. And if we&rsquo;d known, Toft would have stopped
+him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Mary said gravely. &ldquo;And when did you miss him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Most mornings Etruria&rsquo;d let me into the house. But this morning
+she found the door unlocked; howsomever she thought nothing of it, for Toft has
+a key as well, and since the Master&rsquo;s illness and him coming and going at
+all hours, he has not always locked the door; so she made no remark. A bit
+before eight Toft came down&mdash;I didn&rsquo;t see him but I heard
+him&mdash;and at eight he took up the Master&rsquo;s cup of tea. Toft makes it
+in the pantry and takes it up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft paused heavily&mdash;not without enjoyment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Mary said anxiously, &ldquo;and then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose it was five minutes after, he came out to me&mdash;I was in
+the kitchen getting our breakfast&mdash;and he was shaking all over. I
+don&rsquo;t know that I ever saw a man more upset. &lsquo;He&rsquo;s
+gone!&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;Law, Toft,&rsquo; I said. &lsquo;What&rsquo;s the
+matter? Who&rsquo;s gone?&rsquo; &lsquo;The Master!&rsquo; he said.
+&lsquo;Fiddlesticks!&rsquo; says I. &lsquo;Where should he go?&rsquo; And with
+that I went into the house and up to the Master&rsquo;s room. When I saw it was
+empty you could have knocked me down with a feather! I looked round a bit, and
+then I went up to Mr. Basset&rsquo;s room that&rsquo;s over, and down again to
+the library, and so forth. By that time Toft was there, gawpin about.
+&lsquo;He&rsquo;s gone!&rsquo; he kept saying. I don&rsquo;t know as I ever saw
+Toft truly upset before.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what then?&rdquo; Mary asked. Twice she had looked through the door,
+but to no purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;if he&rsquo;s not here he can&rsquo;t be
+far! Don&rsquo;t twitter, man, but think! It&rsquo;s my belief he&rsquo;s away
+sleepwalking or what not, to the place you found him before. On that I gave
+Toft some brandy and he went off.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shouldn&rsquo;t he be back by now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He should, Miss, if he&rsquo;s not found him,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft answered.
+&ldquo;But, if he&rsquo;s found him, he couldn&rsquo;t carry him! Toft&rsquo;s
+not all that strong. And if the Master&rsquo;s lain out long, it&rsquo;s not
+all the brandy in the world will bring him round!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary shuddered, and moved by a common impulse the two went out and crossed the
+court. The old hound was still at gaze in the gateway, still staring with
+purblind eyes down the vistas of the park. &ldquo;Maybe he sees more than we
+see,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft muttered. &ldquo;He&rsquo;d not stand there, would the
+old dog, as he&rsquo;s stood twenty minutes, for nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was right, for the next moment three figures appeared hurrying across the
+park towards them. It was impossible to mistake Toft&rsquo;s lanky figure. The
+others were Etruria, with a shawl about her head, and the keeper Petch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary scanned them anxiously. &ldquo;Have they found him?&rdquo; she murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft said. &ldquo;If they&rsquo;d found him, one would
+have stopped with him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; Mary said. And heedless of the cold, searching wind
+that swung their skirts and carried showers of dead leaves sailing past them,
+they waited until Toft and the others, talking together, came up. Mary saw
+that, in spite of the pace at which he had walked, Toft&rsquo;s face was
+colorless. He was almost livid. His daughter wore an anxious look, while the
+keeper was pleasantly excited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as the three were within hearing, &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve not found
+him?&rdquo; Mary cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Miss,&rdquo; Etruria answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor any trace?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Miss. My father has been as far as the iron gate, and found it
+locked. It was no use going on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He could not have walked farther without help,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft said.
+&ldquo;If the Master&rsquo;s not between us and the gardens he&rsquo;s not that
+way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then where is he?&rdquo; Mary cried, aghast. She looked from one to the
+other. &ldquo;Where can he be, Toft?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft raised his hands and let them fall. It was clear that he had given up
+hope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But his wife was of different mettle. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s to be seen,&rdquo;
+she said briskly. &ldquo;Anyway, you&rsquo;ll be perished here, Miss, and I
+don&rsquo;t want another invalid on my hands. We&rsquo;ll go in, if you
+please.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary gave way. They turned to go in, but it was noticeable that as they moved
+towards the house each, stirred by the same thought, swept the extent of the
+park with eyes that clung to it, and were loth to leave it. Each hung for a
+moment, searching this alley or that, fancying a clue in some distant object,
+or taking a clump of gorse, or a jagged stump for the fallen man. All were
+harassed by the thought that they might be abandoning him; that in turning
+their backs on the bald, wintry landscape they might be carrying away with them
+his last chance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&rsquo;T would take a day to search the park,&rdquo; the keeper
+muttered. &ldquo;And a dozen men, I&rsquo;m afeared, to do it
+thoroughly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not take a round yourself!&rdquo; Mrs. Toft replied. &ldquo;And if
+you find nothing be at the house in an hour, Petch, and we&rsquo;ll know better
+what&rsquo;s to do. The poor gentleman&rsquo;s off his head, I doubt, and
+there&rsquo;s no saying where he&rsquo;d wander. But he can&rsquo;t be far, and
+I&rsquo;m beginning to think he&rsquo;s in the house after all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man agreed willingly, and strode away across the turf. The others entered
+the hall. Mary was for pausing there, but Mrs. Toft swept them all into the
+parlor where a good fire was burning. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll excuse me,
+Miss,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but Toft will be the better for this,&rdquo; and
+without ceremony she poured out a cup of coffee, jerked into it a little brandy
+from the decanter on the sideboard, and handed it to her husband. &ldquo;Drink
+that,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and get your wits together, man! You&rsquo;re no
+better than a wisp of paper now, and it&rsquo;s only you can help us. Now
+think! You know him best. Where can he be? Did he say no word last night to
+give you a clue?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little color came back to Toft&rsquo;s face. He sighed and passed his hand
+across his forehead. &ldquo;If I&rsquo;d never left him!&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;I never ought to have left him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s no good going over that!&rdquo; Mrs. Toft replied
+impatiently. &ldquo;He means, Miss, that up to three nights ago he slept in the
+Master&rsquo;s room. Then when the Master seemed better Toft came back to his
+bed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I ought to have stayed with him,&rdquo; Toft repeated. That seemed the
+one thought in his mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But where is he?&rdquo; Mary cried. &ldquo;Where? Every moment we stand
+talking&mdash;can&rsquo;t you think where he might go? Are there no
+hiding&mdash;places in the house? No secret passages?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft raised her hands. &ldquo;Lord&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo; she exclaimed.
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the locked closet in his room where he keeps his papers. I
+never looked there. It&rsquo;s seldom opened, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not finish. With one accord they hurried through the library and up the
+stairs to the old tapestried room, where Mr. Audley had slept and for the last
+month had lived. The others had been in it since his disappearance, Mary had
+not; and she felt a thrill of awe as she passed the threshold. The angular
+faces, the oblique eyes, of the watchers in the needlework on the wall, that
+from generation to generation had looked down on marriage and birth and
+death&mdash;what had they seen during the past night? On what had they gazed,
+she asked herself. Mrs. Toft, less fanciful or more familiar with the room, had
+no such thoughts. She crossed the floor to a low door which was outlined for
+those who knew of its existence, by rough cuts in the arras. It led into a
+closet, contained in one of the turrets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft tried the door, shook it, knocked on it. Finally she set her eye to
+the keyhole. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s not there,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
+no key in the lock. He&rsquo;d not take out the key, that&rsquo;s
+certain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary scanned the disordered room. Books lay in heaps on the deep window-seats,
+and even on the floor. A table by one of the windows was strewn with papers and
+letters; on another beside the bed-head stood a tray with night drinks, a pair
+of candles, an antique hour-glass, a steel pistol. The bedclothes were dragged
+down, as if the bed had been slept in, and over the rail at the foot, half
+hidden by the heavy curtains, hung a nightgown. She took this up and found
+beneath it a pair of slippers and a shoehorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He was dressed then?&rdquo; she exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft eyed the things. &ldquo;Yes, Miss, I&rsquo;ve no doubt he was,&rdquo; he
+said despondently. &ldquo;His overcoat&rsquo;s gone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then he meant to leave the house?&rdquo; Mary cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God save us!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s taken his silver flask too,&rdquo; Etruria said in a low
+voice. She was examining the dressing-table. &ldquo;And his watch.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;His watch?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Miss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that&rsquo;s odd,&rdquo; Mary said, fixing her eyes on Toft.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think that&rsquo;s odd? If my uncle had rambled out in
+some nightmare or&mdash;or wandering, would he have taken his flask and his
+watch, Toft? Are his spectacles there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft inspected the table, raised the pillow, felt under the bolster. &ldquo;No,
+Miss,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;he&rsquo;s taken them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; Mary replied; &ldquo;then I have hope. Wherever he is, he is
+in his senses. Now, Toft!&rdquo;&mdash;she looked hard at the
+man&mdash;&ldquo;think again! Surely since he had this in his mind last night
+he must have let something drop? Some word?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man shook his head. &ldquo;Not that I heard, Miss,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary sighed. But Mrs. Toft was less patient. She exploded. &ldquo;You
+gaby!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Where&rsquo;s your senses? It&rsquo;s to you
+we&rsquo;re looking, and a poor stick you are in time of trouble! I
+couldn&rsquo;t have believed it! Find your tongue, Toft, say something! You
+knew the Master down to his shoe leather. Let&rsquo;s hear what you do think!
+He couldn&rsquo;t walk far! He couldn&rsquo;t walk a mile without help. Where
+is he? Where do you think he is?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft&rsquo;s answer silenced them. If one of the mute, staring figures on the
+walls&mdash;that watched as from the boxes of a theatre the living
+actors&mdash;had stepped down, it would hardly have affected them more deeply.
+The man sat down on the bed, covered his face with his hands, and rocking
+himself to and fro broke into a passion of weeping. &ldquo;The poor
+Master!&rdquo; he cried between his sobs. &ldquo;The poor Master!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quickly at that Mary&rsquo;s feelings underwent a change. As if she had stood
+already beside her uncle&rsquo;s grave, sorrow took the place of perplexity.
+His past kindness dragged at her heart-strings. She forgot that she had never
+been able to love him, she forgot that behind the man whom she had known she
+had been ever conscious of another being, vague, shifting, inhuman. She
+remembered only the help he had given, the home he had offered, the rare hours
+of sympathy. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t, Toft, don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; she cried, tears in
+her voice. She touched the man on the shoulder. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t give up
+hope!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for Mrs. Toft, surprise silenced her. When she found her voice,
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said, looking round her with a sort of pride,
+&ldquo;who&rsquo;ll say after this that Toft&rsquo;s a hard man? Why, if the
+Master was lying on that bed ready for burial&mdash;and we&rsquo;re some way
+off that, the Lord be thanked!&mdash;he couldn&rsquo;t carry on more! But
+there, let&rsquo;s look now, and weep afterwards! Pull yourself together, Toft,
+or who&rsquo;s the young lady to depend on? If you take my advice, Miss,&rdquo;
+she continued, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll get out of this room. It always did give me
+the fantods with them Egyptians staring at me from the walls, and to-day
+it&rsquo;s worse than a hearse! Now downstairs&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are quite right, Mrs. Toft,&rdquo; Mary said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go
+downstairs.&rdquo; She shared to the full Mrs. Toft&rsquo;s distaste for the
+room. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re doing no good here, and your husband can follow us
+when he is himself again. Petch should be back by this time, and we ought to
+arrange what is to be done outside.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft made no demur, and they went down. They found the keeper waiting in the
+hall. He had made no discovery, and Mary, to whom Toft&rsquo;s breakdown had
+given fresh energy, took things into her own hands. She gave Petch his orders.
+He must get together a dozen men, and search the park and every place within a
+mile of the Gatehouse. He must report by messenger every two hours to the
+house, and in the meantime he must send a man on horseback to the town for Dr.
+Pepper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Mr. Basset?&rdquo; Mrs. Toft murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will write a note to Mr. Basset,&rdquo; Mary said, &ldquo;and the man
+must send it by post-horses from the Audley Arms. I will write it now.&rdquo;
+She sat down in the library, cold as the room was, and scrawled three lines,
+telling Basset that her uncle had disappeared during the night, and that, ill
+as he was, she feared the worst.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, when Petch had gone to get his men together&mdash;a task which would take
+time as there were no farms at hand&mdash;she and Mrs. Toft searched the house
+room by room, while Etruria and her father went again through the outbuildings.
+But the quest was as fruitless as the former search had been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary had known many unhappy days in Paris, days of anxiety, of loneliness, of
+apprehension, when she had doubted where she would lodge or what she would eat
+for her next meal. Now she had a source of strength in her engagement and her
+love, which should have been inexhaustible. But she never forgot the misery of
+this day, nor ever looked back on it without a shudder. Probably there were
+moments when she sat down, when she took a tasty meal, when she sought Mrs.
+Toft in her warm kitchen or talked with Etruria before her own fire. But as she
+remembered the day, she spent the long hours gazing across the wintry park; now
+catching a glimpse of the line of beaters as it appeared for a moment crossing
+a glade, now watching the approach of the messenger who came to tell her that
+they had found nothing; or again straining her eyes for the arrival of Dr.
+Pepper, who, had she known it, was at the deathbed of an old patient, ten miles
+on the farther side of Riddsley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now and again a hailstorm swept across the park, and Mrs. Toft came out and
+scolded her into shelter; or a farmer, whose men had been borrowed,
+&ldquo;happened that way,&rdquo; and after a gruff question touched his hat and
+went off to join the searchers. Once a distant cry seemed to herald a
+discovery, and she tried to steady her leaping pulses. But nothing came of it
+except some minutes of anxiety. And once her waiting ear caught the clang of
+the bell that hung in the hall and she flew through the house to the front
+door, only to learn that the visitor was the carrier who three times a week
+called for letters on his way to town. The dreary house with its open doors,
+its cold draughts, its unusual aspect, the hurried meals, the furtive glances,
+the hours of suspense and fear&mdash;these stamped the day for ever on
+Mary&rsquo;s memory: as sometimes an hour of loneliness prints itself on the
+mind of a child who all his life long hears with distaste the clash of wedding
+bells.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length the wintry day with its gusts of snow began to draw in. Before four
+Petch sent in to say that he had beaten the park and also the gardens at the
+Great House, but had found nothing. Half his men were now searching the slope
+on either side of the Riddsley road. With the other half he was going to
+explore, while the light lasted, the fringe of the Chase towards Brown Heath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That left Mary face to face with the night; with the long hours of darkness,
+which inaction must render infinitely worse than those of the day. She had
+visions of the windswept park, the sullen ponds, the frozen moorland; they
+spread before her fraught with some brooding terror. She had never much marked,
+she had seldom felt the loneliness of the house. Now it pressed itself upon
+her, isolated her, menaced her. It made the thought of the night, that lay
+before her, almost unbearable.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap27"></a>CHAPTER XXVII<br/>
+A FOOTSTEP IN THE HALL</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft bringing in candles, and looking grave enough herself, noticed the
+girl&rsquo;s pale face and chid her gently. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe that
+you&rsquo;ve sat down this blessed day, Miss!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Nor no
+more than looked at good food. But tea you shall have and sit down to it, or my
+name&rsquo;s not Anne Toft! Fretting&rsquo;s no manner of use, and
+fasting&rsquo;s a poor stick to beat trouble with!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, Mrs. Toft,&rdquo; Mary said, her face piteous, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+the thought that he may be lying out there, helpless and dying, while we sit
+here&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Steady, Miss! Giving way does no good, and too much mind&rsquo;s worse
+than none. If he&rsquo;s out there he&rsquo;s gone, poor gentleman, long ago.
+And Dr. Pepper&rsquo;ll say the same. It&rsquo;s not in reason he should be
+alive if he&rsquo;s in the open. And, God knows, if he&rsquo;s under cover
+it&rsquo;s little better.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But then if he is alive!&rdquo; Mary cried. &ldquo;Think of another
+night!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, I know,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft said. &ldquo;And hard it is! But
+you&rsquo;ve been a model all this blessed day, and it&rsquo;s no time to break
+down now. Where that dratted doctor is, beats me, though he could do no more
+than we&rsquo;ve done! But there, Mr. Basset will be with us to-morrow, and
+he&rsquo;ll find the poor gentleman dead or alive! There&rsquo;s some as are
+more to look at than the Squire, but there&rsquo;s few I&rsquo;d put before him
+at a pinch!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Toft?&rdquo; Mary asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He went to join Petch two hours ago,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft explained.
+&ldquo;And there again, take Toft. He&rsquo;s a good husband, but there&rsquo;s
+no one would say he was a man to wear his heart outside. But you saw how hard
+he took it? I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft continued thoughtfully,
+&ldquo;as I&rsquo;ve seen Toft shed a tear these twenty years&mdash;no, nor
+twice since we went to church!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t think,&rdquo; Mary asked, &ldquo;that he knows more than
+he has told us?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The question took Mrs. Toft aback. &ldquo;Why, Miss,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;you don&rsquo;t mean as you think he was putting on this morning?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Mary answered. &ldquo;But is it possible that he knows the
+worst and does not tell us?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why shouldn&rsquo;t he tell us? It would be strange if he
+wouldn&rsquo;t tell his own wife? And you that&rsquo;s Mr. Audley&rsquo;s
+nearest!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all so strange,&rdquo; Mary pleaded. &ldquo;My uncle is gone.
+Where has he gone?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft did not answer the question. She could not. And there came an
+interruption. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s Petch&rsquo;s voice,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;re back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men trooped into the hall. They advanced to the door of the parlor, Petch
+leading, a man whom Mary did not know next to him, after these a couple of
+farmers and Toft, in the background a blur of faces vaguely seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve found something, Miss,&rdquo; Petch said. &ldquo;At least
+Tom has. But I&rsquo;m not sure it lightens things much. He was going home by
+the Yew Tree Walk and pretty close to the iron gate, when what should he see
+lying in the middle of the walk but this!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Petch held out a silver flask.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the Master&rsquo;s, sure enough,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; Petch answered. &ldquo;But the odd thing is, I searched that
+place before noon, a&rsquo;most inch by inch, looking for footprints, and I
+went over it again when we were beating the Yew Tree Walk this afternoon, and
+I&rsquo;m danged if that flask was there then!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think as you could ha&rsquo; missed it, Mr. Petch,&rdquo;
+the finder said, &ldquo;it was that bright and plain!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But isn&rsquo;t the grass long there?&rdquo; Mary asked. She had already
+as much mystery as she could bear and wanted no addition to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that long,&rdquo; said Tom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, not that long, the lad&rsquo;s right,&rdquo; Petch added. &ldquo;I
+warrant I must have seen it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you must, Mr. Petch,&rdquo; a lad in the background said. &ldquo;I
+was next man, and I wondered when you&rsquo;d ha&rsquo; done that bit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; Mary answered. &ldquo;If it was not
+there, this morning&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand neither, lady,&rdquo; the keeper rejoined.
+&ldquo;But it is on my mind that there&rsquo;s foul play!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but,&rdquo; Mary protested, &ldquo;who&mdash;why should any one hurt
+my uncle?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say as to that,&rdquo; Petch replied, darkly. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t know anybody as would. But there&rsquo;s the flask, and flasks
+don&rsquo;t travel without hands. If he took it out of the house with
+him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;May he not have dropped it&mdash;this afternoon?&rdquo; Mary suggested.
+&ldquo;Suppose he wandered that way after you passed?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The keeper shook his head. &ldquo;If he had passed that way this afternoon it
+isn&rsquo;t one but six pairs of eyes would ha&rsquo; seen him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a murmur of assent. The searchers were keenly enjoying the drama,
+taking in every change that appeared on the girl&rsquo;s face. They were men
+into whose lives not much of drama entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I cannot think that what you say is likely!&rdquo; Mary protested.
+She had held her own stoutly through the day, but now with the eyes of all
+these men upon her she grew bewildered. The rows of faces, the bashful hands
+twisting caps, the blurred white of smocked frocks&mdash;grew and multiplied
+and became misty. She had to grasp the table to steady herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft saw how it was, and came to the rescue. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s Toft say
+about it?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, to be sure, missus,&rdquo; Petch agreed. &ldquo;I dunno as
+he&rsquo;s said anything yet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think the Master could have passed and not been
+seen,&rdquo; Toft replied. His tone was low, and in the middle of his speech he
+shivered. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;m not saying that the flask wasn&rsquo;t there
+this morning. It&rsquo;s a small thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It couldn&rsquo;t have been overlooked, Mr. Toft,&rdquo; the keeper
+replied firmly. &ldquo;I speak as I know!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Mrs. Toft intervened. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure nobody would ha&rsquo; laid a
+hand on the Master!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Nobody in these parts and nobody
+foreign, as I can fancy. I&rsquo;ve no doubt at all the poor gentleman awoke
+with some maggot in his brain and wandered off, not knowing. The question is,
+what can we do? The young lady&rsquo;s had a sad day, and it&rsquo;s time she
+was left to herself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing we can do now,&rdquo; Petch said flatly. &ldquo;It
+stands to reason if we&rsquo;ve found nothing in the daylight we&rsquo;ll find
+nothing in the dark. We&rsquo;ll be back at eight in the morning. Whether
+we&rsquo;d ought to let his lordship know&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sho!&rdquo; said Mrs. Toft with scorn. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s he in it,
+I&rsquo;d like to know? But there, you&rsquo;ve said what you come to say and
+it&rsquo;s time we left the young lady to herself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary raised her head. &ldquo;One moment,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I want to
+thank you all for what you&rsquo;ve done. And for what Petch says about the
+flask, he&rsquo;s right to speak out, but I can&rsquo;t think any one would
+touch my uncle. Only&mdash;can we do nothing? Nothing more? Nothing at all? If
+we don&rsquo;t find him to-night&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She broke off, overcome
+by her feelings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid not, Miss,&rdquo; Petch said gently. &ldquo;We&rsquo;d
+all be willing, but we don&rsquo;t know where to look. I own I&rsquo;m fair
+beat. Still Tom and I&rsquo;ll stay an hour or two with Toft in case of
+anything happening. Good-night, Miss. You&rsquo;re very welcome, I&rsquo;m
+sure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The others murmured their sympathy as they trooped out into the darkness. Mrs.
+Toft bustled away for the tea, and Mary was left alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suspense lay heavy on her. She felt that she ought to be doing something and
+she did not know what to do. Dr. Pepper did not come, the Tofts were but
+servants. They could not take the onus, they could not share her burden; and
+Toft was a broken reed. Meanwhile time pressed. Hours, nay, minutes might make
+all the difference between life and death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Etruria came in with Mary&rsquo;s tea she found her mistress bending over
+the fire in an attitude of painful depression, and she said a few words, trying
+to impart to her something of her own patience. That patience was a fine thing
+in Etruria because it was natural. But Mary was of sterner stuff. She had a
+more lively imagination, and she could not be blind to the issues, or to the
+value of every moment that passed. Even while she listened to Etruria she saw
+with the eyes of fancy a hollow amid a clump of trees not far from a pool that
+she knew. In summer it was a pleasant dell, clothed with mosses and ferns and
+the flowers of the bog-bean; in winter a dank, sombre hollow. There she saw her
+uncle lie, amid the decaying leaves, the mud, the rank grass; and the vision
+was too much for her. What if he were really lying there, while she sat here by
+the fire? Sat here in this home which he&mdash;he had given her, amid the
+comforts which he had provided!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thought was horrible, and she turned fiercely on the comforter.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t think! You
+don&rsquo;t understand! We can&rsquo;t go through the night like this! They
+must go on looking! Fetch your father! And bring Petch! Bring them here!&rdquo;
+she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria went, alarmed by her excitement, but almost as quickly she came back.
+Toft had gone out with Petch and the other man. They would not be long.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary cried out on them, but could do no more than walk the room, and after a
+time Etruria coaxed her to sit down and eat; and tea and food restored her
+balance. Still, as she sat and ate she listened&mdash;she listened always. And
+Etruria, taught by experience, let her be and said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, &ldquo;How long they are!&rdquo; Mary cried. &ldquo;What are they
+doing? Are they never&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stopped. The footsteps of two men coming through the hall had reached her
+ears, and she recognized the tread of one&mdash;recognized it with a rush of
+relief so great, of thankfulness so overwhelming that she was startled and
+might well have been more than startled, had she been free to think of anything
+but the lost man. It was Basset&rsquo;s step, and she knew it&mdash;she would
+have known it, she felt, among a hundred! He had come! An instant later he
+stood in the doorway, booted and travel-stained, his whip in his hand, just as
+he had dropped from the saddle&mdash;and with a face grave indeed, but calm and
+confident. He seemed to her to bring relief, help, comfort, safety, all in one!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You are here! How&mdash;how good of
+you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not good at all,&rdquo; he answered, advancing to the table and quietly
+taking off his gloves. &ldquo;Your messenger met me half-way to Blore. I was
+coming into Riddsley to a meeting. I had only to ride on. Of course I
+came.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But the meeting?&rdquo; she asked fearfully. Was he only come to go
+again?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;D&mdash;n the meeting!&rdquo; he answered, moved to anger by the
+girl&rsquo;s pale face. &ldquo;Will you give me a cup of tea, Toft? I will hear
+Miss Audley&rsquo;s account first. Keep Petch and the other man. We shall want
+them. In twenty minutes I&rsquo;ll talk to you. That will do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah, with what gratitude, with what infinite relief, did Mary hear his tone of
+authority! He watched Toft out of the room and, alone with her, he looked at
+her. He saw that her hand shook as she filled the teapot, that her lips
+quivered, that she tried to speak and could not. And he felt an infinite love
+and pity, though he drove both out of his voice when he spoke. &ldquo;Yes, tea
+first,&rdquo; he said coolly, as he took off his riding coat. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+had a long journey. You must take another cup with me. You can leave things to
+me now. Yes, two lumps, please, and not too strong.&rdquo; He knocked together
+the logs, and warmed his hands, stooping over the fire with his back to her.
+Then he took his place at the table, and when he had drunk half a cup of tea,
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;will you tell me the story from the
+beginning. And take time. More haste, less speed, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a calmness that surprised herself, Mary told the tale. She described the
+first alarm, the hunt through the house, the discoveries in the bedroom,
+Toft&rsquo;s breakdown, last of all the search through the park and the finding
+of the flask.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He listened gravely, asking a question now and then. When she had done,
+&ldquo;What of Toft?&rdquo; he inquired. &ldquo;Not been very active, has he?
+Not given you much help?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No! But how did you guess?&rdquo; she asked in surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid that Toft knows more than he has told you. For the
+rest,&rdquo; he looked at her kindly, &ldquo;I want you to give up the hope of
+finding your uncle alive. I have none. But I think I can promise you that there
+has been no suffering. If it turns out as I imagine, he was dead before he was
+missed. What the doctor expected has happened. That is all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I don&rsquo;t want to say more until I know for certain. May I ring
+for Toft?&rdquo; She nodded. He rang, and after a pause, during which he stood,
+silent and waiting, the servant came in. He shot a swift glance at them, and
+dropped his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell Petch and the other man to be ready to start with us in five
+minutes,&rdquo; Basset said. &ldquo;Let them fetch a hurdle, and do you put a
+mattress on it. I suppose&mdash;you made sure he was dead, Toft, before you
+left him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man flinched before the sudden question, but he showed less emotion than
+Mary. Perhaps he had expected it. After a pause, during which Basset did not
+take his eyes from him, &ldquo;I made sure,&rdquo; he said in a low voice.
+&ldquo;As God sees me, I did! But if you think I raised a hand to
+him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; Basset said sternly. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think so
+badly of you as that. But nothing but frankness can save you now. Is he in the
+Great House?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toft opened his mouth, but he seemed unable to speak. He nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What about the flask?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I dropped it,&rdquo; the man muttered. He turned a shade paler. &ldquo;I
+could not bear to think he was lying there. I thought it would lead the
+search&mdash;that way, and they would find him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see. That&rsquo;s enough now. Be ready to start at once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man went out. &ldquo;Good heavens!&rdquo; Mary cried. She was
+horror-stricken. &ldquo;And he has known it all this time! Do you think that
+he&mdash;he had any part&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no. He was alone with Mr. Audley when he collapsed, and he lost his
+head. They were together in the Great House&mdash;it was a difficult
+position&mdash;and he did not see his way to explain. He may have seen some
+advantage in gaining time&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know. The first thing to be done
+is to bring your uncle home. I will see to that. You have borne up
+nobly&mdash;you have done your part. Do you go to bed now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something in his tone, and in his thought for her, brought old times to
+Mary&rsquo;s mind and the blood to her pale cheek. She did not say no, but she
+would not go to bed. She made Etruria come to her, and the two girls sat in the
+parlor listening and waiting, moving only when it was necessary to snuff the
+candles. It was a grim vigil. An hour passed, two hours. At length they caught
+the first distant murmur, the tread of men who moved slowly and heavily under a
+burden&mdash;there are few who have not at one time or another heard that
+sound. Little by little the shuffling feet, the subdued orders, the jar of a
+stumbling bearer, drew nearer, became more clear. A gust of wind swept through
+the hall, and moaned upwards through the ancient house. The candles on the
+table flickered. And still the two sat spell-bound, clasping cold hands, as the
+unseen procession passed over the threshold, and for the last time John Audley
+came home to sleep amid his books&mdash;heedless now of right or claim, or rank
+or blood.
+</p>
+
+<p style="text-align:center; letter-spacing:20pt">* * * * *
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few minutes later Basset entered the parlor. His face betrayed his fatigue,
+and his first act was to go to the sideboard and drink a glass of wine. Mary
+saw that his hand shook as he raised the glass, and gratitude for what he had
+done for her brought the tears to her eyes. He stood a moment, leaning in utter
+weariness against the wall&mdash;he had ridden far that day. And Mary had been
+no woman if she had not drawn comparisons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Opportunity had served him, and had not served the other. Nor, had her
+betrothed been here, could he have helped her in this pinch. He could not have
+taken Basset&rsquo;s place, nor with all the will in the world could he have
+done what Basset had done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was plain. Yet deep down in her there stirred a faint resentment, a
+complaint hardly acknowledged. Audley was not here, but he might have been. It
+was his doing that she had not told her uncle, and that John Audley had passed
+away in ignorance. It was his doing that in her trouble she had had to lean on
+the other. It was not the first time during the long hours of the day that the
+thought had come to her; and though she had put it away, as she put it away
+now, the opening flower of love is delicate&mdash;the showers pass but leave
+their mark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Etruria had slipped out, and left them, Basset came forward, and warmed
+himself at the fire. &ldquo;Perhaps it is as well you did not go to bed,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;You can go now with an easy mind. It was as I thought&mdash;he
+lay on the stairs of the Great House and he had been dead many hours. Dr.
+Pepper will tell us more to-morrow, but I have no doubt that he died of syncope
+brought on by exertion. Toft had tried to give him brandy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shocked and grieved, yet sensible of relief, she was silent for a time. She had
+known John Audley less than a year, but he had been good to her in his way and
+she sorrowed for him. But at least she was freed from the nightmare which had
+ridden her all day. Or was she? &ldquo;May I know what took him there?&rdquo;
+she asked in a low voice. &ldquo;And Toft?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He believed that there were papers in the Great House, which would prove
+his claim. It was an obsession. He asked me more than once to go with him and
+search for them, and I refused. He fell back on Toft. They had begun to
+search&mdash;so Toft tells me&mdash;when Mr. Audley was taken ill. Before he
+could get him down the stairs, the end came. He sank down and died.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a shudder Mary pictured the scene in the empty house. She saw the light of
+the lantern fall on the huddled group, as the panic-stricken servant strove to
+pour brandy between the lips of the dying man; and truly she was thankful that
+in this strait she had Basset to support her, to assist her, to advise her!
+&ldquo;It is very dreadful,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I do not wonder that Toft
+gave way. But had he&mdash;had my uncle&mdash;any right to be there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In his opinion, yes. And if the papers were there, they were his papers,
+the house was his, all was his. In my opinion he was wrong. But if he believed
+anything, he believed that he was justified in what he did.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am glad of that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There must be an inquest, I am afraid,&rdquo; Basset continued.
+&ldquo;One or two will know, and one or two more will guess what Mr.
+Audley&rsquo;s errand was. But Lord Audley will have nothing to gain by moving
+in it. And if only for your sake&mdash;but you must go to bed. Etruria is
+waiting in the hall. I will send her to you. Good-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood up. She wished to thank him, she longed to say something, anything,
+which would convey to him what his coming had been to her. But she could not
+find words, she was tongue-tied. And Etruria came in.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap28"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII<br/>
+THE NEWS FROM RIDDSLEY</h2>
+
+<p>
+The business which had taken Audley away on the morrow of his engagement had
+been no mere pretext. The crisis in political life which Peel&rsquo;s return to
+office had brought about was one of those upheavals which are of rare promise
+to the adventurous. The wise foresaw that the party which Sir Robert had led
+would be riven from top to bottom. Old allies would be flung into opposing
+camps, and would be reaching out every way for support. New men would be
+learning their value, and to those who dared, all things might be added.
+Places, prizes, honors, all might be the reward of those who knew how to choose
+their side with prudence and to support it with courage. The clubs were like
+hives of bees. All day long and far into the winter night Pall Mall roared
+under the wheels of carriages. About the doors of Whitehall Gardens, where Peel
+lived, men gathered like vultures about the prey. And, lo, in a twinkling and
+as by magic the Conservative party vanished in a cloud of dust, to reappear a
+few days later in the guise of Peelites and Protectionists&mdash;Siamese twins,
+who would not live together, and could not live apart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At such a time it was Audley&rsquo;s first interest to be as near as possible
+to the hub of things and to place himself in evidence as a man concerned. He
+had a little influence in the Foreign Office, he had his vote in the House of
+Lords. And though he did not think that these would suffice, he trusted that,
+reinforced by the belief that he carried the seat at Riddsley in his pocket,
+they might be worth something to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unfortunately he could deal with one side only. If Stubbs were right he could
+pass for the owner of the borough only as long as he opposed Sir Robert. He
+could return the younger Mottisfont and have the credit of returning him, in
+the landed interest; but however much it might suit his book&mdash;and it was
+of that book he was thinking as he travelled to Lord Seabourne&rsquo;s&mdash;he
+could not, if Stubbs were right, return a member in the other interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now when a man can sell to one party only, tact is needed if he is to make a
+good bargain. Audley saw this. But he knew his own qualities and he did not
+despair. The occasion was unique, and he thought that it would be odd if he
+could not pluck from the confusion something worth having; some place under the
+Foreign Office, a minor embassy, a mission, something worth two, or three, or
+even four thousand a year.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He travelled up to town thinking steadily of the course he would pursue, and
+telling himself that he must be as cunning as the serpent and as gentle as the
+dove. He must let no whip cajole him, and no Tory browbeat him. For he had only
+this to look to now: a rich marriage was no longer among the possibilities. Not
+that he regretted his decision in that matter as yet, but at times he wondered
+at it. He told himself that he had been impulsive, and setting this down to the
+charms of his mistress he gave himself credit for disinterested motives. And
+then, too, he had made himself safe!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still there were difficulties in the way of his ambition, which appeared more
+clearly at Seabourne Castle, where Lady Adela was a fellow-guest, and in London
+than at Riddsley; difficulties of shrewd whips, who knew the history of the
+borough by heart, and had figures at their fingers&rsquo; ends; difficulties of
+arrogant leaders, who talked of his duty to the land and assumed that duty was
+its own reward. Above all, there was the difficulty that he could only sell to
+the party that was out of office and must pay in promises&mdash;bills drawn at
+long dates and for which no discounters could be found. For who could say when
+the landed interest, made up of stupid bull-headed men like Lord George
+Bentinck and Stubbs, a party without a leader and with divided counsels, would
+be in power? They were a mob rather than a party, and like every other mob were
+ready to sacrifice future prospects to present revenge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was a terrible difficulty, and his lordship did not see how he was to get
+over it. To the Peelites who could pay, cash down, in honors and places, he
+could not sell. Nor to the Liberals under little Lord John, though to their
+promises some prospect of office gave value. So that at times he almost
+despaired. For he had only this to look to now; if he failed in this he would
+have love and he would have Mary, and he would have safety, but very little
+besides. If his word had not been given to Mary, he might almost have
+reconsidered the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The die was cast, however. Yet many a man has believed this, and then one fine
+morning he has begun to wonder if it is so&mdash;the cast was such an unlucky,
+if not an unfair one! And presently he has seen that at the cost of a little
+pride, or a little consistency, or what not, he might call the game drawn. That
+is, he might&mdash;if he were not the soul of honor that he is!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By and by under the stress of circumstances his lordship began to consider that
+point. He did not draw back, he did not propose to draw back; but he thought
+that he would keep the door behind him ajar. To begin with, he did not
+overwhelm Mary with letters&mdash;his public engagements were so many; and when
+he wrote he wrote on ordinary matters. His pen ran more glibly on party gossip
+than on their joint future; he wrote as he might have written to a cousin
+rather than to his sweetheart. But he told himself that Mary was not versed in
+love letters, nor very passionate. She would expect no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then one fine morning he had a letter from Stubbs, which told him that there
+was to be a real contest in Riddsley, that the Horn and Corn platform was to be
+challenged, and that the assailant was Peter Basset. Stubbs added that the
+Working Men&rsquo;s Institute was beside itself with joy, that Hatton&rsquo;s
+and Banfield&rsquo;s hands were solid for repeal, and that the fight would be
+real, but that the issue was a foregone conclusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The news was not altogether unwelcome. The contest gave value to the seat, and
+increased my lord&rsquo;s claim; on that party, unfortunately, they could only
+pay in promises. It also tickled my lord&rsquo;s vanity. His rival, unhorsed in
+the lists of love, had betaken himself, it seemed, to other lists, in which he
+would as surely be beaten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor beggar!&rdquo; Audley thought. &ldquo;He was always a day late!
+Always came in second! I don&rsquo;t know that I ever knew anything more like
+him than this! From the day I first saw him, standing behind John
+Audley&rsquo;s counsel at the suit, right to this day, he has always been a
+loser!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he smiled as he recalled the poor figure Basset had cut as a squire of
+dames.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A week later Stubbs wrote again, and this time his news was startling. John
+Audley was dead. Stubbs wrote in the first alarm of the discovery, word of
+which had just been brought into the town. He knew no particulars, but thought
+that his lordship should be among the first to learn the fact. He added a hasty
+postscript, in which he said that Mr. Basset was proving himself a stronger
+candidate than either side had expected, and that not only were the
+brass-workers with him but a few of the smaller fry of tradesmen, caught by his
+cry of cheap bread. Stubbs closed, however, with the assurance that the landed
+interest would carry it by a solid majority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;D&mdash;n their impudence!&rdquo; Lord Audley exclaimed. And after that
+he gave no further heed to the postscript. As long as the issue was certain,
+the election was Mottisfont&rsquo;s and Stubbs&rsquo;s affair. As for Basset,
+the more money he chose to waste the better.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But John Audley&rsquo;s death was news&mdash;it was great news! So he was gone
+at last&mdash;the man whom he had always regarded as a menace! Whom he had
+feared, whose very name had rung mischief in his ears, by whom, during many a
+sleepless night, he had seen himself ousted from all that he had gained from
+title, income, lands, position! He was gone at last; and gone with him were the
+menace, the danger, the night alarms, the whole pile of gloomy fancies which
+apprehension had built up!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The relief was immense. Audley read the letter twice, and it seemed to him that
+a weight was lifted from him. John Audley was dead. In his dressing-gown and
+smoking-cap my lord paced his rooms at the Albany and said again and again,
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s dead! By gad, he&rsquo;s dead!&rdquo; Later, he could not
+refrain from the thought that if the death had taken place a few weeks earlier,
+in that first attack, he would have been under no temptation to make himself
+safe. As it was&mdash;but he did not pursue the thought. He only reflected that
+he had followed love handsomely!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A day later a third letter came from Stubbs, and one from Mary. The tidings
+they brought were such that my lord&rsquo;s face fell as he read them, and he
+swore more than once over them. John Audley, the lawyer wrote, had been found
+dead in the Great House. He had been found lying on the stairs, a lantern
+beside him. Stubbs had visited the house the moment the facts became known. He
+had examined the muniment room and found part of the wall broken down, and in
+the room two boxes of papers which had been taken from a recess which the
+breach had disclosed. One of the boxes had been broken open. At present Stubbs
+could only say that the papers had been disturbed, he could not say whether any
+were missing. He begged his lordship&mdash;he was much disturbed, it was
+clear&mdash;to come down as quickly as possible. In the meantime, he would go
+through the papers and prepare a report. They appeared to be family documents,
+old, and not hitherto known to his lordship&rsquo;s advisers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley was still swearing, when his man came in. &ldquo;Will you wear the black
+velvet vest, my lord?&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;or the flowered satin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go to the devil!&rdquo; his master cried&mdash;so furiously that the man
+fled without more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was gone Audley read the letter again, and came to the conclusion that
+in making himself safe he had builded more wisely than he knew. For who could
+say what John Audley had found? Or who, through those papers, had a hold on
+him? He remembered the manservant&rsquo;s visit, and the thing looked black.
+Very black. Alive or dead, John Audley threatened him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he felt bitterly angry with Stubbs. There had been the most shocking
+carelessness. Had he not himself pointed out what was going on? Had he not put
+it to Stubbs that the place should be guarded? But the lawyer, stubborn in his
+belief that there were no papers there, had done nothing. Nothing! And this had
+come of it! This which might spell ruin!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Or, no. Stubbs had indeed done his best to ruin him, but he had saved himself.
+He turned with relief to Mary&rsquo;s letter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was written sadly, and it was rather cold. He noticed this, but her tone did
+not alarm him, because he set it down to the reserve of his own letters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took care to answer this letter, however, by that day&rsquo;s post, and he
+wrote more affectionately than before&mdash;as if her trouble had broken down a
+reserve natural to him. He wrote with tact, too. He could not attend the
+funeral; the dead man&rsquo;s feelings towards him forbade that he should. But
+his agent would attend, and his carriage and servants. When he had written the
+letter he was satisfied with it: more than satisfied when he had added a phrase
+implying that their happiness would not long be postponed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After he had posted the letter he wondered if she would expect him to come to
+her. It was a lonely house and with death in it&mdash;but no, in the
+circumstances it was not possible. He would go down to The Butterflies next
+day. That would be the most that could be expected of him. He would be at hand
+if she needed anything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when the next day came he did not go. A letter from a man belonging to the
+inner circle of politics reached him. The great man, who had been and might be
+again in the Cabinet, suggested a meeting. Nothing came of the meeting&mdash;it
+was one of those will-of-the-wisps that draw the unwary on until they find
+themselves committed. But it kept Audley in London, and it was not until the
+evening of Monday, the day of the funeral, that, chilled and out of temper,
+after posting the last stage from Stafford, he reached his quarters at The
+Butterflies, and gave short answers to Mrs. Jenkinson&rsquo;s inquiries after
+his health.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor dear young man!&rdquo; she said, when she rejoined her sisters.
+&ldquo;He has a kind heart and he feels it. Mr. John was Mr. John, and odd,
+very odd. But still he was an Audley!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap29"></a>CHAPTER XXIX<br/>
+THE AUDLEY BIBLE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Angry with Stubbs as he was&mdash;and with some reason&mdash;Lord Audley was
+not the man to bite off his nose to spite his face. He pondered long what he
+would say to him, and more than once he rehearsed the scene, toning down this
+phrase and pruning that. For he knew that after all Stubbs was a good agent. He
+was honest, he thought much and made much of the property, and nothing would be
+gained by changing him. Then his influence in the borough was such that even if
+my lord quarrelled with him, Mottisfont would hardly venture to discard him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For these reasons Audley had no mind to break with his agent. But he did wish
+to punish him. He did wish to make his displeasure felt. And he wished this the
+more because he began to suspect that if Stubbs had been less bigoted, he might
+have carried the borough the way he wished&mdash;the way that would pay him
+best.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs on his side foresaw an unpleasant quarter of an hour. He had been too
+easy. He had paid too little heed to John Audley&rsquo;s trespasses, and had
+let things pass that he should have stopped. Then, too, he had been
+over-positive that there were no more documents at the Great House. Evil had
+not come of this, but it might have; and he made up his mind to hear some hard
+words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when he obeyed my lord&rsquo;s summons his reception tried his patience. A
+bright fire burned in the grate, half a dozen wax candles shed a softened light
+on the room. The wine stood at Audley&rsquo;s elbow, and his glass was half
+full. But he did not give Stubbs even two fingers, nor did he ask him to take
+wine. And his tone was colder than Stubbs had ever known it. He made it plain
+that he was receiving a servant, and a servant with whom he was displeased.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still he was Lord Audley, something of divine right survived in him, and Stubbs
+knew that he had been himself in the wrong. He took the bull by the horns.
+&ldquo;You are displeased, my lord,&rdquo; he said, as he took the seat to
+which the other pointed. &ldquo;And I admit with some cause. I have been
+mistaken and, perhaps, a little remiss! But it is the exception, and it will be
+a lesson to me. I am sorry, my lord,&rdquo; he added frankly. &ldquo;I can say
+no more than that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And much good that will do us,&rdquo; my lord growled, &ldquo;in certain
+events, Mr. Stubbs!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At any rate it will be a sharp lesson to me,&rdquo; Stubbs replied.
+&ldquo;It has cost Mr. Audley his life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He had no right to be there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, my lord, he had no right to be there. But he would not have been
+there if I had seen that the place was properly secured. I take all the
+blame.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Unfortunately,&rdquo; the other flung at him contemptuously, &ldquo;you
+cannot pay the penalty; that may fall upon me. Anyway, it was a d&mdash;d silly
+thing, Mr. Stubbs, to leave the place open, and you see what has come of
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I cannot deny it, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs said patiently. &ldquo;But I
+hope that nothing will come of it. I will tell your lordship first what my own
+observations were. I made a careful examination of the two chests of papers and
+I came to the conclusion that Mr. Audley had done little more than open the
+first when he was taken ill. One chest showed some disturbance. The upper layer
+had been taken out and replaced. The other box had not been opened.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What if he found what he wanted and searched no further?&rdquo; Audley
+asked grimly. &ldquo;But the point of the matter does not lie there. It lies in
+another direction, as I should have thought any lawyer would see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who was with him?&rdquo; Lord Audley rapped the table with his fingers.
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the point, sir! Who was with him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I have ascertained that,&rdquo; Stubbs replied, less put out
+than his employer expected. &ldquo;I have little doubt that his man-servant, a
+man called Toft, was with him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; the other exclaimed, &ldquo;I expected that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs raised his eyebrows. &ldquo;You know him, my lord?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know him for a d&mdash;d blackmailing villain!&rdquo; Audley broke
+out. Then he remembered himself. He had not told Stubbs of the blackmailing.
+And, after all, what did it matter? He had made himself safe. Whatever papers
+he had found, John Audley was dead, and John Audley&rsquo;s heiress was going
+to be his wife! The danger to him was naught, and the blackmailer was already
+disarmed. Still he was not going to spare Stubbs by telling him that. Instead,
+&ldquo;What did the boxes contain?&rdquo; he asked ungraciously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing of any value when I examined them, my lord. Old surrenders,
+fines, and recoveries with some ancient terriers. I could find no document
+among them that related to the title.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That may be,&rdquo; Audley retorted. &ldquo;But John Audley expected to
+find something that related to the title! He knew more than we knew. He knew
+that those boxes existed, and he knew what he expected to find in them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt. And if your lordship had given me a little more time I should
+have explained before this that he was disappointed in his expectation; nay,
+more, that it was that disappointment&mdash;as I have little doubt&mdash;that
+caused his collapse and death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How the devil do you know that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If your lordship will have patience I will explain,&rdquo; Stubbs said,
+a gleam of malice in his eyes. He rose from his seat and took from a chair
+beside the door a parcel which he had laid there on his entrance. &ldquo;I have
+here that which he found, and that which I don&rsquo;t doubt caused his
+death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The deuce you have!&rdquo; Audley cried, rising to his feet in his
+surprise. And he watched with all his eyes while the lawyer slowly untied the
+tape and spread wide the wrappers. The action disclosed a thick quarto volume
+bound in blue leather, sprinkled on the sides with silver butterflies, and
+stamped with the arms of Audley. &ldquo;Good G&mdash;d!&rdquo; Audley
+continued, &ldquo;the Family Bible!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, the Family Bible,&rdquo; the lawyer answered, gazing at it
+complacently, &ldquo;about which there was so much talk at the opening of the
+suit. It was identified by a score of references, called for by both sides,
+sought for high and low, and never produced!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And here it is!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here it is. Apparently at some time or other it went out of fashion, was
+laid aside and lost sight of, and eventually bricked up with a mass of old and
+valueless papers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley steadied his voice with difficulty. &ldquo;And what is its
+effect?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Its effect, my lord, is to corroborate our case in every
+particular,&rdquo; the lawyer answered proudly. &ldquo;Its entries form a
+history of the family for a long period, and amongst them is an entry of the
+marriage of Peter Paravicini Audley on the date alleged by us; an entry made in
+the handwriting of his father, and one of eleven made by the same hand. This
+entry agrees in every particular with the suspected statement in the register
+which we support, and fully bears out our case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And John Audley found that?&rdquo; my lord cried, after a moment of
+pregnant silence. He had regained his composure. His eyes were shining.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, and it killed him,&rdquo; Stubbs said gravely. &ldquo;Doubtless he
+came on it at the moment when he thought success was within his grasp, and the
+shock was too much for him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good Lord! Good Lord! And how did you get it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;From Mr. Basset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Basset?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who obtained it, I have no doubt, from the man, Toft, either by pressure
+or purchase.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The rascal! The d&mdash;d rascal! He ought to be prosecuted!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Possibly,&rdquo; the lawyer agreed. &ldquo;But he was only an
+accomplice, and we could not prosecute him without involving others; without
+bringing Mr. John&rsquo;s name into it&mdash;and he is dead. As a fact, I have
+passed my word to Mr. Basset that no steps should be taken against him, and I
+think your lordship will agree with me that I could not do otherwise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still&mdash;the man ought to be punished!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He ought, but if any one has paid for his silence or for this book, it
+is not we.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After that there was a little more talk about the Bible, which my lord examined
+with curiosity, about the singularity of its discovery, about the handwriting
+of the entries, which the lawyer said he could himself prove. Stubbs was made
+free of the decanter, and of everything but my lord&rsquo;s mind. For Audley
+said nothing of his engagement to Mary&mdash;the moment was hardly opportune;
+and nothing&mdash;it was too late in the day&mdash;of Toft&rsquo;s former
+exploit. He stood awhile absorbed and dreaming, staring through the haze of the
+candles. Here at last was final and complete relief. No more fears, no more
+calculations. Here was an end at last of the feeling that there was a mine
+under him. Traditions, when they are bred in the bone, die slowly, and many a
+time he had been hard put to it to resist the belief, so long whispered, that
+his branch was illegitimate. At last the tradition was dead. There was no more
+need to play for safety. What he had he had, and no one could take it from him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And presently the talk passed to the election.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no doubt,&rdquo; Stubbs said, &ldquo;that Mr. Basset is a
+stronger candidate than either side expected.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But he&rsquo;s no politician! He has no experience!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer sat forward, with his legs apart and a hand on either knee.
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But the truth is, though it is beyond me how
+a gentleman of his birth can be so misled, he believes what he says&mdash;and
+it goes down!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is he a speaker?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is and he isn&rsquo;t! I slipped in myself one night at the back of
+one of the new-fangled meetings his precious League has started. I wanted to
+see, my lord, if any of our people were there. I heard him for ten minutes, and
+at the start he was so jumpy I thought that he would break down. But when he
+got going&mdash;well, I saw how it was and what took the people. He believes
+what he says, and he says it plain. The way he painted Peel giving up
+everything, sacrificing himself, sacrificing his party, sacrificing his
+reputation, sacrificing all to do what he thought was right&mdash;the devil
+himself wouldn&rsquo;t have known his own!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He almost converted you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer laughed disdainfully. &ldquo;Not a jot!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But I
+saw that he would convert some. Not many,&rdquo; Stubbs continued complacently.
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s some that mean to, but will think better of it at the
+last. And some would but daren&rsquo;t! Two or three may. Still, he&rsquo;s
+such a candidate as we&rsquo;ve not had against us before, my lord. And with
+cheap bread and the preachings of this plaguy League&mdash;I shall be glad when
+it is over.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley rose and poked the fire. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re not going to tell
+me,&rdquo; he said, in a voice that was unnaturally even, &ldquo;that
+he&rsquo;s going to beat us? You&rsquo;re not going, after all the assurances
+you&rsquo;ve given me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God forbid,&rdquo; Stubbs replied. &ldquo;No, no, my lord! Mr.
+Mottisfont will hold the seat! I mean only that it will be a nearer
+thing&mdash;a nearer thing than it has been.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had no idea that his patron was fighting a new spasm of anger; that the
+thought that he might, after all, have dealt with Sir Robert, the thought that
+he might, after all, have bargained with the party in power, was almost too
+much for the other&rsquo;s self-command. It was too late now, of course. It was
+too late. But if the contest was to be so close, surely if he had cast his
+weight on the other side, he might have carried it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And what if the seat were lost? Then this stubborn, confident fool, who was as
+bigoted in his faith as the narrowest Leaguer of them all, had done him a
+deadly injury! My lord bit off an oath, and young as he was, his face wore a
+very apoplectic look as he turned round, after laying down the poker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That reminds me,&rdquo; the lawyer resumed, blandly unconscious of the
+crisis, and of the other&rsquo;s anger. &ldquo;I meant to ask your lordship
+what&rsquo;s to be done about the two Boshams. You remember them, my lord?
+They&rsquo;ve had the small holding by the bridge with the water meadow time
+out of mind&mdash;for seven generations they say. They pay eighteen pounds as
+joint tenants, and have votes as old freemen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What of them?&rdquo; the other asked impatiently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m afraid they&rsquo;ll not support us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean that they&rsquo;ll not vote for Mottisfont?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid not,&rdquo; Stubbs answered. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re as
+stubborn as their own pigs! I&rsquo;ve spoken to them myself and told them that
+they&rsquo;ve only one thing to expect if they go against their
+landlord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that is, to go out!&rdquo; Audley said. &ldquo;Well, make that quite
+clear to them, Stubbs, and depend upon it&mdash;they&rsquo;ll see
+differently.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid they won&rsquo;t, my lord, and that is why I trouble
+you. They voted against the last lord&mdash;twice, I am told&mdash;and the
+story goes that he laid his stick about Ben Bosham&rsquo;s shoulders in the
+street&mdash;that would be in &rsquo;31, I fancy. But he didn&rsquo;t turn them
+out&mdash;they&rsquo;d been in the holding so long.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Two votes may have been nothing to him,&rdquo; Audley replied coldly.
+&ldquo;They are something to me. They will vote for Mottisfont or they will go,
+Stubbs. That is flat, and do you see to it. There, I&rsquo;m tired now,&rdquo;
+he continued, rising from his seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs rose. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know if your lordship&rsquo;s heard about Mr.
+John&rsquo;s will!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No!&rdquo; My lord straightened himself. Earlier in the day he had given
+some thought to this, and had weighed Mary Audley&rsquo;s chances of inheriting
+what John Audley had. &ldquo;No!&rdquo; he said. And he waited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has left the young lady eight thousand pounds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eight thousand!&rdquo; Audley ejaculated. &ldquo;Do you mean&mdash;he
+must have had more than that? He wasted a small fortune in that confounded
+suit. But he must have had&mdash;four times that, man!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The residue goes to Mr. Basset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Basset!&rdquo; Audley cried, his face flushed with passion. &ldquo;To
+Basset?&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;Good G&mdash;d!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I&rsquo;m told, my lord,&rdquo; the lawyer answered, staggered by the
+temper in which his employer received the news.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But Miss Audley was his own niece! Basset? He was no relation to
+him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They were very old friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s no reason why he should leave him thirty thousand pounds of
+Audley money! Money taken straight out of the Audley property! Thirty
+thousand&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not thirty, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs ventured. &ldquo;Not much above
+twenty, I should say. If you put it&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I put it that you were&mdash;something of a fool at times,&rdquo; the
+angry man cried, &ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t be far wrong! But there, there, never
+mind! Good-night! Can&rsquo;t you see I&rsquo;m dead tired and hardly know what
+I am saying? Come to-morrow! Come at eleven in the morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs hardly knew how to take it. But after a moment&rsquo;s hesitation, he
+made the best of the apology, muttered something, and got out of the room. On
+the stairs he relieved his feelings by a word or two. In the street he wondered
+what had taken the man so suddenly. Surely he had not expected to get the
+money!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap30"></a>CHAPTER XXX<br/>
+A FRIEND IN NEED</h2>
+
+<p>
+Basset had obtained the missing Bible very much in the way the lawyer had
+indicated&mdash;partly by purchase and partly by pressure. Shocked as Toft had
+been by his master&rsquo;s sudden death, he had had the presence of mind to
+remember that he might make something of what they had discovered could he
+secrete it; and with every nerve quivering the man had fought down panic until
+he had hidden the parcel which had caused John Audley&rsquo;s collapse. Then he
+had given way. He had turned his back on the Great House, and shuddering,
+clutched at by grisly hands, pursued by phantom feet, he had fled through the
+night and the Yew Walk, to hide, for the present at least, his part in the
+tragedy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset, however, had known too much for him, and the servant, shaken by what
+had happened, had not been able to persist in his denials. But to tell and to
+give were two things, and it is doubtful whether he would have released his
+plunder if Basset had not in the last resort disclosed to him Miss
+Audley&rsquo;s engagement to her cousin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The change which this news wrought in Toft had astonished Basset. The man had
+gone down under it as under a blow on the head. The spirit had gone out of him,
+and he had taken with thankfulness the sum which Basset, as John Audley&rsquo;s
+representative, had offered him&mdash;rather out of pity than because it seemed
+necessary. He had given up the parcel on the night before the funeral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The book in his hands, Basset had hastened to be rid of it. Cynically he had
+told himself that he did so, lest he too might give way to the ignoble impulse
+to withhold it. Audley was his rival, but that he might have forgiven, as men
+forgive great wrongs and in time smile on their enemies. But the little wrongs,
+who can forgive these&mdash;the slight, the sneer, the assumption of
+superiority, the upper hand lightly taken and insolently held?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not Peter Basset, at a moment when he was being tried almost beyond bearing.
+For every day, between the finding of the body and the funeral, and often more
+than once in the day he had to see Mary, he had to advise her, he had&mdash;for
+there was no one else&mdash;to explain matters to her, to bear her company. He
+had to quit this meeting and that Ordinary&mdash;for election business stops
+for no man&mdash;and to go to her. He had to find her alone and to see her face
+light up at his entrance; he had to look back, and to see her watch him as he
+rode from the door. Nor when he was absent from the Gatehouse was it any
+better; nay, it was worse. For then he was forced to think of her as alone and
+sad, he had to picture her brooding over the fire, he had to fancy her at her
+solitary meals. And alike, with her or away from her, he had to damp down the
+old passion, as well as the new regret that each day and each hour and every
+kind look on her part fanned into a flame. Nor was even this all; every day he
+saw that she grew more grave, daily he saw her color fading, and he did not
+know what qualms she masked, what nightmares she might be suffering in that
+empty house&mdash;nay, what cause for unhappiness she might be hiding. At
+last&mdash;it was the afternoon before the funeral&mdash;he could bear it no
+longer, and he spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You ought not to be here!&rdquo; he said bluntly. &ldquo;Why
+doesn&rsquo;t Audley fetch you away?&rdquo; He was standing before the fire
+drawing on his gloves as he prepared to leave. The room was full of shadows,
+for he had chosen a time when she could not see his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She tried to fence with him. &ldquo;I am afraid,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that
+some formalities will be necessary before he can do that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then why is he not here?&rdquo; he retorted. &ldquo;Or why doesn&rsquo;t
+he send some one to be with you? You ought not to be alone. Mrs. Jenkinson at
+The Butterflies&mdash;she&rsquo;s a good soul&mdash;you know her?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;d come at a word. I know it&rsquo;s not my
+business&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or you would go about it, I am sure,&rdquo; she replied gently,
+&ldquo;with as much respect to my wishes as Lord Audley shows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your wishes? But why&mdash;why do you wish&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why do I wish to be alone?&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Because I owe
+something to my uncle. Because I owe him a little thought and some remembrance.
+He made my old life for me&mdash;would you have me begin the new one before he
+is in the grave? This was his house&mdash;would you have me entertain Lord
+Audley in it?&rdquo; She stood up, slender and straight, with the table between
+them&mdash;and he did not guess that her knees were trembling. &ldquo;Please to
+understand,&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;that Lord Audley and I are entirely at
+one in this. We have our lives before us, and it were indeed selfish of us, and
+ungrateful of me, if we grudged a few days to remembrance. As selfish,&rdquo;
+she continued bravely&mdash;and he did not know that she braced herself
+anew&mdash;&ldquo;as if I were ever to forget the friend who was <i>his</i>
+friend, whose kindness has never failed me, whose loyalty has
+never&mdash;&rdquo; she broke down there. She could not go on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Add, too,&rdquo; he said gruffly, &ldquo;who has robbed you of the
+greater part of your inheritance! Don&rsquo;t forget that!&rdquo; He had been
+explaining the effect of John Audley&rsquo;s will to her. It had been opened
+that morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His roughness helped her to recover herself. &ldquo;I do not know what you mean
+by &lsquo;inheritance,&rsquo;&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;My uncle has left me the
+portion his wife brought to him. I am more than satisfied. I am very grateful.
+My only fear is that, had he known of my engagement, he would not have wished
+me to have this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The will was made before you came to live here,&rdquo; Basset said.
+&ldquo;The eight thousand was left to you because you were his brother&rsquo;s
+child. It was the least he could do for you, and had he made a new will he
+would doubtless have increased it. But,&rdquo; breaking off, &ldquo;I must be
+going.&rdquo; Yet he still stood, and he still tapped the table with the end of
+his riding-crop. &ldquo;When is Audley coming?&rdquo; he asked suddenly.
+&ldquo;To-morrow?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well he ought to,&rdquo; he replied, without looking at her. &ldquo;You
+should not be here a day longer by yourself. It is not fitting. I shall see you
+in the morning before we start for the church, but the lawyer will be here and
+I shall not be able to come again. But I must be sure that there is some one
+here.&rdquo; He spoke almost harshly, partly to impress her, partly to hide his
+own feelings; and he did not suspect that she, too, was fighting for calmness;
+that she was praying that he would go, before she showed more clearly how much
+the parting tried her&mdash;before every kind word, every thoughtful act, every
+toilsome journey taken on her behalf, rose to her remembrance and swept away
+the remnants of her self-control.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had not imagined that she would feel the leave-taking as she did. She could
+not speak, and she was thankful that it was too dark for him to see her face.
+Would he never go? And still the slow tap-tap of his whip on the table went on.
+It seemed to her that she would never forget the sound! And if he touched
+her&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he had no thought of touching her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-night,&rdquo; he said at last. He turned, moved away, lingered. At
+the door he looked back. &ldquo;I am going into the library,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;The coffin will be closed in the morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, good-night,&rdquo; she muttered, thankful that the thought of the
+dead man steadied her and gave her power to speak. &ldquo;I shall see him in
+the morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He closed the door, and she crept blindly to a chair, and covered by the
+darkness she gave way. She told herself that she was thinking of her uncle. But
+she knew that she deceived herself. She knew that her uncle had little to do
+with her tears, or with the feeling of loneliness that overcame her. Once more
+she had lost her friend&mdash;and a friend so good, so kind. Only now did she
+know his value!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Five minutes later Basset crossed the court in search of his horse. Mrs.
+Toft&rsquo;s door stood open and a stream of firelight and candlelight poured
+from it and cut the January fog. She was hard at work, cooking funeral meats
+with the help of a couple of women; for quietly as John Audley had lived, he
+could not be buried without some stir. Odd people would come, drawn by the
+Audley name, squires who boasted some distant connection with the line, a few
+who had been intimate with him in past days. And the gentry far and wide would
+send their carriages, and the servants must be fed. Still the preparations
+jarred on Basset as he crossed the court. He felt the bustle an outrage on the
+mourning girl he had left, and on his own depression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Probably Mrs. Toft had set the door open that she might waylay him, for as he
+went by she came out and stopped him. &ldquo;Mr. Basset, sir!&rdquo; she said
+in a low voice. &ldquo;Is this true, what Toft tells me? I declare, when I
+heard it, you could ha&rsquo; knocked me down with a common dip!&rdquo; She was
+wiping her hands on her apron. &ldquo;That the young lady is to marry his
+lordship?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe it is true,&rdquo; Basset said coldly. &ldquo;But you had
+better let her take her own time to make it known. Toft should not have told
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never fear, sir, I&rsquo;ll not let on. But, Lord&rsquo;s sakes,
+who&rsquo;d ha&rsquo; thought it? And she&rsquo;ll be my lady! Not that
+she&rsquo;s not an Audley, and there&rsquo;s small differ, and she&rsquo;ll
+make none, or I don&rsquo;t know her! Well, indeed, I hope she&rsquo;s wise,
+but wedding cake, make it as rich as you like, it&rsquo;s soon stale. And for
+him, I don&rsquo;t know what the Master would have said if he&rsquo;d known it!
+I thought things would come out,&rdquo; with a quick look at Basset,
+&ldquo;quite otherways! And wished it, too!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you, Mrs. Toft,&rdquo; he said quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so, sir, you&rsquo;ll excuse me. Well, it&rsquo;s not many months
+since the young lady came, and look at the changes! With the old Master dead,
+and you going in for elections&mdash;drat &rsquo;em, I say, plaguy things that
+set folks by the ears&mdash;and Mr. Colet gone and &rsquo;Truria that
+unsettled, and Toft for ever wool-gathering, I shall be glad when
+tomorrow&rsquo;s over and I can sit down and sort things out a bit!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Mrs. Toft.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And speaking of elections reminds me. You know they two Boshams of the
+Bridge End, sir?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know them. Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft sniffed. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re sort of kin to me, and middling honest
+as town folks go. But two silly fellows, always meddling and making and
+gandering with things they&rsquo;d ought to leave to the gentry! The old lord
+was soft with them, and so they&rsquo;ve a mind now to see who is the stronger,
+they or his lordship.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you mean that they have promised to vote for me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, sir! Vote their living away, they will, and leave
+&rsquo;em alone! Votes are for poor men to make a bit of money by, odd times;
+but they two Boshams I&rsquo;ve no patience with. Sally, Ben&rsquo;s wife, was
+with me to-day, and the long and the short of it is, Mr. Stubbs has told them
+that if they vote for you they&rsquo;ll go into the street.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a hard case,&rdquo; Basset said. &ldquo;But what can I
+do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t ha&rsquo; their votes. What&rsquo;s two votes to you? For
+the matter of that,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft continued, thoroughly wound up,
+&ldquo;what&rsquo;s all the votes&mdash;put together? Bassets and Audleys,
+Audleys and Bassets were knights of the shire, time never was, as all the
+country knows! But for this little borough&mdash;place it&rsquo;s what your
+great-grandfather wouldn&rsquo;t ha&rsquo; touched with a pair of gloves!
+I&rsquo;d leave it to the riff-raff that&rsquo;s got money and naught else, and
+builds Institutes and such like!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you&rsquo;d like cheap bread?&rdquo; Basset said, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bread? Law, Mr. Basset, what&rsquo;s elections to do wi&rsquo; bread?
+It&rsquo;s not bread they&rsquo;re thinking of, cheap or dear. It&rsquo;s beer!
+Swim in it they do, more shame to you gentry! I&rsquo;ll be bound to say
+there&rsquo;s three goes to bed drunk in the town these days for two that goes
+sober! But there, you speak to they Boshams, Mr. Basset, sir, and put some
+sense into them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I can&rsquo;t promise,&rdquo; he answered.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was not of the Boshams he thought as he rode down the hill with a tight
+rein&mdash;for between fog and frost the road was treacherous. He was thinking
+of the man who had been his friend and of whose face, sphinx-like in death, he
+had taken farewell in the library. And solemn thoughts, thoughts such as at
+times visit most men, calmed his spirit. The fret of the contest, the strivings
+of the platform, the rubs of vanity flitted to a distance, they became small
+things. Even passion lost its fever and love its selfishness; and he thought of
+Audley with patience and of Mary as he would think of her in years to come,
+when time had enshrined her, and she was but a memory, one of the things that
+had shaped his life. He knew, indeed, that this mood would pass; that passion
+would surge up again, that love would reach out to its object, that memory
+would awake and wound him, that pain and restlessness would be his for many
+days. But he knew also&mdash;in this hour of clear views&mdash;that all these
+things would have an end, and only the love,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+That seeketh not itself to please<br/>
+Nor of itself hath any care,
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+would remain with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Already it had carried him some way. In the matter of the election, indeed, he
+might be wrong. He might have entered on it too hastily&mdash;often he thought
+that he had&mdash;he might be of fibre too weak for the task. It cost him much
+to speak, and the occasional failure, the mistake, the rebuff, worried him for
+hours and even days. Trifles, too, that would not have troubled another,
+troubled his conscience; side-issues that were false, but that he must not the
+less support, workers whom he despised and must still use, tools that soiled
+his hands but were the only tools. Then the vulgar greeting, the tipsy grasp,
+the friend in the market-place:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+The man who hails you Tom or Jack<br/>
+And proves by thumps upon your back
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+How he esteems your merit!
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+Who&rsquo;s such a friend that one had need<br/>
+Be very much his friend indeed
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+To pardon or to bear it!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+these humiliated him. But worse, far worse, than all was his unhappy gift of
+seeing the merits of the other side and of doubting the cause which he had set
+out to champion. He had fits of lowness when he was tempted to deny that
+honesty existed anywhere in politics; when Sir Robert Peel no less than Lord
+George Bentinck&mdash;who was coming to the front as the spokesman of the
+land&mdash;Cobden the Radical no less than Lord John Russell, seemed to be bent
+only on their own advancement, when all, he vowed, were of the School of the
+Cynics!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But were he right or wrong in his venture&mdash;and right or wrong he had small
+hope of winning&mdash;he would not the less cling to the thing which Mary had
+given him&mdash;the will to make something of his life, the determination that
+he would leave the world, were it only the few hundred acres that he owned, or
+the hamlet in which he lived, better than he had found them. The turmoil of the
+election over, he would devote himself to his property at Blore. There John
+Audley&rsquo;s twenty thousand pounds opened a wide door. He would build,
+drain, manure, make roads, re-stock. He would make all things new. From him as
+from a centre comfort should flow. He saw himself growing old in the middle of
+his people, a lonely, but not an unhappy man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he passed the bridge at Riddsley he thought of the Boshams, and weary as he
+was, he drew rein at their door. Ben Bosham came out, bare-headed; a short,
+elderly man with a bald forehead and a dirty complexion, a man who looked like
+a cobbler rather than the cow-keeper he was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shut your door, Bosham,&rdquo; Basset said. &ldquo;I want a word with
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when the man had done this, he stooped from the saddle and said a few words
+to him in a low voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m dommed!&rdquo; the other answered, peering up through
+the darkness. &ldquo;It be you, Squire, bain&rsquo;t it? But you&rsquo;re not
+meaning it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am,&rdquo; Basset replied in a low voice. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d not say,
+vote for him, Bosham. But leave it alone. You&rsquo;re not called upon to ruin
+yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But ha&rsquo; you thought,&rdquo; the man exclaimed, &ldquo;that our two
+votes may make the differ? That they may make you or mar you, Squire!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;d rather be marred than see you put out of your
+place,&rdquo; Basset answered. &ldquo;Think it over, Bosham.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Bosham repudiated even thought of it. This vote and his use of it, this
+defiance of a lord, was, for the time, his very life. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not do
+it,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t do it! Nor I
+won&rsquo;t!&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re freemen o&rsquo; Riddsley,
+and almost the last of the freemen that has votes as freemen! And while free we
+are, free we&rsquo;ll be, and vote as we choose, Squire! Vote as we choose!
+I&rsquo;d not show my face in the town else! Mr. Stubbs may talk as gallus as
+he likes&mdash;and main ashamed of himself he looked yesterday&mdash;he may
+talk as gallus as never was, we&rsquo;ll not bend to no landlord, nor to no
+golden image!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then there&rsquo;s no more to be said,&rdquo; Basset answered, feeling
+that he cut a poor figure. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wish you to do anything against
+your conscience, Bosham, and I&rsquo;m obliged to you and your brother for your
+staunchness. I only wanted you to know that I should understand if you stayed
+away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;d chop my foot off first!&rdquo; cried the patriot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After which Basset had no choice but to leave him and to ride on, feeling that
+he was himself too soft for the business&mdash;that he was a round man in a
+square hole. He wondered what his committee would think of him if they knew,
+and what Bosham thought of him&mdash;who did know. For Bosham seemed to him at
+this moment a man of principle, a patriot, nay, a very Brutus: whereas, Ben was
+in truth no better than a small man of large conceit, whose vote was his one
+road to fame.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap31"></a>CHAPTER XXXI<br/>
+BEN BOSHAM</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was Tuesday, market-day at Riddsley, and farmers&rsquo; wives, cackling as
+loudly as the poultry they carried, elbowed one another on the brick pavements
+or clustered before the windows of the low-browed shops. Farmers in white
+great-coats, with huge handkerchiefs about their necks, streamed from the yards
+of the Packhorse and the Barley Mow, and meeting a friend planted themselves in
+the roadway as firmly as if they stood in their own pastures. Now and again a
+young spark, fancying all eyes upon his four-year-old, sidled through the
+throng with many a &ldquo;Whoa!&rdquo; and &ldquo;Where be&rsquo;st going,
+lad?&rdquo; While on the steps of the Market-Cross and about the long line of
+carts that rested on their shafts in the open street, hucksters chaffered and
+house-wives haggled over the rare egg or the keg of salted butter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The quacking of ducks, the neighing of horses, the singsong of rustic voices
+filled the streets. It was common talk that the place was as full as at the
+March Fair. The excitement of the Election had gone abroad, the cry that the
+land was at stake had brought in some, others had come to see what was afoot.
+Many a stout tenant was here who at other times left the marketing to his
+womenfolk; and shrewd glances he cast at the gentry, as he edged past the
+justices who lounged before the Audley Arms and killed in gossip the interval
+between the Magistrates&rsquo; Meeting, at which they had just assisted, and
+the Ordinary at which they were to support young Mottisfont.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great men talked loudly and eagerly, were passionate, were in earnest.
+Occasionally one of the younger of them would step aside to look at a passing
+hackney, or an older man would speak to a favorite tenant whom he called by his
+first name. But, for the most part, they clung together, fine upstanding
+figures, in high-collared riding-coats and top-boots. They were keen to a man;
+the farmers keen also, but not so keen. For the argument that high wheat meant
+high rents, and that most of the benefits of protection went to the landlords
+had got about even in Riddsley. The squires complained that the farmers would
+only wake up when it was too late!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still in such a place, and on market-day, four out of five were in the landed
+interest; four-fifths of the squires, four-fifths of the parsons, almost
+four-fifths of the tenants; for the laborers, no one asked what they thought of
+it&mdash;they had ten shillings a week and no votes.
+&ldquo;Peel&mdash;&rsquo;od rot him!&rdquo; cried the majority, &ldquo;might
+shift as often as his own spinning-jenny! But not they! No Manchester man, and
+no Tamworth man either, should teach them their business! Who would die if
+there were no potatoes? It was a flam, a bite, but it wouldn&rsquo;t bamboozle
+Stafford farmers!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Stubbs, moving quietly through the throng, spoke with one here and
+there. He had the same word for all. &ldquo;Listen to me, John,&rdquo; he would
+say, his hand on the yeoman&rsquo;s shoulder. &ldquo;Peel says he&rsquo;s been
+wrong all these years and is only right now. Then, if you believe him,
+he&rsquo;s a fool; and if you don&rsquo;t believe him, he&rsquo;s a knave. Not
+a very good vet., John, eh? Not the vet. for the old gray mare, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This had a great effect. John went away and repeated it to himself, and
+presently grasped the dilemma and chuckled over it. Ten minutes later he
+imparted it, with the air of a Solomon, to the &ldquo;Duke,&rdquo; who mouthed
+it and liked it and rolled it off to the first he met. It went the round of the
+inns and about four o&rsquo;clock a farmer fresh from the &ldquo;tap&rdquo; put
+it to Stubbs and convinced him; and that night men, travelling home
+market-peart in the charge of their wives, bore it to many a snug homestead set
+in orchards of hard cider apples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had the issue of the Election lain with the Market, indeed, it had been over.
+But of the hundred and ninety voters no more than fifteen were farmers, and
+though the main trade of the town sided with them, the two factories were in
+opposition; and cheap bread had its charms for the lesser fry. But the free
+traders were too wise to flaunt their views on market-day, and it was left for
+little Ben Bosham, whose vote was pretty near his all, to distinguish himself
+in the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, too, had been at the tap, and about noon his voice was heard issuing from a
+group who stood near the Audley Arms. &ldquo;Be I free, or bain&rsquo;t
+I?&rdquo; he bawled. &ldquo;Answer me that, Mr. Bagenal!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A knot of farmers had edged him into a corner and were disposed to bait him. A
+stubby figure in a velveteen coat and drab breeches, his hand on an ash-plant,
+he held his ground among them, tickled by the attention he excited and fired by
+his own importance. &ldquo;Be I free, or bain&rsquo;t I?&rdquo; he repeated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Free?&rdquo; Bagenal answered contemptuously. &ldquo;You be free to make
+a fool of yourself, Ben! I&rsquo;m thinking you&rsquo;d ha&rsquo; us all lay
+down the ground to lazy pasture and live by milk, as you do!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Milk?&rdquo; ejaculated a stout man of many acres, whose contempt for
+such traffic was above speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be free to go out of Bridge End,&rdquo; cried a third.
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what you&rsquo;ll be free to do! And where&rsquo;ll your
+vote be then, Ben?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there Bosham was sure of himself. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s where you be wrong,
+Mr. Willet,&rdquo; he retorted with gusto. &ldquo;My vote dunno come o&rsquo;
+my landlord, and in the Bridge End or out of the Bridge End, I&rsquo;ve a vote
+while I&rsquo;ve a breath! &rsquo;Tain&rsquo;t the landlord&rsquo;s vote, and
+why&rsquo;d I give it to he? Free I be&mdash;not like you, begging your pardon!
+Freeman, old freeman, I be, of this borough! Freeman by marriage!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you be a very rare thing!&rdquo; Bagenal retorted slyly.
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a many lose their freedom that way, but you be the first I
+ever heard of that got it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And a hard bargain, too, as I hear,&rdquo; said Willet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This drew a roar of laughter. The crowd grew thicker and the little man&rsquo;s
+temper grew short, for his wife was no beauty. He began to see that they were
+playing with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You leave me alone, Mr. Willet,&rdquo; he said angrily, &ldquo;and
+I&rsquo;ll leave you alone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Leave thee alone!&rdquo; said the farmer who had turned up his nose at
+milk. &ldquo;So I would, same as any other lump o&rsquo; dirt! But yo&rsquo;
+don&rsquo;t let us. Yo&rsquo; set up to know more than your betters! Pity the
+old lord ain&rsquo;t alive to put his stick about your back!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did it smart, Ben?&rdquo; cried a lad who had poked himself in between
+his betters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You let me catch you,&rdquo; Ben cried, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll make you
+smart. You be all a set of slaves! You&rsquo;d set your thatch afire if
+squires&rsquo;d tell you! Set o&rsquo; slaves, set o&rsquo; slaves you
+be!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what be you, Bosham?&rdquo; said a man who had just joined the
+group. &ldquo;Head of the men, bain&rsquo;t you? Cheap bread and high wages,
+that&rsquo;s your line, ain&rsquo;t it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s his line, be it?&rdquo; said the old farmer slowly.
+&ldquo;Bit of a rascal it seems yo&rsquo; be? Don&rsquo;t yo&rsquo; let me find
+you in my boosey pasture talking to no men o&rsquo; mine, or I&rsquo;ll make
+yo&rsquo; smart a sight more than his lordship did!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, that&rsquo;s Ben&rsquo;s line,&rdquo; said the new-comer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a liar!&rdquo; Ben shrieked. &ldquo;A dommed liar you be! I
+see you not half an hour agone coming out of Stubbs&rsquo;s office! I know who
+told you to say that, you varmint! I&rsquo;ll have the law of you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ben Bosham, the laborers&rsquo; friend!&rdquo; the man retorted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ben was furious, for he was frightened. There was no feud so bitter in the
+&rsquo;forties as the feud between farmer and laborer. The laborer had no vote,
+he had lost his common rights, his wood, his cow-feed; he was famished, he was
+crushed by the new Poor Law, and so he was often in an ugly mood, as singed
+barns and burning stacks went to show. Bosham knew that he might flout the
+squires, and at worst be turned out of his holding; but woe betide him if he
+got the name of the laborers&rsquo; friend. Moreover, there was just so much
+truth in the accusation as made it dangerous. Ben and his brother eked out the
+profits of the dairy by occasional labor, and Ben had sometimes vapored in
+tap-rooms where he had better have held his tongue. He shrieked furiously,
+therefore, at the false witness, and even tried to reach him with his
+ash-plant. &ldquo;Who be you?&rdquo; he screamed. &ldquo;You be a
+lawyer&rsquo;s pup, you be! You&rsquo;d ruin me, you would! Let me get a hold
+of you and I&rsquo;ll put a mark on you! You be lying!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about that,&rdquo; said the big farmer slowly and
+weightily. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m feared yo&rsquo;re a bit of a rascal, Ben.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, and fine he&rsquo;ll look in front of Stafford Gaol some
+morning!&rdquo; said Willet. &ldquo;At the end of a rope.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On that in a happy moment for Ben, while he gaped for a retort and found none,
+two carriers&rsquo; vans, huge wooden vehicles festooned with rabbits and
+market-baskets and drawn by three horses abreast, lumbered through the crowd
+and scattered it. In a twinkling Ben was left alone, an angry man, aware that
+he had cut but a poor figure!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been frightened, too, and he resented it. He thirsted for some chance of
+setting himself right, of proving to others that he was a freeman and not as
+other men. And in the nick of time he saw a chance&mdash;if only he had the
+courage to rise to it. He saw moving towards him through the press a
+mail-phaeton and pair. On the box, caped and gloved, the pink of fashion, sat
+no less a person than his lordship himself. A servant in the well-known livery,
+a white coat with a blue collar, sat behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The vans which had freed Ben blocked the great man&rsquo;s way, and he was
+moving at a walk. All heads were bared as he passed, and he was acknowledging
+the courtesy with his whip when Ben stepped before the horses and lifted his
+hand. In an instant a hundred eyes were on the man and he knew that he had
+burned his boats. Bravado was now his only chance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; he cried, waving his hat impudently. &ldquo;I want to
+know what you be going to do about me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord hardly caught his words and did not catch his meaning, but he saw that
+the man was almost under the horses&rsquo; feet and he checked them. Ben stood
+aside then but, as the carriage passed him, he laid his hand on the splashboard
+and walked beside it. He looked up at the great man and in the same impudent
+tone, &ldquo;Be you agoing to turn me out, my lord?&rdquo; he cried.
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I want to know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand you,&rdquo; Audley said coldly. He guessed that
+the man referred to the Election, and what was the use of understrappers like
+Stubbs if he was to be exposed to this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Ben Bosham of the Bridge End, my lord, that&rsquo;s who I
+be,&rdquo; Ben replied brazenly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not ashamed of my name. I
+want to know whether you be agoing to turn me out, and my wife and my child!
+That&rsquo;s what I want to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then a farmer seized him and dragged him back, and others laid hands on him,
+though he still shouted. &ldquo;Dunno be a fool!&rdquo; cried the farmer,
+deeply shocked. &ldquo;Drive on, drive on, my lord! Never heed him. He&rsquo;ve
+had a glass too much!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Packhorse beer, my lord,&rdquo; explained a second in stentorian
+tones&mdash;though he knew that Ben was fairly sober. &ldquo;Ought to be
+ashamed of himself!&rdquo; cried a third, and he shook the aggressor. Ben was
+in a minority of one, and those who held him were inclined to be rough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley waved his whip good-humoredly. &ldquo;Take care of him!&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t hurt him!&rdquo; And he drove on, outwardly unmoved though
+inwardly fuming. Still had it ended there little harm would have been done. But
+word of the brawl outran the carriage and, as it chanced, reached the door of
+Hatton&rsquo;s Works as the men came out to dinner. Ben Bosham had spoken his
+mind to his lordship! His lordship had driven over him! The farmers had beaten
+him! The news passed from one to another like flame, and the hands stood, some
+two score of them, and hooted my lord loudly, shouting &ldquo;Shame!&rdquo; and
+jeering at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now had Audley been the candidate he would have thought nothing of it. He would
+have laughed in the men&rsquo;s faces and taken it as part of the day&rsquo;s
+work; or had he been the old lord, he would have flung a curse at the men and
+cut at the nearest with his whip&mdash;and forgotten it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he was not the old lord, times were changed, and the thing angered him. It
+was in an ill-temper that he drove on along the road that rose by gentle
+degrees to the Great Chase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the matter of that, he had been in a black mood for some time, because he
+could not make up his mind. Night and morning ambition whispered to him to put
+the vessel about; to steer the course which experience told him that it
+behooved a man to steer who was not steeped in romance, nor too greedy for the
+moment&rsquo;s enjoyment; the course which, beyond all doubt, he would have
+steered were he now starting!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he was not starting; and when he thought of shifting the helm he foresaw
+difficulties. He did not think that he was a soft-hearted man, yet he feared
+that when it came to the point he would flinch. Besides, he told himself that
+he was a man of honor; and the change was a little at odds with this. But there
+again, he reflected that truth was honor and in the end would cause less pain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eight thousand pounds was so very small a portion! And for safety, he no longer
+needed to play for it. John Audley was dead and the Bible was in his hands; his
+case was beyond cavil or question, while the political situation was such that
+he saw no opening, no chance of enrichment in that direction. To make Mary,
+handsome, good, attractive as she was&mdash;to make her the wife of a poor
+peer, of a discontented, dissatisfied man&mdash;this, if he could only find it
+in his heart to tell her the truth, would be a cruel kindness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he drove along the road, angry with the wretched Bosham, angry with Stubbs,
+angry with the fools who had hooted him, he was not sorry to feel his
+ill-temper increase. He might not find it so difficult to speak to her. A
+little effort and the thing would be done. Eight thousand pounds? The interest
+would barely dress her. Whereas, if she had played her cards well and been heir
+to her uncle&rsquo;s thirty thousand&mdash;the case would have been different.
+After all, the fault lay with her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He roused the off-horse with a sharp cut, and a moment later discerned at the
+end of a long, straight piece of road, the moss-clad steps of the old Cross and
+standing beside them a figure he knew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was moved, even while, in his irritation, he was annoyed that she had come
+to meet him at a place that had recollections for him. It seemed to him that in
+doing this she was putting an undue, an unfair burden on him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She waved her hand and he raised his hat. The day was bright and cold, and the
+east wind had whipped a fine color into her cheeks. Perhaps that, too, was
+unfair. Perhaps that too was putting an undue burden on him.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap32"></a>CHAPTER XXXII<br/>
+MARY MAKES A DISCOVERY</h2>
+
+<p>
+But his face was not one to betray his thoughts, and as he drew up beside Mary,
+horses fretting, polechains jingling, the silver of the harness glittering from
+a score of points, he made a gallant show. The most eager lover, Apollo himself
+in the chariot of the sun, had scarcely made a better approach to his mistress,
+had hardly carried it more finely over a mind open to appearances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a very fair show of haste he bade his man take the reins, and as the
+servant swung himself into the front seat the master sprang to the ground. His
+hand met Mary&rsquo;s, his curly-brimmed hat was doffed, his eyes smiled into
+hers. &ldquo;Well, better late than never!&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she answered. But she spoke more soberly than he expected
+and her face was grave. &ldquo;You have been a long time away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was their meeting. The servant was there; under his eyes it could not be
+warmer. Whether one or the other had foreseen this need not be asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke to the man, who, possessed by a natural curiosity, was all ears.
+&ldquo;Keep them moving,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Drive back a mile or two and
+return.&rdquo; Then to Mary, his hat still in his hand, &ldquo;A long time
+away? Longer than I expected, and far longer than I hoped, Mary. Shall we go up
+the hill a little?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought you would propose that,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I am so glad
+that it is fine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man had turned the horses. Audley took her hand again and pressed it,
+looking in her face, telling himself that she grew more handsome every day. Why
+hadn&rsquo;t she thirty thousand pounds? Aloud he said, &ldquo;So am I, very
+glad. Otherwise you could not have met me, and I fancied that you might not
+wish me to come to the house? Was that so, dear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think it was,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He has been gone so very short a
+time. Perhaps it was foolish of me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not at all!&rdquo; he answered, admiring the purity of her complexion.
+&ldquo;It was like you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If we had told him, it would have been different.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On the other hand,&rdquo; he said deftly, as he drew her hand through
+his arm, &ldquo;it might have troubled his last days? And now, tell me all,
+Mary, from the beginning. You have gone through dark days and I have not
+been&mdash;I could not be with you. But I want to share them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She told the story of John Audley&rsquo;s disappearance, her cheeks growing
+pale as she described the alarm, the search, the approach of night and her
+anguish at the thought that her uncle might be lying in some place which they
+had overlooked! Then she told him of Basset&rsquo;s arrival, of the discovery,
+of the manner in which Peter had arranged everything and saved her in every
+way. It seemed to her that to omit this, to say nothing of him, would be as
+unfair to the one as uncandid to the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord&rsquo;s comment was cordial, yet it jarred on her. &ldquo;Well
+done!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He was made to be of use, poor chap! If it were
+any one else I should be jealous of him!&rdquo; And he laughed, pressing her
+arm to his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was quivering with the memories which her story had called up, and it was
+only by an effort that she checked the impulse to withdraw her hand. &ldquo;Had
+you been there&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope I should have done as much,&rdquo; he replied complacently.
+&ldquo;But it was impossible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said. And though she knew that her tone was cold, she
+could not help it. For many, many times during the last month she had pondered
+over his long absence and the chill of his letters. Many times she had told
+herself that he was treating her with scant affection, scant confidence, almost
+with scant respect. But then again she had reflected that she must be mistaken,
+that she brought him nothing but herself, and that if he did not love her he
+would not have sought her. And telling herself that she expected too much of
+love, too much of her lover, she had schooled herself to be patient, and had
+resolved that not a word of complaint should pass her lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But to assume a warmth which she did not feel was another matter. This was
+beyond her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, for his part, set down her manner to a natural depression. &ldquo;Poor
+child!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you have had a sad time. Well, we must make up
+for it. As soon as we can make arrangements you must leave that gloomy house
+where everything reminds you of your uncle and&mdash;and we must make a fresh
+start. Do you know where I am taking you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw that they had turned off the road and were following a track that
+scrambled upwards through the scrub that clothed the slope below the Gatehouse.
+It slanted in the direction of the Great House. &ldquo;Not to
+Beaudelays?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes&mdash;to Beaudelays. But don&rsquo;t be afraid. Not to the
+house.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think I could bear to go
+there to-day!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know. But I want you to see the gardens. I want you to see what might
+have been ours, what we might have enjoyed had fortune been more kind to us!
+Had we been rich, Mary! It is hard to believe that you have never seen even the
+outside of the Great House.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have never been beyond the Iron Gate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And all these months within a mile!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All these months within a mile. But he did not wish it. It was one of
+the first things he made me understand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! Well, there is an end of that!&rdquo; And again so matter-of-fact
+was his tone that she had to struggle against the impulse to withdraw her arm.
+&ldquo;Now, if there is any one who has a right to be there, it is you! And I
+want to be the one to take you there. I want you to see for yourself that it is
+only fallen grandeur that you are marrying, Mary, the thing that has been, not
+the thing that is. By G&mdash;d! I don&rsquo;t know that there is a creature in
+the world&mdash;certainly there is none in my world&mdash;more to be pitied
+than a poor peer!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s nothing to me,&rdquo; she said. And, indeed, his words had
+brought him nearer to her than anything he had said. So that when, taking
+advantage of the undergrowth which hid them from the road below, he put his arm
+about her and assisted her in her climb, she yielded readily. &ldquo;To
+think,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that you have never seen this place! I wonder
+that after we parted you did not go the very next morning to visit it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps I wished to be taken there by you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By Jove! Do you know that that is the most lover-like thing you have
+said.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may improve with practice,&rdquo; she rejoined. &ldquo;Indeed, it is
+possible,&rdquo; she continued demurely, &ldquo;that we both need
+practice!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had not a notion that he was in two minds; that one half of him was
+revelling in the hour, pleased with possession, enjoying her beauty, dwelling
+on the dainty curves of her figure, while the other uncertain, wavering, was
+asking continually, &ldquo;Shall I or shall I not?&rdquo; But if she did not
+guess thoughts to which she had no clue he was sharp enough to understand hers.
+&ldquo;Ah! you are there, are you?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Wait! Presently, when
+we are out of sight of that cursed road&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t find fault!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On that there was a little banter between them, gallant and smiling on his
+part, playful and defensive on hers, which lasted until they reached a door
+leading into the lower garden. It was a rusty, damp-stained door, once painted
+green, and masked by trees somewhat higher than the underwood through which
+they had climbed. Ivy hung from the wall above it, rank grass grew against it,
+the air about it was dank, and in summer sent up the smell of wild leeks. Once
+under-gardeners had used it to come and go, and many a time on moonlit nights
+maids had stolen through it to meet their lovers in the coppice or on the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley had brought the key and he set it in the lock and turned it. But he did
+not open the door. Instead, he turned to Mary with a smile. &ldquo;This is my
+surprise,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Shut your eyes and open them when I tell you.
+I will guide you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She complied without suspicion, and heard the door squeak on its rusty hinges.
+Guided by his hand she advanced three or four paces. She heard the door close
+behind her. He put his arm round her and drew her on. &ldquo;Now?&rdquo; she
+asked, &ldquo;May I look?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, now!&rdquo; he answered. As he spoke he drew her to him, and,
+before she knew what to expect, he had crushed her to his breast and was
+pressing kisses on her face and lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was taken by surprise and so completely, that for a moment she was
+helpless, without defence. Then the instinctive impulse to resist overcame her,
+and she struggled fiercely; and, presently, she released herself. &ldquo;Oh,
+you shouldn&rsquo;t have done it!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t
+have done it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My darling!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&mdash;you hurt me!&rdquo; she panted, her breath coming short and
+quick. She was as red now as she had for a moment been white. Her lips
+trembled, and there were tears in her eyes. He thought that he had been too
+rough with her, and though he did not understand, he stayed his impulse to
+seize her again. Instead, he stood looking down at her, a little put out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She tried to smile, tried bravely to pass it off; but she was put to it, he
+could see, not to burst into tears. &ldquo;Perhaps I am foolish,&rdquo; she
+faltered, &ldquo;but please don&rsquo;t do it again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t promise&mdash;for always,&rdquo; he answered, smiling.
+But, none the less, he was piqued. What a prude the girl was! What a
+Sainte-ni-touche! To make such a fuss about a few kisses!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She tried to take the same tone. &ldquo;I know I am silly,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;but you took me by surprise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You were very innocent, then, my dear. Still, I&rsquo;ll be good, and
+next time I will give you warning. Now, don&rsquo;t be afraid, take my arm, and
+let us&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I could sit down?&rdquo; she murmured. Then he saw that the color had
+again left her cheeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was an old wheelbarrow inside the door, half full of dead leaves. He
+swept it clear, and she sat down on the edge of it. He stood by her, puzzled,
+and at a loss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certainly he had played a trick on her, and he had been a little rough because
+he had felt her impulse to resist. But she must have known that he would kiss
+her sooner or later. And she was no child. Her convent days were not of
+yesterday. She was a woman. He did not understand it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas, she did understand it. It was not her lover&rsquo;s kisses, it was not
+his passion or his roughness that had shaken Mary. She was not a prude and she
+was a woman. That which had overwhelmed her was the knowledge, the certainty
+forced on her by his embrace, that she did not love him! That, however much she
+might have deluded herself a few weeks earlier, however far she might have let
+the lure of love mislead her, she did not love this man! And she was betrothed
+to him, she was promised to him, she was his! On her engagement to him, on her
+future with him had been based&mdash;a moment before&mdash;all her plans and
+all her hopes for the future.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No wonder that the color was struck from her face, that she was shaken to the
+depths of her being. For, indeed, she knew something more&mdash;that she had
+had her warning and had closed her eyes to it. That evening, when she had heard
+Basset&rsquo;s step come through the hall, that moment when his presence had
+lifted the burden of suspense from her, should have made her wise. And for an
+instant the veil had been lifted, and she had been alarmed. But she reflected
+that the passing doubt was due to her lover&rsquo;s absence and his coldness;
+and she had put the doubt from her. When Audley returned all would be well, she
+would feel as before. She was hipped and lonely and the other was kind to
+her&mdash;that was all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now she knew that that was not all. She did not love Audley and she did love
+some one else. And it was too late. She had misled herself, she had misled the
+man who loved her, she had misled that other whom she loved. And it was too
+late!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a time that was short, yet seemed long to her companion, who stood watching
+her, she sat lost in thought and unconscious of his presence. At length he
+could bear it no longer. Pale cheeks and dull eyes had no charm for him! He had
+not come, he had not met her, for this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;come, Mary, you will catch cold sitting
+there! One might suppose I was an ogre!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She smiled wanly. &ldquo;Oh no!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;It is I&mdash;who am
+foolish. Please forgive me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you would like to go back?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But her ear detected temper in his tone, and with a newborn fear of him she
+hastened to appease him. &ldquo;Oh no!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You were going
+to show me the gardens!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Such as they are. Well, so you will see what there is to be seen. It is
+a sorry sight, I can tell you.&rdquo; She rose and, taking her arm, he led her
+some fifty yards along the alley in which they were, then, turning to the
+right, he stopped. &ldquo;There,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What do you think of
+it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had before them the long, dank, weed-grown walk, broken midway by the
+cracked fountain and closed at the far end by the broad flight of broken steps
+that led upward to the terrace and so to the great lawn. When Audley had last
+stood on this spot the luxuriance of autumn had clothed the neglected beds. A
+tangle of vegetation, covering every foot of soil with leaf and bloom, had
+veiled the progress of neglect. Now, as by magic, all was changed. The sun
+still shone, but coldly and on a bald scene. The roses that had run riot, the
+spires of hollyhocks that had risen above them, the sunflowers that had
+struggled with the encroaching elder, nay, the very bindweed that had strangled
+all alike in its green embrace, were gone, or only reared naked stems to the
+cold sky. Gone, too, were the Old Man, the Sweet William, the St. John&rsquo;s
+Wort, the wilderness of humbler growths that had pressed about their feet; and
+from the bare earth and leafless branches, the fountain and the sundial alone,
+like mourners over fallen grandeur, lifted gray heads.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is no garden that has not its sad season, its days of stillness and
+mourning, but this garden was sordid as well as sad. Its dead lay unburied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Involuntarily Mary spoke. &ldquo;Oh, it is terrible!&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is terrible,&rdquo; he answered gloomily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she feared that, preoccupied as she was with other thoughts, she had hurt
+him. She was trying to think of something to comfort him, when he repeated,
+&ldquo;It is terrible! But, d&mdash;n it, let us see the rest of it!
+We&rsquo;ve come here for that! Let us see it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Together they went slowly along the walk. They came by and by to the sundial.
+She hung a moment, wishing to read the inscription, but he would not stay.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the old story,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We are gay fellows in
+the sunshine, but in the shadow&mdash;we are moths.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not explain his meaning. He drew her on. They mounted the wide flight
+which had once, flanked by urns and nymphs and hot with summer sunshine, echoed
+the tread of red-heeled shoes and the ring of spurs. Now, elder grew between
+the shattered steps, weeds clothed them, the nymphs mouldered, lacking arms and
+heads, the urns gaped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary felt his depression and would have comforted him, but her brain was numbed
+by the discovery which she had made; she was unable to think, without power to
+help. She shared, she more than shared, his depression. And it was not until
+they had surmounted the last flight and stood gazing on the Great House that
+she found her voice. Then, as the length and vastness of the pile broke upon
+her, she caught her breath. &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;It is
+immense!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a nightmare,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;That is Beaudelays!
+That is,&rdquo; with bitterness, &ldquo;the splendid seat of Philip, fourteenth
+Lord Audley&mdash;and a millstone about his neck! It is well, my dear, that you
+should see it! It is well that you should know what is before you! You see your
+home! And what you are marrying&mdash;if you think it worth while!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If she had loved him she would have been strong to comfort him. If she had even
+fancied that she loved him, she would have known what to answer. As it was, she
+was dumb; she scarcely took in the significance of his words. Her mind&mdash;so
+much of it as she could divert from herself&mdash;was engaged with the sight
+before her, with the long rows of blank and boarded windows, the smokeless
+chimneys, the raw, unfinished air that, after eighty years, betrayed that this
+had never been a home, had never opened its doors to happy brides, nor heard
+the voices of children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last she spoke. &ldquo;And this is Beaudelays?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is my home,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the place
+I&rsquo;ve come to own! It&rsquo;s a pleasant possession! It promises a
+cheerful homecoming, doesn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you never thought of&mdash;of doing anything to it?&rdquo; she
+asked timidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean&mdash;have I thought of completing it? Of repairing
+it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose I meant that,&rdquo; she replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might as well think,&rdquo; he retorted, &ldquo;of repairing the Tower
+of London! All I have in the world wouldn&rsquo;t do it! And I cannot pull it
+down. If I did, the lawyers first and the housebreakers afterwards, would pull
+down all I have with it! There is no escape, my dear,&rdquo; he continued
+slowly. &ldquo;Once I thought there was. I had my dream. I&rsquo;ve stood on
+this lawn on summer days and I&rsquo;ve told myself that I would build it up
+again, and that the name of Audley should not be lost. But I am a peer, what
+can I do? I cannot trade, I cannot plead. For a peer there is but one
+way&mdash;marriage. And there were times when I had visions of repairing the
+breach&mdash;in that way; when I thought that I could set the old name first
+and my pleasure second; when I dreamed of marrying a great dowry that should
+restore us to the place we once enjoyed. But&mdash;that is over! That is
+over,&rdquo; he repeated in a sinking voice. &ldquo;I had to choose between
+prosperity and happiness; I made my choice. God grant that we may never repent
+it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sank into silence, waiting for her to speak; he waited with exasperation.
+She did not, and he looked down at her. Then, &ldquo;I believe,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;that you have not heard a word I have said!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She glanced up, startled. &ldquo;I am afraid I have not,&rdquo; she answered
+meekly. &ldquo;Please forgive me. I was thinking of my uncle, and wondering
+where he died.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was all that Audley could do to check the oath that rose to his lips. For he
+had spoken with intention; he had given her, as he thought, a lead, an opening;
+and he had wasted his pains. He could hardly believe that she had not heard. He
+could almost believe that she was playing with him. But in truth she had barely
+recovered from the shock of her discovery, and the thing before her
+eyes&mdash;the house&mdash;held her attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe that you think more of your uncle than of me!&rdquo; he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;but he is gone and I have you.&rdquo; She
+was beginning to be afraid of him; afraid of him, because she felt that she was
+in fault.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;But you must be more kind to me&mdash;or
+I don&rsquo;t know that you will keep me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought that he spoke in jest, and she pressed his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t want to go into the house?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no! I could not bear it to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you must not mind if I leave you for a moment. I have to look to
+something inside. I shall not be more than five minutes. Will you walk up and
+down?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She assented, thankful to be alone with her thoughts; and he left her. A burly,
+stately figure, he passed across the lawn and disappeared round the corner of
+the old wing where the yew trees grew close to the walls. He let himself into
+the house. He wished to examine the strong-room for himself and to see what
+traces were left of the tragedy which had taken place there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when he stood inside and felt the icy chill of the house, where each
+footstep awoke echoes, and a ghostly tread seemed to follow him, he went no
+farther than the shadowy drawing-room with its mouldering furniture and fallen
+screen. There, placing himself before an unshuttered pane, he stood some
+minutes without moving, his hands resting on the head of his cane, his eyes
+fixed on Mary. The girl was slowly pacing the length of the terrace, her head
+bent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whether the lonely figure, with its suggestion of sadness, made its appeal, or
+the attraction of a grace that no depression could mar, overcame the dictates
+of prudence, he hesitated. At last, &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t do it!&rdquo; he
+muttered, &ldquo;hanged if I can! I suppose I ought not to have kissed her if I
+meant to do it to-day. No, I can&rsquo;t do it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when, half an hour later, he parted from her at the old Cross at the foot
+of the hill, he had not done it.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap33"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII<br/>
+THE MEETING AT THE MAYPOLE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Within twenty-four hours there were signs that Bosham&rsquo;s brush with his
+lordship and the show of feeling outside Hatton&rsquo;s Works had set a sharper
+edge on the fight. Trifles as these were, the farmers about Riddsley took them
+up and resented them. The feudal feeling was not quite extinct. Their landlord
+was still a great man to them, and even those who did not love him believed
+that he was fighting their battle. An insult to him seemed, in any case, a
+portent, but that such a poor creature as Bosham&mdash;Ben Bosham of the Bridge
+End&mdash;should insult him, went beyond bearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moreover, it was beginning to be whispered that Ben was tampering with the
+laborers. One heard that he was preaching higher wages in the public houses,
+another that he was asking Hodge what he got out of dear bread, a third that he
+was vaporing about commons and enclosures. The farmers growled. The
+farmers&rsquo; sons began to talk together outside the village inn. The
+farmers&rsquo; wives foresaw rick-burning, maimed cattle, and empty hen coops,
+and said that they could not sleep in their beds for Ben.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile those who, perhaps, knew something of the origin of these rumors, and
+could size up the Boshams to a pound, were not unwilling to push the matter
+farther. Men who fancied with Stubbs that repeal of the corn-taxes meant the
+ruin of the country-side, were too much in earnest to pick and choose. They
+believed that this was a fight between the wholesome country and the black,
+sweating town, between the open life of the fields and the tyranny of mill and
+pit; and that the only aim of the repealer was to lower wages, and so to swell
+the profits that already enabled him to outshine the lords of the soil. They
+were prone, therefore, to think that any stick was good enough to beat so bad a
+dog, and if the stout arms of the farmers could redress the balance, they were
+in no mood to refuse their help.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor were sharpeners wanting on the other side. The methods of the League were
+brought into play. Women were sent out to sing through the streets of an
+evening, and the townsfolk ate their muffins to the doleful strains of:
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+Child, is thy father dead?
+</p>
+
+<p class="t2">
+Father is gone.
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+Why did they tax his bread?
+</p>
+
+<p class="t2">
+God&rsquo;s will be done!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+And as there were enthusiasts on this side, too, who saw the work of the Corn
+Laws in the thin cheeks of children and the coffins of babes, the claims of
+John Barley-corn, roared from the windows of the Portcullis and the Packhorse,
+did not seem a convincing answer. A big loaf and a little loaf, carried high
+through the streets, made a wide appeal to non-voters; and a banner with,
+&ldquo;You be taxing, we be starving!&rdquo; had its success. Then, on the
+evening of the market-day, a band of Hatton&rsquo;s men, fresh from the Three
+Tailors, came to blows with a market-peart farmer, and a &ldquo;hand&rdquo; was
+not only knocked down, but locked up. Hatton&rsquo;s and Banfield&rsquo;s men
+were fired with indignation at this injustice, and Hatton himself said a little
+more at the Institute than Basset thought prudent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These things had their effect, and more, perhaps, than was expected. For
+Stubbs, going back to his office one afternoon, suffered an unpleasant shock.
+Bosham&rsquo;s impudence had not moved him, nor the jeers of Hatton&rsquo;s
+men. But this turned out to be another matter. Farthingale, the shabby clerk
+with the high-bred nose, had news for him which he kept until the office door
+was locked. And the news was so bad that Stubbs stood aghast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What? All nine?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Impossible, man! The
+woman&rsquo;s made a fool of you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Farthingale merely looked at him over his steel-rimmed spectacles.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s true,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never believe it!&rdquo; cried the lawyer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Farthingale shook his head. &ldquo;That won&rsquo;t alter it,&rdquo; he said
+patiently. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s true.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dyas the butcher! Why, he served me for years! For years! I go to him at
+times now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only for veal,&rdquo; replied the clerk, who knew everything
+&ldquo;Pitt, of the sausage shop, and Badger, the tripeman, are in his
+pocket&mdash;buy his offal. With the other six, it&rsquo;s mainly the big
+loaf&mdash;Lake has a sister with seven children, and Thomas a father in the
+almshouse. Two more have big families, and the women have got hold of
+them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But they&rsquo;ve always voted right!&rdquo; Stubbs urged, with a
+sinking heart. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s taken them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you ask me,&rdquo; the clerk answered, &ldquo;I should say it was
+partly Squire Basset&mdash;he talks straight and it takes. And partly the
+split. When a party splits you can&rsquo;t expect to keep all. I doubted Dyas
+from the first. He&rsquo;s the head. They were all at his house last night and
+a prime supper he gave them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs groaned. At last, &ldquo;How much?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Farthingale shook his head. &ldquo;Nix,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You may be
+shaking Dyas&rsquo;s hand and find it&rsquo;s Hatton&rsquo;s. If you take my
+advice, you&rsquo;ll leave it alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; the lawyer cried, &ldquo;of all the d&mdash;d ingratitude I
+ever heard of! The money Dyas has had from me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Farthingale&rsquo;s lips framed the words &ldquo;only veal,&rdquo; but no sound
+came. Devoted as he was to his employer, he was enjoying himself. Election
+times were meat and drink&mdash;especially drink&mdash;to him. At such times
+his normal wage was royally swollen by Election extras, such as: &ldquo;To
+addressing one hundred circulars, one guinea. To folding and closing the same,
+half a guinea. To watering the same, half a guinea. To posting the same, half a
+guinea.&rdquo; A whole year&rsquo;s score, chalked up behind the door at the
+Portcullis, vanished as by magic at this season.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then he loved the importance of it, and the secrecy, and the confidence
+that was placed in him and might safely be placed. The shabby clerk who had
+greased many a palm was himself above bribes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Stubbs was aghast. Scarcely could he keep panic at bay. He had staked his
+reputation for sagacity on the result. He had made himself answerable for
+success, to his lordship, to the candidate, to the party. Not once, but twice,
+he had declared in secret council that defeat was impossible&mdash;impossible!
+Had he not done so, the contest, which his own side had invited, might have
+been avoided.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then, too, his heart was in the matter. He honestly believed that these
+poor creatures, these weaklings whose defection might cost so much, were voting
+for the ruin of their children, for the impoverishment of the town. They would
+live to see the land pass into the hands of men who would live on it, not by
+it. They would live to see the farmers bankrupt, the country undersold, the
+town a desert!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer had counted on a safe majority of twenty-two on a register of a
+hundred and ninety voters. And twenty-two had seemed a buckler, sufficient
+against all the shafts and all the spite of fortune. But a majority of
+four&mdash;for that was all that remained if these nine went over&mdash;a
+majority of four was a thing to pale the cheek. Perspiration stood on his brow
+as he thought of it. His hand shook as he shuffled the papers on his desk,
+looking for he knew not what. For a moment he could not face even Farthingale,
+he could not command his eye or his voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, &ldquo;Who could get at Dyas?&rdquo; he muttered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Farthingale pondered for a time, but shook his head. &ldquo;No one,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;You might try Hayward if you like. They deal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s to be done, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s only one way that I can think of,&rdquo; the clerk
+replied, his eyes on his master&rsquo;s face. &ldquo;Rattle them! Set the
+farmers on them! Show them that what they&rsquo;re doing will be taken ill.
+Show &rsquo;em we&rsquo;re in earnest. Badger&rsquo;s a poor creature and
+Thomas&rsquo;s wife&rsquo;s never off the twitter. I&rsquo;d try it, if I were
+you. You&rsquo;d pull some back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They talked for a time in low voices and before he went into the Portcullis
+that night Farthingale ordered a gig to be ready at daylight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It might have been thought that with this unexpected gain, Basset would be in
+clover. But he, too, had his troubles and vexations. John Audley&rsquo;s death
+and Mary&rsquo;s loneliness had made drafts on his time as well as on his
+heart. For a week he had almost withdrawn from the contest, and when he
+returned to it it was to find that the extreme men&mdash;as is the way of
+extreme men&mdash;had been active. In his address and in his speeches he had
+declared himself a follower of Peel. He had posed as ready to take off the
+corn-tax to meet an emergency, but not as convinced that free trade was always
+and everywhere right. He had striven to keep the question of Irish famine to
+the front, and had constantly stated that that which moved his mind was the
+impossibility of taxing food in one part of the country while starvation
+reigned in another. Above all, he had tried to convey to his hearers his notion
+of Peel. He had pictured the statesman&rsquo;s dilemma as facts began to coerce
+him. He had showed that in the same position many would have preferred party to
+country and consistency to patriotism. He had painted the struggle which had
+taken place in the proud man&rsquo;s mind. He had praised the decision to which
+Peel had come, to sacrifice his name, his credit, and his popularity to his
+country&rsquo;s good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when Basset returned to his Committee Room, he found that the men to whom
+Free Trade was the whole truth, and to whom nothing else was the truth, had
+stolen a march on him. They had said much which he would not have said. They
+had set up Cobden where he had set up Peel. To crown all, they had arranged an
+open-air meeting, and invited a man from Lancashire&mdash;whose name was a red
+rag to the Tories&mdash;to speak at it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset was angry, but he could do nothing. He had an equal distaste for the man
+and the meeting, but his supporters, elated by their prospects, were neither to
+coax nor hold. For a few hours he thought of retiring. But to do so at the
+eleventh hour would not only expose him to obloquy and injure the cause, but it
+would condemn him to an inaction from which he shrank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For all that he had seen of Mary, and all that he had done for her, had left
+him only the more restless and more unhappy. To one in such a mood success,
+which began to seem possible, promised something&mdash;a new sphere, new
+interests, new friends. In the hurly-burly of the House and amid the press of
+business, the wound that pained him would heal more quickly than in the
+retirement of Blore; where the evenings would be long and lonely, and many a
+time Mary&rsquo;s image would sit beside his fire and regret would gnaw at his
+heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The open-air meeting was to be held at the Maypole, in the wide street bordered
+by quaint cottages, that served the town for a cattle-market. The day turned
+out to be mild for the season, the meeting was a novelty, and a few minutes
+before three the Committee began to assemble in strength at the Institute,
+which stood no more than a hundred yards from the Maypole, but in another
+street. Hatton was entertaining Brierly, the speaker from Lancashire, and in
+making him known to the candidate, betrayed a little too plainly that he
+thought that he had scored a point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll see something new now, sir,&rdquo; he said, rubbing his
+hands. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s wanting, he&rsquo;ll win! He&rsquo;s addressed as
+many as four thousand persons at one time, Mr. Brierly has!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, and not such as are here, Squire,&rdquo; Brierly boomed. He was a
+tall, bulky man with an immense chin, who moved his whole body when he turned
+his head. &ldquo;Not country clods, but Lancashire men! No throwing dust
+i&rsquo; their eyes!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still, I hope you&rsquo;ll deal with us gently,&rdquo; Basset said.
+&ldquo;Strong meat, Mr. Brierly, is not for babes. We must walk before we can
+run.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, but the emptier the stomach, the more need o&rsquo; meat!&rdquo;
+Brierly replied, and he rumbled with laughter. &ldquo;An&rsquo; a bellyful
+I&rsquo;ll give them! Truth&rsquo;s truth and I&rsquo;m no liar!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But to different minds the same words do not convey the same
+thing,&rdquo; Basset urged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man stared over his stiff neck-cloth. &ldquo;That&rsquo;ud not go down
+i&rsquo; Todmorden,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Nor i&rsquo; Burnley nor i&rsquo;
+Bolton! We&rsquo;re down-right chaps up North, and none for chopping words.
+Hands off the hands&rsquo; loaf, is Lancashire gospel, and we&rsquo;re out to
+preach it! We&rsquo;re out to preach it, and them that clems folk and fats
+pheasants may make what mouth o&rsquo;er it they like!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortunately the order to start came at this moment, and Basset had to fall in
+and move forward with Hatton, the chairman of the day. Banfield followed with
+the stranger, and the rest of the Committee came on two by two, the smaller men
+enjoying the company in which they found themselves. So they marched solemnly
+into the street, a score of Hatton&rsquo;s men forming a guard of honor, and a
+long tail of the riff-raff of the town falling in behind with orange flags and
+favors. These at a certain signal set up a shrill cheer, a band struck up
+&ldquo;See, the Conquering Hero Comes!&rdquo; and the sixteen gentlemen
+marched, some proudly and some shamefacedly, into the wider street, wherein a
+cart drawn up at the foot of the Maypole awaited them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On such occasions Englishmen out of uniform do not show well. The daylight
+streamed without pity on the Committee as they stalked or shambled along in
+their Sunday clothes, and Basset at least felt the absurdity of the position.
+With the tail of his eye he discerned that the stranger was taking off a large
+white hat, alternately to the right and left, in acknowledgment of the cheers
+of the crowd, while ominous sniggers of laughter mingled here and there with
+the applause. Banfield&rsquo;s men, with another hundred or so of the town
+idlers, were gathered about the cart, but of the honest and intelligent voters
+there were scanty signs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crowd greeted the appearance of each of the principals with cheers and a
+shaft or two of Stafford wit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hooray! Hooray!&rdquo; shouted Hatton&rsquo;s men as he climbed into the
+cart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hatton&rsquo;s a great man now!&rdquo; a bass voice threw in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But he&rsquo;s never lost his taste for tripe!&rdquo; squeaked a shrill
+treble. The gibe won roars of laughter, and the back of the chairman&rsquo;s
+neck grew crimson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hurrah for Banfield and the poor man&rsquo;s loaf!&rdquo; shouted his
+supporters, as he mounted in his turn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s little of the crumb he&rsquo;ll leave the poor man!&rdquo;
+squeaked the treble.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the candidate&rsquo;s turn to mount next. &ldquo;Hooray! Hooray!&rdquo;
+shouted the crowd with special fervor. Handkerchiefs were waved from windows,
+the band played a little more of the Conquering Hero.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the music ceased, &ldquo;What&rsquo;s he doing, Tommy, along o&rsquo; these
+chaps?&rdquo; asked the treble voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s waiting for that there Samaritan, Sammy?&rdquo; answered the
+bass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay? And the wine and oil, Sammy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It took the crowd a little time to digest this, but in time they did so, and
+the gust of laughter that followed covered the appearance of the stranger. He
+was not to escape, however, for as the noise ceased, &ldquo;Is this the
+Samaritan, Sammy?&rdquo; asked the bass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s your eyes?&rdquo; whined the treble. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s the
+big loaf! and, lor, ain&rsquo;t he crumby!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I were down there&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; the Burnley man began, leaning
+over the side of the cart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s crusty, too!&rdquo; cried the wit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this was too much for the chairman. &ldquo;Silence! Silence!&rdquo; he
+cried, and, as at a signal, there was a rush, the two interrupters were seized
+and, surrounded by a gang of hobbledehoys, were hustled down the road, fighting
+furiously and shouting, &ldquo;Blues! Blues!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chairman made use of the lull to step to the edge of the cart and take off
+his hat. He looked about him, pompous and important.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;free and independent electors of our
+ancient borough! At a crisis such as this, a crisis the most
+momentous&mdash;the most momentous&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he paused and looked
+into his hat, &ldquo;that history has known, when the very staff of life is,
+one may say, the apple of discord, it is an honor to me to take the
+chair!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The cart you mean!&rdquo; cried a voice, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re in the
+cart!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The speaker cast a withering glance in the direction whence the voice came,
+lost his place and, failing to find it, went on in a different strain.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a business man,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you all know that!
+I&rsquo;m a business man, and I&rsquo;m not ashamed of it. I stick to my
+business and my business to-day&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better go on with it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he was getting set, and he was not to be abashed. &ldquo;My business
+to-day,&rdquo; he repeated, &ldquo;is to ask your attention for the
+distinguished candidate who seeks your suffrages, and for the&mdash;the
+distinguished gentleman on my left who will presently follow me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A hollow groan checked him at this point, but he recovered himself.
+&ldquo;First, however,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;I propose, with your
+permission, to say a word on the&mdash;the great question of the day&mdash;if I
+may call it so. It is to the food of the people I refer!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paused for cheers, under cover of which Banfield murmured to his neighbor
+that Hatton was set now for half an hour. He had yet to learn that open-air
+meetings have their advantages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The food of the people!&rdquo; Hatton repeated, uplifted by the
+applause. &ldquo;It is to me a sacred thing! My friends, it is to me the Ark of
+the Covenant. The bread is the life. It should go straight, untaxed, untouched
+from the field of the farmer to the house of&mdash;of the widow and the
+orphan!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hear! Hear! Hear! Hear!&rdquo; Then, &ldquo;What about the
+miller?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It should go from where it is grown,&rdquo; Hatton repeated, &ldquo;to
+where it is needed; from where it is grown to the homes of the poor! And to the
+man,&rdquo; slipping easily and fatally into his Sunday vein, &ldquo;that lays
+his &rsquo;and upon it, let him be whom he may, I say with the Book,
+&lsquo;Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn!&rsquo; The Law,
+ay, and the Prophets&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Hatton&rsquo;s profits! Hands off them!&rdquo; roared the bass
+voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Low bread and high profits!&rdquo; shrieked the treble. &ldquo;Hatton
+and thirty per cent!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A gust of laughter swept all away for a time, and when the speaker could again
+get a hearing he had lost his thread and his temper. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a low
+insinuation!&rdquo; he cried, crimson in the face. &ldquo;A low insinuation! I
+scorn to answer it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Regular old Puseyite you be,&rdquo; shouted a new tormentor.
+&ldquo;Quoting Scripture.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hatton shook his fist at the crowd. &ldquo;A low, dirty insinuation!&rdquo; he
+cried. &ldquo;I scorn&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t scorn the profits!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen! Silence!&rdquo; Then, &ldquo;I shall not say another word!
+You&rsquo;re not worth it! You&rsquo;re below it! I call on Mr. Brierly of
+Manchester to propose a resolution.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And casting vengeful glances here and there where he fancied he detected an
+opponent, he stood back. He began for the first time to think the meeting a
+mistake. Basset, who had held that opinion from the first, scanned the crowd
+and had his misgivings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man from Manchester, however, had none. He stood forward, a smile on his
+broad face, his chest thrown forward, a something easy in his air, as became
+one who had confronted thousands and was not to be put out of countenance by a
+few hisses. He waited good-humoredly for silence. Nor could he see that, behind
+the cart, there had been gathering for some time a band of men of a different
+air from those who faced the platform. These men were still coming up by twos
+and threes, issuing from side-streets; men clad in homespun and with ruddy
+faces, men in smocked frocks, men in velveteens; a few with belcher
+neckerchiefs and slouched felts, whom their mothers would not have known. When
+Brierly raised his hand and opened his mouth there were over two score of these
+men&mdash;and they were still coming up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Brierly was unaware of them, and, complacent and confident of the effect he
+would produce, he opened his mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; he began. His voice, strong and musical, reached the
+edge of the meeting. &ldquo;Gentlemen, free electors! And I tell you straight
+no man is free, no man had ought to be free&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boom! and again, Boom! Boom! Not four paces behind him a drum rolled heavily,
+drowning his voice. He stopped, his mouth open; for an instant surprise held
+the crowd also. Then laughter swept the meeting and supplied a treble to the
+drum&rsquo;s persistent bass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And still the drum went on, Boom! Boom! amid cheers, yells, laughter. Then, as
+suddenly as it had started, it stopped. More slowly, the hurrahs, yells,
+laughter, died down, the laughter the last to fail, for not only had the big
+man&rsquo;s face of surprise tickled the crowd, but the drum had so nicely
+taken the pitch of his voice that the interruption seemed even to his friends a
+joke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seized the opportunity, but defiance not complacency was now his note.
+&ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s funny, but you don&rsquo;t
+drum me down, let me tell you! You don&rsquo;t drum me down! What I said
+I&rsquo;m going to say again, and shame the devil and the landlords! Free
+men&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he did not say it. Boom, boom, rolled the drum, drowning his voice beyond
+hope. And this time, with the fourth stroke, a couple of fifes struck into a
+sprightly measure, and the next moment three score lively voices were roaring:
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+You&rsquo;ve here the little Peeler,
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+Out of place he will not go!
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+But to keep it, don&rsquo;t he turn about
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+And jump Jim Crow!
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+&nbsp;
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+But to keep it see him turn about
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+And jump Jim Crow!
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+Turn about, and wheel about
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+And do just so!
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+&nbsp;
+</p>
+
+<p class="t8">
+
+<i>Chorus</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+&nbsp;
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+The only dance Sir Robert knows
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+Is Jump Jim Crow!
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+The only dance Sir Robert knows
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+Is Jump Jim Crow!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+For a verse or two the singers had it their own way. Then the band of the
+meeting struck in with &ldquo;See, the Conquering Hero Comes!&rdquo; and as the
+airs clashed in discord, the stalwarts of the two parties clashed also in
+furious struggle. In a twinkling and as by magic the scene changed. Women,
+children, lads, fled every way, screaming and falling. Shrieks of alarm routed
+laughter. The crowd swayed stormily, flowed this way, ebbed that way. The
+clatter of staves on clubs rang above oaths and shouts of defiance, as the
+Yellows made a rush for the drum. Men were down, men were trampled on, men
+strove to scale the cart, others strove to descend from it. But to descend from
+it was to descend into a mêlée of random fists and falling sticks, and the man
+from Manchester bellowed to stand fast; while Hatton shouted to &ldquo;clear
+out these rogues,&rdquo; and Banfield called on his men to charge. Basset alone
+stood silent, measuring the conflict with his eyes. With an odd exultation he
+felt his spirits rise to meet the need.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He saw quickly that the orange favors were outnumbered, and were giving way;
+and almost as quickly that, so far as mischief was meant, it was aimed at the
+Manchester man. He was a stranger, he was the delegate of the League, he was a
+marked man. Already there were cries to duck him. Basset tapped Banfield on the
+shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll not touch us,&rdquo; he shouted in the man&rsquo;s ear,
+&ldquo;but we must get Brierly away. There&rsquo;s Pritchard&rsquo;s house
+opposite. We must fight our way to it. Pass the word!&rdquo; Then to Brierly,
+&ldquo;Mr. Brierly, we must get you away. There&rsquo;s a gang here means
+mischief.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let them come on!&rdquo; cried the Manchester man, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not
+afraid.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, but I am,&rdquo; Basset replied. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re responsible, and
+we&rsquo;ll not have you hurt here. Down all!&rdquo; he cried raising his
+voice, as he saw the band whom he had already marked, pressing up to the cart
+through the mêlée&mdash;they moved with the precision of a disciplined force,
+and most of their faces were muffled. &ldquo;Down all!&rdquo; he shouted.
+&ldquo;Yellows to the rescue! Down before they upset us!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The leaders scrambled out of the cart, some panic-stricken, some enjoying the
+scuffle. They were only just in time. The Yellows were in flight, amid yells
+and laughter, and before the last of the platform was over the side, the cart
+was tipped up by a dozen sturdy arms. Hatton and another were thrown down, but
+a knot of their men, the last with fight in them, rallied to the call, plucked
+the two to their feet, and, striking out manfully, covered the rear of the
+retreating force.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men with the belcher neckerchiefs pressed on silently, brandishing their
+clubs, and twice with cries of &ldquo;Down him! Down him!&rdquo; made a rush
+for Brierly, striking at him over the shoulders of his companions. But it was
+plain that the assailants shrank from coming to blows with the local magnates;
+and Basset seeing this handed Brierly over to an older man, and himself fell
+back to cover the retreat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fair play, men,&rdquo; he cried, good humoredly. And he laughed in their
+faces as he fell back before them. &ldquo;Fair play! You&rsquo;re too many for
+us to-day, but wait till the polling-day!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They hooted him. &ldquo;Yah! Yah!&rdquo; they cried. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d ruin
+the land that bred you! You didn&rsquo;t ought to be there!&rdquo; &ldquo;Give
+us that fustian rascal! We&rsquo;ll club him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who makes cloth o&rsquo; devil&rsquo;s dust?&rdquo; yelled another.
+&ldquo;Yah! You d&mdash;d cotton-spawn!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset laughed in their faces, but he was not sorry when the friendly doorway
+received his party. The country gang, satisfied with their victory, began to
+fall back after breaking a dozen panes of glass; and the panting and
+discomfited Yellows, thronging the passage and pulling their coats into shape,
+were free to exchange condolences or recriminations as they pleased. More than
+one had been against the open-air meeting, and Hatton, a sorry figure, hatless,
+and with a sprained knee, was not likely to hear the end of it. Two or three
+had black eyes, one had lost two teeth, another his hat, and Brierly his
+note-book.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But almost before a word had been exchanged, a man pushed his way among them.
+He had slipped into the house by the back way. &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake,
+gentlemen,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;get the constable, or there&rsquo;ll be
+murder!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; asked a dozen voices.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve got Ben Bosham, half a hundred of them! They&rsquo;re away
+to the canal with him. They&rsquo;re that mad with him they&rsquo;ll drown
+him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So far Basset had treated the affair as a joke. But Bosham&rsquo;s plight in
+the hands of a mob of angry farmers seemed more than a joke. Murder might
+really be done. He snatched a thick stick from a corner&mdash;he had been
+hitherto unarmed&mdash;and raised his voice. &ldquo;Mr. Banfield,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;go to Stubbs and tell him what is doing! He can control them if
+any one can. And do some of you, gentlemen, come with me! We must get him from
+them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But we&rsquo;re not enough,&rdquo; a man protested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The man must not be murdered,&rdquo; Basset replied. &ldquo;Come,
+gentlemen, they&rsquo;ll not dare to touch us who know them, and we&rsquo;ve
+the law with us! Come on!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well done, Squire!&rdquo; cried Brierly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a
+man!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but I&rsquo;m not man enough to take you!&rdquo; Basset retorted.
+&ldquo;You stay here, please!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap34"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV<br/>
+BY THE CANAL</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was noon on that day, the day of the meeting at Riddsley, and Mary was
+sitting in the parlor at the Gatehouse. She was stooping over the fire with her
+eyes on the embers. The old hound lay beside her with his muzzle resting on her
+shoe, and Mrs. Toft, solidly poised on her feet, on the farther side of the
+table, rolled her apron about her arms and considered the pair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s given us all a rare shock,&rdquo; she said as she marked the
+girl&rsquo;s listless pose, &ldquo;the poor Master&rsquo;s death! That sudden
+and queer, too! I don&rsquo;t know that I&rsquo;m better for it, myself, and
+Toft goes up and down like a toad under a harrow, he&rsquo;s that restless! For
+&rsquo;Truria, she&rsquo;s fairly mazed. Her body&rsquo;s here and her thoughts
+are lord knows where. Toft, he seems to think something will come of her and
+her reverend&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope so,&rdquo; Mary said gently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But it&rsquo;s beyond me what Toft thinks these days. I asked him
+point&mdash;blank yesterday, &lsquo;Toft,&rsquo; I says, &lsquo;are we going or
+are we staying?&rsquo; And, bless the man, he looks at me as if he&rsquo;d eat
+me. &lsquo;Take time and you&rsquo;ll know,&rsquo; he says. &lsquo;But whose is
+the house?&rsquo; I asks, &lsquo;and who&rsquo;s to pay us?&rsquo; &lsquo;God
+knows!&rsquo; he says, and whiffs out of the room like one of these
+lucifers!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think that the house is Mr. Basset&rsquo;s,&rdquo; Mary explained,
+&ldquo;for the rest of the lease; that&rsquo;s about three years.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you&rsquo;ll not be staying, begging your pardon, Miss? I suppose
+you&rsquo;ll be naming the day soon? The Master&rsquo;s gone and his lordship
+will be wanting you somewhere else than here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Mrs. Toft,&rdquo; Mary said quietly. &ldquo;I suppose so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft looked for a blush and saw none, and she drew her conclusions. She
+went on another tack. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s like to be a fine rumpus in the town
+to-day,&rdquo; she said comfortably. &ldquo;The Squire&rsquo;s brought a
+foreigner down to trim their nails, and there&rsquo;s to be a wagon and
+speaking and such like foolishness at the Maypole. As if all the speeches of
+all the fools in Staffordshire would lower the quartern loaf! Anyway, if what
+Petch says is true, the farmers are that mad there&rsquo;s like to be lives
+lost!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary stooped and carefully put a piece of wood on the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And, to be sure, they&rsquo;re a rough lot,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft continued,
+dropping her apron. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not forgetting what happened to the
+reverend Colet, and I wish the young master safe out of it. It&rsquo;s all give
+and no take with him, too much for others and too little for himself! I&rsquo;m
+thinking if anybody&rsquo;s hurt he&rsquo;ll be there or thereabouts.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary turned. &ldquo;Is Petch&mdash;couldn&rsquo;t Petch go down
+and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;La, Miss,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft answered&mdash;the girl&rsquo;s face told her
+all that she wished to know&mdash;&ldquo;Petch don&rsquo;t dare, with his
+lordship on the other side! But, all said and done, I&rsquo;ll be bound the
+young master&rsquo;ll come through. It&rsquo;s a pity, though,&rdquo; she
+continued thoughtfully, as she began to dust the sideboard, &ldquo;as people
+don&rsquo;t know their own minds. There&rsquo;s the Squire, now. He&rsquo;s
+lived quiet and pleasant all these years and now he must dip his nose into this
+foolishness, same as if he dipped it into hot worts when Toft&rsquo;s
+a-brewing! I don&rsquo;t know what&rsquo;s come to him. He goes riding up to
+Blore these winter nights, twenty miles if it&rsquo;s a furlong, when this
+house is his! He&rsquo;s more like to take his death that way, if I&rsquo;m a
+judge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is he doing that?&rdquo; Mary asked in a small voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft returned. &ldquo;What else! Which reminds
+me, Miss, are those papers to go to the bank to-day?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;re looking that peaky, you&rsquo;d best take a jaunt
+with them. Why not? It&rsquo;s a fine day, and if there is a bit of a clash
+there&rsquo;s none will hurt you. Do you go, Miss, and get a little color in
+your cheeks. At worst, you&rsquo;ll bring back the news and I&rsquo;m sure
+we&rsquo;re that dead-alive and moped a little&rsquo;s a godsend!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I will go,&rdquo; Mary said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So when the gig, which was to convey the boxes to the bank, arrived about
+three, she mounted beside the driver. Here, were it only for an hour, was
+distraction and a postponement of that need to decide, to choose between two
+courses, which was crushing her under its weight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Mary was very unhappy. That moment which had proved to her that she did not
+love the man she was to marry and did love another, had stamped itself on her
+memory, never to be wiped from it. In Audley&rsquo;s company, and for a time
+after they had parted, the shock had numbed her mind and dulled her feelings.
+But once alone and free to think, she had grasped all that the discovery
+meant&mdash;to her and to him; and from that moment she had not known an
+instant of ease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw that she had made a terrible mistake, and one so vital that, if nothing
+could be done, it must wreck her happiness and another&rsquo;s happiness. And
+what was she to do? What ought she to do? In a moment of emotion, led astray by
+that love of love which is natural to women, and something swayed&mdash;so she
+told herself in scorn&mdash;by
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem3">
+<p class="t0">
+Those glories of our blood and state,
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+which to women are not shadows, she had made this mistake, and now,
+self-tricked, she had only herself to blame if
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem3">
+<p class="t2">
+Sceptre and crown<br/>
+Were tumbled down
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+And in the dust were lesser made<br/>
+Than the poor crooked scythe and spade!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+But to see her folly did not avail. What was she to do?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ought she to tell the truth, however painful it might be, to the man whom she
+had deceived? Or ought she to go through with it, to do her duty and save him
+at least from hurt? Either way, she had wrecked her own craft, but she might
+still hope to save his. Or&mdash;might she hope? She was not certain even of
+this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was she to do? Hour after hour she asked herself the question, sometimes
+looking through the windows with eyes that saw nothing, at others pacing her
+room in a fever of anxiety. What was she to do? She could not decide. Now she
+thought one thing, now another. And time was passing. No wonder that she was
+glad even of the distraction of this journey to Riddsley that at another time
+had been so dull an adventure! It was, at least, a reprieve, a respite from the
+burden of decision.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She would not own, even to herself, that she had any other thought in going, or
+that anxiety had any part in her restlessness. From that side of the battle she
+turned her eyes with all the strength of her will. Her conduct had been that of
+a silly girl rather than that of a woman who had seen and suffered; but she was
+not light&mdash;and besides Basset was cured. She was only unfortunate, and
+desperately unhappy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they drove by the old Cross at the foot of the hill she averted her eyes.
+Surely it must have been in some other life that she had made it the object of
+a walk, and had told herself that she would never forget it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas, she had been right. She would never forget it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man who drove saw that her face matched her mourning, and he left her to
+her thoughts, so that hardly a word passed between them until they were close
+upon the outskirts of the town. Then the driver, to whom the dull winter
+landscape, the lines of willows, and the low water-logged fields, were no
+novelty, pricked up his ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dang me!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;they&rsquo;ve started! There&rsquo;s a
+fine rumpus in the town. Do you hear &rsquo;em, Miss? That&rsquo;s a band
+I&rsquo;m thinking?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope no one will be hurt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man winked at his horse. &ldquo;None of the right side, Miss,&rdquo; he
+said slyly. &ldquo;But it might be a hanging, front o&rsquo; Stafford gaol, by
+the roar! I met a tidy lot going in as I came out, a right tidy lot! I&rsquo;m
+blest,&rdquo; after listening a moment, &ldquo;if they&rsquo;re not coming this
+way!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope they won&rsquo;t do anything to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;La, Miss,&rdquo; the man answered, misreading her anxiety and
+interrupting her, &ldquo;they&rsquo;ll never touch us. And for the old nag,
+he&rsquo;s yeomanry. He&rsquo;d not start if he met a mile o&rsquo;
+funerals!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certainly the noise was growing. But the lift of the canal bridge and bank,
+which crossed the road a hundred yards before them, hid all of the town from
+them save a couple of church towers, some tiled roofs, and the brick gable of
+Hatton&rsquo;s Works. The man whipped up his horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Teach they Manchester chaps a trick!&rdquo; he muttered.
+&ldquo;Shouldn&rsquo;t wonder if there&rsquo;ll be work for the crowner out of
+this! Gee-up, old nag, let&rsquo;s see what&rsquo;s afoot! &rsquo;Pears to
+me,&rdquo; as the shouting grew plainer, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll be in at the death
+yet, Miss!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary winced at the word, but if the man feared that she would refuse to go on,
+he was mistaken. On the contrary, she looked eagerly to the front as the old
+horse, urged by the whip, took the rise of the bridge at a canter, and, having
+reached the crown, relapsed into an absent-minded walk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dang me!&rdquo; cried the driver, greatly excited, &ldquo;but they do
+mean business! It&rsquo;s in knee in neck with &rsquo;em! Never thought it
+would come to this. And who is&rsquo;t they&rsquo;ve got, Miss?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certainly there was something out of the common on foot. Moving to meet the
+gig, and filling the road from ditch to ditch, appeared a disorderly crowd of
+two or three hundred persons. Cheering, hooting, and brandishing sticks, they
+came on at something between a walk and a run, although in the heart of the
+mass there was a something that now and again checked the movement, and once
+brought it to a stand. When this happened the crowd eddied and flowed about the
+object in its centre and presently swept on again with the same hooting and
+laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in the laughter, as in the hooting, there was, after each of these pauses,
+a more savage note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; Mary cried, as the driver, scared by the sight,
+pulled up his horse. &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;D&mdash;n me,&rdquo; the man replied, forgetting his manners, &ldquo;if
+I don&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s Ben Bosham they&rsquo;ve got! It is Ben! And
+they&rsquo;re for ducking him! It&rsquo;s mortal deep by the bridge there, and
+s&rsquo;help me, if it&rsquo;s not ten to one they drown him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ben Bosham?&rdquo; Mary repeated. Then she recalled the name. She
+remembered what Mrs. Toft had said of him&mdash;that the man had a wife and
+would bring her to ruin. The crowd was not fifty yards from them now and was
+still coming on. To the left a track ran down to the towing-path and the canal,
+and already the leaders of the mob were swerving in that direction. As they did
+so&mdash;and were once more checked for a moment&mdash;Mary espied among them a
+man&rsquo;s bald head twisting this way and that, as he strove to escape. The
+man was struggling desperately, his clothes almost torn from his back, but he
+was helpless in the hands of a knot of stout fellows, and after a brief
+resistance he was hauled forcibly on. A hundred jeering voices rose about him,
+and a something cruel in the sound chilled Mary&rsquo;s blood. The dreary
+scene, the sluggish canal, the flat meadows, the rising mist, all pressed on
+her mind and deepened the note of tragedy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But on that she broke the spell. The blood in her spoke. She clutched the
+driver&rsquo;s arm and shook it. &ldquo;Go on!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Go on!
+Drive into them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man hesitated&mdash;he saw that the crowd was in no jesting mood. But the
+old horse felt the twitch on the reins and started, and having the slope with
+him, trotted gently forward as if the road were empty before him. The crowd
+waved and shouted, and cursed the driver. But the horse, thinking perhaps that
+this was some new form of parade, only cocked his ears and ambled on till he
+reached the foremost. Then a man seized the rein, jerked it, and stopped him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a moment Mary sprang down, heedless of the fact that she was one woman among
+a hundred men. She faced the crowd, her eyes bright with indignation.
+&ldquo;Let that man go,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Do you hear? Do you want to
+murder him?&rdquo; And, advancing a step, she laid her hand on Ben
+Bosham&rsquo;s ragged, filthy sleeve&mdash;he had been down more than once and
+been rolled in the mud. &ldquo;Let him go!&rdquo; she continued imperiously.
+&ldquo;Do you know who I am, you cowards? Let him go!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yah!&rdquo; shouted the crowd, and drowned her voice and pressed roughly
+about her, threatened her. One of the foremost asked her what she would do,
+another cried that she had best make herself scarce! Furious faces surrounded
+her, fists were shaken at her. But Mary was not daunted. &ldquo;If you
+don&rsquo;t let him go, I shall go to Lord Audley!&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a fool meddling in this!&rdquo; cried a voice.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;re only going to wash the devil!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will let him go!&rdquo; she replied, facing them all without fear
+and, advancing a step, she actually plucked the man from the hands that held
+him. &ldquo;I am Miss Audley! If you do not let him go&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;re only going to wash him, lady,&rdquo; whined one of the men
+who held him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all, lady!&rdquo; chimed in half-a-dozen. &ldquo;He wants
+it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Ben was not of that opinion, or he did not value cleanliness.
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;re going to drown me!&rdquo; he spluttered, his eyes wild.
+All the fight had been knocked out of him. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re paid to do it!
+They&rsquo;ll drown me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And sarve him right!&rdquo; shouted half-a-dozen at the rear of the
+crowd. &ldquo;Sarve him right, the devil!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They will not do it!&rdquo; Mary said firmly. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll not
+lay another hand on you. Get in! Get in here!&rdquo; And then to the crowd,
+&ldquo;For shame!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Stand back!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man was so shaken that he could not help himself, but she pushed, the
+driver pulled, and in a trice, before the mob had recovered from its
+astonishment, Ben was above their heads, on the seat of the gig&mdash;a
+blubbering, ragged, mud-caked figure with a white face and bleeding lips.
+&ldquo;Go on!&rdquo; Mary said in the same tone, and the gig moved forward, the
+old yeomanry horse tossing its head. She moved on beside it with her hand on
+the rail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mob let them pass, but closed in behind them, and after a pause began to
+jeer&mdash;a little in amusement, a little to cover its defeat. In a moment
+farce took the place of tragedy; the danger was over. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll tell
+your wife, Ben!&rdquo; screamed a youth, and the crowd laughed and followed.
+Other wits took their turn. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll want a new coat for the
+wedding, Ben!&rdquo; cried one. And now and again amid the laughter a sterner
+note survived. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll ha&rsquo; you yet, Ben!&rdquo; a man would
+cry. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re not out of the wood yet, Ben!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary&rsquo;s face burned, but she stuck to her post, plodding on beside the
+gig, and after this fashion the queer procession, heralded by a score of
+urchins crying the news, entered the streets of the town. On either side women
+thronged the doorways and steps, and while some cried, &ldquo;Bravo,
+Miss!&rdquo; others laughed and called to their neighbors to come out and see
+the sight. And still the crowd clung to the rear of the gig, and hooted and
+laughed and pretended to make forays on it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary had hoped to shake them off, but as they persisted in following and no
+relief came&mdash;for Basset and his rescue party had gone to the canal by
+another road&mdash;she saw nothing for it but to go on to Lord Audley&rsquo;s.
+With a curt word she made the man turn that way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crowd still attended, curious, amused. It had doubled its numbers, nay, had
+trebled them. There were friends as well as foes among them now, some of
+Hatton&rsquo;s men, some of Banfield&rsquo;s, yellow favors as well as blue. If
+Mary had known it, she might have set Ben down and not a hand would have been
+laid upon him. Even the leaders of the riot were now thankful that they had not
+carried the matter farther. Enough had been done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Mary did not know this. She thought that the man was still in peril. She
+did not dream of leaving him. And it was at the head of a crowd of three or
+four hundred of the riff-raff of Riddsley that she broke in upon the quiet of
+the suburban road in which The Butterflies stood. Tumultuously, followed by
+laughter and hooting and cheers, she swept along it with her train, and came to
+a halt before the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No house was ever more surprised. Mrs. Wilkinson&rsquo;s scared face peered
+above one blind, her sisters&rsquo; caps showed above another. Was it an
+accident? Was it a riot? Was it a Puseyite protest? What was it? Every servant,
+every neighbor, Lord Audley himself came to the windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary signed to the driver to help Ben down, and the moment the man&rsquo;s foot
+touched the ground she grasped his arm. With a burning face, but with her head
+in the air, she guided his stumbling footsteps through the gate and along the
+paved walk. They came together to the door. They went in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crowd formed up five deep along the railings, and waited in wondering
+silence to see what would happen. What would his lordship say? What would his
+lordship do? This was bringing the election to his doors with a vengeance, and
+there were not a few of the better sort who saw the fun of the situation.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap35"></a>CHAPTER XXXV<br/>
+MY LORD SPEAKS OUT</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mary had passed through twenty minutes of tense excitement. The risk had been
+slight, after the first moment of intervention, but she had not known this, and
+she was still trembling with indignation, a creature all fire and passion, when
+the door of The Butterflies opened to admit her. Leaving Ben Bosham on the
+threshold she lost not a moment, but with her story on her lips, hurried up the
+stairs, and on the landing came plump upon Lord Audley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the window he had seen something of what was afoot below. He had
+recognized Mary and the tattered Bosham, and he had read the riddle, grasped
+the facts, and cursed the busybody, all within thirty seconds. &ldquo;D&mdash;n
+it! this passes everything,&rdquo; he had muttered to himself as he turned from
+the window in disgust. &ldquo;This is altogether too much!&rdquo; And he had
+opened the door&mdash;ready also to open his mind to her!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What in the world is it?&rdquo; he asked. He held the door for her to
+enter. &ldquo;What has happened? I could not believe my eyes when I saw you in
+company with that wretched creature!&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;And all the
+tagrag and bobtail in the place behind you? What is it, Mary?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She felt the check, and the color, which excitement had brought to her cheeks,
+faded. But she thought that it was only that he did not understand, and,
+&ldquo;That wretched creature, as you call him,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;has
+just escaped from death. They were going to murder him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Murder him?&rdquo; Audley repeated. He raised his eyebrows.
+&ldquo;Murder him?&rdquo; coldly. &ldquo;My dear girl, don&rsquo;t be silly!
+Don&rsquo;t let yourself be carried away. You&rsquo;ve lost your head. And,
+pardon me for saying it, I am afraid have made a fool of yourself! And of
+me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But they were going to throw him into the canal!&rdquo; she protested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going to wash him!&rdquo; he replied cynically. &ldquo;And a good thing
+too! It&rsquo;s a pity they left the job undone. The man is a low, pestilent
+fellow!&rdquo; he continued severely, &ldquo;and obnoxious to me and to all
+decent people. The idea of bringing him, and that pleasant tail, to my
+house&mdash;my dear girl, it&rsquo;s absurd!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made no attempt to soften his tone or suppress his annoyance, and she stared
+at him in astonishment. Yet she still thought, or she strove to think, that he
+did not understand, and tried to make the facts clear. &ldquo;But you
+don&rsquo;t know what they were like,&rdquo; she protested. &ldquo;You were not
+there. They had torn the clothes from his back&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can see that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And he was so terrified that it was dreadful to see him! They were
+handling him brutally, horribly! And then I came up and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And lost your head!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I dare say you thought all
+this. But do you know anything about elections?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you ever see an election in progress before?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; he replied dryly. &ldquo;Well, if you had, you would
+know that brawls of this kind are common things, the commonest of things at
+such a time, and that sensible people turn their backs on them. You&rsquo;ve
+chosen to turn the farce into a tragedy, and in doing so you&rsquo;ve made
+yourself ridiculous&mdash;and me too!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you had seen them,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I do not think you would
+speak as you are speaking.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear girl,&rdquo; he replied, and shrugged his shoulders, &ldquo;I
+have seen many such things, many. But there is one thing I have never seen, and
+that is a man killed in an election squabble! The whole thing is
+childish&mdash;silly! The least knowledge of the world&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would have saved me from it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Exactly! Would have saved you from it!&rdquo; he answered austerely.
+&ldquo;And me from a very annoying incident! Peers have nothing to do with
+elections, as you ought to know; and to bring this mob of all sorts to my door
+as if the matter touched me, is to compromise me. It is past a joke!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary stared. She was trying to place herself. Certainly this was the room in
+which she had taken tea, and this was the man who had welcomed her, who had
+hung over her, whose eyes had paid her homage, who had foreseen her least want,
+who had lapped her in observance. This was the man and this the room, and there
+was the chair in which good Mrs. Wilkinson had sat and beamed on her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there was a change somewhere; and the change was in the man. Could it mean
+that he, too, had made a mistake and now recognized it? That he, too, had found
+that he did not love? But in that case this was not the way to confess an
+error. His tone, his manner, which held no respect for the woman and no
+softness for the sweetheart, were far from the tone of one in the wrong. On the
+contrary, they presented a side of him which had been hitherto hidden from her;
+a phase of the strength that she had admired, which shocked her even while, as
+deep calls to deep, it roused her pride. She remembered that she was his
+betrothed, and that he had wooed her, he had chosen her. And on slight
+provocation he spoke to her in this strain!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sought the clue, she fancied that she held it, and from this moment she was
+on her guard. She was quiet, but there was a smouldering fire in her eyes.
+&ldquo;Perhaps I was wrong,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I have had little
+experience of these things. But are not you, on your side, making too much of
+this? Too much of a very small, a very natural mistake? Isn&rsquo;t it a trifle
+after all?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not so much of a trifle as you think!&rdquo; he retorted. &ldquo;A man
+in my position has to follow a certain line of conduct. A girl in yours should
+be careful to guide herself by my views. Instead, out of a foolish
+sentimentality, you run directly counter to them! It is too late to consider
+your relation to me when the harm is done, my dear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps we have neither of us considered the relation quite
+enough?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not sure that we have.&rdquo; And again, &ldquo;I am not sure,
+Mary, that we have,&rdquo; he repeated more soberly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She knew what he meant now&mdash;knew what was in his mind almost as clearly as
+if, instead of grasping his conclusion, she had been a party to his reasons.
+And she closed her lips, a spot of color in each cheek. In other circumstances
+she would have taken on herself a full, nay, the main share, of the blame. She
+would have been quick to admit that she, too, had made a mistake, and that no
+harm was done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But his manner opened her eyes to many things that had been a puzzle to her.
+Thought is swift, and in a flash her mind had travelled over the whole course
+of their engagement, had recalled his long absence, the chill of his letters,
+the infrequency of his visits; and she saw by that light that this was no
+sudden shift, but an occasion sought and seized. Therefore she would not help
+him. She at least had been honest, she at least had been in earnest. She had
+tricked, not him only, but herself!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She closed her lips and waited, therefore. And he, knowing that he had now
+burned his boats, had to go on. &ldquo;I am not sure that we did think enough
+about it?&rdquo; he said doggedly. &ldquo;I have suspected for some time that I
+acted hastily in&mdash;in asking you to be my wife, Mary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. And what has happened to-day, proving that we look at things so
+differently, has confirmed my suspicion. It has convinced me&mdash;&rdquo; he
+looked down at his table, avoiding her eyes, but continued
+firmly&mdash;&ldquo;that we are not suited to one another. The wife of a man,
+placed as I am, should have an idea of values, a certain reserve, that comes of
+a knowledge of the world; above all, no sentimental notions such as lead to
+mistakes like this.&rdquo; He indicated the street by a gesture. &ldquo;If I
+was mistaken a while ago in listening to my feelings rather than to my
+prudence, if I gave you credit for knowledge which you had had no means of
+gaining, I wronged you, Mary, and I am sorry for it. But I should be doing you
+a far greater wrong if I remained silent now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean,&rdquo; she asked in a low voice, &ldquo;that you wish it to
+be at an end between us? That you wish to&mdash;to throw me over?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled awry. &ldquo;That is an unpleasant way of putting it, isn&rsquo;t
+it?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;However, I am in the wrong, and I have no right to
+quarrel with a word. I do think that to break off our engagement at once is the
+best and wisest thing for both of us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How long have you felt this?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For some time,&rdquo; he replied, measuring his words, &ldquo;I have
+been coming slowly&mdash;to that conclusion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That I am not fitted to be your wife?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you like to put it so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then her anger, hitherto kept under, flamed up. &ldquo;Then what right,&rdquo;
+she cried, &ldquo;if that was in your mind, had you to treat me as you treated
+me at Beaudelays&mdash;in the garden? What right had you to kiss me? Rather,
+what right had you to insult me? For it was an insult&mdash;it was an insult,
+if you were not going to marry me! Don&rsquo;t you know, sir, that it was vile?
+That it was unforgivable?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had never looked more handsome, never more attractive than at this moment.
+The day was failing, but the glow of the fire fell on her face, and on her eyes
+sparkling with anger. He took in the picture, he owned her charm, he even came
+near to repenting. But it was too late, and &ldquo;It may have been
+vile&mdash;and you may not forgive it,&rdquo; he answered hardily, &ldquo;but
+I&rsquo;d do it again, my dear, on the same provocation!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You would&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would do it again,&rdquo; he repeated coolly. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you
+know that you are handsome enough to turn any man&rsquo;s head? And what is a
+kiss after all? We are cousins. If you were not such a prude, I would kiss you
+now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was furiously angry&mdash;or she fancied that she was. But it may be that,
+deep down in her woman&rsquo;s mind, she was not truly angry. And, indeed, how
+could she be angry when in her heart a little bird was beginning to
+sing&mdash;was telling her that she was free, that presently this cloud would
+be behind her, and that the sky would be blue? Already the message was making
+itself heard, already she was finding it hard to keep up appearances, to frown
+upon him and play her part.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet she flashed out at him. Was he not going too fast, was he not riding off
+too lightly? &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;You dare to say that! Even
+while you break off with me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But his selfish, masterful nature had now the upper hand. He had eaten his leek
+and he was anxious to be done with it. &ldquo;And what then?&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;I believe that you know that I am right. I believe that you know that we
+are not suited to one another.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you think I will let you go at a word?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you will let me go,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;because you are not a
+fool, Mary. You know as well as I do that you might be &lsquo;my lady&rsquo; at
+too high a price. I&rsquo;m not the most manageable of men. I&rsquo;d make a
+decent husband, all being well. But I&rsquo;m not meek and I&rsquo;d make a
+very unhandy husband <i>malgré moi</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The threat exasperated her. &ldquo;I know this at least,&rdquo; she retorted,
+&ldquo;that I would not marry you now, if you were twenty times my lord! You
+have behaved meanly, and I believe falsely! Not to-day! You are speaking the
+truth to-day. But I believe that from the start you had this in your mind, that
+you foresaw this, and were careful not to commit yourself too publicly! What I
+don&rsquo;t understand is why you ever asked me to be your wife&mdash;at
+all?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look in the glass!&rdquo; he answered impudently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She put that aside. &ldquo;But I suppose that you had a reason!&rdquo; she
+returned. &ldquo;That you loved me, that you felt for me anything worthy of the
+name of love is impossible! For the rest, let me tell you this! If I ever felt
+thankful for anything I am thankful for the chance that brought me to your
+house to-day&mdash;and brought me to the truth!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Anything more to say?&rdquo; he asked flippantly. The way she was taking
+it suited him better than if she had wept and appealed. And then she was so
+confoundedly good-looking in her tantrums!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing more,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I think that we understand one
+another now. At any rate, I understand you. Perhaps you will kindly see if I
+can leave the house without annoyance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked into the street. Dusk had fallen, the lamplighter was going his
+rounds. Of the crowd that had attended Mary to the house no more than a handful
+remained; the nipping air, the attractions of free beer, the sound of the
+muffin-bell, had drawn away the rest. The driver of the gig was moving to and
+fro, now looking disconsolately at the windows, now beating his fingers on his
+chest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you can leave with safety,&rdquo; Audley said with irony.
+&ldquo;I will see you downstairs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not trouble you,&rdquo; she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, surely, we may still be friends?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked him in the face. &ldquo;We need not be enemies,&rdquo; she answered.
+&ldquo;And, perhaps, some day I may be able to think more kindly of you. If
+that day comes I will tell you. Good-bye.&rdquo; She went out without touching
+his hand. She went down the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drove through the dusky, dimly-lighted streets in a kind of dream, seeing
+all things through a pleasant haze. The bank was closed and to deliver up her
+papers she had to go into the bank-house. The glimpse she had of the cheerful
+parlor, of the manager&rsquo;s wife, of his two children playing the Royal Game
+of Goose at a round table, enchanted her. Presently she was driving again
+through the darkling streets, passing the Maypole, passing the quaint,
+low-browed shops, lit only by an oil lamp or a couple of candles. The Audley
+Arms, the Packhorse, the Portcullis, were all alight and buzzing with the
+voices of those who fought their battles over again or laid bets on this
+candidate or that. What the speaker had said to Lawyer Stubbs and what Lawyer
+Stubbs had said to the speaker, what the &ldquo;Duke&rdquo; thought, who would
+have to pay for the damage, and the odds the stout farmer would give that wheat
+wouldn&rsquo;t be forty shillings a quarter this day twelvemonth if the Repeal
+passed&mdash;scraps of these and the like poured from the doorways as she drove
+by.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All fell in delightfully with her mood and filled her with a sense of
+well-being. Even when the streets lay behind her, and the driver hunched his
+shoulders to meet the damp night-fog and the dreary stretch that lay beyond the
+canal-bridge, Mary found the darkness pleasant and the chill no more than
+bracing. For what were that night, that chill beside the numbing grip from
+which she had just&mdash;oh, thing miraculous!&mdash;escaped! Beside the
+fetters that had been lifted from her within the last hour! O foolish girl, O
+ineffable idiot, to have ever fancied that she loved that man!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No, for her it was a charming night! The owl that, far away towards the Great
+House, hooted dolefully above the woods&mdash;no nightingale had been more
+tuneful. Ben Bosham&mdash;she laughed, thinking of his plight&mdash;blessings
+on his bare, bald head and his ragged shoulders! The old horse plodding on,
+with the hill that mounts to the Gatehouse sadly on his mind&mdash;he should
+have oats, if oats there were in the Gatehouse stables! He should have oats in
+plenty, or what he would if oats failed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you give him when he&rsquo;s tired?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; the driver replied with diplomacy, &ldquo;times a quart of
+ale, Miss. He&rsquo;ll take it like a Christian.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then a quart of ale he shall have to-night!&rdquo; she said with a happy
+laugh. &ldquo;And you shall have one, too, Simonds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her mood held to the end, so that before she was out of her wraps, Mrs. Toft
+was aware of the change in her. &ldquo;Why, Miss,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you
+look like another creature! It isn&rsquo;t the bank, I&rsquo;ll be bound, has
+put that color in your cheeks!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No!&rdquo; Mary answered, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had an adventure, Mrs. Toft.
+And briefly she told the tale of Ben Bosham&rsquo;s plight and of her gallant
+rescue. She began herself to see the comic side of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He always was a fool, was Ben!&rdquo; Mrs. Toft commented. &ldquo;And
+that,&rdquo; she continued shrewdly, &ldquo;was how you come to see his
+lordship was it, Miss?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How did you know I saw him?&rdquo; Mary asked in surprise. &ldquo;But
+you&rsquo;re right, I did.&rdquo; Then, as she entered the parlor,
+&ldquo;Perhaps I&rsquo;d better tell you, Mrs. Toft,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;that the engagement between my cousin and myself is at an end. You were
+one of the very few who knew of it, and so I tell you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft showed no surprise. &ldquo;Indeed, Miss,&rdquo; she answered,
+stooping to the hearth to light the candles with a piece of wood. &ldquo;Well,
+one thing&rsquo;s certain, and many a time my mother&rsquo;s drummed it into
+me, &lsquo;Better a plain shoe than one that pinches!&rsquo; And again,
+&lsquo;Better live at the bottom of the hill than the top,&rsquo; she&rsquo;d
+say. &lsquo;You see less but you believe more.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither she nor Mary saw Toft. But Toft, who had entered the hall a moment
+before, was within hearing, and Mary&rsquo;s statement, so coolly received by
+his wife, had an extraordinary effect on the man-servant. He stood an instant,
+his lank figure motionless. Then he opened the door beside him, slipped out
+into the chill and the darkness, and silently, but with extravagant gestures,
+he broke into a dance, now waving his thin arms in the air, now stooping with
+his hands locked between his knees. Whether he thus found vent for joy or grief
+was a secret which he kept to himself.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap36"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI<br/>
+THE RIDDSLEY ELECTION</h2>
+
+<p>
+The riot at Riddsley found its way into the London Press, and gained for the
+contest a certain amount of notoriety. The <i>Morning Chronicle</i> pointed out
+that the election had been provoked by the Protectionists in a constituency in
+Sir Robert&rsquo;s own country; and the writer inferred that, foreseeing
+defeat, the party of the land were now resorting to violence. The <i>Morning
+Herald</i> rejoiced that there were still places which would not put up with
+the incursions of the Manchester League, &ldquo;the most knavish, pestilent
+body of men that ever plagued this or any country!&rdquo; In the House, where
+the tempest of the Repeal debate already raged, and the air was charged with
+the stern invective of Disraeli, or pulsed to the cheering of Peel&rsquo;s
+supporters&mdash;even here men discussed the election at Riddsley, considered
+it a clue to the feeling in the country, and on the one side hardly dared to
+hope, on the other refused to fear. What? cried the Land Party. Be defeated in
+an agricultural borough? Never!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a brief time, then, the contest filled the public eye and presented itself
+as a thing of more than common interest. Those who knew little weighed the
+names and the past of the candidates; those behind the scenes whispered of Lord
+Audley. Whips gave thought to him, and that one to whom his lordship was
+pledged, wrote graciously, hinting at the pleasant things that might happen if
+all went well, and the present winter turned to a summer of fruition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas, Audley felt that the Whip&rsquo;s summer, and
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+The friendly beckon towards Downing Street,<br/>
+Which a Premier gives to one who wishes<br/>
+To taste of the Treasury loaves and fishes,
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+were very remote, whereas, if the other Whip, he who had the honors under his
+hand and the places in his power, had written so! But that cursed Stubbs had
+blocked his play in that direction by asserting that it was hopeless, though
+Audley himself began at this late hour to suspect that it had not been
+hopeless! That it had been far from hopeless!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his chagrin my lord tore the Whip&rsquo;s letter across and across, and then
+prudently gummed it together again and locked it away. Certainly the odds were
+long that it would never be honored; on the one side stood Peel with
+four-fifths of his Cabinet and half his party, with all the Whigs, all the
+Radicals, all the League, and the Big Loaf: on the other stood the landed
+interest! Just the landed interest led by Lord George Bentinck, handsome and
+debonair, the darling of the Turf, the owner of Crucifix; but hitherto a silent
+member, and one at whom, as a leader, the world gaped. Only, behind this Joseph
+there lurked a Benjamin, one whose barbed shafts were many a time to clear the
+field. The lists were open, the lances were levelled, the slogan of Free Trade
+was met by the cry of &ldquo;The Land and the Constitution!&rdquo; and while
+old friendships were torn asunder and old allies cut adrift, town and country,
+forge and field, met in a furious grapple that promised to be final.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If, amid the dust of such a conflict, the riot at Riddsley obtained a passing
+notice in London, intense it may be believed was the excitement which it caused
+in the borough. Hatton and Banfield and their men went about, vowing to take
+vengeance at the hustings. The mayor went about, swearing in constables. The
+farmers and their allies went about grinning. Fights took place nightly behind
+the Packhorse and the Portcullis, while very old ladies, peering over their
+blinds, talked of the French Revolution, and very young ones thought that the
+Militia, adequately officered, should be brought into the town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spirit of which Basset had given proof was blazoned about; and he gained in
+another way. He was one of those to whom a spice of danger is a fillip, whom a
+little peril shakes out of themselves. On the day after the riot he came upon a
+score of people collected round a Cheap Jack in the market. The man presently
+closed his patter and his stall, and, on the impulse of the moment, Basset took
+his place and made the crowd a speech as short as it was simple. He told them
+that in his opinion it was impossible to keep food out of the country by a tax
+while Ireland was threatened by famine. Secondly, that the sacrifice which Peel
+was making of his party, his reputation, and his consistency was warrant that
+in his view the change was urgently needed. Thirdly, he asked them whether the
+farmers were so prosperous and the laborers so comfortable that change must be
+for the worse. But here he came on delicate ground; murmurs arose and some
+hisses, and he broke off good-humoredly, thanked the crowd, which had grown to
+a good size, and, stepping down from his barrow, he walked away amid plaudits.
+The thing was reported, and though the Tories sneered at it as a
+hole-and-corner meeting, Farthingale held another view. He told Mr. Stubbs that
+it was a neat thing&mdash;very well done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs grunted. &ldquo;Will it change a vote?&rdquo; he growled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Change a&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will it change a vote, man? You heard what I said.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord, no!&rdquo; the clerk answered. &ldquo;I never said it
+would!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then why trouble about it?&rdquo; Stubbs retorted fretfully. &ldquo;Get
+on with those poll-cards! I don&rsquo;t pay you a guinea a day at election time
+to praise monkey-tricks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Stubbs was not happy. He knew, indeed, that the breaking-up of the open-air
+meeting had been fairly successful. It had brought back two votes to the fold;
+and he calculated that the seat would be held. But by a majority how narrow,
+how fallen, how discreditable! He blushed to think of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And other things made him unhappy. Those who are politicians by trade are like
+cardplayers, who play for the game&rsquo;s sake; one game lost, they cut and
+deal as keenly as before. Behind the politicians, however, are a few to whom
+the stake is something; and of these was Stubbs. To him, as we know, the
+Corn-Tax was no mere toll, but the protection of agriculture, the well-head
+that guarded the pure waters, the fence that saved from smoke and steam, from
+slag-heap and brickfield, the smiling face of England. For him, the home of his
+fathers, the land of field and stubble, of plough and pinfold, was at stake;
+nay, was passing, wasted by men who thought in percentages and saw no farther
+than the columns of their ledgers. To that England of his memory&mdash;whether
+it had ever existed in fact or no&mdash;a hundred associations bound the
+lawyer; things tender and things true; quaint memories of his first
+turkey&rsquo;s nest, of the last load of the harvest, of the loosened plough
+horses straying to the water at the close of day, of the flat paintings of the
+Durham Ox and the Coke Ram that adorned the farm parlor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the men who bade him look up and see that in his Elysium the farmer
+struggled and the laborer starved, his answer was short. &ldquo;Better ten
+shillings and fresh air, than shoddy dust and a pound a week!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the country as a whole&mdash;and as time went on&mdash;he despaired of
+success. But he found Lord George a leader after his own heart, and many an
+evening he pored over the long paragraphs of his long-winded speeches. When he
+heard that the owner of Crucifix had dismissed his trainers, released his
+jockeys, sold his stud, and turned his back on the turf, he could have wept.
+Lord George and Stubbs, indeed, were the true country party. For Lord
+George&rsquo;s sake Stubbs was prepared to taken even the &ldquo;Jew boy&rdquo;
+to his heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to the potato famine, he did not believe a word of it. He called the
+Premier, &ldquo;Potato Peel!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rains of February are apt to damp enthusiasm, but before eleven
+o&rsquo;clock on the nomination day Riddsley was like a hive of bees about to
+swarm. The throng in the streets was such that Mottisfont could hardly pass
+through it. He made his entry into the borough on horseback at the head of a
+hundred mounted farmers wearing blue sashes and favors. Before him reeled a
+huge banner upheld by eight men and bearing on one side the legend, &ldquo;The
+Land and the Constitution,&rdquo; on the other, &ldquo;Mottisfont the
+Farmers&rsquo; Friend!&rdquo; Behind the horsemen, and surrounded by a guard of
+laborers in smocked frocks, moved a plough mounted on a wain and drawn by eight
+farm horses. Flags with &ldquo;Speed the Plough,&rdquo; &ldquo;England&rsquo;s
+Share is England&rsquo;s Fare,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Peace and Plenty,&rdquo;
+streamed from it. Three bands of varying degrees of badness found their places
+where they could, and thumped and blared against one another until the panes
+rattled in the deafened streets. The butchers, with marrow-bones and cleavers,
+brought up the rear, and in comparison were tuneful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had Basset got his way, he would have dispensed with pomp and walked the
+hundred yards which separated his quarters at the Swan from the hustings. But
+he was told that this would never do. What would the landlord of the Swan say,
+who kept postchaises? And the postboys who looked for a golden tip? And the men
+who would hand him in and hand him out, and the men who would open the door and
+shut the door, and the men who would raise the steps and lower the steps, who
+would all look for the same tip? So, perforce, he drove in state to the Town
+Hall&mdash;before which the hustings stood&mdash;in a barouche and four
+accompanied by Banfield and Hatton and his agent. The rest of his Committee
+followed in postchaises. A bodyguard of &ldquo;hands&rdquo; escorted them, and
+they, too, had their bands&mdash;of equal badness&mdash;and their yellow
+banners with &ldquo;Down with the Corn Laws,&rdquo; &ldquo;Vote for Basset the
+Poor Man&rsquo;s Friend,&rdquo; and &ldquo;No Bread Taxes.&rdquo; The great and
+little loaf pranced in front of him on spears, and if his procession was not
+quite so fine or so large as his opponent&rsquo;s, it must be admitted that the
+blackguards of the town showed no preference and that he could boast about an
+equal number of the tagrag and bobtail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The left hand of the hustings was allotted to him, the right hand to
+Mottisfont, and by a little after eleven both parties had crammed and crushed,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+With blustering, bullying, and brow-beating,<br/>
+A little pummelling and maltreating,<br/>
+And elbowing, jostling and cajoling,
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+into their places in front of the platform, the bullies and truncheon-men being
+posted well to the fore, or craftily ranged where the frontiers met. The bands
+boomed and blared, the men huzzaed, the air shook, the banners waved, every
+window that looked out upon the seething mob was white with faces, every
+&rsquo;vantage-point was occupied. It was such a day and such a contest as
+Riddsley had never seen. The eyes of the country, it was felt, were upon it!
+Fights took place every five minutes, oaths and bets flew like hail over the
+heads of the crowd, coarse wit met coarser nicknames, and now and again shrieks
+varied the hubbub as the huge press of people, gathered from miles round,
+swayed under the impact of some vicious rush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hurrah! Hurrah! Mottisfont for ever! Basset! Basset and the Big Loaf!
+Basset! Basset! Hurrah! Mottisfont! Hurrah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, in a short-lived silence, &ldquo;Ten to one on Mottisfont! Three cheers
+for the Duke!&rdquo; and a roar of laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Or a hundred voices would raise
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+John Barley-corn, my Joe, John!<br/>
+When we were first acquaint!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+but never got beyond the first two lines, either because they were howled down
+or they knew no more of the words. The Peelites answered with their mournful,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+Child, is thy father dead?
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+Father is gone!
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+Why did they tax his bread?
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+God&rsquo;s will be done!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+or with the quicker,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+Oh, landlords&rsquo; devil take
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+Thy own elect I pray!
+</p>
+
+<p class="t0">
+Who taxed our cake, and took our cake,
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+And threw our cake away!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+On this would ensue a volley of personalities. &ldquo;What would you be without
+your starch, Hayward?&rdquo; &ldquo;How&rsquo;s your dad, Farthingale?&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Who whopped his wife last Saturday?&rdquo; &ldquo;Hurrah! Hurrah! Who
+said Potatoes?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For nearly an hour this went on, the blare of the bands, the uproar, the
+cheering, the abuse never ceasing. Then the town-crier appeared upon the vacant
+hustings. He rang his bell for silence and for a moment obtained it. On his
+heels entered, first the mayor and his assistants, then the candidates, the
+proposers, the seconders. Each, as he made his appearance, was greeted with a
+storm of groans, cheers, and cat-calls. Each put on to meet it such a show of
+ease as he could, some smiling, some affecting ignorance. The candidates and
+their supporters filed to either side, while the flustered mayor took his stand
+in the middle with the town clerk at his elbow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset, nearly at the end of his troubles, sought comfort in looking beyond the
+present moment. He feared that he was not likely to win, but he had done his
+duty, he had made his effort, and soon he would be free to repeat that effort
+on a smaller stage. Soon, these days, that in horror rivalled the middle
+passage of the slave trade, would be over, and if he were not elected he would
+be free to retire to Blore, and to spend days, lonely and sad indeed, but
+clean, in the improvement of his acres and his people. His eyes dwelt upon the
+sea of faces, and from time to time he smiled; but his mind was far away. He
+thought with horror of elections, and with loathing of the sordid round of
+flattery and handshaking, of bribery and intimidation from which he emerged.
+Thank God, the morrow would see the end! He would have done his best, and
+played his part. And it would be over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What the mayor said and what the town clerk said is of no importance, for no
+one heard them. The proposers, the seconders, the candidates, all spoke in dumb
+show. Basset dwelt briefly on the crisis in Ireland, the integrity of Peel, and
+the doubtful wisdom of taxing that which, to the poorest, was a necessity of
+life. If bread were cheaper all would have more to spend on other things and
+the farmer would have a wider market for his meat, his wool, and his cheese. It
+read well in the local paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But one man was heard. This was a man who was not expected to speak, whose
+creed it had ever been that speeches were useless, and whom tradition almost
+forbade to speak, for he was an agent. At the last moment, when a seconder for
+a formal motion was needed, he thrust himself forward to the astonishment of
+all. The same astonishment stilled the mob as they gazed on the well-known
+figure. For a minute or two, curiosity and the purpose in the man&rsquo;s face,
+held even his opponents silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man was Stubbs; and from the moment he showed himself it was plain that he
+was acting under the stress of great emotion. The very fuglemen forgot to
+interrupt him. They scented something out of the common.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have never spoken on the hustings in my life,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I
+speak now to warn you. I believe that you, the electors of Riddsley, are going
+to sell the birthright of health which you have received; and the heritage of
+freedom which this land has enjoyed for generations and on which the power of
+Bonaparte broke as on a rock. You think you are going to have cheap bread, and,
+maybe, you are! But at what a cost! Cheap bread is foreign bread. To you, the
+laborers, I say that foreign bread means that the fields you till will be laid
+to grass and you will go to work in Dudley and Walsall and Bury and Bolton, in
+mills and pits and smoke and dust! And your children will be dwarfed and
+wizened and puny! Foreign bread means that. And it means that the day will come
+when war will cut off your bread and you will starve; or the will of the
+foreigner who feeds you will cut it off&mdash;for he will be your master. I
+say, grow your own bread and eat your own bread, and you will be free men. Eat
+foreign bread and in time you will be slaves! No land that is fed by another
+land&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His last words were lost. Signals from furious principals roused the fuglemen,
+and he was howled down, and stood back ashamed of the impulse which had moved
+him and little less astonished than those about him. Young Mottisfont clapped
+him on the back and affected to make much of him. But even he hardly knew how
+to take it. Some said that Stubbs had had tears in his eyes, while the opposing
+agent whispered to his neighbor that the lawyer was breaking and would never
+handle another contest. Sober men shook their heads; agents should hardly be
+seen, much less heard!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Stubbs&rsquo;s words were marked, and when the bad times came thirty years
+later, aged farmers recalled them and thought over them. Nor were they without
+fruit at the time. For next morning when the poll opened, Basset&rsquo;s people
+suffered a shock. Two men on whom he had counted appeared and voted short and
+sharp for Mottisfont. Basset&rsquo;s agent asked them pleasantly if they were
+not making a mistake; and then less pleasantly had the Bribery Oath
+administered to them. But they stuck to their guns, the votes were recorded,
+and Mottisfont shook hands with them. Later in the day when the two were
+fuddled they denied that they had voted for Mottisfont. They had voted for old
+Stubbs&mdash;and they would do it again and fight any man who said to the
+contrary. Their desire in this direction was quickly met, and both, to the
+indignation of the Tories, were fined five shillings at the next petty
+sessions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whether this start gave the Protectionists a fillip or no, they were in great
+spirits, and Mottisfont was up and down shaking hands all the morning. At noon
+the figures as exhibited outside the Mottisfont Committee-room&mdash;amid
+tremendous cheering&mdash;were:
+</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left:20%">
+Mottisfont<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . </span>41<br/>
+Basset<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . . </span>30
+</p>
+
+<p class="continue">
+though Basset outside his Committee-room claimed one more. Soon after twelve
+Hatton brought up the two Boshams in his carriage, and Ben, recovered from his
+fright, flung his hat before him into the booth, danced a war-dance on the
+steps, and gave three cheers for Basset as he came down. Banfield brought up
+three more voters in his carriage and thence onward until one o&rsquo;clock the
+polling was rapid. The one o&rsquo;clock board showed:
+</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left:20%">
+Mottisfont<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . </span>60<br/>
+Basset<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . . </span>57
+</p>
+
+<p class="continue">
+with seventy votes to poll. The Mottisfont party began to look almost as blue
+as their favors, but Stubbs, returned to his senses, continued to read his
+newspaper in a closet behind the Committee-room, as if there were no contest
+within a hundred miles of Riddsley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the next three hours little was done. The poll-clerks sent out for pots
+of beer, the watchers drowsed, the candidates were invisible&mdash;some said
+that they had gone to dine with the mayor. The bludgeon-men and blackguards
+went home to sleep off their morning&rsquo;s drink, and to recruit themselves
+for the orgy of the Chairing. The crowd before the polling booth shrank to a
+knot of loafing lads and a stray dog. At four Mottisfont still held the lead
+with 64 to 61.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as the clock struck four the town awoke. Word went round that a message
+from Sir Robert Peel would be read outside Basset&rsquo;s Committee-room.
+Hearers were whipped up, and the message, having been read with much parade,
+was posted up through the town and as promptly pulled down. Animated by the
+message, and making as much of it as if it had not been held back for the
+purpose, the Peelites polled five-and-twenty votes in rapid succession, and at
+half-past four issued a huge placard with:
+</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left:20%">
+Basset<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . . </span>87<br/>
+Mottisfont<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . </span>83
+</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left:16%">Vote for Basset and the Big Loaf!
+</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left:28%">Basset wins!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Great was the enthusiasm, loud the cheering, vast the stir outside their
+Committee-room. The Big and the Little Loaf waltzed out on their poles. The
+placard, mounted as a banner, was entrusted to the two Boshams. The band was
+ready, a dozen flares were ready, the Committee were ready, all was ready for a
+last rally which might decide the one or two doubtful voters. All was ready,
+but where was Mr. Basset? Where was the candidate?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He could not be found, and great was the hubbub, vast the running to and fro.
+&ldquo;The Candidate? Where&rsquo;s the Candidate?&rdquo; One ran to the Swan,
+another to the polling-booth, a third to his agent&rsquo;s office. He could not
+be found. All that was known of him or could be learned was that a tall man,
+who looked like an undertaker, had stopped him near the polling-booth and had
+kept him in talk for some minutes. From that time he had been seen by no one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Foul play was talked of, and the search went on, but meantime the
+procession&mdash;the poll closed at half-past six&mdash;must start if it was to
+do any good. It did so, and with its flares, its swaying placard, its running
+riff-raff, now luridly thrown up by the lights, now lost in shadow, formed the
+most picturesque scene that the election had witnessed. The absence of the
+candidate was a drawback, and some shook their heads over it. But the more
+knowing put their tongues in their cheeks, aware that whether he were there or
+not, and whether they marched or stayed at home, neither side would be a vote
+the better!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At half&mdash;past five the figures were,
+</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left:20%">
+Basset<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . . </span>87<br/>
+Mottisfont<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . </span>86
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were still fourteen votes to poll, and on the face of things victory hung
+in the balance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But at that hour Stubbs moved. He laid down his newspaper, gave Farthingale an
+order, took up a slip of paper and his hat, and went by way of the darkest
+street to The Butterflies. He walked thoughtfully, with his chin on his breast,
+as if he had no great appetite for the interview before him. By the time he
+reached the house the poll stood at
+</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left:20%">
+Mottisfont<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . </span>96<br/>
+Basset<span style="letter-spacing:10pt"> . . . . </span>87
+</p>
+
+<p class="continue">
+And long and loud was the cheering, wild the triumph of the landed interest.
+The town was fuller than ever, for during the last hour the farmers and their
+men had trooped in, Brown Heath had sent its colliers, and a crowd filling
+every yard of space within eye-shot of the polling-booth greeted the news. To
+hell with Peel! Down with Cobden! Away with the League! Hurrah! Hurrah! Stubbs,
+had he been there, would have been carried shoulder-high. Old Hayward was
+lifted and carried, old Musters of the Audley Arms, one or two of the
+Committee. It was known that four votes only remained unpolled, so that
+Mottisfont&rsquo;s victory was secure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At The Butterflies, whither the cheering of the crowd came in gusts that rose
+and fell by turns, Stubbs nodded to the maid and went up the stairs
+unannounced. Audley was writing at a side-table facing the room. He looked up
+eagerly. &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; he said, putting down his quill. &ldquo;Is it
+over?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs laid the slip of paper before him. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not over, my
+lord,&rdquo; he answered soberly. &ldquo;But that is the result. I am sorry
+that it is no better.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley looked at the paper. &ldquo;Nine!&rdquo; he exclaimed. He looked at
+Stubbs, he looked again at the paper. &ldquo;Nine? Good G&mdash;d, man, you
+don&rsquo;t mean it? You can&rsquo;t mean it! You don&rsquo;t mean that that is
+the best we could do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We hold the seat, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold the seat!&rdquo; Audley replied, staring at him with furious eyes.
+&ldquo;Hold the seat? But I thought that it was a safe seat? I thought that it
+was a seat that couldn&rsquo;t be lost! When five, only five, votes would have
+cast it the other way! Why, man, you cannot have known anything about it! No
+more about it than the first man in the street!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a jot more!&rdquo; Audley repeated. He had been prepared for
+something like this, but the certainty that if he had cast his weight on the
+other side, the side that had sinecures and places and pensions, he would have
+turned the scale&mdash;this was too much for his temper. &ldquo;Nine!&rdquo; he
+rapped out with another oath. &ldquo;I can only think that the Election has
+been mismanaged! Grievously, grievously mismanaged, Mr. Stubbs!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If your lordship thinks so&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do!&rdquo; Audley retorted, his certainty that the man before him had
+thwarted his plans, carrying him farther than he intended. &ldquo;I do! Nine!
+Good G&mdash;d, man! When you assured me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whatever I assured your lordship,&rdquo; Stubbs said firmly, &ldquo;I
+believed. And&mdash;no, my lord, you must allow me to speak now&mdash;what I
+promised would have been borne out&mdash;fully borne out by the result in
+normal times. But I did not allow enough for the split in the party, nor for
+the wave of madness&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As you think it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And surely as your lordship also thinks it!&rdquo; Stubbs rejoined
+smartly, &ldquo;that has swept over the country! In these circumstances it is
+something to hold the seat, which a return to sanity will certainly assure to
+us at the next election.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The next election!&rdquo; Audley muttered scornfully. For the moment he
+was too angry to play a part or to drape his feelings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if your lordship is dissatisfied&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dissatisfied? I am d&mdash;nably dissatisfied.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then your lordship has the power,&rdquo; Stubbs said slowly, &ldquo;to
+dispense with my services.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know that, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if you do not think fit to take that step, my
+lord&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall consider it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another word or two and the deed had been done, for both men were too angry to
+fence. But before that last word was spoken Audley&rsquo;s man entered. He
+handed a card to his master and waited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley looked at the card longer than was necessary and under cover of the
+pause regained control of himself. &ldquo;Who brought this?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A messenger from the Swan, my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He broke off. Holding out the card for
+Stubbs to take, &ldquo;Do you know anything about this?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs returned the card. &ldquo;No, my lord,&rdquo; he said coldly. &ldquo;I
+know nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Business of great importance to me? D&mdash;n his impudence, what
+business important to me can he have?&rdquo; Audley muttered. Then, &ldquo;My
+compliments to Mr. Basset and I am leaving in the morning, but I shall be at
+home this evening at nine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The servant retired. Audley looked askance at his agent. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d
+better be here,&rdquo; he muttered ungraciously. &ldquo;We can settle what we
+were talking about later.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very good, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs answered. And nothing more being said,
+he took himself off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was not sorry that they had been interrupted. Much of his income and more of
+his importance sprang from the Audley agency, but rather than be treated as if
+he were a servant, he would surrender both&mdash;in his way he was a proud man.
+Still he did not want to give up either; and if time were given he thought that
+his lordship would think better of the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he returned to his office, choosing the quiet streets by which he had come,
+he had a glimpse, through an opening, of the distant Market-place. A sound of
+cheering, a glare of smoky light, a medley of leaping, running forms, a
+something uplifted above the crowd, moved across his line of vision. Almost as
+quickly it vanished, leaving only the reflection of retreating torches.
+&ldquo;Hurrah! Hurrah for Mottisfont! Hurrah!&rdquo; Still the cheering came
+faintly to his ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sighed. Riddsley had remained faithful-by nine! But he did not deceive
+himself. It was the writing on the wall. The Corn Laws were doomed, and with
+them much that he had loved, much that he cherished, much in which he believed.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap37"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII<br/>
+A TURN OF THE WHEEL</h2>
+
+<p>
+Audley was suspicious and ill at ease. Standing on the hearth-rug with his back
+to the fire, he fixed the visitor with his eyes, and with secret anxiety asked
+himself what he wanted. The possibility that Basset came to champion Mary had
+crossed his mind more than once; if that were so he would soon dispose of him!
+In the meantime he took civility for his cue, exchanged an easy word or two
+about the poll and the election, and between times nodded to Stubbs to be
+seated. Through all, his eyes were watchful and he missed nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I asked Mr. Stubbs to be here,&rdquo; he said when a minute or two had
+been spent in this by-play, &ldquo;as you spoke of business. You don&rsquo;t
+object?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; Basset replied. His face was grave. &ldquo;I should
+tell you at once, Audley,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;that my mission is not a
+pleasant one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other raised his eyebrows. &ldquo;You are sure that it concerns me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It certainly concerns you. Though, as things stand, not very materially.
+I knew nothing of the matter myself until three o&rsquo;clock to-day, and at
+first I doubted if it was my duty to communicate it. But the facts are known to
+a third person, they may be used to annoy you in the future, and though the
+task is unpleasant, I decided that I had no option.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley set his broad shoulders against the mantel-shelf. &ldquo;But if the
+facts don&rsquo;t affect me?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In a way they do. Not as they might under other circumstances. That is
+all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet you are making our hair stand on end! I confess you puzzle me.
+Well, let us have it. What is it all about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little time ago you recovered, if you remember, your Family
+Bible.&rdquo; &ldquo;Well? What of that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have just learned that the man did not hand over all that he had. He
+kept back&mdash;it now appears&mdash;certain papers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; Audley&rsquo;s voice was stern. &ldquo;Well, he has had his
+chance. This time, I can promise him a warrant will follow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps you will hear me out first?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; was the sharp reply. Audley&rsquo;s temper was getting the
+better of him. &ldquo;Last time, my dear fellow, you compounded with him; your
+motive an excellent one I don&rsquo;t doubt. But if he now thinks to get more
+money from me&mdash;and for other papers&mdash;I can promise him that he will
+see the inside of Stafford gaol. Besides, my good friend, you gave us to
+understand that he had surrendered all he had.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid I did, and I fear I was wrong. Why he deceived me, and has
+now turned about, I know no more than you do!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I can enlighten you,&rdquo; the other answered&mdash;his fears
+as well as his temper were aroused. &ldquo;The rogue is shallow. He thinks to
+be paid twice. Once by you and once by me. But you can tell him that this time
+he will be paid in other coin.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid that there is more in it than that,&rdquo; Basset said.
+&ldquo;The fact is the papers he now produces, Audley, are of another
+character.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! The wind blows in that quarter, does it?&rdquo; my lord replied.
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean that you&rsquo;ve come here&mdash;why, d&mdash;n
+it, man,&rdquo; with sudden passion, &ldquo;either you are very simple, or you
+are art and part&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Steady, steady, my lord,&rdquo; Stubbs said, interposing discreetly.
+Hitherto he had not spoken. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no need to quarrel! I am sure
+that Mr. Basset&rsquo;s intentions are friendly. It will be better if he just
+tells us what these documents are which are now put forward. We shall then be
+able to judge where we stand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go ahead,&rdquo; Audley said, averting his face and sulkily relapsing
+against the mantel-shelf. &ldquo;Put your questions! And, for God&rsquo;s sake,
+let&rsquo;s get to the point!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The paper that is pertinent is a deed,&rdquo; Basset explained. &ldquo;I
+have the heads of it here. A deed made between Peter Paravicini Audley, your
+ancestor, the Audley the date of whose marriage has been always in
+issue&mdash;between him on the one side, and his father and two younger
+brothers on the other.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is the date?&rdquo; Stubbs asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Seventeen hundred and four.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very good, Mr. Basset.&rdquo; Stubbs&rsquo;s tone was now as even as he
+could make it, but an acute listener would have detected a change in it.
+&ldquo;Proceed, if you please.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before Basset could comply, my lord broke in. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the use of
+this? Why the d&mdash;l are we going into it?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;If this
+man is out for plunder I will make him smart as sure as my name is Audley! And
+any one who supports him. In the meantime I want to hear no more of it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset moved in his chair as if he would rise. Stubbs intervened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is one way of looking at it, my lord,&rdquo; he said temperately.
+&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m not saying that it is the wrong way. But I think we had
+better hear what Mr. Basset has to say. He is probably
+deceived&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has let himself be used as a catspaw!&rdquo; Audley cried. His face
+was flushed and there was an ugly look in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But he means us well, I am sure,&rdquo; the lawyer interposed. &ldquo;At
+present I don&rsquo;t see&rdquo;&mdash;he turned and carefully snuffed one of
+the candles&mdash;&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you do!&rdquo; Basset answered. He had had a long day and he had
+come on an unpleasant business. His own temper was not too good. &ldquo;You see
+this, at any rate, Mr. Stubbs, that such a deed may be of vital import to your
+client.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To me?&rdquo; Audley exclaimed. Was it possible that the thing he had so
+long feared&mdash;and had ceased to fear&mdash;was going to befall him? Was it
+possible that at the eleventh hour, when he had burnt his boats, when he had
+thought all danger at an end&mdash;no, it was impossible! &ldquo;To me?&rdquo;
+he repeated passionately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Basset replied. &ldquo;Or, rather, it would be of vital
+import to you in other circumstances.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In what other circumstances? What do you mean?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you were not about to marry the only person who, with you, is
+interested.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley cut short, by a tremendous effort, the execration that burst from his
+lips. His face, always too fleshy for his years, swelled till it was purple.
+Then, and as quickly, the blood ebbed, leaving it gray and flabby. He would
+have given much, very much at this moment to be able to laugh or to utter a
+careless word. But he could do neither. The blow had been too sudden, too
+heavy, too overwhelming. Only in his nightmares had he seen what he saw now!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Stubbs, startled by the half-uttered oath and a little out of his
+depth&mdash;for he had heard nothing of the engagement&mdash;intervened.
+&ldquo;I think, my lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you had better leave this to
+me. I think you had, indeed. We are quite in the dark and we are not getting
+forward. Let us have the facts, Mr. Basset. What is the gist of this deed? Or,
+first, have you seen it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And read it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It appears to you&mdash;I only say it appears&mdash;to be
+genuine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no doubt that it is genuine,&rdquo; Basset replied. &ldquo;It
+bears the marks of age, and it was found in the chest with the old Bible. If
+the book is genuine&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer raised his hand. &ldquo;Too fast,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You say it
+was found! You mean that this man says it was found?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Precisely. But there is a difference. Still, we have cleared the ground.
+Now, what does this deed purport to be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset produced a slip of paper. &ldquo;An agreement,&rdquo; he read from it,
+&ldquo;between Peter Paravicini Audley and his father and his two younger
+brothers. After admitting that the entry of the marriage in the register is
+misleading and that no marriage took place until after the birth of his son,
+Peter Paravicini undertakes that, in consideration of his father and his
+brothers taking no action and making no attack upon his wife&rsquo;s
+reputation, she being their cousin, he will not set up for the said son, or the
+issue of the said son, any claim to the title or estates.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Audley listened to the description, so clear and so precise, and he recognized
+that it tallied with the deed which tradition had always held to exist but of
+which John Audley had been able to give no proof. He heard, he understood; yet
+while he listened and understood, his mind was working to another end, and
+viewing with passion the tragedy which fate had prepared for him. Too late! Too
+late! Had this become known a week, only a week, earlier, how lightly had the
+blow fallen! How impotently! But he had cut the rope, he had severed the
+strands once carefully twisted, that bound him to safety! And then the irony,
+the bitterness, the cruelty of those words of Basset&rsquo;s, &ldquo;in other
+circumstances!&rdquo; They bit into his mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still he suffered in silence, and only his stillness and his unhealthy color
+betrayed the despair that gripped and benumbed his soul. Stubbs did not look at
+him; perhaps he was careful not to look at him. The lawyer sat thinking and
+drumming gently with his fingers on the table. &ldquo;Just so, just so,&rdquo;
+he said presently. &ldquo;On the face of it, the document of which Mr. John
+Audley tried to give secondary evidence, and which a person fraudulently
+inclined would of course concoct. That touch of the cousin well brought
+in!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But the lady was his cousin,&rdquo; Basset said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All the world knows it,&rdquo; the lawyer retorted coolly, &ldquo;and
+use has been made of the knowledge. But, of course, there are a hundred things
+to be proved before any weight can be given to this document; its origin, the
+custody from which it comes, the signatures, the witnesses. Its production by a
+man who has once endeavored to blackmail is alone suspicious. And the deed
+itself is at variance with the evidence of the Bible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that variance bears out the deed, which is to secure the younger
+sons&rsquo; rights while covering the reputation of the lady.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer shook his head. &ldquo;Very clever,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But,
+frankly, the matter has an ugly look, Mr. Basset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord Audley says nothing,&rdquo; Basset replied, nettled by the
+lawyer&rsquo;s phrase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And will say nothing,&rdquo; Stubbs rejoined genially, &ldquo;if he is
+advised by me. In the circumstances, as I understand them, he is not affected
+as he might be, but this is still a serious matter. We are not quarrelling with
+you for coming to us, Mr. Basset. On the contrary. But I would like to know why
+the man came to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The answer is simple,&rdquo; Basset explained. &ldquo;I am Mr.
+Audley&rsquo;s executor. On his account, I am obliged to be interested. The
+moment I learned this I saw that, be it true or false, I must disclose it to
+Miss Audley. But I thought it fair to open it to Lord Audley first that he
+might tell the young lady himself, if he preferred to do so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs nodded. &ldquo;Very proper,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;And where, in the
+meantime, is this&mdash;precious document?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I lodged it with Mr. Audley&rsquo;s bankers this afternoon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stubbs nodded again. &ldquo;Also very proper,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Just
+so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset rose. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve told you what I know. If there is nothing
+more?&rdquo; he said. He looked at Audley, who had turned his back on them and,
+with his hands in his pockets and one foot on the fender, was gazing into the
+fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think that&rsquo;s all,&rdquo; Stubbs hastened to say. &ldquo;I am
+sure that his lordship is obliged to you, Mr. Basset, though it is a hundred to
+one that there is nothing in this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that, however, Audley turned about. He had pulled himself together, and his
+manner was excellent. &ldquo;I would like to say that for myself,&rdquo; he
+said frankly, &ldquo;I owe you many thanks for the straightforward course you
+have taken, Basset. You must pardon my momentary annoyance. Perhaps you will
+kindly keep this business to yourself for&mdash;shall we say&mdash;three days?
+I will speak myself to my cousin, but I should like to make one or two
+inquiries first.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Basset agreed willingly. He hated the whole thing and his part in it. It forced
+him to champion, or to seem to champion, Mary against her betrothed; and so set
+him in that kind of opposition to his rival which he loathed. It was only after
+some hesitation that he had determined to see Audley, and now that he had seen
+him, the sooner he was clear of the matter the happier he would be. So,
+&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; he repeated, thinking that the other was taking it
+very well. &ldquo;And now, as I have had a hard day, I will say
+good-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-night, and believe me,&rdquo; my lord added warmly, &ldquo;we
+recognize the friendliness of your action.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Outside, in the darkness of the road, Basset drew a breath of relief. He had
+had a hard day and he was utterly weary. But he had come now, thank God, to an
+end of many things; of the canvass he had detested and the contest in which he
+had been beaten; of his relations with Mary, whom he had lost; of this
+imbroglio, which he hated; of Riddsley and the Gatehouse and the old life
+there! He could go to his inn and sleep the clock round. In his bed he would be
+safe, he would be free from troubles. It seemed to him a refuge. Till the
+morrow he need think of nothing, and when he came forth again it would be to a
+new life. Henceforth Blore, his old house and his starved acres must bound his
+ambitions. With the money which John Audley had left him he would dig and drain
+and fence and build, and be by turns Talpa the mole and Castor the beaver. In
+time, as he began to see the fruit of his toil, he would win to some degree of
+content, and be glad, looking back, that he had made this trial of his powers,
+this essay towards a wider usefulness. So, in the end, he would come through to
+peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But at this point the current of his thoughts eddied against Toft, and he
+cursed the man anew. Why had he played these tricks? Why had he kept back this
+paper? Why had he produced it now and cast on others this unpleasant task?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap38"></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII<br/>
+TOFT&rsquo;S LITTLE SURPRISE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Toft had gone into Riddsley on the polling-day, but had returned before the
+result was known. &ldquo;What the man was thinking of,&rdquo; his wife declared
+in wrath, &ldquo;beats me! To be there hours and hours and come out no wiser
+than he went, and we waiting to hear&mdash;a babe would ha&rsquo; had more
+sense! The young master that we&rsquo;ve known all our lives, to be in or out,
+and we to know nothing till morning! It passes patience!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary had her own feelings, but she concealed them. &ldquo;He must know how it
+was going when he left?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t know an identical thing!&rdquo; Mrs. Toft replied.
+&ldquo;And all he&rsquo;d say was, &lsquo;There, there, what does it
+matter?&rsquo; For all the world as if he spoke to a child! &lsquo;What else
+matters, man?&rsquo; says I. &lsquo;What did you go for?&rsquo; But there,
+Miss, he&rsquo;s beyond me these days! I believe he&rsquo;s going like the poor
+master, that had a bee in his bonnet, God forgive me for saying it! But
+what&rsquo;d one not say, and we to wait till morning not knowing whether those
+plaguy Repealers are in or out!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But Mr. Basset is for Repeal,&rdquo; Mary said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What matter what he&rsquo;s for, if he&rsquo;s in?&rdquo; Mrs. Toft
+replied loftily. &ldquo;But to wait till morning to know&mdash;the man&rsquo;s
+no better than a numps!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the end, it was Mr. Colet who brought the news to the Gatehouse. He brought
+it to Etruria and so much of moment with it that before noon the election
+result had been set aside as a trifle, and Mary found herself holding a kind of
+court in the parlor&mdash;Mr. Colet plaintiff, Etruria defendant, Mrs. Toft
+counsel for the defence. Absence had but strengthened Mr. Colet&rsquo;s
+affection, and he came determined to come to an understanding with his
+mistress. He saw his way to making a small income by writing sermons for his
+more indolent brethren, and, in the meantime, Mr. Basset was giving him food
+and shelter; in return he was keeping Mr. Basset&rsquo;s accounts, and he was
+saving a little, a very little, money. But the body of his plea rested not on
+these counts, but on the political change. Repeal was in the air, repeal was in
+the country. Vote as Riddsley might, the Corn Laws were doomed. His opinions
+would no longer be banned; they would soon be the opinions of the majority, and
+with a little patience he might find a new curacy. When that happened he wished
+to marry Etruria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why not?&rdquo; Mary asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will never marry him to disgrace him,&rdquo; Etruria replied. She
+stood with bowed head, her hands clasped before her, her beautiful eyes
+lowered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you love him?&rdquo; Mary said, blushing at her own words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I did not love him I might marry him,&rdquo; Etruria rejoined.
+&ldquo;I am a servant, my father&rsquo;s a servant. I should be wronging him,
+and he would live to know it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To my way o&rsquo; thinking, &rsquo;Truria&rsquo;s right,&rdquo; her
+mother said. &ldquo;I never knew good come of such a marriage! He&rsquo;s poor,
+begging his reverence&rsquo;s pardon, but, poor or rich, his place is
+there.&rdquo; She pointed to the table. &ldquo;And &rsquo;Truria&rsquo;s place
+is behind his chair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you forget,&rdquo; Mary said, &ldquo;that when she is Mr.
+Colet&rsquo;s wife her place will be by his side.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And much good that&rsquo;ll do him with the parsons and such like, as
+are all gleg together! If he&rsquo;s in their black books for preaching too
+free&mdash;and when you come to tithes one parson is as like another as pigs
+o&rsquo; the same litter&mdash;he&rsquo;ll not better himself by taking such as
+Etruria, take my word for it, Miss!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will never do it,&rdquo; said Etruria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But,&rdquo; Mary protested, &ldquo;Mr. Colet need not live here, and in
+another part people will not know what his wife has been. Etruria has good
+manners and some education, Mrs. Toft, and what she does not know she will
+learn. She will be judged by what she is. If there is a drawback, it is that
+such a marriage will divide her from you and from her father. But if you are
+prepared for that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Toft rubbed her nose. &ldquo;We&rsquo;d be willing if that were
+all,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;She&rsquo;d come to us sometimes, and
+there&rsquo;d be no call for us to go to her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Colet looked at Etruria. &ldquo;If Etruria will come to me,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;I will be ashamed neither of her nor her parents.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bravely said!&rdquo; Mary cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But there&rsquo;s more to it than that,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft objected.
+&ldquo;A deal more. Mr. Colet nor &rsquo;Truria can&rsquo;t live upon air. And
+it&rsquo;s my opinion that if his reverence gets a curacy, he&rsquo;ll lose it
+as soon as it&rsquo;s known who his wife is. And he can&rsquo;t dig and he
+can&rsquo;t beg, and where&rsquo;ll they be with the parsons all sticking to
+one another as close as wax?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll not need them!&rdquo; replied a new speaker, and that
+speaker was Toft. He had entered silently, none of them had seen him, and the
+interruption took them aback. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll not need them,&rdquo; he
+repeated, &ldquo;nor their curacies. He&rsquo;ll not need to dig nor beg.
+There&rsquo;s changes coming. There&rsquo;s changes coming for more than him,
+Miss. If Mr. Colet&rsquo;s willing to take my girl she&rsquo;ll not go to him
+empty-handed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will take her as she stands,&rdquo; Mr. Colet said, his eyes shining.
+&ldquo;She knows that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;ll take her, sir, asking your pardon, with what I give
+her,&rdquo; Toft answered. &ldquo;And that&rsquo;ll be five hundred pounds that
+I have in hand, and five hundred more that I look to get. Put &rsquo;em
+together and they&rsquo;ll buy what&rsquo;s all one with a living, and
+you&rsquo;ll be your own rector and may snap your fingers at &rsquo;em!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They stared at the man, while Mrs. Toft, in an awestruck tone, cried,
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re out of your mind, Toft! Five hundred pounds! Whoever heard
+of the like of us with that much money?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Silence, woman,&rdquo; Toft said. &ldquo;You know naught about
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, Toft,&rdquo; Mary said, &ldquo;are you in earnest? Do you
+understand what a large sum of money this is?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have it,&rdquo; the man replied, his sallow cheek reddening. &ldquo;I
+have it, and it&rsquo;s for Etruria.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If this be true,&rdquo; Mr. Colet said slowly, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know
+what to say, Toft.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve said all that is needful, sir,&rdquo; Toft replied.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s long I&rsquo;ve looked forward to this. She&rsquo;s yours,
+and she&rsquo;ll not come to you empty-handed, and you&rsquo;ll have no need to
+be ashamed of a wife that brings you a living. We&rsquo;ll not trouble except
+to see her at odd times in the year. It will be enough for her mother and me
+that she&rsquo;ll be a lady. She never was like us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hear the man!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Toft between admiration and protest.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d suppose she wasn&rsquo;t our child!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Mary went to him and gave him her hand. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s very fine,
+Toft,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I believe Etruria will be as happy as she is
+good, and Mr. Colet will have a wife of whom he may be proud. But Etruria will
+not be Etruria if she forgets her parents or your gift. Only you are sure that
+you are not deceiving yourself?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s my bank-book to show for half of it,&rdquo; Toft replied.
+&ldquo;The other half is as certain if I live three months!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I declare!&rdquo; Mrs. Toft cried. &ldquo;If anybody&rsquo;d told
+me yesterday that I&rsquo;d have&mdash;&rsquo;Truria, han&rsquo;t you got a
+word to say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etruria&rsquo;s answer was to throw her arms round her father&rsquo;s neck. Yet
+it is doubtful if the moment was as much to her as to the ungainly,
+grim&mdash;visaged man, who looked so ill at ease in her embrace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The contrast between them was such that Mary hastened to relieve the sufferer.
+&ldquo;Etruria will have more to say to Mr. Colet,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;than
+to us. Suppose we leave them to talk it over.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw the Tofts out after another word or two, and followed them.
+&ldquo;Well, well, well!&rdquo; said Mrs. Toft, when they stood in the hall.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I wish that everybody was as lucky this day&mdash;if
+all&rsquo;s true as Toft tells us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s some in luck that don&rsquo;t know it!&rdquo; the man said
+oracularly. And he slid away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If he said black was white, I&rsquo;d believe him after this,&rdquo; his
+wife exclaimed, &ldquo;asking your pardon, Miss, for the liberties we&rsquo;ve
+taken! But you&rsquo;d always a fancy for &rsquo;Truria. Anyway, if
+there&rsquo;s one will be pleased to hear the news, it&rsquo;s the Squire! If
+I&rsquo;d some of those nine here that voted against him I&rsquo;d made their
+ears burn!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But perhaps they thought that Mr. Basset was wrong,&rdquo; Mary said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What business had they o&rsquo; thinking?&rdquo; Mrs. Toft replied.
+&ldquo;They had ought to vote; that&rsquo;s enough for them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it does seem a pity,&rdquo; Mary allowed. And then, because she
+fancied that Mrs. Toft looked at her with meaning, she went upstairs and,
+putting on her hat and cloak, went out. The day was cold and bright, a
+sprinkling of snow lay on the ground, and a walk promised her an opportunity of
+thinking things over. Between the Butterflies, at the entrance to the flagged
+yard, she hung a moment in doubt, then she set off across the park in the
+direction of the Great House.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At first her thoughts were busy with Etruria&rsquo;s fortunes and the
+mysterious windfall which had enriched Toft. How had he come by it? How could
+he have come by it? And was the man really sane? But soon her mind took another
+turn. She had strayed this way on the morning after her arrival at the
+Gatehouse, and, remembering this, she looked across the gray, frost-bitten
+park, with its rows of leafless trees and its naked vistas. Her mind travelled
+back to that happy morning, and involuntarily she glanced behind her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But to-day no one followed her, no one was thinking of her. Basset was gone,
+gone for good, and it was she who had sent him away. The May morning when he
+had hurried after her, the May sunshine, gay with the songs of larks and warm
+with the scents of spring were of the past. To-day she looked on a bare, cold
+landscape and her thoughts matched it. Yet she had no ground to complain, she
+told herself, no reason to be unhappy. Things might have been worse, ah, so
+much worse, she reflected. For a week ago she had been a captive, helpless,
+netted in her own folly! And now she was free.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, she ought to be happy, being free; and, more than free, independent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she must go from here. And for many reasons the thought of going was
+painful to her. During the nine months which she had spent at the Gatehouse it
+had become a home. Its panelled rooms, its austerity, its stillness, the
+ancient woodlands about it were endeared to her by the memory of lamp-lit
+evenings and long summer days. The very plainness and solitude of the life,
+which had brought the Tofts and Etruria so near to her, had been a charm. And
+if her sympathy with her uncle had been imperfect, still he had been her uncle
+and he had been kind to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this she must leave, and something else which she did not define; which was
+bound up with it, and which she had come to value when it was too late. She had
+taken brass for gold, and tin for silver! And now it was too late. So that it
+was no wonder that when she came to the hawthorn-tree where she had gathered
+her may that morning, a sob rose in her throat. She knew the tree! She had
+marked it often. But to-day there was no one to follow her, no one to call her
+back, no one to say that she should go no farther. Basset was gone, her uncle
+was dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Telling herself that, as she would never see it again, she would go as far as
+the Great House, she pushed on to the Yew Walk. Its recesses showed dark, the
+darker for the sprinkling of snow that lay in the park. But it was high noon,
+there was nothing to fear, and she pursued the path until she came to the
+crumbling monster that tradition said was a butterfly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was still viewing it with awe, thinking now of the duel which had taken
+place there, now of her uncle&rsquo;s attack, when a bird moved in the copse
+and she glanced nervously behind her, expecting she knew not what. The dark
+yews shut her in, and involuntarily she shivered. What if, in this solitary
+place&mdash;and then through the silence the sharp click of the Iron Gate
+reached her ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stillness and the associations shook her nerves. She heard footsteps and,
+hardly knowing what she feared, she slipped among the trees and stood
+half-hidden. A moment passed and a man appeared. He came from the Great House.
+He crossed the opening slowly, his chin sunk upon his breast, his eyes bent on
+the path before him. A moment and he was gone, the way she had come, without
+seeing her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Lord Audley, and foolish as the impulse to hide herself had been, she
+blessed it. Nothing pleasant, nothing good, could have come of their meeting;
+and into her thoughts of him had crept so much of distaste that she was glad
+that she had not met him in this lonely spot. She went on to the Iron Gate, and
+viewed for a few moments the desolate lawn and the long, gaunt front. Then,
+reflecting that if she turned back at once she might meet him, she took a
+side-path through the plantation, and emerged on the park at another point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was careful not to reach home until late in the day and then she learned
+that he had called, that he had waited, and that in the end Toft had seen him;
+and that he had departed in no good temper. &ldquo;What Toft said to
+him,&rdquo; Mrs. Toft reported, &ldquo;I know no more than the moon, but
+whatever it was his lordship marched off, Miss, as black as thunder.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After that nothing happened, and of the four at the Gatehouse Etruria alone was
+content. Mrs. Toft was uneasy about the future&mdash;what were they going to
+do?&mdash;and perplexed by Toft&rsquo;s mysterious fortune&mdash;how had he
+come by it? Toft himself was on the rack, looking for things to
+happen&mdash;and nothing happened. And Mary knew that she must take action. She
+could not stay at the Gatehouse, she could not remain as the guest either of
+Basset or of Lord Audley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she did not know where to go, and no suggestion reached her. At length she
+wrote, two days after Lord Audley&rsquo;s visit, to Quebec Street, to the house
+where she had stayed with her father many years before. It was the only address
+of the kind that she knew. But she received no answer, and her heart sank. The
+difficulty, small as it was, harassed her; she had no adviser, and ten times a
+day, to keep up her spirits, she had tell herself that she was independent,
+that she had eight thousand pounds, that the whole world was open to her, and
+that compared with the penniless girl who had lived on the upper floor of the
+Hôtel Lambert she was fortunate!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in the Hôtel Lambert she had had work to do, and here she had none!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought of taking rooms in Riddsley, but Lord Audley was there and she
+shrank from meeting him. She would wait another week for the answer from
+London, and then, if none came, she must decide what she would do. But in her
+room that night the thought that Basset had abandoned her, that he no longer
+cared, no longer desired to come near her, broke her down. Of course, he was
+not to blame. He fancied her still engaged to her cousin and receiving from him
+all the advice, all the help, all the love, she needed. He fancied her happy
+and content, in no need of him. And, alas, there was the pinch. She had written
+to him to tell him of her engagement. She could not write to him to tell him
+that it was at an end!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then, by the morrow&rsquo;s post, there came a long letter from Basset, and
+in the letter the whole astonishing, overwhelming story of the discovery of the
+document which John Audley had sought so long, and in the end so disastrously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; the writer added, &ldquo;Lord Audley has made you
+acquainted with the facts, but I think it my duty as your uncle&rsquo;s
+executor to lay them before you in detail and also to advise you that in your
+interest and in view of the change in your position&mdash;and in Lord
+Audley&rsquo;s&mdash;which this imports, it is proper that you should have
+independent advice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The blood ebbed and left Mary pale; it returned in a flood as with a bounding
+heart and shaking fingers she read and turned and re-read this letter. At
+length she grasped its meaning, and truly what astounding, what overwhelming
+news! What a shift of fortune! What a reversal of expectations! And how
+strangely, how singularly had all things shaped themselves to bring this
+about&mdash;were it true!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unable to sit still, unable to control her excitement&mdash;and no
+wonder&mdash;she rose and paced the floor. If she were indeed Lady Audley! If
+this were indeed all hers! This dear house and the Great House! This which had
+seemed to its possessor so small, so meagre, so cramping an inheritance, but
+was to her fortune, an old name, a great place, a firm position in the world! A
+position that offered so many opportunities and so much power for good!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She walked the room with throbbing pulses, the letter now crushed in her hand,
+now smoothed out that she might assure herself of its meaning, might read again
+some word or some sentence, might resolve some doubt. Oh, it was a wonderful,
+it was a marvellous, it was an incredible turn of fortune! And presently her
+mind began to deal with and to sift the past. And, enlightened, she understood
+many of the things that had perplexed her, and read many of the riddles that
+had baffled her. And her cheeks burned, her heart was hot with indignation.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap39"></a>CHAPTER XXXIX<br/>
+THE DEED OF RENUNCIATION</h2>
+
+<p>
+Basset moved in his chair. He was unhappy and ill at ease. He looked at the
+fire, he looked askance at Mary. &ldquo;But do you mean,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;that you knew nothing about this until you had my letter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; Mary answered, &ldquo;not a word.&rdquo; She, too, found
+it more easy to look at the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must have been very much surprised?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was. It was for that reason that I asked you to bring me the
+papers&mdash;to bring me everything, so that I might see for myself how it
+was.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand why Audley did not tell you. He said he
+would.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the question Mary had foreseen and dreaded. She had slept two nights
+upon the letter and given a long day&rsquo;s thought to it, and she had made up
+her mind what she would do and how she would do it. But between the planning
+and the doing there were passages which she would fain have shunned, fain have
+omitted, had it been possible; and this was one of them. She saw that there was
+nothing else for it, however&mdash;the thing must be told, and told by her. She
+tried, and not without success, to command her voice. &ldquo;He did not tell
+me,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Indeed I have not seen him. And I ought to say, Mr.
+Basset, you ought to know in these circumstances&mdash;that the engagement
+between my cousin and myself is at an end.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He may have started&mdash;he might well be astonished, in view of the business
+which brought him there. But he did not speak, and Mary could not tell what
+effect it had on him. She only knew that the silence seemed age-long, the pause
+cruel, and that her heart was beating so loudly that it seemed to her that he
+must hear it. At last, &ldquo;Do you mean,&rdquo; he asked, his voice muffled
+and uncertain, &ldquo;that it is all over between you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is quite over between us,&rdquo; she answered soberly. &ldquo;It was
+a mistake from the beginning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When&mdash;when did he&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, before this arose. Some time before this arose.&rdquo; She spoke
+lightly, but her cheeks were hot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did not tell me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Basset repeated. He spoke angrily, as if he felt this a
+grievance, but in no other way could he have masked his emotion. Perhaps he did
+not mask it altogether, for she was observing him&mdash;ah, how keenly was she
+observing him! &ldquo;On the contrary, he led me to believe,&rdquo; he
+continued, &ldquo;that things were as before between you, and that he would
+tell you this himself. It was for that reason that I let a week go by before I
+wrote to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; she said, squeezing her handkerchief into a ball, and
+telling herself that the worst was over now, the story told, that in another
+minute this would be done and past. &ldquo;Just so, I quite understand. At any
+rate there is no longer any question of that, Mr. Basset. And now,&rdquo;
+briskly, &ldquo;may I see this famous deed which is to do so much. You brought
+it with you, I hope?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I brought it,&rdquo; he answered heavily. He took a packet of
+papers from his breast-pocket, and it did not escape her&mdash;she was cooler
+now&mdash;that his fingers were not as steady as a man&rsquo;s fingers should
+be. The packet he brought out was tied about with old and faded green ribbon,
+and bore a docket on the outside. She looked at it with curiosity. That ribbon
+had been tied by a long-dead hand in the reign of Queen Anne! Those yellowish
+papers had lain in damp and darkness a hundred and forty years, that in the end
+they might take John Audley&rsquo;s life! &ldquo;I brought them from the bank
+this afternoon,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;They have been in the bank&rsquo;s
+custody since they were handed to me, and I must return them to the bank
+to-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Everything depends upon them, I suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I thought that it was a deed&mdash;just one paper?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The actual instrument is a deed. This one!&rdquo; He took it from the
+series as he untied the packet. &ldquo;The other papers are of value as
+corroboration. They are letters, original letters, bearing on the preparation
+of the agreement. They were found all together as they are now, and in the same
+order. I did not disclose the letters to Audley, or to his lawyer, because I
+had not then gone through them; nor was it necessary to disclose them. I have
+since examined them, and they provide ample proof of the genuineness of the
+deed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So that you think...?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not think that it can be contested. I am sure that it
+cannot&mdash;with success. And if it be admitted, your opponent&rsquo;s case is
+gone. It was practically common ground in the former suit that if this
+agreement could be produced and proved his claim fell to the ground. Yours
+remains. I do not suppose,&rdquo; Basset concluded, &ldquo;that he will contest
+it, save as a matter of form.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sorry for him,&rdquo; she said thoughtfully. And almost for the
+first time her eyes met his. But he was not responsive. He shrugged his
+shoulders. &ldquo;He has had it long enough to feel the loss of it,&rdquo; she
+continued, still bidding for his sympathy. &ldquo;May I look at that
+now&mdash;the deed?&rdquo; She held out her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He gave it to her. It was a folded sheet of parchment, yellow with age and not
+very large, perhaps ten inches square. Three or four seals of green wax on
+ribbon ends dangled from it. It was written all over in a fine and curious
+penmanship, its initial letter adorned with a portrait of Queen Anne;
+altogether a pretty and delicate thing, but small&mdash;so small, she thought,
+to effect so great a change, to carry, to wreck, to make the fortunes of a
+house!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She handled it gently, almost fearfully, with awe and a little distaste. She
+turned it, she read the signatures. They were clear but faint. The ink had
+turned brown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter Paravicini Audley,&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;He must have signed
+it sadly, to save his wife, his cousin, a young girl, a girl of my age perhaps!
+To save her name!&rdquo; There was a quaver in her voice. Basset moved
+uncomfortably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are all dead,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, they are all dead,&rdquo; she agreed. &ldquo;And their joys and
+failings, hopes and fears&mdash;all dead! It seems a pity that this should live
+to betray them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a pity on your account.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. You are glad, of course?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you should have your rights?&rdquo; he said manfully. &ldquo;Of
+course I am.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you congratulate me?&rdquo; She rose and held out her hand. Her eyes
+were shining, there were tears in them, and her face was marvellously soft.
+&ldquo;You will be the first, won&rsquo;t you, to congratulate me? You who have
+done so much for me, you who have been my friend through all? You who have
+brought me this? You will wish me joy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was deeply moved; how deeply he could not hide from her, and her last doubt
+faded. He took her hand&mdash;his own was cold&mdash;but he could not speak. At
+last, &ldquo;May you be very happy! It is my one wish, Lady Audley!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She let his hand fall. &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; she said gently. &ldquo;I think
+that I shall be happy. And now&mdash;now,&rdquo; in a firmer tone, &ldquo;will
+you do something for me, Mr. Basset? It is not much. Will you deal with Toft
+for me? You told me in your letter that he held my uncle&rsquo;s note for £800,
+to be paid in the event of the discovery of these papers? And that £300,
+already paid, might be set off against this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The money should be paid, of course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear it must be paid.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you see him and tell him that it shall be. I&mdash;I am fond of
+Etruria, but I am not so fond of Toft, and I would rather not&mdash;would you
+see him about this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I quite understand,&rdquo; Basset answered. &ldquo;Of course I will do
+it.&rdquo; They had both regained the ordinary plane of feeling and he spoke in
+his usual tone. &ldquo;You would like me to see him now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you please.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went from the room. There were other things that as executor he must
+arrange, and when he had dealt with Toft, and not without a hard word or two
+that went home, had settled that matter, he went round the house and gave the
+orders he had to give. The light was beginning to fail and shadows to fill the
+corners, and as he glanced into this room and that and viewed the
+long-remembered places and saw ghosts and heard the voices of the dead, he knew
+that he was taking leave of many things, of things that had made up a large
+part of his life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he had other thoughts hardly more cheering. Mary&rsquo;s engagement was
+broken off. But how? By whom? Had she freed herself? Or had Audley, <i>immemor
+Divum</i>, and little foreseeing the discovery that trod upon his threshold,
+freed her? And if so, why? He was in the dark as to this and as to
+all&mdash;her attitude, her thoughts, her feelings. He knew only that while her
+freedom trebled the moment of the news he had brought, the gifts of fortune
+which that news laid at her feet, rose insuperable between them and formed a
+barrier he could not pass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For he could never woo her now. Whatever dawn of hope crept quivering above the
+horizon&mdash;and she had been kind, ah, in that moment of softness and
+remembrance she had been kind!&mdash;he could never speak now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dusk was far advanced and firelight was almost the only light when, after
+half an hour&rsquo;s absence, he returned to the parlor. Mary was standing
+before the hearth, her slender figure darkly outlined against the blaze. She
+held the poker in her hand, and she was stooping forward; and something in her
+pose, something in the tense atmosphere of the room, drew his gaze&mdash;he
+never knew why&mdash;to the table on which he had left the papers. It was bare.
+He looked round, he could not see them, a cry broke from him.
+&ldquo;Mary!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t burn easily,&rdquo; she said, a quaver of exultation
+and defiance in her tone. &ldquo;Parchment is so hard to burn&mdash;it burns so
+slowly, though I made a good fire on purpose!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;D&mdash;n!&rdquo; he cried, and he was going to seize, he tried to seize
+her arm. But he saw the next moment that it was useless, he saw that it was too
+late. &ldquo;Are you mad? Are you mad?&rdquo; he cried. Frantically, he went
+down on his knees, he raked among the embers. But he knew that it was futile,
+he had known it before he knelt, and he stood up again with a gesture of
+despair. &ldquo;My G&mdash;d!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Do you know what you have
+done? You have destroyed what cannot be replaced! You have ruined your claim!
+You must have been mad! Mad, to do it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, mad? Because I do not wish to be Lady Audley?&rdquo; she said,
+facing him calmly, with her hands behind her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mad!&rdquo; he repeated, bitter self-reproach in his voice. For he felt
+himself to blame, he felt the full burden of his responsibility. He had left
+the papers with her, the true value of which she might not have known! And she
+had done this dreadful, this fatal, this irreparable thing!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She faced his anger without a quiver. &ldquo;Why, mad!&rdquo; she repeated. She
+was quite at her ease now. &ldquo;Because, having been jilted by my cousin, I
+do not wish for this common, this vulgar, this poor revenge? Because I will not
+stoop to the game he plays and has played? Because I will not take from him
+what is little to me who have not had it, but much, nay all, to him who
+has?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But your uncle?&rdquo; he cried. He was striving desperately to collect
+himself, trying to see the thing all round and not only as she saw it, but in
+its consequences. &ldquo;Your uncle, whose one aim, whose one object in
+life&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was to be Lord Audley? Believe me,&rdquo; she replied gently, &ldquo;he
+sees more clearly now. And he is dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But there are still&mdash;those who come after you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will they be better, happier, more useful?&rdquo; she answered.
+&ldquo;Will they be less Audleys, with less of ancient blood running in their
+veins because of what I have done? Because I have refused to rake up this old,
+pitiful, forgotten stain, this scandal of Queen Elizabeth? No, a thousand times
+no! And do not think, do not think,&rdquo; she continued more soberly,
+&ldquo;that I have acted in haste or on impulse. I have not had this out of my
+thoughts for a moment since I knew the truth. I have weighed, carefully
+weighed, the price, and as carefully decided to pay it. My duty? I can do it, I
+hope, as well in one station as another. For the rest there is only one who
+will lose by it&rdquo;&mdash;she faced him bravely now&mdash;&ldquo;only one
+who will have the right to blame me&mdash;ever.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may have no right&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No you have no right at present.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When you have the right&mdash;when you have gained the right, if
+ever&mdash;you may blame me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was he deceived? Was it the fact or only his fancy, a mere
+will-o&rsquo;-the-wisp inviting him to trouble that led him to imagine that she
+looked at him queerly? With a mingling of raillery and tenderness, with a tear
+and a smile, with something in her eyes that he had never seen in them before?
+With&mdash;with&mdash;but her face was in shadow, she had her back to the blaze
+that filled the room with dancing lights, and his thoughts were in a turmoil of
+confusion. &ldquo;I wish I knew,&rdquo; he said in a low voice, &ldquo;what you
+meant by that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By what?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By what you have just said. Did you mean that now that he&mdash;now that
+Audley is out of the way, there was a chance for me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A chance for you?&rdquo; she repeated. She stared at him in seeming
+astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t play with me!&rdquo; he cried, advancing upon her.
+&ldquo;You understand me? You understand me very well! Yes, or no, Mary?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not flinch. &ldquo;There is no chance for you,&rdquo; she answered
+slowly, still confronting him. &ldquo;If there be a second chance for
+me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For me, Peter?&rdquo; And with that her tone told him all, all there was
+to tell. &ldquo;If you are willing to take me second-hand,&rdquo; she
+continued, with a tremulous laugh, &ldquo;you may take me. I don&rsquo;t
+deserve it, but I know my own mind now. I have known it since the day my uncle
+died and I heard your step come through the hall. And if you are still
+willing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not answer her, but he took her. He held her to him, his heart too full
+for anything but a thankfulness beyond speech, while she, shaken out of her
+composure, trembled between tears and laughter. &ldquo;Peter! Peter!&rdquo; she
+said again and again. And once, &ldquo;We are the same height, Peter!&rdquo;
+and so showed him a new side of her nature which thrilled him with surprise and
+happiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That she brought him no title, no lands, that by her own act she had flung away
+her inheritance and came to him almost empty-handed was no pain to him, no
+subject for regret. On the contrary, every word she had said on that, every
+argument she had used, came home to him now with double force. It had been a
+poor, it had been a common, it had been a pitiful revenge! It had mingled the
+sordid with the cup, it had cast the shadow of the Great House on their
+happiness. In that room in which they had shared their first meal on that far
+May morning, and where the light of the winter fire now shone on the wainscot,
+now brought life to the ruffed portraits above it, there was no question of
+name or fortune, or more or less.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So much so, that when Mrs. Toft came in with the tea she well-nigh dropped the
+tray in her surprise. As she said afterwards, &ldquo;The sight of them two as
+close as chives in a barrel, I declare you might ha&rsquo; knocked me down with
+a straw! God bless &rsquo;em!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap40"></a>CHAPTER XL<br/>
+&ldquo;LET US MAKE OTHERS THANKFUL&rdquo;</h2>
+
+<p>
+A man can scarcely harbor a more bitter thought than that he has lost by foul
+play what fair play would have won for him. This for a week was Lord
+Audley&rsquo;s mood and position; for masterful as he was he owned the power of
+Nemesis, he felt the force of tradition, nor, try as he might, could he
+convince himself that in face of this oft-cited deed his chance of retaining
+the title and property was anything but desperate. He made the one attempt to
+see Mary of which we know; and had he seen her he would have done his best to
+knot again the tie which he had cut. But missing her by a hair&rsquo;s breadth,
+and confronted by Toft who knew all, he had found even his courage unequal to a
+second attempt. The spirit in which Mary had faced the breach had shown his
+plan to be from the first a counsel of despair, and despairing he let her go.
+In a dark mood he sat down to wait for the next step on the enemy&rsquo;s part,
+firmly resolved that whatever form it might take he would contest the claim to
+the bitter end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Stubbs was scarcely in happier case. At the time, and face to face with
+Basset, he had borne up well, but the production of the fateful deed had none
+the less fallen on him with stunning effect. He appreciated&mdash;none better
+and more clearly now&mdash;what the effect of his easiness would have been had
+Lord Audley not been engaged to his cousin; nor did his negligence appear in a
+less glaring light because his patron was to escape its worst results. He
+foresaw that whatever befel he must suffer, and that the agency which his
+family had so long enjoyed&mdash;that, that at any rate was forfeit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was enough to make him a most unhappy, a most miserable man. But it did
+not stand alone. Everything seemed to him to be going wrong. All good things,
+public and private, seemed to be verging on their end. The world as he had
+known it for sixty years was crumbling about his ears. It was time that he was
+gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certainly the days of that Protection with which he believed the welfare of the
+land to be bound up, were numbered. In the House Lord George and Mr.
+Disraeli&mdash;those strangest of bedfellows!&mdash;might rage, the old
+Protectionist party might foam, invective and sarcasm, taunt and sneer might
+rain upon the traitor as he sat with folded arms and hat drawn down to his
+eyes, rectors might fume and squires swear; the end was certain, and Stubbs saw
+that it was. Those rascals in the North, they and their greed and smoke, that
+stained the face of England, would win and were winning. He had saved Riddsley
+by nine&mdash;but to what end? What was one vote among so many? He thought of
+the nut-brown ale, the teeming stacks, the wagoner&rsquo;s home,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+Hard-by, a cottage chimney smokes<br/>
+From betwixt two aged oaks.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+He thought of the sweet cow-stalls, the brook where he had bent his first pin,
+and he sighed. Half the country folk would be ruined, and Shoddy from Halifax
+and Brass from Bury would buy their lands and walk in gaiters where better men
+had foundered. The country would be full of new men&mdash;Peels!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, it would last his time. But some day there would rise another Buonaparte
+and they would find Cobden with his calico millennium a poor stay against
+starvation, his lean and flashy songs a poor substitute for wheat. It was all
+money now; the kindly feeling, the Christmas dole, the human ties, where father
+had worked for father and son for son, and the thatch had covered three
+generations&mdash;all these were past and gone. He found one fault, it is true,
+in the past. He had one regret, as he looked back. The laborers&rsquo; wage had
+been too low; they had been left outside the umbrella of Protection. He saw
+that now; there was the weak point in the case. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s where they
+hit us,&rdquo; he said more than once, &ldquo;the foundation was too
+narrow.&rdquo; But the knowledge came too late.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Naturally he buried his private mishap&mdash;and my lord&rsquo;s&mdash;in
+silence. But his mien was changed. He was an altered, a shaken man. When he
+passed through the streets, he walked with his chin on his breast, his
+shoulders bowed. He shunned men&rsquo;s eyes. Then one day Basset entered his
+office and for a long time was closeted with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he left Stubbs left also, and his bearing was so subtly changed as to
+impress all who met him; while Farthingale, stepping out in his absence, drank
+his way through three brown brandies in a silence which grew more portentous
+with every glass. At The Butterflies, whither the lawyer hastened, Audley met
+him with moody and repellent eyes, and in the first flush of the news which the
+lawyer brought refused to believe it. It was not only that the tidings seemed
+too good to be true, the relief from the nightmare which weighed upon him too
+great to be readily accepted. But the thing that Mary had done was so far out
+of his ken and so much beyond his understanding that he could not rise to it,
+or credit it. Even when he at last took in the truth of the story he put upon
+it the interpretation that was natural to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was a forgery!&rdquo; he cried with an oath. &ldquo;You may depend
+upon it, it was a forgery and they discovered it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Stubbs would not agree to that. Stubbs was very stout about it, and giving
+details of his conversation with Basset gradually persuaded his patron. In one
+way, indeed, the news coming through him wrought a benefit which neither Mary
+nor Basset had foreseen. It once more commended him to Audley, and by and by
+healed the breach which had threatened to sever the long connection between the
+lawyer and Beaudelays. If Stubbs&rsquo;s opinion of my lord could never again
+be wholly what it had been, if Audley still had hours of soreness when the
+other&rsquo;s negligence recurred to his mind, at least they were again at one
+as to the future. They were once more free to look forward to a time when a
+marriage with Lady Adela, or her like, would rebuild the fortunes of the Great
+House. Of Audley, whose punishment if short had been severe, one thing at least
+may be ventured with safety&mdash;and beyond this we need not inquire; that to
+the end his first, last, greatest thought would be&mdash;himself!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Late in June, the Corn Laws were repealed. On the same day Sir Robert Peel, in
+the eyes of some the first, in the eyes of others the last of men, was forced
+to resign. Thwarted by old friends and abandoned by new ones, he fell by a
+man&#339;uvre which even his enemies could not defend. Whether he was more to
+be blamed for blindness than he was to be praised for rectitude, are questions
+on which party spirit has much to say, nor has history as yet pronounced a
+final decision. But if his hand gave the victory to the class from which he
+sprang, he was at least free from the selfishness of that class. He had ideals,
+he was a man,
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem2">
+<p class="t0">
+He nothing common did nor mean,<br/>
+Upon that memorable scene,
+</p>
+
+<p class="t1">
+But bowed his comely head,<br/>
+Down as upon a bed.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="continue">
+Nor is it possible, even for those who do not agree with him, to think of his
+dramatic fall without sympathy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the same week Basset and Mary were married. They spent their honeymoon after
+a fashion of their own, for they travelled through the north of England, and
+beginning with the improvements which Lord Francis Egerton was making along the
+Manchester Canal, they continued their quiet journey along the inland waterways
+which formed in the &rsquo;forties a link, now forgotten, between the great
+cities. In this way&mdash;somewhat to the disgust of Mary&rsquo;s new maid,
+whose name was Joséphine&mdash;they visited strange things; the famous
+land-warping upon the Humber, the Doncaster drainage system in Yorkshire, the
+Horsfall dairies. They brought back to the old gabled house at Blore some ideas
+which were new even to old Hayward&mdash;though the &ldquo;Duke&rdquo; would
+never have admitted this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now that we are not protected, we must bestir ourselves,&rdquo; Basset
+said on the last evening before their return. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll inquire about a
+seat, if you like,&rdquo; he added reluctantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mary was standing behind him. She put her hand on his shoulder. &ldquo;You are
+paying me out, Peter,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I know now that I don&rsquo;t
+know as much as I thought I knew.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which means?&rdquo; Basset said, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That once I thought that nothing could be done without an earthquake. I
+know now that it can be done with a spade.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So that where Mary was content with nothing but a gilt coach, Mrs.
+Basset is content with a nutshell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you are in the nutshell,&rdquo; Mary answered softly,
+&ldquo;only&mdash;for what we have received, Peter&mdash;let us make other
+people thankful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We will try,&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<h3>THE END</h3>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT HOUSE ***</div>
+<div style='text-align:left'>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
+be renamed.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
+States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
+the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
+of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
+copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
+easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
+of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
+Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
+do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
+by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
+license, especially commercial redistribution.
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin:0.83em 0; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br />
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</span>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
+Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
+or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
+Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country other than the United States.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
+on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
+phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+</div>
+
+<blockquote>
+ <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+ other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+ are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
+ of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
+ </div>
+</blockquote>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
+Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; License.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
+other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
+Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+provided that:
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+ works.
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
+the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
+forth in Section 3 below.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
+of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
+Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
+to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
+and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
+public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
+visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
+facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+</body>
+
+</html>
+
+
diff --git a/39294-h/images/cover.jpg b/39294-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2d0447b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39294-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..849f7de
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #39294 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/39294)
diff --git a/old/39294-8.txt b/old/39294-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8fd1fb9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/39294-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14728 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Great House, by Stanley J. Weyman
+
+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: The Great House
+
+Author: Stanley J. Weyman
+
+Release Date: March 28, 2012 [EBook #39294]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT HOUSE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by the
+Web Archive (University of Michigan)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+ 1. Page scan source:
+ http://www.archive.org/details/greathouseastor00weymgoog
+ (University of Michigan)
+
+ 2. The diphthong oe is represented by [oe].
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+ THE HOUSE OF THE WOLF
+ THE NEW RECTOR
+ THE STORY OF FRANCIS CLUDDE
+ A GENTLEMAN OF FRANCE
+ THE MAN IN BLACK
+ UNDER THE RED ROBE
+ MY LADY ROTHA
+ MEMOIRS OF A MINISTER OF FRANCE
+ THE RED COCKADE
+ SHREWSBURY
+ THE CASTLE INN
+ SOPHIA
+ COUNT HANNIBAL
+ IN KINGS' BYWAYS
+ THE LONG NIGHT
+ THE ABBESS OF VLAYE
+ STARVECROW FARM
+ CHIPPINGE
+ LAID UP IN LAVENDER
+ THE WILD GEESE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+ BY
+
+ STANLEY J. WEYMAN
+
+ Author of "The Castle Inn," "Chippinge,"
+ "A Gentleman of France," etc., etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
+ FOURTH AVENUE AND 30th STREET
+ 1919
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1919
+ BY
+ STANLEY J. WEYMAN
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+
+ I. The Htel Lambert--Upstairs.
+
+ II. The Htel Lambert--Downstairs.
+
+ III. The Lawyer Abroad.
+
+ IV. Homeward Bound.
+
+ V. The London Packet.
+
+ VI. Field and Forge.
+
+ VII. Mr. John Audley.
+
+ VIII. The Gatehouse.
+
+ IX. Old Things.
+
+ X. New Things.
+
+ XI. Tact and Temper.
+
+ XII. The Yew Walk.
+
+ XIII. Peter Pauper.
+
+ XIV. The Manchester Men.
+
+ XV. Strange Bedfellows.
+
+ XVI. The Great House at Beaudelays.
+
+ XVII. To the Rescue.
+
+ XVIII. Masks and Faces.
+
+ XIX. The Corn Law Crisis.
+
+ XX. Peter's Return.
+
+ XXI. Toft at the Butterflies.
+
+ XXII. My Lord Speaks.
+
+ XXIII. Blore Under Weaver.
+
+ XXIV. An Agent of the Old School.
+
+ XXV. Mary is Lonely.
+
+ XXVI. Missing.
+
+ XXVII. A Footstep in the Hall.
+
+ XXVIII. The News from Riddsley.
+
+ XXIX. The Audley Bible.
+
+ XXX. A Friend in Need.
+
+ XXXI. Ben Bosham.
+
+ XXXII. Mary Makes a Discovery.
+
+ XXXIII. The Meeting at the Maypole.
+
+ XXXIV. By the Canal.
+
+ XXXV. My Lord Speaks Out.
+
+ XXXVI. The Riddsley Election.
+
+ XXXVII. A Turn of the Wheel.
+
+ XXXVIII. Toft's Little Surprise.
+
+ XXXIX. The Deed of Renunciation.
+
+ XL. "Let Us Make Others Thankful."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ THE HTEL LAMBERT--UPSTAIRS
+
+
+On an evening in March in the 'forties of last century a girl looked
+down on the Seine from an attic window on the Ile St. Louis. The
+room behind her--or beside her, for she sat on the window-ledge, with
+her back against one side of the opening and her feet against the
+other--was long, whitewashed from floor to ceiling, lighted by five
+gaunt windows, and as cold to the eye as charity to the recipient.
+Along each side of the chamber ran ten pallet beds. A black door broke
+the wall at one end, and above the door hung a crucifix. A painting of
+a Station of the Cross adorned the wall at the other end. Beyond this
+picture the room had no ornament; it is almost true to say that beyond
+what has been named it had no furniture. One bed--the bed beside the
+window at which the girl sat--was screened by a thin curtain which did
+not reach the floor. This was her bed.
+
+But in early spring no window in Paris looked on a scene more cheerful
+than this window; which as from an eyrie commanded a shining reach of
+the Seine bordered by the lawns and foliage of the King's Garden, and
+closed by the graceful arches of the Bridge of Austerlitz. On the
+water boats shot to and fro. The quays were gay with the red trousers
+of soldiers and the coquettish caps of soubrettes, with students in
+strange cloaks, and the twin kling wheels of yellow cabriolets. The
+first swallows were hawking hither and thither above the water, and a
+pleasant hum rose from the Boulevard Bourdon.
+
+Yet the girl sighed. For it was her birthday, she was twenty this
+twenty-fifth of March, and there was not a soul in the world to know
+this and to wish her joy. A life of dependence, toned to the key of
+the whitewashed room and the thin pallets, lay before her; and though
+she had good reason to be thankful for the safety which dependence
+bought, still she was only twenty, and springtime, viewed from prison
+windows, beckons to its cousin, youth. She saw family groups walking
+the quays, and father, mother, children, all, seen from a distance,
+were happy. She saw lovers loitering in the garden or pacing to and
+fro, and romance walked with every one of them; none came late, or
+fell to words. She sighed more deeply; and on the sound the door
+opened.
+
+"_Hola!_" cried a shrill voice, speaking in French, fluent, but oddly
+accented. "Who is here? The Princess desires that the English
+Mademoiselle will descend this evening."
+
+"Very good," the girl in the window replied pleasantly. "At the same
+hour, Josphine?"
+
+"Why not, Mademoiselle?" A trim maid, with a plain face and the
+faultless figure of a Pole, came a few steps into the room. "But you
+are alone?"
+
+"The children are walking. I stayed at home."
+
+"To be alone? As if I did not understand that! To be alone--it is the
+luxury of the rich."
+
+The girl nodded. "None but a Pole would have thought of that," she
+said.
+
+"Ah, the crafty English Miss!" the maid retorted. "How she flatters!
+Perhaps she needs a touch of the tongs to-night? Or the loan of a pair
+of red-heeled shoes, worn no more than thrice by the Princess--and
+with the black which is convenable for Mademoiselle, oh, so neat! Of
+the _ancien rgime_, absolutely!"
+
+The other laughed. "The _ancien rgime_, Josphine--and this!" she
+replied, with a gesture that embraced the room, the pallets, her own
+bed. "A curled head--and this! You are truly a cabbage----"
+
+"But Mademoiselle descends!"
+
+"A cabbage of--foolishness!"
+
+"Ah, well, if I descended, you would see," the maid retorted. "I am
+but the Princess's second maid, and I know nothing! But if I descended
+it would not be to this dormitory I should return! Nor to the
+tartines! Nor to the daughters of Poland! Trust me for that--and I
+know but my prayers. While Mademoiselle, she is an artist's daughter."
+
+"There spoke the Pole again," the girl struck in with a smile.
+
+"The English Miss knows how to flatter," Josphine laughed. "That is
+one for the touch of the tongs," she continued, ticking them off on
+her fingers. "And one for the red-heeled shoes. And--but no more! Let
+me begone before I am bankrupt!" She turned about with a flirt of her
+short petticoats, but paused and looked back, with her hand on the
+door. "None the less, mark you well, Mademoiselle, from the whitewash
+to the ceiling of Lebrun, from the dortoir of the Jeunes Filles to the
+Gallery of Hercules, there are but twenty stairs, and easy, oh, so
+easy to descend! If Mademoiselle instead of flattering Josphine, the
+Cracovienne, flattered some pretty gentleman--who knows? Not I! I know
+but my prayers!" And with a light laugh the maid clapped to the door
+and was gone.
+
+The girl in the window had not throughout the parley changed her pose
+or moved more than her head, and this was characteristic of her. For
+even in her playfulness there was gravity, and a measure of stillness.
+Now, left alone, she dropped her feet to the floor, turned, and knelt
+on the sill with her brow pressed against the glass. The sun had set,
+mists were rising from the river, the quays were gray and cold. Here
+and there a lamp began to shine through the twilight. But the girl's
+thoughts were no longer on the scene beneath her eyes.
+
+"There goes the third who has been good to me," she pondered. "First
+the Polish lodger who lived on the floor below, and saved me from that
+woman. Then the Princess's daughter. Now Josphine. There are still
+kind people in the world--God grant that I may not forget it! But how
+much better to give than to take, to be strong than to be weak, to be
+the mistress and not the puppet of fortune! How much better--and, were
+I a man, how easy!"
+
+But on that there came into her remembrance one to whom it had not
+been easy, one who had signally failed to master fortune, or to
+grapple with circumstances. "Poor father!" she whispered.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ THE HTEL LAMBERT--DOWNSTAIRS
+
+
+When ladies were at home to their intimates in the Paris of the
+'forties, they seated their guests about large round tables with a
+view to that common exchange of wit and fancy which is the French
+ideal. The mode crossed to England, and in many houses these round
+tables, fallen to the uses of the dining-room or the nursery, may
+still be seen. But when the Princess Czartoriski entertained in the
+Htel Lambert, under the ceiling painted by Lebrun, which had looked
+down on the arm-chair of Madame de Chtelet and the tabouret of
+Voltaire, she was, as became a Pole, a law to herself. In that
+beautiful room, softly lit by wax candles, her guests were free to
+follow their bent, to fall into groups, or to admire at their ease the
+Watteaus and Bouchers which the Princess's father-in-law, old Prince
+Adam, had restored to their native panels.
+
+Thanks to his taste and under her rule the gallery of Hercules
+presented on this evening a scene not unworthy of its past. The
+silks and satins of the old rgime were indeed replaced by the
+high-shouldered coats, the stocks, the pins and velvet vests of the
+dandies; and Thiers beaming through his glasses, or Lamartine, though
+beauty, melted by the woes of Poland, hung upon his lips, might have
+been thought by some unequal to the dead. But they were now what those
+had been; and the women peacocked it as of old. At any rate the effect
+was good, and a guest who came late, and paused a moment on the
+threshold to observe the scene, thought that he had never before done
+the room full justice. Presently the Princess saw him and he went
+forward. The man who was talking to her made his bow, and she pointed
+with her fan to the vacant place. "Felicitations, my lord," she said.
+She held out her gloved hand.
+
+"A thousands thanks," he said, as he bent over it. "But on what,
+Princess?"
+
+"On the success of a friend. On what we have all seen in the
+_Journal_. Is it not true that you have won your suit?"
+
+"I won, yes." He shrugged his shoulders. "But what, Madame? A bare
+title, an empty rent-roll."
+
+"For shame!" she answered. "But I suppose that this is your English
+phlegm. Is it not a thing to be proud of--an old title? That which
+money cannot buy and the wisest would fain wear? M. Guizot, what would
+he not give to be Chien de Race? Your Peel, also?"
+
+"And your Thiers?" he returned, with a sly glance at the little man in
+the shining glasses.
+
+"He, too! But he has the passion of humanity, which is a title in
+itself. Whereas you English, turning in your unending circle, one out,
+one in, one in, one out, are but playing a game--marking time! You
+have not a desire to go forward!"
+
+"Surely, Princess, you forget our Reform Bill, scarce ten years old."
+
+"Which bought off your cotton lords and your fat bourgeois, and left
+the people without leaders and more helpless than before. No, my lord,
+if your Russell--Lord John, do you call him?--had one jot of M.
+Thiers' enthusiasm! Or your Peel--but I look for nothing there!"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "I admit," he said, "that M. Thiers has an
+enthusiasm beyond the ordinary."
+
+"You do? Wonderful!"
+
+"But," with a smile, "it is, I fancy, an enthusiasm of which the
+object is--M. Thiers!"
+
+"Ah!" she cried, fanning herself more quickly. "Now there spoke not
+Mr. Audley, the attach--he had not been so imprudent! But--how do you
+call yourself now?"
+
+"On days of ceremony," he replied, "Lord Audley of Beaudelays."
+
+"There spoke my lord, unattached! Oh, you English, you have no
+enthusiasm. You have only traditions. Poor were Poland if her fate
+hung on you!"
+
+"There are still bright spots," he said slyly. And his glance returned
+to the little statesman in spectacles on whom the Princess rested the
+hopes of Poland.
+
+"No!" she cried vividly. "Don't say it again or I shall be displeased.
+Turn your eyes elsewhere. There is one here about whom I wish to
+consult you. Do you see the tall girl in black who is engaged with the
+miniatures?"
+
+"I saw her some time ago."
+
+"I suppose so. You are a man. I dare say you would call her handsome?"
+
+"I think it possible, were she not in this company. What of her,
+Princess?"
+
+"Do you notice anything beyond her looks?"
+
+"The picture is plain--for the frame in which I see her. Is she one of
+the staff of your school?"
+
+"Yes, but with an air----"
+
+"Certainly--an air!" He nodded.
+
+"Well, she is a countrywoman of yours and has a history. Her father, a
+journalist, artist, no matter what, came to live in Paris years ago.
+He went down, down, always down; six months ago he died. There was
+enough to bury him, no more. She says, I don't know"--the Princess
+indicated doubt with a movement of her fan--"that she wrote to friends
+in England. Perhaps she did not write; how do I know? She was at the
+last sou, the street before her, a hag of a concierge behind, and
+withal--as you see her."
+
+"Not wearing that dress, I presume?" he said with a faint smile.
+
+"No. She had passed everything to the Mont de Pit; she had what she
+stood up in--yet herself! Then a Polish family on the floor below, to
+whom my daughter carried alms, told Ccile of her. They pitied her,
+spoke well of her, she had done--no matter what for them--perhaps
+nothing. Probably nothing. But Ccile ascended, saw her, became
+enamoured, _enrage!_ You know Ccile--for her all that wears feathers
+is of the angels! Nothing would do but she must bring her here and set
+her to teach English to the daughters during her own absence."
+
+"The Princess is away?"
+
+"For four weeks. But in three days she returns, and you see where I
+am. How do I know who this is? She may be this, or that. If she were
+French, if she were Polish, I should know! But she is English and of a
+calm, a reticence--ah!"
+
+"And of a pride too," he replied thoughtfully, "if I mistake not. Yet
+it is a good face, Princess."
+
+She fluttered her fan. "It is a handsome one. For a man that is the
+same."
+
+"With all this you permit her to appear?"
+
+"To be of use. And a little that she may be seen by some English
+friend, who may tell me."
+
+"Shall I talk to her?"
+
+"If you will be so good. Learn, if you please, what she is."
+
+"Your wishes are law," he rejoined. "Will you present me?"
+
+"It is not necessary," the Princess answered. She beckoned to a stout
+gentleman who wore whiskers trimmed la mode du Roi, and had laurel
+leaves on his coat collar. "A thousand thanks."
+
+He lingered a moment to take part in the Princess's reception of the
+Academician. Then he joined a group about old Prince Adam Czartoriski,
+who was describing a recent visit to Cracow, that last morsel of free
+Poland, soon to pass into the maw of Austria. A little apart, the girl
+in black bent over the case of miniatures, comparing some with a list,
+and polishing others with a square of silk. Presently he found himself
+beside her. Their eyes met.
+
+"I am told," he said, bowing, "that you are my countrywoman. The
+Princess thought that I might be of use to you."
+
+The girl had read his errand before he spoke and a shade flitted
+across her face. She knew, only too well, that her hold on this rock
+of safety to which chance had lifted her--out of a gulf of peril and
+misery of which she trembled to think--was of the slightest. Early,
+almost from the first, she had discovered that the Princess's
+benevolence found vent rather in schemes for the good of many than in
+tenderness for one. But hitherto she had relied on the daughter's
+affection, and a little on her own usefulness. Then, too, she was
+young and hopeful, and the depths from which she had escaped were such
+that she could not believe that Providence would return her to them.
+
+But she was quick-witted, and his opening frightened her. She guessed
+at once that she was not to be allowed to await Ccile's return, that
+her fate hung on what this Englishman, so big and bland and forceful,
+reported of her.
+
+She braced herself to meet the danger. "I am obliged to the Princess,"
+she said. "But my ties with England are slight. I came to France with
+my father when I was ten years old."
+
+"I think you lost him recently?" He found his task less easy than it
+should have been.
+
+"He died six months ago," she replied, regarding him gravely. "His
+illness left me without means. I was penniless, when the young
+Princess befriended me and gave me a respite here. I am no part of
+this," with a glance at the salon and the groups about them. "I teach
+upstairs. I am thankful for the privilege of doing so."
+
+"The Princess told me as much," he said frankly. "She thought that,
+being English, I might advise you better than she could; that possibly
+I might put you in touch with your relations?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Or your friends? You must have friends?"
+
+"Doubtless my father had--once," she said in a low voice. "But as his
+means diminished, he saw less and less of those who had known him. For
+the last two years I do not think that he saw an Englishman at home.
+Before that time I was in a convent school, and I do not know."
+
+"You are a Roman Catholic, then?"
+
+"No. And for that reason--and for another, that my account was not
+paid"--her color rose painfully to her face--"I could not apply to the
+Sisters. I am very frank," she added, her lip trembling.
+
+"And I encroach," he answered, bowing. "Forgive me! Your father was an
+artist, I believe?"
+
+"He drew for an Atelier de Porcelaine--for the journals when he could.
+But he was not very successful," she continued reluctantly. "The china
+factory which had employed him since he came to Paris, failed. When I
+returned from school he was alone and poor, living in the little
+street in the Quartier, where he died."
+
+"But forgive me, you must have some relations in England?"
+
+"Only one of whom I know," she replied. "My father's brother. My
+father had quarrelled with him--bitterly, I fear; but when he was
+dying he bade me write to my uncle and tell him how we were placed. I
+did so. No answer came. Then after my father's death I wrote again. I
+told my uncle that I was alone, that I was without money, that in a
+short time I should be homeless, that if I could return to England I
+could live by teaching French. He did not reply. I could do no more."
+
+"That was outrageous," he answered, flushing darkly. Though well under
+thirty he was a tall man and portly, with one of those large faces
+that easily become injected. "Do you know--is your uncle also in
+narrow circumstances?"
+
+"I know no more than his name," she said. "My father never spoke of
+him. They had quarrelled. Indeed, my father spoke little of his past."
+
+"But when you did not hear from your uncle, did you not tell your
+father?"
+
+"It could do no good," she said. "And he was dying."
+
+He was not sentimental, this big man, whose entrance into a room
+carried with it a sense of power. Nor was he one to be lightly moved,
+but her simplicity and the picture her words drew for him of the
+daughter and the dying man touched him. Already his mind was made up
+that the Czartoriski should not turn her adrift for lack of a word.
+Aloud, "The Princess did not tell me your name," he said. "May I know
+it?"
+
+"Audley," she said. "Mary Audley."
+
+He stared at her. She supposed that he had not caught the name. She
+repeated it.
+
+"Audley? Do you really mean that?"
+
+"Why not?" she asked, surprised in her turn. "Is it so uncommon a
+name?"
+
+"No," he replied slowly. "No, but it is a coincidence. The Princess
+did not tell me that your name was Audley."
+
+The girl shook her head. "I doubt if she knows," she said. "To her I
+am only 'the English girl.'"
+
+"And your father was an artist, resident in Paris? And his name?"
+
+"Peter Audley."
+
+He nodded. "Peter Audley," he repeated. His eyes looked through her at
+something far away. His lips were more firmly set. His face was grave.
+"Peter Audley," he repeated softly. "An artist resident in Paris!"
+
+"But did you know him?" she cried.
+
+He brought his thoughts and his eyes back to her. "No, I did not know
+him," he said. "But I have heard of him." And again it was plain that
+his thoughts took wing. "John Audley's brother, the artist!" he
+muttered.
+
+In her impatience she could have taken him by the sleeve and shaken
+him. "Then you do know John Audley?" she said. "My uncle?"
+
+Again he brought himself back with an effort. "A thousand pardons!" he
+said. "You see the Princess did not tell me that you were an Audley.
+Yes, I know John Audley--of the Gatehouse. I suppose it was to him you
+wrote?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And he did not reply?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+He laughed, as at something whimsical. It was not a kindly laugh, it
+jarred a little on his listener. But the next moment his face
+softened, he smiled at her, and the smile of such a man had its
+importance, for in repose his eyes were hard. It was clear to her that
+he was a man of position, that he belonged of right to this keen
+polished world at which she was stealing a glance. His air was
+distinguished, and his dress, though quiet, struck the last note of
+fashion.
+
+"But I am keeping you in suspense," he said. "I must tell you, Miss
+Audley, why it surprised me to learn your name. Because I, too, am an
+Audley."
+
+"You!" she cried.
+
+"Yes, I," he replied. "What is more, I am akin to you. The kinship is
+remote, but it happens that your father's name, in its place in a
+pedigree, has been familiar to me of late, and I could set down the
+precise degree of cousinship in which you stand to me. I think your
+father was my fourth cousin."
+
+She colored charmingly. "Is it possible?" she exclaimed.
+
+"It is a fact, proved indeed, recently, in a court of law," he
+answered lightly. "Perhaps it is as well that we have that warrant for
+a conversation which I can see that the Princess thinks long. After
+this she will expect to hear the whole of your history."
+
+"I fear that she may be displeased," the girl said, wincing a little.
+"You have been very kind----"
+
+"Who should be kind," he replied, "if not the head of your family? But
+have no fear, I will deal with the Princess. I shall be able to
+satisfy her, I have no doubt."
+
+"And you"--she looked at him with appeal in her eyes--"will you be
+good enough to tell me who you are?"
+
+"I am Lord Audley. To distinguish me from another of the same name, I
+am called Audley of Beaudelays."
+
+"Of Beaudelays?" she repeated. He thought her face, her whole bearing,
+singularly composed in view of his announcement. "Beaudelays?" she
+repeated thoughtfully. "I have heard the name more than once. Perhaps
+from my father."
+
+"It were odd if you had not," he said. "It is the name of my house,
+and your uncle, John Audley, lives within a mile of it."
+
+"Oh," she said. The name of the uncle who had ignored her appeals fell
+on her like a cold douche.
+
+"I will not say more now," Lord Audley continued. "But you shall hear
+from me. To--morrow I quit Paris for three or four days, but when I
+return have no fear. You may leave the matter in my hands in full
+confidence that I shall not fail--my cousin."
+
+He held out his hand and she laid hers in it. She looked him frankly
+in the face. "Thank you," she said. "I little thought when I descended
+this evening that I should meet a kinsman."
+
+"And a friend," he answered, holding her hand a little longer than was
+needful.
+
+"And a friend," she repeated. "But there--I must go now. I should have
+disappeared ten minutes ago. This is my way." She inclined her head,
+and turning from him she pushed open a small door masked by a picture.
+She passed at once into a dark corridor, and threading its windings
+gained the great staircase.
+
+As she flitted upwards from floor to floor, skirting a long procession
+of shadowy forms, and now ogled by a Leda whose only veil was the
+dusk, now threatened by the tusks of the great boar at bay, she
+was not conscious of thought or surprise. It was not until she had
+lighted her taper outside the dormitory door, and, passing between the
+rows of sleeping children, had gained her screened corner, that she
+found it possible to think. Then she set the light in her tiny
+washing-basin--such was the rule--and seated herself on her bed. For
+some minutes she stared before her, motionless and unwinking, her
+hands clasped about her knees, her mind at work.
+
+Was it true, or a dream? Had this really happened to her since she had
+viewed herself in the blurred mirror, had set a curl right and,
+satisfied, had turned to go down? The danger and the delivery from it,
+the fear and the friend in need? Or was it a Cinderella's treat, which
+no fairy godmother would recall to her, with which no lost slipper
+would connect her? She could almost believe this. For no Cinderella,
+in the ashes of the hearth, could have seemed more remote from the gay
+ball-room than she crouching on her thin mattress, with the breathing
+of the children in her ears, from the luxury of the famous salon.
+
+Or, if it was true, if it had happened, would anything come of it?
+Would Lord Audley remember her? Or would he think no more of her,
+ignoring to-morrow the poor relation whom it had been the whim of the
+moment to own? That would be cruel! That would be base! But if Mary
+had fallen in with some good people since her father's death, she had
+also met many callous, and a few cruel people. He might be one. And
+then, how strange it was that her father had never named this great
+kinsman, never referred to him, never even, when dying, disclosed his
+name!
+
+The light wavered in the draught that stole through the bald, undraped
+window. A child whimpered in its sleep, awoke, began to sob. It was
+the youngest of the daughters of Poland. The girl rose, and going on
+tip-toe to the child, bent over it, kissed it, warmed it in her bosom,
+soothed it. Presently the little waif slept again, and Mary Audley
+began to make ready for bed.
+
+But so much turned for her on what had happened, so much hung in the
+balance, that it was not unnatural that as she let down her hair and
+plaited it in two long tails for the night, she should see her new
+kinsman's face in the mirror. Nor strange that as she lay sleepless
+and thought-ridden in her bed the same face should present itself anew
+relieved against the background of darkness.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ THE LAWYER ABROAD
+
+
+Half an hour later Lord Audley paused in the hall at Meurice's, and
+having given his cloak and hat to a servant went thoughtfully up the
+wide staircase. He opened the door of a room on the first floor. A
+stout man with a bald head, who had been for some time yawning over
+the dying fire, rose to his feet and remained standing.
+
+Audley nodded. "Hallo, Stubbs!" he said carelessly, "not in bed yet?"
+
+"No, my lord," the other answered. "I waited to learn if your lordship
+had any orders for England."
+
+"Well, sit down now. I've something to tell you." My lord stooped as
+he spoke and warmed his hands at the embers; then rising, he stood
+with his back to the hearth. The stout man sat forward on his
+chair with an air of deference. His double chin rested on the ample
+folds of a soft white stock secured by a gold pin in the shape of a
+wheat-sheaf. He wore black knee-breeches and stockings, and his dress,
+though plain, bore the stamp of neatness and prosperity.
+
+For a minute or two Audley continued to look thoughtfully before him.
+At length, "May I take it that this claim is really at an end now?" he
+said. "Is the decision final, I mean?"
+
+"Unless new evidence crops up," Stubbs answered--he was a lawyer--"the
+decision is certainly final. With your lordship's signature to the
+papers I brought over----"
+
+"But the claimant might try again?"
+
+"Mr. John Audley might do anything," Stubbs returned. "I believe him
+to be mad upon the point, and therefore capable of much. But he could
+only move on new evidence of the most cogent nature. I do not believe
+that such evidence exists."
+
+His employer weighed this for some time. At length, "Then if you were
+in my place," he said, "you would not be tempted to hedge?"
+
+"To hedge?" the lawyer exclaimed, as if he had never heard the word
+before. "I am afraid I don't understand."
+
+"I will explain. But first, tell me this. If anything happens to me
+before I have a child, John Audley succeeds to the peerage? That is
+clear?"
+
+"Certainly! Mr. John Audley, the claimant, is also your heir-at-law."
+
+"To title and estates--such as they are?"
+
+"To both, my lord."
+
+"Then follow me another step, Stubbs. Failing John Audley, who is the
+next heir?"
+
+"Mr. Peter Audley," Stubbs replied, "his only brother, would succeed,
+if he were alive. But it is common ground that he is dead. I knew Mr.
+Peter, and, if I may say it of an Audley, my lord, a more shiftless,
+weak, improvident gentleman never lived. And obstinate as the devil!
+He married into trade, and Mr. John never forgave it--never forgave
+it, my lord. Never spoke of his brother or to his brother from that
+time. It was before the Reform Bill," the lawyer continued with a
+sigh. "There were no railways then and things were different. Dear,
+dear, how the world changes! Mr. Peter must have gone abroad ten years
+ago, but until he was mentioned in the suit I don't think that I had
+heard his name ten times in as many years. And he an Audley!"
+
+"He had a child?"
+
+"Only one, a daughter."
+
+"Would she come in after Mr. John?"
+
+"Yes, my lord, she would--if living."
+
+"I've been talking to her this evening."
+
+"Ah!" The lawyer was not so simple as he seemed, and for a minute or
+two he had foreseen the _dnouement_. "Ah!" he repeated, thoughtfully
+rubbing his plump calf. "I see, my lord. Mr. Peter Audley's daughter?
+Really! And if I may venture to ask, what is she like?"
+
+Audley paused before he answered. Then, "If you have painted the
+father aright, Stubbs, I should say that she was his opposite in all
+but his obstinacy. A calm and self-reliant young woman, if I am any
+judge."
+
+"And handsome?"
+
+"Yes, with a look of breeding. At the same time she is penniless and
+dependent, teaching English in a kind of charity school, cheek by jowl
+with a princess!"
+
+"God bless my soul!" cried the lawyer, astonished at last. "A
+princess!"
+
+"Who is a good creature as women go, but as likely as not to send her
+adrift to-morrow."
+
+"Tut-tut-tut!" muttered the other.
+
+"However, I'll tell you the story," Audley concluded. And he did so.
+
+When he had done, "Well," Stubbs exclaimed, "for a coincidence----"
+
+"Ah, there," the young man broke in, "I fancy, all's not said. I take
+it the Princess noted the name, but was too polite to question me.
+Anyway, the girl is there. She is dependent, friendless; attractive,
+and well-bred. For a moment it did occur to me--she is John Audley's
+heiress--that I might make all safe by----" His voice dropped. His
+last words were inaudible.
+
+"The chance is so very remote," said the lawyer, aware that he was on
+delicate ground, and that the other was rather following out his own
+thoughts than consulting him.
+
+"It is. The idea crossed my mind only for a moment--of course it's
+absurd for a man as poor as I am. There is hardly a poorer peer out of
+Ireland--you know that. Fourteenth baron without a roof to my house
+or a pane of glass in my windows! And a rent-roll when all is told
+of----"
+
+"A little short of three thousand," the lawyer muttered.
+
+"Two thousand five hundred, by God, and not a penny more! If any man
+ought to marry money, I am that man, Stubbs!"
+
+Mr. Stubbs, staring at the fire with a hand on each knee, assented
+respectfully. "I've always hoped that you would, my lord," he said,
+"though I've not ventured to say it."
+
+"Yes! Well--putting that aside," the other resumed, "what is to be
+done about her? I've been thinking it over, and I fancy that I've hit
+on the right line. John Audley's given me trouble enough. I'll give
+him some. I'll make him provide for her, d--n him, or I don't know my
+man!"
+
+"I'd like to know, my lord," Stubbs ventured thoughtfully, "why he
+didn't answer her letters. He hated her father, but it is not like Mr.
+John to let the young lady drift. He's crazy about the family, and she
+is his next heir. He's a lonely man, too, and there is room at the
+Gatehouse."
+
+Audley paused, half-way across the room. "I wish we had never leased
+the Gatehouse to him!"
+
+"It's not everybody's house, my lord. It's lonely and----"
+
+"It's too near Beaudelays!"
+
+"If your lordship were living at the Great House, quite so," the
+lawyer agreed. "But, as it is, the rent is useful, and the lease was
+made before our time, so that we have no choice."
+
+"I shall always believe that he had a reason for going there!"
+
+"He had an idea that it strengthened his claim," the lawyer said
+indulgently. "Nothing beyond that, my lord."
+
+"Well, I've made up my mind to increase his family by a niece!" the
+other replied. "He shall have the girl whether he likes it or not.
+Take a pen, man, and sit down. He's spoiled my breakfast many a time
+with his confounded Writs of Error, or whatever you call them, and for
+once I'll be even with him. Say--yes, Stubbs, say this:
+
+"'I am directed by Lord Audley to inform you that a young lady,
+believed to be a daughter of the late Mr. Peter Audley, and recently
+living in poverty in an obscure'--yes, Stubbs, say obscure--'part of
+Paris, has been rescued by the benevolence of a Polish lady. For the
+present she is in the lady's house in a menial capacity, and is
+dependent on her charity. Lord Audley is informed that the young lady
+made application to you without result, but this report his lordship
+discredits. Still, he feels himself concerned; and if those to whom
+she naturally looks decline to aid her, it is his lordship's intention
+to make such provision as may enable her to live respectably. I am to
+inform you that Miss Audley's address is the Htel Lambert, He St.
+Louis, Paris. Letters should be addressed "Care of the Housekeeper."'"
+
+"He won't like the last touch!" the young man continued, with a quiet
+chuckle. "If that does not touch him on the raw, I'll yield up the
+title to-morrow. And now, Stubbs, good-night."
+
+But Stubbs did not take the hint. "I want to say one word, my lord,
+about the borough--about Riddsley," he said. "We put in Mr. Mottisfont
+at the last election, your lordship's interest just tipping the scale.
+We think, therefore, that a word from you may set right what is going
+wrong."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"There's a strong feeling," the lawyer answered, his face serious,
+"that the party is not being led aright. And that Mr. Mottisfont, who
+is old----"
+
+"Is willing to go with the party, eh, Stubbs?"
+
+"No, my lord, with the party leaders. Which is a different thing.
+Sir Robert Peel--the land put him in, but, d--n me, my lord"--the
+lawyer's manner lost much of its deference and he spoke bluntly and
+strongly--"it looks as if he were going to put the land out! An
+income-tax in peace time, we've taken that. And less protection for
+the farmer, very good--if it must be. But all this taking off of
+duties, this letting in of Canadian corn--I tell you, my lord, there's
+an ugly feeling abroad! There are a good many in Riddsley say that he
+is going to repeal the Corn Laws altogether; that he's sold us to the
+League, and won't be long before he delivers us!"
+
+The big man sitting back in his chair smiled. "It seems to me," he
+said, "that you are travelling rather fast and rather far, Stubbs!"
+
+"That's just what we fear Sir Robert is doing!" the lawyer retorted
+smartly, the other's rank forgotten. "And you may take it from me the
+borough won't stand it, my lord, and the sooner Mr. Mottisfont has a
+hint the better. If he follows Peel too far, the bottom will fall out
+of his seat. There's no Corn Law leaguer will ever sit for Riddsley!"
+
+"With your help, anyway, Stubbs," my lord said with a smile. The
+lawyer's excitement amused him.
+
+"No, my lord! Never with my help! I believe that on the landed
+interest rests the stability of the country! It was the landed
+interest that supported Pitt and beat Bony, and brought us through
+the long war. It was the landed interest that kept us from revolution
+in the dark days after the war. And now because the men that turn
+cotton and iron and clay into money by the help of the devil's
+breath--because they want to pay lower wages----"
+
+"The ark of the covenant is to be overthrown, eh?" the young man
+laughed. "Why, to listen to you, Stubbs, one would think that you were
+the largest landowner in the county!"
+
+"No, my lord," the lawyer answered. "But it's the landowners have made
+me what I am. And it's the landowners and the farmers that Riddsley
+lives by and is going to stand by! And the sooner Mr. Mottisfont knows
+that the better. He was elected as a Tory, and a Tory he must stop,
+whether Sir Robert turns his coat or not!"
+
+"You want me to speak to Mottisfont?"
+
+"We do, my lord. Just a word. I was at the Ordinary last fair day, and
+there was nothing else talked of. Free Canadian corn was too like free
+French corn and free Belgian corn for Stafford wits to see much
+difference. And Peel is too like repeal, my lord. We are beginning to
+see that."
+
+Audley shrugged his shoulders. "The party is satisfied," he said. "And
+Mottisfont? I can't drive the man."
+
+"No, but a word from you----"
+
+"Well, I'll think about it. But I fancy you're overrunning the scent."
+
+"Then the line is not straight!" the lawyer retorted shrewdly.
+"However, if I have been too warm, I beg pardon, my lord."
+
+"I'll bear it in mind," Audley answered. "Very good. And now,
+good-night, Stubbs. Don't forget to send the letter to John Audley as
+soon as you reach London."
+
+Stubbs replied that he would, and took his leave. He had said his say
+on the borough question, lord or no lord; which to a Briton--and he
+was a typical Briton--was a satisfaction.
+
+But half an hour later, when he had drawn his nightcap down to his
+ears and stood, the extinguisher in his hand, he paused. "He's a sober
+hand for a young man," he thought, "a very sober hand. I warrant he
+will never run his ship on the rocks for lack of a good look-out!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ HOMEWARD BOUND
+
+
+In the corner of the light diligence, seating six inside, which had
+brought her from Montreuil, Mary Audley leant forward, looking out
+through the dingy panes for the windmills of Calais. Josphine slept
+in the corner facing her, as she had slept for two hours past. Their
+companions, a French shopkeeper and her child, and an English bagman,
+sighed and fidgeted, as travellers had cause to sigh and fidget in
+days when he was lucky who covered the distance from Paris to Calais
+in twenty-five hours. The coach rumbled on. The sun had set, a small
+rain was falling. The fading light tinged the plain of the Pas de
+Calais with a melancholy which little by little dyed the girl's
+thoughts.
+
+She was on her way to her own country, to those on whom she might be
+dependent without shame. And common sense, of which she had a large
+share, told her that she had cause, great cause to be thankful. But
+the flush of relief, to which the opening prospect had given rise, was
+ebbing. The life before her was new, those amongst whom she must lead
+that life were strange; nor did the cold phrases of her uncle's
+invitation, which ignored both her father and the letters that she had
+written, promise an over-warm welcome.
+
+Still, "Courage!" Mary murmured to herself, "Courage!" And she
+recalled a saying which she had learned from the maid, "At the worst,
+ten fingers!" Then, seeing that at last they were entering the streets
+of the town and that the weary journey was over--she had left Paris
+the day before--she touched Josphine. "We are there," she said.
+
+The maid awoke with her eyes on the bagman, who was stout. "Ah!" she
+muttered. "In England they are like that! No wonder that they travel
+seeing that their bones are so padded! But, for me I am one ache."
+
+They jolted over the uneven pavement, crossed a bridge, lumbered
+through streets scarcely wider than the swaying diligence, at last
+with a great cracking of whips they swerved to the left and drew up
+amid the babel of the quay. In a twinkling they were part of it.
+Porters dragged down, fought for, snatched up their baggage.
+English-speaking touts shook dirty cards in their faces. Tide-waiters
+bawled questions in their ears. The postilion, the conductor, all the
+world stretched greedy palms under their noses. Other travellers ran
+into them, and they ran into other travellers. All this, in the dusk,
+in the rain, while the bell on the deck overhead clanged above the
+roar of the escaping steam, and a man shouted without ceasing, "Tower
+steamer! Tower steamer! Any more for England?"
+
+Josphine, after one bitter exchange of words with a lad who had
+seized her handbag, thrust her fingers into her ears and resigned
+herself. Even Mary for a moment was aghast. She was dragged this way
+and that, she lost one article and recovered it, lost another and
+recovered that, she lost her ticket and rescued it from a man's hand.
+At last, her baggage on board, she found herself breathless at the
+foot of the ladder, with three passengers imploring her to ascend, and
+six touts clinging to her skirts and crying for drink-money. She had
+barely time to make her little gift to the kind-hearted maid--who was
+returning to Paris by the night coach--and no time to thank her,
+before they were parted. Mary was pushed up the ladder. In a moment
+she was looking down from the deck on the wet, squalid quay, the pale
+up-turned faces, the bustling crowd.
+
+She picked out the one face which she knew, and which it pained her to
+lose. By gestures and smiles, with a tear in the eye, she tried to
+make amends to Josphine for the hasty parting, the half-spoken words.
+The maid on her side was in tears, and after the French fashion was
+proud of them. So the last minute came. The paddles were already
+turning, the ship was going slowly astern, when a man pushed his way
+through the crowd. He clutched the ladder as it was unhooked, and at
+some risk and much loss of dignity he was bundled on board. There was
+a lamp amidships, and, as he regained his balance, Mary, smiling in
+spite of herself, saw that he was an Englishman, a man about thirty,
+and plainly dressed. Then in her anxiety to see the last of Josphine
+she crossed the deck as the ship went about, and she lost sight of
+him.
+
+She continued to look back and to wave her handkerchief, until
+nothing remained but a light or two in a bank of shadow. That was the
+last she was to see of the land which had been her home for ten years;
+and chilled and lonely she turned about and did what, had she been
+an older traveller, she would have done before. She sought the
+after-cabin. Alas, a glance from the foot of the companion was enough!
+Every place was taken, every couch occupied, and the air, already
+close, repelled her. She climbed to the deck again, and was seeking
+some corner where she could sit, sheltered from the wind and rain,
+when the captain saw her and fell foul of her.
+
+"Now, young lady," he said, "no woman's allowed on deck at night!"
+
+"Oh, but," she protested, "there's no room downstairs!"
+
+"Won't do," he answered roughly. "Lost a woman overboard once, and as
+much trouble about her as about all the men, drunk or sober, I've ever
+carried. All women below, all women below, is the order! Besides,"
+more amicably, as he saw by a ray of lantern-light that she was young
+and comely, "it's wet, my dear, and going to be d--d wet, and as dark
+as Wapping!"
+
+"But I've a cloak," she petitioned, "if I sit quite still, and----"
+
+A tall form loomed up at the captain's elbow. "This is the lady I am
+looking for," the new-comer said. "It will be all right, Captain
+Jones."
+
+The captain turned sharply. "Oh, my lord," he said, "I didn't know;
+but with petticoats and a dark night, blest if you know where you are!
+I'm sure I beg the young lady's pardon. Quite right, my lord, quite
+right!" With a rough salute he went forward and the darkness swallowed
+him.
+
+"Lord Audley?" Mary said. She spoke quietly, but to do so she had to
+steady her voice.
+
+"Yes," he replied. "I knew that you were crossing to-night, and as I
+had to go over this week I chose this evening. I've reserved a cabin
+for you."
+
+"Oh, but," she remonstrated, "I don't think you should have done that!
+I don't know that I can----"
+
+"Afford it?" he said coolly. "Then--as it is a matter of some
+shillings--your kinsman will presume to pay for it."
+
+It was a small thing, and she let it pass. "But who told you," she
+asked, "that I was crossing to-night?"
+
+"The Princess. You don't feel, I suppose, that as you are crossing, it
+was my duty to stay in France?"
+
+"Oh no!" she protested.
+
+"But you are not sure whether you are more pleased or more vexed?
+Well, let me show you where your cabin is--it is the size of a
+milliner's box, but by morning you will be glad of it, and that may
+turn the scale. Moreover," as he led the way across the deck, "the
+steward's boy, when he is not serving gin below, will serve tea above,
+and at sea tea is not to be scorned. That's your number--7. And there
+is the boy. Boy!" he called in a voice that ensured obedience, "Tea
+and bread and butter for this lady in number 7 in an hour. See it is
+there, my lad!"
+
+She smiled. "I think the tea and bread and butter may turn the scale,"
+she said.
+
+"Right," he replied. "Then, as it is only eight o'clock, why should we
+not sit in the shelter of this tarpaulin? I see that there are two
+seats. They might have been put for us."
+
+"Is it possible that they were?" she asked shrewdly. "Well, why not?"
+
+She had no reason to give--and the temptation was great. Five minutes
+before she had been the most lonely creature in the world. The parting
+from Josphine, the discomfort of the boat, the dark sea and the
+darker horizon, the captain's rough words, had brought the tears to
+her eyes. And then, in a moment, to be thought of, provided for,
+kindly entreated, to be lapped in attentions as in a cloak--in very
+fact, in another second a warm cloak was about her--who could expect
+her to refuse this? Moreover, he was her kinsman; probably she owed it
+to him that she was here.
+
+At any rate she thought that it would be prudish to demur, and she
+took one of the seats in the lee of the screen. Audley tucked the
+cloak about her, and took the other. The light of a lantern fell on
+their faces and the few passengers who still tramped the windy deck
+could see the pair, and doubtless envied him their shelter. "Are you
+comfortable?" he inquired--but before she could answer he whistled
+softly.
+
+"What is it?" Mary asked.
+
+"Not much." He laughed to himself.
+
+Then she saw coming along the deck towards them a man who had not
+found his sea-legs. As he approached he took little runs, and now
+brought up against the rail, now clutched at a stay. Mary knew the man
+again. "He nearly missed the boat," she whispered.
+
+"Did he?" her companion answered in the same tone. "Well, if he had
+quite missed it, I'd have forgiven him. He is going to be ill, I'll
+wager!"
+
+When the man was close to them he reeled, and to save himself he
+grasped the end of their screen. His eyes met theirs. He was past much
+show of emotion, but his voice rose as he exclaimed, "Audley. Is that
+you?"
+
+"It is. We are in for a rough night, I'm afraid."
+
+"And--pardon me," the stranger hesitated, peering at them, "is that
+Miss Audley with you?"
+
+"Yes," Mary said, much surprised.
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"This is Mr. Basset," Audley explained. Mary stared at the stranger.
+The name conveyed nothing to her.
+
+"I came to meet you," he said, speaking with difficulty, and now and
+again casting a wild eye abroad as the deck heaved under him. "But I
+expected to find you at the hotel, and I waited there until I nearly
+missed the boat. Even then I felt that I ought to learn if you were on
+board, and I came up to see."
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," Mary answered politely, "but I am
+quite comfortable, thank you. It is close below, and Lord Audley found
+this seat for me. And I have a cabin."
+
+"Oh yes!" he answered. "I think I will go down then if you--if you are
+sure you want nothing."
+
+"Nothing, thank you," Mary answered with decision.
+
+"I think I--I'll go, then. Good-night!"
+
+With that he went, making desperate tacks in the direction of the
+companion. Unfortunately what he gained in speed he lost in dignity,
+and before he reached the hatch Lord Audley gave way to laughter.
+
+"Oh, don't!" Mary cried. "He will hear you. And it was kind of him to
+look for me when he was not well."
+
+But Audley only laughed the more. "You don't catch the full flavor of
+it," he said. "He's come three hundred miles to meet you, and he's too
+ill to do anything now he's here!"
+
+"Three hundred miles to meet me!" she cried in astonishment.
+
+"Every yard of it! Don't you know who he is? He's Peter Basset, your
+uncle's nephew by marriage, who lives with him. He's come, or rather
+your uncle has sent him, all the way from Stafford to meet you--and
+he's gone to lie down! He's gone to lie down! There's a squire of
+dames for you! Upon my honor, I never knew anything richer!"
+
+And my lord's laughter broke out anew.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ THE LONDON PACKET
+
+
+Mary laughed with him, but she was not comfortable. What she had seen
+of the stranger, a man plain in feature and ordinary in figure, one
+whom the eye would not have remarked in a crowd, did not especially
+commend him. And certainly he had not shown himself equal to a
+difficult situation. But the effort he had made to come to her help
+appealed to her generosity, and she was not sure how far she formed a
+part of the comedy. So her laughter was from the lips only, and brief.
+Then, "My uncle's nephew?" she asked thoughtfully.
+
+"His wife's nephew. Your uncle married a Basset."
+
+"But why did he send him to meet me?"
+
+"For a simple reason--I should say that he had no one else to send.
+Your uncle is not a man of many friends."
+
+"I understood that some one would meet the boat in London," she said.
+"But I expected a woman."
+
+"I fancy the woman would be to seek," he replied. "And Basset is a
+kind of tame cat at the Gatehouse. He lives there a part of the year,
+though he has an old place of his own up the country. He's a
+Staffordshire man born and bred, and I dare say a good fellow in his
+way, but a dull dog! a dull dog! Are you sure that the wind does not
+catch you?"
+
+She said that she was very comfortable, and they were silent awhile,
+listening to the monotonous slapping of a rope against the mast and
+the wash of the waves as they surged past the beam. A single light at
+the end of the breakwater shone in the darkness behind them. She
+marked the light grow smaller and more distant, and her thoughts went
+back to the convent school, to her father, to the third-floor where
+for a time they had been together, to his care for her--feeble and
+inefficient, to his illness. And a lump rose in her throat, her hands
+gripped one another as she strove to hide her feelings. In her heart
+she whispered a farewell. She was turning her back on her father's
+grave. The last tendril which bound her to the old life was breaking.
+
+The light vanished, and gradually the girl's reflections sought a new
+channel. They turned from the past to the present, and dwelt on the
+man beside her, who had not only thought of her comfort, who had not
+only saved her from some hours of loneliness, but had probably wrought
+this change in her life. This was the third time only that she had
+seen him. Once, some days after that memorable evening, he had called
+at the Htel Lambert, and her employer had sent for her. He had
+greeted her courteously in the Princess's presence, had asked her
+kindly if she had heard from England, and had led her to believe that
+she would hear. And she remembered with a blush that the Princess had
+looked from one to the other with a smile, and afterwards had had
+another manner for her.
+
+Meanwhile the man wondered what she was thinking, and waited for her
+to give him the clue. But she was so long silent that his patience
+wore thin. It was not for this, it was not to sit silent beside her,
+that he had taken a night journey and secured these cosey seats.
+
+"Well?" he said at last.
+
+She turned to him, her eyes wet with tears. "It seems so strange," she
+murmured, "to be leaving all and going into a world in which I know no
+one."
+
+"Except the head of your family."
+
+"Except you! I suppose that I owe it to you that I am here?"
+
+"I should be happy if I thought so," he replied, with careful
+reticence. "But we set a stone rolling, we do not know where it falls.
+You will soon learn--Basset will tell you, if I don't--that your uncle
+and I are not on good terms. Therefore it is unlikely that he was
+moved by what I said."
+
+"But you said something?"
+
+"If I did," he answered, smiling, "it was against the grain--who likes
+to put his finger between the door and the jamb? And let me caution
+you. Your uncle will not suffer meddling on my part, still less a
+reminder of it. Therefore, as you are going to owe all to him, you
+will do well to be silent about me."
+
+She was sure that she owed all to him, and she might have said so, but
+at that moment the boat changed its course and the full force of the
+wind struck them. The salt spray whipped and stung their faces. Her
+cloak flew out like a balloon, her scarf pennon-wise, the tarpaulin
+flapped like some huge bird. He had to spring to the screen, to adjust
+it to the new course, to secure and tuck in her cloak--and all in
+haste, with exclamations and laughter, while Mary, sharing the joy of
+the struggle, and braced by the sting of the salt wind, felt her heart
+rise. How kind he was, and how strong. How he towered above ordinary
+men. How safe she felt in his care.
+
+When they were settled anew, she asked him to tell her something about
+the Gatehouse.
+
+"It's a lonely place," he said. "It is quite out of the world. I don't
+know, indeed, how you will exist after the life you have led."
+
+"The life I have led!" she protested. "But that is absurd! Though you
+saw me in the Princess's salon, you know that my life had nothing in
+common with hers. I was downstairs no more than three or four times,
+and then merely to interpret. My life was spent between whitewashed
+walls, on bare floors. I slept in a room with twenty children, ate
+with forty--onion soup and thick tartines. The evening I saw you I
+wore shoes which the maid lent me. And with all that I was thankful,
+most thankful, to have such a refuge. The great people who met at the
+Princess's----"
+
+"And who thought that they were making history!" he laughed. "Did you
+know that? Did you know that the Princess was looking to them to save
+the last morsel of Poland?"
+
+"No," she said. "I did not know. I am very ignorant. But if I were a
+man, I should love to do things like that."
+
+"I believe you would!" he replied. "Well, there are crusades in
+England. Only I fear that you will not be in the way of them."
+
+"And I am not a princess! But tell me, please, what are they?"
+
+"You will not be long before you come upon one," he replied, a hint of
+derision in his tone. "You will see a placard in the streets, '_Shall
+the people's bread be taxed?_' Not quite so romantic as the
+independence of Poland? But I can tell you that heads are quite as
+likely to be broken over it."
+
+"Surely," she said, "there can be only one answer to that."
+
+"Just so," he replied dryly. "But what is the answer? The land
+claims high prices that it may thrive; the towns claim cheap bread
+that they may live. Each says that the country depends upon it.
+'England self-supporting!' says one. 'England the workshop of the
+world!' says the other."
+
+"I begin to see."
+
+"'The land is the strength of the country,' argues the squire. 'Down
+with monopoly,' cries the cotton lord. Then each arms himself with a
+sword lately forged and called 'Philanthropy,' and with that he
+searches for chinks in the other's armor. 'See how factories work the
+babes, drive the women underground, ruin the race,' shout the squires.
+'Vote for the land and starvation wages,' shout the mill-owners."
+
+"But does no one try to find the answer?" she asked timidly. "Try to
+find out what is best for the people?"
+
+"Ah!" he rejoined, "if by the people you mean the lower classes, they
+cry, 'Give us not bread, but votes!' And the squires say that that is
+what the traders who have just got votes don't mean to give them; and
+so, to divert their attention, dangle cheap bread before their noses!"
+
+Mary sighed. "I am afraid that I must give it up," she said. "I am so
+ignorant."
+
+"Well," he replied thoughtfully. "Many are puzzled which side to take,
+and are waiting to see how the cat jumps. In the meantime every fence
+is placarded with 'Speed the Plough!' on one side, and 'The Big Loaf!'
+on the other. The first man you meet thinks the landlord a devourer of
+widows' houses; to the next the mill-owner is an ogre grinding men's
+bones to make his bread. Even at the Gatehouse I doubt if you will
+escape the excitement, though there is not a field of wheat within a
+mile of it!"
+
+"To me it is like a new world," she said.
+
+"Then, when you are in the new world," he replied, smiling as he rose,
+"do not forget Columbus! But here is the lad to tell you that your tea
+is ready."
+
+He repented when Mary had left him that he had not made better use of
+his time. It had been his purpose to make such an impression on the
+girl as might be of use in the future, and he wondered why he had not
+devoted himself more singly to this; why he had allowed minutes which
+might have been given to intimate subjects to be wasted in a dry
+discussion. But there was a quality in Mary that did not lightly
+invite to gallantry--a gravity and a balance that, had he looked
+closely into the matter, might have explained his laches.
+
+And in fact he had builded better than he knew, for while he
+reproached himself, Mary, safe within the tiny bathing machine which
+the packet company called a cabin, was giving much thought to him. The
+dip-candle, set within a horn lantern, threw its light on the one
+comfortable object, the tea-tray, seated beside which she reviewed
+what had happened, and found it all interesting; his meeting with her,
+his thought for her, the glimpses he had given her of things beyond
+the horizon of the convent school, even his diversion into politics.
+He was not on good terms with her uncle, and it was unlikely that she
+would see more of him. But she was sure that she would always remember
+his appearance on the threshold of her new life, that she would always
+recall with gratitude this crossing and the kindness which had lapped
+her about and saved her from loneliness.
+
+In her eyes he figured as one of the brilliant circle of the Htel
+Lambert. For her he played a part in great movements and high
+enterprises such as those which he had revealed to her. His light
+treatment of them, his air of detachment, had, indeed, chilled her at
+times; but these were perhaps natural in one who viewed from above and
+from a distance the ills which it was his task to treat. How ignorant
+he must think her! How remote from the plane on which he lived, the
+standards by which he judged, the objects at which he aimed! Yet he
+had stooped to explain things to her and to make them clear.
+
+She spent an hour deep in thought, and, strange as the life of the
+ship was to her, she was deaf to the creaking of the timbers, and the
+surge of the waves as they swept past the beam. At intervals hoarse
+orders, a rush of feet across the deck, the more regular tramp of rare
+passengers, caught her attention, only to lose it as quickly. It was
+late when she roused herself. She saw that the candle was burning low,
+and she began to make her arrangements for the night.
+
+Midway in them she paused, and colored, aware that she knew his tread
+from the many that had passed. The footstep ceased. A hand tapped at
+her door. "Yes?" she said.
+
+"We shall be in the river by daybreak," Audley announced. "I thought
+that you might like to come on deck early. You ought not to miss the
+river from the Nore to the Pool."
+
+"Thank you," she answered.
+
+"You shouldn't miss it," he persisted. "Greenwich especially!"
+
+"I shall be there," she replied. "It is very good of you. Good-night."
+
+He went away. After all, he was the only man on board shod like a
+gentleman; it had been odd if she had not known his step! And for
+going on deck early, why should she not? Was she to miss Greenwich
+because Lord Audley went to a good bootmaker?
+
+So when Peter Basset, still pale and qualmish, came on deck in the
+early morning, a little below the Pool, the first person he saw was
+the girl whom he had come to escort. She was standing high above him
+on the captain's bridge, her hands clasping the rail, her hair blown
+about and shining golden in the sunshine. Lord Audley's stately form
+towered above her. He was pointing out this and that, and they were
+talking gaily; and now and again the captain spoke to them, and many
+were looking at them. She did not see Basset; he was on the deck
+below, standing amid the common crowd, and so he was free to look at
+her as he pleased. He might be said not to have seen her before, and
+what he saw now bewildered, nay, staggered him. Unwillingly, and to
+please his uncle, he had come to meet a girl of whom they knew no more
+than this, that, rescued from some backwater of Paris life, into which
+a weak and shiftless father had plunged her, she had earned her
+living, if she had earned it at all, in a dependent capacity. He had
+looked to find her one of two things; either flashy and underbred,
+with every fault an Englishman might consider French, or a nice
+mixture of craft and servility. He had not been able to decide which
+he would prefer.
+
+Instead he saw a girl tall, slender, and slow of movement, with eyes
+set under a fine width of brow and grave when they smiled, a chin
+fuller than perfect beauty required, a mouth a little large, a perfect
+nose. Auburn hair, thick and waving, drooped over each temple, and
+framed a face as calm as it was fair. "Surely a pearl found on a
+midden!" he thought. And as the thought passed through his mind, Mary
+looked down. Her eyes roved for a moment over the crowded deck, where
+some, like Basset, returned her gaze with interest, while others
+sought their baggage or bawled for missing companions. He was not a
+man, it has been said, to stand out in a crowd, and her eyes travelled
+over him without seeing him. Audley spoke to her, she lifted her eyes,
+she looked ashore again. But the unheeding glance which had not
+deigned to know him stung Basset! He dubbed her, with all her beauty,
+proud and hard. Still--to be such and to have sprung from such a life!
+It was marvellous.
+
+He knew nothing of the convent school with its hourly discipline
+lasting through years. He did not guess that the obstinacy which had
+been weakness in the father was strength in the child. Much less could
+he divine that the improvidence of that father had become a beacon,
+warning the daughter off the rocks which had been fatal to him! Mary
+was no miracle, but neither was she proud or hard.
+
+They had passed Erith, and Greenwich with its stately pile and formal
+gardens glittering in the sunshine of an April morning. The ripple of
+a westerly wind, meeting the flood, silvered the turbid surface. A
+hundred wherries skimmed like water-flies hither and thither, long
+lines of colliers fringed the wharves, tall China clippers forged
+slowly up under a scrap of foresail, dumb barges deep laden with hay
+or Barclay's Entire, moved mysteriously with the tide. On all sides
+hoarse voices bawled orders or objurgations. Charmed with the gayety,
+the movement, the color, Mary could not take her eyes from the scene.
+The sunshine, the leap of life, the pulse of spring, moved in her
+blood and put to flight the fears that had weighed on her at
+nightfall. She told herself with elation that this was England, this
+was her native land, this was her home.
+
+Meanwhile Audley's mind took another direction. He reflected that in a
+few minutes he must part from the girl, and must trust henceforth to
+the impression he had made. For some hours he had scarcely given a
+thought to Basset, but he recalled him now, and he searched for him in
+the throng below. He found him at last, pressed against the rail
+between a fat woman with a basket and a crying child. Their eyes met.
+My lord glanced away, but he could not refrain from a smile as he
+pictured the poor affair the other had made of his errand. And
+Basset saw the smile and read its meaning, and though he was not
+self--assertive, though he was, indeed, backward to a fault, anger ran
+through his veins. To have travelled three hundred miles in order to
+meet this girl, to have found her happy in another's company, and to
+have accepted the second place--the position had vexed him even under
+the qualms of illness. This morning, and since he had seen her, it
+stirred in him an unwonted resentment. He d--d Audley under his
+breath, disengaged himself from the basket which the fat woman was
+thrusting into his ribs, lifted the child aside. He escaped below to
+collect his effects.
+
+But in a short time he recovered his temper. When the boat began to go
+about in the crowded Pool and Mary reluctantly withdrew her eyes from
+the White Tower, darkened by the smoke and the tragedies of twenty
+generations, she found him awaiting them at the foot of the ladder. He
+was still pale, and the girl's conscience smote her. For many hours
+she had not given him a thought. "I hope you are better," she said
+gently.
+
+"Horrid thing, _mal de mer!_" remarked my lord, with a gleam of humor
+in his eye.
+
+"Thank you, I am quite right this morning," Basset answered.
+
+"You go from Euston Grove, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes. The morning train starts in a little over an hour."
+
+No more was said, and they went ashore together. Audley, an old
+traveller, and one whose height and presence gave weight to his
+orders, saw to Mary's safety in the crowd, shielded her from touts and
+tide-waiters, took the upper hand. He watched the aproned porters
+disappearing with the baggage in the direction of the Custom House,
+and a thought struck him. "I am sorry that my servant is not here," he
+said. "He would see our things through without troubling us." His eyes
+met Basset's.
+
+Basset disdained to refuse. "I will do it," he said. He received the
+keys and followed the baggage.
+
+Audley looked at Mary and laughed. "I think you'll find him useful,"
+he said. "Takes a hint and is not too forward."
+
+"For shame!" she cried. "It is very good of him to go." But she could
+not refrain from a smile.
+
+"Well trained," Audley continued in a whimsical tone, "fetches and
+carries, barks at the name of Peel and growls at the name of Cobden,
+gives up a stick when required, could be taught to beg--by the right
+person."
+
+She laughed--she could not resist his manner. "But you are not very
+kind," she said. "Please to call a--whatever we need. He shall not do
+everything."
+
+"Everything?" Lord Audley echoed. "He should do nothing," in a lower
+tone, "if I had my way."
+
+Mary blushed.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ FIELD AND FORGE
+
+
+The window of the clumsy carriage was narrow, but Mary gazed through
+it as if she could never see enough of the flying landscape, the
+fields, the woods, the ivy-clad homes and red-roofed towns that passed
+in procession before her. The emotions of those who journeyed for the
+first time on a railway at a speed four times as great as that of the
+swiftest High-flier that ever devoured the road are forgotten by this
+generation. But they were vivid. The thing was a miracle. And though
+by this time men had ceased to believe that he who passed through the
+air at sixty miles an hour must of necessity cease to breathe, the
+novice still felt that he could never tire of the panorama so swiftly
+unrolled before him.
+
+And it was not only wonder, it was admiration that held Mary chained
+to the window. Her infancy had been spent in a drab London street, her
+early youth in the heart of a Paris which was still gloomy and
+medival. Some beautiful things she had seen on fte days, the
+bend of the river at Meudon or St. Germain, and once the Forest
+of Fontainebleau; on Sundays the Bois. But the smiling English
+meadows, the gray towers of village churches, the parks and lawns of
+manor-houses, the canals with their lines of painted barges, and here
+and there a gay packet boat--she drank in the beauty of these, and
+more than once her eyes grew dim. For a time Basset, seated in the
+opposite corner, did not exist for her; while he, behind the _Morning
+Chronicle_, made his observations and took note of her at his leisure.
+The longer he looked the more he marvelled.
+
+He asked himself with amusement what John Audley would think of her
+when he, too, should see her. He anticipated the old man's surprise on
+finding her so remote from their preconceived ideas of her. He
+wondered what she would think of John Audley.
+
+And while he pondered, and now scanned his paper without reading it,
+and now stole another glance at her, he steeled himself against her.
+She might not have been to blame, it might not have been her fault;
+but, between them, the two on the boat had put him in his place and he
+could not forget it. He had cut a poor figure, and he resented it. He
+foresaw that in the future she would be dependent on him for society,
+and he would be a fool if he then forgot the lesson he had learned.
+She had a good face, but probably her up-bringing had been anything
+but good. Probably it had taught her to make the most of the moment
+and of the man of the moment, and he would be foolish if he let her
+amuse herself with him. He had seen in what light she viewed him when
+other game was afoot, and he would deserve the worst if he did not
+remember this.
+
+Presently an embankment cut off the view, and she withdrew her eyes
+from the window. In her turn she took the measure of her companion. It
+seemed to her that his face was too thoughtful for his years, and that
+his figure was insignificant. The eye which had accustomed itself to
+Lord Audley's port and air found Basset slight and almost mean. She
+smiled as she recalled the skill with which my lord had set him aside
+and made use of him.
+
+Still, he was a part of the life to which she was hastening, and
+curiosity stirred in her. He was in possession, he was in close
+relations with her uncle, he knew many things which she was anxious to
+know. Much of her comfort might depend on him. Presently she asked him
+what her uncle was like.
+
+"You will see for yourself in a few hours," he replied, his tone cold
+and almost ungracious. "Did not Lord Audley describe him?"
+
+"No. And you seem," with a faint smile, "to be equally on your guard,
+Mr. Basset."
+
+"Not at all," he retorted. "But I think it better to leave you to
+judge for yourself. I have lived too near to Mr. Audley to--to
+criticise him."
+
+She colored.
+
+"Let me give you one hint, however," he continued in the same dry
+tone; "you will be wise not to mention Lord Audley to him. They are
+not on good terms."
+
+"I am sorry."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "It cannot be said to be unnatural, after
+what has happened."
+
+She considered this. "What has happened?" she asked after a pause.
+
+"Well, the claim to the peerage, if nothing else----"
+
+"What claim?" she asked. "Whose claim? What peerage? I am quite in the
+dark."
+
+He stared. He did not believe her. "Your uncle's claim," he said
+curtly. Then as she still looked a question, "You must know," he
+continued, "that your uncle claimed the title which Lord Audley bears,
+and the property which goes with it. And that the decision was only
+given against him three months ago."
+
+"I know nothing of it," she said. "I never heard of the claim."
+
+"Really?" he replied. He hardly deigned to veil his incredulity. "Yet
+if your uncle had succeeded you were the next heir."
+
+"I?"
+
+"Yes, you."
+
+Then her face shook his unbelief. She turned slowly and painfully red.
+"Is it possible?" she said. "You are not playing with me?"
+
+"Certainly I am not. Do you mean that Lord Audley never told you that?
+Never told you that you were interested?"
+
+"Never! He only told me that he was not on good terms with my uncle,
+and that for that reason he would leave me to learn the rest at the
+Gatehouse."
+
+"Well, that was right," Basset answered. "It is as well, since you
+have to live with Mr. Audley, that you should not be prejudiced
+against him."
+
+"No doubt," she said dryly. "But I do not understand why he did not
+answer my letters."
+
+"Did you write to him?"
+
+"Twice." She was going to explain the circumstances, but she
+refrained. Why appeal to the sympathies of one who seemed so cold, so
+distant, so indifferent?
+
+"He cannot have had the letters," Basset decided after a pause.
+
+"Then how did he come to write to me at last?"
+
+"Lord Audley sent your address to him."
+
+"Ah!" she said. "I supposed so." With an air of finality she turned to
+the window, and for some time she was silent. Her mind had much upon
+which to work.
+
+She was silent for so long that before more was said they were running
+through the outskirts of Birmingham, and Mary awoke with a shock to
+another and sadder side of England. In place of parks and homesteads
+she saw the England of the workers--workers at that time exploited to
+the utmost in pursuance of a theory of economy that heeded only the
+wealth of nations, and placed on that wealth the narrowest meaning.
+They passed across squalid streets, built in haste to meet the needs
+of new factories, under tall chimneys the smoke of which darkened the
+sky without hindrance, by vile courts, airless and almost sunless.
+They looked down on sallow children whose only playground was the
+street and whose only school-bell was the whistle that summoned them
+at dawn to premature toil. Haggard women sat on doorsteps with puling
+babes in their arms. Lines of men, whose pallor peered through the
+grime, propped the walls, or gazed with apathy at the train. For a few
+minutes Mary forgot not only her own hopes and fears, but the
+aloofness and even the presence of her companion. When they came to a
+standstill in the station, where they had to change on to the Grand
+Junction Railway, Basset had to speak twice before she understood that
+he wished her to leave the carriage.
+
+"What a dreadful place!" she exclaimed.
+
+"Well, it is not beautiful," Basset admitted. "One does not look for
+beauty in Birmingham and the Black Country."
+
+He got her some tea, and marshalled her carefully to the upper line.
+But his answer had jarred upon her, and when they were again seated,
+Mary kept her thoughts to herself. Beyond Birmingham their route
+skirted towns rather than passed through them, but she saw enough to
+deepen the impression which the lanes and alleys of that place had
+made upon her. The sun had set and the cold evening light revealed in
+all their meanness the rows of naked cottages, the heaps of slag and
+cinders, the starveling horses that stood with hanging heads on the
+dreary lands. As darkness fell, fires shone out here and there, and
+threw into Dantesque relief the dark forms of half-naked men toiling
+with fury to feed the flames. The change which an hour had made in all
+she saw seemed appalling to the girl; it filled her with awe and
+sadness. Here, so near the paradise of the country and the plough, was
+the Inferno of the town, the forge, the pit! Here, in place of the
+thatched cottage and the ruddy faces, were squalor and sunken cheeks
+and misery and dearth.
+
+She thought of the question which Lord Audley had raised twenty-four
+hours before, and which he had told her was racking the minds of
+men--should food be taxed? And she fancied that there was, there could
+be, but one answer. These toiling masses, these slaves of the hammer
+and the pick, must be fed, and, surely, so fed that a margin, however
+small, however meagre, might be saved out of which to better their
+sordid lot.
+
+"We call this the Black Country," Basset explained, feeling the
+silence irksome. After all, she was in his charge, in a way she was
+his guest. He ought to amuse her.
+
+"It is well named," she answered. "Is there anything in England worse
+than this?"
+
+"Well, round Hales Owen and Dudley," he rejoined, "it may be worse.
+And at Cradley Heath it may be rougher. More women and children are
+employed in the pits; and where women make chains--well, it's pretty
+bad."
+
+She had spoken dryly to hide her feelings. He replied in a tone as
+matter-of-fact, through lack of feeling. For this he was not so much
+to blame as she fancied, for that which horrified her was to him an
+everyday matter, one of the facts of life with which he had been
+familiar from boyhood. But she did not understand this. She judged him
+and condemned him. She did not speak again.
+
+By and by, "We shall be at Penkridge in twenty minutes," he said.
+"After that a nine-miles drive will take us to the Gatehouse, and your
+journey will be over. But I fear that you will find the life quiet
+after Paris."
+
+"I was very quiet in Paris."
+
+"But you were in a large house."
+
+"I was at the Princess Czartoriski's."
+
+"Of course. I suppose it was there that you met Lord Audley?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, after that kind of life, I am afraid that the Gatehouse will
+have few charms for you. It is very remote, very lonely."
+
+She cut him short with impatience, the color rising to her face. "I
+thought you understood," she said, "that I was in the Princess's house
+as a governess? It was my business to take care of a number of
+children, to eat with them, to sleep with them, to see that they
+washed their hands and kept their hair clean. That was my position,
+Mr. Basset. I do not wish it to be misunderstood."
+
+"But if that were so," he stammered, "how did you----"
+
+"Meet Lord Audley," she replied. "Very simply. Once or twice the
+Princess ordered me to descend to the salon to interpret. On one of
+these occasions Lord Audley saw me and learned--who I was."
+
+"Indeed," he said. "I see." Perhaps he had had it in his mind to test
+her and the truth of Audley's letter, which nothing in her or in my
+lord's conduct seemed to confirm. He did not know if this had been in
+his mind, but in any case the result silenced him. She was either very
+honest or very clever. Many girls, he knew, would have slurred over
+the facts, and not a few would have boasted of the Princess's
+friendship and the Princess's society, and the Princess's htel, and
+brought up her name a dozen times a day.
+
+She is very clever, he thought, or she is--good. But for the moment he
+steeled himself against the latter opinion.
+
+No other travellers alighted at Penkridge, and he went away to claim
+the baggage, while she waited, cold and depressed, on the little
+platform which, lit by a single oil lamp, looked down on a dim
+churchyard. Dusk was passing into night, and the wind, sweeping across
+the flat, whipped her skirts and chilled her blood. Her courage sank.
+A light or two betrayed the nearness of the town, but in every other
+direction dull lines of willows or pale stretches of water ran into
+the night.
+
+Five minutes before she had resented Basset's company, now she was
+glad to see him return. He led the way to the road in silence. "The
+carriage is late," he muttered, but even as he spoke the quick tramp
+of a pair of horses pushed to speed broke on them, lights appeared, a
+moment later a fly pulled up beside them and turned. "You are late,"
+Basset said.
+
+"There!" the man replied. "Minutes might be guineas since trains came
+in, dang 'em! Give me the days when five minutes made neither man nor
+mouse, and gentry kept their own time."
+
+"Well, let us get off now."
+
+"I ask no better, Squire. Please yourself and you'll please me."
+
+When they were shut in, Basset laughed. "Stafford manners!" he said.
+"You'll become used to them!"
+
+"Is this my uncle's carriage?" she asked.
+
+"No," he replied, smiling in the darkness. "He does not keep one."
+
+She said no more. Though she could not see him, her shoulder touched
+his, and his nearness and the darkness in which they sat troubled her,
+though she was not timid. They rode thus for a minute or two, then
+trundled through a narrow street, dimly lit by shop windows; again
+they were in the dark and the country. Presently the pace dropped to a
+walk as they began to ascend.
+
+She fancied, peering out on her side, that they were winding up
+through woods. Branches swept the sides of the carriage. They jolted
+into ruts and jolted out of them. By and by they were clear of the
+trees and the road seemed to be better. The moon, newly risen, showed
+her a dreary upland, bare and endless, here dotted with the dark
+stumps of trees, there of a deeper black as if fire had swept over it
+and scarred it. They met no one, saw no sign of habitation. To the
+girl, accustomed all her life to streets and towns, the place seemed
+infinitely desolate--a place of solitude and witches and terror and
+midnight murder.
+
+"What is this?" she asked, shivering.
+
+"This is the Great Chase," he said. "Riddsley, on the farther side, is
+our nearest town, but since the railway was opened we use Penkridge
+Station."
+
+His practical tone steadied her, but she was tired, and the loneliness
+which she had felt while she waited on the bleak platform weighed
+heavily on her. To what was she going? How would her uncle receive
+her? This dreary landscape, the gaunt signpost that looked like a
+gibbet and might have been one, the skeleton trees that raised bare
+arms to heaven, the scream of a dying rabbit, all added to the
+depression of the moment. She was glad when at last the carriage
+stopped at a gate. Basset alighted and opened the gate. He stepped in
+again, they went on. There were now shadowy trees about them, sparsely
+set. They jolted unevenly over turf.
+
+"Are we there?" she asked, a tremor in her voice.
+
+"Very nearly," he said. "Another mile and we shall be there. This is
+Beaudelays Park."
+
+She called pride to her aid, and he did not guess--for all day he had
+marked her self-possession--that she was trembling. Vainly she told
+herself that she was foolish, that nothing could happen to her,
+nothing that mattered. What, after all, was a cold reception, what was
+her uncle's frown beside the poverty and the hazards from which she
+had escaped? Vainly she reassured herself; she could not still the
+rapid beating of her heart.
+
+He might have said a word to cheer her. But he did not know that she
+was suffering, and he said no word. She came near to hating him for
+his stolidity and his silence. He was inhuman! A block!
+
+She peered through the misty glass, striving to see what was before
+them. But she could make out no more than the dark limbs of trees, and
+now and then a trunk, which shone as the light of the lamp slipped
+over it, and as quickly vanished. Suddenly they shot from turf to hard
+road, passed through an open gateway, for an instant the lamp on her
+side showed a grotesque pillar--they wheeled, they stopped. Within a
+few feet of her a door stood open, and in the doorway a girl held a
+lantern aloft in one hand, and with the other screened her eyes from
+the light.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ MR. JOHN AUDLEY
+
+
+An hour later Basset was seated on one side of a wide hearth,
+on the other John Audley faced him. The library in which they sat was
+the room which Basset loved best in the world. It was a room of
+silence and large spaces, and except where four windows, tall and
+narrow, broke one wall, it was lined high with the companions of
+silence--books. The ceiling was of black oak, adorned at the crossings
+of the joists and beams with emblems, butterflies, and Stafford knots
+and the like, once bright with color, and still soberly rich. A
+five-sided bay enlarged each of the two inner corners of the
+room and broke the outlines. One of these bays shrined a window,
+four-mullioned, the other a spiral staircase. An air of comfort and
+stateliness pervaded the whole; here the great scutcheon over the
+mantel, there the smaller coats on the chair-backs blended their or
+and gules with the hues of old rugs and the dun bindings of old
+folios. There were books on the four or five tables, and books on the
+Cromwell chairs; and charts and deeds, antique weapons and silver
+pieces, all the tools and toys of the antiquary, lay broadcast.
+Against the door hung a blazoned pedigree of the Audleys of
+Beaudelays. It was six feet long and dull with age.
+
+But Basset, as he faced his companion, was not thinking of the room,
+or of the pursuits with which it was connected in his mind, and which,
+more than affection and habit, bound him to John Audley. He moved
+restlessly in his chair, then stretched his legs to meet the glow of
+the wood fire. "All the same," he said, "I think you would have done
+well to see her to-night, sir."
+
+"Pooh! pooh!" John Audley answered with lazy good humor. "Why? It
+doesn't matter what I think of her or she thinks of me. It's what
+Peter thinks of Mary and Mary thinks of Peter that matters. That's
+what matters!" He chuckled as he marked the other's annoyance. "She is
+a beauty, is she?"
+
+"I didn't say so."
+
+"But you think it. You don't deceive me at this time of day. And
+stand-off, is she? That's for the marines and innocent young fellows
+like you who think women angels. I'll be bound that she's her mother's
+daughter, and knows her value and will see that she fetches it!
+Trading blood will out!"
+
+To the eye that looked and glanced away John Audley, lolling in his
+chair, in a quilted dressing-gown with silk facings, was a plump and
+pleasant figure. His face was fresh-colored, and would have been
+comely if the cheeks had not been a little pendulous. His hair was
+fine and white and he wore it long, and his hands were shapely and
+well cared for. As he said his last word he poured a little brandy
+into a glass and filled it up with water. "Here's to the wooing that's
+not long adoing!" he said, his eyes twinkling. He seemed to take a
+pleasure in annoying the other.
+
+He was so far successful that Basset swore softly. "It's silly to talk
+like that," he said, "when I have hardly known the girl twenty-four
+hours and have scarcely said ten times as many words to her."
+
+"But you're going to say a good many more words to her!" Audley
+retorted, grinning. "Sweet, pretty words, my boy! But there, there,"
+he continued, veering between an elfish desire to tease and a desire
+equally strong to bring the other to his way of thinking. "I'm only
+joking. I know you'll never let that devil have his way! You'll never
+leave the course open for _him!_ I know that. But there's no hurry!
+There's no hurry. Though, lord, how I sweated when I read his letter!
+I had never a wink of sleep the night after."
+
+"I don't suppose that he's given a thought to her in that way," Basset
+answered. "Why should he?"
+
+John Audley leant forward, and his face underwent a remarkable change.
+It became a pale, heavy mask, out of which his eyes gleamed, small and
+malevolent. "Don't talk like a fool!" he said harshly. "Of course he
+means it. And if she's fool enough all my plans, all my pains, all my
+rights--and once you come to your senses and help me I shall have my
+rights--all, all, all will go for nothing. For nothing!" He sank back
+in his chair. "There! now you've excited me. You've excited me, and
+you know that I can't bear excitement!" His hand groped feebly for his
+glass, and he raised it to his lips. He gasped once or twice. The
+color came back to his face.
+
+"I am sorry," Basset said.
+
+"Ay, ay. But be a good lad. Be a good lad. Make up your mind to help
+me at the Great House."
+
+Basset shook his head.
+
+"To help me, and twenty-four hours--only twenty-four hours, man--may
+make all the difference! All the difference in the world to me."
+
+"I have told you my views about it," Basset said doggedly. He shifted
+uneasily in his chair. "I cannot do it, sir, and I won't."
+
+John Audley groaned. "Well, well!" he answered. "I'll say no more now.
+I'll say no more now. When you and she have made it up"--in vain
+Basset shook his head--"you'll see the question in another light. Ay,
+believe me, you will. It'll be your business then, and your interest,
+and nothing venture, nothing win! You'll see it differently. You'll
+help the old man to his rights then."
+
+Basset shrugged his shoulders, but thought it useless to protest. The
+other sighed once or twice and was silent also. At length, "You never
+told me that you had heard from her," Basset said.
+
+"That I'd----" John Audley broke off. "What is it, Toft?" he asked
+over his shoulder.
+
+A man-servant, tall, thin, lantern-jawed, had entered unseen. "I came
+to see if you wanted anything more, sir?" he said.
+
+"Nothing, nothing, Toft. Good-night!" He spoke impatiently, and he
+watched the man out before he went on. Then, "Perhaps I heard from
+her, perhaps I didn't," he said. "It's some time ago. What of it?"
+
+"She was in great distress when she wrote."
+
+John Audley raised his eyebrows. "What of it!" he repeated.
+"She was that woman's daughter. When Peter married a tradesman's
+daughter--married a----" He did not continue. His thoughts trickled
+away into silence. The matter was not worthy of his attention.
+
+But by and by he roused himself. "You've ridiculous scruples," he
+said. "Absurd scruples. But," briskly, "there's that much of good in
+this girl that I think she'll put an end to them. You must brighten
+up, my lad, and spark it a little! You're too grave."
+
+"Damn!" said Basset. "For God's sake, don't begin it all again. I've
+told you that I've not the least intention----"
+
+"She'll see to that if she's what I think her," John Audley retorted
+cheerfully. "If she's her mother's daughter! But very well, very well!
+We'll change the subject. I've been working at the Feathers--the
+Prince's Feathers."
+
+"Have you gone any farther?" Basset asked, forcing an interest which
+would have been ready enough at another time.
+
+"I might have, but I had a visitor."
+
+Visitors were rare at the Gatehouse, and Basset wondered. "Who was
+it?" he asked.
+
+"Bagenal the maltster from Riddsley. He came about some political
+rubbish. Some trouble they are having with Mottisfont. D--n
+Mottisfont! What do I care about him? They think he isn't running
+straight--that he's going in for corn-law repeal. And Bagenal and the
+other fools think that that will be the ruin of the town."
+
+"But Mottisfont is a Tory," Basset objected.
+
+"So is Peel. They are both in Bagenal's bad books. Bagenal is sure
+that Peel is going back to the cotton people he came from. Spinning
+Jenny spinning round again!"
+
+"I see."
+
+"I asked him," Audley continued, rubbing his knees with sly enjoyment,
+"what Stubbs the lawyer was doing about it. He's the party manager.
+Why didn't he come to me?"
+
+Basset smiled. "What did he say to that?"
+
+"Hummed and hawed. At last he said that owing to Stubbs's connection
+with--you know who--it was thought that he was not the right person to
+come to me. So I asked him what Stubbs's employer was going to do
+about it."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"He didn't know what to say to that, the ass! Thought I should go the
+other way, you see. So I told him"--John Audley laughed maliciously as
+he spoke--"that, for the landed interest, the law had taken away my
+land, and, for politics, I would not give a d--n for either party in a
+country where men did not get their rights! Lord! how he looked!"
+
+"Well, you didn't hide your feelings."
+
+"Why should I?" John Audley asked cheerfully. "What will they do for
+me? Nothing. Will they move a finger to right me? No. Then a plague on
+both their houses!" He snapped his fingers in schoolboy fashion and
+rose to his feet. He lit a candle, taking a light from the fire with a
+spill. "I am going to bed now, Peter. Unless----" he paused, the
+candlestick in his hand, and gazed fixedly at his companion. "Lord,
+man, what we could do in two or three hours! In two or three hours.
+This very night!"
+
+"I've told you that I will have nothing to do with it!" Basset
+repeated.
+
+John Audley sighed, and removing his eyes, poked the wick of the
+candle with the snuffers. "Well," he said, "good-night. We must look
+to bright eyes and red lips to convert you. What a man won't do for
+another he will do for himself, Peter. Good-night."
+
+Left alone, Basset stared fretfully at the fire. It was not the first
+time by scores that John Audley had tried him and driven him almost
+beyond bearing. But habit is a strong tie, and a common taste is a
+bond even stronger. In this room, and from the elder man, Basset had
+learned to trace a genealogy, to read a coat, to know a bar from a
+bend, to discourse of badges and collars under the guidance of the
+learned Anstie or the ingenious Le Neve. There he had spent hours
+flitting from book to book and chart to chart in the pursuit, as
+thrilling while it lasted as any fox-chase, of some family link, the
+origin of this, the end of that, a thing of value only to those who
+sought it, but to them all-important. He could recall many a day so
+spent while rain lashed the tall mullioned windows or sunlight flooded
+the window-seat in the bay; and these days had endeared to him every
+nook in the library from the folio shelves in the shadowy corner under
+the staircase to the cosey table near the hearth which was called "Mr.
+Basset's," and enshrined in a long drawer a tree of the Bassets of
+Blore.
+
+For he as well as Audley came of an ancient and shrunken stock. He
+also could count among his forbears men who had fought at Blore Heath
+and Towton, or had escaped by a neck from the ruin of the Gunpowder
+Plot. So he had fallen early under the spell of the elder man's
+pursuits, and, still young, had learned from him to live in the past.
+Later the romantic solitude of the Gatehouse, where he had spent more
+of the last six years than in his own house at Blore, had confirmed
+him in the habit.
+
+Under the surface, however, the two men remained singularly unlike.
+While a fixed idea had narrowed John Audley's vision to the inhuman,
+the younger man, under a dry and reserved exterior--he was shy, and
+his undrained acres, his twelve hundred a year, poorly supported an
+ancient name--was not only human, but in his way was something of an
+idealist. He dreamed dreams, he had his secret aspirations, at times
+ambition of the higher kind stirred in him, he planned plans and
+another life than this. But always--this was a thing inbred in him--he
+put forward the commonplace, as the cuttle-fish sheds ink, and hid
+nothing so shyly as the visions which he had done nothing to make
+real. On those about him he made no deep impression, though from one
+border of Staffordshire to the other his birth won respect. Politics
+viewed as a game, and a selfish game, had no attraction for him.
+Quarter Sessions and the Bench struck no spark from him. At the Races
+and the County Ball richer men outshone him. But given something to
+touch his heart and fire his ambition, he had qualities. He might
+still show himself in another light.
+
+Something of this, for no reason that he could imagine, some feeling
+of regret for past opportunities, passed through his mind as he sat
+fretting over John Audley's folly. But after a time he roused himself
+and became aware that he was tired; and he rose and lit a candle. He
+pushed back the smouldering logs and slowly and methodically he put
+out the lights. He gave a last thought to John Audley. "There was
+always one maggot in his head," he muttered, "now there's a second.
+What I would not do to please him, he thinks I shall do to please
+another! Well, he does not know her yet!"
+
+He went to bed.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ THE GATEHOUSE
+
+
+It is within the bounds of imagination that death may make no greater
+change in our inner selves than is wrought at times by a new mood or
+another outlook. When Mary, an hour before the world was astir on the
+morning after her arrival, let herself out of the Gatehouse, and from
+its threshold as from a ledge saw the broad valley of the Trent
+stretched before her in all the beauty of a May morning, her alarm of
+the past night seemed incredible. At her feet a sharp slope, clothed
+in gorse and shrub, fell away to meet the plain. It sank no more than
+a couple of hundred feet, but this was enough to enable her to follow
+the silver streak of the river winding afar between park and coppice
+and under many a church tower. Away to the right she could see the
+three graceful spires of Lichfield, and southward, where an opal haze
+closed the prospect, she could imagine the fringe of the Black
+Country, made beautiful by distance.
+
+In sober fact few parts of England are less inviting than the low
+lands of Staffordshire, when the spring floods cover them or the fogs
+of autumn cling to the cold soil. But in spring, when larks soar above
+them and tall, lop-sided elms outline the fields, they have their
+beauty; and Mary gazed long at the fair prospect before she turned her
+back on it and looked at the house that was fated to be her home.
+
+It was what its name signified, a gatehouse; yet by turns it could be
+a sombre and a charming thing. Some Audley of noble ideas, a man long
+dead, had built it to be the entrance to his demesne. The park wall,
+overhung by trees, still ran right and left from it, but the road
+which had once passed through the archway now slid humbly aside and
+entered the park by a field gate. A wide-latticed Tudor tower, rising
+two stories above the arch and turreted at the four corners, formed
+the middle. It was buttressed on either hand by a lower building,
+flush with it and of about the same width. The tower was of yellowish
+stone, the wings were faced with stained stucco. Right and left of the
+whole a plot of shrubs masked on the one hand the stables, on the
+other the kitchens--modern blocks set back to such a distance that
+each touched the old part at a corner only.
+
+He who had planned the building had set it cunningly on the brow of
+the Great Chase, so that, viewed from the vale, it rose against the
+skyline. On dark days it broke the fringe of woodland and stood up,
+gloomy and forbidding, the portal of a Doubting Castle. On bright
+days, with its hundred diamond panes a-glitter in the sunshine, it
+seemed to be the porch of a fairy palace, the silent home of some
+Sleeping Beauty. At all times it imposed itself upon men below and
+spoke of something beyond, something unseen, greater, mysterious.
+
+To Mary Audley, who saw it at its best, the very stains of the plaster
+glorified by the morning light, it was a thing of joy. She fancied
+that to live behind those ancient mullioned windows, to look out
+morning and evening on that spacious landscape, to feel the bustle of
+the world so remote, must in itself be happiness. For a time she could
+not turn from it.
+
+But presently the desire to explore her new surroundings seized her
+and she re-entered the house. A glance at the groined roof of the
+hall--many a gallant horseman had ridden under it in his time--proved
+that it was merely the archway closed and fitted with a small door and
+window at either end. She unlocked the farther door and passed into a
+paved court, in which the grass grew between the worn flags. In the
+stables on the left a dog whined. The kitchens were on the other hand,
+and before her an opening flanked by tall heraldic beasts broke a low
+wall, built of moss-grown brick. She ventured through it and uttered a
+cry of delight.
+
+Near at hand, under cover of a vast chestnut tree, were traces of
+domestic labor: a grindstone, a saw-pit, a woodpile, coops with
+clucking hens. But beyond these the sward, faintly lined at first with
+ruts, stretched away into forest glades, bordered here by giant oaks
+brown in bud, there by the yellowish-green of beech trees. In the
+foreground lay patches of gorse, and in places an ancient thorn, riven
+and half prostrate, crowned the russet of last year's bracken with a
+splash of cream. Heedless of the spectator, rabbits sat making their
+toilet, and from every brake birds filled the air with a riot of song.
+
+To one who had seen little but the streets of Paris, more sordid then
+than now, the scene was charming. Mary's eyes filled, her heart
+swelled. Ah, what a home was here! She had espied on her journey many
+a nook and sheltered dell, but nothing that could vie with this!
+Heedless of her thin shoes, with no more than a handkerchief on her
+head, she strayed on and on. By and by a track, faintly marked, led
+her to the left. A little farther, and old trees fell into line on
+either hand, as if in days long gone, before age thinned their ranks,
+they had formed an avenue.
+
+For a time she sat musing on a fallen trunk, then the hawthorn that a
+few paces away perfumed the spring air moved her to gather an armful
+of it. She forgot that time was passing, almost she forgot that she
+had not breakfasted, and she might have been nearly a mile from the
+Gatehouse when she was startled by a faint hail that seemed to come
+from behind her. She looked back and saw Basset coming after her.
+
+He, too, was hatless--he had set off in haste--and he was out of
+breath. She turned with concern to meet him. "Am I very late, Mr.
+Basset?" she asked, her conscience pricking her. What if this first
+morning she had broken the rules?
+
+"Oh no," he said. And then, "You've not been farther than this?"
+
+"No. I am afraid my uncle is waiting?"
+
+"Oh no. He breakfasts in his own room. But Etruria told me that
+you had gone this way, and I followed. I see that you are not
+empty-handed."
+
+"No." And she thrust the great bunch of may under his nose--who would
+not have been gay, who would not have lost her reserve in such a
+scene, on such a morning? "Isn't it fresh? Isn't it delicious?"
+
+As he stooped to the flowers his eyes met hers smiling through the
+hawthorn sprays, and he saw her as he had not seen her before. Her
+gravity had left her. Spring laughed in her eyes, youth fluttered in
+the tendrils of her hair, she was the soul of May. And what she had
+found of beauty in the woodland, of music in the larks' songs, of
+perfume in the blossoms, of freshness in the morning, the man found in
+her; and a shock, never to be forgotten, ran through him. He did not
+speak. He smelled the hawthorn in silence.
+
+But a few seconds later--as men reckon time--he took note of his
+feelings, and he was startled. He had not been prepared to like her,
+we know; many things had armed him against her. But before the
+witchery of her morning face, the challenge of her laughing eyes, he
+awoke to the fact that he was in danger. He had to own that if he must
+live beside her day by day and would maintain his indifference, he
+must steel himself. He must keep his first impressions of her always
+before him, and be careful. And be very careful--if even that might
+avail.
+
+For a hundred paces he walked at her side, listening without knowing
+what she said. Then his coolness returned, and when she asked him why
+he had come after her without his hat he was ready.
+
+"I had better tell you," he answered, "this path is little used. It
+leads to the Great House, and your uncle, owing to his quarrel with
+Lord Audley, does not like any one to go farther in that direction
+than the Yew Tree Walk. You can see the Walk from here--the yews mark
+the entrance to the gardens. I thought that it would be unfortunate if
+you began by displeasing him, and I came after you."
+
+"It was very good of you," she said. Her face was not gay now. "Does
+Lord Audley live there--when he is at home?"
+
+"No one lives there," he explained soberly. "No one has lived there
+for three generations. It's a ruin--I was going to say, a nightmare.
+The greater part of the house was burnt down in a carouse held to
+celebrate the accession of George the Third. The Audley of that day
+rebuilt it on a great scale, but before it was finished he gave a
+housewarming, at which his only son quarrelled with a guest. The two
+fought at daybreak, and the son was killed beside the old Butterfly in
+the Yew Walk--you will see the spot some day. The father sent away the
+builders and never looked up again. He diverted much of his property,
+and a cousin came into the remainder and the title, but the house was
+never finished, the windows in the new part were never glazed. In the
+old part some furniture and tapestry decay; in the new are only bats
+and dust and owls. So it has stood for eighty years, vacant in the
+midst of neglected gardens. In the sunlight it is one of the most
+dreary things you can imagine. By moonlight it is better, but
+unspeakably melancholy."
+
+"How dreadful," she said in a low voice. "I almost wish, Mr. Basset,
+that you had not told me. They say in France that if you see the dead
+without touching them, you dream of them. I feel like that about the
+house."
+
+It crossed his mind that she was talking for effect. "It is only a
+house after all," he said.
+
+"But our house," with a touch of pride. Then, "What are those?"
+she asked, pointing to the gray shapeless beasts, time-worn and
+weather-stained, that flanked the entrance to the courtyard.
+
+"They are, or once were, Butterflies, the badge of the Audleys. These
+hold shields. You will see the Butterflies in many places in the
+Gatehouse. You will find them with men's faces and sometimes with a
+fret on the wings. Your uncle says that they are not butterflies, but
+moths, that have eaten the Audley fortunes."
+
+It was a thought that matched the picture he had drawn of the deserted
+house, and Mary felt that the morning had lost its brightness. But not
+for long. Basset led her into a room on the right of the hall, and the
+sight drew from her a cry of pleasure. On three sides the dark
+wainscot rose eight feet from the floor; above, the walls were
+whitewashed to the ceiling and broken by dim portraits, on stretchers
+and without frames. On the fourth side where the panelling divided the
+room from a serving-room, once part of it, it rose to the ceiling. The
+stone hearth, the iron dogs, the matted floor, the heavy chairs and
+oak table, all were dark and plain and increased the austerity of the
+room.
+
+At the end of the table places were laid for three, and Toft, who had
+set on the breakfast, was fixing the kettle amid the burning logs.
+
+"Is Mr. Audley coming down?" Basset asked.
+
+"He bade me lay for him," Toft replied dryly. "I doubt if he will
+come. You had better begin, sir. The young lady," with a searching
+look at her, "must want her breakfast."
+
+"I am afraid I do," Mary confessed.
+
+"Yes, we will begin," Basset said. He invited her to make the tea.
+
+When they were seated, "You like the room?"
+
+"I love it," she answered.
+
+"So do I," he rejoined, more soberly. "The panelling is linen--pattern
+of the fifteenth century--you see the folds? It was saved from the old
+house. I am glad you like it."
+
+"I love it," she said again. But after that she grew thoughtful, and
+during the rest of the meal she said little. She was thinking of what
+was before her; of the unknown uncle, whose bread she was eating, and
+upon whom she was going to be dependent. What would he be like? How
+would he receive her? And why was every one so reticent about him--so
+reticent that he was beginning to be something of an ogre to her? When
+Toft presently appeared and said that Mr. Audley was in the library
+and would see her when she was ready, she lost color. But she answered
+the man with self-possession, asked quietly where the library was, and
+had not Basset's eyes been on her face he would have had no notion
+that she was troubled.
+
+As it was, he waited for her to avow her misgiving--he was prepared to
+encourage her. But she said nothing.
+
+None the less, at the last moment, with her hand on the door of the
+library, she hesitated. It was not so much fear of the unknown
+relative whom she was going to see that drove the blood from her
+cheek, as the knowledge that for her everything depended upon him. Her
+new home, its peace, its age, its woodland surroundings, fascinated
+her. It promised her not only content, but happiness. But as her stay
+in it hung upon John Audley's will, so her pleasure in it, and her
+enjoyment of it, depended upon the relations between them. What would
+they be? How would he receive her? What would he be like? At last she
+called up her courage, turned the handle, and entered the library.
+
+For a moment she saw no one. The great room, with its distances and
+its harmonious litter, appeared to be empty. Then, "Mary, my dear,"
+said a pleasant voice, "welcome to the Gatehouse!" And John Audley
+rose from his seat at a distant table and came towards her.
+
+The notion which she had formed of him vanished in a twinkling, and
+with it her fears. She saw before her an elderly gentleman, plump
+and kindly, who walked with a short tripping step, and wore the
+swallow-tailed coat with gilt buttons which the frock-coat had
+displaced. He took her hand with a smile, kissed her on the forehead,
+and led her to a chair placed beside his own. He sat for a moment
+holding her hand and looking at her.
+
+"Yes, I see the likeness," he said, after a moment's contemplation.
+"But, my dear, how is this? There are tears in your eyes, and you
+tremble."
+
+"I think," she said, "I was a little afraid of you, sir."
+
+"Well, you are not afraid now," he replied cheerfully. "And you won't
+be again. You won't be again. My dear, welcome once more to the
+Gatehouse. I hope that it may be your home until another is offered
+you. Things came between your father and me--I shall never mention
+them again, and don't you, my dear!"--this a little hurriedly--"don't
+you; all that is buried now, and I must make it up to you. Your
+letters?" he continued, patting her hand. "Yes, Peter told me that you
+wrote to me. I need not say that I never had them. No, never had
+them--Toft, what is it?"
+
+The change in his voice struck her. The servant had come in quietly.
+"Mr. Basset, sir, has lost----"
+
+"Another time!" John Audley replied curtly. "Another time! I am
+engaged now. Go!" Then when the door had closed behind the servant,
+"No, my dear," he continued, "I need not say that I never had them, so
+that I first heard of your troubles through a channel upon which I
+will not dwell. However, many good things come by bad ways, Mary. I
+hope you like the Gatehouse?"
+
+"It is charming!" she cried with enthusiasm.
+
+"It has only one drawback," he said.
+
+She was clever enough to understand that he referred to its owner, and
+to escape from the subject. "This room," she said, "is perfection. I
+have never seen anything like it, sir."
+
+"It is a pleasant room," he said, looking round him. "There is our
+coat over the mantel, gules, a fret or; like all old coats, very
+simple. Some think it is the Lacy Knot; the Audley of Edward the
+First's time married a Lacy. But we bore our old coat of three
+Butterflies later than that, for before the fall of Roger Mortimer,
+who was hung at Tyburn, he married his daughter to an Audley, and the
+escheaters found the wedding chamber in his house furnished with our
+Butterflies. Later the Butterfly survived as our badge. You see it
+there!" he continued, pointing it out among the mouldings of the
+ceiling. "There is the Stafford Knot, the badge of the great Dukes of
+Buckingham, the noblest of English families; it is said that the last
+of the line, a cobbler, died at Newport, not twenty miles from here.
+We intermarried with them, and through them with Peter's people, the
+Bassets. That is the Lovel Wolf, and there is the White Wolf of the
+Mortimers--all badges. But you do not know, I suppose, what a badge
+is?"
+
+"I am afraid not," she said, smiling. "But I am as proud of our
+Butterfly, and as proud to be an Audley, sir, as if I knew more."
+
+"Peter must give you some lessons in heraldry," he answered. "We live
+in the past here, my dear, and we must indoctrinate you with a love of
+our pursuits or you will be dull." He paused to consider. "I am afraid
+that we cannot allot you a drawing-room, but you must make your room
+upstairs as comfortable as you can. Etruria will see to that. And
+Peter shall arrange a table for you in the south bay here, and it
+shall be your table and your bay. That is his table; this is mine. We
+are orderly, and so we do not get in one another's way."
+
+She thanked him gratefully, and with tears in her eyes, she said
+something to which he would not listen--he only patted her hand--as to
+his kindness, his great kindness, in receiving her. She could not,
+indeed, put her relief into words, so deep was it. Nowhere, she felt,
+could life be more peaceful or more calm than in this room which no
+sounds of the outer world except the songs of birds, no sights save
+the swaying of branches disturbed; where the blazoned panes cast their
+azure and argent on lines of russet books, where an aged hound
+sprawled before the embers, and the measured tick of the clock alone
+vied with the scratching of the pen. She saw herself seated there
+during drowsy summer days, or when firelight cheered the winter
+evenings. She saw herself sewing beside the hearth while her
+companions worked, each within his circle of light.
+
+Then, she also was an Audley. She also had her share in the race which
+had lived long on this spot. Already she was fired with the desire to
+know more of them, and that flame John Audley was well fitted to fan.
+For he was not of the school of dry-as-dust antiquaries. He had the
+knack of choosing the picturesque in story, he could make it stand out
+for others, he could impart life to the actors in it. And, anxious to
+captivate Mary, he bent himself for nearly an hour to the display of
+his knowledge. Taking for his text one or other of the objects about
+him, he told her of great castles, from which England had been ruled,
+and through which the choicest life of the country had passed, that
+now were piles of sherds clothed with nettles. He told her of that
+woodland country on the borders of three counties, where the papists
+had long lived undisturbed and where the Gunpowder Plot had had its
+centre. He told her of the fashion which came in with Richard the
+Second, of adorning the clothes with initials, reading and writing
+having become for the first time courtly accomplishments; and to
+illustrate this he showed her the Westminster portrait of Richard in a
+robe embroidered with letters of R. He quoted Chaucer:
+
+
+ And thereon hung a broch of gold ful schene
+ On which was first i-written a crowned A
+ And after that, Amor vincit omnia.
+
+
+Then, turning his back on her, he produced from some secret place a
+key, and opening a masked cupboard in the wall, he held out for her
+inspection a small bowl, bent and mis-shapen by use, and supported by
+two fragile butterflies. The whole was of silver so thin that to
+modern eyes it seemed trivial. Traces of gilding lingered about some
+parts of it, and on each of the wings of the butterflies was a capital
+A.
+
+She was charmed. "Of all your illustrations," she cried, "I prefer
+this one! It is very old, I suppose?"
+
+"It is of the fifteenth century," he said, turning it about. "We
+believe that it was made for the Audley who fell early in the Wars of
+the Roses. Pages and knights, maids and matrons, gloves of silk and
+gloves of mail, wrinkled palms and babies' fingers, the men, the
+women, the children of twelve generations of our race, my dear, have
+handled this. Once, according to an old inventory, there were six;
+this one alone remains."
+
+"It must be very rare?" she said, her eyes sparkling.
+
+"It is very rare," he said, and he handled it as if he loved it. He
+had not once allowed it to go out of his fingers. "Very rare. I doubt
+if, apart from the City Companies, there is another in the hands of
+the original owners."
+
+"And it came to you by descent, sir?"
+
+He paused in the act of returning it to its hiding-place. "Yes, that
+is how it came to me," he said in a muffled tone. But he seemed to be
+a long time putting it away; and when he turned with the key in his
+hand his face was altered, and he looked at her--well, had she done
+anything to anger him, she would have thought he was angry. "To whom
+besides me could it descend!" he asked, his voice raised a tone. "But
+there, I must not grow excited. I think--I think you had better go
+now. Go, my dear, now. But come back presently."
+
+Mary went. But the change in tone and face had been such as to startle
+her and to dash the happy mood of a few moments earlier. She wondered
+what she had said to annoy him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ OLD THINGS
+
+
+The Gatehouse, placed on the verge of the upland, was very solitary.
+Cut off from the vale by an ascent which the coachmen of the great
+deemed too rough for their horses, it was isolated on the other three
+sides by Beaudelays Park and by the Great Chase, which flung its
+barren moors over many miles of table-land. In the course of the
+famous suit John Audley had added to the solitude of the house by a
+smiling aloofness which gave no quarter to those who agreed with his
+rival. The result was that when Mary came to live there, few young
+people would have found the Gatehouse a lively abode.
+
+But to Mary during the quiet weeks that followed her arrival it seemed
+a paradise. She spent long hours in the open air, now seated on a
+fallen trunk in some glade of the park, now watching the squirrels in
+the clear gloom of the beech-wood, or again, lying at length on the
+carpet of thyme and heather that clothed the moor. She came to know by
+heart every path through the park--except that which led to the Great
+House; she discovered where the foxgloves clustered, where the
+meadow-sweet fringed the runlet, where the rare bog-bean warned the
+traveller to look to his footing. Even the Great Chase she came to
+know, and almost daily she walked to a point beyond the park whence
+she could see the distant smoke of a mining village. That was the one
+sign of life on the Chase; elsewhere it stretched vast and unpeopled,
+sombre under a livid sky, smiling in sunshine, here purple with ling,
+there scarred by fire--always wide under a wide heaven, raised high
+above the common world. Now and again she met a shepherd or saw a gig,
+lessened by distance, making its slow way along a moorland track. But
+for days together she might wander there without seeing a human being.
+
+The wide horizon became as dear to her as the greenwood. Pent as she
+had been in cities, straitened in mean rooms where sight and smell had
+alike been outraged, she revelled in this sweet and open life. The hum
+of bees, the scent of pines, the flight of the ousel down the water,
+the whistle of the curlew, all were to her pleasures as vivid as they
+were new.
+
+Meantime Basset made no attempt to share her excursions. He was
+fighting a battle with himself, and he knew better than to go out of
+his way to aid the enemy. And for her part she did not miss him. She
+did not dislike him, but the interest he excited in her was feeble.
+The thought of comparing him with Lord Audley, with the man to whose
+intervention she owed this home, this peace, this content, never
+occurred to her. Of Audley she did think as much perhaps as was
+prudent, sometimes with pensive gratitude, more rarely with a smile
+and a blush at her folly in dwelling on him. For always she thought of
+him as one, high and remote, whom it was not probable that she would
+ever see again, one whose course through life lay far from hers.
+
+Presently, it is not to be denied, Basset began to grow upon her. He
+was there. He was part of her life. Morning and evening she had to do
+with him. Often she read or sewed in the same room with him, and in
+many small ways he added to her comfort. Sometimes he suggested things
+which would please her uncle; sometimes he warned her of things which
+she would do well to avoid. Once or twice he diverted to himself a
+spirt of John Audley's uncertain temper; and though Mary did not
+always detect the man[oe]uvre, though she was far from suspecting the
+extent of his vigilance or the care which he cast about her, it would
+have been odd if she had not come to think more kindly of him, and to
+see merits in him which had escaped her at first.
+
+Meanwhile he thought of her with mingled feelings. At first with
+doubt--it was never out of his mind that she had made much of Lord
+Audley and little of him. Then with admiration which he withstood more
+feebly as time went on, and the cloven hoof failed to appear. Later,
+with tenderness, which, hating the scheme John Audley had formed, he
+masked even from himself, and which he was sure that he would never
+have the courage to express in her presence.
+
+For Basset was conscious that, aspire as he might, he was not a hero.
+The clash of life, the shock of battle, had no attraction for him. The
+library at the Gatehouse was, he owned it frankly, his true sphere.
+She, on the other hand, had had experiences. She had sailed through
+unknown seas, she had led a life strange to him. She had seen much,
+done much, suffered much, had held her own among strangers. Before her
+calmness and self-possession he humbled himself. He veiled his head.
+
+He did not attempt, therefore, to accompany her abroad, but at home he
+had no choice save to see much of her. There was only one living room
+for all, and she glided with surprising ease into the current of the
+men's occupations. At first she was astray on the sea of books. Her
+knowledge was not sufficient to supply chart or compass, and it fell
+to Basset to point the way, to choose her reading, to set in a proper
+light John Audley's vivid pictures of the past, to teach her the
+elements of heraldry and genealogy. She proved, however, an apt
+scholar, and very soon she dropped into the position of her uncle's
+secretary. Sometimes she copied his notes, at other times he set her
+on the track of a fact, a relationship, a quotation, and she would
+spend hours in a corner, embedded in huge tomes of the county
+histories. Dugdale, Leland, Hall, even Polydore Vergil, became her
+friends. She pored over the Paston Letters, probed the false pedigrees
+of Banks, and could soon work out for herself the famous discovery
+respecting the last Lovel.
+
+For a young girl it was an odd pursuit. But the past was in the
+atmosphere of the house, it went with the fortunes of a race whose
+importance lay in days long gone. Then all was new to her, enthusiasm
+is easily caught, and Mary, eager to please her uncle, was glad to be
+of use. She found the work restful after the suspense of the past
+year. It sufficed for the present, and she asked no more.
+
+She never forgot the lamplit evenings of that summer; the spacious
+room, the fluttering of the moths that entered by the open windows,
+the flop of the old dog as it sought a cooler spot, the whisper of
+leaves turned ceaselessly in the pursuit of a fact or a fancy. In the
+retrospect all became less a picture than a frame containing a past
+world, a fifteenth-century world of color and movement, of rooms
+stifled in hangings and tapestries, of lines of spear-points and rows
+of knights in surcoats, of tolling bells and praying monks, of
+travellers kneeling before wayside shrines, of strange changes of
+fortune. For says the chronicler:
+
+
+"I saw one of them, who was Duke of Exeter (but he concealed his name)
+following the Duke of Burgundy's train barefoot and bare-legged,
+begging his bread from door to door--this person was the next of the
+House of Lancaster and had married King Edward's sister."
+
+
+And of dark sayings:
+
+
+"Thys sayde Edward, Duke of Somerset, had herde a fantastyk prophecy
+that he sholde dy under a Castelle, wherefore he, as meche as in him
+was, he lete the King that he sholde not come in the Castelle of
+Wynsore, dredynge the sayde prophecy; but at Seint Albonys there was
+an hostelry havyng the sygne of a Castelle, and before that hostelry
+he was slayne."
+
+
+"His badge was a Portcullis," her uncle said, when she read this to
+him, "so it was natural that he should fall before a castle. He used
+the Beanstalk, too, and if his name had been John, a pretty thing
+might have been raised upon it. But you're divagating, my dear," he
+continued, smiling--and seldom had Mary seen him in a better
+humor--"you're divagating, whereas I--I believe that I have solved the
+problem of the Feathers."
+
+"The Prince of Wales's? No!"
+
+"I believe so. Of course there is no truth in the story which traces
+them to the blind King of Bohemia, killed at Crcy. His crest was two
+vulture wings."
+
+"But what of Arderne, who was the Prince's surgeon?" Basset objected.
+"He says clearly that the Prince gained it from the King of Bohemia."
+
+"Not at all!" John Audley replied arrogantly--at this moment he was an
+antiquary and nothing more. "Where is the Arderne extract? Listen.
+'Edward, son of Edward the King, used to wear such a feather, and
+gained that feather from the King of Bohemia, whom he slew at Crcy,
+and so assumed to himself that feather which is called an ostrich
+feather which the first-named most illustrious King, used to wear on
+his crest.' Now who was the first-named most illustrious King, who
+before that used to wear it?"
+
+"The King of Bohemia."
+
+"Rubbish! Arderne means his own King, 'Edward the King.' He means that
+the Black Prince, after winning his spurs by his victory over the
+Bohemian, took his father's insignia. He had only been knighted six
+weeks and waited to wear his father's crest until he had earned it."
+
+"By Jove, sir!" Basset exclaimed, "I believe you are right!"
+
+"Of course I am! The evidence is all that way. The Black Prince's
+brothers wore it; surely not because their brother had done something,
+but because it was their father's crest, probably derived from their
+mother, Philippa of Hainault? If you will look in the inventory of
+jewels made on the usurpation of Henry the Fourth you will see this
+item, 'A collar of the livery of the Queen, on whom God have mercy,
+with an ostrich.'"
+
+"But that," Basset interposed, "was Queen Anne of Bohemia--she died
+seven years before. There you get Bohemia again!"
+
+"Compare this other entry," replied the antiquary, unmoved: "'A collar
+of the livery of Queen Anne, of branches of rosemary.' Now either
+Queen Anne of Bohemia had two liveries--which is unlikely--or the
+inventory made by order of Henry IV. quotes verbatim from lists made
+during the lifetime of Queen Anne; if this be the case, the last
+deceased Queen, on whom God have mercy, would be Philippa of Hainault;
+and we have here a clear statement that her livery was an ostrich, of
+which ostrich her husband wore a feather on his crest."
+
+Basset clapped his hands. Mary beat applause on the table. "Hurrah!"
+she cried. "Audley for ever!"
+
+"Miss Audley," Basset said, "Toft shall bring in hot water, and we
+will have punch!"
+
+"Miss Audley!" her uncle exclaimed, with a wrinkling nose. "Why don't
+you call her Mary? And why, child, don't you call him Peter?"
+
+Mary curtseyed. "Why not, my lord?" she said. "Peter it shall
+be--Peter who keeps the keys that you discover!"
+
+And Peter laughed. But he saw that she used his name without a blush
+or a tremor, whereas he knew that if he could force his lips to frame
+her name, the word would betray him. For by this time, from his seat
+at his remote table, and from the ambush of his book, he had watched
+her too often for his peace, and too closely not to know that she was
+indifferent to him. He knew that at the best she felt a liking for
+him, the growth of habit, and tinged, he feared, with contempt.
+
+He was so far right that there were three persons in the house who had
+a larger share of the girl's thoughts than he had. The first was John
+Audley. He puzzled her. There were times when she could not doubt his
+affection, times when he seemed all that she could desire, kind,
+good-humored, frank, engaged with the simplicity of a child in
+innocent pursuits, and without one thought beyond them. But touch
+a certain spot, approach with steps ever so delicate a certain
+subject--Lord Audley and his title--and his manner changed, the very
+man changed, he became secretive, suspicious, menacing. Nor, however
+quickly she might withdraw from the danger-line, could the harm be
+undone at once. He would remain for hours gloomy and thoughtful, would
+eye her covertly and with suspicion, would sit silent through meals,
+and at times mutter to himself. More rarely he would turn on her with
+a face which rage made inhuman, a face that she did not know, and with
+a shaking hand he would bid her go--go, and leave the room!
+
+The first time that this happened she feared that he might follow up
+his words by sending her away. But nothing ensued, then or later. For
+a while after each outburst he would appear ill at ease. He would
+avoid her eyes, and look away from her in a manner almost as
+unpleasant as his violence; later, in a shamefaced way, he would tell
+her that she must not excite him, she must not excite him, it was bad
+for him. And the man-servant meeting her in the hall, would take the
+liberty of giving her the same advice.
+
+Toft, indeed, was the second who puzzled her. He was civil, with the
+civility of the trained servant, but always there was in his manner a
+reserve. And she fancied that he watched her. If she left the house
+and glanced back she was certain to see his face at a window, or his
+figure in a doorway. Within doors it was the same. He slept out,
+living with his wife in the kitchen wing, which had a separate
+entrance from the courtyard. But he was everywhere at all hours. Even
+his master appeared uneasy in his presence, and either broke off what
+he was saying when the man entered, or continued the talk on another
+note. More rarely he turned on Toft and without rhyme or reason would
+ask him harshly what he wanted.
+
+The third person to share Mary's thoughts, but after a more pleasant
+fashion, was Toft's daughter, Etruria. "I hope you will like her, my
+dear," John Audley had said. "She will give you such attendance as you
+require, and will share the south wing with you at night. The two
+bedrooms there are on a separate staircase. I sleep above the library
+in this wing, and Peter in the tower room--we have our own staircase.
+I have brought her into the house because I thought you might not like
+to sleep alone in that wing."
+
+Mary had thanked him, and had said how much she liked the girl. And
+she had liked her, but for a time she had not understood her. Etruria
+was all that was good and almost all that was beautiful. She was
+simple, kindly, helpful, having the wide low brow, the placid eyes,
+and perfect complexion of a Quaker girl--and to add to these
+attractions she was finely shaped, though rather plump than slender;
+and she was incredibly neat. Nor could any Quaker girl have been more
+gentle or more demure.
+
+But she might have had no tongue, she was so loth to use it; and a
+hundred times Mary wondered what was behind that reticence. Sometimes
+she thought that the girl was merely stupid. Sometimes she yoked her
+with her father in the suspicions she entertained of him. More often,
+moved by the girl's meek eyes, she felt only a vague irritation. She
+was herself calm by nature, and reserved by training, the last to
+gossip with a servant, even with one whose refinement appeared innate.
+But Etruria's dumbness was beyond her.
+
+One day in a research which she was making she fancied that she had
+hit on a discovery. It happened that Etruria came into the room at the
+moment, and in the fulness of her heart Mary told her of it.
+"Etruria," she said, "I've made a discovery all by myself."
+
+"Yes, Miss."
+
+"Something that no one has known for hundreds of years! Think of
+that!"
+
+"Indeed, Miss."
+
+Provoked, Mary took a new line. "Etruria," she asked, "are you happy?"
+
+The girl did not answer.
+
+"Don't you hear me? I asked if you were happy."
+
+"I am content, Miss."
+
+"I did not ask that. Are you happy?"
+
+And then, moved on her side, perhaps, by an impulse towards
+confidence, Etruria yielded. "I don't think that we can any of us be
+happy, Miss," she said, "with so much sorrow about us."
+
+"You strange girl!" Mary cried, taken aback. "What do you mean?"
+
+But Etruria was silent.
+
+"Come," Mary insisted. "You must tell me what you mean."
+
+"Well, Miss," the girl answered reluctantly, "I'm sad and loth to
+think of all the suffering in the world. It's natural that you should
+not think of it, but I'm of the people, and I'm sad for them."
+
+Balaam when the ass spoke was scarcely more surprised than Mary.
+"Why?" she asked.
+
+The girl pointed to the open window. "We've all we could ask,
+Miss--light and air and birds' songs and sunshine. We've all we need,
+and more. But I come of those who have neither light nor air, nor
+songs nor sunshine, who've no milk for children nor food for mothers!
+Who, if they've work, work every hour of the day in dust and noise and
+heat. Who are half clemmed from year's end to year's end, and see no
+close to it, no hope, no finish but the pauper's deals! It's for them
+I'm sad, Miss."
+
+"Etruria!"
+
+"They've no teachers and no time to care," Etruria continued in
+desperate earnest now that the floodgates were raised. "They're just
+tools to make money, and, like the tools, they wear out and are cast
+aside! For there are always more to do their work, to begin where they
+began, and to be worn out as they were worn out!"
+
+"Don't!" Mary cried.
+
+Etruria was silent, but two large tears rolled down her face. And Mary
+marvelled. So this mild, patient girl, going about her daily tasks,
+could think, could feel, could speak, and upon a plane so high that
+the listener was sensible of humiliation as well as surprise! For a
+moment this was the only effect made upon her. Then reflection did its
+part--and memory. She recalled that glimpse of the under-world which
+she had had on her journey from London. She remembered the noisome
+alleys, the cinder wastes, the men toiling half-naked at the furnaces,
+the pinched faces of the women; and she remembered also the account
+which Lord Audley had given her of the fierce contest between town and
+country, plough and forge, land-lord and cotton-lord, which had struck
+her so much at the time.
+
+In the charms of her new life, in her new interests, these things had
+faded from her mind. They recurred now, and she did not again ask
+Etruria what she meant. "Is it as bad as that?" she asked.
+
+"It is not as bad as it has been," Etruria answered. "Three years ago
+there were hundreds of thousands out of work. There are thousands,
+scores of thousands, still; and thousands have no food but what's
+given them. And charity is bitter to many," she added, "and the
+poorhouse is bitter to all."
+
+"But what has caused things to be so bad?"
+
+"Some say one thing and some another. But most that machines lower
+wages, Miss, and the bread-tax raises food."
+
+"Ah!" Mary said. And she looked more closely at the girl who knew so
+much that was at odds with her station.
+
+"Others," Etruria continued, a faint color in her cheeks, "think that
+it is selfishness, that every one is for himself and no one for one
+another, and----"
+
+"Yes?" Mary said, seeing that she hesitated.
+
+"And that if every one thought as much of his neighbor as of himself,
+or even of his neighbor as well as of himself, it would not be
+machines nor corn-taxes nor poorhouses would be strong enough to take
+the bread out of the children's mouths or the work out of men's
+hands!"
+
+Mary had an inspiration. "Etruria," she cried, "some one has been
+teaching you this."
+
+The girl blushed. "Well, Miss," she said simply, "it was at church I
+learned most of it."
+
+"At church? What church? Not Riddsley?" For it was to Riddsley, to a
+service as dull as it was long, that they proceeded on Sundays in a
+chaise as slow as the reader.
+
+"No, Miss, not Riddsley," Etruria answered. "It's at Brown Heath on
+the Chase. But it's not a real church, Miss. It's a room."
+
+"Oh!" Mary replied. "A meeting-house!"
+
+For some reason Etruria's eyes gleamed. "No, Miss," she said. "It's
+the curate at Riddsley has a service in a room at Brown Heath on
+Thursdays."
+
+"And you go?"
+
+"When I can, Miss."
+
+The idea of attending church on a week-day was strange to Mary; as
+strange as to that generation was the zeal that passed beyond the
+common channel to refresh those whom migrations of population or
+changes in industry had left high and dry. The Tractarian movement was
+giving vigor not only to those who supported it, but to those who
+withstood it.
+
+"And you've a sermon?" Mary said. "What was the text last Thursday,
+Etruria?"
+
+The girl hesitated, considered, then looked with appeal at her
+mistress. She clasped her hands. "'Two are better than one,'" she
+replied, "'because they have good reward for their labor. For if they
+fall, one will lift up his fellow, but woe to him that is alone when
+he falleth, for he hath not another to lift him up.'"
+
+"Gracious, Etruria!" Mary cried. "Is that in the Bible?"
+
+Etruria nodded.
+
+"And what did your preacher say about it?"
+
+"That the employer and the workman were fellows, and if they worked
+together and each thought for the other they would have a good reward
+for their labor; that if one fell, it was the duty of the other to
+help him up. And again, that the land and the mill were fellows--the
+town and the country--and if they worked together in love they would
+have a good return, and if trouble came to one the other should
+bear with him. But all the same," Etruria added timidly, "that the
+bread-taxes were wrong."
+
+"Etruria," Mary said. "To-morrow is Thursday. I shall go with you to
+Brown Heath."
+
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ NEW THINGS
+
+
+Mary Audley, crossing the moor to a week-day service, was but one of
+many who in the 'forties were venturing on new courses. In religion
+there were those who fancied that by a return to primitive forms they
+might recapture the primitive fervor; and those again who, like the
+curate whom Mary was going to hear, were bent on pursuing the beaten
+path into new places. Some thought that they had found a panacea for
+the evils of the day in education, and put their faith in workmen's
+institutes and night schools. Others were satisfied with philanthropy,
+and proclaimed that infants of seven ought not to toil for their
+living, that coal-pits were not fit places for women, and that what
+paid was not the only standard of life. A few dreamt of a new England
+in which gentle and simple were to mix on new-old terms; and a
+multitude, shrewd and hard-headed, believed in the Corn Law League,
+whose speakers travelled from Manchester to carry the claims of cheap
+bread to butter crosses and market towns, and there bearded the very
+landlord's agent.
+
+The truth was that the country was lying sick with new evils, and had
+perforce to find a cure, whether that cure lay in faith, or in the
+primer, or in the Golden Rule, or in Adam Smith. For two generations
+men had been quitting the field for the mill, the farm for the
+coal-pit. They had followed their work into towns built haphazard,
+that grew presently into cities. There, short of light, of air, of
+water, lacking decency, lacking even votes--for the Reform Bill,
+that was to give everything to everybody, had stopped at the
+masters--lacking everything but wages, they swarmed in numbers
+stupendous and alarming to the mind of that day. And then the wages
+failed. Machines pushed out hands, though
+
+
+ Tools were made, and born were hands,
+ Every farmer understands.
+
+
+Machines lowered wages, machines glutted the markets. Men could get no
+work, masters could sell no goods. On the top of this came bad seasons
+and dear bread. Presently hundreds of thousands were living on public
+charity, long lists of masters were in the _Gazette_. In the gloomy
+cities of the North, masses of men heaved and moaned as the sea when
+the south-west wind falls upon it.
+
+All but the most thoughtless saw danger as well as unhappiness in
+this, and called on their gods. The Chartists proclaimed that safety
+lay in votes. The landed interest thought that a little more
+protection might mend matters. The Golden Rulers were for shorter
+hours. But the men who were the loudest and the most confident cried
+that cheap bread would mend all. The poor, they said, would have to
+eat and to spend. They would buy goods, the glut would cease. The
+wheels would turn again, there would be work and wages. The Golden Age
+would return. So preached the Manchester men.
+
+In the meantime the doctors wrangled, and the patient grew a little,
+not much, better. And Mary Audley and Etruria walked across the
+moorland in the evening sunshine, with a light breeze stirring the
+bracken, and waves of shadow moving athwart the stretches of purple
+ling. They seemed very far, very remote from the struggle for life and
+work and bread that was passing in the world below.
+
+Presently they dropped into a fern-clad dingle and saw below them,
+beside the rivulet that made music in its bottom, a house or two.
+Descending farther, they came on more houses, crawling up the hill
+slopes, and on a few potato patches and ash-heaps. As the sides of the
+valley rose higher and closed in above the walkers cottages fell into
+lines on either side of the brook, and began to show one behind the
+other in rough terraces, with middens that slid from the upper to the
+lower level. The valley bent to the left, and quickly tall chimneys
+became visible, springing from a huddle of mean roofs through which no
+other building of size, no tower, no steeple, rose to break the ugly
+sameness. This was Brown Heath.
+
+"It's a rough place," Etruria said as they picked their way. "But
+don't be afraid, Miss. I'm often passing, and they know me."
+
+Still it was a rough place. The roadway was a cinder-track, and from
+the alleys and lanes above it open drains wormed their way across the
+path and into the stream, long grown foul. The air was laden with
+smoke, coal dust lay everywhere; the most cleanly must have despaired.
+Men seated, pipe in mouth, on low walls, watched the two go by--not
+without some rude banter; frowsy women crouching on door-steps and
+nursing starveling babes raised sullen faces. Lads in clogs made way
+for them unwillingly. In one place a crowd seethed from a side street
+and, shouting and struggling, overflowed the roadway before them and
+threatened to bar their path.
+
+"It's a dog-fight," Etruria said. "They are rare and fond of them,
+Miss. We'd best get by quickly."
+
+They passed in safety, passed, too, a brawl between two colliers, the
+air about them thick with oaths, passed a third eddy round two women
+fighting before a public-house. "The chaps are none so gentle,"
+Etruria said, falling unconsciously into a commoner way of speaking.
+"They're all for fighting, dogs or men, and after dark I'm not saying
+we'd be safe. But we'll be over the moor by dusk, Miss."
+
+They came, as she spoke, to a triangular space, sloping with the hill,
+skirted by houses, and crossed by an open sewer. It was dreary and
+cinder-covered, but five publics looked upon it and marked it for the
+centre of Brown Heath. Etruria crossed the triangle to a building a
+little cleaner than its neighbors; it was the warehouse, she told her
+mistress, of a sack-maker who had failed. She entered, and her
+companion followed her.
+
+Mary found herself in a bare barn-like room, having two windows set
+high in the walls, the light from which fell coldly on a dozen benches
+ranged one behind the other, but covering only a portion of the floor.
+On these were seated, when they entered, about twenty persons, mainly
+women, but including three or four men of the miner class. No attempt
+had been made to alter the character of the place, and of formality
+there was as little. The two had barely seated themselves before a
+lean young man, with a long pale face and large nose, rose from the
+front bench, and standing before the little congregation, opened his
+book. He wore shabby black, but neither surplice nor gown.
+
+The service lasted perhaps twenty minutes, and Mary was not much
+moved by it. The young man's voice was weak, the man himself looked
+under-fed. She noticed, however, that as the service went on the
+number in the room grew, and when it closed she found that all the
+seats were filled, and that there were even a few men--some of them
+colliers fresh from the pit--standing at the back. Remembering the odd
+text that the clergyman had given out the week before, she wondered
+what he would choose to-day, and, faintly amused, she stole a glance
+at her companion. But Etruria's rapt face was a reproach to her
+levity.
+
+The young clergyman pushed back the hair from his forehead. His
+posture was ungainly, he did not know what to do with his hands, he
+opened his mouth and shut it again. Then with an effort he began. "My
+text, my friends," he said, "is but one word, 'Love.' Where will you
+find it in the Scriptures? In every chapter and in every verse. In the
+dark days of old the order was 'Thou shalt live!' The new order in
+these days is 'Thou shalt love!'" He began by describing the battle of
+life in the animal and vegetable world, where all things lived at the
+cost of others; and he admitted that the struggle for life, for bread,
+for work, as they saw it around them, resembled that struggle. In
+moving terms he enlarged on the distress, on the vast numbers lately
+living on the rates, on the thousands living, where even the rates
+fell short, on Government aid. He described the fireless homes, the
+foodless children, the strong men hopeless. And he showed them that
+others were stricken, that masters suffered, tradesmen were ruined,
+the country languished. "The worst may be past," he said. "You are
+working half-time, you are living on half-wages, you are thankful that
+things are better." Then he told them that for his part he did not
+presume to say what was at the root of these unhappy conditions, but
+that of one thing he felt sure--and this was his message to them--that
+if the law of love, if the golden rule of preferring another to one's
+self, if the precept of that charity,
+
+
+ Which seeketh not itself to please
+ Nor for itself hath any care,
+ But for another gives its ease,
+
+
+if that were followed by all, then all
+
+
+ Might build a heaven in hell's despair.
+
+
+And in words more eloquent than he had yet compassed he begged them to
+set that example of brotherhood, in the certainty that the worst
+social evils, nay, all evils save pain and death, would be cured by
+the love that thought for others, that in the master preferred the
+servant's welfare and in the servant put first his master's interests.
+Finally he quoted his old text, "Let two work together, for if they
+fall, one will lift up his fellow!"
+
+It seemed as if he had done. He was silent; his hearers waited. Then
+with an effort he continued:
+
+"I have a word to say about something which fell from me in this place
+last week. While I did not venture, unskilled as I am, to say where
+lies the cause of our distress, I did say that I found it hard to
+believe that the system which taxes the bread you earn in the sweat of
+your brow, which takes a disproportionate part from the scanty crust
+of the widow and from the food of the child, was in accordance with
+the law of love. I repeat that now; and because I have been told that
+I dare not say in the pulpit of Riddsley church what I say here, I
+shall on the first opportunity state my belief there. You may ask why
+I have not done so; my answer is, that I am there the representative
+of another, whereas in this voluntary work I am myself more
+responsible. In saying that I ask you to judge me, as we should judge
+all, with that charity which believeth no evil."
+
+A moment later Mary, deeply moved, was passing out with the crowd. As
+she stood, caught in the press by the door, an old man in horn-rimmed
+glasses, who was waiting there, held out his hand. She was going to
+take it, when she saw that it was not meant for her, but for the young
+clergyman who was following at her heels.
+
+"Master, dunno you do it," the old fellow growled. "You'll break your
+pick, and naught gotten. Naught gotten, that'll serve. Your gaffer'll
+not abide it, and you'll lose your job!"
+
+"Would you have me take it," the young man answered, "and not do the
+work, Cluff? Never fear for me."
+
+"Dunno you be rash, master!" the other rejoined, clutching his sleeve
+and detaining him. "You be sure----"
+
+Mary heard no more. She felt Etruria's hand pressing her arm. "We'd
+best lose no time," the girl whispered. And she drew Mary onward,
+across the triangle and into the lane which led to the moor.
+
+"Are we so late?" The sun had set, but it was still light. "We'd best
+hurry," Etruria persisted, increasing her speed.
+
+Mary looked at her and saw that she was troubled, but at the moment
+she set this down to the influence of the sermon, and her own mind
+went back to it. "I am glad you brought me, Etruria," she said. "I
+shall always be glad that I came."
+
+"We'd best be getting home now," was Etruria's only answer, but this
+time Mary's ear caught the sound of footsteps behind them, and she
+turned. The young clergyman was hastening after them.
+
+"Etruria!" he cried.
+
+For a moment Mary fancied that Etruria did not hear. The girl hurried
+on. But Mary saw no occasion to run away, and she halted. Then
+Etruria, with a gesture of despair, stopped.
+
+"It is no use," she said.
+
+The young man came up with them. His head was bare, his hat was in his
+hand, his long plain face was aglow with the haste he had made. He had
+heard Etruria's words, and "It is of every use," he said.
+
+"This is--my mistress," Etruria said.
+
+"Miss Audley?"
+
+"I am Miss Audley," Mary announced, wondering much.
+
+"I thought that it might be so," he replied. "I have waited for such
+an occasion. I am Mr. Colet, the curate at Riddsley. Etruria and I
+love one another," he continued. "We are going to be married, if ever
+my means allow me to marry."
+
+"No, we are not," the girl rejoined sharply. "Mr. Colet knows my
+mind," she continued, her eyes turned away. "I have told him many
+times that I am a servant, the daughter of a servant, in a different
+class from his, and I'll never be the one to ruin him and be a
+disgrace to him! I'll never marry him! Never!"
+
+"And I have told Etruria," he replied, "that I will never take that
+answer. We love one another. It is nothing to me that she is a
+servant. My work is to serve. I am as poor as it is possible to be,
+with as poor prospects as it is possible to have. I shall never be
+anything but what I am, and I shall think myself rich when I have a
+hundred pounds a year. I who have so little, who look for so little,
+am I to give up this happiness because Etruria has less? I, too, say,
+Never!"
+
+Mary, standing between them, did not know what to answer, and it was
+Etruria who replied. "It is useless," she said. And then, in a tone of
+honest scorn, "Who ever heard," she cried, "of a clergyman who married
+a servant? Or who ever heard of good coming of it?"
+
+Mary had an inspiration. "Does Etruria's father know?" she asked.
+
+"He knows and approves," the young man replied, his eyes bent fondly
+on his mistress.
+
+Mary too looked at Etruria--beautiful, patient, a servant, loved. And
+she wondered. All these weeks she had been rubbing elbows with this
+romance, and she had not discerned it! Now, while her sympathies flew
+to the lover's side, her prejudices rose up against him. They echoed
+Etruria's words, "Who ever heard of good coming of such a match?" The
+days had been, as Mary knew, when the chaplain had married the lady's
+maid. But those days were gone. Meantime the man waited, and she did
+not know what to say.
+
+"After all," she said at last, "it is for Etruria to decide."
+
+"No, it is for us both to decide," he replied. And then, as if he
+thought that he had sufficiently stated his case, "I ask your pardon,
+Miss Audley, for intruding," he continued. "I am keeping you, and as I
+am going your way that is needless. I have had a message from a sick
+woman, and I am on my way to see her."
+
+He took permission for granted, and though Etruria's very shoulders
+forbade him, he moved on beside them. "Conditions are better here than
+in many places," he said, "but in this village you would see much to
+sadden you."
+
+"I have seen enough," Mary answered, "to know that."
+
+"Ten years ago there was not a house here. Now there is a population
+of two thousand, no church, no school, no gentry, no one of the better
+class. There is a kind of club, a centre of wild talk; better that,
+perhaps, than apathy."
+
+"Is it in Riddsley parish?" Mary asked. They were nearly clear of the
+houses, and the slopes of the hill, pale green in the peaceful evening
+light, began to rise on either side. It was growing dusk, and from the
+moorland above came the shrill cries of plovers.
+
+"Yes, it is in Riddsley parish," he answered, "but many miles from the
+town, and as aloof from it--Riddsley is purely agricultural--as black
+from white. In such places as this--and there are many of them in
+Staffordshire, as raw, as rough, and as new--there is work for plain
+men and plain women. In these swarming hives there is no room for any
+refinement but true refinement. And the Church must learn to do her
+work with plain tools, or the work will pass into other hands."
+
+"You may cut cheese with an onion knife," Etruria said coldly. "I
+don't know that people like it."
+
+"I know nothing better than onions in the right place," he replied.
+
+"That's not in cheese," she rejoined, to Mary's amusement.
+
+"The poor get little cheese," he said, "and the main thing is to cut
+their bread for them. But here I must leave you. My errand is to that
+cottage."
+
+He pointed to a solitary house, standing a few score paces above the
+road on the hillside. Mary shook hands with him, but Etruria turned
+her shoulder resolutely.
+
+"Good-bye, Etruria," he said. And then to Mary, "I hope that I have
+made a friend?"
+
+"I think you have," she answered. "I am sure that you deserve one."
+
+He colored, raised his hat, and turned away, and the two went on,
+without looking back; darkness was coming apace, and they were still
+two miles from home. Mary kept silence, prudently considering how she
+should deal with the matter, and what she should say to her companion.
+As it fell out, events removed her difficulty. They had not gone more
+than two hundred yards, and were still some way below the level of the
+Chase, when a cry reached them. It came out of the dusk behind them,
+and might have been the call of a curlew on the moor. But first one,
+and then the other stood. They turned, and listened, and suddenly
+Etruria, more anxious or sharper of eye than her mistress, uttered a
+cry and broke away at a run across the sloping turf towards the
+solitary cottage. Alarmed, Mary looked intently in that direction, and
+made out three or four figures struggling before the door of the
+house. She guessed then that the clergyman was one of them, and that
+the cry had come from him, and without a thought for herself she set
+off, running after Etruria as fast as she could.
+
+Twice Etruria screamed as she ran, and Mary echoed the cry. She saw
+that the man was defending himself against the onset of three or
+four--she could hear the clatter of sticks on one another. Then she
+trod on her skirt and fell. When she had got, breathless, to her feet
+again, the clergyman was down and the men appeared to be raining blows
+on him. Etruria shrieked once more and the next moment was lost amid
+the moving figures, the brandished sticks, the struggle.
+
+Mary ran on desperately. She caught sight of the girl on her knees
+over the fallen man, she saw her fend off more than one blow, she
+heard more than one blow fall with a sickening thud. She came up to
+them. With passion that drove out fear, she seized the arm of the
+nearest and dragged him back.
+
+"You coward!" she cried. "You coward! I am Miss Audley! Do you hear!
+Leave him! Leave him, I say!"
+
+Her appearance, the surprise, checked the man; her fearlessness,
+perhaps her name, gave the others pause. They retreated a step. The
+man she had grasped shook himself free, but did not attempt to strike
+her. "Oh, d--n the screech-owls!" he cried. "The place is alive with
+them! Hold your noise, you fools! We'll have the parish on us!"
+
+"I am Miss Audley!" Mary repeated, and in her indignation she advanced
+on him. "How dare you?" Etruria, still on her knees, continued to
+shriek.
+
+"You're like to get a wipe over the head, dang you!" the man growled,
+"whoever you be! Go to---- and mind your own brats! He'll know better
+now than to preach against them as he gets his living by! You be
+gone!"
+
+But Mary stood her ground. She declared afterwards that, brutally as
+the man spoke, the fight had gone out of him. Etruria, on the
+contrary, maintained that, finding only women before them, the
+ruffians would have murdered them. Fortunately, while the event hung
+in the balance, "What is it?" some one shouted from the road below.
+"What's the matter there?"
+
+"Murder!" cried Etruria shrilly. "Help! Help!"
+
+"Help!" cried Mary. She still kept her face to the men, but for the
+first time she began to know fear.
+
+Footsteps thudded softly on the turf, figures came into view, climbing
+the slope. It needed no more. With a volley of oaths the assailants
+turned tail and made off. In a trice they were round the corner of the
+house and lost in the dusk.
+
+A moment later two men, equally out of breath and each carrying a gun,
+reached the spot. "Well!" said the bigger of the two, "What is it?"
+
+He spoke as if he had not come very willingly, but Mary did not notice
+this. The crisis over, her knees shook, she could barely stand, she
+could not speak. She pointed to the fallen man, over whom Etruria
+still crouched, her hair dragged down about her shoulders, her
+neckband torn, a ghastly blotch on her white cheek.
+
+"Is he dead?" the new-comer asked in a different tone.
+
+"Ay, dead!" Etruria echoed. "Dead!"
+
+Fortunately the curate gave the lie to the word. He groaned, moved,
+with an effort he raised himself on his elbow. "I'm--all right!" he
+gasped. "All right!"
+
+Etruria sprang to her feet. She stepped back as if the ground had
+opened before her.
+
+"I'm not--hurt," Colet added weakly.
+
+But it was evident that he was hurt, even if no bones were broken.
+When they came to lift him he could not stand, and he seemed to be
+uncertain where he was. After watching him a moment, "He should see a
+doctor," said the man who had come up so opportunely. "Petch," he
+continued, addressing his companion, who wore a gamekeeper's dress,
+"we must carry him to the trap and get him down to Brown Heath. Who is
+he, do you know? He looks like a parson."
+
+"He's Mr. Colet of Riddsley," Mary said.
+
+The man turned and looked at her. "Hallo!" he exclaimed. And then in
+the same tone of surprise, "Miss Audley!" he said. "At this time of
+night?"
+
+Mary collected herself with an effort. "Yes," she said, "and very
+fortunately, for if we had not been here the men would have murdered
+him. As it is, you share the credit of saving him, Lord Audley."
+
+"The credit of saving you is a good deal more to me," he answered
+gallantly. "I did not think that we should meet after this fashion."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ TACT AND TEMPER
+
+
+He looked at Etruria, and Mary explained who she was.
+
+"I am afraid that she is hurt."
+
+The girl's temple was bruised and there was blood on her cheek; more
+than one of the blows aimed at her lover had fallen on her. But she
+said eagerly that it was "Nothing! Nothing!"
+
+"Are you sure, Etruria?" Mary asked with concern.
+
+"It is nothing, indeed, Miss," the girl repeated. She was trying with
+shaking fingers to put up her hair.
+
+"Then the sooner," Audley rejoined, "we get this--this gentleman to my
+dogcart, the better. Take his other arm, Petch. Miss Audley, can you
+carry my gun?--it is not loaded. And you," he continued to Etruria,
+"if you are able, take Petch's."
+
+They took the guns, and the little procession wound down the path to
+the road, where they found a dogcart awaiting them, and, peering from
+the cart, two setters, whining and fretting. The dogs were driven
+under the seat, and the clergyman, still muttering that he was all
+right, was lifted in. "Steady him, Petch," Audley said; "and do you
+drive slowly," he added, to the other man. "You will be at the
+surgeon's at Brown Heath in twenty minutes. Stay with him, Petch, and
+send the cart back for me."
+
+"But are you not going?" Mary cried.
+
+"I am not going to leave you in the dark with only your maid," he
+answered with severity. "One adventure a night is enough, Miss
+Audley."
+
+She murmured a word or two, but submitted. The struggle had shaken
+her; she could still see the men's savage faces, still hear the thud
+of their blows. And she and Etruria had nearly a mile to go before
+they reached the park.
+
+When they were fairly started, "How did it happen?" he asked.
+
+Mary told the story, but said no word of Etruria's romance.
+
+"Then you were not with him when they set on him?"
+
+"No, we had parted."
+
+"And you went back?"
+
+"Of course we did!"
+
+"It was imprudent," he said, "very imprudent. If we had not come up at
+that moment you might have been murdered."
+
+"And if we had not gone back, Mr. Colet might have been murdered!" she
+answered. "What he had done to offend them----"
+
+"I think I can tell you that. He's the curate at Riddsley, isn't he?
+Who's been preaching up cheap bread and preaching down the farmers?"
+
+"Perhaps so," Mary answered. "He may be. But is he to be murdered for
+that? From your tone one might think so."
+
+"No," he replied slowly, "he is not to be murdered for it. But whether
+he is wise to preach cheap bread to starving men, whether he is wise
+to tell them that they would have it but for this man or that man,
+this class or that class--is another matter."
+
+She was not convinced--the sermon had keyed her thoughts to a high
+pitch. But he spoke reasonably, and he had the knack of speaking with
+authority, and she said no more. And on his side he had no wish to
+quarrel. He had come down to Riddsley partly to shoot, partly to look
+into the political situation, but a little--there was no denying
+it--to learn how Mary Audley fared with her uncle.
+
+For he had thought much of her since they had parted, and much of the
+fact that she was John Audley's heir. Her beauty, her spirit, her
+youth, had caught his fancy. He had looked forward to renewing his
+acquaintance with her, and he was in no mood, now he saw her, to spoil
+their meeting by a quarrel. He thought Colet, whose doings had been
+reported to him, a troublesome, pestilent fellow, and he was not sorry
+that he had got his head broken. But he need not tell her that.
+Circumstances had favored him in bringing them together and giving him
+the beau rle, and he was not going to cross his luck.
+
+So, "Fire is an excellent thing of course," he continued with an air
+of moderation, "but, believe me, it's not safe amid young trees in a
+wind. Whatever your views, to express them in all companies may be
+honest, but is not wise. I have no doubt that a parson is tried. He
+sees the trouble. He is not always the best judge of the remedy.
+However, enough of that. We shall agree at least in this, that our
+meetings are opportune?"
+
+"Most opportune," Mary answered. "And from my point of view very
+fortunate!"
+
+"There really is a sort of fate in it. What but fate could have
+brought about our meeting at the Htel Lambert? What but fate could
+have drawn us to the same spot on the Chase to-night?"
+
+There was a tone in his voice that brought the blood to her cheek and
+warned her to keep to the surface of things. "The chance that men call
+fate," she answered lightly.
+
+"Or the fate that fools call chance," he urged, half in jest, half in
+earnest. "We have met by chance once, and once again--with results!
+The third time--what will the third time bring? I wonder."
+
+"Not a fright like this, I hope!" Mary answered, remaining cheerfully
+matter of fact. "Or if it does," with a flash of laughter, "I trust
+that the next time you will come up a few moments earlier!"
+
+"Ungrateful!"
+
+"I?" she replied. "But it was Etruria who was in danger!"
+
+For the peril had left her with a sense of exhilaration, of lightness,
+of ease. She was pleased to feel that she could hold her own with him,
+relieved that she was not afraid of him. And she was glad--she was
+certainly glad--to see him again. If he were inclined to make the most
+of his advantage, well, a little gallantry was quite in the picture;
+she was not deceived, and she was not offended. While he on his side,
+as they walked over the moor, thought of her as a clever little witch
+who knew her value and could keep her head; and he liked her none the
+less for it.
+
+When they came at last to the gap in the wall that divided the Chase
+from the park, a figure, dimly outlined, stood in the breach waiting
+for them. "Is that you?" a voice asked.
+
+The voice was Basset's, and Mary's spirits sank. She felt that the
+meeting was ill-timed. "Yes," she answered.
+
+Unluckily, Peter was one of those whose anxiety takes an irritable
+form. "What in the world has happened?" he asked. "I couldn't believe
+that you were still out. It's really not safe. Hallo!" breaking off
+and speaking in a different tone, "is some one with you?"
+
+"Yes," Mary said. They were within touch now and could see one
+another. "We have had an adventure. Lord Audley was passing, he came
+to our rescue, and has very kindly seen us home."
+
+"Lord Audley!" Basset was taken by surprise and his tone was much as
+if he had said, "The devil!"
+
+"By good fortune, Basset," Audley replied. He may have smiled in the
+darkness--we cannot say. "I was returning from shooting, heard cries
+for help, and found Miss Audley playing the knight-errant, encircled
+by prostrate bodies!"
+
+Basset could not frame a word, so great was his surprise, so
+overwhelming his chagrin. Was this man to spring up at every turn? To
+cross him on every occasion? To put him in the background perpetually?
+To intrude even on the peace and fellowship of the Gatehouse? It was
+intolerable!
+
+When he did not answer, "It was not I who was the knight-errant," Mary
+said. "It was Etruria. She is a little the worse for it, I fear, and
+the sooner she is in bed the better. As Mr. Basset is here," she
+continued, turning to Audley, "we must not take you farther. Your cart
+is no doubt waiting for you. But you will allow us to thank you again.
+We are most grateful to you--both Etruria and I."
+
+She spoke more warmly, perhaps she let her hand rest longer in his, to
+make up for Basset's silence. For that silence provoked her. She had
+gathered from many things that Basset did not love the other; but to
+stand mute and churlish on such an occasion, and find no word of
+acknowledgment--this was too bad.
+
+And Basset knew, he too knew that he ought to thank Audley. But the
+black dog was on his back, and while he hesitated, the other made
+his adieux. He said a pleasant word to Etruria, tossed a careless
+"Good-night" to the other man, turned away, and was gone.
+
+For awhile the three who remained trudged homewards in silence. Then,
+"What happened to you?" Basset asked grudgingly.
+
+Vexed and indignant, Mary told the story.
+
+"I did not know that you knew Mr. Colet!"
+
+"When a man is being murdered," she retorted, "one does not wait for
+an introduction."
+
+He was a good fellow, but jealousy was hot within him, and he could
+not bridle his tongue. "Oh, but murdered?" he said. "Isn't that rather
+absurd? Who would murder Colet?"
+
+Mary did not deign to reply.
+
+Baffled, he sought for another opening. "I do not know what your uncle
+will say."
+
+"Because we rescued Mr. Colet? And perhaps saved his life?"
+
+"No, but----"
+
+"Or because Lord Audley rescued us?"
+
+"He will certainly not be pleased to hear that," he retorted
+maliciously. He knew that he was misbehaving, but he could not
+refrain. "If you take my advice you will not mention it."
+
+"I shall tell him the moment I reach the house," she declared.
+
+"You will be very unwise if you do."
+
+"I shall be honest at least! For the rest I would rather not discuss
+the matter, Mr. Basset. I am a good deal shaken by what we have gone
+through, and I am very tired."
+
+He muttered humbly that he was sorry--that he only meant----
+
+"Please leave it there," she said. "Enough has been said."
+
+Too late the anger and the spirit died out of the unlucky man, and he
+would have grovelled before her, he would have done anything to earn
+his pardon. But Etruria's presence tied his tongue, and gloomy and
+wretched--oh, why had he not gone farther to meet them, why had he not
+been the one to rescue her?--he walked on beside them, cursing his
+unhappy temper. It was dark, the tired girls lagged, Etruria hung
+heavily on her mistress's arm; he longed to help them. But he did not
+dare to offer. He knew too well that Mary would reject the offer.
+
+Etruria had her own dreams, and in spite of an aching head was happy.
+But to Mary, fatigued by the walk, and vexed by Basset's conduct, the
+way seemed endless. At last the house loomed dark above them, their
+steps rang hard on the flagged court. The outer door stood ajar, and
+entering, they found a lamp burning in the hall; but the silence which
+prevailed, above and below, struck a chill. Silence and an open door
+go ill together.
+
+Etruria at Mary's bidding went up at once to her room. Basset called
+angrily for Toft. But no Toft appeared, and Mary, resentment still hot
+in her, opened the door of the library and went in to see her uncle.
+She felt that the sooner her story was told the better.
+
+But the library was empty. Lights burned on the several tables, the
+wood fire smouldered on the hearth, the tall clock ticked in the
+silence, the old hound flopped his tail. But John Audley was not
+there.
+
+"Where is my uncle?" she asked, as she stood in the open doorway.
+
+Basset looked over her shoulder. He saw that the room was empty. "He
+may have gone to look for us."
+
+"And Toft?"
+
+"And Toft, too, I suppose."
+
+"But why should my uncle go to look for us?" she asked, aghast at the
+thought--he troubled himself so little for others, he lived so
+completely his own life!
+
+"He might," Basset replied. He stood for a moment, thinking. Then--for
+the time they had forgotten their quarrel--"You had better get
+something to eat and go to bed," he said. "I will send Mrs. Toft to
+you."
+
+She had not the strength to resist. "Very well," she said. "Are you
+going to look for them?"
+
+"Perhaps Mrs. Toft will know where they are."
+
+She took her candle and went slowly up the narrow winding staircase
+that led to her room and to Etruria's. As she passed, stair by stair,
+the curving wainscot of dull wood which so many generations had
+rubbed, she carried with her the picture of Basset standing in thought
+in the middle of the hall, his eyes on the doorway that gaped on the
+night. Then a big man with a genial face usurped his place; and she
+smiled and sighed.
+
+A moment later she went into Etruria's room to learn how she was, and
+caught the girl rising from her knees. "Oh, Miss," she said, coloring
+as she met Mary's eyes, "if we had not been there!"
+
+"And yet--you won't marry him, you foolish girl?"
+
+"Oh no, no!"
+
+"Although you love him!"
+
+"Love him!" Etruria murmured, her face burning. "It is because I love
+him, Miss, that I will never, never marry him."
+
+Mary wondered. "And yet you love him?" she said, raising the candle so
+that its light fell on the other's face.
+
+Etruria looked this way and that way, but there was no escape. In a
+very small voice she said,
+
+
+ "Love seeketh not itself to please
+ Nor for itself hath any care!"
+
+
+She covered her hot cheeks with her hands. But Mary took away the
+hands and kissed her.
+
+"Oh, Miss!" Etruria exclaimed.
+
+Mary went out then, but on the threshold of her own room she paused to
+snuff her candle. "So that is love," she thought. "It's very
+interesting, and--and rather beautiful!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ THE YEW WALK
+
+
+Basset had been absent the greater part of the day, and returning at
+sunset had learned that Miss Audley had not come back from Brown
+Heath. The servant had hinted alarm--the Chase was lonely, the hour
+late; and Basset had hurried off without more, not doubting that John
+Audley was in the house.
+
+Now he was sure that John Audley had been abroad at the time, and he
+suspected that Toft had known it, and had kept it from him. He stood
+for a moment in thought, then he crossed the court to Toft's house.
+Mrs. Toft was cooking something savory in a bonnet before the fire,
+and the contrast between her warm cheerful kitchen and the stillness
+of the house from which he came struck him painfully. He told her that
+her daughter had received a blow on the head, and that Miss Audley
+needed supper--she had better attend to them.
+
+Mrs. Toft was a stout woman, set by a placid and even temper above
+small surprises. She looked at the clock, a fork in her hand. "I can't
+hurry it, Mr. Basset," she said. "You may be Sir Robert Peel himself,
+but meat's your master and will have its time. A knock on the head?"
+she continued, with a faint stirring of anxiety. "You don't say so?
+Lor, Mr. Basset, who'd go to touch Etruria?"
+
+"You'd better go and see."
+
+"But where's Toft?"
+
+Basset's temper gave way at that. "God knows!" he said. "He ought to
+be here--and he's not!" He went out.
+
+Mrs. Toft stared after him, and by and by she let down her skirt and
+prepared to go into the house. "On the head?" she ruminated. "Well,
+'Truria's a tidy lot of hair! And I will say this, if there's few
+points a man gives a woman, hair's one of them."
+
+Meanwhile Basset had struck across the court and taken in the darkness
+the track which led in the direction of the Great House. The breeze,
+light but of an autumn coldness, swept the upland, whispering through
+the dying fern, and rustling in the clumps of trees by which he
+steered his course. He listened more than once, hoping that he might
+hear approaching footsteps, but he heard none, and presently he came
+to the yew-trees that masked the entrance to the gardens.
+
+The trees formed a wall of blackness exceeding that of the darkest
+night, and Basset hesitated before he plunged into it. The growth of a
+century had long trespassed on the walk, a hundred and fifty yards
+long, which led through the yew-wood, and had been in its time a
+stately avenue trimmed to the neatness of a bowling green. Now it was
+little better than a tunnel, dark even at noon, and at night bristling
+with a hundred perils. Basset peered into the blackness, listened,
+hesitated. But he was honestly anxious on John Audley's account, and
+contenting himself with exclaiming that the man was mad, he began to
+grope his way along the path.
+
+It was no pleasant task. If he swerved from his course he stumbled
+over roots, branches swept his cheek, jagged points threatened his
+eyes, and more than once he found himself in the hedge. Half-way
+through the wood he came to a circular clearing, some twenty yards
+across; and here a glimmer of light enabled him to avoid the crumbling
+stone Butterfly that crouched on its mouldering base in the centre of
+the clearing--much as a spider crouches in its web. It seemed in that
+dim light to be the demon of this underworld, a monster, a thing of
+evil.
+
+The same gleam, however, disclosed the opposite opening, and for
+another seventy yards he groped his way onward, longing to be clear of
+the stifling air, and the brooding fancies that dwelt in it, longing
+to plant his feet on something more solid than this carpet of rotting
+yew. At last he came to the tall, strait gate, wrought of old iron,
+that admitted to the pleasance. It was ajar. He passed through it, and
+with relief he felt the hard walk under his feet, the fresh air on his
+face. He crossed the walk, and stepping on to the neglected lawn, he
+halted.
+
+The Great House loomed before him, a hundred yards away. The moon had
+not risen, but the brightness which goes before its rising lightened
+the sky behind the monstrous building. It outlined the roof but left
+the bulk in gloom. No light showed in any part, and it was only the
+watcher's memory that pictured the quaint casements of the north wing,
+or filled in the bald rows of unglazed windows, which made of the new
+portion a death-mask. In that north wing just eighty years before, in
+a room hung with old Cordovan leather, the fatal house-warming had
+been held. The duel had been fought at sunrise within a pace or two of
+the moss-grown Butterfly that Basset had passed; and through the gate
+of ironwork, wood-smelted and wrought with the arms of Audley, which
+had opened at his touch, they had carried the dead heir back to his
+father. Tradition had it that the servant who bore in the old lord's
+morning draught of cool ale had borne also the tragic news to his
+bedside.
+
+Basset remembered that the hinges of the gate, seldom as it was used,
+had not creaked, and he felt sure that he was on the right track. He
+scanned the dark house, and tried to sift from the soughing of the
+wind any sound that might inform him.
+
+Presently he moved forward and scrutinized with care the north wing,
+which abutted on the yew-wood. There lay between the two only a strip
+of formal garden, once set with rows of birds and beasts cut in yew.
+Time had turned these to monsters, huge, amorphous, menacing, amidst
+which rank grass rioted and elder pushed. Even in daylight it seemed
+as if the ancient trees stretched out arms to embrace and strangle the
+deserted house.
+
+But the north wing remained as dark as the bulk of the house, and
+Basset uttered a sigh of relief. Ill-humor began to take the place of
+misgiving. He called himself a fool for his pains and anticipated with
+distaste a return through the yew-walk. However, the sooner he
+undertook the passage the sooner it would be over, and he was turning
+on his heel when somewhere between him and the old wing a stick
+snapped.
+
+Under a foot, he fancied; and he waited. In two or three minutes the
+moon would rise.
+
+Again he caught a faint sound. It resembled the stealthy tread of some
+one approaching from the north wing, and Basset, peering that way, was
+striving to probe the darkness, when a gleam of light shot across his
+eyes. He turned and saw in the main building a bright spark. It
+vanished. He waited to see it again, and while he waited a second
+stick snapped. This time the sound was behind him, and near the iron
+gate.
+
+He had been outflanked, and he had now to choose which he would stalk,
+the footstep or the light. He chose the latter, the rather as while he
+stood with his eyes fixed on the house the upper edge of a rising moon
+peeped above the roof.
+
+He stepped back to the gate, and in the shadow of the trees he waited.
+Two or three minutes passed. The moon rose clear of the roof,
+outlining the stately chimneys and gables and flooding with cold light
+the lower part of the lawn. With the rising of the moon the air grew
+more chilly. He shivered.
+
+At length a dull sound reached him--the sound of a closing door or a
+shutter cast back. A minute later he heard the footsteps of some one
+moving along the walk towards him. The man trod with care, but once he
+stumbled.
+
+Basset advanced. "Is that you, sir?" he asked.
+
+"D--n!" John Audley replied out of the darkness. He halted, breathing
+quickly.
+
+"I say d--n, too!" Basset replied. As a rule he was patient with the
+old man, but to-night his temper failed him.
+
+The other came on. "Why did you follow me?" he asked. "What is the
+use? What is the use? If you are willing to help me, good! But if not,
+why do you follow me?"
+
+"To see that you don't come to harm," Basset retorted. "As you
+certainly will one of these nights if you come here alone."
+
+"Well, I haven't come to harm to-night! On the contrary---- But there,
+there, man, let us get back."
+
+"The sooner the better," Basset replied. "I nearly put out an eye as I
+came."
+
+John Audley laughed. "Did you come through the yews in the dark?" he
+asked.
+
+"Didn't you?"
+
+"No, I brought a lantern." He removed as he spoke the cap of a small
+bull's-eye lantern and threw its light on the path. "Who's the fool
+now?"
+
+"Let us get home," Basset snapped.
+
+John Audley locked the iron gate behind them and they started. The
+light removed their worst difficulties and they reached the open park
+without mishap. But long before they gained the house the elder man's
+strength failed, and he was glad to lean on Basset's arm. On that a
+sense of weakness on the one side and of pity on the other closed
+their differences. "After all," Audley said wearily, "I don't know
+what I should have done if you had not come."
+
+"You'd have stayed there!"
+
+"And that would have been--Heavens, what a pity that would have been!"
+Audley paused and struck his stick on the ground. "I must take care of
+myself, I must take care of myself! You don't know, Basset, what
+I----"
+
+"And I don't want to know--here!" Basset replied. "When you are safe
+at home, you may tell me what you like."
+
+In the courtyard they came on Toft, who was looking out for them with
+a lantern. "Thank God, you're safe, sir," he said. "I was growing
+alarmed about you."
+
+"Where were you," Basset asked sharply, "when I came in?" John Audley
+was too tired to speak.
+
+"I had stepped out at the front to look for the master," Toft replied.
+"I fancied that he had gone out that way."
+
+Basset did not believe him, but he could not refute the story. "Well,
+get the brandy," he said, "and bring it to the library. Mr. Audley has
+been out too long and is tired."
+
+They went into the library and Toft pulled off his master's boots and
+brought his slippers and the spirit-tray. That done, he lingered, and
+Basset thought that he was trying to divine from the old man's looks
+whether the journey had been fruitful.
+
+In the end, however, the man had to go, and Audley leant forward to
+speak.
+
+"Wait!" Basset muttered. "He is coming back."
+
+"How do you know?"
+
+Basset raised his hand. The door opened. Toft came in. "I forgot to
+take your boots, sir," he said.
+
+"Well, take them now," his master replied peevishly. When the man had
+again withdrawn, "How did you know?" he asked, frowning at the fire.
+
+"I saw him go to take your boots--and leave them."
+
+Audley was silent for a time, then "Well," he said, "he has been with
+me many years and I think he is faithful."
+
+"To his own interests. He dogged you to-night."
+
+"So did you!"
+
+"Yes, but I did not hide! And he did, and hid from me, too, and lied
+about it. How long he had been watching you, I cannot say, but if you
+think that you can break through all your habits, sir, and be missing
+for two hours at night and a man as shrewd as Toft suspect nothing,
+you are mistaken. Of course he wonders. The next time he thinks it
+over. The third time he follows you. Presently whatever you know he
+will know."
+
+"Confound him!" Audley turned to the table and jerked some brandy into
+a glass. Then, "You haven't asked yet," he said, "what I've done."
+
+"If I am to choose," Basset replied, "I would rather not know. You
+know my views."
+
+"I know that you didn't think I should do it? Well, I've done it!"
+
+"Do you mean that--you've found the evidence?"
+
+"Is it likely?" the other replied petulantly. "No, but I've been in
+the Muniment Room. It is fifty years since I heard my father describe
+its position, but I could have gone to it blindfold! I was a boy then,
+and the name--he was telling a story of the old lord--took my fancy. I
+listened. In time the thing faded, but one day when I was at the
+lawyer's and some one mentioned the Muniment Room, the story came back
+to me so clearly, that I could almost repeat my father's words."
+
+"And you've been in the room?"
+
+"I've been in it. Why not? A door two inches thick and studded with
+iron, and a lock that one out of any dozen big keys would open!" He
+rubbed his calves in his satisfaction. "In twenty minutes I was
+inside."
+
+"And it was empty?"
+
+"It was empty," the other agreed, with a cunning smile. "As bare as a
+board. A little whitewashed room, just as my father described it!"
+
+"They had removed the papers?"
+
+"To the bank, or to London, or to Stubbs's. The place was as clean as
+a platter! Not a length of green tape or an end of parchment was
+left!"
+
+"Then what have you gained?" Basset asked.
+
+Audley looked slyly at him, his head on one side. "Ay, what?" he said.
+"But I'll tell you my father's story. At one time the part of the room
+under the stairs was crumbling and the rats got in. The steward told
+the old lord and he went to see it. 'Brick it up!' he said. The
+steward objected that there would not be room--the place was full;
+there were boxes everywhere, some under the stairs. The old lord
+tapped one of the boxes with his gold-headed cane. 'What's in these!'
+he asked. 'Old papers,' the steward explained. 'Of no use, my lord,
+but curious; old leases for lives, and terriers.' 'Terriers?' cried
+the old lord. 'Then, by G--d, brick 'em up with the rats!' And that
+day at dinner he told my father the story and chuckled over it."
+
+"And that's what you've had in your mind all this time?" Basset said.
+"Do you think it was done?"
+
+"The old lord bricked up many a pipe of port, and I think that he
+would do it for the jest's sake. And"-- John Audley turned and looked
+in his companion's face--"the part under the stairs _is bricked up_,
+and the room is as square and as flush as the family vault--and very
+like it. The old lord," he added sardonically, "knows what it is to be
+bricked up himself now."
+
+"And still there may be nothing there to help you."
+
+Audley rose from his chair. "Don't say it!" he cried passionately. "Or
+I'll say that there's no right in the world, no law, no providence, no
+God! Don't dare to say it!" he continued, his cheeks trembling with
+excitement. "If I believed that I should go mad! But it is there! It
+is there! Do you think that it was for naught I heard that story? That
+it was for naught I remembered it, for naught I've carried the story
+in my mind all these years? No, they are there, the papers that will
+give me mine and give it to Mary after me! They are there! And you
+must help me to get them."
+
+"I cannot do it, sir," Basset replied firmly. "I don't think that you
+understand what you ask. To break into Audley's house like any common
+burglar, to dig down his wall, to steal his deeds----"
+
+John Audley shook his fist in the young man's face. "His house!" he
+shrieked. "His wall! His deeds! No, fool, but my house, my wall, my
+deeds! my deeds! If the papers are there all's mine! All! And I am but
+taking my own! Can't you see that? Can't you see it? Have I no right
+to take what is my own?"
+
+"But if the papers are not there?" Basset replied gravely. "No, sir,
+if you will take my advice you will tell your story, apply to the
+court, and let the court examine the documents. That's the
+straightforward course."
+
+John Audley flung out his arms. "Man!" he cried. "Don't you know that
+as long as he is in possession he can sit on his deeds, and no power
+on earth can force him to show them?"
+
+Basset drew in his breath. "If that is so," he said, "it is hard. Very
+hard! But to go by night and break into his house--sticks in my
+gizzard, sir. I'm sorry, but that is the way I look at it. The man's
+here too. I saw him this evening. The fancy might have taken him to
+visit the house, and he might have found you there?"
+
+Audley's color faded, he seemed to shrink into himself. "Where did you
+see him?" he faltered.
+
+Basset told the story. "I don't suppose that the girls were really in
+danger," he continued, "but they thought so, and Audley came to the
+rescue and brought them as far as the park gap."
+
+The other took out his silk handkerchief and wiped his brow. "As near
+as that," he muttered.
+
+"Ay, and if he had found you at the house, he might have guessed your
+purpose."
+
+John Audley held out a hand trembling with passion. "I would have
+killed him!" he cried. "I would have killed him--before he should have
+had what is there!"
+
+"Exactly," Basset replied. "And that is why I will have nothing to do
+with the matter! It's too risky, sir. If you take my advice you will
+give it up."
+
+Audley did not answer. He sat awhile, his shoulders bowed, his eyes
+fixed on the hearth, while the other wondered for the hundredth time
+if he were sane. At length, "What is he doing here?" the old man asked
+in a lifeless tone. The passion had died out of him.
+
+"Shooting, I suppose. But there was some talk in Riddsley of his
+coming down to stir up old Mottisfont."
+
+"What about?"
+
+"Against the corn-law repeal, I suppose."
+
+Audley nodded. But after a while, "That's a pretext," he said. "And so
+is the shooting. He has followed the girl."
+
+Basset started. "Followed Mary!" he exclaimed.
+
+"What else? I have looked for it from the first. I've pressed you to
+come to an understanding with her for that reason. Why the devil can't
+you? If you leave it much longer you'll be too late! Too late! And, by
+G--d, I'll never forgive you!" with a fresh spirt of passion. "Never!
+Never, man!"
+
+"I've not said that I meant to do it."
+
+"You've not said!" Audley replied contemptuously. "Do you think that I
+don't know that she's all the world to you? Do you think that I've no
+eyes? Do you think that when you sit there watching her from behind
+your book by the hour together, I have not my sight? Man, I'm not a
+fool! And I tell you that if you're not to lose her you must speak!
+You must speak! Stand by another month, wait a little longer, and
+Philip Audley will put in his oar, and I'll not give that for your
+chances!" He snapped his fingers.
+
+"Why should he put in his oar?" Basset asked sullenly. His face had
+turned a dull red.
+
+John Audley shrugged his shoulders. "Do you think that she is without
+attractions?"
+
+"But Audley lives in another world."
+
+"The more likely to have attractions for her!"
+
+"But surely he'll look for--for something more," Basset stammered.
+
+"For a rich wife? For an alliance, as the saying is? And sleep ill of
+nights? And have bad dreams? No, he is no fool, if you are. He sees
+that if he marries the girl he makes himself safe. He makes himself
+safe! After me, it lies between them."
+
+"I take it that he does think himself safe."
+
+"Not he!" Audley replied. He was stooping over the ashes, warming his
+hands, but at that he jumped up. "Not he! he knows better than you!
+And fears! And sleeps ill of nights, d--n him! And dreams! But there,
+I must not excite myself. I must not excite myself. Only, if he once
+begins, he'll be no laggard in love as you are! He'll not sit puling
+and peeping and looking at the back of her head by the hour together!
+He'll be up and at her--I know what that big jowl means! And she'll be
+in his arms in half the time that you've taken to count her
+eyelashes!" He turned in a fresh fit of fury and seized his candle.
+"In his arms, I tell you, fool, while you are counting her eyelashes.
+Well, lose her, lose her, and I never want to see you again, or her!
+Never! I'll curse you both!"
+
+He stumbled to the door and went out, a queer, gibbering, shaking
+figure; and Basset had no doubt at such moments that he was mad. But
+on this occasion he was afraid--he was very much afraid, as he sat
+pondering in his chair, that there was method in his madness!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ PETER PAUPER
+
+
+The impression which the events of the evening had made on Mary's mind
+was still lively when she awoke next day. It was not less clear,
+because like the feminine letter of the 'forties, crossed and
+recrossed, it had stamped itself in two layers on her mind, of which
+the earlier was the more vivid.
+
+The solitude in which her days had of late been spent had left her
+peculiarly open to new ideas, while the quiet and wholesome life of
+the Gatehouse had prepared her to answer any call which those ideas
+might make upon her. Rescued from penury, lifted above anxiety about
+bed and board, no longer exposed to the panic-fears which in Paris had
+beset even her courageous nature, Mary had for a while been content
+simply to rest. She had taken the sunshine, the beauty, the ease and
+indolence of her life as a convalescent accepts idleness, without
+scruple or question.
+
+But this could not last. She was young, nature soon rallied in her,
+and she had seen things and done things during the last two years
+which forbade her to accept such a limited horizon as satisfied most
+of the women of that day. Unlike them, she had viewed the world from
+more than one standpoint; through the grille of a convent school, from
+the grimy windows of a back-street in Paris; again, as it moved
+beneath the painted ceilings of a French salon. And now, as it
+presented itself in this retired house.
+
+Therefore she could not view things as those saw them whose standpoint
+had never shifted. She had suffered, she still had twinges--for who,
+with her experience, could be sure that the path would continue easy?
+And so to her Mr. Colet's sermon had made a strong appeal.
+
+It left the word which Mr. Colet had taken for his text sounding in
+her ears. Borne upward on the eloquence which earnestness had lent to
+the young preacher, she looked down on a world in torment, a world
+holding up piteous hands, craving, itself in ignorance, the help of
+those who held the secret, and whose will might make that secret
+sufficient to save. Love! To do to others as she would have others do
+to her! With every day, with every hour, with every minute to do
+something for others! Always to give, never to take! Above all to give
+herself, to do her part in that preference of others to self, which
+could alone right these mighty wrongs, could find work for the idle,
+food for the hungry, roofs for the homeless, knowledge for the blind,
+healing for the sick! Which could save all this world in torment, and
+could
+
+
+ "Build a Heaven in Hell's despair!"
+
+
+It was a beautiful vision, and in this her first glimpse of it, Mary's
+fancy was not chilled by the hard light of experience. It seemed so
+plain that if the workman had his master's profit at heart, and the
+master were as anxious for the weal of his men, the interests of the
+two would be one. Equally plain it seemed that if they who grew the
+food aimed at feeding the greatest number, and they who ate had the
+same desire to reward the grower, if every man shrank from taking
+advantage of other men, if the learned lived to spread their
+knowledge, and the strong to help the weak, if no man wronged his
+neighbor, but
+
+
+ "Each for another gave his ease,"
+
+
+then it seemed equally plain that love would indeed be lord of all!
+
+Later, she might discover that it takes two to make a bargain; that
+charity does bless him who gives but not always him who takes; even,
+that cheap bread might be a dear advantage--that at least it might
+have its drawbacks.
+
+But for the moment it was enough for Mary that the vision was
+beautiful and, as a theory, true. So that, gazing upward at the faded
+dimity of her tester, she longed to play her part in it. That world in
+torment, those countless hands stretched upward in appeal, that murmur
+of infinite pain, the cry of the hungry, of the widow, of men sitting
+by tireless hearths, of children dying in mill and mine--the picture
+wrought on her so strongly, that she could not rest. She rose, and
+though the hoar frost was white on the grass and the fog of an autumn
+morning still curtained the view, she began to dress.
+
+Perhaps the chill of the cold water in which she washed sobered her.
+At any rate, with the comb in one hand and her hair in the other, she
+drifted down another line of thought. Lord Audley--how strange was the
+chance which had again brought them together! How much she owed him,
+with what kindness had he seen to her comfort, how masterfully had he
+arranged matters for her on the boat. And then she smiled. She
+recalled Basset's ill-humor, or his--jealousy. At the thought of what
+the word implied, Mary colored.
+
+There could be nothing in the notion, yet she probed her own feelings.
+Certainly she liked Lord Audley. If he was not handsome, he had that
+air of strength and power which impresses women; and he had ease and
+charm, and the look of fashion which has its weight with even the most
+sensible of her sex. He had all these and he was a man, and she
+admired him and was grateful to him. And yesterday she might have
+thought that her feeling for him was love.
+
+But this morning she had gained a higher notion of love. She had
+learned from Etruria how near to that pattern of love which Mr. Colet
+preached the love of man and woman could rise. She had a new
+conception of its strength and its power to expel what was selfish or
+petty. She had seen it in its noblest form in Etruria, and she knew
+that her feeling for Lord Audley was not in the same world with
+Etruria's feeling for the curate. She laughed at the notion.
+
+"Poor Etruria!" she meditated. "Or should it be, happy Etruria? Who
+knows? I only know that I am heart-whole!"
+
+And she knotted up her hair and, Diana-like, went out into the pure
+biting air of the morning, along the green rides hoary with dew and
+fringed with bracken, under the oak trees from which the wood-pigeons
+broke in startled flight.
+
+But if the energy of her thoughts carried her out, fatigue soon
+brought her to a pause. The evening's excitement, the strain of the
+adventure had not left her, young as she was, unscathed. The springs
+of enthusiasm waned with her strength, and presently she felt jaded.
+She perceived that she would have done better had she rested longer;
+and too late the charms of bed appealed to her.
+
+She was at the breakfast table when Basset--he, too, had had a
+restless night and many thoughts--came down. He saw that she was pale
+and that there were shadows under her eyes, and the man's tenderness
+went out to her. He longed, he longed above everything to put himself
+right with her; and on the impulse of the moment, "I want you to
+know," he said, standing meekly at her elbow, "that I am sorry I lost
+my temper last evening."
+
+But she was out of sympathy with him. "It is nothing," she said. "We
+were all tired, I think. Etruria is not down yet."
+
+"But I want to ask your----"
+
+"Oh dear, dear!" she cried, interrupting him with a gesture of
+impatience. "Don't let us rake it up again. If my uncle has not
+suffered, there is no harm done. Please let it rest."
+
+But he could not let it rest. He longed to put his neck under her
+foot, and he did not see that she was in the worst possible mood for
+his purpose. "Still," he said, "you must let me say----"
+
+"Don't!" she cried. She put her hands to her ears. Then, seeing that
+she had wounded him, she dropped them and spoke more kindly. "Don't
+let us make much of little, Mr. Basset. It was all natural enough. You
+don't like Lord Audley----"
+
+"I don't."
+
+"And you did not understand that we had been terribly frightened, and
+had good reason to be grateful to him. I am sure that if you had known
+that, you would have behaved differently. There!" with a smile. "And
+now that I have made the amende for you, let us have breakfast. Here
+is your coffee."
+
+He knew that she was holding him off, and all his alarms of the night
+were quickened. Again and again had John Audley's warning recurred to
+him and as often he had striven to reject it, but always in vain. And
+gradually, slowly, it had kindled his resolution, it had fired him to
+action. Now, the very modesty which had long kept him silent and
+withheld him from enterprise was changed--as so often happens with
+diffident man--into rashness. He was as anxious to put his fate to the
+test as he had before been unwilling.
+
+Presently, "You will not need to tell your uncle about Lord Audley,"
+he said. "I've done it."
+
+"I hope you told him," she answered gravely, "that we were indebted to
+Lord Audley for our safety."
+
+"You don't trust me?"
+
+"Don't say things like that!" she cried. "It is foolish. I have no
+doubt that in telling my uncle you meant to relieve me. You have
+helped me more than once in that way. But----"
+
+"But this is a special occasion?"
+
+She looked at him. "If you wish us to be friends----"
+
+"I don't," he answered roughly. "I don't want to be friends with you."
+
+Then, ambiguous as his words were, she saw where she stood, and she
+mustered her presence of mind. She rose from her seat. "And I," she
+said, "am not going to quarrel with you, Mr. Basset. I am going now to
+learn how Etruria is. And then I shall see my uncle."
+
+She escaped before he could answer.
+
+Once or twice it had crossed her mind that he looked at her with
+intention; and once reading that look in his eyes she had felt her
+color rise, and her heart beat more quickly. But the absence on her
+side of any feeling, except that which a sister might feel for a kind
+brother, this and the reserve of his manner had nipped the fancy as
+soon as it budded. And if she had given it a second thought, it had
+been only to smile at her vanity.
+
+Now she had no doubt of the fact, no doubt that it was jealousy that
+moved him, and her uppermost, almost her only feeling was vexation.
+Because they had lived in the same house for five months, because he
+had been useful and she had been grateful, because they were man and
+woman, how foolish it was! How absurd! How annoying! She foresaw from
+it many, many, inconveniences; a breach in their pleasant intercourse,
+displeasure on her uncle's part, trouble in the house that had been so
+peaceful--oh, many things. But that which vexed her most was the fear
+that she had, all unwittingly, encouraged him.
+
+She believed that she had not. But while she talked to Etruria, and
+later, as she went down the stairs to interview her uncle, she had
+this weight on her mind. She strove to recall words and looks, and
+upon the whole she was sure that she could acquit herself, sure that
+of this evil no part lay at her door. But it was very, very vexatious!
+
+On the threshold of the library she wrested her thoughts back to the
+present, and paused a moment, considering what she should say to her
+uncle.
+
+She need not have troubled herself, for he was not there. At the first
+glance she took the room to be empty; a second showed her Basset. She
+turned to retire, but too late; he stepped between her and the door
+and closed it. He was a little paler than usual, and his air of
+purpose was not to be mistaken.
+
+She stiffened. "I came to see my uncle," she said.
+
+"I am the bearer of a message from him," he answered. "He asked me to
+say that he considers the matter at an end. He does not wish it to be
+mentioned again. Of course he does not blame you."
+
+"But, Mr. Basset----"
+
+But he would not let her speak. "That was his message," he continued,
+"and I am glad to be the messenger because it gives me a chance of
+speaking to you. Will you sit down?"
+
+"But we have only just parted," she remonstrated, struggling against
+her fate. "I don't understand what you want----"
+
+"To say? No, I am going to explain it--if you will sit down."
+
+She sat down then with the feeling that she was trapped. And since it
+was clear that she must go through with it, she was glad that his
+insistence hardened her heart and dried up the springs of pity.
+
+He went to the fire, stooped and moved the wood. "You won't come
+nearer?" he said.
+
+"No," she replied. How foolish to trap her like this if he thought to
+get anything from her!
+
+He turned to her and his face was changed. Under his wistful look she
+discovered that it was not so easy to be hard, not so easy to maintain
+her firmness. "You would rather escape?" he said, reading her mind. "I
+know. But I can't let you escape. You are thinking that I have trapped
+you? And you are fearing that I am going to make you unhappy for--for
+half an hour perhaps? I know. And I am fearing that you are going to
+make me unhappy for--always."
+
+No, she could not retain her hardness. She knew that she was going to
+feel pity after all. But she would not speak.
+
+"I have only hope," he went on. "There is only one thing I am clinging
+to. I have read that when a man loves a woman very truly, very deeply,
+as I love you, Mary"--she started violently, and blushed to the roots
+of her hair, so sudden was the avowal--"as I love you," he repeated
+sorrowfully, "I have read that she either hates him or loves him. His
+love is a fire that either warms her or scorches her, draws her or
+repels her. I thought of that last night, as I thought of many things,
+and I was sure, I was confident that you did not hate me."
+
+"Oh no," she answered, unsteadily. "Indeed, indeed, I don't! I am very
+grateful to you. But the other--I don't think it is true."
+
+"No?" he said, keeping his eyes on her face. "And then, you don't
+doubt that I love you?"
+
+"No." The flush had faded from her face and left her pale. "I don't
+doubt that--now."
+
+"It is so true that--you know that you have sometimes called me Peter?
+Well, I would have given much, very much to call you Mary. But I did
+not dare. I could not. For I knew that if I did, only once, my voice
+would betray me, and that I should alarm you before the time! I knew
+that that one word--that word alone--would set my heart upon my sleeve
+for all to see. And I did not want to alarm you. I did not want to
+hurry you. I thought then that I had time, time to make myself known
+to you, time to prove my devotion, time to win you, Mary. I thought
+that I could wait. Now, since last night, I am afraid to wait. I
+doubt, nay I am sure, that I have no time, that I dare not wait."
+
+She did not answer, but the color mounted again to her face.
+
+He turned and knocked the fire together with his foot. Then he took a
+step towards her. "Tell me," he said, "have I any chance? Any chance
+at all, Mary?"
+
+She shook her head; but seeing then that he kept his eyes fixed on her
+and would not take that for an answer, "None," she said as kindly as
+she could. "I must tell you the truth. It is useless to try to break
+it. I have never once, not once thought of you but as a friend,
+Peter."
+
+"But now," he said, "cannot you regard me differently--now! Now that
+you know? Cannot you begin to think of me as--a lover?"
+
+"No," Mary said frankly and pitifully. "I should not be honest if I
+said that I could. If I held out hopes. You have been always good to
+me, kind to me, a dear friend, a brother when I had need of one. And I
+am grateful, Mr. Basset, honestly, really grateful to you. And fond of
+you--in that way. But I could not think of you in the way you desire.
+I know it for certain. I know that there is no chance."
+
+He stood for a moment without speaking, and seeing how stricken he
+looked, how sad his face, her eyes filled with tears. Then, "Is there
+any one else?" he asked slowly, his eyes on her face.
+
+She did not answer. She rose to her feet.
+
+"Is there any one else?" he repeated, a new note in his voice. He
+moved forward a step.
+
+"You have no right to ask that," she said.
+
+"I have every right," he replied. "What?" he continued, moving still
+nearer to her, his whole bearing changed in a moment by the sting of
+jealousy. "I am condemned, I am rejected, and I am not to ask why?"
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"But I do ask!" he retorted with a passion which surprised and alarmed
+her; he was no longer the despondent lover of five minutes before, but
+a man demanding his rights. "Have you no heart? Have you no feeling
+for me? Do you not consider what this is to me?"
+
+"I consider," Mary replied with a warmth almost equal to his own,
+"that if I answered your question I should humiliate myself. No one,
+no one has a right, sir, to ask that question. And least of all you!"
+
+"And I am to be cast aside, I am to be discarded without a reason?"
+
+That word "discarded" seemed so unjust, and so uncalled for, seeing
+that she had given him no encouragement, that it stung her to anger.
+"Without a reason?" she retorted. "I have given you a reason--I do not
+return your love. That is the only reason that you have a right to
+know. But if you press me, I will tell you why what you propose is
+impossible. Because, if I ever love a man I hope, Mr. Basset, that it
+will be one who has some work in the world, something to do that shall
+be worth the doing, a man with ambitions above mere trifling, mere
+groping in the dust of the past for facts that, when known, make no
+man happier, and no man better, and scarce a man wiser! Do you ever
+think," she continued, carried away by the remembrance of Mr. Colet's
+zeal, "of the sorrow and pain that are in the world? Of the vast
+riddles that are to be solved? Of the work that awaits the wisest and
+the strongest, and at which all in their degree can help? My uncle is
+an old man, it is well he should play with the past. I am a girl, it
+may serve for me. But what do you here?" She pointed to his table,
+laden with open folios and calf-bound volumes. "You spend a week in
+proving a Bohun marriage that is nothing to any one. Another, in
+raking up a blot that is better forgotten! A third in tracing to its
+source some ancient tag! You move a thousand books--to make one
+knight! Is that a man's work?"
+
+"At least," he said huskily, "I do no harm."
+
+"No harm?" Mary replied, swept away by her feelings. "Is that enough?
+Because in this quiet corner, which is home to my uncle and a refuge
+to me, no call reaches you, is it enough that you do no harm? Is there
+no good to be done? Think, Mr. Basset! I am ignorant, a woman. But I
+know that to-day there are great questions calling for an answer,
+wrongs clamoring to be righted, a people in travail that pleads for
+ease! I know that there is work in England for men, for all! Work,
+that if there be any virtue left in ancient blood should summon you as
+with a trumpet call!"
+
+He did not answer. Twice, early in her attack he had moved as if he
+would defend himself. Then he had let his chin fall and he had
+listened with his eyes on the table. And--but she had not seen it--he
+had more than once shivered under her words as under a lash. For he
+loved her and she scourged him. He loved her, he desired her, he had
+put her on a pedestal, and all the time she had been viewing him with
+the clear merciless eyes of youth, trying him by the standard of her
+dreams, probing his small pretensions, finding him a potterer in a
+library--he who in his vanity had raised his eyes to her and sought to
+be her hero!
+
+It was a cruel lesson, cruelly given; and it wounded him to the heart.
+So that she, seeing too late that he made no reply, seeing the
+grayness of his face, and that he did not raise his eyes, had a
+too-late perception of what she had done, of how cruel she had been,
+of how much more she had said than she had meant to say. She stood
+conscience-stricken, remorseful, ashamed.
+
+And then, "Oh, I am sorry!" she cried. "I am sorry! I should not have
+said that! You meant to honor me and I have hurt you."
+
+He looked up then, but neither the shadow nor the grayness left his
+face. "Perhaps it was best," he said dully. "I am sure that you meant
+well."
+
+"I did," she cried. "I did! But I was wrong. Utterly wrong!"
+
+"No," he said, "you were not wrong. The truth was best."
+
+"But perhaps it was not the truth," she replied, anxious at once,
+miserably anxious to undo what she had done, to unsay what she had
+said, to tell him that she was conceited, foolish, a mere girl! "I am
+no judge--after all what do I know of these things? What have I done
+that I should say anything?"
+
+"I am afraid that what is said is said," he replied. "I have always
+known that I was no knight-errant. I have never been bold until
+to-day--and it has not answered," with a sickly smile. "But we
+understand one another now--and I relieve you."
+
+He passed her on his way to the door, and she thought that he was
+going to hold it open for her to go out. But when he reached the door
+he fumbled for the handle, found it as a blind man might find it, and
+went out himself, without turning his head.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ THE MANCHESTER MEN
+
+
+Basset knew every path that crossed the Chase, and had traversed them
+at all seasons, and in all weathers. But when, some hours later, he
+halted on a scarred and blackened waste that stretched to the horizon
+on every side, he would have been hard put to it to say how he came to
+be there. He wore his hat, he carried his stick, but he could not
+remember how he had become possessed of either.
+
+For a time the shock of disappointment, the numbing sense of loss had
+dulled his mind. He had walked as in a dream, repeating over and over
+again that that was what she thought of him--and he had loved her. It
+was possible that in the interval he had sworn at fate, or shrieked
+against the curlews, or cursed the inhuman sky that mocked him with
+its sameness. But he did not think that he had. He felt the life in
+him too low for such outbursts. He told himself that he was a poor
+creature, a broken thing, a failure. He loved her, and--and that was
+what she thought of him.
+
+He sat on the stump of an ancient thorn-tree that had been a landmark
+on the burnt heath longer than the oldest man could remember, and he
+began to put together what she had said. He was trifling away his
+life, picking stray finds from the dust-heap of the past, making no
+man wiser and no man better, doing nothing for any one! Was she right?
+The Bohun pedigree, at which he had worked so long? He had been proud
+of his knowledge of Norman descents, proud of the research which had
+won that knowledge, proud of his taste for following up recondite
+facts. Were the knowledge, the research, the taste, all things for
+which he ought to blush? Certainly, tried by the test, _cui bono?_
+they came off but poorly. And perhaps, to sit down at his age, content
+with such employments, might seem unworthy and beneath him, if there
+were other calls upon him. But were there other calls?
+
+Time had been when his family had played a great part, not in
+Staffordshire only but in England; and then doubtless public service
+had been a tradition with them. But the tradition had waned with their
+fortunes. In these days he was only a small squire, a little more
+regarded than the new men about him; but with no ability to push his
+way in a crowd, no mastery among his fellow-men, one whom character
+and position alike cast for a silent part.
+
+Of course she knew none of these things, but with the enthusiasm of
+youth she looked to find in every man the qualities of the leading
+role. He who seldom raised his voice at Quarter Sessions or on the
+Grand Jury--to which his birth rather than his possessions called
+him--she would have had him figure among the great, lead causes,
+champion the oppressed! It was pitiful, if it had not been absurd!
+
+He walked on by and by, dwelling on the pity of it, a very unhappy
+man. He thought of the evenings in the library when she had looked
+over his shoulder, and one lamp had lighted them; of the mornings when
+the sun had gilded her hair as she bent over the task she was even
+then criticizing; of afternoons when the spirit of the chase had been
+theirs, and the sunshine and the flowers had had no charm strong
+enough to draw them from the pursuit of--alas! something that could
+make no man better or wiser. He had lost her; and if aught mattered
+apart from that, she had for ever poisoned the springs of content,
+muddied the wells of his ordered life.
+
+Beyond doubt she loved the other, for had she not, she would have
+viewed things differently. Beyond doubt in her love for the other lay
+the bias that weighted her strictures. And yet, making all allowance
+for that, there was so much of truth in what she had said, so much
+that hit the mark, that he could never be the same again, never give
+himself with pleasure to his former pursuits, never find the old life
+a thing to satisfy!
+
+And still, like the tolling of a death bell above the city's life, two
+thoughts beat on his mind again and again, and gave him intolerable
+pain. That was what she thought of him! And he had lost her! That was
+what she thought of him! And he had lost her! Her slender gracious
+figure, her smiling eyes, the glint in her hair, her goodness, her
+very self--all were for another! All were lost to him!
+
+Presently the day began to draw in, and fagged and hopeless he turned
+and began to make his way back. His road lay through Brown Heath, the
+mining village, where in all the taverns and low-browed shops they
+were beginning to light their candles. He crossed the Triangle, and
+made his way along the lane, deep in coal-dust and foul with drains,
+that ran upwards to the Chase. A pit, near at hand, had just turned
+out its shift, and in the dusk tired men, swinging tins in their
+hands, were moving by twos and threes along the track. With his bent
+shoulders and weary gait he was lost among them, he walked one with
+them; yet here and there an older man espied the difference,
+recognized him, and greeted him with rough respect. Presently the
+current slackened; something, he could not see what, dammed the
+stream. A shrewish voice rose in the darkness before him, and other
+voices, angry, clamant, protesting, struck in. A few of the men pushed
+by the trouble, others stood, here and there a man added a taunt to
+the brawl. In his turn Basset came abreast of the quarrel. He halted.
+
+A farm cart blocked the roadway. Over the tail hung three or four
+wailing children; into it a couple of sturdy men were trying to lift
+an old woman, seated in a chair. A dingy beadle and a constable, who
+formed the escort and looked ill at ease, stood beside the cart, and
+round it half a score of slatternly women pushed and shrieked and
+gesticulated. On the group and the whole dreary scene nightfall cast a
+pallid light.
+
+"What is it?" Basset asked.
+
+"They're shifting Nan Oates to the poorhouse," a man answered. "Her
+son died of the fever, and there's none to keep her or the little uns.
+She've done till now, but they'll not give her bite nor sup out of the
+House--that's the law now't seems. So the House it be!"
+
+"Her'd rather die than go!" cried a girl.
+
+"D--n them and their Bastilles!" exclaimed a younger man. "Are we free
+men, or are we not?"
+
+"Free men?" shrieked a woman, who had seized the horse's rein and was
+loudest in her outcry. "No, nor Staffordshire men, nor Englishmen, nor
+men at all, if you let an old woman that's always lived decent go to
+their stone jug this way. Give me Stafford Gaol--'tis miles afore it!"
+
+"Ay, you're at home there, Bet!" a voice in the crowd struck in, and
+the laugh that followed lightened matters.
+
+Basset looked with pity at the old woman. Her head sunk upon her
+breast, her thin shawl tucked about her shoulders, her gray hair in
+wisps on her cheeks, she gazed in tearless grief upon the hovel which
+had been home to her. "Who's to support her," he asked, "if she
+stays?"
+
+"For the bite and sup there's neighbors," a man answered. "Reverend
+Colet he said he might do something. But he's been lammed. And there's
+the rent. The boy's ten, and he made four shilling a week in the pit,
+but the new law's stopped the young uns working."
+
+"Ay, d--n all new laws!" cried another. "Poor laws and pit laws we're
+none but the worse for them!"
+
+The men were preparing to move the cart. The woman who held the rein
+clung to it. "Now, Bet, have a care!" said the constable. "Or you'll
+go home by Weeping Cross again!"
+
+"Cross? I'll cross you!" the termagant retorted. "Selling up widows'
+houses is your bread and meat! May the devil, hoof and horn, with his
+scythe on his back, go through you! If there were three men here, ay,
+men as you'd call men----"
+
+"Easy, woman, easy!"
+
+"Woman, dang you! You call me woman----"
+
+"Now, let go, Bet! You'll be in trouble else!" some one said.
+
+But she held on, and the crowd were beginning to jostle the men in
+charge when Basset stepped forward. "Steady, a moment," he said. "Will
+the guardians let the woman stop if the rent is provided?"
+
+"Who be you, master?" the constable asked. "You'd best let us do our
+duty."
+
+"Dang it, man," an old fellow interposed, "it's Squire Basset of
+Blore. Dunno you know him? Keep a civil tongue in your head, will
+you!"
+
+"Ay," chimed in another, pushing forward with a menacing gesture. "You
+be careful, Jack! You be Jack in office, but 'twon't always be so!
+'Twon't always be so!"
+
+"Mr. Colet knows the old woman?" Basset asked.
+
+"Sure, sir, the curate knows her."
+
+"Well, I'll find the rent," Basset said, addressing the constable, "if
+you'll let her be. I'll see the overseer about her in the morning."
+
+"So long as she don't come on the rates, sir?"
+
+"She'll not come on the rates for six months," Basset said. "I'll be
+answerable for so much."
+
+The men had little stomach for their task, and with a good excuse they
+were willing enough to desist. A woman fetched a stub of a pen and a
+drop of ink and Basset wrote a word for their satisfaction. While he
+did so, "O'd Staffordshire! O'd Staffordshire!" a man explained in the
+background. "Bassets of Blore--they be come from an Abbey and come to
+a Grange, as the saying is. You never heard of the Bassets of Blore,
+you be neither from Mixen nor Moor!" In old Stafford talk the rich
+lands of Cheshire stood for the "mixen" as against the bare heaths of
+the home county.
+
+In five minutes the business was done, the woman freed, and Basset was
+trudging away through the gathering darkness. But the incident had
+done him good. It had lightened his heart. It had changed ever so
+little the direction of his thoughts. Out of his own trouble he had
+stretched a hand to another; and although he knew that it was not by
+stray acts such as this that he could lift himself to Mary's standard,
+though the battle over the new Poor Law had taught him, and many
+others, that charity may be the greatest of evils, what he had done
+seemed to bring him nearer to her. A hardship of the poor, which he
+might have seen with blind eyes, or viewed from afar as the inevitable
+result of the stay of outdoor relief, had come home to him. As he
+plodded across the moor he carried with him a picture of the old woman
+with her gray hair falling about her wrinkled face, and her hands
+clasped in hopeless resignation. And he felt that his was not the only
+trouble in the world.
+
+When he had passed the wall of Beaudelays Park, Basset struck--not far
+from the Gatehouse--into the road leading down to the Vale, and a
+couple of hours after dark he plodded into Riddsley. He made for the
+Audley Arms, a long straggling house on the main street, in one part
+of two stories, in another of three, with a big bay window at the end.
+Entering the yard by the archway he ordered a gig to go to the
+Gatehouse for his portmanteau. Then he turned into the inn, and
+scribbled a note to John Audley, stating that he was called away, and
+would explain matters when he wrote again. He sent it by the driver.
+
+It was eight o'clock. "I am afraid, Squire," the landlord said, "that
+there's no fire upstairs. If you'd not mind our parlor for once,
+there's no one there and it's snug and warm."
+
+"I'll do that, Musters," he said. He was cold and famished and he was
+not sorry to avoid the company of his own thoughts. In the parlor,
+next door to the Snug, he might be alone or listen to the local gossip
+as he pleased.
+
+Ten minutes later he sat in front of a good plain meal, and for the
+time the pangs of appetite overcame those of disappointment. About
+nine the landlord entered on some errand. "I suppose, sir," he said,
+lingering to see that his guest had all that he wanted, "you've heard
+this about Mr. Mottisfont?"
+
+"No, Musters, what is it? Get a clean glass and tell me about it."
+
+"He's to resign, sir, I hear. And his son is to stand."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Along o' this about Sir Robert Peel, I understand. They have it that
+Sir Robert's going to repeal the corn taxes--some say that he's been
+for it all through, and some talk about a potato failure. Mr.
+Mottisfont sees that that'll never do for Riddsley, but he don't want
+to part from his leader, after following him all these years; so he'll
+go out and the young gentleman will take his place."
+
+"Do you think it is true about Peel?"
+
+"They're saying it, and Mr. Stubbs, he believes it. But it'll never go
+down in Riddsley, Squire. We're horn and corn men here, two to one of
+us. There's just the two small factories on the other side, and most
+of the hands haven't votes. But here's Mr. Stubbs himself."
+
+The lawyer had looked into the room in passing. Seeing Basset he
+removed his hat. "Pardon, Squire," he said. "I did not know that you
+were here."
+
+"Not at all," Basset answered. He knew the lawyer locally, and had
+seen him often--at arm's length--in the peerage suit. "Will you take a
+glass of wine with me?"
+
+Stubbs said that he would with pleasure, if he might take it
+standing--his time was short. The landlord was for withdrawing, but
+Stubbs detained him. "No, John, with Mr. Basset's leave I've a bone to
+pick with you," he said. "Who are these men who are staying here?"
+
+Musters's face fell. "Lord, Mr. Stubbs," he said, "have you heard of
+them?"
+
+"I hear most things," the lawyer answered. "But repealers talking
+treason at the Audley Arms is a thing I never thought to hear. They
+must go."
+
+The landlord rubbed his head. "I can't turn 'em out," he said. "They'd
+have the law of me. His lordship couldn't turn 'em out."
+
+"I don't know about that," Stubbs replied. "He's a good landlord, but
+he likes his own way."
+
+"But what can I do?" the stout man protested. "When they came I knew
+no more about them than a china babe. When they began to talk, so glib
+that no one could answer them, I was more took aback than anybody.
+Seems like the world's coming to an end with Manchester men coming
+here."
+
+"Perhaps it is," Basset said.
+
+Stubbs met his eye and took his meaning. Later the lawyer maintained
+that he had his suspicions from that moment. At the time he only
+answered, "Not in our day, Mr. Basset. Peel or Repeal, there's no one
+has attacked the land yet but the land has broken them. And so it will
+be this time. John, the sooner those two are out of your house the
+better."
+
+"But, dang me, sir, what am I to do?"
+
+"Put 'em in the horse trough for what I care!" the lawyer replied.
+"Good-evening, Squire. I hope the Riddsley parliament mayn't disturb
+you."
+
+The landlord followed him out, after handing something through the
+hatch, which opened into the Snug. He left the hatch a little ajar
+when he had done so, and the voices of those who gathered there
+nightly, as to a club, reached Basset. At first he caught no more than
+a word here or there, but as the debate grew warm the speakers raised
+their voices.
+
+"All mighty fine," some one said, laying down the law, "but you're
+like the rest, you Manchester chaps. You've your eyes on your own rack
+and manger!"
+
+"I'm not denying it," came the answer in a Lancashire accent, "I'm not
+saying that cheap bread won't suit us. But it isn't for that----"
+
+"No, no, of course not," the former speaker replied with heavy
+irony--Basset thought that the voice belonged to Hayward of the
+Leasows, a pompous old farmer, dubbed behind his back "The Duke." "You
+don't want low wages i' your mills, of course!"
+
+"Cheap bread doesn't make low wages," the other rejoined. "That's
+where you mistake, sir. Let me put it to you. You've known wheat
+high?"
+
+"It was seventy-seven shillings seven years back," the farmer
+pronounced. "And I ha' known it a hundred shillings a quarter for
+three years together."
+
+"And I suppose the wages at that time were the highest you've ever
+known?"
+
+"Well, no," the farmer admitted, "I'm not saying that."
+
+"And seven years ago when wheat was seventy-seven--it is fifty-six
+now--were wages higher then than now?"
+
+"Well," the Duke answered reluctantly, "I don't know as they were,
+mister, not to take notice of."
+
+"Think it out for yourself, sir," the other replied. "I don't think
+you'll find that wages are highest when wheat is highest, nor lowest
+when wheat is lowest."
+
+The farmer, more weighty than ready, snorted. But another speaker took
+up the cudgels. "Ay, but one minute," he said. "It's the price of
+wheat fixes the lowest wages. If it's two pound of bread will keep a
+man fit to work--just keep him so and no more--it's the price of bread
+fixes whether the lowest wages is eightpence a day or a shilling a
+day."
+
+"Well, but----"
+
+"Well, but by G--d, he's got you there!" the Duke cried, and smacked
+his fat thigh in triumph. "We've some sense i' Riddsley yet. Here's
+your health and song, Dr. Pepper!" At which there was some laughter.
+
+"Well, sir, I'll not say yes, nor no, to that," the Lancashire man
+replied, as soon as he could get a hearing. "But, gentlemen, it's not
+low wages we want. I'll tell you the two things we do want, and why we
+want cheap bread; first, that your laborers after they have bought
+bread may have something over to buy our woollens, and our cottons,
+and your pots. And secondly, if we don't take foreign wheat in payment
+how are foreigners to pay for our goods?"
+
+But at this half a dozen were up in arms. "How?" cried the Duke, "why
+wi' money like honest men at home! But there it is! There's the
+devil's hoof! It's foreign corn you're after! And with foreign corn
+coming in at forty shillings where'll we be?"
+
+"No wheat will ever be grown at that price," declared the free trader
+with solemnity, "here or abroad!"
+
+"So you say!" cried Hayward. "But put it at forty-five. We'll be on
+the rates, and our laborers, where'll they be?"
+
+"I don't like such talk in my house!" said Musters.
+
+"I'd certainly like an answer to that," Pepper the surgeon said. "If
+the farmers are broke where'll their laborers be but flocking to your
+mills to put down wages there!"
+
+"The laborers? Well, they're protected now, that's true."
+
+"Lucky for them!" cried two or three.
+
+"They are protected now," the stranger repeated slowly. "And I'll tell
+you what one of them said to me last year. 'I be protected,' he said,
+'and I be starving!'"
+
+"Dang his impudence!" muttered old Hayward. "That's the kind of thing
+they two Boshams at the Bridge talk. Firebrands they be!"
+
+But the shot had told; no one else spoke.
+
+"That man's wages," the Manchester man continued, "were six shillings
+a week--it was in Wiltshire. And you are protected too, sir," he
+continued, turning suddenly on the Duke. "Have you made a fortune,
+sir, farming?"
+
+"I don't know as I have," the farmer answered sulkily--and in a lower
+voice, "Dang his impudence again!"
+
+"Why not? Because you are paying a protected rent. Because you pay
+high for feeding-stuff. Because you pay poor-rates so high you'd be
+better off paying double wages. There's only one man benefits by the
+corn-tax, sir, there's only one who is truly protected, and that is
+the landlord!"
+
+But to several in the room this was treason, and they cried out upon
+it. "Ay, that's the bottom of it, mister," one roared, "down with the
+landlords and up with the cotton lords!" "There's your Reform Bill,"
+shouted another, "we've put the beggars on horseback, and none's to
+ride but them now!" A third protested that cheap bread was a herring
+drawn across the track. "They're for cheap bread for the poor man, but
+no votes! Votes would make him as good as them!"
+
+"Anyway," the stranger replied patiently, "it's clear that neither the
+farmer nor the laborer grows fat on Protection. Your wages are nine
+shillings----"
+
+"Ten and eleven!" cried two or three.
+
+"And your farmers are smothered in rates. If that's all you get by
+Protection I'd try another system."
+
+"Anyways, I'll ask you to try it out of my house," Musters said. "I've
+a good landlord and I'll not hear him abused!"
+
+"Hear! Hear! Musters! Quite right!"
+
+"I've not said an uncivil word," the Manchester man rejoined. "I shall
+leave your house to-morrow, not an hour before. I'll add only one
+word, gentlemen. Bread is the staff of life. Isn't it the last thing
+you should tax?"
+
+"True," Mr. Pepper replied. "But isn't agriculture the staple
+industry? Isn't it the base on which all other industries stand? Isn't
+it the mainstay of the best constitution in the world? And wasn't it
+the land that steadied England, and kept it clear of Bonaparte and
+Wooden Shoes----"
+
+"Ay, wooden ships against wooden shoes for ever!" broke in old
+Hayward, in great excitement. "Where were the oaks grown as beat Bony!
+No, master, protect the oak and protect the wheat, and England'll
+never lack ships nor meat! Your cotton-printers and ironfounders
+they're great folks now, great folks, with their brass and their
+votes, and so they've a mind to upset the gentry. It's the town
+against the country, and new money against the old acres that have fed
+us and our fathers before us world without end! But put one of my lads
+in your mills, and amid your muck, and in twelve months he'd not pitch
+hay, no not three hours of the day!"
+
+Basset could hear the free trader's chair grate on the sanded floor as
+he pushed it back. "Well, gentlemen," he said, "I'll not quarrel with
+you. I wish you all the protection you deserve--and I think Sir Robert
+will give it you! For us, I'm not saying that we are not thinking of
+our own interests."
+
+"Devil a doubt of that!" muttered the farmer.
+
+"And some of us may have been cold-shouldered by my lord. But you
+may take it from me that there's some of us, too, are as anxious to
+better the poor man's lot--ay, as Lord Ashley himself! That's all!
+Good-night, gentlemen."
+
+When he was gone, "Gi' me a coal for my pipe, John," said the Duke. "I
+never heard the like of that in Riddsley. He's a gallus glib chap
+that!"
+
+"I won't say," said Mr. Pepper cautiously, "that there's nothing in
+it."
+
+"Plenty in it for the cotton people and the coal people, and the
+potters. But not for us!"
+
+"But if Sir Robert sees it that way?" queried the surgeon, delicately.
+
+"Then if Sir Robert were member for Riddsley," Hayward answered
+stubbornly, "he'd get his notice to quit, Dr. Pepper! You may bet your
+hat on that!"
+
+"There's one got a lesson last night," a new-comer chimed in. "Parson
+Colet got so beaten on the moor he's in bed I am told. He's been
+speaking free these last two months, and I thought he'd get it. Three
+lads from your part I am told, Hayward."
+
+"Well, well!" the farmer replied with philosophy. "There's good in
+Colet, and maybe it'll be a lesson to him! Anyway, good or bad, he's
+going."
+
+"Going?" cried two or three, speaking at once.
+
+"I met Rector not two hours back. He'd a letter from Colet saying he
+was going to preach the same rubbish here as he's fed 'em with at
+Brown Heath--cheap bread and the rest of it. Rector's been to him--he
+wouldn't budge, and he got his notice to quit right straight. Rector
+was fit to burst when I saw him."
+
+"Colet be a born fool!" cried Musters. "Who's like to employ him after
+that? Wheat is tithe and the parsons are as fond of their tithe as any
+man. You may look a long way before you'll find a parson that's a
+repealer."
+
+"Serves Colet right!" said one. "But I'm sorry for him all the same.
+There's worse men than the Reverend Colet."
+
+Basset could never say afterwards what moved him at this point, but
+whatever it was he got up and went out. The boots was lounging at the
+door of the inn. He asked the man where Mr. Colet lodged, and learning
+that it was in Stream Street, near the Maypole, he turned that way.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ STRANGE BEDFELLOWS
+
+
+Had any one told Basset, even that morning, that before night he would
+seek the advice of the Riddsley curate, he would have met the
+suggestion with unmeasured scorn. Probably he had not since his
+college days spent an hour in intimate talk with a man so far from him
+in fortune and position, and so unlike him in those things which bring
+men together. Nor in the act of approaching Colet--under the impulse
+of a few casual words and a sudden thought--was he able to understand
+or to justify himself.
+
+But when he rose to his feet after an hour spent beside the curate's
+dingy hearth--over the barber's shop in Stream Street--he did not need
+to justify the step. He had said little but he had heard much. Colet's
+tongue had been loosened by the sacrifice he had made, and inspired by
+that love of his kind which takes refuge in the most unlikely shapes,
+he had poured forth at length his beliefs and his aspirations. And
+Basset, whose world had tottered since morning, for whom common things
+had lost their poise and life its wonted aspect, began to think that
+he had found in the other's aims a new standpoint and the offer of a
+new beginning.
+
+The dip candles, which had been many times snuffed, were burning low
+when the two rose. The curate, whose pale cheeks matched his bandaged
+head, had a last word to say. "Of the need I am sure," he repeated, as
+Basset's eye sought the cheap clock on the mantelpiece. "If I have not
+proved that, the fault, sir, is mine. But the means--they are a
+question for you; almost any man may see them more clearly than I do.
+By votes, it may be, and so through the people working out their own
+betterment. Or by social measures, as Lord Ashley thinks, through the
+classes that are fitted by education to judge for all. Or by the wider
+spread, as I hold, of self-sacrifice by all for all--to me, the ideal.
+But of one thing I am convinced; that this tax upon the commonest
+food, which takes so much more in proportion from the poor than from
+the rich, is wrong. Certainly wrong, Mr. Basset,--unless the gain and
+the loss can be equally spread. That's another matter."
+
+"I will not say any more now," Basset answered cautiously, "than that
+I am inclined to your view. But for yourself, are there not others who
+will not pay so dearly for maintaining it?"
+
+A redness spread over the curate's long horse-face. "No, Mr. Basset,"
+he rejoined, "if I left my duty to others I should pay still more
+dearly. I am my own man. I will remain so."
+
+"But what will you do when you leave here?" Basset inquired, casting
+his eyes round the shabby room. He did not see it as he had seen it on
+his entrance. He discerned that, small as it was, and shabby as it
+was, it might be a man's home. "I fear that there are few incumbents
+who hold your views."
+
+"There are absentees," Colet replied with a smile, "who are not so
+particular; and in the north there are a few who think as I think. I
+shall not starve."
+
+"I have an old house on the Derbyshire border twenty miles from here,"
+Basset said. "A servant and his wife keep it, and during some months
+of the year I live there. It is an out-of-the-way place, Mr. Colet,
+but it is at your service--if you don't get work?"
+
+The curate seemed to shrink into himself. "I couldn't trespass on
+you," he said.
+
+"I hope you will," Basset replied. "In the meantime, who was the man
+you quoted a few minutes ago?"
+
+"Francis Place. He is a good man though not as we"--he touched his
+threadbare cloth--"count goodness. He is something of a Socialist,
+something of a Chartist--he might frighten you, Mr. Basset. But he has
+the love of the people in him."
+
+"I will see him."
+
+"He has been a tailor."
+
+That hit Basset fairly in the face. "Good heavens!" he said. "A
+tailor?"
+
+"Yes," Colet replied, smiling. "But a very uncommon tailor. Let me
+tell you why I quoted him. Because, though he is not a Christian, he
+has ideals. He aims higher than he can shoot, while the aims of the
+Manchester League, though I agree with them upon the corn-tax, seem to
+me to be bounded by the material and warped by their own interests."
+
+Basset nodded. "You have thought a good deal on these things," he
+said.
+
+"I live among the poor. I have them always before me."
+
+"And I have thought so little that I need time. You must think no
+worse of me if I wait a while. And now, good-night."
+
+But the other did not take the hand held out to him. He was staring at
+the candle. "I am not clear that I have been quite frank with you," he
+said awkwardly. "You have offered me the shelter of your house though
+I am a stranger, Mr. Basset, and though you must suspect that to
+harbor me may expose you to remark. Well, I may be tempted to avail
+myself of your kindness. But I cannot do so unless you know more of my
+circumstances."
+
+"I know all that is necessary."
+
+"You don't know what I am going to tell you," Colet persisted. "And I
+think that you should. I am going to marry the daughter of your
+uncle's servant, Toft."
+
+"Good Lord!" cried Basset. This was a second and more serious blow. It
+brought him down from the clouds.
+
+"That shocks you, Mr. Basset," the curate continued with dignity,
+"that I should marry one in her position? Well, I am not called upon
+to justify it. Why I think her worthy, and more than worthy to share
+my life, is my business. I only trouble you with the matter because
+you have made me an offer which you might not have made had you known
+this."
+
+Basset did not deny the fact. He could not, indeed. His taste, his
+prejudice, his traditions all had received a blow, all were up in
+arms; and, for the moment, at any rate he repented of his visit. He
+felt that in stepping out of the normal round he had made a mistake.
+He should have foreseen, he should have known that he would meet with
+such shocks. "You have certainly astonished me," he said after a pause
+of dismay. "I cannot think the match suitable, Mr. Colet. May I ask if
+my uncle knows of this?"
+
+"Miss Audley knows of it."
+
+"But--you cannot yourself think it suitable!"
+
+"I have," Colet replied dryly, "or rather I had seventy pounds a year.
+What girl, born in comfort, gently bred, sheltered from childhood
+could I ask to share that? How could I, with so little in the present
+and no prospects, ask a gentlewoman to share my lot?"
+
+Basset did not reply, but he was not convinced. A clergyman to marry a
+servant, good and refined as Etruria was! It seemed to him to be
+unseemly, to be altogether wrong.
+
+Colet too was silent a moment. Then, "I am glad I have told you this,"
+he said. "I shall not now trespass on you. On the other hand, I hope
+that you may still do something--and with your name, you can do
+much--for the good cause. If rumor goes for anything, many will in the
+next few months examine the ground on which they stand. It will be
+much, if what I have said has weight with you."
+
+He spoke with constraint, but he spoke like a man, and Basset owned
+his equality while he resented it. He felt that he ought to renew his
+offer of hospitality, but he could not--reserve and shyness had him
+again in their grip. He muttered something about thinking it over,
+added a word or two of thanks--which were cut short by the flickering
+out of the candle--and a minute later he was in the dark deserted
+street, and walking back to his inn--not over well content with
+himself, if the truth be told.
+
+Either he should not have gone, he felt, or he should have gone the
+whole way, sunk his ideas of caste, and carried the thing through.
+What was it to him if the man was going to marry a servant?
+
+But that was a detail. The main point was that he should not have
+gone. It had been a foolish impulse--he saw it now--which had taken
+him to the barber's shop; and one which he might have known that he
+would repent. He ought to have foreseen that he could not place
+himself on Colet's level without coming into collision with him; that
+he could not draw wisdom from him without paying toll.
+
+An impossible person, he thought, a man of ideas quite unlike his own!
+And yet the man had spoken well and ably, and spoken from experience.
+He had told the things that he had seen as he passed from house to
+house, hard, sad facts, the outcome of rising numbers and falling
+wages, of over-production, of mouths foodless and unwanted. And all
+made worse, as he maintained, by this tax on bread, that barely
+touched the rich man's income, yet took a heavy toll from the small
+wage.
+
+As he recalled some of the things that he had heard, Basset felt his
+interest revive. Colet had dealt with facts; he had attempted no
+oratory, he had cast no glamour over them. But he had brought to bear
+upon them the light of an ideal--the Christian ideal of unselfishness;
+and his hearer, while he doubted, while he did not admit that the
+solution was practical, owned its beauty.
+
+For he too, as we know, had had his aspirations, though he had rarely
+thought of turning them into action. Instead, he had hidden them
+behind the commonplace; and in this he had matched the times, which
+were commonplace. For the country lay in the trough of the wave.
+Neither the fine fury of the generation which had adored the rights of
+man, nor the splendid endurance which the great war had fostered, nor
+the lesser ardors of the Reform era, which found its single panacea in
+votes, touched or ennobled it. Great wealth and great poverty,
+jostling one another, marked a material age, seeking remedies in
+material things, despising arms, decrying enthusiasm; an age which
+felt, but hardly bowed as yet, to the breath of the new spirit.
+
+But Basset--perhaps because the present offered no great prospect to
+the straitened squire--had had his glimpses of a life higher and
+finer, devoted to something above the passing whim and the day's
+indulgence, a life that should not be useless to those who came after
+him. Was it possible that he now heard the call? Could this be the
+crusade of which he had idly dreamed? Had the trumpet sounded at the
+moment of his utmost need?
+
+If only it were so! During the evening he had kept his sorrow at bay
+as well as he could, distracting his thoughts with passing objects.
+Now, as the boots ushered him up the close-smelling stairs to the
+inn's best room, and he stood in his hat and coat, looking on the cold
+bare aspect and the unfamiliar things--he owned himself desolate. The
+thought of Mary, of his hopes and plans and of the end of these,
+returned upon him in an irresistible flood. The waters which he had
+stemmed all day, though all day they had lapped his lips, overwhelmed
+him with their bitterness. Mary! He had loved her and she--he knew
+what she thought of him.
+
+He could not take up the old life. She had made an end of that, the
+rather as from this time onward the Gatehouse would be closed to him
+by her presence. And the old house near Wootton where he had been wont
+to pass part of his time? That hardly met his needs or his
+aspirations. Unhappy as he was, he could not see himself sitting down
+in idleness, to brood and to rust in a home so remote, so quiet, so
+lost among the stony hills that the country said of it,
+
+
+ "Wootton under Weaver
+ Where God came never!"
+
+
+No, he could hardly face that. Hitherto he had not been called upon to
+say what he would do with his life. Now the question was put to him
+and he had to answer it. He had to answer it. For many minutes he sat
+on the bed staring before him. And from time to time he sighed.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ THE GREAT HOUSE AT BEAUDELAYS
+
+
+It was about a week after this that two men stood on the neglected
+lawn, contemplating the long blind front of Beaudelays House. With all
+its grandeur the house lacked the dignity of ruin, for ruin presumes a
+past, and the larger part of the Great House had no past. The ancient
+wing that had welcomed brides, and echoed the laughter of children and
+given back the sullen notes of the passing-bell did not suffice to
+redeem the whole. By night the house might pass; the silent bulk
+imposed on the eye. By day it required no effort of fancy to see the
+scaffold still clinging to the brickwork, or to discern that the grand
+entrance had never opened to guest or neighbor, that everyday life had
+never gazed through the blank windows of the long faade.
+
+The house, indeed, was not only dead. It had never lived.
+
+Certainly Nature had done something to shroud the dead. The lawn was
+knee-deep in weeds, and the evergreens about it had pushed out
+embracing arms to narrow the vista before the windows. At the lower
+end of the lawn a paved terrace, the width of the house, promised a
+freer air, but even here grass sprouted between the flags, and elders
+labored to uproot the stately balustrade that looked on the lower
+garden. This garden, once formal, was now a tangle of vegetation, a
+wilderness amid whose broad walks Venuses slowly turned to Dryads, and
+classic urns lay in fragments, split by the frosts of some excessive
+winter. Only the prospect of the Trent Valley and the Derbyshire
+foot-hills, visible beyond the pleasance, still pleased; and this view
+was vague and sad and distant. For the Great House, as became its
+greatness, shunned the public eye, and, lying far back, set a wide
+stretch of park between its bounds and the verge of the upland.
+
+One of the two men was the owner. The other who bore a bunch of keys
+was Stubbs. Both had a depressed air. It would have been hard to say
+which of the two entered more deeply into the sadness of the place.
+
+Presently my lord turned his back on the house. "The view is fine," he
+said. "The only fine thing about the place," he added bitterly. "Isn't
+there a sort of Belvedere below the garden?"
+
+"There is, my lord. But I fear that it is out of repair."
+
+"Like everything else! There, don't think I'm blaming you for it, man.
+You cannot make bricks without straw. But let us look at this
+Belvedere."
+
+They descended the steps, and passed slowly along the grass-grown
+walk, now and again stepping aside to avoid the clutch of a straggling
+rose bough, or the fragments of a broken pillar. They paused to
+inspect the sundial, a giant Butterfly with closed wings, a replica of
+the stone monster in the Yew Walk. Lord Audley read the inscription,
+barely visible through the verdigris that stained the dial-plate:
+
+
+ "Non sine sole volo!"
+
+
+"Just so!" he said. "A short life and a merry one!"
+
+A few paces farther along the walk they stopped to examine the basin
+of the great fountain. Cracked from edge to centre, and become a
+shallow bed of clay and weeds, it was now as unsightly as it had been
+beautiful in the days when fair women leaning over it had fed the gold
+fish, or viewed their mirrored faces in its waters.
+
+"The fortunes of the Audleys in a nutshell!" muttered the unlucky
+owner. And turning on his heel, "Confound it, Stubbs," he cried, "I
+have had as much of this as I can stand! A little more and I shall go
+back and cut my throat! It is beginning to rain, too. D--n the
+Belvedere! Let us go into the house. That cannot be as bad as this."
+
+Without waiting for an answer, or looking behind him, he strode back
+the way they had come. Stubbs followed in silence, and they regained
+the lawn.
+
+"I tell you what it is," Audley continued, letting the agent come
+abreast of him. "You must find some vulgarian to take the place--iron
+man or cotton man, I don't care who he is, if he has got the cash I
+You must let it, Stubbs. You must let it! It's a white elephant, it's
+the d--ndest White Elephant man ever had!"
+
+The lawyer shook his head. "You may be sure, my lord," he said mildly,
+"I should have advised that long ago, if it were possible. But we
+couldn't let it in its present state--for a short term; and we have no
+more power to lease it for a long one than, as your lordship knows, we
+have power to sell it."
+
+The other swore. At the outset he had scarcely felt his poverty. But
+he was beginning to feel it. There were moments such as this when his
+withers were wrung; when the consequence which the title had brought
+failed to soften the hardships of his lot--a poor peer with a vast
+house. Had he tried to keep the Great House in repair it would have
+swallowed the whole income of the peerage--a sum which, as it was,
+barely sufficed for his needs as a bachelor.
+
+Already Stubbs had hinted that there was one way out--a rich marriage.
+And Audley had received the hint with the easiness of a man who was in
+no haste to marry and might, likely enough, marry where money was. But
+once or twice during the last few days, which they had been spending
+in a review of the property, my lord had shown irritation. When an old
+farmer had said to his face, that he must bring home a bride with a
+good fat chest, "and his lordship would be what his forbears had
+been," the great man, in place of a laughing answer, had turned glumly
+away.
+
+Presently the two halted at the door of the north wing. Stubbs
+unlocked it and pushed it open. They entered an ante-room of moderate
+size.
+
+"Faugh!" Audley cried. "Open a window! Break one if necessary."
+
+Stubbs succeeded in opening one, and they passed on into the great
+hall, a room sixty feet long and open to the roof, a gallery running
+round it. A withdrawing-room of half the length opened at one end, and
+midway along the inner side a short passage led to a second hall--the
+servants' hall--the twin of this. Together they formed an H, and were
+probably a Jacobean copy of a Henry the Eighth building. A long table,
+some benches, and a score of massive chairs furnished the room.
+Between the windows hung a few ragged pictures, and on either side of
+the farther door a piece of tapestry hung askew.
+
+Audley looked about him. In this room eighty years before the old lord
+had held his revels. The two hearths had glowed with logs, a hundred
+wax-lights had shone on silver and glass and the rosy tints of old
+wine. Guests in satin and velvet, henchmen and led captains, had
+filled it with laughter and jest, and song. With a foot on the table
+they had toasted the young king--not stout Farmer George, not the old,
+mad monarch, but the gay young sovereign. To-day desolation reigned.
+The windows gray with dirt let in a grisly light. All was bare and
+cold and rusty--the webs of spiders crossed the very hearths. The old
+lord, mouldering in his coffin, was not more unlike that Georgian
+reveller than was the room of to-day unlike the room of eighty years
+before.
+
+Perhaps the thought struck his descendant. "God! What a
+charnel-house!" he cried. "To think that men made merry in this room.
+It's a vault, it's a grave! Let us get away from it. What's through,
+man?"
+
+They passed into the withdrawing-room, where panels of needlework of
+Queen Anne's time, gloomy with age, filled the wall spaces, and a few
+pieces of furniture crouched under shrouds of dust. As they stood
+gazing two rats leapt from a screen of Cordovan leather that lay in
+tatters on the floor. The rats paused an instant to stare at the
+intruders, then fled in panic.
+
+The younger man advanced to one of the panels in the wall. "A hunting
+scene?" he said. "These may be worth money some day."
+
+The lawyer looked doubtful. "It will be a long day first, I am
+afraid," he said. "It's funereal stuff at the best, my lord."
+
+"At any rate it is out of reach of the rats," Lord Audley answered. He
+cast a look of distaste at the shreds of the screen. He touched them
+with his foot. A third rat sprang out and fled squeaking to covert.
+"Oh, d--n!" he said. "Let us see something else."
+
+The lawyer led the way upstairs to the ghostly, echoing gallery that
+ran round the hall. They glanced into the principal guest-room, which
+was over the drawing-room. Then they went by the short passage of the
+H to the range of bedrooms over the servants' hall. For the most part
+they opened one from the other.
+
+"The parents slept in the outer and the young ladies in the inner,"
+Audley said, smiling. "Gad! it tells a tale of the times!"
+
+Stubbs opened the nearest door and recoiled. "Take care, my lord!" he
+said. "Here are the bats!"
+
+"Faugh! What a smell! Can't you keep them out?"
+
+"We tried years ago--I hate them like poison--but it was of no use.
+They are in all these upper rooms."
+
+They were. For when Stubbs, humping his shoulders as under a shower,
+opened a second door, the bats streamed forth in a long silent
+procession, only to stream back again as silently. In a dusky corner
+of the second room a cluster, like a huge bunch of grapes, hung to one
+of the rafters. Now and again a bat detached itself and joined the
+living current that swept without a sound through the shadowy rooms.
+
+"There's nothing beyond these rooms?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then let us go down. Rats and bats and rottenness! _Non sine sole
+volo!_ We may not, but the bats do. Let us go down! Or no! I was
+forgetting. Where is the Muniment Room?"
+
+"This way, my lord," Stubbs replied, turning with suspicious
+readiness--the bats were his pet aversion. "I brought a candle and
+some of the new lucifers. This way, my lord."
+
+He led the way down to a door set in a corner of the ante-room. He
+unlocked this and they found themselves at the foot of a circular
+staircase. On the farther side of the stairfoot was another door which
+led, Stubbs explained, into the servants' quarters. "This turret," he
+added, "is older even than the wing, and forms no part of the H. It
+was retained because it supplied a second staircase, and also a short
+cut from the servants' hall to the entrance. The Muniment Room is over
+this lobby on the first floor. Allow me to go first, my lord."
+
+The air was close, but not unpleasant, and the stairs were clean. On
+the first floor a low-browed door, clamped and studded with iron,
+showed itself. Stubbs halted before it. There was a sputter. A light
+shone out. "Wonderful invention!" he said. "Electric telegraph not
+more wonderful, though marvellous invention that, my lord."
+
+"Yes," the other answered dryly. "But--when were you here last,
+Stubbs?"
+
+"Not for a twelvemonth, my lord."
+
+"Leave your candle?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then what's that?" The young man pointed to something that lay in the
+angle between a stair and the wall.
+
+"God bless my soul!" the lawyer cried. "It's a candle."
+
+"And clean. It has not been there a week. Who has been here, my
+friend?"
+
+Stubbs reflected. "No one with my authority," he said. "But if the
+devil himself has been here," he continued, stoutly recovering
+himself, "he can have done no harm. I can prove that in five minutes,
+my lord--if you will kindly hold the light." He inserted a large key
+in the lock, and with an effort, he shot back the bolts. He pushed
+open the door and signed to Lord Audley to enter.
+
+He did so, and Stubbs followed. They stood and looked about them. They
+were in a whitewashed chamber twelve feet square, clean, bare, empty.
+The walls gave back the light so that the one candle lit the place
+perfectly.
+
+"It's as good as air-tight," Stubbs said with pride. "And you see, my
+lord, we swept it as bare as the palm of my hand. I can answer for it
+that not a shred of paper or a piece of wax was left."
+
+Audley, gazing about him, seemed satisfied. His face relaxed. "Yes,"
+he said, "you could not overlook anything in a place like this. I'm
+glad I've seen it."
+
+He was turning to go when a thought struck him. He lowered the light
+and scanned the floor. "All the same, somebody has been here!" he
+exclaimed. "There's one of the things you are so pleased with--a
+lucifer!"
+
+Stubbs stooped and looked. "A lucifer?" he repeated. He picked up the
+bit of charred wood and examined it. "Now how did that come here? I
+never used one till six months ago."
+
+My lord frowned. "Who is it?" he asked.
+
+"Some one, I fear, who has had a key made," the agent answered,
+shaking his head,
+
+"I can see that for myself. But has he learned anything?"
+
+Stubbs stared. "There's nothing to learn, my lord," he said. "You can
+see that. Whoever he is, he has cracked the nut and found no kernel!"
+
+The young man looked round him again. He nodded. "I suppose so," he
+said. But he seemed ill at ease and inclined to find fault. He threw
+the light of the candle this way and that, as if he expected the clean
+white walls to tell a tale. "What's that?" he asked suddenly. "A
+crack? Or what?"
+
+Stubbs looked, passed his hand over the mark on the wall, effaced it.
+"No, my lord, a cobweb," he said. "Nothing."
+
+There was no more to be seen, yet Audley seemed loth to go. At length
+he turned and went out. Stubbs closed and locked the door behind them,
+then he took the candle from his lordship and invited him to go down
+before him. Still the young man hesitated. "I suppose we can learn
+nothing more?" he said.
+
+"Nothing, my lord," Stubbs answered. "To tell you the truth, I have
+long thought Mr. John mad, and it is possible that his madness has
+taken this turn. But I am equally sure that there is nothing for him
+to discover, if he spends every day of his life here."
+
+"All the same I don't like it," the owner objected. "Whoever has been
+here has no right here. It is odd that I had some notion of this
+before we came. You may depend upon it that this was why he fixed
+himself at the Gatehouse."
+
+"He may have had something of the sort in his mind," Stubbs admitted.
+"But I don't think so, my lord. More probably, being here and idle, he
+took to wandering in for lack of something to do."
+
+"And by and by, had a key made and strayed into the Muniment Room! No,
+that won't do, Stubbs. And frankly there should be closer supervision
+here. It should not have remained for me to discover this."
+
+He began to descend, leaving Stubbs to digest the remark; who for his
+part thought honestly that too much was being made of the matter.
+Probably the intruder was John Audley; the man had a bee in his
+bonnet, and what more likely than that he should be taken with a craze
+to haunt the house which he believed was his own? But the agent was
+too prudent to defend himself while the young man's vexation was
+fresh. He followed him down in silence, and before many minutes had
+passed, they were in the open air, and had locked the door behind
+them.
+
+Clouds hung low on the tops of the trees, mist veiled the view, and a
+small rain was falling on the wet lawn. Nevertheless the young man
+moved into the open. "Come this way," he said.
+
+The lawyer turned up the collar of his coat and followed him
+unwillingly. "Where does he get in?" my lord asked. It seemed as if
+the longer he dwelt on the matter the less he liked it. "Not by that
+door--the lock is rusty. The key had shrieked in it. Probably he
+enters by one of the windows in the new part."
+
+He walked towards the middle of the lawn and Stubbs, thankful that he
+wore Wellington boots, followed him.
+
+The lawyer thought that he had never seen the house wear so dreary an
+aspect as it wore under the gray weeping sky. But his lordship was
+more practical. "These windows look the most likely," he said after a
+short survey: and he dragged his unwilling attendant to the point he
+had marked.
+
+A nearer view strengthened his suspicions. On the sill of one of the
+windows were scratches and stains. "You see?" he said. "It should not
+have been left to me to discover this! Probably John Audley comes from
+the Gatehouse by the Yew Walk." He turned to measure the distance with
+his eye, the distance which divided the spot from the Iron Gate.
+"That's it," he said, "he comes----"
+
+Then, "Good G--d!" he muttered. "Look! Look!" Stubbs looked. They both
+looked. Beyond the lawn, on the farther side of the iron grille and
+clinging to it with both hands, a man stood bareheaded under the rain.
+Whether he had come uncovered, or his hat had been jerked from him by
+some movement caused by their appearance, they could not tell; nor how
+long he had stood thus, gazing at them through the bars. But they
+could see that his eyes never wavered, that his hands gripped the
+iron, and the two knew by instinct that in the intensity of his hate,
+the man was insensible alike to the rain that drenched him, and to the
+wind that blew out the skirts of his thin black coat.
+
+Even Stubbs held his breath. Even he felt that there was something
+uncanny and ominous in the appearance. For the gazer was John Audley.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ TO THE RESCUE
+
+
+Stubbs was the first to collect himself, but a minute elapsed before
+he spoke. Then, "He must be mad," he cried, "mad, to expose himself to
+the weather at his age. If I had not seen it, I couldn't believe it!"
+
+"I suppose it is John Audley?"
+
+"Yes." Then raising his voice, "My lord! I don't think I would go to
+him now!"
+
+But Audley was already striding across the lawn towards the gate. The
+lawyer hesitated, gave way, and followed him.
+
+They were within twenty paces of the silent watcher when he moved--up
+to that time he might have been a lay figure. He shook one hand in the
+air, as if he would beat them off, then he turned and walked stiffly
+away. Half a dozen steps took him out of sight. The Yew Walk swallowed
+him.
+
+But, quickly as he vanished, the lawyer had had time to see that he
+staggered. "I fear, my lord, he is ill," he said. "He will never reach
+the Gatehouse in that state. I had better follow him."
+
+"Why the devil did he come here?" Audley retorted savagely. The
+watcher's strange aspect, his face, white against the dark yews, his
+stillness, his gesture, a something ominous in all, had shaken him.
+"If he had stopped at home----"
+
+"Still----"
+
+"D--n him, it's his affair!"
+
+"Still we cannot leave him if he has fallen, my lord," Stubbs replied
+with decision. And without waiting for his employer's assent he tried
+the gate. It was locked, but in a trice he found the key on his bunch,
+turned it, and pushed back the gate. Audley noticed that it moved
+silently on its hinges.
+
+Stubbs, the gate open, began to feel ashamed of his impulse. Probably
+there was nothing amiss after all. But he had hardly looked along the
+path before he uttered a cry, and hurrying forward, stooped over a
+bundle of clothes that lay in the middle of the walk. It was John
+Audley. Apparently he had tripped over a root and lain where he had
+fallen.
+
+Stubbs's cry summoned the other, who followed him through the gate, to
+find him on his knees supporting the old man's head. The sight
+recalled Audley to his better self. The mottled face, the staring
+eyes, the helpless limbs shocked him. "Good G--d!" he cried, "you were
+right, Stubbs! He might have died if we had left him."
+
+"He would have died," Stubbs answered. "As it is--I am not sure." He
+opened the waistcoat, felt for the beating of the heart, bent his ear
+to it. "No, I don't think he's gone," he said, "but the heart is
+feeble, very feeble. We must have brandy! My lord, you are the more
+active. Will you go to the Gatehouse--there is no nearer place--and
+get some? And something to carry him home! A hurdle if there is
+nothing better, and a couple of men?"
+
+"Right!" Audley cried.
+
+"And don't lose a minute, my lord! He's nearly gone."
+
+Audley stripped off his overcoat. "Wrap this about him!" he said. And
+before the other could answer he had started for the Gatehouse, at a
+pace which he believed that he could keep up.
+
+Pad, pad, my lord ran under the yew trees, swish, swish across the
+soaking grass, about the great Butterfly. Pad, pad, again through the
+gloom under the yews! Not too fast, he told himself--he was a big man
+and he must save himself. Now he saw before him the opening into the
+park, and the light falling on the pale turf. And then, at a point not
+more than twenty yards short of the open ground, he tripped over a
+root, tried to recover himself, struck another root, and fell.
+
+The fall shook him, but he was young, and he was quickly on his feet.
+He paused an instant to brush the dirt from his hands and knees; and
+it was during that instant that his inbred fear of John Audley, and
+the certainty that if John Audley died he need fear no more, rose
+before him.
+
+Yes, if he died--this man who was even now plotting against him--there
+was an end of that fear! There was an end of uneasiness, of anxiety,
+of the alarm that assailed him in the small hours, of the forebodings
+that showed him stripped of title and income and consequence. Stripped
+of all!
+
+Five seconds passed, and he still stood, engaged with his hands. Five
+more; it was his knees he was brushing now--and very carefully.
+Another five--the sweat broke out on his brow though the day was cold.
+Twenty seconds, twenty-five! His face showed white in the gloom. And
+still he stood. He glanced behind him. No one could see him.
+
+But the movement discovered the man to himself, and with an oath he
+broke away. He thrust the damning thought from him, he sprang forward.
+He ran. In ten strides he was in the open park, and trotting steadily,
+his elbows to his sides, across the sward. The blessed light was about
+him, the wind swept past his ears, the cleansing rain whipped his
+face. Thank God, he had left behind him the heavy air and noisome
+scent of the yews. He hated them. He would cut them all down some day.
+
+For in a strange way he associated them with the temptation which had
+assailed him. And he was thankful, most thankful, that he had put that
+temptation from him--had put it from him, when most men, he thought,
+would have succumbed to it. Thank God, he had not! The farther he
+went, indeed, the better he felt. By the time he saw the Gatehouse
+before him, he was sure that few men, exposed to that temptation,
+would have overcome it. For if John Audley died what a relief it would
+be! And he had looked very ill; he had looked like a man at the point
+of death. The brandy could not reach him under--well, under half an
+hour. Half an hour was a long time, when a man looked like that. "I'll
+do my best," he thought. "Then if he dies, well and good. I've always
+been afraid of him."
+
+He did not spare himself, but he was not in training, and he was well
+winded when he reached the Gatehouse. A last effort carried him
+between the Butterflies, and he halted on the flags of the courtyard.
+A woman, whose skirts were visible, but whose head and shoulders were
+hidden by an umbrella, was standing in the doorway on his left,
+speaking to some one in the house. She heard his footsteps and turned.
+
+"Lord Audley!" she exclaimed--for it was Mary Audley. Then with a
+woman's quickness, "You have come from my uncle?" she cried. "Is he
+ill?"
+
+Audley nodded. "I am come for some brandy," he gasped.
+
+She did not waste a moment. She sped into the house, and to the
+dining-room. "I had missed him," she cried over her shoulder. "The
+man-servant is away. I hoped he might be with him."
+
+In a trice she had opened a cellarette and taken from it a decanter of
+brandy. Then she saw that he could not carry this at any speed, and
+she turned to the sideboard and took a wicker flask from a drawer.
+With a steady hand and without the loss of a minute--he found her
+presence of mind admirable--she filled this.
+
+As she corked it, Mrs. Toft appeared, wiping her hands on her apron.
+"Dear, dear, miss," she said, "is the master bad? But it's no wonder
+when he, that doesn't quit the fire for a week together, goes out like
+this? And Toft away and all!" She stared at his lordship. Probably she
+knew him by sight.
+
+"Will you get his bed warmed, Mrs. Toft," Mary answered. She gave Lord
+Audley the flask. "Please don't lose a moment," she urged. "I am
+following--oh yes, I am. But you will go faster."
+
+She had not a thought, he saw, for the disorder of her dress, or for
+her hair dishevelled by the wind, and scarce a thought for him. He
+decided that he had never seen her to such advantage, but it was no
+time for compliments, nor was she in the mood for them. Without more
+he nodded and set off on his return journey--he had not been in the
+house three minutes. By and by he looked back, and saw that Mary was
+following on his heels. She had snatched up a sun-bonnet, discarded
+the umbrella, and, heedless of the rain, was coming after him as
+swiftly and lightly as Atalanta of the golden apple. "Gad, she's not
+one of the fainting sort!" he reflected; and also that if he had given
+way to that d--d temptation he could not have looked her in the face.
+"As it is," his mind ran, "what are the odds the old boy's not dead
+when we get there? If he is--I am safe! If he is not, I might do worse
+than think of her. It would checkmate him finely. More"--he looked
+again over his shoulder--"she's a fine mover, by Gad, and her figure's
+perfect! Even that rag on her head don't spoil her!" Whereupon he
+thought of a certain Lady Adela with whom he was very friendly, who
+had political connections and would some day have a plum. The
+comparison was not, in the matter of fineness and figure, to Lady
+Adela's advantage. Her lines were rather on the Flemish side.
+
+Meanwhile Mary was feeling anything but an Atalanta. Wind and rain and
+wet grass, loosened hair and swaying skirts do not make for romance.
+But in her anxiety she gave small thought to these. Her one instinct
+was to help. With all his oddity her uncle had been kind to her, and
+she longed to show him that she was grateful. And he was her one
+relative. She had no one else in the world. He had given her what of
+home he had, and ease, and a security which she had never known
+before. Were she to lose him now--the mere fancy spurred her to fresh
+exertions, and in spite of a pain in her side, in spite of clinging
+skirts, and shoes that threatened to leave her feet, she pushed on.
+She was not far behind Audley when he reached the Yew Walk.
+
+She saw him plunge into it, she followed, and was on the scene not
+many seconds later. When she caught sight of the little group kneeling
+about the prostrate man, that sense of tragedy, and of the inevitable,
+which assails at such a time, shook her. The thing always possible,
+never expected, had happened at last.
+
+Then the coolness which women find in these emergencies returned. She
+knelt between the men, took the insensible head on her arm, held out
+her other hand for the cup. "Has he swallowed any?" she asked, taking
+command of the situation.
+
+"No," Toft answered--and she became aware that the man with Lord
+Audley was the servant.
+
+She waited for no more, she tilted the cup, and by some knack she
+succeeded where Toft had failed. A little of the spirit was swallowed.
+She improvised a pillow and laid the head down on it. "The lower the
+better," she murmured. She felt the hands and began to rub one. "Rub
+the other," she said to Toft. "The first thing to do is to get him
+home! Have you a carriage? How near can you bring it, Lord Audley?"
+
+"We can bring it to the park at the end of the walk," he answered. "My
+agent has gone to fetch it."
+
+"Will you hasten it?" she replied. "Toft will stay with me. And bring
+something, please, on which you can carry him to it."
+
+"At once," Audley answered, and he went off in the direction of the
+Great House.
+
+"I've seen him as bad before, Miss," Toft said. "I found that he had
+gone out without his hat and I followed him, but I could not trace him
+at once. I don't think you need feel alarmed."
+
+Certainly the face had lost its mottled look, the eyes were now shut,
+the limbs lay more naturally. "If he were only at home!" Mary
+answered. "But every moment he is exposed to the cold is against him.
+He must be wet through."
+
+She induced the patient to swallow another mouthful of brandy, and
+with their eyes on his face the two watched for the first gleam of
+consciousness. It came suddenly. John Audley's eyes opened. He stared
+at them.
+
+His mind, however, still wandered. "I knew it!" he muttered. "They
+could not be there and I not know it! But the wall! The wall is
+thick--thick and----" He was silent again.
+
+The rambling mind is to those who are not wont to deal with it a most
+uncanny thing, and Mary looked at Toft to see what he made of it. But
+the servant had eyes only for his master. He was gazing at him with an
+absorbed face.
+
+"Ay, a thick wall!" the sick man murmured. "They may look and look,
+they'll not see through it." He was silent a moment, then, "All bare!"
+he murmured. "All bare!" He chuckled faintly, and tried to raise
+himself, but sank back. "Fools!" he whispered, "fools, when in ten
+minutes if they took out a brick----"
+
+The servant cut him short. "Here's his lordship!" he cried. He spoke
+so sharply that Mary looked up in surprise, wondering what was amiss.
+Lord Audley was within three or four paces of them--the carpet of yew
+leaves had deadened his footsteps. "Here's his lordship, sir!" Toft
+repeated in the same tone, his mouth close to John Audley's ear.
+
+The servant's manner shocked Mary. "Hush, Toft!" she said. "Do you
+want to startle him?"
+
+"His lordship will startle him," Toft retorted. He looked over his
+shoulder, and without ceremony he signed to Lord Audley to stand back.
+
+"Bare, quite bare!" John Audley muttered, his mind still far away.
+"But if they took out--if they took out----"
+
+Toft waved his hand again--waved it wildly.
+
+"All right, I understand," Lord Audley said. He had not at first
+grasped what was wanted, but the man's repeated gestures enlightened
+him. He retired to a position where he was out of the sick man's
+sight.
+
+The servant wiped the sweat from his brow. "He mustn't see him!" he
+repeated insistently. "Lord! what a turn it gave me. I ask your
+pardon, Miss," he continued, "but I know the master so well." He cast
+an uneasy glance over his shoulder. "If the master's eyes lit on him
+once, only once, when he's in this state, I'd not answer for his
+life."
+
+Mary reproached herself. "You are quite right, Toft," she said. "I
+ought to have thought of that myself."
+
+"He must not see any strangers!"
+
+"He shall not. You are quite right."
+
+But Toft was still uneasy. He looked round. Stubbs and a man who had
+been working in the neighborhood were bringing up a sheep-hurdle, and
+again the butler's anxiety overcame him. "D--n!" he said: and he rose
+to his feet. "I think they want to kill him amongst them! Why can't
+they keep away?"
+
+"Hush! Toft. Why----"
+
+"He mustn't see the lawyer! He must not see him on any account."
+
+Mary nodded. "I will arrange it!" she said. "Only don't excite him.
+You will do him harm that way if you are not careful. I will speak to
+them."
+
+She went to meet them and explained, while Stubbs, who had not seen
+her before, considered her with interest. So this was Miss Audley,
+Peter Audley's daughter! She told them that she thought it better that
+her uncle should not find strangers about him when he came to himself.
+They agreed--it seemed quite natural--and it was arranged that Toft
+and the man should carry him as far as the carriage, while Mary walked
+beside him; and that afterwards she and Toft should travel with him.
+The carriage cushions were placed on the hurdle, and the helpless man
+was lifted on to them. Toft and the laborer raised their burden, and
+slowly and heavily, with an occasional stagger, they bore it along the
+sodden path. Mary saw that the sweat sprang out on Toft's sallow face
+and that his knees shook under him. Clearly the man was taxing his
+strength to the utmost, and she felt some concern--she had not given
+him credit for such fidelity. However, he held out until they reached
+the carriage.
+
+Babbling a word now and again, John Audley was moved into the vehicle.
+Mary mounted beside him and supported his head, while Toft climbed to
+the box, and at a footpace they set off across the sward, the laborer
+plodding at the tail of the carriage, and Lord Audley and Stubbs
+following a score of paces behind. The rain had ceased, but the clouds
+were low and leaden, the trees dripped sadly, and the little
+procession across the park had a funereal look. To Mary the way seemed
+long, to Toft still longer. With every moment his head was round. His
+eyes were now on his master, now jealously cast on those who brought
+up the rear. But everything comes to an end, and at length they swung
+into the courtyard, where Mrs. Toft, capable and cool, met them and
+took a load off Mary's shoulders.
+
+"He's that bad is he?" she said calmly. "Then the sooner he's in his
+bed the better. 'Truria's warming it. How will we get him up? I could
+carry him myself if that's all. If Toft'll take his feet, I'll do the
+rest. No need for another soul to come in!" with a glance at Lord
+Audley. "But if they would fetch the doctor I'd not say no, Miss."
+
+"I'll ask them to do that," Mary said.
+
+"And don't you worrit, Miss," Mrs. Toft continued, eyeing the sick man
+judicially. "He's been nigh as bad as this before and been about
+within the week. There's some as when they wool-gathers, there's no
+worse sign. But the master he's never all here, nor all there, and
+like a Broseley butter-pot another touch of the kiln will neither make
+him nor break him. Now, Toft, wide of the door-post, and steady, man."
+
+Lord Audley and Stubbs had remained outside, but when they saw Mary
+coming towards them, the young man left Stubbs and went to meet her.
+"How is he?" he asked.
+
+"Mrs. Toft thinks well of him. She has seen him nearly as ill before,
+she says. But if he recovers," Mary continued gratefully, "we owe his
+life to you. Had you not found him he must have died. And if you had
+lost a moment in bringing the news, I am sure that we should have been
+too late."
+
+The young man might have given some credit to Stubbs, but he did not;
+perhaps because time pressed, perhaps because he felt that his virtue
+in resisting a certain temptation deserved its reward. Instead he
+looked at Mary with a sympathy so ardent that her eyes fell. "Who
+would not have done as much?" he said. "If not for him--for you."
+
+"Will you add one kindness then?" she answered. "Will you send Dr.
+Pepper as quickly as possible?"
+
+"Without the loss of a minute," he said. "But one thing before I go. I
+cannot come here to inquire, yet I should like to know how he goes on.
+Will you walk a little way down the Riddsley road at noon to-morrow,
+and tell me how he fares?"
+
+Mary hesitated. But when he had done so much for them, when he had as
+good as saved her uncle's life, how could she be churlish? How could
+she play the prude? "Of course I will," she said frankly. "I hope I
+shall bring a good report."
+
+"Thank you," he said. "Until to-morrow!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ MASKS AND FACES
+
+
+Cherbuliez opens one of his stories with the remark that if the law of
+probabilities ruled, the hero and heroine would never have met, seeing
+that the one lived in Venice and the other seldom left Paris. That in
+spite of this they fell in with one another was enough to suggest to
+the lady that Destiny was at work to unite them.
+
+He put into words a thought which has entertained millions of lovers.
+If in face of the odds of three hundred and sixty-four to one Phyllis
+shares her birthday with Corydon, if Frederica sprains her ankle and
+the ready arm belongs to a Frederic, if Mademoiselle has a _grain de
+beaut_ on the right ear, and Monsieur a plain mole on the left--here
+is at once matter for reverie, and the heart is given almost before
+the hands have met.
+
+This was the fourth occasion on which Audley had come to Mary's
+rescue, and, sensible as she was, she was too thoroughly woman to be
+proof against the suggestion. On three of the four occasions the odds
+had been against his appearance. Yet he had come. To-day in
+particular, as if no pain that threatened her could be indifferent to
+him, as if no trouble approached her but touched a nerve in him, he
+had risen from the very ground to help and sustain her.
+
+Could the coldest decline to feel interest in one so strangely linked
+with her by fortune? Could the most prudent in such a case abstain
+from day dreams, in which love and service, devotion and constancy,
+played their parts?
+
+_Sic itur ad astra!_ So men and women begin to love.
+
+She spent the morning between the room in which John Audley was making
+a slow recovery, and the deserted library which already wore a cold
+and unused aspect. In the one and the other she felt a restlessness
+and a disturbance which she was fain to set down to yesterday's alarm.
+The old interests invited her in vain. Do what she would, she could
+not keep her mind off the appointment before her. Her eyes grew
+dreamy, her thoughts strayed, her color came and went. At one moment
+she would plunge into a thousand attentions to her uncle, at another
+she opened books only to close them. She looked at the clock--surely
+the hands were not moving! She looked again--it could not be as late
+as that! The truth was that Mary was not in love, but she was ready to
+be in love. She was glad and sorry, grave and gay, without reason;
+like a stream that dances over the shallows, and rippling and
+twinkling goes its way through the sunshine, knowing nothing of the
+deep pool that awaits it.
+
+Presently, acting upon some impulse, she opened a drawer in one of the
+tables. It contained a portrait in crayons of Peter Basset, which John
+Audley had shown her. She took out the sketch and set it against a
+book where the light fell upon it, and she examined it. At first with
+a smile--that he should have been so mad as to think what he had
+thought! And then with a softer look. How hard she had been to him!
+How unfeeling! Nay, how cruel!
+
+She sat for a long time looking at the portrait. But in fact she had
+forgotten that it was before her, when the clock, striking the
+half--hour before noon, surprised her. Then she thrust the portrait
+back into its drawer, and went with a composed face to put on her hat.
+
+The past summer had been one of the wettest ever known, for rain had
+fallen on five days out of seven. But to-day it was fine, and as Mary
+descended the road that led from the house towards Riddsley, a road
+open to the vale on one side and flanked on the other by a rising
+slope covered with brushwood, a watery sun was shining. Its rays,
+aided by the clearness of the air, brought out the colors of stubble
+and field, flood and coppice, that lay below. And men looking up
+from toil or pleasure, leaning on spades or pausing before they
+crossed a stile, saw the Gatehouse transformed to a fairy lodge, gray,
+clear--cut, glittering, breaking the line of forest trees--saw it as
+if it had stood in another world.
+
+Mary looked back, looked forward, admired, descended. She had made up
+her mind that Lord Audley would meet her at a turn near the foot of
+the hill, where a Cross had once stood, and where the crumbling base
+and moss-clothed steps still bade travellers rest and be thankful.
+
+He was there, and Mary owned the attraction of the big smiling face
+and the burly figure, that in a rough, caped riding-coat still kept an
+air of fashion. He on his side saw coming to meet him, through the
+pale sunshine, not as yesterday an Atalanta, but a cool Dian, with her
+hands in a large muff.
+
+"You bring a good report, I hope?" he cried before they met.
+
+"Very good," Mary replied, sparkling a little as she looked at
+him--was not the sun shining? "My uncle is much better this morning.
+Dr. Pepper says that it was mainly exertion acting on a weak heart. He
+expects him to be downstairs in a week and to be himself in a
+fortnight. But he will have to be more careful in future."
+
+"That is good!"
+
+"He says, too, that if you had not acted so promptly, my uncle must
+have died."
+
+"Well, he was pretty far gone, I must say."
+
+"So, as he will not thank you himself, you must let me thank you." And
+Mary held out the hand she had hitherto kept in her muff. She was
+determined not to be a prude.
+
+He pressed it discreetly. "I am glad," he said. "Very glad. Perhaps
+after this he may think better of me."
+
+She laughed. "I don't think that there is a chance of it," she said.
+
+"No? Well, I suppose it was foolish, but do you know, I did hope that
+this might bring us together."
+
+"You may dismiss it," she answered, smiling.
+
+"Ah!" he said. "Then tell me this. How in the world did he come to be
+there? Without a hat? Without a coat? And so far from the house?"
+
+Mary hesitated. He had turned, they were walking side by side. "I am
+not sure that I ought to tell you," she said. "What I know I gathered
+from a word that Mr. Audley let fall when he was rambling. He seems to
+have had some instinct, some feeling that you were there and to have
+been forced to learn if it was so."
+
+"But forced? By what?" Lord Audley asked. "I don't understand."
+
+"I don't understand either," Mary answered.
+
+"He could not know that we were there?"
+
+"But he seems to have known."
+
+"Strange," he murmured. "Does he often stray away like that?"
+
+"He does, sometimes," she admitted reluctantly.
+
+"Ah!" Audley was silent a moment. Then, "Well, I am glad he is
+better," he said in the tone of one who dismisses a subject. "Let us
+talk of something else--ourselves. Are you aware that this is the
+fourth time that I have come to your rescue?"
+
+"I know that it is the fourth time that you have been very useful,"
+she admitted. She wished that she had been able to control her color,
+but though he spoke playfully there was meaning in his voice.
+
+"I, too, have a second sense it seems," he said, almost purring as he
+looked at her. "Did you by any chance think of me, when you missed
+your uncle?"
+
+"Not for a moment," she retorted.
+
+"Perhaps--you thought of Mr. Basset?"
+
+"No, nor of Mr. Basset. Had he been at the Gatehouse I might have. But
+he is away."
+
+"Away, is he? Oh!" He looked at her with a whimsical smile. "Do you
+know that when he met us the other evening I thought that he was a
+little out of temper? It was not a continuance of that which took him
+away, I suppose?"
+
+Mary would have given the world to show an unmoved face at that
+moment. But she could not. Nor could she feel as angry as she wished.
+"I thought we were going to talk of ourselves," she said.
+
+"I thought that we were talking of you."
+
+On that, "I am afraid that I must be going back," she said. And she
+stopped.
+
+"But I am going back with you!"
+
+"Are you? Well, you may come as far as the Cross."
+
+"Oh, hang the Cross!" he answered with a masterfulness of which Mary
+owned the charm, while she rebelled against it. "I shall come as far
+as I like! And hang Basset too--if he makes you unhappy!" He laughed.
+"We'll talk of--what shall we talk of, Mary? Why, we are cousins--does
+not that entitle me to call you 'Mary'?"
+
+"I would rather you did not," she said, and this time there was no
+lack of firmness in her tone. She remembered what Basset had said
+about her name and--and for the moment the other's airiness displeased
+her.
+
+"But we are cousins."
+
+"Then you can call me cousin," she answered.
+
+He laughed. "Beaten again!" he said.
+
+"And I can call you cousin," she said sedately. "Indeed, I am going to
+treat you as a cousin. I want you, if not to do, to think of doing
+something for me. I don't know," nervously, "whether I am asking more
+than I ought--if so you must forgive me. But it is not for myself."
+
+"You frighten me!" he said. "What is it?"
+
+"It's about Mr. Colet, the curate whom you helped us to save from
+those men at Brown Heath. He has been shamefully treated. What they
+did to him might be forgiven--they knew no better. But I hear that
+because he preaches what is not to everybody's taste, but what
+thousands and thousands are saying, he is to lose his curacy. And
+that is his livelihood. It seems most wicked to me, because I am told
+that no one else will employ him. And what is he to do? He has no
+friends----"
+
+"He has one eloquent friend."
+
+"Don't laugh at me!" she cried.
+
+"I am not laughing," he answered. He was, in fact, wondering how he
+should deal with this--this fad of hers. A little, too, he was
+wondering what it meant. It could not be that she was in love with
+Colet. Absurd! He recalled the look of the man. "I am not laughing,"
+he repeated more slowly. "But what do you want me to do?"
+
+"To use your influence for him," Mary explained, "either with the
+rector to keep him or with some one else to employ him."
+
+"I see."
+
+"He only did what he thought was his duty. And--and because he did it,
+is he to pay with all he has in the world?"
+
+"It seems a hard case."
+
+"It is more, it is an abominable injustice!" she cried.
+
+"Yes," he said slowly. "It seems so. It certainly seems hard. But let
+me--don't be angry with me if I put another side." He spoke with
+careful moderation. "It is my experience that good, easy men, such as
+I take the rector of Riddsley to be, rarely do a thing which seems
+cruel, without reason. A clergyman, for instance; he has generally
+thought out more clearly than you or I what it is right to say in the
+pulpit; how far it is lawful, and then again how far it is wise to
+deal with matters of debate. He has considered how far a pronouncement
+may offend some, and so may render his office less welcome to them.
+That is one consideration. Probably, too, he has considered that a
+statement, if events falsify it, will injure him with his poorer
+parishioners who look up to him as wiser than themselves. Well, when
+such a man has laid down a rule and finds a younger clergyman bent
+upon transgressing it, is it unreasonable if he puts his foot down?"
+
+"I had not looked at it in that way."
+
+"And that, perhaps, is not all," he resumed. "You know that a thing
+may be true, but that it is not always wise to proclaim it. It may be
+too strong meat. It may be true, for instance, that corn-dealers make
+an unfair profit out of the poor; but it is not a truth that you would
+tell a hungry crowd outside the corn-dealer's shop on a Saturday
+night."
+
+"No," Mary allowed reluctantly. "Perhaps not."
+
+"And again--I have nothing to say against Colet. It is enough for me
+that he is a friend of yours----"
+
+"I have a reason for being interested in him. I am sure that if you
+heard him----"
+
+"I might be carried away? Precisely. But is it not possible that he
+has seen much of one side of this question, much of the poverty for
+which a cure is sought, without being for that reason fitted to decide
+what the cure should be?"
+
+Mary nodded. "Have you formed any opinion yourself?" she asked.
+
+But he was too prudent to enter on a discussion. He saw that so far he
+had impressed her with what he had said, and he was not going to risk
+the advantage he had gained. "No," he said, "I am weighing the matter
+at this moment. We are on the verge of a crisis on the Corn Laws, and
+it is my duty to consider the question carefully. I am doing so. I
+have hitherto been a believer in the tax. I may change my views, but I
+shall not do so hastily. As for your friend, I will consider what can
+be done, but I fear that he has been imprudent."
+
+"Sometimes," she ventured, "imprudence is a virtue."
+
+"And its own reward!" he retorted. They had passed the Cross, they
+were by this time high on the hill, with one accord they came to a
+stand. "However, I will think it over," he continued. "I will think it
+over, and what a cousin may, a cousin shall."
+
+"A cousin may much when he is Lord Audley."
+
+"A poor man in a fine coat! A butterfly in an east wind." He
+removed his curly-brimmed hat and stood gazing over the prospect,
+over the wide valley that far and near gleamed with many a sheet of
+flood-water. "Have you ever thought, Mary, what that means?" he
+continued with feeling. "To be the shadow of a name! A ghost of the
+past! To have for home a ruin, and for lands a few poor farms--in
+place of all that we can see from here! For all this was once ours. To
+live a poor man among the rich! To have nothing but----"
+
+"Opportunities!" she answered, her voice betraying how deeply she was
+moved--for she too was an Audley. "For, with all said and done, you
+start where others end. You have no need to wait for a hearing. Doors
+stand open to you that others must open. Your name is a passport--is
+there a Stafford man who does not thrill to it? Surely these things
+are something. Surely they are much?"
+
+"You would make me think so!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Believe me, they are."
+
+"They would be if I had your enthusiasm!" he answered, moved by her
+words. "And, by Jove," gazing with admiration at her glowing face, "if
+I had you by me to spur me on there's no knowing, Mary, what I might
+not try! And what I might not do!"
+
+Womanlike, she would evade the crisis which she had provoked. "Or fail
+to do!" she replied. "Perhaps the most worthy would be left undone.
+But I must go now," she continued. "I have to give my uncle his
+medicine. I fear I am late already."
+
+"When shall I see you again?" he asked, trying to detain her.
+
+"Some day, I have no doubt. But good-bye now! And don't forget Mr.
+Colet! Good-bye!"
+
+He stood awhile looking after her, then he turned and went down the
+hill. By the time he was at the place where he had met her he was glad
+that she had broken off the interview.
+
+"I might have said too much," he reflected. "She's handsome enough to
+turn any man's head! And not so cold as she looks. And she spells
+safety. But there's no hurry--and she's inclined to be kind, or I am
+mistaken! That clown, Basset, too, has got his dismissal, I fancy, and
+there's no one else!"
+
+Presently his thoughts took another turn. "What maggots women get into
+their heads!" he muttered. "That pestilent Colet--I'm glad the rector
+acted on my hint. But there it is; when a woman meddles with politics
+she's game for the first spouter she comes across! Fine eyes, too, and
+the Audley blood! With a little drilling she would hold her own
+anywhere."
+
+Altogether, he found the walk to the place where he had left his
+carriage pleasant enough and his thoughts satisfactory. With Mary and
+safety on one side, and Lady Adela and a plum on the other--it would
+be odd if he did not bring his wares to a tolerable market.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+ THE CORN LAW CRISIS
+
+
+He had been right in his forecast when he told Mary that a political
+crisis was at hand. That which had been long whispered, was beginning
+to be stated openly in club and market-place. The Corn Laws, the
+support of the country, the mainstay, as so many thought, of the
+Constitution, were in danger; and behind closed doors, while England
+listened without, the doctors were met to decide their fate.
+
+Potatoes! The word flew from mouth to mouth that wet autumn, from town
+to country, from village to village. Potatoes! The thing seemed
+incredible. That the lordly Corn Laws, the bulwark of the landed
+interest, the prop of agriculture, that had withstood all attacks for
+two generations, and maintained themselves alike against high prices
+and the Corn Law League--that these should go down because a vulgar
+root like the potato had failed in Ireland--it was a thing passing
+belief. It couldn't be. With the Conservatives in power, it seemed
+impossible.
+
+Yet it was certain that the position was grave, if not hopeless. Never
+since the Reform Bill had there been such meetings of the Cabinet, so
+frequent, so secret. And strange things were said. Some who had
+supported Peel yet did not trust him, maintained that this was the
+natural sequel of his measures, the point to which he had been moving
+through all the years of his Ministry. Potatoes--bah! Others who still
+supported him, yet did not trust him, brooded nervously over his
+action twenty years before, when he had first resisted and then
+accepted the Catholic claims. Tories and Conservatives alike, wondered
+what they were there to conserve, if such things were in the wind;
+they protested, but with growing misgiving, that the thing could not
+be. While those among them who had seats to save and majorities to
+guard, met one another with gloomy looks, whispered together in
+corners and privately asked themselves what they would do--if he did.
+Happy in these circumstances were those who like Mottisfont, the
+father, were ready to retire; and still happier those who like
+Mottisfont, the son, knew the wishes of their constituents and could
+sing "John Barleycorn, my Joe, John," with no fear of being jilted.
+
+Their anxieties--they were politicians--were mainly personal--and
+selfish. But there were some, simple people like Mr. Stubbs at
+Riddsley, who really believed, when these rumors reached them, that
+the foundations of things were breaking up, and that the world in
+which they had lived was sinking under their feet. Already in fancy
+they saw the glare of furnaces fall across the peaceful fields.
+Already they heard the tall mill jar and quiver where the cosey
+homestead and the full stackyard sprawled. They saw a weakly race,
+slaves to the factory bell, overrun the land where the ploughman still
+whistled at his work and his wife suckled healthy babes. To these men,
+if the rumors they heard were true, if Peel had indeed sold the pass,
+it meant the loss of all. It meant the victory of coal and cotton, the
+ruling of all after the Manchester pattern, the reign of Cash, the
+Lord, and ten per cent. his profit. It meant the end of the old
+England they had loved.
+
+Not that Stubbs said this at Riddsley, or anything like it. He smiled
+and kept silence, as became a man who knew much and was set above
+common rumor. The landlord of the Audley Arms, the corndealer, the
+brewer, the saddler went away from him with their fears allayed merely
+by the way in which he shrugged his shoulders. At the farmers'
+ordinary he had never been more cheerful. He gave the toast of "Horn
+and Corn, gentlemen! And when potatoes take their place you may come
+and tell me!" And he gave it so heartily that the farmers went home,
+market-peart and rejoicing, laughed at their doubting neighbors, and
+quoted a hundred things that Lawyer Stubbs had not said.
+
+But a day or two later the lawyer sustained an unpleasant shock. He
+had been little moved by Lord John's manifesto--the declaration in
+which the little Whig Leader, seeing that the Government hesitated,
+had plumped for total repeal. That was in the common course of things.
+It had heartened him, if anything. It was natural. It would bring the
+Tories into line and put an end to trimming. But this--this which
+confronted him one morning when he opened his London paper was
+different. He read it, he held his breath, he stood aghast a long
+minute, he swore. After a few minutes he took his hat and the
+newspaper, and went round to the house in which Lord Audley lived when
+he was at Riddsley.
+
+It was a handsome Georgian house, built of brick with stone facings,
+and partly covered with ivy. A wide smooth lawn divided it from the
+road. The occupant was a curate's widow who lived there with her two
+sisters and eked out their joint means by letting the first floor to
+her landlord. For "The Butterflies" was Audley property, and the
+clergyman's widow was held to derogate in no way by an arrangement
+which differed widely from a common letting of lodgings. Mrs.
+Jenkinson was stout, short, and fussy, her sisters were thin, short,
+and precise, but all three overflowed with words as kindly as their
+deeds. Good Mrs. Jenkinson, in fact, who never spoke of his lordship
+behind his back but with distant respect, sometimes forgot in his
+presence that he was anything but a "dear young man," and when he had
+a cold, would prescribe a posset or a warming-pan with an insistence
+which at times amused and more often bored him.
+
+Stubbs found his lordship just risen from a late lunch, and in his
+excitement, the lawyer forgot his manners. "By G--d, my lord!" he
+cried, "he's resigned."
+
+Audley looked at him with displeasure. "Who's resigned?" he asked
+coldly.
+
+"Peel!"
+
+Against that news the young man was not proof. He caught the
+infection. "Impossible!" he said, rising to his feet.
+
+"It's true! It's in the _Morning Post_, my lord! He saw the Queen
+yesterday. She's sending for Lord John. It's black treachery! It's the
+blackest of treachery! With a majority in the House, with the peers in
+his pocket, the country quiet, trade improving, everything in his
+favor, he's sold us--sold us to Cobden on some d--d pretext of famine
+in Ireland!"
+
+Audley did not answer at once. He stood deep in thought, his eyes on
+the floor, his hands in his pockets. At length, "I don't follow it,"
+he said. "How is Russell, who is in a minority, to carry repeal?"
+
+"Peel's promised his support!" Stubbs cried. Like most honest men, he
+was nothing if not thorough. "You may depend upon it, my lord, he has!
+He won't deceive me again. I know him through and through, now. He'll
+take with him Graham and Gladstone and Herbert, his old tail, Radicals
+at heart every man of them, and he's the biggest!"
+
+"Well," Audley said slowly, "he might have done one thing worse. He
+might have stayed in and passed repeal himself!"
+
+"Good G--d!" the lawyer cried, "Judas wouldn't have done that! All he
+could do, he has done. He has let in corn from Canada, cattle from
+Heaven knows where, he has let in wool. All that he has done. But even
+he has a limit, my lord! Even he! The man who was returned to support
+the Corn Laws--to repeal them. Impossible!"
+
+"Well?" Audley said. "There'll be an election, I suppose?"
+
+"The sooner the better," Stubbs answered vengefully. "And we shall see
+what the country thinks of this. In Riddsley we've been ready for
+weeks--as you know, my lord. But a General Election? Gad! I only hope
+they will put up some one here, and we will give them such a beating
+as they've never had!"
+
+Audley pondered. "I suppose Riddsley is safe," he said.
+
+"As safe as Burton Bridge, my lord!"
+
+The other rattled the money in his pocket. "As long as you give them a
+lead, Stubbs, I suppose? But if you went over? What then?"
+
+Stubbs opened his eyes. "Went over?" he ejaculated.
+
+"Oh, I don't mean," my lord said airily, "that you're not as staunch
+as Burton Bridge. But supposing you took the other side--it would make
+a difference, I suppose?"
+
+"Not a jot!" the lawyer answered sturdily.
+
+"Not even if the two Mottisfonts sided with Peel?"
+
+"If they did the old gentleman would never see Westminster again,"
+Stubbs cried, "nor the young one go there!"
+
+"Or," Audley continued, setting his shoulders against the
+mantel-shelf, and smiling, "suppose I did? If the Beaudelays interest
+were cast for repeal? What then?"
+
+"What then?" Stubbs answered. "You'll pardon me, my lord, if I am
+frank. Then the Beaudelays influence, that has held the borough time
+out of mind, that returned two members before '32, and has returned
+one since--there'd be an end of it! It would snap like a rotten stick.
+The truth is we hold the borough while we go with the stream. In fair
+weather when it is a question of twenty votes one way or the other, we
+carry it. And you've the credit, my lord."
+
+Audley moved his shoulders restlessly. "It's all I get by it," he
+said. "If I could turn the credit into a snug place of two thousand a
+year, Stubbs--it would be another thing. Do you know," he continued,
+"I've often wondered why you feel so strongly on the corn-taxes?"
+
+"You asked me that once before, my lord," the agent answered slowly.
+"All that I can say is that more things than one go to it. Perhaps the
+best answer I can make is that, like your lordship's influence in the
+borough, it's part sentiment and part tradition. I have a picture in
+my mind--it's a picture of an old homestead that my grandfather lived
+in and died in, and that I visited when I was a boy. That would be
+about the middle nineties; the French war going, corn high, cattle
+high, a good horse in the gig and old ale for all comers. There was
+comfort inside and plenty without; comfort in the great kitchen, with
+its floor as clean as a pink, and greened in squares with bay leaves,
+its dresser bright with pewter, its mantel with Toby jugs! There was
+wealth in the stackyard, with the poultry strutting and scratching,
+and more in the byres knee-deep in straw, and the big barn where they
+flailed the wheat! And there were men and maids more than on two farms
+to-day, some in the house, some in thatched cottages with a run on the
+common and wood for the getting. I remember, as if they were
+yesterday, hot summer afternoons when there'd be a stillness on the
+farm and all drowsed together, the bees, and the calves, and the old
+sheep-dog, and the only sounds that broke the silence were the cluck
+of a hen, or the clank of pattens on the dairy-floor, while the sun
+fell hot on the orchard, where a little boy hunted for damsons! That's
+what I often see, my lord," Stubbs continued stoutly. "And may Peel
+protect me, if I ever raise a finger to set mill and furnace, devil's
+dust and slave-grown cotton, in place of that!"
+
+My lord concealed a yawn. "Very interesting, Stubbs," he said. "Quite
+a picture! Peace and plenty and old ale! And little Jack Horner
+sitting in a corner! No, don't go yet, man. I want you." He made a
+sign to Stubbs to sit down, and settling his shoulders more firmly
+against the mantel-shelf, he thrust his hands deeper into his
+trouser-pockets. "I'm not easy in my mind about John Audley," he said.
+"I'm not sure that he has not found something."
+
+Stubbs stared. "There's nothing to find," he said. "Nothing, my lord!
+You may be sure of it."
+
+"He goes there."
+
+"It's a craze."
+
+"It's a confoundedly unpleasant one!"
+
+"But harmless, my lord. Really harmless."
+
+The younger man's impatience darkened his face, but he controlled
+it--a sure sign that he was in earnest. "Tell me this," he said. "What
+evidence would upset us? You told me once that the claim could be
+reopened on fresh evidence. On what evidence?"
+
+"I regard the case as closed," Stubbs answered stubbornly. "But if you
+put the question--" he seemed to reflect--"the point at issue, on
+which the whole turned, was the legitimacy of your great-grandfather,
+my lord, Peter Paravicini Audley's son. Mr. John's great-grandfather
+was Peter Paravicini's younger brother. The other side alleged, but
+could not produce, a family agreement admitting that the son was
+illegitimate. Such an agreement, if Peter Paravicini was a party
+to it, if it was proved, and came from the proper custody, would
+be an awkward document and might let in the next brother's
+descendants--that's Mr. John. But in my opinion, its existence is a
+fairy story, and in its absence, the entry in the register stands
+good."
+
+"But such a document would be fatal?"
+
+"If it fulfilled the conditions it would be serious," the lawyer
+admitted. "But it does not exist," he added confidently.
+
+"And yet--I'm not comfortable, Stubbs," Audley rejoined. "I can't get
+John Audley's face out of my mind. If ever man looked as if he had his
+enemy by the throat, he looked it; a d--d disinheriting face I thought
+it! I don't mind telling you," the speaker continued, some disorder in
+his own looks, "that I awoke at three o'clock this morning, and I saw
+him as clearly as I see you now, and at that moment I wouldn't have
+given a thousand pounds for my chance of being Lord Audley this time
+two years!"
+
+"Liver!" said Stubbs, unmoved. "Liver, my lord, asking your pardon!
+Nothing else--and the small hours. I've felt like that myself. Still,
+if you are really uneasy there is always a way out, though it may be
+impertinent of me to mention it."
+
+"The old way?"
+
+"You might marry Miss Audley. A handsome young lady, if I may presume
+to say so, of your own blood and name, and no disparagement except in
+fortune. After Mr. John, she is the next heir, and the match once made
+would checkmate any action on his part."
+
+"I am afraid I could not afford such a marriage," Audley said coldly.
+"But I am to you. As for this news--" he flicked the newspaper that
+lay on the table--"it may be true or it may not. If it is true, it
+will alter many things. We shall see. If you hear anything fresh let
+me know."
+
+Stubbs said that he would and took his leave, wondering a little, but
+having weightier things on his mind. He sought his home by back ways,
+for he did not wish to meet Dr. Pepper or Bagenal the brewer, or even
+the saddler, until he had considered what face he would put on Peel's
+latest move. He felt that his reputation for knowledge and sagacity
+was at stake.
+
+Meanwhile his employer, left alone, fell to considering, not what face
+he should put upon the matter, but how he might at this crisis turn
+the matter and the borough to the best account. Certainly Stubbs was
+discouraging, but Stubbs was a fool. It was all very well for him; he
+drew his wages either way. But a man of the world did not cling to the
+credit of owning a borough for the mere name of the thing. If he were
+sensible he looked to get something more from it than that. And it was
+upon occasions such as this that the something more was to be had by
+those who knew how to go about the business.
+
+Here, in fact, was the moment, if he was the man.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+ PETER'S RETURN
+
+
+Not a word or hint of John Audley's illness had come to Basset's ears.
+At the time of the alarm he had been in London, and it was not until
+some days later that he took his seat in the morning train to return
+to Stafford. On his way to town, and for some days after his arrival,
+he had been buoyed up by plans, nebulous indeed, but sufficient. He
+came back low in his mind and in poor spirits. The hopes, if not the
+aspirations, which Colet's enthusiasm had generated in him had died
+down, and the visit to Francis Place had done nothing to revive them.
+
+Some greatness in the man, a largeness of ideas, an echo of the
+revolutionary days when the sanest saw visions, Basset was forced to
+own. But the two stood too far apart, the inspired tailor and the
+country squire, for sympathy. They were divided by too wide a gulf of
+breeding and prejudice to come together. Basset was not even a
+Radical, and his desire to improve things, and to better the world,
+fell very far short of the passion of humanity which possessed the
+aged Republican--the man who for half a century had been so forward in
+all their movements that his fellows had christened him the "_Old
+Postilion_."
+
+Nothing but disappointment, therefore, had come of the meeting. The
+two had parted with a little contempt on the one side, a sense of
+failure on the other. If a man could serve his neighbors only in
+fellowship with such, if the cause which for a few hours had promised
+to fill the void left by an unhappy love, could be supported only by
+men who held such opinions, then Basset felt that the thing was not
+for him. For six or seven days he went up and down London at odds with
+himself and his kind, and ever striving to solve a puzzle, the answer
+to which evaded him. Was the hope that he might find a mission and
+found a purpose on Colet's lines, was it just the desire to set the
+world right that seized on young men fresh from college? And if this
+were so, if this were all, what was he to do? Whither was he to turn?
+How was he going to piece together the life which Mary had broken? How
+was he going to arrange his future so that some thread of purpose
+might run through it, so that something of effort might still link
+together the long bede-roll of years?
+
+He found no answer to the riddle. And it was in a gloomy, unsettled
+mood, ill-content with himself and the world, that he took his seat in
+the train. Alas, he could not refrain from recalling the May morning
+on which he had taken his seat in the same train with Mary. How ill
+had he then appreciated her company, how little had he understood, how
+little had he prized his good fortune! He who was then free to listen
+to her voice, to meet her eyes, to follow the changes of her mood from
+grave to gay! To be to her--all that he could! And that for hours, for
+days, for weeks!
+
+He swore under his breath and sat back in the shadow of the corner.
+And a man who entered late, and saw that he kept his eyes shut,
+fancied that he was ill; and when he muttered a word under his breath,
+asked him if he spoke.
+
+"No," Basset replied rather curtly. And that he might be alone with
+his thoughts he took up a newspaper and held it before him. But not a
+word did he read. After a long interval he looked over the journal and
+met the other's eyes.
+
+"Surprising news this," the stranger said. He had the look of a
+soldier, and the bronzed face of one who had lived under warm skies.
+
+Basset murmured that it was.
+
+"The Whigs have a fine opportunity," the other pursued. "But I am not
+sure that they will use it."
+
+"You are a Whig, perhaps?"
+
+The stranger smiled. "No," he replied. "I am not. I have lived so long
+abroad that I belong to no party. I am an Englishman."
+
+"Ah?" Basset rejoined, curiosity beginning to stir in him. "That's
+rather a fine idea."
+
+"Apparently it's a novel one. But it seems natural to me. I have lived
+for fifteen years in India and I have lost touch with the cant of
+parties. Out there, we do honestly try to rule for the good of the
+people; their prosperity is our interest. Here, during the few weeks I
+have spent in England I see things done, not because they are good,
+but because they suit a party, or provide a cry, or put the other side
+in a quandary."
+
+"There's a good deal of that, I suppose."
+
+"Still," the stranger continued, "I know a great man, and I know a
+fine thing when I see them. And I fancy that I see them here!" He
+tapped his paper.
+
+"Has Lord John formed his ministry, then?"
+
+"No, I am not sure that he will. I am not thinking of him, I am
+thinking of Peel."
+
+"Oh! Of Peel?"
+
+"He has done a fine thing! As every man does who puts what is right
+before what is easy. May I tell you a story of myself?" the Indian
+continued. "Some years ago in the Afghan war I was unlucky enough
+to command a small frontier post. My garrison consisted of two
+companies and six or seven European officers. The day came when I had
+to choose between two courses. I must either hold my ground until our
+people advanced, or I must evacuate the post, which had a certain
+importance--and fall back into safety. The men never dreamed of
+retiring. The officers were confident that we could hold out. But we
+were barely supplied for forty days, and in my judgment no
+reinforcement was possible under seventy. I made my choice, breached
+the place, and retired. But I tell you, sir, that the days of that
+retreat, with sullen faces about me, and hardly a man in my company
+who did not think me a poltroon, were the bitterest of my life. I knew
+that if the big-wigs agreed with them I was a ruined man, and after
+ten years service I should go home disgraced. Fortunately the General
+saw it as I saw it, and all was well. But--" he looked at Basset with
+a wry smile--"it was a march of ten days to the base, and to-day the
+sullen looks of those men come back to me in my dreams."
+
+"And you think," Basset said--the other's story had won his
+respect--"that Peel has found himself in such a position?"
+
+"To compare great issues with small, I do. I suspect that he has gone
+through an agony--that is hardly too strong a word--such as I went
+through. My impression is that when he came into office he was in
+advance of his party. He saw that the distress in the country called
+for measures which his followers would accept from no one else. He
+believed that he could carry them with him. Perhaps, even then, he
+held a repeal of the Corn Laws possible in some remote future; perhaps
+he did not, I don't know. For suddenly there came on him the fear of
+this Irish famine--and forced his hand."
+
+"But don't you think," Basset asked, "that the alarm is premature?" A
+dozen times he had heard the famine called a flam, a sham, a bite,
+anything but a reality.
+
+"You have never seen a famine?" the other replied gravely. "You have
+never had to face the impossibility of creating food where it does not
+exist, or of bringing it from a distance when there are no roads. I
+have had that experience. I have seen people die of starvation by
+hundreds, women, children, babes, when I could do nothing because
+steps had not been taken in time. God forbid that that should happen
+in Ireland! If the fear does not outrun the dearth, God help the poor!
+Now I am told that Peel witnessed a famine in Ireland about '17 or
+'18, and knows what it is."
+
+"You have had interesting experiences?"
+
+"The experience of every Indian officer. But the burden which rests on
+us makes us alive to the difficulties of a statesman's position. I see
+Peel forced--forced suddenly, perhaps, to make a choice; to decide
+whether he shall do what is right or what is consistent. He must
+betray his friends, or he must betray his country. And the agony of
+the decision is the greater if he has it burnt in on his memory that
+he did this thing once before, that once before he turned his back on
+his party--and that all the world knows!"
+
+"I see."
+
+"If a man in that position puts self, consistency, reputation all
+behind him--believe me, he is doing a fine thing."
+
+Basset assented. "But you speak," he added, "as if Sir Robert were
+going to do the thing himself--instead of merely standing aside for
+others to do it."
+
+"A distinction without much difference," the other rejoined. "Possibly
+it will turn out that he is the only man who can do it. If so, he will
+have a hard row to hoe. He will need the help of every moderate man in
+the country, if he is not to be beaten. For whether he succeeds or
+fails, depends not upon the fanatics, but upon the moderate men. I
+don't know what your opinions are?"
+
+"Well," Basset said frankly, "I am not much of a party-man myself. I
+am inclined to agree with you, so far."
+
+"Then if you have any influence, use it. Unfortunately, I am out of it
+for family reasons."
+
+Basset looked at the stranger. "You are not by any chance Colonel
+Mottisfont?" he said.
+
+"I am. You know my brother? He is member for Riddsley."
+
+"Yes. My name is Basset."
+
+"Of Blore? Indeed. I knew your father. Well, I have not cast my seed
+on stony ground. Though you are stony enough about Wootton under
+Weaver."
+
+"True, worse luck. Your brother is retiring, I hear?"
+
+"Yes, he has just horse sense, has Jack. He won't vote against Peel.
+His lad has less and will take his place and vote old Tory. But there,
+I mustn't abuse the family."
+
+They had still half an hour to spend together before Basset got out at
+Stafford. He had time to discover that the soldier was faced by a
+problem not unlike his own. His service over, he had to consider what
+he would do. "All I know," the Colonel said breezily, "is that I won't
+do nothing. Some take to preaching, others to Bath, but neither will
+suit me. But I'll not drift. I kept from brandy pawnee out there, and
+I am going to keep from drift here. For you, you're a young man,
+Basset, and a hundred things are open to you. I am over the top of the
+hill. But I'll do something."
+
+"You have done something to-day," Basset said. "You have done me
+good."
+
+Later he had time to think it over during the long journey from
+Stafford to Blore. He drove by twisting country roads, under the gray
+walls of Chartley, by Uttoxeter and Rocester. Thence he toiled uphill
+to the sterile Derbyshire border, the retreat of old families and old
+houses. He began to think that he had gained some ideas with which he
+could sympathize, ideas which were at one with Mary Audley's burning
+desire to help, while they did not clash with old prejudices. If he
+threw himself into Peel's cause, he would indeed be seen askance by
+many. He would have to put himself forward after a fashion that gave
+him the goose-flesh when he thought of it. A landowner, he would have
+to go against the land. But he would not feel, in his darker moods,
+that he was the dupe of cranks and fanatics. He saw Peel as Mottisfont
+had pictured him, as a man putting all behind him except the right;
+and his heart warmed to the picture. Many would fall away, few would
+be staunch. From this ship, as from every sinking ship, the rats would
+flee. But so much the stronger was the call.
+
+The result was that the Peter Basset who descended at the porch of the
+old gabled house, that sat low and faced east in the valley under
+Weaver, was a more hopeful man than he who had entered the train at
+Euston. A purpose, a plan--he had gained these, and the hope that
+springs from them.
+
+He had barely doffed his driving-coat, however, before his thoughts
+were swept in another direction. On the hall table lay two letters. He
+took up one. It was from Colet and written in deep dejection. "The
+barber was a Tory and had given him short notice. Feeling ran high in
+the town, and other lodgings were not to be had. The Bishop had
+supported the rector's action, and he saw no immediate prospect of
+further work." He did not ask for shelter, but it was plain that he
+was at his wit's end, and more than a little surprised by the storm
+which he had raised.
+
+Basset threw down the letter. "He shall come here," he thought. "What
+is it to me whom he marries?" Many solitary hours spent in the streets
+of London had gone some way towards widening Peter's outlook.
+
+He took up the second letter. It was from John Audley, and before
+he had read three lines, he rang the bell and ordered that the
+post-chaise which had brought him from Stafford should be kept: he
+would want it in the morning. John Audley wrote that he had been very
+ill--he was still in bed. He must see Basset. The matter was urgent,
+he had something to tell him. He hinted that if he did not come
+quickly it might be too late.
+
+Basset could not refuse to go; summoned after this fashion, he must
+go. But he tried to believe that he was not glad to go. He tried to
+believe that the excitement with which he looked forward to the
+journey had to do with his uncle. It was in vain; he knew that he
+tricked himself. Or if he did not know this then, his eyes were opened
+next day, when, after walking up the hill to spare the horses--and a
+little because he shrank at the last from the meeting--he came in
+sight of the Gatehouse, and saw Mary Audley standing in the doorway.
+The longing that gripped him then, the emotion that unmanned him, told
+him all. It was of Mary he had been thinking, towards Mary he had been
+travelling, of her work it was that the miles had seemed leagues! He
+was not cured. He was not in the way to be cured. He was the same
+love-sick fool whom she had driven from her with contumely an age--it
+seemed an age, ago.
+
+He bent his head as he approached, that she might not see his face.
+His knees shook and a tremor ran through him. Why had he come back?
+Why had he come back to face this anguish?
+
+Then he mastered himself; indeed he took himself the more strongly in
+hand for the knowledge he had gained. When they met at the door it was
+Mary, not he, whose color came and went, who spoke awkwardly, and
+rushed into needless explanations. The man listened with a stony face,
+and said little, almost nothing.
+
+After the first awkward greeting, "Your room has been airing," she
+continued, avoiding his eyes. "My uncle has been expecting you for
+some days. He has asked for you again and again."
+
+He explained that he had been in London--hence the delay; and,
+further, that he must return to Blore that day. She felt that she was
+the cause of this, and she colored painfully. But he seemed to be
+indifferent. He noticed a trifling change in the hall, asked a
+question or two about his uncle's state, and inquired what had caused
+his sudden illness.
+
+She told the story, giving details. He nodded. "Yes, I have seen him
+in a similar attack," he said. "But he gets older. I am afraid it
+alarmed you?"
+
+She forced herself to describe Lord Audley's part in the matter--and
+Mr. Stubbs's, and was conscious that she was dragging in Mr. Stubbs
+more often than was necessary. Basset listened politely, remarked that
+it was fortunate that Audley had been on the spot, added that he was
+sure that everything had been done that was right.
+
+When he had gone upstairs to see John Audley she escaped to her room.
+Her cheeks were burning, and she could have cried. Basset's coldness,
+his distance, the complete change in his manner all hurt her more than
+she could say. They brought home to her, painfully home to her what
+she had done. She had been foolish enough to fling away the friend,
+when she need only have discarded the lover!
+
+But she must face it out now, the thing was done, and she must put up
+with it. And by and by, fearing that Basset might suppose that she
+avoided him, she came down and waited for him in the deserted library.
+She had waited some minutes, moving restlessly to and fro and wishing
+the ordeal of luncheon were over, when her eyes fell on the door of
+the staircase that led up to her uncle's room. It was ajar.
+
+She stared at it, for she knew that she had closed it after Basset had
+gone up. Now it was ajar. She reflected. The house was still, she
+could hear no one moving. She went out quickly, crossed the hall,
+looked into the dining-room. Toft was not there, nor was he in the
+pantry. She returned to the library, and went softly up the stairs.
+
+So softly that she surprised the man before he could raise his head
+from the keyhole. He saw that he was detected, and for an instant he
+scowled at her in the half-light of the narrow passage, uncertain what
+to do. Mary beckoned to him, and went down before him to the library.
+
+There she turned on him. "Shut the door," she said. "You were
+listening! Don't deny it. You have acted disgracefully, and it will be
+my duty to tell Mr. Audley what has happened."
+
+The man, sallow with fear, tried to brave it out.
+
+"You will only make mischief, Miss," he said sullenly. "You'll come
+near to killing the master."
+
+"Very good!" Mary said, quivering with indignation. "Then instead of
+telling Mr. Audley I shall tell Mr. Basset. It will be for him to
+decide whether Mr. Audley shall know. Go now."
+
+But Toft held his ground. "You'll be doing a bad day's work, Miss," he
+said earnestly. "I want to run straight." He raised his hand to his
+forehead, which was wet with perspiration. "I swear I do! I want to
+run straight."
+
+"Straight!" Mary cried in scorn. "And you listen at doors!"
+
+The man made a last attempt to soften her. "For God's sake, be warned,
+Miss!" he cried. "Don't drive me. If you knew as much as I do----"
+
+"I should not listen to learn the rest!" replied Mary without pity.
+"That is enough. Please to see that lunch is ready." She pointed to
+the door. She was not an Audley for nothing.
+
+Toft gave way and went, and she remained alone, perplexed as well as
+angry. Mrs. Toft and Etruria were good simple folk; she liked them.
+But Toft had puzzled her from the first. He was so silent, so
+secretive, he was for ever appearing without warning and vanishing
+without noise. She had often suspected that he spied on his master.
+
+But she had never caught him in the act, and the certainty that he did
+so, filled her with dismay. It was fortunate, she thought, that Basset
+was there, and that she could consult him. And the instant that he
+appeared, forgetting their quarrel and the strained relations between
+them, she poured out her story. Toft was ungrateful, treacherous, a
+danger! With Mr. Audley so helpless, the house so lonely, it
+frightened her.
+
+It was only when she had run on for some time that Basset's air of
+detachment struck her. He listened, with his back to the fire, and his
+eyes bent on the floor, but he did not speak until she had told her
+story, and expressed her misgivings.
+
+When he did, "I am not surprised," he said. "I've suspected this for
+some time. But I don't know that anything can be done."
+
+"Do you mean that--you would do nothing?"
+
+"The truth is," he answered, "Toft is pretty far in his master's
+confidence. And what he does not know he wishes to know. When he knows
+it, he will find it a mare's nest. The truth--as I see it at any
+rate--is that your uncle is possessed by a craze. He wants me to help
+him in it. I cannot. I have told him so, firmly and finally, to-day.
+Well, I suspect that he will now turn to Toft. I hope not, but he may,
+and if we report the man's misconduct, it will only precipitate
+matters and hasten an understanding. That is the position, and if I
+were you, I should let the matter rest."
+
+"You mean that?" she exclaimed.
+
+"I do."
+
+"But--but I have spoken to Toft!" Her eyes were bright with anger.
+
+He kept his on the floor. It was only by maintaining the distance
+between them that he could hope to hide what he felt. "Still I would
+let him be," he repeated. "I do not think that Toft is dangerous. He
+has surprised one half of a secret, and he wishes to learn the other
+half. That is all."
+
+"And I am to take no notice?"
+
+"I believe that will be your wisest course."
+
+She was shocked, and she was still more hurt. He pushed her aside, he
+pushed her out of his confidence, out of her uncle's confidence! His
+manner, his indifference, his stolidity showed that she had not only
+killed his fancy for her at a stroke, but that he now disliked her.
+
+And still she protested. "But I must tell my uncle!" she cried.
+
+"I think I would not," he repeated. "But there--" he paused and looked
+at his watch--"I am afraid that if you are going to give me lunch I
+must sit down. I've a long journey before me."
+
+Then she saw that no more could be said, and with an effort she
+repressed her feelings. "Yes," she said, "I was forgetting. You must
+be hungry."
+
+She led the way to the dining-room, and sat down with him, Toft
+waiting on them with the impassive ease of the trained man. While they
+ate, Basset talked of indifferent things, of his journey from town, of
+the roads, of London, of Colonel Mottisfont--an interesting man whom
+he had met in the train. And as he talked, and she made lifeless
+answers, her indignation cooled, and her heart sank.
+
+She could have cried, indeed. She had lost her friend. He was gone to
+an immense distance. He was willing to leave her to deal with her
+troubles and difficulties, it might be, with her dangers. In killing
+his love with cruel words--and how often had she repented, not of the
+thing, but of the manner!--she had killed every feeling, every liking,
+that he had entertained for her.
+
+It was clear that this was so, for to the last he maintained his
+coldness and indifference. When he was gone, when the sound of the
+chaise-wheels had died in the distance, she felt more lonely than she
+had ever felt in her life. In her Paris days she had had no reason to
+blame herself, and all the unturned leaves of life awaited her. Now
+she had turned over one page, and marred it, she had won a friend and
+lost him, she had spoiled the picture, which she had not wished to
+keep!
+
+Her uncle lay upstairs, ready to bear, but hardly welcoming her
+company. He had his secrets, and she stood outside them. She sat
+below, enclosed in and menaced by the silence of the house. Yet it was
+not fear that she felt so much as a sadness, a great depression, a
+gray despondency. She craved something, she did not know what. She
+only knew that she was alone--and sad.
+
+She tried to fight against the feeling. She tried to read, to work,
+even to interest herself in Toft and his mystery. She failed. And at
+last she gave up the attempt and with her elbows on her knees and her
+eyes on the fire she fell to musing, the ticking of the tall clock and
+the fall of the embers the only sounds that broke the stillness of the
+shadowy room.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+ TOFT AT THE BUTTERFLIES
+
+
+Basset's view of Toft, if it did not hit, came very near the mark. For
+many years the man had served his master with loyalty, the relations
+between them being such as were common in days when servants stayed
+long in a place and held themselves a part of the family. The master
+had been easy, the man had had no ambitions beyond those of his
+fellows, and no temptations except those which turned upon the
+cellar-book.
+
+But a year before Mary Audley's arrival two things had happened. First
+the curate had fallen in love with Etruria, and the fact had become
+known to her father, to whom the girl was everything. Her refinement,
+her beauty, her goodness were his secret delight. And the thought that
+she might become a lady, that she might sit at the table at which he
+served had taken hold of the austere man's mind and become a passion.
+He was ready to do anything and to suffer anything to bring this
+about. Nor was he deceived when Etruria put the offer aside. She was
+nothing if not transparent, and he was too fond of her not to see that
+her happiness was bound up with the man who had stooped to woo her.
+
+He was not blind to the difficulties or to the clergyman's poverty.
+But he saw that Colet, poor as he was, could raise his daughter in the
+social scale; and he spent long hours in studying how the marriage
+might be brought about. He hugged the matter to him, and brooded over
+it, but he never discovered his thoughts or his hopes either to his
+wife, or to Etruria.
+
+Then one day the sale of a living happened to be discussed in his
+presence, and as he went, solemn and silent, round the table he
+listened. He learned that livings could be bought. He learned that the
+one in question, with its house and garden and three hundred a year,
+had fetched a thousand guineas, and from that day Toft's aim was by
+hook or crook to gain a thousand guineas. He revelled in impossible
+dreams of buying a living, of giving it to Etruria, and of handing
+maid and dowry to the fortunate man who was to make her a lady.
+
+There have been more sordid and more selfish ambitions.
+
+But a thousand guineas was a huge sum to the manservant. True, he had
+saved a hundred and twenty pounds, and for his position in life he
+held himself a rich man. But a thousand guineas? He turned the matter
+this way and that, and sometimes he lost hope, and sometimes he pinned
+his faith to a plan that twenty-four hours showed to be futile. All
+the time his wife who lay beside him, his daughter who waited on him,
+his master on whom he waited, were as far from seeing into his mind as
+if they had lived in another planet.
+
+Then the second thing happened. He surprised, wholly by chance, a
+secret which gave him a hold over John Audley. Under other
+circumstances he might have been above using the advantage; as it was,
+he was tempted. He showed his hand, a sum of four hundred pounds was
+named; for a week he fancied that he had performed half his task. Then
+his master explained with a gentle smile that to know and to prove
+were two things, and that whereas Toft had for a time been able to do
+both, John Audley had now destroyed the evidence. The master had in
+fact been too sly for the man, and Toft found himself pretty well
+where he had been. In the end Audley thought it prudent to give him a
+hundred pounds, which did but whet his desire and sharpen his wits.
+
+For he had now tasted blood. He had made something by a secret. There
+might be others to learn. He kept his eyes open, and soon he became
+aware of his master's disappearances. He tracked him, he played the
+spy, he discovered that John Audley was searching for something in the
+Great House. The words that the old man let fall, while half-conscious
+in the Yew Walk, added to his knowledge, and at the same time scared
+him. A moment later, and Lord Audley might have known as much as he
+knew--and perhaps more!
+
+For he did not as yet know all, and it was in the attempt to complete
+his knowledge that Mary had caught him listening at the door. The blow
+was a sharp one. He was still so far unspoiled, still so near the old
+Toft that he could not bear that his wife and daughter should learn
+the depth to which he had fallen. And John Audley? What would he do,
+if Mary told him?
+
+Toft could not guess. He knew that his master was barely sane, if he
+was sane; but he knew also that he was utterly inhuman. John Audley
+would put him and his family to the door without mercy if that seemed
+to him the safer course. And that meant an end of all his plans for
+Etruria, for Colet, for them all.
+
+True, he might use such power as he had. But it was imperfect, and in
+its use he must come to grips with one who had shown himself his
+better both in courage and cunning. He had imbibed a strong fear of
+his master, and he could not without a qualm contemplate a struggle
+with him.
+
+For a week after his detection by Mary, he went about his work in a
+fever of anxiety. And nothing happened; it was that which tried him.
+More than once he was on the point of throwing himself at her feet, of
+telling her all he knew, of imploring her pardon. It was only her
+averted eyes and cold tone that held him back.
+
+Such a crisis makes a man either better or worse, and it made Toft
+worse. At the end of three days a chance word put a fine point on his
+fears and stung him to action. He might not know enough to face John
+Audley, but he thought that he knew enough to sell his secret--in the
+other camp. His lordship was young and probably malleable. He would go
+to him and strike a bargain.
+
+Arrived at this point the man did not hide from himself that he was
+going to do a hateful thing. He thought of his wife and her wonder
+could she know. He thought of Etruria's mild eyes and her goodness.
+And he shivered. But it was for her. It was for them. Within
+twenty-four hours he was in Riddsley.
+
+As he passed the Maypole, where Mr. Colet had his lodgings, he noticed
+that the town wore an unusual aspect. Groups of men stood talking in
+the doorway, or on the doorsteps. A passing horseman was shouting to a
+man at a window. Nearer the middle of the town the stir was greater.
+About the saddler's door, about the steps leading up to the Audley
+Arms, and round the yard of the inn, knots of men argued and
+gesticulated. Toft asked the saddler what it was.
+
+"Haven't you heard?"
+
+"No. What's the news?"
+
+"The General Election's off!" The saddler proclaimed it with an
+inflamed look. "Peel's in again! And damn me, after this," he
+continued, "there's nothing I won't swallow! He come in in the farming
+interest, and the hunting interest, and the racing interest, and the
+gentlemanly interest, that I live by, and you too, Mr. Toft! And it
+was bad enough when he threw it up! But to go in again and to take our
+money and do the Radicals' work!" The saddler spat on the brick
+pavement. "Why, there was never such a thing heard of in the 'varsal
+world! Never! If Tamworth don't blush for him and his pigs turn pink,
+I'm d--d, and that's all."
+
+Toft had to ask half a dozen questions before he grasped the position.
+Gradually he learned that after Peel had resigned the Whigs had tried
+to form a government; that they had failed, and that now Peel was to
+come in again, expressly to repeal the Corn Laws. The Corn Laws which
+he had taken office to support, and to the maintenance of which his
+party was pledged!
+
+The thing was not much in Toft's way, nor his interest in it great,
+but as he passed along he caught odds and ends of conversation. "I
+don't believe a word of it!" cried an angry man. "The Radicals have
+invented it!" "Like enough!" replied another. "Like enough! There's
+naught they wouldn't do!" "Well, after all," suggested a third in a
+milder tone, "cheap bread is something." "What? If you've got no money
+to buy it? You're a fool! I tell you it'll be the ruin of Riddsley!"
+"You're right there, Joe!" answered the first speaker. "You're right!
+There'll be no farmer for miles round'll pay his way!"
+
+At the door of Mr. Stubbs's office three excited clients were
+clamoring for entrance; an elderly clerk with a high bridge to his
+nose was withstanding them. Before the Mechanics' Institute the
+secretary, a superior person of Manchester views, was talking
+pompously to a little group. "We must take in the whole field," Toft
+heard him say. "If you'll read Mr. Carlyle's tract on----" Toft lost
+the rest. The Institute readers belonged mainly to Hatton's Works or
+Banfield's, and the secretary taught in an evening school. He was
+darkly suspected of being a teetotaller, but it had never been proved
+against him.
+
+Toft began to wonder if he had chosen his time well, but he was near
+The Butterflies and he hardened his heart; to retreat now were to dub
+himself coward. He told the maid that he came from the Gatehouse, and
+that he was directed to deliver a letter into his lordship's own hand,
+and in a moment he found himself mounting the shallow carpeted stairs.
+In comparison with the Gatehouse, the house was modern, elegant,
+luxurious, the passages were warm.
+
+When he was ushered in, his lordship, a dressing-gown cast over a
+chair beside him as if he had just put on his coat, was writing near
+the fireplace. After an interval that seemed long to Toft, who eyed
+his heavy massiveness with a certain dismay, he laid down his pen, sat
+back, and looked at the servant.
+
+"From the Gatehouse?" he asked, after a leisurely survey.
+
+"Yes, my lord," Toft answered respectfully. "I was with Mr. Audley
+when he was taken ill in the Yew Walk."
+
+"To be sure! I thought I knew your face. You've a letter for me?"
+
+Toft hesitated. "I wished to see you, my lord," he said. The thing was
+not as easy as he had hoped it would be; the man was more formidable.
+"On a matter of business."
+
+Audley raised his eyebrows. "Business?" he said. "Isn't it Mr. Stubbs
+you want to see?"
+
+"No, my lord," Toft answered. But the sweat broke out on his forehead.
+What if his lordship took a high tone, ordered him out, and reported
+the matter to his master? Too late it struck Toft that a gentleman
+might take that line.
+
+"Well, be quick," Audley replied. Then in a different tone, "You don't
+come from Miss Audley?"
+
+"No, my lord."
+
+"Then what is it?"
+
+Toft turned his hat in his hands. "I have information"--it was with
+difficulty he could control his voice--"which it is to your lordship's
+interest to have."
+
+There was a pregnant pause. "Oh!" the young man said at last. "And you
+come--to sell it?"
+
+Toft nodded, unable to speak. Yet he was getting on as well as could
+be expected.
+
+"Rather an unusual position, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, my lord."
+
+"The information should be unusual?"
+
+"It is, my lord."
+
+Lord Audley smiled. "Well," he answered, "I'll say this, my man. If
+you are going to sell me a spavined horse, don't! It will not be to
+your advantage. What's it all about?"
+
+"Mr. Audley's claim, my lord."
+
+Audley had expected this, yet he could not quite mask the effect which
+the statement made upon him. The thing that he had foreseen and
+feared, that had haunted him in the small hours and been as it were a
+death's-head at his feast, was taking shape. But he was quick to
+recover himself, and "Oh!" said he. "That's it, is it! Don't you know
+that that's all over, my man?"
+
+"I think not, my lord."
+
+The peer took up a paper-knife and toyed with it. "Well," he said,
+"what is it? Come, I don't buy a pig in a poke."
+
+"Mr. Audley has found----"
+
+"Found, eh?" raising his eyebrows.
+
+Toft corrected himself. "He has in his power papers that upset your
+lordship's case. I can still enable you to keep those papers in your
+hands."
+
+Audley threw down the paper-cutter. "They are certainly worthless," he
+said. His voice was contemptuous, but there was a hard look in his
+eyes.
+
+"Mr. Audley thinks otherwise."
+
+"But he has not seen them?"
+
+"He knows what's in them, my lord. He has been searching for them for
+weeks."
+
+The young man weighed this, and Toft's courage rose, and his
+confidence. The trumps were in his hand, and though for a moment he
+had shrunk before the other's heavy jaw he was glad now that he had
+come; more glad when the big man after a long pause asked quietly,
+"What do you want?"
+
+"Five hundred pounds, my lord."
+
+The other laughed, and Toft did not like the laugh. "Indeed? Five
+hundred pounds? That's a good deal of money!"
+
+"The information is worth that, or it is worth nothing."
+
+"I quite agree!" the peer answered lightly. "You're a wit, my man. But
+that's not saying you've a good case. However, I'll put you to the
+test. You know where the papers are?"
+
+"I do, my lord."
+
+"Very good. There's a piece of paper. Write on one side the precise
+place where they lie. I will write on the other a promise to pay 500
+if the papers are found in that place, and are of the value you
+assert. That is a fair offer."
+
+Toft stood irresolute. He thought hard.
+
+My lord pushed the paper across. "Come!" he said; "write! Or I'll
+write first, if that is your trouble." With decision he seized a
+quill, held it poised a moment, then he wrote four lines and signed
+them with a flourish, added the date, and read them to himself. With a
+grim smile he pushed the paper across to Toft. "There," he said. "What
+more do you want, my man, than that?"
+
+Toft took the paper and read what was written on it, from the "In
+consideration of," that began the sentence, to the firm signature
+"Audley of Beaudelays" that closed it. He did not speak.
+
+"Come! You can't want anything more than that!" my lord said. "You
+have only to write, read me the secret, and keep the paper until it is
+redeemed."
+
+"Yes, my lord."
+
+"Then take the pen. Of course the place must be precise. I am not
+going to pull down Beaudelays House to find a box of papers that I do
+not believe is there!"
+
+Toft's face was gray, the sweat stood on his lip. "I did not say," he
+muttered, the paper rustling in his unsteady hand, "that they were in
+Beaudelays House."
+
+"No?" Audley replied. "Perhaps not. And for the matter of that, it is
+not a question of saying anything. It is a question of writing. You
+can write, I suppose?"
+
+Toft did not speak. He could not speak. He had supposed that the power
+to put his lordship on the scent would be the same as pulling down the
+fox. When he had said that the papers were in the house, that they
+were behind a wall, that Mr. Audley knew where they were, he would
+have earned--he thought--his money!
+
+But he had not known the man with whom he had to deal. And challenged
+to set down the place where the papers lay, he knew that he could not
+do it. In the house? Behind a wall? He saw now that that would not do.
+That would not satisfy the big smiling gentleman who sat opposite him,
+amused at the dilemma in which he found himself.
+
+He knew that he was cornered, and he lost his countenance and his
+manners. He swore.
+
+The young man laughed. "The biter bit," he said. "Five hundred pounds
+you said, didn't you? I wonder whether I ought to send for the
+constable? Or tell Mr. Audley? That would be wiser perhaps? What do
+you think you deserve, my man?"
+
+Toft stretched out a shaking arm towards the paper. But my lord was
+before him. His huge hand fell on it. He tore it across and across,
+and threw the pieces under the table.
+
+"No," he said, "that won't do! You will write at a venture and if you
+are right you will claim the money, and if you are wrong you will have
+this paper to show that I bargained with you. But I never meant to
+bargain with you, my good rascal. I knew you were a fraud. I knew it
+from the beginning. And now I've only one thing to say. Either you
+will tell me freely what you know, and in that case I shall say
+nothing. Or I report you to your master. That's my last word."
+
+Toft shook from head to foot. He had done a hateful thing, he had been
+defeated, and exposure threatened him. As far as his master was
+concerned he could face it. But his wife, his daughter? Who thought
+him honest, loyal, who thought him a man! Who believed in him! How
+could he, how would he face them, if this tale were told?
+
+My lord saw the change in him, saw how he shrank, and, smiling, he
+fancied that he had the man in his grasp, fancied that he would tell
+what he knew, and tell it for nothing. And twice Toft opened his lips
+to speak, and twice no words came. For at the last moment, in this
+strait, what there was of good in him--and there was good--rose up,
+and had the better; had the better, reinforced perhaps by his hatred
+of the heavy smiling face that gloated upon him.
+
+For at the last moment, "No, my lord," he said desperately, "I'll not
+speak. I'm d--d if I do! You may do what you like."
+
+And before his lordship, taken by surprise, could interpose, the
+servant had turned and made for the door. He was half-way down the
+stairs before the other had risen from his seat. He had escaped. He
+was clear for the time, and safe in the road he breathed more freely.
+But he had gone a hundred yards on his way before he remarked that he
+was in the open air, or bethought himself to put on his hat.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+ MY LORD SPEAKS
+
+
+For a few moments Audley had certainly hoped that he was going to
+learn all that Toft knew, and to learn it for nothing. He had been
+baulked in this. But when he came to think over the matter he was not
+ill content with himself, nor with his conduct of the interview. He
+had dealt with the matter with presence of mind, and in the only safe
+way; and he had taught the man a lesson. "He knows by this time," he
+reflected, "that if I am a lord, I am not a fool!"
+
+But this mood did not last long, and it was succeeded by one less
+cheerful. The death's-head had never been wanting at his feast. The
+family tradition which had come down to him with his blood had never
+ceased to haunt him, and in the silence of the night he had many a
+time heard John Audley at work seeking for the means to displace him.
+Even the great empty house had seemed to mock his pretensions.
+
+But until the last month his fears had been vague and shadowy, and in
+his busy hours he had laughed at them. He was Lord Audley, he sat, he
+voted, the doors of White's, of Almack's were open to him. In town he
+was a personage, in the country a divinity still hedged him, no
+tradesman spoke to him save hat in hand. Then, lately, the traces
+which he had found in the Great House had given a shape to his fears;
+and within the last hour he had learned their solidity. Sane or mad,
+John Audley was upon his track, bent upon displacing him, bent upon
+ruining him; and this very day the man might be laying his hand upon
+the thing he needed.
+
+Audley did not doubt the truth of Toft's story. It confirmed his fears
+only too well; and the family tradition--that too weighed with him. He
+sat for a long time staring before him, then, uneasy and restless, he
+rose and paced the floor. He went to and fro, to and fro, until
+by-and-by he came to a stand before one of the windows. He drummed
+with his fingers on the glass. There was one way, certainly. Stubbs
+had said so, and Stubbs was right. There was one way, if he could make
+up his mind to the limitations it would impose upon him. If he could
+make up his mind to be a poor man.
+
+The window at which he stood looked on a road of quiet dignity, a
+little removed from the common traffic of the town. But the windows,
+looking sideways, commanded also a more frequented thoroughfare which
+crossed this street. His thoughts far away and sombrely engaged, the
+young man watched the stream of passers, as it trickled across the
+distant opening.
+
+Suddenly his eyes recalled his mind to the present. He started,
+turned, in three strides he was beside the hearth. He rang the bell
+twice, the signal for his man. He waited impatiently.
+
+"My hat and coat!" he cried to the servant. "Quick, I'm in a hurry!"
+Like most men who have known vicissitudes he had a superstitious side,
+and the figure which he had seen pass across the end of the road had
+appeared so aptly, so timely, had had so much the air of an answer to
+his doubts that he took it for an inspiration.
+
+He ran down the stairs, but he knew that his comings and goings were
+marked, and once outside the house he controlled his impatience. He
+walked slowly, humming a tune and swaying his cane, and it was a very
+stately gentleman taking the air and acknowledging with courtesy the
+respectful salutations of the passers, who came on Mary Audley as she
+turned from Dr. Pepper's door in the High Street.
+
+He stood. "Miss Audley!" he cried.
+
+Mary was flushed with exercise, ruffled by the wind, travel-stained.
+But she would have cared little for these things if she could have
+governed the blood that rose to her cheeks at his sudden appearance.
+To mask her confusion she rushed into speech.
+
+"You cannot be more surprised than I am," she said. "My uncle is not
+so well to-day, and in a panic about his medicine. Toft, who should
+have come in to town to fetch it, was not to be found, so I had to
+come."
+
+"And you have walked in?"
+
+Smiling, she showed him her boots. "And I am presently going to walk
+out," she said.
+
+"You will never do it?"
+
+"Before dark? No, perhaps not!" She raised her hand and put back a
+tress of hair which had strayed from its fellows. "And I shall be
+tired. But I shall be much surprised if I cannot walk ten miles at a
+pinch."
+
+"I shall be surprised if you walk ten miles to-day," he retorted. "My
+plans for you are quite different. Have you got what you came to
+fetch?"
+
+She had steadied herself, and was by this time at her ease. She made a
+little grimace. "No," she said. "It will not be ready for quarter of
+an hour."
+
+He rang Dr. Pepper's bell. An awestruck apprentice, who had watched
+the interview through the dusty window of the surgery, showed himself.
+
+"Be good enough to send the medicine for Miss Audley to Mrs.
+Jenkinson's," Audley said. "You understand?"
+
+"Yes, my lord! Certainly, my lord!" She was going to protest. He
+turned to her, silenced her. "And now I take possession of you," he
+said, supremely careless what the lad heard. "You are coming to The
+Butterflies to take tea, or sherry, or whatever you take when you have
+walked five miles."
+
+"Oh, Lord Audley!"
+
+"And then I am going to drive you as far as the old Cross, and walk up
+the hill with you--as far as I choose."
+
+"Oh, but I cannot!" Mary cried, coloring charmingly, but whether with
+pleasure or embarrassment she could not tell. She only knew that his
+ridiculous way of taking possession of her, the very masterfulness of
+it, moved her strangely. "I cannot indeed. What would my uncle say?"
+
+"I don't know, and I don't care!" he replied, swinging his walking
+cane, and smiling as he towered above her.
+
+"He may go hang--for once!"
+
+She hesitated. "It is very good of you," she said. "I confess I did
+not look forward to the walk back. But----"
+
+"There is no--but," he replied. "And no walk back! It is arranged. It
+is time--" his eyes dwelt kindly on her as she turned with him--"it
+is time that some one took it in hand to arrange things for you.
+Five miles in and five miles out over dirty roads on a winter
+afternoon--and Miss Audley! No, no! And now--this way, please!"
+
+She yielded, she could not tell why, except that it was difficult to
+resist him, and not unpleasant to obey him. And after all, why should
+she not go with him? She had been feeling fagged and tired, depressed,
+moreover, by her uncle's fears. The low-lying fields, the town, the
+streets, all dingy under a gray autumn sky, had given her no welcome.
+
+And her thoughts, too, had been dun-colored. She had felt very lonely
+the last few days, doubtful of the future, without aim, hipped. And
+now in a moment all seemed changed. She was no longer alone, nor
+fearful. The streets were no longer dingy nor dreary. There were still
+pleasant things in the world, kindness, and thought for others, and
+friendship and--and tea and cake! Was it wonderful that as she walked
+along beside my lord her spirits rose? That she felt an unaccountable
+relief, and in the reaction of the moment smiled and sparkled more
+than her wont? That the muddy brick pavement, the low-browed shops,
+the leafless trees all seemed brighter than before, and that even the
+butcher's stall became almost a thing of beauty?
+
+And he responded famously. He swung his stick, he laughed, he was gay.
+"Don't pretend!" he said. "I see that you were glad enough to meet
+me!"
+
+"And the tea and cake!" she replied. "After five miles who would not
+be glad to meet them?"
+
+"Exactly! It is my belief that if I had not met you, you would have
+fallen by the way. You want some one to look after you, Miss Audley."
+The name was a caress.
+
+Nor was the pleasure all their own. Great was the excitement of the
+townsfolk as they passed. "His lordship and a young lady?" cried half
+Riddsley, running to the windows. "Quick, or you will miss them!" Some
+wondered who she could be; more had seen her at church and could
+answer. "Miss Audley? The young lady who had come to live at the
+Gatehouse? Indeed! You don't say so?" For every soul in Riddsley, over
+twelve years old, was versed in the Audley history, knew all about the
+suit, and could tell off the degrees of kindred as easily as they
+could tell the distance from the Audley Arms to the Portcullis. "Mr.
+Peter Audley's daughter who lived in Paris? Lady-in-waiting to a
+Princess. And now walking with his lordship as if she had known him
+all her life! What would Mr. John say? D'you see how gay he looks! Not
+a bit what he is when he speaks to us! Wonder whether there's anything
+in it!" And so on, and so on, with tit-bits from the history of Mary's
+father, and choice eccentricities from the life of John Audley.
+
+Mrs. Jenkinson's amazement, as she espied them coming up the path to
+the house, was a thing by itself. It was such that she set her door
+ajar that she might see them pass through the hall. She was all of a
+twitter, she said afterwards. And poor Jane and poor Sarah--who were
+out! What a miss they were having! It was not thrice in the twelve
+months that his lordship brought a lady to the house.
+
+A greater miss, indeed, it turned out, than she thought. For to her
+gratification Lord Audley tapped at her door. He pushed it open. "Mrs.
+Jenkinson," he said pleasantly, "this is my cousin, Miss Audley, who
+is good enough to take a cup of your excellent tea with me, if you
+will make it. She has walked in from the Gatehouse."
+
+Mrs. Jenkinson was a combination of an eager, bright-eyed bird and a
+stout, short lady in dove-colored silk--if such a thing can be
+imagined; and the soul of good-nature. She took Mary by both hands,
+beamed upon her, and figuratively took her to her bosom. "A little
+cake and wine, my dear," she chirruped. "After a long walk! And then
+tea. To be sure, my dear! I knew your father, Mr. Peter Audley, a
+dear, good gentleman. You would like to wash your hands? Yes, my dear!
+Not that you are not--and his lordship will wait for us upstairs. Yes,
+there's a step. I knew your father, to be sure, to be sure. A new
+brush, my dear. And now will you let me--not that your sweet face
+needs any ornament! Yes, I talk too much--but, there, my love, when
+you are as old----"
+
+She was a simple soul, and because her tongue rarely stopped she might
+have been thought to see nothing. But women, unlike men, can do two
+things at once, and little escaped her twinkling spectacles. As she
+told her sister later, "My dear, I saw it was spoons from the first.
+She sparkled all over, bless her innocent heart! And he, if she had
+been a duchess, could not have waited on her more elegant--well,
+elegantly, Sally, if you like, but we can't all talk like you. They
+thought, the dear creatures, that I saw nothing; but once he said
+something too low for me to hear and she looked up at him, and her
+pretty eyes were like stars. And he looked--well, Sally, I could not
+tell you how he looked!"
+
+"I am not sure that it would be proper," the spinster demurred.
+
+"Ah, well, it was as pretty a thing as you'd wish to see," the good
+creature ran on, drumming with her fingers on the lap of her silk
+gown. "And she, bless her, I dare say she was all of a twitter, but
+she didn't show it. No airs or graces either--but there, an Audley has
+no need! Why, God bless me, I said something about the Princess and
+what company she must have seen, and what a change for her, and she up
+and said--I am sure I loved her for it!--that she had been no more
+than a governess! My dear, an Audley a governess! I fancied my lord
+wasn't quite pleased, and very natural! But when a man is spoons----"
+
+"My dear sister!"
+
+"Vulgar? Well, perhaps so, I know I run on, but gentle or simple,
+they're the same when they're in love! And Jane will be glad to hear
+that she took two pieces of the sultana and two cups of tea, and he
+watching every piece she put in her mouth, and she coloring up, once
+or twice, so that it did my heart good to see them, the pretty dears.
+Jane will be pleased. And there might have been nothing but seed cake
+in the house. I shall remember more presently, but I was in such a
+twitter!"
+
+"What did she call him?" Miss Sarah asked.
+
+"To be sure, my dear, that was what I was going to tell you! I
+listened, and not a single thing did she call him. But once, when he
+gave her some cake, I heard him call her Mary, for all the world as if
+it was a bit of sugar in his mouth. And there came a kind of quiver
+over her pretty face, and she looked at her plate as much as to say it
+was a new thing. And I said to myself 'Philip and Mary'--out of the
+old school-books you know, but who they were I don't remember. But
+it's my opinion," Mrs. Jenkinson continued, rubbing her nose with the
+end of her spectacles, "that he had spoken just before they came in,
+Sally."
+
+"You don't say so?" Sarah cried.
+
+"If you ask me, there was a kind of softness about them both! Law,
+when I think what you and Jane missed through going to that stupid
+Institute! I am sure you'll never forgive yourselves!"
+
+The good lady had not missed much herself, but she was mistaken in
+thinking that the two had come to an understanding. Indeed when,
+leaving the warmth of her presence behind them, they drove out of
+town, with the servant seated with folded arms behind them and Mary
+snugly tucked in beside my lord, a new constraint began to separate
+them. The excitement of the meeting had waned, the fillip of the
+unwonted treat had lost its power. A depression for which she could
+not account beset Mary as they rolled through the dull outskirts and
+faced the flat mistridden pastures and the long lines of willows. On
+his side doubt held him silent. He had found it pleasant to come to
+the brink, he had not been blind to Mary's smiles and her rare
+blushes. But the one step farther--that could not be re-trodden, and
+it was in the nature of the man to hesitate at the last, and to
+consider if he were getting full value.
+
+So, as they drove through the dusk, now noiselessly over sodden
+leaves, now drumming along the hard road, the hint of a chill fell
+between them. Mary's thoughts went forward to the silent house and the
+lonely rooms, and she chid herself for ingratitude. She had had her
+pleasure, she had had an unwonted treat. What was wrong with her? What
+more did she want?
+
+It was nearly dark, and not many words had passed when Lord Audley
+pulled up the horses at the old Cross. The man leapt down and was
+going to help Mary to alight, when his master bade him take the
+box-seat and the reins.
+
+Mary remonstrated. "Oh, don't get down, please!" she cried. "Please!
+It is nothing to the house from here."
+
+"It is half a mile if it is a yard," he said. "And it is nearly dark.
+I am going with you." He bade the man walk the horses up and down.
+
+She ventured another protest, but he put it aside. He threw back the
+rug and lifted her down. For a moment he stamped about and stretched
+himself. Then "Come, Mary," he said. It was an order.
+
+She knew then what was at hand. And though she had a minute before
+looked forward with regret to the parting, all her thought now was how
+she might escape to the Gatehouse. It became a refuge. Her heart, as
+she started to walk beside him, beat so quickly that she could not
+speak. She was thankful that it was dark, and that he could not read
+her agitation in her face.
+
+He did not speak himself for some minutes. Then "Mary," he said
+abruptly, looking straight before him, "I am rather one for taking
+than asking, and that stands in my way now. When I've wanted a thing
+I've generally taken it. Now I want a thing I can't take--without
+asking. And I feel that I'm not good at the asking. But I want it
+badly, and I must do the best I can. I love you, Mary. I love you, and
+I want you for my wife."
+
+She could not find a word. When he went on his tone was lower.
+
+"I'm rather a lonely man," he said. "You didn't know that, or think
+it? But it is true. And such an hour as we have spent to-day is not
+mine often. It lies with you to say if I am going to have more of
+them. I might tell you with truth that I haven't much to offer my
+wife. That if I am Audley of Beaudelays, I am the poorest Audley that
+ever was. That my wife will be no great lady, and will step into no
+golden shoes. The butterflies are moths, Mary, nowadays, and if I am
+ever to be much she will have to help me. But I will tell no lies, my
+dear!" He turned to her then and stopped; and perforce, though her
+knees trembled, she had to stand also, and face him as he looked down
+at her. "I am not going to pretend that what I have to offer isn't
+enough. For you are lonely like me; you have no one but John Audley to
+look to, and I am big enough and strong enough to take care of you.
+And I will take care of you--if you will let me. If you will say the
+word, Mary?"
+
+He loomed above her in the darkness. He seemed already to possess her.
+She tried to think, tried to ask herself if she loved him, if she
+loved him enough; but the fancy for him which she had had from the
+beginning, that and his masterfulness swept her irresistibly towards
+him. She was lonely--more lonely than ever of late, and to whom was
+she to look? Who else had been as good to her, as kind to her, as
+thoughtful for her, as he who now wooed her so honestly, who offered
+her all he had to offer? She hesitated, and he saw that she hesitated.
+
+"Come, we've got to have this out," he said bluntly. And he put his
+hand on her shoulder. "We stand alone, both of us, you and I. We're
+the last of the old line, and I want you for my wife, Mary! With you I
+can do something, with you I believe that I can make something of my
+life! Without you--but there, if you say no, I won't take it! I won't
+take it, and I am going to have you, if not to-day, to-morrow, and if
+not to-morrow, the next day! Make no mistake about that!"
+
+She tried to fence with him. "I have not a penny," she faltered.
+
+"I don't ask you for a penny."
+
+Her instinct was still to escape. "You are Lord Audley," she said,
+"and I am a poor relation. Won't you--don't you think that you will
+repent presently!"
+
+"That's my business! If that be all--if there's no one else----"
+
+"No, there's no one else," she admitted. "But----"
+
+"_But_ be hanged!" he cried. "If there's no one else you are mine."
+And he passed his arm round her.
+
+For a moment she stepped back. "No!" she protested, raising her hands
+to push him off. "Please--please let me think."
+
+He let her be, for already he knew that he had won; and perhaps in his
+own mind he was beginning to doubt the wisdom of the step. "My uncle?
+Have you thought of him?" she asked. "What will he say?"
+
+"I have not thought of him," he cried grandly, "and I am not going to
+think of him. I am thinking, my dear, only of you. Do you love me?"
+
+She stood silent, gazing at him.
+
+"Don't play with me!" he said. "I've a right to an answer."
+
+"I think I do," she said softly. "Yes--I think--no, wait; that is not
+all."
+
+"It is all."
+
+"No," between laughing and crying. "You are not giving me time. I want
+to think. You are carrying me by storm, sir."
+
+"And a good way, too!" he rejoined. Then she did let him take her, and
+for a few seconds she was in his arms. He crushed her to him, she felt
+all the world turning. But before he found her lips, the crack of a
+whip startled them, the creak of a wheel sliding round the corner
+warned them, she slipped from his arms.
+
+"You little wretch!" he said.
+
+Breathless, hardly knowing what she felt, or what storm shook her, she
+could not speak. The wagon came creaking past them, the driver
+clinging to the chain of the slipper. When it was gone by she found
+her voice. "It shall be as you will," she said, and her tone thrilled
+him. "But I want to think. It has been so sudden, I am frightened. I
+am frightened, and--yes, I think I am happy. But please to let me go
+now. I am safe here--in two minutes I shall be at home."
+
+He tried to keep her, but "Let me go now," she pleaded. "Later it
+shall be as you wish--always as you wish. But let me go now."
+
+He gave way then. He said a few words while he held her hands, and he
+said them very well. Then he let her go. Before the dusk hid her she
+turned and waved her hand, and he waved his. He stood, listening. He
+heard the sound of her footsteps grow fainter and fainter as she
+climbed the hill, until they were lost in the rustle of the wind
+through the undergrowth. At last he turned and trudged down the hill.
+
+"Well, I've done it," he muttered presently. "And Uncle John may find
+what he likes, damn him! After all, she's handsome enough to turn any
+man's head, and it makes me safe! But I'll go slow. I'll go slow now.
+There's no hurry."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ BLORE UNDER WEAVER
+
+
+Gratitude and liking, and the worship of strength which is as natural
+in a woman as the worship of beauty in a man, form no bad imitation of
+love, and often pass into love as imperceptibly as the brook becomes a
+river. The morning light brought Mary no repentance. Misgivings she
+had, as what lover has not, were the truth told. Was her love as
+perfect as Etruria's, as unselfish, as absorbing? She doubted. But in
+all honesty she hoped that it might become so; and when she dwelt on
+the man who had done so much for her, and thought so well for her, who
+had so much to offer and made so little of the offering, her heart
+swelled with gratitude, and if she did not love she fancied that she
+did.
+
+So much was changed for her! She had wondered more than once what
+would happen to her, if her uncle died. That fear was put from her.
+Toft--she had been vexed with Toft. How small a matter that seemed
+now! And Peter Basset? He had been kind to her, and a pang did pierce
+her heart on his account. But he had recovered very quickly, she
+reflected. He had shown himself cold enough and distant enough at his
+last visit! And then she smiled as she thought how differently her new
+lover had assailed her, with what force, what arrogance, what
+insistence--and yet with a force and arrogance and insistence to which
+it was pleasant to yield.
+
+She did not with all this forget that she would be Lady Audley, she,
+whose past had been so precarious, whose prospects had been so dark,
+whose fate it might have been to travel through life an obscure
+teacher! She had not been woman if she had not thought of this; nor if
+she had failed, when she thought of it, to breathe a prayer for the
+gallant lover who had found her and saved her, and had held it enough
+that she was an Audley. He might have chosen far and wide. He had
+chosen her.
+
+No wonder that Mrs. Toft saw a change in her. "Law, Miss," she
+remarked, when she came in to remove the breakfast. "One would think a
+ten-mile walk was the making of you! It's put a color into your cheeks
+that would shame a June rose! And to be sure," with a glance at the
+young lady's plate, "not much eaten either!"
+
+"I am not hungry, Mrs. Toft," Mary said meekly. "I drove back to the
+foot of the hill."
+
+"And I'd like to sort Toft for it! Ifs he who should have gone! He's
+upstairs now, keeping out of my way, and that grim and gray you'd
+think he'd seen a ghost! And 'Truria, silly girl, she's all of a
+quiver this morning. It's 'Mother, let me do this!' and 'Mother, I'll
+do that!' all because her reverend--not, as I tell her, that aught
+will ever come of it--has got a roof over his head at last."
+
+"But that's good news! Has Mr. Colet got some work?"
+
+"Not he, the silly man! Nor likely! There's mighty little work for
+them as go against the gentry. For what he's got he's to thank Mr.
+Basset."
+
+"Mr. Basset."
+
+"To be sure," Mrs. Toft answered, with a covert glance at the girl,
+"why not, Miss? Some talk and the wind goes by. There's plenty of
+those. And some say naught but do--and that's Mr. Basset. He's took in
+Mr. Colet till he can find a church. Etruria's that up about it, I
+tell her, smile before breakfast and sweat before night. And so she'll
+find it, I warrant!"
+
+"It is very good of Mr. Basset," Mary said gravely. And then, "Is that
+some one knocking, Mrs. Toft?"
+
+"It's well to have young ears!" Mrs. Toft took out the tray, and
+returned with a letter. "It's for you, Miss," she said. "The postman's
+late this morning, but cheap's a slow traveller. When a letter was a
+letter and cost ninepence it came to hand like a gentleman!"
+
+Mary waited to hear no more. She knew the handwriting, and as quickly
+as she could she escaped from the room. No one with any claim to taste
+used an envelope in those days, and to open a letter so that no rent
+might mar its fairness called for a care which she could not exercise
+in public.
+
+Alone, in her room, she opened it, and her eyes grew serious as they
+travelled down the page, which bore signs of haste.
+
+
+"Sweetheart," it began, and she thought that charming, "I do not ask
+if you reached the Gatehouse safely, for I listened and I must have
+heard, if harm befel you. I drove home as happy as a king, and grieved
+only that I had not had that of you which I had a right to have--damn
+that carter! This troubles me the more as I shall not see you again
+for a time, and if this does not disappoint you too, you're a
+deceiver! My plans are altered by to-day's news that Peel returns to
+office. In any event, I had to go to Seabourne's for Christmas, now I
+must be there for a meeting to-morrow and go from there to London on
+the same business. You would not have me desert my post, I am sure?
+Heaven knows how long I may be kept, possibly a fortnight, possibly
+more. But the moment I can I shall be with you.
+
+"Write to me at the Brunswick Htel, Dover Street. Sweetheart, I am
+yours, as you, my darling, are
+
+ "Philip's.
+
+"_P. S_.--I must put off any communication to your uncle till I can see
+him. So for the moment, mum!"
+
+
+Mary read the letter twice; the first time with eager eyes, the second
+time more calmly. Nothing was more natural, she told herself, than
+that her spirits should sink--Philip was gone. The walk with him, the
+talk which was to bring them nearer, and to make them better known to
+one another, stood over. The day that was to be so bright was clouded.
+
+But beyond this the letter itself fell a little, a very little, short
+of her expectations. The beginning was charming! But after that--was
+it her fancy, or was her lover's tone a little flippant, a little
+free, a little too easy? Did it lack that tender note of reassurance,
+that chivalrous thought for her, which she had a right to expect in a
+first letter? She was not sure.
+
+And as to her uncle. She must, of course, be guided by her lover, his
+will must be her law now; and it was reasonable that in John Audley's
+state of health the mode of communication should be carefully weighed.
+But she longed to be candid, she longed to be open; and in regard to
+one person she would be open. Basset had let her see that her
+treatment had cured him. At their last meeting he had been cold,
+almost unkind; he had left her to deal with Toft as she could. Still
+she owed him, if any one, the truth, and, were it only to set herself
+right in her own eyes, she must tell him. If the news did nothing else
+it would open the way for his return to the Gatehouse, and the telling
+would enable her to make the _amende_.
+
+The letter was not written on that day nor the next. But on the fourth
+day after Audley's departure it arrived at Blore, and lay for an hour
+on the dusty hall table amid spuds and powder-flasks and old
+itineraries. There Mr. Colet found it and another letter, and removed
+the two for safety to the parlor, where litter of a similar kind
+struggled for the upper hand with piles of books and dog's-eared
+Quarterlies. The decay of the Bassets dated farther back than the
+decline of the Audleys, and the gabled house under the shadow of
+Weaver was little better, if something larger, than a farm-house.
+There had been a library, but Basset had taken the best books to the
+Gatehouse. And there were in the closed drawing-room, and in some of
+the bedrooms, old family portraits, bad for the most part; the best
+lay in marble in Blore Church. But in the parlor, which was the
+living-room, hung only paintings of fat oxen and prize sheep; and the
+garden which ran up to the walls of the house, and in summer was a
+flood of color, lay in these days dank and lifeless, ebbing away from
+bee-skips and chicken-coops. The park had been ploughed during the
+great war, and now pined in thin pasture. The whole of the valley was
+still Basset land, but undrained in the bottom and light on the
+slopes, it made no figure in a rent-roll. The present owner had
+husbanded the place, and paid off charges, and cleared the estate, but
+he had been able to do no more. The place was a poor man's place,
+though for miles round men spoke to the owner bareheaded. He was
+"Basset of Blore," as much a part of Staffordshire as Burton Bridge or
+the Barbeacon. The memories of the illiterate are long.
+
+He had been walking the hill that morning with a dog and a gun, and
+between yearnings for the woman he loved, and longings for some plan
+of life, some object, some aim, he was in a most unhappy mood. At one
+moment he saw himself growing old, without the energy to help himself
+or others, still toying with trifles, the last and feeblest of his
+blood. At another he thought of Mary, and saw her smiling through the
+flowering hawthorn, or bending over a book with the firelight on her
+hair. Or again, stung by the lash of her reproaches he tried to harden
+himself to do something. Should he take the land into his own hands,
+and drain and fence and breed stock and be of use, were it only as a
+struggling farmer in his own district? Or should he make that plunge
+into public life to which Colonel Mottisfont had urged him and from
+which he shrank as a shivering man shrinks from an icy bath?
+
+For there was the rub. Mary was right. He was a dreamer, a weakling,
+one in whom the strong pulse that had borne his forbears to the front
+beat but feebly. He was not equal to the hard facts of life. With what
+ease had Audley, whenever they had stood foot to foot, put him in the
+second place, got the better of him, outshone him!
+
+Old Don pointed in vain. His master shot nothing, for he walked for
+the most part with his eyes on the turf. If he raised them it was to
+gaze at the hamlet lying below him in the valley, the old house, the
+ring of buildings and cottages, the church that he loved--and that
+like the woman he loved, reproached him with his inaction.
+
+About two o'clock he turned homewards. How many more days would he
+will and not will, and end night by night where he had begun? In the
+main he was of even temper, but of late small things tried him, and
+when he entered the parlor and Colet rose at his entrance, he could
+not check his irritation.
+
+"For heaven's sake, man, sit still!" he cried. "And don't get up every
+time I come in! And don't look at me like a dog! And don't ask me if I
+want the book you are reading!"
+
+The curate stared, and muttered an apology. It was true that he did
+not wear the chain of obligation with grace.
+
+"No, it is I who am sorry!" Basset replied, quickly repenting. "I am a
+churlish ass! Get up when you like, and say what you like! But if you
+can, make yourself at home!"
+
+Then he saw the two letters lying on the table. He knew Mary's writing
+at a glance, and he let it lie, his face twitching. He took up the
+other, made as if he would open it, then he threw it back again, and
+took Mary's to the window, where he could read it unwatched.
+
+It was short.
+
+
+"Dear Mr. Basset," she wrote, "I should be paying you a poor
+compliment if I pretended that what I am writing will not pain you.
+But I hope, and since our last meeting, I have reason to believe that
+that pain will not be lasting.
+
+"My cousin, Lord Audley, has asked me to marry him, and I have
+consented. Nothing beyond this is fixed, and no announcement will be
+made until my uncle has recovered his strength. But I feel that I owe
+it to you to let you know this at once.
+
+"I owe you something more. You crowned your kindness by doing me a
+great honor. I could not reply in substance otherwise than I did, but
+for the foolish criticisms of an inexperienced girl, I ask you to
+believe that I feel deep regret.
+
+"When we meet I hope that we may meet as friends. If I can believe
+this it will add something to the happiness of my engagement. My uncle
+is better, but little stronger than when you saw him.
+
+ "I am, truly yours,
+
+ "Mary Audley."
+
+
+He stood looking at it for a long time, and only by an effort could he
+control the emotion that strove to master him. Then his thoughts
+travelled to the other, the man who had won her, the man who had got
+the better of him from the first, who had played the Jacob from the
+moment of their meeting on the steamer; and a passion of jealousy
+swept him away. He swore aloud.
+
+Mr. Colet leapt in his chair. "Mr. Basset!" he cried. And then, in a
+different tone, "You have bad news, I fear?"
+
+The other laughed bitterly. "Bad news?" he repeated, and Colet saw
+that his face was white and that the letter shook in his hand. "The
+Government's out, and that's bad news. The pig's ill, and that's bad
+news. Your mother's dead, and that's bad news!"
+
+"Swearing makes no news better," Colet said mildly.
+
+"Not even the pig? If your--if Etruria died, and some one told you
+that she was dead, you wouldn't swear? You wouldn't curse God?"
+
+"God forbid!" the clergyman cried in horror.
+
+"What would you do then?"
+
+"Try so to live, Mr. Basset, that we might meet again!"
+
+"Rubbish, man!" Basset retorted rudely. "Try instead not to be a
+prig!"
+
+"If I could be of use?"
+
+"You cannot, nor any one else," Basset answered. "There, say no more.
+The worst is over. We've played our little part and--what's the odds
+how we played it?"
+
+"Much when the curtain falls," the poor clergyman ventured.
+
+"Well, I'll go and eat something. Hunger is one more grief!" And
+Basset went out.
+
+He came back ten minutes later, pale but quiet. "Sorry, Colet," he
+said. "Very rude, I am afraid! I had bad news, but I am right now.
+Wasn't there another letter for me?"
+
+He found the letter and read it listlessly. He tossed it across the
+table to his guest. "News is plentiful to-day," he said.
+
+Colet took the letter and read it. It was from a Mr. Hatton, better
+known to him than to Basset, and the owner of one of the two small
+factories in Riddsley. It was an invitation to contest the borough in
+opposition to young Mottisfont.
+
+
+"If it were a question, respected sir," Hatton wrote, "of Whigs and
+Tories we should not approach you. But as the result must depend upon
+the proportions in which the Tory party splits for and against Sir
+Robert Peel upon the Corn Laws, we, who are in favor of repeal,
+recognize the advantage of being represented by a moderate Tory. The
+adherence to Sir Robert of Sir James Graham in the North and of Lord
+Lincoln in the Midlands proves that there are landowners who place
+their country before their rents, and it is in the hope that you, sir,
+are of the number that we invite you to give us that assistance which
+your ancient name must afford.
+
+"We are empowered to promise you the support of the Whig party in the
+borough, conditioned only upon your support of the repeal of the Corn
+Laws, leaving you free on other points. The Audley influence has been
+hitherto paramount, but we believe that the time has come to free the
+borough from the last remnant of the Feudal system.
+
+"A deputation will wait upon you to give you such assurances as you
+may desire. But as Parliament meets on an early date, and the present
+member may at once apply for the Chiltern Hundreds, we shall be glad
+to have your answer before the New Year."
+
+
+"Well?" Basset asked. "What do you think?"
+
+"It opens a wide door."
+
+"If you wish to have your finger pinched," Basset replied, flippantly,
+"it does. I don't know that it is an opening to anything else." And as
+Colet refrained from speaking, "You don't think," he went on, "that
+it's a way into Parliament? A repealer has as much chance of getting
+in for Riddsley against the Audley interest as you have of being an
+archdeacon! Of course the Radicals want a fight if they can find a man
+fool enough to spend his money. But as for winning, they don't dream
+of it."
+
+"It is better to lose in some causes than to win in others."
+
+Basset laughed. "Do you know why they have come to me? They think that
+I shall carry John Audley with me and divide the Audley interest.
+There's nothing in it, but that's the notion."
+
+"Why look at the seamy side?" Colet objected. "I suppose there always
+is one, but I don't think that it was at that side Sir Robert looked
+when he made up his mind to put the country first and his party
+second! I don't think that it was at that side he looked when he
+determined to eat his words and pocket his pride, rather than be
+responsible for famine in Ireland! Believe me, Mr. Basset," the
+clergyman continued earnestly, "it was no easy change of opinion.
+Before he came to that resolution, proud, cold man as I am told he is,
+many a sight and sound must have knocked at the door of his mind; a
+scene of poverty he passed in his carriage, a passage in some report,
+a speech through which he seemed to sleep, a begging letter--one by
+one they pressed the door inwards, till at last, with--it may be with
+misery, he came to see what he must do!"
+
+"Possibly."
+
+"The call came, he had to answer it. Here is a call to you."
+
+"And do you think," the other retorted, "that I can answer it more
+cheaply than Sir Robert? So far as I have thought it out, I am with
+him. But do you think I could do this," he tapped the letter, "without
+misery--of a different kind it may be? I am not a public man, I have
+served no apprenticeship to it, I've not addressed a meeting three
+times in my life, I don't know what I should say or how I should say
+it. And for Hatton and his friends, they would rub me up a dozen times
+a day."
+
+"_Non sine pulvere!_" Mr. Colet murmured.
+
+"Dust enough there'll be! I don't doubt that. And dirt. But there's
+another thing." He paused, and turning, knocked the fire together. He
+was nearly a minute about it, while the other waited. "There's another
+thing," he repeated. "I am not going into this business to pay out a
+private grudge, and I want to be clear that I am not doing that. And
+I'm not going into this simply for what I can get out of it. Ambition
+is a poor stayer with me, a washy chestnut. It would not carry me
+through, Colet. If I go into this, it will be because I believe in it.
+It seems as if I were preaching," he continued awkwardly. "But there's
+nothing but belief will carry me through, and unless I am clear--I'll
+not start. I'll not start, although I want to make a fresh start
+badly! Devilish badly, if you'll excuse me!"
+
+"And how will you----"
+
+"Make certain? I don't know. I must fight it out by myself--go up on
+the hill and think it out. I must believe in the thing, or I must
+leave it alone!"
+
+"Just so," said Mr. Colet. And prudent for once he said no more.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+ AN AGENT OF THE OLD SCHOOL
+
+
+It is doubtful if even the great Reform Bill of '32, which shifted the
+base of power from the upper to the middle class, awoke more bitter
+feelings that did the _volte face_ of Peel in the winter of '45. Since
+the days of Pitt no statesman had enjoyed the popularity or wielded
+the power which had been Sir Robert's when he had taken office four
+years before. He had been more than the leader of the Tory party; he
+had been its re-creator. He had been more than the leader of the
+landed interest; he had been its pride. Men who believed that upon the
+welfare of that interest rested the stability of the constitution, men
+with historic names had walked on his right hand and on his left, had
+borne his train and carried his messages. All things, his origin, his
+formality, his pride, his quiet domestic life, even his moderation,
+had been forgiven in the man who had guided the Tories through the bad
+days, had led them at last to power, and still stood between them and
+the mutterings of this new industrial England, that hydra-like
+threatened and perplexed them.
+
+And then--he had betrayed them. Suddenly, some held; in a panic,
+scared by God knows what bugbear! Coldly and deliberately, said
+others, spreading his treachery over years, laughing in his sleeve as
+he led them to the fatal edge. Those who took the former view made
+faint excuse for him, and perhaps still clung to him. Those who held
+the latter thought no price too high, no sacrifice too costly, no
+effort too great, if they could but punish the traitor! If they could
+but pillory him for all to see.
+
+So, in a moment, in the autumn of '45, as one drop of poison will
+cloud the fairest water, the face of public life was changed.
+Bitterness was infused into it, friend was parted from friend and son
+from father, the oldest alliances were dissolved. Men stood gaping, at
+a loss whither to turn and whom to trust. Many who had never in all
+their lives made up their own minds were forced to have an opinion and
+choose a side; and as that process is to some men as painful as a
+labor to a woman, the effect was to embitter things farther. How could
+one who for years past had cursed Cobden in all companies, and in
+moments of relaxation had drunk to a "Bloody War and a Wet Harvest,"
+turn round and join the Manchester School? It could be done, it was
+done, but with what a rending of bleeding sinews only the sufferers
+knew!
+
+Strange to say, few gave weight to Sir Robert's plea of famine in
+Ireland. Still more strange, when events bore out his alarm, when in
+the course of a year or two a quarter of a million in that unhappy
+country died of want, public feeling changed little. Those who had
+remained with him, stood with him still. Those who had banded
+themselves against him, held their ground. Only a handful allowed that
+he was honest, after all. Nor was it until he, who rode his horse like
+a sack, had died like a demi-god, with a city hanging on his breath,
+and weeping women filling all the streets about the house, that the
+traitor became the patriot.
+
+But this is to anticipate. In December of '45, few men believed in
+famine. Few thought much of dearth. The world was angry, blood was
+hot, many dreamt of vengeance. Meantime Manchester exulted, and Coal,
+Iron, Cotton toasted Peel. But even they marvelled that the man who
+had been chosen to support the Corn Laws had the courage to repeal
+them!
+
+Upon no one in the whole country did the news fall with more stunning
+effect than upon poor Stubbs at Riddsley. He had suspected Peel. He
+had disliked his measures, and doubted whither he was moving. He had
+even on the occasion of his resignation predicted that Sir Robert
+would support the repeal; but he had not thought worse of him than
+that, and the event left him not uncertain, nor under any stress as to
+making up his mind, but naked, as it were, in an east wind. He felt
+older. He owned that his generation was passing. He numbered the
+friends he had left and found them few. And though he continued to
+assert that no man had ever pitted himself against the land whom the
+land had not broken, doubt began to creep into his mind. There were
+hours when he foresaw the end of the warm farming days, of game and
+sport, of Horn and Corn, ay, and of the old toast, "The farmer's best
+friend--the landlord," to which he had replied at many an audit
+dinner.
+
+One thing remained--the Riddsley election. He found some comfort in
+that. He drew some pleasure from the thought that Sir Robert might do
+what he pleased at Tamworth, he might do what he pleased in the
+Cabinet, in the Commons--there were toadies and turn-coats everywhere;
+but Riddsley would have none of him! Riddsley would remain faithful!
+Stubbs steeped himself in the prospect of the election, and in
+preparations for it. A dozen times a day he thanked his stars that the
+elder Mottisfont's weakness for Peel had provided this opening for his
+energies.
+
+Not that even on this ground he was quite happy. There was a little
+bitter in the cup. He hardly owned it to himself, he did not dream of
+whispering it to others, but at the bottom of his mind he had ever so
+faint a doubt of his employer. A hint dropped here, a word there, a
+veiled question--he could not say which of these had given him the
+notion that his lordship hung between two opinions, and even--no
+wonder that Stubbs dared not whisper it to others--was weighing which
+would pay him best!
+
+Such a thought was treason, however, and Stubbs buried it and trampled
+on it, before he went jauntily into the snug little meeting at the
+Audley Arms, which he had summoned to hear the old member's letter
+read and to accept the son as a candidate in his father's place. Those
+whom the agent had called were few and trusty; young Mottisfont
+himself, the rector and Dr. Pepper, Bagenal the maltster, Hogg the
+saddler, Musters the landlord, the "Duke" from the Leasows (which was
+within the borough), and two other tradesmen. Stubbs had no liking for
+big meetings. He had been bred up to believe that speeches were lost
+labor, and if they must be made should be made at the Market Ordinary.
+
+At such a gathering as this he was happy. He had the strings in his
+own hands. The work to be done was at his fingers' ends. At this table
+he was as great a man as my lord. With young Mottisfont, who was by
+way of being a Bond Street dandy, solemn, taciturn, and without an
+opinion of his own, he was not likely to have trouble. The rector was
+enthusiastic but indolent, Pepper an old friend. The rest were
+Stubbs's most obedient.
+
+Stubbs read the retiring member's letter, and introduced the
+candidate. The rector boomed through a few phrases of approbation, Dr.
+Pepper seconded, the rest cried "Hear! hear!"
+
+"There's little to say," Stubbs went on. "I take it that we are all of
+one mind, gentlemen, to return Mr. Mottisfont in his father's place?"
+
+"Hear! hear!" from all. "In the old interest?" Stubbs went on, looking
+round the table. "And on the clear understanding that Mr. Mottisfont
+is returned to oppose any tampering with the protection of
+agriculture."
+
+"That is so," said Mr. Mottisfont.
+
+"I will see that that is embodied in Mr. Mottisfont's address," Stubbs
+continued. "There must be no mistake. These are queer times----"
+
+"Sad times!" said the rector, shaking his head.
+
+"Terrible times!" said the maltster, shaking his.
+
+"Never did I dream I should live to see 'em," said old Hayward.
+"'Tisn't a month since a chap came on my land, ay, up to my very door,
+and said things--I'll be damned if I did not think he'd turn the cream
+sour! And when I cried 'Sam! fetch a pitchfork and rid me of this
+rubbish----'"
+
+"I know, Hayward," Stubbs said, cutting him short. "I know. You told
+me about it. You did very well. But to business. It shall be a short
+address--just that one point. We are all agreed, I think, gentlemen?"
+
+All were agreed.
+
+"I'll see that it is printed in good time," Stubbs continued. "I don't
+think that we need trouble you further, Mr. Mottisfont. There's a
+fat-stock sale this day fortnight. Perhaps you'll dine and say a few
+words? I'll let you know if it is necessary. There'll be no
+opposition. Hatton will have a meeting at the Institute, but nothing
+will come of it."
+
+"That's all then, is it?" said the London man, sticking his glass in
+his eye with a sigh of relief.
+
+"That's all," Stubbs replied. "If you can attend this day fortnight so
+much the better. The farmers like it, and they've fourteen votes in
+the borough. Thank you, gentlemen, that's all."
+
+"I think you've forgotten one thing, Mr. Stubbs," said old Hayward,
+with a twinkle.
+
+"To be sure, I have. Ring the bell, Musters, and send up the two
+bottles of your '20 port that I ordered and some glasses. A glass of
+Musters' '20 port, Mr. Mottisfont, won't hurt you this cold day. And
+we must drink your health. And, Musters, when these gentlemen go down,
+see that they have what they call for."
+
+The port was sipped, tasted. Mr. Mottisfont's health was drunk, and
+various compliments were paid to his father. The rector took his two
+glasses; so did young Mottisfont, who woke up and vowed that he had
+tasted none better in St. James's Street. "Is it Garland's?" he asked.
+
+"It is, sir," Musters said, much pleased.
+
+"I thought it was--none better!" said young Mottisfont, also pleased.
+"The old Duke drinks no other."
+
+"Fine tipple! Fine tipple!" said the other "Duke." In the end a third
+bottle was ordered, of which Musters and old Hayward drank the better
+part.
+
+At one of these meetings a sad thing had happened. A rash tradesman
+had proposed his lordship's health. Of course he had been severely
+snubbed. It had been considered most indecent. But on this occasion no
+one was so simple as to name my lord, and Stubbs felt with
+satisfaction that all had passed as it should. So had candidates been
+chosen as long as he could remember.
+
+But call no man happy until the day closes. As he left the house
+Bagenal the maltster tacked himself on to him. "I'd a letter from
+George this morning," he said. George was his son, articled to Mr.
+Stubbs, and now with Mr. Stubbs's agents in town. "He saw his lordship
+one day last week."
+
+"Ay, ay. I suppose Master George was in the West End? Wasting his
+time, Bagenal, I'll be bound."
+
+"I don't know about that. Young fellows like to see things. He went
+with a lot of chaps to see the crowd outside Sir Robert's. They'd read
+in a paper that all the nobs were to be seen going in and out. Anyway,
+he went, and the first person he saw going in was his lordship!"
+
+Mr. Stubbs walked a few yards in silence. Then, "Well, he's no sight
+to George," he said. "It seems to me they were both wasting their
+time. I told his lordship he'd do no good. When half the dukes in
+England have been at Peel, d--n him, it wasn't likely he'd change his
+course for his lordship! It wasn't to be expected, Bagenal. Did George
+stop to see him come out?"
+
+"He did. And in a thundering temper my lord looked."
+
+"Ay, ay! Well I told him how it would be."
+
+"They were going in and out like bees, George said."
+
+"Ay, ay."
+
+They parted on that, and the lawyer went into his office. But his face
+was gloomy. "Ay, like bees!" he muttered. "After the honey! I wonder
+what he asked for! Whatever it was he couldn't have paid the price! I
+thought he knew that. I've a good mind--but there, we've held it so
+long, grandfather, father, and son--I can't afford to give it up."
+
+He turned into his office, but the day was spoiled for him. And the
+day was not done yet. He had barely sat down before his clerk a thin,
+gray-haired man, high-nosed, with a look of breeding run to seed, came
+in, and closed the door behind him. Farthingale was as well known in
+Riddsley as the Maypole; gossip had it that he was a by-blow of an old
+name. "I've heard something," he said darkly, "and the sooner you know
+it the better. They've got a man."
+
+Stubbs shrugged his shoulders. "For repeal in Riddsley?" he said.
+"You're dreaming."
+
+The clerk smiled. "Well, you'd best be awake," he said. He had been
+long enough with Stubbs to take a liberty. "Who do you think it is?"
+he continued, rubbing his chin with the feather-end of a quill.
+
+"Some methodist parson!"
+
+Farthingale shook his head. "Guess again, sir," he said. "You're cold
+at present. It's a bird of another feather."
+
+"A pretty big fool whoever he is!"
+
+"Mr. Basset of Blore. I have it on good authority."
+
+Stubbs stared. He was silent for a time, thinking hard. "Somebody's
+fooled you," he said at last, but in a different tone. "He's never
+shown a sign of coming out."
+
+The clerk looked wise. "It's true," he said. "It cost me four goes of
+brown brandy at the Portcullis."
+
+"Well, you may score that to me," Stubbs answered. "Basset, eh? Well,
+he's throwing his money into the gutter if it's true, and he hasn't
+much to spare. I see Hatton's point. He's not the fool."
+
+"No. He's an old bird is Hatton."
+
+"But I don't see where Squire Basset comes in."
+
+Farthingale looked wiser than ever. "Well," he said, "he may have a
+score to pay, too. And if he has, there's more ways than one of paying
+it!"
+
+"What score?"
+
+"Ah, I'm not saying that. Mr. John Audley's may be--against his
+lordship."
+
+"Umph! If you paid off yours at the Portcullis," Stubbs retorted,
+losing his temper, "the landlord wouldn't be sorry! Scores are a deal
+too much in your way, Farthingale!" he continued, severely, forgetting
+in his annoyance the four goes of brown brandy. "You're too much at
+home among 'em. Don't bring me cock-and-bull stories like this! I
+don't believe it. And get to that lease!"
+
+But sure enough Farthingale's story proved to be well founded, for a
+week later it was known for certain in Riddsley that Mr. Basset of
+Blore was coming out, and that there would be a fight for the borough.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+ MARY IS LONELY
+
+
+Mary Audley was one of the last to hear the news. Etruria brought it
+from the town one day in January, when the evenings were beginning to
+lengthen, and the last hour of daylight was the dreariest of the
+twenty-four. It had rained, and the oaks in the park were a-drip, the
+thorn trees stood in tiny pools, the moorland lay stark under a pall
+of fog. In the vale the Trent was in flood, its pale waters swirling
+past the willow-stools, creeping over the chilled meadows, and
+stealing inch by inch up the waterside lanes. Etruria's feet were wet,
+and she was weary with her trudge through the mud; but when Mary met
+her on the tiny landing on which their rooms opened, there was a
+sparkle in the girl's eyes as bright as the red petticoat that showed
+below her tucked-up gown.
+
+"You didn't forget----" Mary was beginning, and then, "Why, Etruria,"
+she exclaimed, "I believe you have seen Mr. Colet?"
+
+Etruria blushed like the dawn. "Oh no, Miss!" she said. "He's at
+Blore."
+
+"To be sure! Then what is it?"
+
+"I've heard some news, Miss," Etruria said. "I don't know whether
+you'll be pleased or not."
+
+"But it is certain that you are!" Mary replied with conviction. "What
+is it?"
+
+The girl told what she had heard: that there was to be an election at
+Riddsley in three weeks, and not only an election but a contest, and
+that the candidate who had come forward to oppose the Corn Laws was no
+other than Mr. Basset--their Mr. Basset! More, that only the evening
+before he had held his first meeting at the Institute, and though he
+had been interrupted and the meeting had been broken up, his short
+plain speech had made a considerable impression.
+
+"Indeed, Miss," Etruria continued, carried away by the subject, "there
+was one told me that when he stood up to speak she could see his hand
+shake, and his face was the color of a piece of paper. But when they
+began to boo and shout at him, he grew as cool as cool, and the longer
+they shouted the braver he was, until they saw that if they let him go
+on he would be getting a hearing! So they put out the lights and
+stormed the platform, and there was a fine Stafford row, I'm told. Of
+course," Etruria added simply, "the drink was in them."
+
+Mary hardly knew what her feelings were. "Mr. Basset?" she said at
+last. "I can hardly believe it."
+
+"Nor could I, Miss, when I first heard it. But it seems they have
+known it there for ten days and more, and the town is agog with it,
+everybody taking sides, and some so much against him as never was.
+It's dreadful to think," Etruria continued, "how misguided men can be.
+But oh, Miss, I'm thankful he's on the right side, and for taking the
+burden off the bread! I'm sure it will be returned to him, win or
+lose. They're farmers' friends here, and they're saying shameful
+things of him in the market! But there's many a woman will bless him,
+and the lanes and alleys, they've no votes, but they'll pray for him!
+Sometimes," Etruria added shyly, "I think it is Mr. Colet has brought
+him to it."
+
+"Mr. Colet?" Mary repeated--she did not know why she disliked the
+notion. "Why do you think that?"
+
+"He's been at Blore," Etruria murmured. "Mr. Basset has been so good
+to him."
+
+"Mr. Basset has a mind of his own," Mary answered sharply. "He is
+quite capable of forming his own opinion."
+
+"Of course. Miss," Etruria said, abashed. "I should have known that."
+
+"Yes," Mary repeated. "But what was it they were saying of Mr. Basset
+in the market, Etruria? Not that it matters."
+
+"Well, Miss," Etruria explained, reluctantly. "They were saying it was
+some grudge Mr. Basset or the Master had against his lordship that
+brought Mr. Basset out."
+
+"Against Lord Audley?" Mary cried. And she blushed suddenly and
+vividly. "Why? What has he to do with it?"
+
+"Well, Miss, it's his lordship's seat," Etruria answered navely;
+"what he wishes has always been done in Riddsley. And he's for Mr.
+Mottisfont."
+
+Mary walked to a window and looked out. "Oh," she said, "I did not
+know that. But you'd better go now, Etruria, and change your shoes.
+Your feet must be wet."
+
+Etruria went, and Mary continued to gaze through the window. What
+strange news! And what a strange situation! The lover whom she had
+rejected and the lover whom she had taken, pitted against one another!
+And her words--she could hardly doubt it--the spur which had brought
+Basset to the post!
+
+So thinking, so pondering, she grew more and more ill at ease. Her
+sympathies should have been wholly with her betrothed, but they were
+not. She should have resented Basset's action. She did not. Instead
+she thought of his shaking hand and his pale face, and of the courage
+that had grown firmer in the face of opposition; and she found
+something fine in that, something that appealed to her. And the cause
+he had adopted? It was the cause to which she naturally inclined. She
+might be wrong, he might be wrong. Lord Audley knew so much more of
+these things and looked at them from so enlightened a standpoint, that
+they must be wrong. And yet--her heart warmed to that cause.
+
+She turned from the window in some trouble, wondering if she were
+disloyal, wondering why she felt as she did; wondering a little, too,
+why she had lost the first rapture of her love, and was less happy in
+it than she had been.
+
+True, she had not seen her lover again, and that might account for it.
+He had been detained at Lord Seabourne's, and in London; he had been
+occupied for days together with the crisis. But she had had three
+letters from him, busy as he was; three amusing letters, full of
+gossip and sprinkled with anecdotes of the great world. She had opened
+the first in something of a tremor; but her fingers had soon grown
+steady, and if she had blushed it had been for her expectation of a
+vulgar love-letter such as milkmaids prize. She had been silly to
+suppose that he would write in that strain.
+
+And yet she had felt a degree of disappointment. He might have written
+with less reserve, she thought; he might have discussed their plans
+and hopes, he might have let the fire peep somewhere through the
+chinks. But there, again, what a poor thing she was if her love must
+be fed with sweetmeats. How weak her trust, how poor her affection, if
+she could not bear a three weeks' parting! He had come to her, he had
+chosen her, what more did she want? Did she expect him to put aside
+the calls and the duties of his station, that he might hang on her
+apron-strings?
+
+Still, she was not in good spirits, and she felt her loneliness. The
+house, this gray evening, with the shadows gathering in the corners,
+weighed on her. Mrs. Toft was far away in her cosey kitchen, Etruria
+also had gone thither. Toft was with Mr. Audley in the other wing--he
+had been much with his master of late. So Mary was alone. She was not
+nervous, but she was depressed. The cold stairs, the austere parlor
+with its dim portraits, the matted hall, the fireless library--all
+struck a chill. She remembered other times and other evenings; cosey
+evenings, when the glow of the wood-fire had vied with the shaded
+lights, when the three heads had bent over the three tables, when the
+rustle of turning pages had blended with the snoring of the old hound,
+when the pursuit of some trifle had sped the pleasant hours. Alas,
+those evenings were gone, as if they had never been. The house was
+dull and melancholy.
+
+She might have gone to her uncle, but during the afternoon he had told
+her that he wished to be alone; he should go to bed betimes. So about
+seven o'clock she took her meal by herself, and when it was done she
+felt more at a loss than ever. Presently her thoughts went again to
+John Audley.
+
+Had she neglected him of late? Had she left him too much to Toft, and
+let her secret, which she hated to keep secret, come between them? Why
+should she not, even now, see him before he slept? She could take him
+the news of Mr. Basset's enterprise. It would serve for an excuse.
+
+Lest her courage should fail she went at once, shivering as she passed
+through the shadowy library, where a small lamp, burning on a table,
+did no more than light her to the staircase. She ran up the stairs and
+was groping for the handle of Mr. Audley's door when the door opened
+abruptly and Toft stepped out, a candle in his hand. She was so close
+to him that he all but touched her, and he was, if anything, more
+startled than she was. He stood gaping at her.
+
+Through the narrow opening she had a glimpse of her uncle, who was on
+his feet before the fire. He was fully dressed.
+
+That surprised her, for, even before this last attack, he had spent
+most of his time in his dressing-gown. Still more surprising was
+Toft's conduct. He shut the door and held it. "The master is going to
+bed, Miss," he said.
+
+"I see that he is dressed!" she replied. And she looked at Toft in
+such a way that the man gave way, took his hand from the door, and
+stood aside. She pushed the door open and went in. Her uncle, standing
+with his back to her, was huddling on his dressing-gown.
+
+"What is it?" he cried, his face averted. "Who is it?"
+
+"It is only I, sir," she replied. "Mary." She closed the door.
+
+"But I thought I told you that I didn't want you!" he retorted
+pettishly. "I am going to bed." He turned, having succeeded in girding
+on his dressing-gown. "Going to bed," he repeated. "Didn't I tell you
+so?"
+
+"I'm very sorry, sir," she said, "but I had news for you. News that
+has surprised me. I thought that you would like to hear it."
+
+He looked at her, his furtive eyes giving the lie to his plump face,
+which sagged more than of old. "News," he muttered, peevishly. "What
+news? I wish you wouldn't startle me. You ought to remember that--that
+excitement is bad for me. And you come at this time of night with
+news! What is it?" He was not looking at her. He seemed to be seeking
+something. "What is it?"
+
+"It's nothing very terrible," she answered, smiling. "Nothing to alarm
+you, uncle. Won't you sit down?"
+
+He looked about him like a man driven into a corner. "No, no, I don't
+want to sit down!" he said. "I ought to be in bed! I ought to be there
+now."
+
+"Well, I shall not keep you long," she answered, trying to humor his
+mood, while all the time she was wondering why he was dressed at this
+time, he whom she had not seen dressed for a fortnight. And why had
+Toft tried to keep her out? "It is only," she continued, "that I heard
+to-day that there is to be a contest at Riddsley. And that Mr. Basset
+is to be one of the candidates."
+
+"Is that all?" he said. "News, you said? That's no news! Bigger fool
+he, unless he does more for himself than he does for his friends!
+Peter the Hermit become Peter the Great! He'll soon find himself Peter
+the Piper, who picked a peck of pepper! Hot pepper he'll find it, d--n
+him!" with sudden spite. "He's no better than the rest! He's all for
+himself! All for himself!" he repeated, his voice rising in his
+excitement.
+
+"But----"
+
+"There, don't agitate me!" He wiped his brow with a shaking hand,
+while his eyes, avoiding hers, continued to look about him as if he
+sought something. "I knew how it would be. You've no thought for me.
+You don't remember how weak I am! Hardly able to crawl across the
+floor, to put one foot before another. And you come chattering!
+chattering!"
+
+She had thought him odd before, but never so odd as this evening; and
+she was sorry that she had come. She was going to say what she could
+and escape, when he began again. "You're the last person who should
+upset me! The very last!" he babbled. "When it's all for you! It's
+little good it can do me. And Basset, he'd the ball at his foot,
+and wouldn't kick it! But I'll show you, I'll show you all!" he
+continued, gesticulating with a violence that distressed Mary. "Ay,
+and I'll show _him_ what I am! He thinks he's safe, d--n him! He
+thinks he's safe! He's spending my money and adding up my balance!
+He's walking on my land and sleeping in my bed! He's peacocking in my
+name! But--but----" he stopped, struggling for words. For an instant
+he turned on her over his shoulder a face distorted by passion.
+
+Thoroughly alarmed, she tried to soothe him. "But I am sure, sir," she
+said, "Mr. Basset would never----"
+
+"Basset!"
+
+"I'm sure he never dreamt----"
+
+"Basset!" he repeated. "No! but Audley! Lord Audley, Audley of
+Beaudelays, Audley of nowhere and nothing! And no Audley! no Audley!"
+he repeated furiously, while again he fought for breath, and again he
+mastered himself and lowered his tone. "No Audley!" he whispered,
+pointing a hand at her, "but Jacob, girl! Jacob the supplanter, Jacob
+the changeling, Jacob the baseborn! And he thinks I lie awake of
+nights, hundreds of nights, for nothing! He thinks I dream of him--for
+nothing! He thinks I go out with the bats--for nothing! He thinks I
+have a canker here! Here!" And he clapped his hand to his breast, a
+grotesque, yet dreadful figure in his huddled dressing-gown, his
+flaccid cheeks quivering with rage. "For nothing! But I'll show him!
+I'll ruin him! I'll----"
+
+His voice, which had risen to a scream, stopped. Toft had opened the
+door. "Sir! Mr. Audley!" he cried. "For God's sake be calm! For God's
+sake have a care, sir! And you, Miss," he continued; "you see what you
+have done! If you'll leave him I'll get him to bed. I'll get him to
+bed and quiet him--if I can."
+
+Mary was shocked, and yet she felt that she could not go without a
+word. "Dear uncle," she said, "you wish me to go?"
+
+He had clutched one of the posts of the bed and was supporting himself
+by it. The fire had died down in him, he was no more now than a
+feeble, shaking old man. He wiped his brow and his lips. "Yes, go," he
+whispered. "Go."
+
+"I am very sorry I disturbed you," she said. "I won't do it again. You
+were right, Toft. Good-night."
+
+The man said "Good-night, Miss." Her uncle said nothing. He had let
+himself down on the bed, but he still clung to the post. Mary looked
+at him in sorrow, grieved to leave him in this state. But she had no
+choice, and she went out and, closing the door behind her, groped her
+way down the narrow staircase.
+
+It was a little short of ten when she reached the parlor, but she was
+in no mood for reading. What she had seen had shocked and frightened
+her. She was sure now that her uncle was not sane; and while she was
+equally sure that Toft exercised a strong influence over him, she had
+her misgivings as to that. Something must be done. She must consult
+some one. Life at the Gatehouse could not go on on this footing. She
+must see Dr. Pepper.
+
+Unluckily when she had settled this to her mind, and sought her bed,
+she could not sleep. Long after she had heard Etruria go to her room,
+long after she had heard the girl's shoes fall--familiar sound!--Mary
+lay awake, thinking now of her uncle's state and her duty towards him,
+nor of her own future, that future which seemed for the moment to have
+lost its brightness. Doubts that the sun dismisses, fears at which
+daylight laughs, are Giants of Despair in the dark watches. So it was
+with her. Misgivings which she would not have owned in the daylight,
+rose up and put on grisly shapes. Her uncle and his madness, her lover
+and his absence, passed in endless procession through her brain. In
+vain she tossed and turned, sat up in despair, tried the cooler side
+of the pillow. She could not rest.
+
+The door creaked. She fancied a step on the staircase, a hand on the
+latch. Far away in the depths of the house a clock struck. It was
+three o'clock--only three o'clock! And it would not be light before
+eight--not much before eight. Oh dear! Oh dear!
+
+And then she slept.
+
+When she awoke it was morning, the light was filtering in through the
+white dimity curtains, and some one was really at her door. Some one
+was knocking. She sat up. "What is it?" she cried.
+
+"Can I come in, Miss?"
+
+The voice was Mrs. Toft's, and Mary needed no second warning. She knew
+in a moment that the woman brought bad news. She sprang out of bed,
+put on a dressing-gown, and with bare feet she went to the door. She
+unlocked it. "What is it, Mrs. Toft?" she said.
+
+"Maybe not much," the woman answered cautiously. "I hope not, Miss,
+but I had to tell you. The Master is missing."
+
+"Missing?" Mary exclaimed, the blood leaving her face. "Impossible!
+Why, I saw him, I was in his room last evening after nine o'clock."
+
+"Toft was with him up to eleven," Mrs. Toft answered. Her face was
+grave. "But he's gone now?"
+
+"You mean that he is not in his room!" Mary said. "But have you
+looked----" and she named places where her uncle might be--places in
+the house.
+
+"We've looked there," Mrs. Toft answered. "Toft's been everywhere. The
+Master's not in the house. We're well-nigh sure of that. And the door
+in the courtyard was open this morning. I am afraid he's gone, Miss."
+
+"In his state and at night? Why, it's----" The girl broke off and took
+hold of herself. "Very well," she said. "I shall not be more than five
+minutes. I will come down."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+ MISSING
+
+
+Mary scrambled into her clothes without pausing to do more than knot
+up her hair. She tried to steady her nerves and to put from her the
+thought that it was her visit which had upset her uncle. That thought
+would only flurry her, and she must be cool. In little more than the
+five minutes that she had named she was in the hall, and found Mrs.
+Toft waiting for her. The door into the courtyard stood open, the
+bleak light and raw air of a January morning poured in, but neither of
+them heeded this. Their eyes met, and Mary saw that the woman, who was
+usually so placid, was frightened.
+
+"Where is Toft?" Mary asked.
+
+"He's away this ten minutes," Mrs. Toft replied. "He's gone to the Yew
+Walk, where you found the Master before. But law, Miss, if he's there
+in this weather!" She lifted up her hands.
+
+Mary controlled herself. "And Etruria?" she asked.
+
+"She's searching outside the house. If she does not find him she is to
+run over to Petch the keeper, and bring him."
+
+"Quite right," Mary said. "Did Toft take any brandy?"
+
+"He did. Miss. And the big kettle is on, if there is a bath wanted,
+and I've put a couple of bricks to heat in the oven."
+
+"You're sure you've looked everywhere in the house?"
+
+"As sure as can be, Miss! More by token, I've some coffee ready for
+you in the parlor."
+
+But Mary said, "Bring it here, Mrs. Toft." And snatching up a shawl
+and folding it about her, she stepped outside. It was a gray, foggy
+morning, and the flagged court wore a desolate air. In one corner a
+crowd of dead leaves were circling in the gusts of wind, in another a
+little pile of snow had drifted, and between the monsters that flanked
+the Gateway, the old hound, deaf and crippled, stood peering across
+the park. Mary fancied that the dog descried Toft returning, and she
+ran across the court. But no one was in sight. The park with its
+clumps of dead bracken, its naked trees and gnarled blackthorns,
+stretched away under a thin sprinkling of snow. Shivering she returned
+to the hall, where Mrs. Toft awaited her with the coffee.
+
+"Now," Mary said, "tell me about it, please--from the beginning."
+
+"Toft had left Mr. Audley about eleven," Mrs. Toft explained. "The
+Master had been a bit put out, and that kept him. But he'd settled
+down, and when Toft left him he was much as usual. It could not have
+been before eleven," Mrs. Toft continued, rubbing her nose, "for I
+heard the kitchen clock strike eleven, and I was asleep when Toft came
+in. The next I remember was finding Toft had got out of bed. 'What is
+it?' says I. He didn't answer, and I roused up and was going to get a
+light. But he told me not to make a noise, he'd been woke by hearing a
+door slam, and thought that some one had crossed the court. He was at
+the window then, looking out, but we heard nothing, and after a while
+Toft came back to bed."
+
+"What time was that?"
+
+"I couldn't say, Miss, and I don't suppose Toft could. It was dark and
+before six, because when I woke again it was on six. But God knows it
+was a thousand pities we didn't search then, for it's on my mind that
+it was the poor Master. And if we'd known, Toft would have stopped
+him."
+
+"Well?" Mary said gravely. "And when did you miss him?"
+
+"Most mornings Etruria'd let me into the house. But this morning she
+found the door unlocked; howsomever she thought nothing of it, for
+Toft has a key as well, and since the Master's illness and him coming
+and going at all hours, he has not always locked the door; so she made
+no remark. A bit before eight Toft came down--I didn't see him but I
+heard him--and at eight he took up the Master's cup of tea. Toft makes
+it in the pantry and takes it up."
+
+Mrs. Toft paused heavily--not without enjoyment.
+
+"Yes," Mary said anxiously, "and then?"
+
+"I suppose it was five minutes after, he came out to me--I was in the
+kitchen getting our breakfast--and he was shaking all over. I don't
+know that I ever saw a man more upset. 'He's gone!' he said. 'Law,
+Toft,' I said. 'What's the matter? Who's gone?' 'The Master!' he said.
+'Fiddlesticks!' says I. 'Where should he go?' And with that I went
+into the house and up to the Master's room. When I saw it was empty
+you could have knocked me down with a feather! I looked round a bit,
+and then I went up to Mr. Basset's room that's over, and down again to
+the library, and so forth. By that time Toft was there, gawpin about.
+'He's gone!' he kept saying. I don't know as I ever saw Toft truly
+upset before."
+
+"And what then?" Mary asked. Twice she had looked through the door,
+but to no purpose.
+
+"Well," I said, "if he's not here he can't be far! Don't twitter, man,
+but think! It's my belief he's away sleepwalking or what not, to the
+place you found him before. On that I gave Toft some brandy and he
+went off."
+
+"Shouldn't he be back by now?"
+
+"He should, Miss, if he's not found him," Mrs. Toft answered. "But, if
+he's found him, he couldn't carry him! Toft's not all that strong. And
+if the Master's lain out long, it's not all the brandy in the world
+will bring him round!"
+
+Mary shuddered, and moved by a common impulse the two went out and
+crossed the court. The old hound was still at gaze in the gateway,
+still staring with purblind eyes down the vistas of the park. "Maybe
+he sees more than we see," Mrs. Toft muttered. "He'd not stand there,
+would the old dog, as he's stood twenty minutes, for nothing."
+
+She was right, for the next moment three figures appeared hurrying
+across the park towards them. It was impossible to mistake Toft's
+lanky figure. The others were Etruria, with a shawl about her head,
+and the keeper Petch.
+
+Mary scanned them anxiously. "Have they found him?" she murmured.
+
+"No," Mrs. Toft said. "If they'd found him, one would have stopped
+with him."
+
+"Of course," Mary said. And heedless of the cold, searching wind that
+swung their skirts and carried showers of dead leaves sailing past
+them, they waited until Toft and the others, talking together, came
+up. Mary saw that, in spite of the pace at which he had walked, Toft's
+face was colorless. He was almost livid. His daughter wore an anxious
+look, while the keeper was pleasantly excited.
+
+As soon as the three were within hearing, "You've not found him?" Mary
+cried.
+
+"No, Miss," Etruria answered.
+
+"Nor any trace?"
+
+"No, Miss. My father has been as far as the iron gate, and found it
+locked. It was no use going on."
+
+"He could not have walked farther without help," Mrs. Toft said. "If
+the Master's not between us and the gardens he's not that way."
+
+"Then where is he?" Mary cried, aghast. She looked from one to the
+other. "Where can he be, Toft?"
+
+Toft raised his hands and let them fall. It was clear that he had
+given up hope.
+
+But his wife was of different mettle. "That's to be seen," she said
+briskly. "Anyway, you'll be perished here, Miss, and I don't want
+another invalid on my hands. We'll go in, if you please."
+
+Mary gave way. They turned to go in, but it was noticeable that as
+they moved towards the house each, stirred by the same thought, swept
+the extent of the park with eyes that clung to it, and were loth to
+leave it. Each hung for a moment, searching this alley or that,
+fancying a clue in some distant object, or taking a clump of gorse, or
+a jagged stump for the fallen man. All were harassed by the thought
+that they might be abandoning him; that in turning their backs on the
+bald, wintry landscape they might be carrying away with them his last
+chance.
+
+"'T would take a day to search the park," the keeper muttered. "And a
+dozen men, I'm afeared, to do it thoroughly."
+
+"Why not take a round yourself!" Mrs. Toft replied. "And if you find
+nothing be at the house in an hour, Petch, and we'll know better
+what's to do. The poor gentleman's off his head, I doubt, and there's
+no saying where he'd wander. But he can't be far, and I'm beginning to
+think he's in the house after all."
+
+The man agreed willingly, and strode away across the turf. The others
+entered the hall. Mary was for pausing there, but Mrs. Toft swept them
+all into the parlor where a good fire was burning. "You'll excuse me,
+Miss," she said, "but Toft will be the better for this," and without
+ceremony she poured out a cup of coffee, jerked into it a little
+brandy from the decanter on the sideboard, and handed it to her
+husband. "Drink that," she said, "and get your wits together, man!
+You're no better than a wisp of paper now, and it's only you can help
+us. Now think! You know him best. Where can he be? Did he say no word
+last night to give you a clue?"
+
+A little color came back to Toft's face. He sighed and passed his hand
+across his forehead. "If I'd never left him!" he said. "I never ought
+to have left him!"
+
+"It's no good going over that!" Mrs. Toft replied impatiently. "He
+means, Miss, that up to three nights ago he slept in the Master's
+room. Then when the Master seemed better Toft came back to his bed."
+
+"I ought to have stayed with him," Toft repeated. That seemed the one
+thought in his mind.
+
+"But where is he?" Mary cried. "Where? Every moment we stand
+talking--can't you think where he might go? Are there no
+hiding--places in the house? No secret passages?"
+
+Mrs. Toft raised her hands. "Lord's sake!" she exclaimed. "There's the
+locked closet in his room where he keeps his papers. I never looked
+there. It's seldom opened, and----"
+
+She did not finish. With one accord they hurried through the library
+and up the stairs to the old tapestried room, where Mr. Audley had
+slept and for the last month had lived. The others had been in it
+since his disappearance, Mary had not; and she felt a thrill of awe as
+she passed the threshold. The angular faces, the oblique eyes, of the
+watchers in the needlework on the wall, that from generation to
+generation had looked down on marriage and birth and death--what had
+they seen during the past night? On what had they gazed, she asked
+herself. Mrs. Toft, less fanciful or more familiar with the room, had
+no such thoughts. She crossed the floor to a low door which was
+outlined for those who knew of its existence, by rough cuts in the
+arras. It led into a closet, contained in one of the turrets.
+
+Mrs. Toft tried the door, shook it, knocked on it. Finally she set her
+eye to the keyhole. "He's not there," she said. "There's no key in the
+lock. He'd not take out the key, that's certain."
+
+Mary scanned the disordered room. Books lay in heaps on the deep
+window-seats, and even on the floor. A table by one of the windows was
+strewn with papers and letters; on another beside the bed-head stood a
+tray with night drinks, a pair of candles, an antique hour-glass, a
+steel pistol. The bedclothes were dragged down, as if the bed had been
+slept in, and over the rail at the foot, half hidden by the heavy
+curtains, hung a nightgown. She took this up and found beneath it a
+pair of slippers and a shoehorn.
+
+"He was dressed then?" she exclaimed.
+
+Toft eyed the things. "Yes, Miss, I've no doubt he was," he said
+despondently. "His overcoat's gone."
+
+"Then he meant to leave the house?" Mary cried.
+
+"God save us!"
+
+"He's taken his silver flask too," Etruria said in a low voice. She
+was examining the dressing-table. "And his watch."
+
+"His watch?"
+
+"Yes, Miss."
+
+"But that's odd," Mary said, fixing her eyes on Toft. "Don't you
+think that's odd? If my uncle had rambled out in some nightmare or--or
+wandering, would he have taken his flask and his watch, Toft? Are his
+spectacles there?"
+
+Toft inspected the table, raised the pillow, felt under the bolster.
+"No, Miss," he said; "he's taken them."
+
+"Ah!" Mary replied; "then I have hope. Wherever he is, he is in his
+senses. Now, Toft!"--she looked hard at the man--"think again! Surely
+since he had this in his mind last night he must have let something
+drop? Some word?"
+
+The man shook his head. "Not that I heard, Miss," he said.
+
+Mary sighed. But Mrs. Toft was less patient. She exploded. "You
+gaby!" she cried. "Where's your senses? It's to you we're looking, and
+a poor stick you are in time of trouble! I couldn't have believed it!
+Find your tongue, Toft, say something! You knew the Master down to his
+shoe leather. Let's hear what you do think! He couldn't walk far! He
+couldn't walk a mile without help. Where is he? Where do you think he
+is?"
+
+Toft's answer silenced them. If one of the mute, staring figures on
+the walls--that watched as from the boxes of a theatre the living
+actors--had stepped down, it would hardly have affected them more
+deeply. The man sat down on the bed, covered his face with his hands,
+and rocking himself to and fro broke into a passion of weeping. "The
+poor Master!" he cried between his sobs. "The poor Master!"
+
+Quickly at that Mary's feelings underwent a change. As if she had
+stood already beside her uncle's grave, sorrow took the place of
+perplexity. His past kindness dragged at her heart-strings. She forgot
+that she had never been able to love him, she forgot that behind the
+man whom she had known she had been ever conscious of another being,
+vague, shifting, inhuman. She remembered only the help he had given,
+the home he had offered, the rare hours of sympathy. "Don't, Toft,
+don't!" she cried, tears in her voice. She touched the man on the
+shoulder. "Don't give up hope!"
+
+As for Mrs. Toft, surprise silenced her. When she found her voice,
+"Well," she said, looking round her with a sort of pride, "who'll say
+after this that Toft's a hard man? Why, if the Master was lying on
+that bed ready for burial--and we're some way off that, the Lord be
+thanked!--he couldn't carry on more! But there, let's look now, and
+weep afterwards! Pull yourself together, Toft, or who's the young lady
+to depend on? If you take my advice, Miss," she continued, "we'll get
+out of this room. It always did give me the fantods with them
+Egyptians staring at me from the walls, and to-day it's worse than a
+hearse! Now downstairs----"
+
+"You are quite right, Mrs. Toft," Mary said. "We'll go downstairs."
+She shared to the full Mrs. Toft's distaste for the room. "We're doing
+no good here, and your husband can follow us when he is himself again.
+Petch should be back by this time, and we ought to arrange what is to
+be done outside."
+
+Toft made no demur, and they went down. They found the keeper waiting
+in the hall. He had made no discovery, and Mary, to whom Toft's
+breakdown had given fresh energy, took things into her own hands. She
+gave Petch his orders. He must get together a dozen men, and search
+the park and every place within a mile of the Gatehouse. He must
+report by messenger every two hours to the house, and in the meantime
+he must send a man on horseback to the town for Dr. Pepper.
+
+"And Mr. Basset?" Mrs. Toft murmured.
+
+"I will write a note to Mr. Basset," Mary said, "and the man must send
+it by post-horses from the Audley Arms. I will write it now." She sat
+down in the library, cold as the room was, and scrawled three lines,
+telling Basset that her uncle had disappeared during the night, and
+that, ill as he was, she feared the worst.
+
+Then, when Petch had gone to get his men together--a task which would
+take time as there were no farms at hand--she and Mrs. Toft searched
+the house room by room, while Etruria and her father went again
+through the outbuildings. But the quest was as fruitless as the former
+search had been.
+
+Mary had known many unhappy days in Paris, days of anxiety, of
+loneliness, of apprehension, when she had doubted where she would
+lodge or what she would eat for her next meal. Now she had a source of
+strength in her engagement and her love, which should have been
+inexhaustible. But she never forgot the misery of this day, nor ever
+looked back on it without a shudder. Probably there were moments when
+she sat down, when she took a tasty meal, when she sought Mrs. Toft in
+her warm kitchen or talked with Etruria before her own fire. But as
+she remembered the day, she spent the long hours gazing across the
+wintry park; now catching a glimpse of the line of beaters as it
+appeared for a moment crossing a glade, now watching the approach of
+the messenger who came to tell her that they had found nothing; or
+again straining her eyes for the arrival of Dr. Pepper, who, had she
+known it, was at the deathbed of an old patient, ten miles on the
+farther side of Riddsley.
+
+Now and again a hailstorm swept across the park, and Mrs. Toft came
+out and scolded her into shelter; or a farmer, whose men had been
+borrowed, "happened that way," and after a gruff question touched his
+hat and went off to join the searchers. Once a distant cry seemed to
+herald a discovery, and she tried to steady her leaping pulses. But
+nothing came of it except some minutes of anxiety. And once her
+waiting ear caught the clang of the bell that hung in the hall and she
+flew through the house to the front door, only to learn that the
+visitor was the carrier who three times a week called for letters on
+his way to town. The dreary house with its open doors, its cold
+draughts, its unusual aspect, the hurried meals, the furtive glances,
+the hours of suspense and fear--these stamped the day for ever on
+Mary's memory: as sometimes an hour of loneliness prints itself on the
+mind of a child who all his life long hears with distaste the clash of
+wedding bells.
+
+At length the wintry day with its gusts of snow began to draw in.
+Before four Petch sent in to say that he had beaten the park and also
+the gardens at the Great House, but had found nothing. Half his men
+were now searching the slope on either side of the Riddsley road. With
+the other half he was going to explore, while the light lasted, the
+fringe of the Chase towards Brown Heath.
+
+That left Mary face to face with the night; with the long hours of
+darkness, which inaction must render infinitely worse than those of
+the day. She had visions of the windswept park, the sullen ponds, the
+frozen moorland; they spread before her fraught with some brooding
+terror. She had never much marked, she had seldom felt the loneliness
+of the house. Now it pressed itself upon her, isolated her, menaced
+her. It made the thought of the night, that lay before her, almost
+unbearable.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+ A FOOTSTEP IN THE HALL
+
+
+Mrs. Toft bringing in candles, and looking grave enough herself,
+noticed the girl's pale face and chid her gently. "I don't believe
+that you've sat down this blessed day, Miss!" she said. "Nor no more
+than looked at good food. But tea you shall have and sit down to it,
+or my name's not Anne Toft! Fretting's no manner of use, and fasting's
+a poor stick to beat trouble with!"
+
+"But, Mrs. Toft," Mary said, her face piteous, "it's the thought that
+he may be lying out there, helpless and dying, while we sit here----"
+
+"Steady, Miss! Giving way does no good, and too much mind's worse than
+none. If he's out there he's gone, poor gentleman, long ago. And Dr.
+Pepper'll say the same. It's not in reason he should be alive if he's
+in the open. And, God knows, if he's under cover it's little better."
+
+"But then if he is alive!" Mary cried. "Think of another night!"
+
+"Ay, I know," Mrs. Toft said. "And hard it is! But you've been a model
+all this blessed day, and it's no time to break down now. Where that
+dratted doctor is, beats me, though he could do no more than we've
+done! But there, Mr. Basset will be with us to-morrow, and he'll find
+the poor gentleman dead or alive! There's some as are more to look at
+than the Squire, but there's few I'd put before him at a pinch!"
+
+"Where's Toft?" Mary asked.
+
+"He went to join Petch two hours ago," Mrs. Toft explained. "And there
+again, take Toft. He's a good husband, but there's no one would say he
+was a man to wear his heart outside. But you saw how hard he took it?
+I don't know," Mrs. Toft continued thoughtfully, "as I've seen Toft
+shed a tear these twenty years--no, nor twice since we went to
+church!"
+
+"You don't think," Mary asked, "that he knows more than he has told
+us?"
+
+The question took Mrs. Toft aback. "Why, Miss," she said, "you don't
+mean as you think he was putting on this morning?"
+
+"No," Mary answered. "But is it possible that he knows the worst and
+does not tell us?"
+
+"And why shouldn't he tell us? It would be strange if he wouldn't tell
+his own wife? And you that's Mr. Audley's nearest!"
+
+"It's all so strange," Mary pleaded. "My uncle is gone. Where has he
+gone?"
+
+Mrs. Toft did not answer the question. She could not. And there came
+an interruption. "That's Petch's voice," she said. "They're back."
+
+The men trooped into the hall. They advanced to the door of the
+parlor, Petch leading, a man whom Mary did not know next to him, after
+these a couple of farmers and Toft, in the background a blur of faces
+vaguely seen.
+
+"We've found something, Miss," Petch said. "At least Tom has. But I'm
+not sure it lightens things much. He was going home by the Yew Tree
+Walk and pretty close to the iron gate, when what should he see lying
+in the middle of the walk but this!"
+
+Petch held out a silver flask.
+
+"It's the Master's, sure enough," Mrs. Toft said.
+
+"Ay," Petch answered. "But the odd thing is, I searched that place
+before noon, a'most inch by inch, looking for footprints, and I went
+over it again when we were beating the Yew Tree Walk this afternoon,
+and I'm danged if that flask was there then!"
+
+"I don't think as you could ha' missed it, Mr. Petch," the finder
+said, "it was that bright and plain!"
+
+"But isn't the grass long there?" Mary asked. She had already as much
+mystery as she could bear and wanted no addition to it.
+
+"Not that long," said Tom.
+
+"No, not that long, the lad's right," Petch added. "I warrant I must
+have seen it."
+
+"That you must, Mr. Petch," a lad in the background said. "I was next
+man, and I wondered when you'd ha' done that bit."
+
+"But I don't understand," Mary answered. "If it was not there, this
+morning----"
+
+"I don't understand neither, lady," the keeper rejoined. "But it is on
+my mind that there's foul play!"
+
+"Oh, but," Mary protested, "who--why should any one hurt my uncle?"
+
+"I can't say as to that," Petch replied, darkly. "I don't know anybody
+as would. But there's the flask, and flasks don't travel without
+hands. If he took it out of the house with him----"
+
+"May he not have dropped it--this afternoon?" Mary suggested. "Suppose
+he wandered that way after you passed?"
+
+The keeper shook his head. "If he had passed that way this afternoon
+it isn't one but six pairs of eyes would ha' seen him."
+
+There was a murmur of assent. The searchers were keenly enjoying the
+drama, taking in every change that appeared on the girl's face. They
+were men into whose lives not much of drama entered.
+
+"But I cannot think that what you say is likely!" Mary protested. She
+had held her own stoutly through the day, but now with the eyes of all
+these men upon her she grew bewildered. The rows of faces, the bashful
+hands twisting caps, the blurred white of smocked frocks--grew and
+multiplied and became misty. She had to grasp the table to steady
+herself.
+
+Mrs. Toft saw how it was, and came to the rescue. "What's Toft say
+about it?" she asked.
+
+"Ay, to be sure, missus," Petch agreed. "I dunno as he's said anything
+yet."
+
+"I don't think the Master could have passed and not been seen," Toft
+replied. His tone was low, and in the middle of his speech he
+shivered. "But I'm not saying that the flask wasn't there this
+morning. It's a small thing."
+
+"It couldn't have been overlooked, Mr. Toft," the keeper replied
+firmly. "I speak as I know!"
+
+Again Mrs. Toft intervened. "I'm sure nobody would ha' laid a hand on
+the Master!" she said. "Nobody in these parts and nobody foreign, as I
+can fancy. I've no doubt at all the poor gentleman awoke with some
+maggot in his brain and wandered off, not knowing. The question is,
+what can we do? The young lady's had a sad day, and it's time she was
+left to herself."
+
+"There's nothing we can do now," Petch said flatly. "It stands to
+reason if we've found nothing in the daylight we'll find nothing in
+the dark. We'll be back at eight in the morning. Whether we'd ought to
+let his lordship know----"
+
+"Sho!" said Mrs. Toft with scorn. "What's he in it, I'd like to know?
+But there, you've said what you come to say and it's time we left the
+young lady to herself."
+
+Mary raised her head. "One moment," she said. "I want to thank you all
+for what you've done. And for what Petch says about the flask, he's
+right to speak out, but I can't think any one would touch my uncle.
+Only--can we do nothing? Nothing more? Nothing at all? If we don't
+find him to-night----" She broke off, overcome by her feelings.
+
+"I'm afraid not, Miss," Petch said gently. "We'd all be willing,
+but we don't know where to look. I own I'm fair beat. Still Tom and
+I'll stay an hour or two with Toft in case of anything happening.
+Good-night, Miss. You're very welcome, I'm sure."
+
+The others murmured their sympathy as they trooped out into the
+darkness. Mrs. Toft bustled away for the tea, and Mary was left alone.
+
+Suspense lay heavy on her. She felt that she ought to be doing
+something and she did not know what to do. Dr. Pepper did not come,
+the Tofts were but servants. They could not take the onus, they could
+not share her burden; and Toft was a broken reed. Meanwhile time
+pressed. Hours, nay, minutes might make all the difference between
+life and death.
+
+When Etruria came in with Mary's tea she found her mistress bending
+over the fire in an attitude of painful depression, and she said a few
+words, trying to impart to her something of her own patience. That
+patience was a fine thing in Etruria because it was natural. But Mary
+was of sterner stuff. She had a more lively imagination, and she could
+not be blind to the issues, or to the value of every moment that
+passed. Even while she listened to Etruria she saw with the eyes of
+fancy a hollow amid a clump of trees not far from a pool that she
+knew. In summer it was a pleasant dell, clothed with mosses and ferns
+and the flowers of the bog-bean; in winter a dank, sombre hollow.
+There she saw her uncle lie, amid the decaying leaves, the mud, the
+rank grass; and the vision was too much for her. What if he were
+really lying there, while she sat here by the fire? Sat here in this
+home which he--he had given her, amid the comforts which he had
+provided!
+
+The thought was horrible, and she turned fiercely on the comforter.
+"Don't!" she cried. "You don't think! You don't understand! We can't
+go through the night like this! They must go on looking! Fetch your
+father! And bring Petch! Bring them here!" she cried.
+
+Etruria went, alarmed by her excitement, but almost as quickly she
+came back. Toft had gone out with Petch and the other man. They would
+not be long.
+
+Mary cried out on them, but could do no more than walk the room, and
+after a time Etruria coaxed her to sit down and eat; and tea and food
+restored her balance. Still, as she sat and ate she listened--she
+listened always. And Etruria, taught by experience, let her be and
+said nothing.
+
+At last, "How long they are!" Mary cried. "What are they doing? Are
+they never----"
+
+She stopped. The footsteps of two men coming through the hall had
+reached her ears, and she recognized the tread of one--recognized it
+with a rush of relief so great, of thankfulness so overwhelming that
+she was startled and might well have been more than startled, had she
+been free to think of anything but the lost man. It was Basset's step,
+and she knew it--she would have known it, she felt, among a hundred!
+He had come! An instant later he stood in the doorway, booted and
+travel-stained, his whip in his hand, just as he had dropped from the
+saddle--and with a face grave indeed, but calm and confident. He
+seemed to her to bring relief, help, comfort, safety, all in one!
+
+"Oh!" she cried. "You are here! How--how good of you!"
+
+"Not good at all," he answered, advancing to the table and quietly
+taking off his gloves. "Your messenger met me half-way to Blore. I was
+coming into Riddsley to a meeting. I had only to ride on. Of course I
+came."
+
+"But the meeting?" she asked fearfully. Was he only come to go again?
+
+"D--n the meeting!" he answered, moved to anger by the girl's pale
+face. "Will you give me a cup of tea, Toft? I will hear Miss Audley's
+account first. Keep Petch and the other man. We shall want them. In
+twenty minutes I'll talk to you. That will do."
+
+Ah, with what gratitude, with what infinite relief, did Mary hear his
+tone of authority! He watched Toft out of the room and, alone with
+her, he looked at her. He saw that her hand shook as she filled the
+teapot, that her lips quivered, that she tried to speak and could not.
+And he felt an infinite love and pity, though he drove both out of his
+voice when he spoke. "Yes, tea first," he said coolly, as he took off
+his riding coat. "I've had a long journey. You must take another cup
+with me. You can leave things to me now. Yes, two lumps, please, and
+not too strong." He knocked together the logs, and warmed his hands,
+stooping over the fire with his back to her. Then he took his place at
+the table, and when he had drunk half a cup of tea, "Now," he said,
+"will you tell me the story from the beginning. And take time. More
+haste, less speed, you know."
+
+With a calmness that surprised herself, Mary told the tale. She
+described the first alarm, the hunt through the house, the discoveries
+in the bedroom, Toft's breakdown, last of all the search through the
+park and the finding of the flask.
+
+He listened gravely, asking a question now and then. When she had
+done, "What of Toft?" he inquired. "Not been very active, has he? Not
+given you much help?"
+
+"No! But how did you guess?" she asked in surprise.
+
+"I'm afraid that Toft knows more than he has told you. For the rest,"
+he looked at her kindly, "I want you to give up the hope of finding
+your uncle alive. I have none. But I think I can promise you that
+there has been no suffering. If it turns out as I imagine, he was dead
+before he was missed. What the doctor expected has happened. That is
+all."
+
+"I don't understand," she said.
+
+"And I don't want to say more until I know for certain. May I ring for
+Toft?" She nodded. He rang, and after a pause, during which he stood,
+silent and waiting, the servant came in. He shot a swift glance at
+them, and dropped his eyes.
+
+"Tell Petch and the other man to be ready to start with us in five
+minutes," Basset said. "Let them fetch a hurdle, and do you put a
+mattress on it. I suppose--you made sure he was dead, Toft, before you
+left him?"
+
+The man flinched before the sudden question, but he showed less
+emotion than Mary. Perhaps he had expected it. After a pause, during
+which Basset did not take his eyes from him, "I made sure," he said in
+a low voice. "As God sees me, I did! But if you think I raised a hand
+to him----"
+
+"I don't!" Basset said sternly. "I don't think so badly of you as
+that. But nothing but frankness can save you now. Is he in the Great
+House?"
+
+Toft opened his mouth, but he seemed unable to speak. He nodded.
+
+"What about the flask?"
+
+"I dropped it," the man muttered. He turned a shade paler. "I could
+not bear to think he was lying there. I thought it would lead the
+search--that way, and they would find him."
+
+"I see. That's enough now. Be ready to start at once."
+
+The man went out. "Good heavens!" Mary cried. She was horror-stricken.
+"And he has known it all this time! Do you think that he--he had any
+part----"
+
+"Oh no. He was alone with Mr. Audley when he collapsed, and he lost
+his head. They were together in the Great House--it was a difficult
+position--and he did not see his way to explain. He may have seen
+some advantage in gaining time--I don't know. The first thing to be
+done is to bring your uncle home. I will see to that. You have borne
+up nobly--you have done your part. Do you go to bed now."
+
+Something in his tone, and in his thought for her, brought old times
+to Mary's mind and the blood to her pale cheek. She did not say no,
+but she would not go to bed. She made Etruria come to her, and the two
+girls sat in the parlor listening and waiting, moving only when it was
+necessary to snuff the candles. It was a grim vigil. An hour passed,
+two hours. At length they caught the first distant murmur, the tread
+of men who moved slowly and heavily under a burden--there are few who
+have not at one time or another heard that sound. Little by little the
+shuffling feet, the subdued orders, the jar of a stumbling bearer,
+drew nearer, became more clear. A gust of wind swept through the hall,
+and moaned upwards through the ancient house. The candles on the table
+flickered. And still the two sat spell-bound, clasping cold hands, as
+the unseen procession passed over the threshold, and for the last time
+John Audley came home to sleep amid his books--heedless now of right
+or claim, or rank or blood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A few minutes later Basset entered the parlor. His face betrayed his
+fatigue, and his first act was to go to the sideboard and drink a
+glass of wine. Mary saw that his hand shook as he raised the glass,
+and gratitude for what he had done for her brought the tears to her
+eyes. He stood a moment, leaning in utter weariness against the
+wall--he had ridden far that day. And Mary had been no woman if she
+had not drawn comparisons.
+
+Opportunity had served him, and had not served the other. Nor, had her
+betrothed been here, could he have helped her in this pinch. He could
+not have taken Basset's place, nor with all the will in the world
+could he have done what Basset had done.
+
+That was plain. Yet deep down in her there stirred a faint resentment,
+a complaint hardly acknowledged. Audley was not here, but he might
+have been. It was his doing that she had not told her uncle, and that
+John Audley had passed away in ignorance. It was his doing that in her
+trouble she had had to lean on the other. It was not the first time
+during the long hours of the day that the thought had come to her; and
+though she had put it away, as she put it away now, the opening flower
+of love is delicate--the showers pass but leave their mark.
+
+When Etruria had slipped out, and left them, Basset came forward,
+and warmed himself at the fire. "Perhaps it is as well you did not go
+to bed," he said. "You can go now with an easy mind. It was as I
+thought--he lay on the stairs of the Great House and he had been dead
+many hours. Dr. Pepper will tell us more to-morrow, but I have no
+doubt that he died of syncope brought on by exertion. Toft had tried
+to give him brandy."
+
+Shocked and grieved, yet sensible of relief, she was silent for a
+time. She had known John Audley less than a year, but he had been good
+to her in his way and she sorrowed for him. But at least she was freed
+from the nightmare which had ridden her all day. Or was she? "May I
+know what took him there?" she asked in a low voice. "And Toft?"
+
+"He believed that there were papers in the Great House, which would
+prove his claim. It was an obsession. He asked me more than once to go
+with him and search for them, and I refused. He fell back on Toft.
+They had begun to search--so Toft tells me--when Mr. Audley was taken
+ill. Before he could get him down the stairs, the end came. He sank
+down and died."
+
+With a shudder Mary pictured the scene in the empty house. She saw the
+light of the lantern fall on the huddled group, as the panic-stricken
+servant strove to pour brandy between the lips of the dying man; and
+truly she was thankful that in this strait she had Basset to support
+her, to assist her, to advise her! "It is very dreadful," she said. "I
+do not wonder that Toft gave way. But had he--had my uncle--any right
+to be there?"
+
+"In his opinion, yes. And if the papers were there, they were his
+papers, the house was his, all was his. In my opinion he was wrong.
+But if he believed anything, he believed that he was justified in what
+he did."
+
+"I am glad of that!"
+
+"There must be an inquest, I am afraid," Basset continued. "One or two
+will know, and one or two more will guess what Mr. Audley's errand
+was. But Lord Audley will have nothing to gain by moving in it. And if
+only for your sake--but you must go to bed. Etruria is waiting in the
+hall. I will send her to you. Good-night."
+
+She stood up. She wished to thank him, she longed to say something,
+anything, which would convey to him what his coming had been to her.
+But she could not find words, she was tongue-tied. And Etruria came
+in.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+ THE NEWS FROM RIDDSLEY
+
+
+The business which had taken Audley away on the morrow of his
+engagement had been no mere pretext. The crisis in political life
+which Peel's return to office had brought about was one of those
+upheavals which are of rare promise to the adventurous. The wise
+foresaw that the party which Sir Robert had led would be riven from
+top to bottom. Old allies would be flung into opposing camps, and
+would be reaching out every way for support. New men would be learning
+their value, and to those who dared, all things might be added.
+Places, prizes, honors, all might be the reward of those who knew how
+to choose their side with prudence and to support it with courage. The
+clubs were like hives of bees. All day long and far into the winter
+night Pall Mall roared under the wheels of carriages. About the doors
+of Whitehall Gardens, where Peel lived, men gathered like vultures
+about the prey. And, lo, in a twinkling and as by magic the
+Conservative party vanished in a cloud of dust, to reappear a few days
+later in the guise of Peelites and Protectionists--Siamese twins, who
+would not live together, and could not live apart.
+
+At such a time it was Audley's first interest to be as near as
+possible to the hub of things and to place himself in evidence as a
+man concerned. He had a little influence in the Foreign Office, he had
+his vote in the House of Lords. And though he did not think that these
+would suffice, he trusted that, reinforced by the belief that he
+carried the seat at Riddsley in his pocket, they might be worth
+something to him.
+
+Unfortunately he could deal with one side only. If Stubbs were right
+he could pass for the owner of the borough only as long as he opposed
+Sir Robert. He could return the younger Mottisfont and have the credit
+of returning him, in the landed interest; but however much it might
+suit his book--and it was of that book he was thinking as he travelled
+to Lord Seabourne's--he could not, if Stubbs were right, return a
+member in the other interest.
+
+Now when a man can sell to one party only, tact is needed if he is to
+make a good bargain. Audley saw this. But he knew his own qualities
+and he did not despair. The occasion was unique, and he thought that
+it would be odd if he could not pluck from the confusion something
+worth having; some place under the Foreign Office, a minor embassy, a
+mission, something worth two, or three, or even four thousand a year.
+
+He travelled up to town thinking steadily of the course he would
+pursue, and telling himself that he must be as cunning as the serpent
+and as gentle as the dove. He must let no whip cajole him, and no Tory
+browbeat him. For he had only this to look to now: a rich marriage was
+no longer among the possibilities. Not that he regretted his decision
+in that matter as yet, but at times he wondered at it. He told himself
+that he had been impulsive, and setting this down to the charms of his
+mistress he gave himself credit for disinterested motives. And then,
+too, he had made himself safe!
+
+Still there were difficulties in the way of his ambition, which
+appeared more clearly at Seabourne Castle, where Lady Adela was a
+fellow-guest, and in London than at Riddsley; difficulties of shrewd
+whips, who knew the history of the borough by heart, and had figures
+at their fingers' ends; difficulties of arrogant leaders, who talked
+of his duty to the land and assumed that duty was its own reward.
+Above all, there was the difficulty that he could only sell to the
+party that was out of office and must pay in promises--bills drawn at
+long dates and for which no discounters could be found. For who could
+say when the landed interest, made up of stupid bull-headed men like
+Lord George Bentinck and Stubbs, a party without a leader and with
+divided counsels, would be in power? They were a mob rather than a
+party, and like every other mob were ready to sacrifice future
+prospects to present revenge.
+
+That was a terrible difficulty, and his lordship did not see how he
+was to get over it. To the Peelites who could pay, cash down, in
+honors and places, he could not sell. Nor to the Liberals under little
+Lord John, though to their promises some prospect of office gave
+value. So that at times he almost despaired. For he had only this to
+look to now; if he failed in this he would have love and he would have
+Mary, and he would have safety, but very little besides. If his word
+had not been given to Mary, he might almost have reconsidered the
+matter.
+
+The die was cast, however. Yet many a man has believed this, and then
+one fine morning he has begun to wonder if it is so--the cast was such
+an unlucky, if not an unfair one! And presently he has seen that at
+the cost of a little pride, or a little consistency, or what not, he
+might call the game drawn. That is, he might--if he were not the soul
+of honor that he is!
+
+By and by under the stress of circumstances his lordship began to
+consider that point. He did not draw back, he did not propose to draw
+back; but he thought that he would keep the door behind him ajar. To
+begin with, he did not overwhelm Mary with letters--his public
+engagements were so many; and when he wrote he wrote on ordinary
+matters. His pen ran more glibly on party gossip than on their joint
+future; he wrote as he might have written to a cousin rather than to
+his sweetheart. But he told himself that Mary was not versed in love
+letters, nor very passionate. She would expect no more.
+
+Then one fine morning he had a letter from Stubbs, which told him that
+there was to be a real contest in Riddsley, that the Horn and Corn
+platform was to be challenged, and that the assailant was Peter
+Basset. Stubbs added that the Working Men's Institute was beside
+itself with joy, that Hatton's and Banfield's hands were solid for
+repeal, and that the fight would be real, but that the issue was a
+foregone conclusion.
+
+The news was not altogether unwelcome. The contest gave value to the
+seat, and increased my lord's claim; on that party, unfortunately,
+they could only pay in promises. It also tickled my lord's vanity. His
+rival, unhorsed in the lists of love, had betaken himself, it seemed,
+to other lists, in which he would as surely be beaten.
+
+"Poor beggar!" Audley thought. "He was always a day late! Always came
+in second! I don't know that I ever knew anything more like him than
+this! From the day I first saw him, standing behind John Audley's
+counsel at the suit, right to this day, he has always been a loser!"
+
+And he smiled as he recalled the poor figure Basset had cut as a
+squire of dames.
+
+A week later Stubbs wrote again, and this time his news was startling.
+John Audley was dead. Stubbs wrote in the first alarm of the
+discovery, word of which had just been brought into the town. He knew
+no particulars, but thought that his lordship should be among the
+first to learn the fact. He added a hasty postscript, in which he said
+that Mr. Basset was proving himself a stronger candidate than either
+side had expected, and that not only were the brass-workers with him
+but a few of the smaller fry of tradesmen, caught by his cry of cheap
+bread. Stubbs closed, however, with the assurance that the landed
+interest would carry it by a solid majority.
+
+"D--n their impudence!" Lord Audley exclaimed. And after that he gave
+no further heed to the postscript. As long as the issue was certain,
+the election was Mottisfont's and Stubbs's affair. As for Basset, the
+more money he chose to waste the better.
+
+But John Audley's death was news--it was great news! So he was gone at
+last--the man whom he had always regarded as a menace! Whom he had
+feared, whose very name had rung mischief in his ears, by whom, during
+many a sleepless night, he had seen himself ousted from all that he
+had gained from title, income, lands, position! He was gone at last;
+and gone with him were the menace, the danger, the night alarms, the
+whole pile of gloomy fancies which apprehension had built up!
+
+The relief was immense. Audley read the letter twice, and it seemed to
+him that a weight was lifted from him. John Audley was dead. In his
+dressing-gown and smoking-cap my lord paced his rooms at the Albany
+and said again and again, "He's dead! By gad, he's dead!" Later, he
+could not refrain from the thought that if the death had taken place a
+few weeks earlier, in that first attack, he would have been under no
+temptation to make himself safe. As it was--but he did not pursue the
+thought. He only reflected that he had followed love handsomely!
+
+A day later a third letter came from Stubbs, and one from Mary. The
+tidings they brought were such that my lord's face fell as he read
+them, and he swore more than once over them. John Audley, the lawyer
+wrote, had been found dead in the Great House. He had been found lying
+on the stairs, a lantern beside him. Stubbs had visited the house the
+moment the facts became known. He had examined the muniment room and
+found part of the wall broken down, and in the room two boxes of
+papers which had been taken from a recess which the breach had
+disclosed. One of the boxes had been broken open. At present Stubbs
+could only say that the papers had been disturbed, he could not say
+whether any were missing. He begged his lordship--he was much
+disturbed, it was clear--to come down as quickly as possible. In the
+meantime, he would go through the papers and prepare a report. They
+appeared to be family documents, old, and not hitherto known to his
+lordship's advisers.
+
+Audley was still swearing, when his man came in. "Will you wear the
+black velvet vest, my lord?" he asked, "or the flowered satin?"
+
+"Go to the devil!" his master cried--so furiously that the man fled
+without more.
+
+When he was gone Audley read the letter again, and came to the
+conclusion that in making himself safe he had builded more wisely than
+he knew. For who could say what John Audley had found? Or who, through
+those papers, had a hold on him? He remembered the manservant's visit,
+and the thing looked black. Very black. Alive or dead, John Audley
+threatened him.
+
+Then he felt bitterly angry with Stubbs. There had been the most
+shocking carelessness. Had he not himself pointed out what was going
+on? Had he not put it to Stubbs that the place should be guarded? But
+the lawyer, stubborn in his belief that there were no papers there,
+had done nothing. Nothing! And this had come of it! This which might
+spell ruin!
+
+Or, no. Stubbs had indeed done his best to ruin him, but he had saved
+himself. He turned with relief to Mary's letter.
+
+It was written sadly, and it was rather cold. He noticed this, but her
+tone did not alarm him, because he set it down to the reserve of his
+own letters.
+
+He took care to answer this letter, however, by that day's post, and
+he wrote more affectionately than before--as if her trouble had broken
+down a reserve natural to him. He wrote with tact, too. He could not
+attend the funeral; the dead man's feelings towards him forbade that
+he should. But his agent would attend, and his carriage and servants.
+When he had written the letter he was satisfied with it: more than
+satisfied when he had added a phrase implying that their happiness
+would not long be postponed.
+
+After he had posted the letter he wondered if she would expect him to
+come to her. It was a lonely house and with death in it--but no, in
+the circumstances it was not possible. He would go down to The
+Butterflies next day. That would be the most that could be expected of
+him. He would be at hand if she needed anything.
+
+But when the next day came he did not go. A letter from a man
+belonging to the inner circle of politics reached him. The great man,
+who had been and might be again in the Cabinet, suggested a meeting.
+Nothing came of the meeting--it was one of those will-of-the-wisps
+that draw the unwary on until they find themselves committed. But it
+kept Audley in London, and it was not until the evening of Monday, the
+day of the funeral, that, chilled and out of temper, after posting the
+last stage from Stafford, he reached his quarters at The Butterflies,
+and gave short answers to Mrs. Jenkinson's inquiries after his health.
+
+"Poor dear young man!" she said, when she rejoined her sisters. "He
+has a kind heart and he feels it. Mr. John was Mr. John, and odd, very
+odd. But still he was an Audley!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ THE AUDLEY BIBLE
+
+
+Angry with Stubbs as he was--and with some reason--Lord Audley was
+not the man to bite off his nose to spite his face. He pondered long
+what he would say to him, and more than once he rehearsed the scene,
+toning down this phrase and pruning that. For he knew that after all
+Stubbs was a good agent. He was honest, he thought much and made much
+of the property, and nothing would be gained by changing him. Then his
+influence in the borough was such that even if my lord quarrelled with
+him, Mottisfont would hardly venture to discard him.
+
+For these reasons Audley had no mind to break with his agent. But he
+did wish to punish him. He did wish to make his displeasure felt. And
+he wished this the more because he began to suspect that if Stubbs had
+been less bigoted, he might have carried the borough the way he
+wished--the way that would pay him best.
+
+Stubbs on his side foresaw an unpleasant quarter of an hour. He had
+been too easy. He had paid too little heed to John Audley's
+trespasses, and had let things pass that he should have stopped. Then,
+too, he had been over-positive that there were no more documents at
+the Great House. Evil had not come of this, but it might have; and he
+made up his mind to hear some hard words.
+
+But when he obeyed my lord's summons his reception tried his patience.
+A bright fire burned in the grate, half a dozen wax candles shed a
+softened light on the room. The wine stood at Audley's elbow, and his
+glass was half full. But he did not give Stubbs even two fingers, nor
+did he ask him to take wine. And his tone was colder than Stubbs had
+ever known it. He made it plain that he was receiving a servant, and a
+servant with whom he was displeased.
+
+Still he was Lord Audley, something of divine right survived in him,
+and Stubbs knew that he had been himself in the wrong. He took the
+bull by the horns. "You are displeased, my lord," he said, as he took
+the seat to which the other pointed. "And I admit with some cause. I
+have been mistaken and, perhaps, a little remiss! But it is the
+exception, and it will be a lesson to me. I am sorry, my lord," he
+added frankly. "I can say no more than that."
+
+"And much good that will do us," my lord growled, "in certain events,
+Mr. Stubbs!"
+
+"At any rate it will be a sharp lesson to me," Stubbs replied. "It has
+cost Mr. Audley his life."
+
+"He had no right to be there!"
+
+"No, my lord, he had no right to be there. But he would not have been
+there if I had seen that the place was properly secured. I take all
+the blame."
+
+"Unfortunately," the other flung at him contemptuously, "you cannot
+pay the penalty; that may fall upon me. Anyway, it was a d--d silly
+thing, Mr. Stubbs, to leave the place open, and you see what has come
+of it."
+
+"I cannot deny it, my lord," Stubbs said patiently. "But I hope that
+nothing will come of it. I will tell your lordship first what my own
+observations were. I made a careful examination of the two chests of
+papers and I came to the conclusion that Mr. Audley had done little
+more than open the first when he was taken ill. One chest showed some
+disturbance. The upper layer had been taken out and replaced. The
+other box had not been opened."
+
+"What if he found what he wanted and searched no further?" Audley
+asked grimly. "But the point of the matter does not lie there. It lies
+in another direction, as I should have thought any lawyer would see."
+
+"My lord?"
+
+"Who was with him?" Lord Audley rapped the table with his fingers.
+"That's the point, sir! Who was with him?"
+
+"I think I have ascertained that," Stubbs replied, less put out than
+his employer expected. "I have little doubt that his man-servant, a
+man called Toft, was with him."
+
+"Ha!" the other exclaimed, "I expected that!"
+
+Stubbs raised his eyebrows. "You know him, my lord?"
+
+"I know him for a d--d blackmailing villain!" Audley broke out. Then
+he remembered himself. He had not told Stubbs of the blackmailing.
+And, after all, what did it matter? He had made himself safe. Whatever
+papers he had found, John Audley was dead, and John Audley's heiress
+was going to be his wife! The danger to him was naught, and the
+blackmailer was already disarmed. Still he was not going to spare
+Stubbs by telling him that. Instead, "What did the boxes contain?" he
+asked ungraciously.
+
+"Nothing of any value when I examined them, my lord. Old surrenders,
+fines, and recoveries with some ancient terriers. I could find no
+document among them that related to the title."
+
+"That may be," Audley retorted. "But John Audley expected to find
+something that related to the title! He knew more than we knew. He
+knew that those boxes existed, and he knew what he expected to find in
+them."
+
+"No doubt. And if your lordship had given me a little more time I
+should have explained before this that he was disappointed in his
+expectation; nay, more, that it was that disappointment--as I have
+little doubt--that caused his collapse and death."
+
+"How the devil do you know that?"
+
+"If your lordship will have patience I will explain," Stubbs said, a
+gleam of malice in his eyes. He rose from his seat and took from a
+chair beside the door a parcel which he had laid there on his
+entrance. "I have here that which he found, and that which I don't
+doubt caused his death."
+
+"The deuce you have!" Audley cried, rising to his feet in his
+surprise. And he watched with all his eyes while the lawyer slowly
+untied the tape and spread wide the wrappers. The action disclosed a
+thick quarto volume bound in blue leather, sprinkled on the sides with
+silver butterflies, and stamped with the arms of Audley. "Good G--d!"
+Audley continued, "the Family Bible!"
+
+"Yes, the Family Bible," the lawyer answered, gazing at it
+complacently, "about which there was so much talk at the opening of
+the suit. It was identified by a score of references, called for by
+both sides, sought for high and low, and never produced!"
+
+"And here it is!"
+
+"Here it is. Apparently at some time or other it went out of fashion,
+was laid aside and lost sight of, and eventually bricked up with a
+mass of old and valueless papers."
+
+Audley steadied his voice with difficulty. "And what is its effect?"
+he asked.
+
+"Its effect, my lord, is to corroborate our case in every particular,"
+the lawyer answered proudly. "Its entries form a history of the family
+for a long period, and amongst them is an entry of the marriage of
+Peter Paravicini Audley on the date alleged by us; an entry made in
+the handwriting of his father, and one of eleven made by the same
+hand. This entry agrees in every particular with the suspected
+statement in the register which we support, and fully bears out our
+case."
+
+"And John Audley found that?" my lord cried, after a moment of
+pregnant silence. He had regained his composure. His eyes were
+shining.
+
+"Yes, and it killed him," Stubbs said gravely. "Doubtless he came on
+it at the moment when he thought success was within his grasp, and the
+shock was too much for him."
+
+"Good Lord! Good Lord! And how did you get it?"
+
+"From Mr. Basset."
+
+"Basset?"
+
+"Who obtained it, I have no doubt, from the man, Toft, either by
+pressure or purchase."
+
+"The rascal! The d--d rascal! He ought to be prosecuted!"
+
+"Possibly," the lawyer agreed. "But he was only an accomplice, and we
+could not prosecute him without involving others; without bringing Mr.
+John's name into it--and he is dead. As a fact, I have passed my word
+to Mr. Basset that no steps should be taken against him, and I think
+your lordship will agree with me that I could not do otherwise."
+
+"Still--the man ought to be punished!"
+
+"He ought, but if any one has paid for his silence or for this book,
+it is not we."
+
+After that there was a little more talk about the Bible, which my lord
+examined with curiosity, about the singularity of its discovery, about
+the handwriting of the entries, which the lawyer said he could himself
+prove. Stubbs was made free of the decanter, and of everything but my
+lord's mind. For Audley said nothing of his engagement to Mary--the
+moment was hardly opportune; and nothing--it was too late in the
+day--of Toft's former exploit. He stood awhile absorbed and dreaming,
+staring through the haze of the candles. Here at last was final and
+complete relief. No more fears, no more calculations. Here was an end
+at last of the feeling that there was a mine under him. Traditions,
+when they are bred in the bone, die slowly, and many a time he had
+been hard put to it to resist the belief, so long whispered, that his
+branch was illegitimate. At last the tradition was dead. There was no
+more need to play for safety. What he had he had, and no one could
+take it from him.
+
+And presently the talk passed to the election.
+
+"There's no doubt," Stubbs said, "that Mr. Basset is a stronger
+candidate than either side expected."
+
+"But he's no politician! He has no experience!"
+
+The lawyer sat forward, with his legs apart and a hand on either knee.
+"No," he said. "But the truth is, though it is beyond me how a
+gentleman of his birth can be so misled, he believes what he says--and
+it goes down!"
+
+"Is he a speaker?"
+
+"He is and he isn't! I slipped in myself one night at the back of one
+of the new-fangled meetings his precious League has started. I wanted
+to see, my lord, if any of our people were there. I heard him for ten
+minutes, and at the start he was so jumpy I thought that he would
+break down. But when he got going--well, I saw how it was and what
+took the people. He believes what he says, and he says it plain. The
+way he painted Peel giving up everything, sacrificing himself,
+sacrificing his party, sacrificing his reputation, sacrificing all to
+do what he thought was right--the devil himself wouldn't have known
+his own!"
+
+"He almost converted you?"
+
+The lawyer laughed disdainfully. "Not a jot!" he said. "But I saw that
+he would convert some. Not many," Stubbs continued complacently.
+"There's some that mean to, but will think better of it at the last.
+And some would but daren't! Two or three may. Still, he's such a
+candidate as we've not had against us before, my lord. And with cheap
+bread and the preachings of this plaguy League--I shall be glad when
+it is over."
+
+Audley rose and poked the fire. "You're not going to tell me," he
+said, in a voice that was unnaturally even, "that he's going to beat
+us? You're not going, after all the assurances you've given me----"
+
+"God forbid," Stubbs replied. "No, no, my lord! Mr. Mottisfont will
+hold the seat! I mean only that it will be a nearer thing--a nearer
+thing than it has been."
+
+He had no idea that his patron was fighting a new spasm of anger; that
+the thought that he might, after all, have dealt with Sir Robert, the
+thought that he might, after all, have bargained with the party in
+power, was almost too much for the other's self-command. It was too
+late now, of course. It was too late. But if the contest was to be so
+close, surely if he had cast his weight on the other side, he might
+have carried it!
+
+And what if the seat were lost? Then this stubborn, confident fool,
+who was as bigoted in his faith as the narrowest Leaguer of them all,
+had done him a deadly injury! My lord bit off an oath, and young as he
+was, his face wore a very apoplectic look as he turned round, after
+laying down the poker.
+
+"That reminds me," the lawyer resumed, blandly unconscious of the
+crisis, and of the other's anger. "I meant to ask your lordship what's
+to be done about the two Boshams. You remember them, my lord? They've
+had the small holding by the bridge with the water meadow time out of
+mind--for seven generations they say. They pay eighteen pounds as
+joint tenants, and have votes as old freemen."
+
+"What of them?" the other asked impatiently.
+
+"Well, I'm afraid they'll not support us."
+
+"Do you mean that they'll not vote for Mottisfont?"
+
+"I'm afraid not," Stubbs answered. "They're as stubborn as their own
+pigs! I've spoken to them myself and told them that they've only one
+thing to expect if they go against their landlord."
+
+"And that is, to go out!" Audley said. "Well, make that quite clear to
+them, Stubbs, and depend upon it--they'll see differently."
+
+"I'm afraid they won't, my lord, and that is why I trouble you. They
+voted against the last lord--twice, I am told--and the story goes that
+he laid his stick about Ben Bosham's shoulders in the street--that
+would be in '31, I fancy. But he didn't turn them out--they'd been in
+the holding so long."
+
+"Two votes may have been nothing to him," Audley replied coldly. "They
+are something to me. They will vote for Mottisfont or they will go,
+Stubbs. That is flat, and do you see to it. There, I'm tired now," he
+continued, rising from his seat.
+
+Stubbs rose. "I don't know if your lordship's heard about Mr. John's
+will!"
+
+"No!" My lord straightened himself. Earlier in the day he had given
+some thought to this, and had weighed Mary Audley's chances of
+inheriting what John Audley had. "No!" he said. And he waited.
+
+"He has left the young lady eight thousand pounds."
+
+"Eight thousand!" Audley ejaculated. "Do you mean--he must have had
+more than that? He wasted a small fortune in that confounded suit. But
+he must have had--four times that, man!"
+
+"The residue goes to Mr. Basset."
+
+"Basset!" Audley cried, his face flushed with passion. "To Basset?" he
+repeated. "Good G--d!"
+
+"So I'm told, my lord," the lawyer answered, staggered by the temper
+in which his employer received the news.
+
+"But Miss Audley was his own niece! Basset? He was no relation to
+him!"
+
+"They were very old friends."
+
+"That's no reason why he should leave him thirty thousand pounds of
+Audley money! Money taken straight out of the Audley property! Thirty
+thousand----"
+
+"Not thirty, my lord," Stubbs ventured. "Not much above twenty, I
+should say. If you put it----"
+
+"If I put it that you were--something of a fool at times," the angry
+man cried, "I shouldn't be far wrong! But there, there, never mind!
+Good-night! Can't you see I'm dead tired and hardly know what I am
+saying? Come to-morrow! Come at eleven in the morning."
+
+Stubbs hardly knew how to take it. But after a moment's hesitation, he
+made the best of the apology, muttered something, and got out of the
+room. On the stairs he relieved his feelings by a word or two. In the
+street he wondered what had taken the man so suddenly. Surely he had
+not expected to get the money!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+ A FRIEND IN NEED
+
+
+Basset had obtained the missing Bible very much in the way the lawyer
+had indicated--partly by purchase and partly by pressure. Shocked as
+Toft had been by his master's sudden death, he had had the presence of
+mind to remember that he might make something of what they had
+discovered could he secrete it; and with every nerve quivering the man
+had fought down panic until he had hidden the parcel which had caused
+John Audley's collapse. Then he had given way. He had turned his back
+on the Great House, and shuddering, clutched at by grisly hands,
+pursued by phantom feet, he had fled through the night and the Yew
+Walk, to hide, for the present at least, his part in the tragedy.
+
+Basset, however, had known too much for him, and the servant, shaken
+by what had happened, had not been able to persist in his denials. But
+to tell and to give were two things, and it is doubtful whether he
+would have released his plunder if Basset had not in the last resort
+disclosed to him Miss Audley's engagement to her cousin.
+
+The change which this news wrought in Toft had astonished Basset. The
+man had gone down under it as under a blow on the head. The spirit had
+gone out of him, and he had taken with thankfulness the sum which
+Basset, as John Audley's representative, had offered him--rather out
+of pity than because it seemed necessary. He had given up the parcel
+on the night before the funeral.
+
+The book in his hands, Basset had hastened to be rid of it. Cynically
+he had told himself that he did so, lest he too might give way to the
+ignoble impulse to withhold it. Audley was his rival, but that he
+might have forgiven, as men forgive great wrongs and in time smile on
+their enemies. But the little wrongs, who can forgive these--the
+slight, the sneer, the assumption of superiority, the upper hand
+lightly taken and insolently held?
+
+Not Peter Basset, at a moment when he was being tried almost beyond
+bearing. For every day, between the finding of the body and the
+funeral, and often more than once in the day he had to see Mary, he
+had to advise her, he had--for there was no one else--to explain
+matters to her, to bear her company. He had to quit this meeting and
+that Ordinary--for election business stops for no man--and to go to
+her. He had to find her alone and to see her face light up at his
+entrance; he had to look back, and to see her watch him as he rode
+from the door. Nor when he was absent from the Gatehouse was it any
+better; nay, it was worse. For then he was forced to think of her as
+alone and sad, he had to picture her brooding over the fire, he had to
+fancy her at her solitary meals. And alike, with her or away from her,
+he had to damp down the old passion, as well as the new regret that
+each day and each hour and every kind look on her part fanned into a
+flame. Nor was even this all; every day he saw that she grew more
+grave, daily he saw her color fading, and he did not know what qualms
+she masked, what nightmares she might be suffering in that empty
+house--nay, what cause for unhappiness she might be hiding. At
+last--it was the afternoon before the funeral--he could bear it no
+longer, and he spoke.
+
+"You ought not to be here!" he said bluntly. "Why doesn't Audley fetch
+you away?" He was standing before the fire drawing on his gloves as he
+prepared to leave. The room was full of shadows, for he had chosen a
+time when she could not see his face.
+
+She tried to fence with him. "I am afraid," she said, "that some
+formalities will be necessary before he can do that."
+
+"Then why is he not here?" he retorted. "Or why doesn't he send some
+one to be with you? You ought not to be alone. Mrs. Jenkinson at The
+Butterflies--she's a good soul--you know her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"She'd come at a word. I know it's not my business----"
+
+"Or you would go about it, I am sure," she replied gently, "with as
+much respect to my wishes as Lord Audley shows."
+
+"Your wishes? But why--why do you wish----"
+
+"Why do I wish to be alone?" she answered. "Because I owe something to
+my uncle. Because I owe him a little thought and some remembrance. He
+made my old life for me--would you have me begin the new one before he
+is in the grave? This was his house--would you have me entertain Lord
+Audley in it?" She stood up, slender and straight, with the table
+between them--and he did not guess that her knees were trembling.
+"Please to understand," she continued, "that Lord Audley and I are
+entirely at one in this. We have our lives before us, and it were
+indeed selfish of us, and ungrateful of me, if we grudged a few days
+to remembrance. As selfish," she continued bravely--and he did not
+know that she braced herself anew--"as if I were ever to forget the
+friend who was _his_ friend, whose kindness has never failed me, whose
+loyalty has never--" she broke down there. She could not go on.
+
+"Add, too," he said gruffly, "who has robbed you of the greater part
+of your inheritance! Don't forget that!" He had been explaining the
+effect of John Audley's will to her. It had been opened that morning.
+
+His roughness helped her to recover herself. "I do not know what you
+mean by 'inheritance,'" she said. "My uncle has left me the portion
+his wife brought to him. I am more than satisfied. I am very grateful.
+My only fear is that, had he known of my engagement, he would not have
+wished me to have this."
+
+"The will was made before you came to live here," Basset said. "The
+eight thousand was left to you because you were his brother's child.
+It was the least he could do for you, and had he made a new will he
+would doubtless have increased it. But," breaking off, "I must be
+going." Yet he still stood, and he still tapped the table with the
+end of his riding-crop. "When is Audley coming?" he asked suddenly.
+"To-morrow?"
+
+"Yes, to-morrow."
+
+"Well he ought to," he replied, without looking at her. "You should
+not be here a day longer by yourself. It is not fitting. I shall see
+you in the morning before we start for the church, but the lawyer will
+be here and I shall not be able to come again. But I must be sure that
+there is some one here." He spoke almost harshly, partly to impress
+her, partly to hide his own feelings; and he did not suspect that she,
+too, was fighting for calmness; that she was praying that he would go,
+before she showed more clearly how much the parting tried her--before
+every kind word, every thoughtful act, every toilsome journey taken on
+her behalf, rose to her remembrance and swept away the remnants of her
+self-control.
+
+She had not imagined that she would feel the leave-taking as she did.
+She could not speak, and she was thankful that it was too dark for him
+to see her face. Would he never go? And still the slow tap-tap of his
+whip on the table went on. It seemed to her that she would never
+forget the sound! And if he touched her----
+
+But he had no thought of touching her.
+
+"Good-night," he said at last. He turned, moved away, lingered. At the
+door he looked back. "I am going into the library," he said. "The
+coffin will be closed in the morning."
+
+"Yes, good-night," she muttered, thankful that the thought of the dead
+man steadied her and gave her power to speak. "I shall see him in the
+morning."
+
+He closed the door, and she crept blindly to a chair, and covered by
+the darkness she gave way. She told herself that she was thinking of
+her uncle. But she knew that she deceived herself. She knew that her
+uncle had little to do with her tears, or with the feeling of
+loneliness that overcame her. Once more she had lost her friend--and a
+friend so good, so kind. Only now did she know his value!
+
+Five minutes later Basset crossed the court in search of his horse.
+Mrs. Toft's door stood open and a stream of firelight and candlelight
+poured from it and cut the January fog. She was hard at work, cooking
+funeral meats with the help of a couple of women; for quietly as John
+Audley had lived, he could not be buried without some stir. Odd people
+would come, drawn by the Audley name, squires who boasted some distant
+connection with the line, a few who had been intimate with him in past
+days. And the gentry far and wide would send their carriages, and the
+servants must be fed. Still the preparations jarred on Basset as he
+crossed the court. He felt the bustle an outrage on the mourning girl
+he had left, and on his own depression.
+
+Probably Mrs. Toft had set the door open that she might waylay him,
+for as he went by she came out and stopped him. "Mr. Basset, sir!" she
+said in a low voice. "Is this true, what Toft tells me? I declare,
+when I heard it, you could ha' knocked me down with a common dip!" She
+was wiping her hands on her apron. "That the young lady is to marry
+his lordship?"
+
+"I believe it is true," Basset said coldly. "But you had better let
+her take her own time to make it known. Toft should not have told
+you."
+
+"Never fear, sir, I'll not let on. But, Lord's sakes, who'd ha'
+thought it? And she'll be my lady! Not that she's not an Audley, and
+there's small differ, and she'll make none, or I don't know her! Well,
+indeed, I hope she's wise, but wedding cake, make it as rich as you
+like, it's soon stale. And for him, I don't know what the Master would
+have said if he'd known it! I thought things would come out," with a
+quick look at Basset, "quite otherways! And wished it, too!"
+
+"Thank you, Mrs. Toft," he said quietly.
+
+"Just so, sir, you'll excuse me. Well, it's not many months since the
+young lady came, and look at the changes! With the old Master dead,
+and you going in for elections--drat 'em, I say, plaguy things that
+set folks by the ears--and Mr. Colet gone and 'Truria that unsettled,
+and Toft for ever wool-gathering, I shall be glad when tomorrow's over
+and I can sit down and sort things out a bit!"
+
+"Yes, Mrs. Toft."
+
+"And speaking of elections reminds me. You know they two Boshams of
+the Bridge End, sir?"
+
+"I know them. Yes."
+
+Mrs. Toft sniffed. "They're sort of kin to me, and middling honest as
+town folks go. But two silly fellows, always meddling and making and
+gandering with things they'd ought to leave to the gentry! The old
+lord was soft with them, and so they've a mind now to see who is the
+stronger, they or his lordship."
+
+"If you mean that they have promised to vote for me----"
+
+"That's it, sir! Vote their living away, they will, and leave 'em
+alone! Votes are for poor men to make a bit of money by, odd times;
+but they two Boshams I've no patience with. Sally, Ben's wife, was
+with me to-day, and the long and the short of it is, Mr. Stubbs has
+told them that if they vote for you they'll go into the street."
+
+"It's a hard case," Basset said. "But what can I do?"
+
+"Don't ha' their votes. What's two votes to you? For the matter of
+that," Mrs. Toft continued, thoroughly wound up, "what's all the
+votes--put together? Bassets and Audleys, Audleys and Bassets were
+knights of the shire, time never was, as all the country knows! But
+for this little borough--place it's what your great-grandfather
+wouldn't ha' touched with a pair of gloves! I'd leave it to the
+riff-raff that's got money and naught else, and builds Institutes and
+such like!"
+
+"But you'd like cheap bread?" Basset said, smiling.
+
+"Bread? Law, Mr. Basset, what's elections to do wi' bread? It's not
+bread they're thinking of, cheap or dear. It's beer! Swim in it they
+do, more shame to you gentry! I'll be bound to say there's three goes
+to bed drunk in the town these days for two that goes sober! But
+there, you speak to they Boshams, Mr. Basset, sir, and put some sense
+into them!"
+
+"I'm afraid I can't promise," he answered. "I'll see!"
+
+But it was not of the Boshams he thought as he rode down the hill with
+a tight rein--for between fog and frost the road was treacherous. He
+was thinking of the man who had been his friend and of whose face,
+sphinx-like in death, he had taken farewell in the library. And solemn
+thoughts, thoughts such as at times visit most men, calmed his spirit.
+The fret of the contest, the strivings of the platform, the rubs of
+vanity flitted to a distance, they became small things. Even passion
+lost its fever and love its selfishness; and he thought of Audley with
+patience and of Mary as he would think of her in years to come, when
+time had enshrined her, and she was but a memory, one of the things
+that had shaped his life. He knew, indeed, that this mood would pass;
+that passion would surge up again, that love would reach out to its
+object, that memory would awake and wound him, that pain and
+restlessness would be his for many days. But he knew also--in this
+hour of clear views--that all these things would have an end, and only
+the love,
+
+
+ That seeketh not itself to please
+ Nor of itself hath any care,
+
+
+would remain with him.
+
+Already it had carried him some way. In the matter of the election,
+indeed, he might be wrong. He might have entered on it too
+hastily--often he thought that he had--he might be of fibre too weak
+for the task. It cost him much to speak, and the occasional failure,
+the mistake, the rebuff, worried him for hours and even days. Trifles,
+too, that would not have troubled another, troubled his conscience;
+side-issues that were false, but that he must not the less support,
+workers whom he despised and must still use, tools that soiled his
+hands but were the only tools. Then the vulgar greeting, the tipsy
+grasp, the friend in the market-place:--
+
+
+ The man who hails you Tom or Jack
+ And proves by thumps upon your back
+ How he esteems your merit!
+ Who's such a friend that one had need
+ Be very much his friend indeed
+ To pardon or to bear it!
+
+
+these humiliated him. But worse, far worse, than all was his unhappy
+gift of seeing the merits of the other side and of doubting the cause
+which he had set out to champion. He had fits of lowness when he was
+tempted to deny that honesty existed anywhere in politics; when Sir
+Robert Peel no less than Lord George Bentinck--who was coming to the
+front as the spokesman of the land--Cobden the Radical no less than
+Lord John Russell, seemed to be bent only on their own advancement,
+when all, he vowed, were of the School of the Cynics!
+
+But were he right or wrong in his venture--and right or wrong he had
+small hope of winning--he would not the less cling to the thing which
+Mary had given him--the will to make something of his life, the
+determination that he would leave the world, were it only the few
+hundred acres that he owned, or the hamlet in which he lived, better
+than he had found them. The turmoil of the election over, he would
+devote himself to his property at Blore. There John Audley's twenty
+thousand pounds opened a wide door. He would build, drain, manure,
+make roads, re-stock. He would make all things new. From him as from a
+centre comfort should flow. He saw himself growing old in the middle
+of his people, a lonely, but not an unhappy man.
+
+As he passed the bridge at Riddsley he thought of the Boshams, and
+weary as he was, he drew rein at their door. Ben Bosham came out,
+bare-headed; a short, elderly man with a bald forehead and a dirty
+complexion, a man who looked like a cobbler rather than the cow-keeper
+he was.
+
+"Shut your door, Bosham," Basset said. "I want a word with you."
+
+And when the man had done this, he stooped from the saddle and said a
+few words to him in a low voice.
+
+"Well, I'm dommed!" the other answered, peering up through the
+darkness. "It be you, Squire, bain't it? But you're not meaning it?"
+
+"I am," Basset replied in a low voice. "I'd not say, vote for him,
+Bosham. But leave it alone. You're not called upon to ruin yourself."
+
+"But ha' you thought," the man exclaimed, "that our two votes may make
+the differ? That they may make you or mar you, Squire!"
+
+"Well, I'd rather be marred than see you put out of your place,"
+Basset answered. "Think it over, Bosham."
+
+But Bosham repudiated even thought of it. This vote and his use of it,
+this defiance of a lord, was, for the time, his very life. "I'll not
+do it," he declared. "I couldn't do it! Nor I won't!" he repeated.
+"We're freemen o' Riddsley, and almost the last of the freemen that
+has votes as freemen! And while free we are, free we'll be, and vote
+as we choose, Squire! Vote as we choose! I'd not show my face in the
+town else! Mr. Stubbs may talk as gallus as he likes--and main ashamed
+of himself he looked yesterday--he may talk as gallus as never was,
+we'll not bend to no landlord, nor to no golden image!"
+
+"Then there's no more to be said," Basset answered, feeling that he
+cut a poor figure. "I don't wish you to do anything against your
+conscience, Bosham, and I'm obliged to you and your brother for your
+staunchness. I only wanted you to know that I should understand if you
+stayed away."
+
+"I'd chop my foot off first!" cried the patriot.
+
+After which Basset had no choice but to leave him and to ride on,
+feeling that he was himself too soft for the business--that he was a
+round man in a square hole. He wondered what his committee would think
+of him if they knew, and what Bosham thought of him--who did know. For
+Bosham seemed to him at this moment a man of principle, a patriot,
+nay, a very Brutus: whereas, Ben was in truth no better than a small
+man of large conceit, whose vote was his one road to fame.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+ BEN BOSHAM
+
+
+It was Tuesday, market-day at Riddsley, and farmers' wives, cackling
+as loudly as the poultry they carried, elbowed one another on the
+brick pavements or clustered before the windows of the low-browed
+shops. Farmers in white great-coats, with huge handkerchiefs about
+their necks, streamed from the yards of the Packhorse and the Barley
+Mow, and meeting a friend planted themselves in the roadway as firmly
+as if they stood in their own pastures. Now and again a young spark,
+fancying all eyes upon his four-year-old, sidled through the throng
+with many a "Whoa!" and "Where be'st going, lad?" While on the steps
+of the Market-Cross and about the long line of carts that rested on
+their shafts in the open street, hucksters chaffered and house-wives
+haggled over the rare egg or the keg of salted butter.
+
+The quacking of ducks, the neighing of horses, the singsong of rustic
+voices filled the streets. It was common talk that the place was as
+full as at the March Fair. The excitement of the Election had gone
+abroad, the cry that the land was at stake had brought in some, others
+had come to see what was afoot. Many a stout tenant was here who at
+other times left the marketing to his womenfolk; and shrewd glances he
+cast at the gentry, as he edged past the justices who lounged before
+the Audley Arms and killed in gossip the interval between the
+Magistrates' Meeting, at which they had just assisted, and the
+Ordinary at which they were to support young Mottisfont.
+
+The great men talked loudly and eagerly, were passionate, were in
+earnest. Occasionally one of the younger of them would step aside to
+look at a passing hackney, or an older man would speak to a favorite
+tenant whom he called by his first name. But, for the most part,
+they clung together, fine upstanding figures, in high-collared
+riding-coats and top-boots. They were keen to a man; the farmers keen
+also, but not so keen. For the argument that high wheat meant high
+rents, and that most of the benefits of protection went to the
+landlords had got about even in Riddsley. The squires complained that
+the farmers would only wake up when it was too late!
+
+Still in such a place, and on market-day, four out of five were in the
+landed interest; four-fifths of the squires, four-fifths of the
+parsons, almost four-fifths of the tenants; for the laborers, no one
+asked what they thought of it--they had ten shillings a week and no
+votes. "Peel--'od rot him!" cried the majority, "might shift as often
+as his own spinning-jenny! But not they! No Manchester man, and no
+Tamworth man either, should teach them their business! Who would die
+if there were no potatoes? It was a flam, a bite, but it wouldn't
+bamboozle Stafford farmers!"
+
+Meanwhile Stubbs, moving quietly through the throng, spoke with one
+here and there. He had the same word for all. "Listen to me, John," he
+would say, his hand on the yeoman's shoulder. "Peel says he's been
+wrong all these years and is only right now. Then, if you believe him,
+he's a fool; and if you don't believe him, he's a knave. Not a very
+good vet., John, eh? Not the vet. for the old gray mare, eh?"
+
+This had a great effect. John went away and repeated it to himself,
+and presently grasped the dilemma and chuckled over it. Ten minutes
+later he imparted it, with the air of a Solomon, to the "Duke," who
+mouthed it and liked it and rolled it off to the first he met. It went
+the round of the inns and about four o'clock a farmer fresh from the
+"tap" put it to Stubbs and convinced him; and that night men,
+travelling home market-peart in the charge of their wives, bore it to
+many a snug homestead set in orchards of hard cider apples.
+
+Had the issue of the Election lain with the Market, indeed, it had
+been over. But of the hundred and ninety voters no more than fifteen
+were farmers, and though the main trade of the town sided with them,
+the two factories were in opposition; and cheap bread had its charms
+for the lesser fry. But the free traders were too wise to flaunt their
+views on market-day, and it was left for little Ben Bosham, whose vote
+was pretty near his all, to distinguish himself in the matter.
+
+He, too, had been at the tap, and about noon his voice was heard
+issuing from a group who stood near the Audley Arms. "Be I free, or
+bain't I?" he bawled. "Answer me that, Mr. Bagenal!"
+
+A knot of farmers had edged him into a corner and were disposed to
+bait him. A stubby figure in a velveteen coat and drab breeches, his
+hand on an ash-plant, he held his ground among them, tickled by the
+attention he excited and fired by his own importance. "Be I free, or
+bain't I?" he repeated.
+
+"Free?" Bagenal answered contemptuously. "You be free to make a fool
+of yourself, Ben! I'm thinking you'd ha' us all lay down the ground to
+lazy pasture and live by milk, as you do!"
+
+"Milk?" ejaculated a stout man of many acres, whose contempt for such
+traffic was above speech.
+
+"You'll be free to go out of Bridge End," cried a third. "That's what
+you'll be free to do! And where'll your vote be then, Ben?"
+
+But there Bosham was sure of himself. "That's where you be wrong, Mr.
+Willet," he retorted with gusto. "My vote dunno come o' my landlord,
+and in the Bridge End or out of the Bridge End, I've a vote while I've
+a breath! 'Tain't the landlord's vote, and why'd I give it to he? Free
+I be--not like you, begging your pardon! Freeman, old freeman, I be,
+of this borough! Freeman by marriage!"
+
+"Then you be a very rare thing!" Bagenal retorted slyly. "There's a
+many lose their freedom that way, but you be the first I ever heard of
+that got it!"
+
+"And a hard bargain, too, as I hear," said Willet.
+
+This drew a roar of laughter. The crowd grew thicker and the little
+man's temper grew short, for his wife was no beauty. He began to see
+that they were playing with him.
+
+"You leave me alone, Mr. Willet," he said angrily, "and I'll leave you
+alone!"
+
+"Leave thee alone!" said the farmer who had turned up his nose at
+milk. "So I would, same as any other lump o' dirt! But yo' don't let
+us. Yo' set up to know more than your betters! Pity the old lord ain't
+alive to put his stick about your back!"
+
+"Did it smart, Ben?" cried a lad who had poked himself in between his
+betters.
+
+"You let me catch you," Ben cried, "and I'll make you smart. You be
+all a set of slaves! You'd set your thatch afire if squires'd tell
+you! Set o' slaves, set o' slaves you be!"
+
+"And what be you, Bosham?" said a man who had just joined the group.
+"Head of the men, bain't you? Cheap bread and high wages, that's your
+line, ain't it!"
+
+"That's his line, be it?" said the old farmer slowly. "Bit of a rascal
+it seems yo' be? Don't yo' let me find you in my boosey pasture
+talking to no men o' mine, or I'll make yo' smart a sight more than
+his lordship did!"
+
+"Ay, that's Ben's line," said the new-comer.
+
+"You're a liar!" Ben shrieked. "A dommed liar you be! I see you not
+half an hour agone coming out of Stubbs's office! I know who told you
+to say that, you varmint! I'll have the law of you!"
+
+"Ben Bosham, the laborers' friend!" the man retorted.
+
+Ben was furious, for he was frightened. There was no feud so bitter in
+the 'forties as the feud between farmer and laborer. The laborer had
+no vote, he had lost his common rights, his wood, his cow-feed; he was
+famished, he was crushed by the new Poor Law, and so he was often in
+an ugly mood, as singed barns and burning stacks went to show. Bosham
+knew that he might flout the squires, and at worst be turned out of
+his holding; but woe betide him if he got the name of the laborers'
+friend. Moreover, there was just so much truth in the accusation as
+made it dangerous. Ben and his brother eked out the profits of the
+dairy by occasional labor, and Ben had sometimes vapored in tap-rooms
+where he had better have held his tongue. He shrieked furiously,
+therefore, at the false witness, and even tried to reach him with his
+ash-plant. "Who be you?" he screamed. "You be a lawyer's pup, you be!
+You'd ruin me, you would! Let me get a hold of you and I'll put a mark
+on you! You be lying!"
+
+"I don't know about that," said the big farmer slowly and weightily.
+"I'm feared yo're a bit of a rascal, Ben."
+
+"Ay, and fine he'll look in front of Stafford Gaol some morning!" said
+Willet. "At the end of a rope."
+
+On that in a happy moment for Ben, while he gaped for a retort and
+found none, two carriers' vans, huge wooden vehicles festooned with
+rabbits and market-baskets and drawn by three horses abreast, lumbered
+through the crowd and scattered it. In a twinkling Ben was left alone,
+an angry man, aware that he had cut but a poor figure!
+
+He had been frightened, too, and he resented it. He thirsted for some
+chance of setting himself right, of proving to others that he was a
+freeman and not as other men. And in the nick of time he saw a
+chance--if only he had the courage to rise to it. He saw moving
+towards him through the press a mail-phaeton and pair. On the box,
+caped and gloved, the pink of fashion, sat no less a person than his
+lordship himself. A servant in the well-known livery, a white coat
+with a blue collar, sat behind him.
+
+The vans which had freed Ben blocked the great man's way, and he was
+moving at a walk. All heads were bared as he passed, and he was
+acknowledging the courtesy with his whip when Ben stepped before the
+horses and lifted his hand. In an instant a hundred eyes were on the
+man and he knew that he had burned his boats. Bravado was now his only
+chance.
+
+"My lord," he cried, waving his hat impudently. "I want to know what
+you be going to do about me?"
+
+My lord hardly caught his words and did not catch his meaning, but he
+saw that the man was almost under the horses' feet and he checked
+them. Ben stood aside then but, as the carriage passed him, he laid
+his hand on the splashboard and walked beside it. He looked up at the
+great man and in the same impudent tone, "Be you agoing to turn me
+out, my lord?" he cried. "That's what I want to know."
+
+"I don't understand you," Audley said coldly. He guessed that the man
+referred to the Election, and what was the use of understrappers like
+Stubbs if he was to be exposed to this?
+
+"I'm Ben Bosham of the Bridge End, my lord, that's who I be," Ben
+replied brazenly. "I'm not ashamed of my name. I want to know whether
+you be agoing to turn me out, and my wife and my child! That's what I
+want to----"
+
+Then a farmer seized him and dragged him back, and others laid hands
+on him, though he still shouted. "Dunno be a fool!" cried the farmer,
+deeply shocked. "Drive on, drive on, my lord! Never heed him. He've
+had a glass too much!"
+
+"Packhorse beer, my lord," explained a second in stentorian
+tones--though he knew that Ben was fairly sober. "Ought to be ashamed
+of himself!" cried a third, and he shook the aggressor. Ben was in a
+minority of one, and those who held him were inclined to be rough.
+
+Audley waved his whip good-humoredly. "Take care of him!" he said.
+"Don't hurt him!" And he drove on, outwardly unmoved though inwardly
+fuming. Still had it ended there little harm would have been done. But
+word of the brawl outran the carriage and, as it chanced, reached the
+door of Hatton's Works as the men came out to dinner. Ben Bosham had
+spoken his mind to his lordship! His lordship had driven over him! The
+farmers had beaten him! The news passed from one to another like
+flame, and the hands stood, some two score of them, and hooted my lord
+loudly, shouting "Shame!" and jeering at him.
+
+Now had Audley been the candidate he would have thought nothing of it.
+He would have laughed in the men's faces and taken it as part of the
+day's work; or had he been the old lord, he would have flung a curse
+at the men and cut at the nearest with his whip--and forgotten it.
+
+But he was not the old lord, times were changed, and the thing angered
+him. It was in an ill-temper that he drove on along the road that rose
+by gentle degrees to the Great Chase.
+
+For the matter of that, he had been in a black mood for some time,
+because he could not make up his mind. Night and morning ambition
+whispered to him to put the vessel about; to steer the course which
+experience told him that it behooved a man to steer who was not
+steeped in romance, nor too greedy for the moment's enjoyment; the
+course which, beyond all doubt, he would have steered were he now
+starting!
+
+But he was not starting; and when he thought of shifting the helm he
+foresaw difficulties. He did not think that he was a soft-hearted man,
+yet he feared that when it came to the point he would flinch. Besides,
+he told himself that he was a man of honor; and the change was a
+little at odds with this. But there again, he reflected that truth was
+honor and in the end would cause less pain.
+
+Eight thousand pounds was so very small a portion! And for safety, he
+no longer needed to play for it. John Audley was dead and the Bible
+was in his hands; his case was beyond cavil or question, while the
+political situation was such that he saw no opening, no chance of
+enrichment in that direction. To make Mary, handsome, good, attractive
+as she was--to make her the wife of a poor peer, of a discontented,
+dissatisfied man--this, if he could only find it in his heart to tell
+her the truth, would be a cruel kindness.
+
+As he drove along the road, angry with the wretched Bosham, angry with
+Stubbs, angry with the fools who had hooted him, he was not sorry to
+feel his ill-temper increase. He might not find it so difficult to
+speak to her. A little effort and the thing would be done. Eight
+thousand pounds? The interest would barely dress her. Whereas, if she
+had played her cards well and been heir to her uncle's thirty
+thousand--the case would have been different. After all, the fault lay
+with her.
+
+He roused the off-horse with a sharp cut, and a moment later discerned
+at the end of a long, straight piece of road, the moss-clad steps of
+the old Cross and standing beside them a figure he knew.
+
+He was moved, even while, in his irritation, he was annoyed that she
+had come to meet him at a place that had recollections for him. It
+seemed to him that in doing this she was putting an undue, an unfair
+burden on him.
+
+She waved her hand and he raised his hat. The day was bright and cold,
+and the east wind had whipped a fine color into her cheeks. Perhaps
+that, too, was unfair. Perhaps that too was putting an undue burden on
+him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+ MARY MAKES A DISCOVERY
+
+
+But his face was not one to betray his thoughts, and as he drew up
+beside Mary, horses fretting, polechains jingling, the silver of the
+harness glittering from a score of points, he made a gallant show. The
+most eager lover, Apollo himself in the chariot of the sun, had
+scarcely made a better approach to his mistress, had hardly carried it
+more finely over a mind open to appearances.
+
+With a very fair show of haste he bade his man take the reins, and as
+the servant swung himself into the front seat the master sprang to the
+ground. His hand met Mary's, his curly-brimmed hat was doffed, his
+eyes smiled into hers. "Well, better late than never!" he said.
+
+"Yes," she answered. But she spoke more soberly than he expected and
+her face was grave. "You have been a long time away."
+
+That was their meeting. The servant was there; under his eyes it could
+not be warmer. Whether one or the other had foreseen this need not be
+asked.
+
+He spoke to the man, who, possessed by a natural curiosity, was all
+ears. "Keep them moving," he said. "Drive back a mile or two and
+return." Then to Mary, his hat still in his hand, "A long time away?
+Longer than I expected, and far longer than I hoped, Mary. Shall we go
+up the hill a little?"
+
+"I thought you would propose that," she said. "I am so glad that it is
+fine."
+
+The man had turned the horses. Audley took her hand again and pressed
+it, looking in her face, telling himself that she grew more handsome
+every day. Why hadn't she thirty thousand pounds? Aloud he said, "So
+am I, very glad. Otherwise you could not have met me, and I fancied
+that you might not wish me to come to the house? Was that so, dear?"
+
+"I think it was," she said. "He has been gone so very short a time.
+Perhaps it was foolish of me."
+
+"Not at all!" he answered, admiring the purity of her complexion. "It
+was like you."
+
+"If we had told him, it would have been different."
+
+"On the other hand," he said deftly, as he drew her hand through his
+arm, "it might have troubled his last days? And now, tell me all,
+Mary, from the beginning. You have gone through dark days and I have
+not been--I could not be with you. But I want to share them."
+
+She told the story of John Audley's disappearance, her cheeks growing
+pale as she described the alarm, the search, the approach of night and
+her anguish at the thought that her uncle might be lying in some place
+which they had overlooked! Then she told him of Basset's arrival, of
+the discovery, of the manner in which Peter had arranged everything
+and saved her in every way. It seemed to her that to omit this, to say
+nothing of him, would be as unfair to the one as uncandid to the
+other.
+
+My lord's comment was cordial, yet it jarred on her. "Well done!" he
+said. "He was made to be of use, poor chap! If it were any one else I
+should be jealous of him!" And he laughed, pressing her arm to his
+side.
+
+She was quivering with the memories which her story had called up, and
+it was only by an effort that she checked the impulse to withdraw her
+hand. "Had you been there----"
+
+"I hope I should have done as much," he replied complacently. "But it
+was impossible."
+
+"Yes," she said. And though she knew that her tone was cold, she could
+not help it. For many, many times during the last month she had
+pondered over his long absence and the chill of his letters. Many
+times she had told herself that he was treating her with scant
+affection, scant confidence, almost with scant respect. But then again
+she had reflected that she must be mistaken, that she brought him
+nothing but herself, and that if he did not love her he would not have
+sought her. And telling herself that she expected too much of love,
+too much of her lover, she had schooled herself to be patient, and had
+resolved that not a word of complaint should pass her lips.
+
+But to assume a warmth which she did not feel was another matter. This
+was beyond her.
+
+He, for his part, set down her manner to a natural depression. "Poor
+child!" he said, "you have had a sad time. Well, we must make up for
+it. As soon as we can make arrangements you must leave that gloomy
+house where everything reminds you of your uncle and--and we must make
+a fresh start. Do you know where I am taking you?"
+
+She saw that they had turned off the road and were following a track
+that scrambled upwards through the scrub that clothed the slope below
+the Gatehouse. It slanted in the direction of the Great House. "Not to
+Beaudelays?" she said.
+
+"Yes--to Beaudelays. But don't be afraid. Not to the house."
+
+"Oh no!" she cried. "I don't think I could bear to go there to-day!"
+
+"I know. But I want you to see the gardens. I want you to see what
+might have been ours, what we might have enjoyed had fortune been more
+kind to us! Had we been rich, Mary! It is hard to believe that you
+have never seen even the outside of the Great House."
+
+"I have never been beyond the Iron Gate."
+
+"And all these months within a mile!"
+
+"All these months within a mile. But he did not wish it. It was one of
+the first things he made me understand."
+
+"Ah! Well, there is an end of that!" And again so matter-of-fact was
+his tone that she had to struggle against the impulse to withdraw her
+arm. "Now, if there is any one who has a right to be there, it is you!
+And I want to be the one to take you there. I want you to see for
+yourself that it is only fallen grandeur that you are marrying, Mary,
+the thing that has been, not the thing that is. By G--d! I don't know
+that there is a creature in the world--certainly there is none in my
+world--more to be pitied than a poor peer!"
+
+"That's nothing to me," she said. And, indeed, his words had brought
+him nearer to her than anything he had said. So that when, taking
+advantage of the undergrowth which hid them from the road below, he
+put his arm about her and assisted her in her climb, she yielded
+readily. "To think," he said, "that you have never seen this place! I
+wonder that after we parted you did not go the very next morning to
+visit it!"
+
+"Perhaps I wished to be taken there by you."
+
+"By Jove! Do you know that that is the most lover-like thing you have
+said."
+
+"I may improve with practice," she rejoined. "Indeed, it is possible,"
+she continued demurely, "that we both need practice!"
+
+She had not a notion that he was in two minds; that one half of him
+was revelling in the hour, pleased with possession, enjoying her
+beauty, dwelling on the dainty curves of her figure, while the other
+uncertain, wavering, was asking continually, "Shall I or shall I not?"
+But if she did not guess thoughts to which she had no clue he was
+sharp enough to understand hers. "Ah! you are there, are you?" he
+said. "Wait! Presently, when we are out of sight of that cursed
+road----"
+
+"I didn't find fault!"
+
+On that there was a little banter between them, gallant and smiling on
+his part, playful and defensive on hers, which lasted until they
+reached a door leading into the lower garden. It was a rusty,
+damp-stained door, once painted green, and masked by trees somewhat
+higher than the underwood through which they had climbed. Ivy hung
+from the wall above it, rank grass grew against it, the air about
+it was dank, and in summer sent up the smell of wild leeks. Once
+under-gardeners had used it to come and go, and many a time on moonlit
+nights maids had stolen through it to meet their lovers in the coppice
+or on the road.
+
+Audley had brought the key and he set it in the lock and turned it.
+But he did not open the door. Instead, he turned to Mary with a smile.
+"This is my surprise," he said. "Shut your eyes and open them when I
+tell you. I will guide you."
+
+She complied without suspicion, and heard the door squeak on its rusty
+hinges. Guided by his hand she advanced three or four paces. She heard
+the door close behind her. He put his arm round her and drew her on.
+"Now?" she asked, "May I look?"
+
+"Yes, now!" he answered. As he spoke he drew her to him, and, before
+she knew what to expect, he had crushed her to his breast and was
+pressing kisses on her face and lips.
+
+She was taken by surprise and so completely, that for a moment she was
+helpless, without defence. Then the instinctive impulse to resist
+overcame her, and she struggled fiercely; and, presently, she released
+herself. "Oh, you shouldn't have done it!" she cried. "You shouldn't
+have done it!"
+
+"My darling!"
+
+"You--you hurt me!" she panted, her breath coming short and quick. She
+was as red now as she had for a moment been white. Her lips trembled,
+and there were tears in her eyes. He thought that he had been too
+rough with her, and though he did not understand, he stayed his
+impulse to seize her again. Instead, he stood looking down at her, a
+little put out.
+
+She tried to smile, tried bravely to pass it off; but she was put to
+it, he could see, not to burst into tears. "Perhaps I am foolish," she
+faltered, "but please don't do it again."
+
+"I can't promise--for always," he answered, smiling. But, none
+the less, he was piqued. What a prude the girl was! What a
+Sainte-ni-touche! To make such a fuss about a few kisses!
+
+She tried to take the same tone. "I know I am silly," she said, "but
+you took me by surprise."
+
+"You were very innocent, then, my dear. Still, I'll be good, and next
+time I will give you warning. Now, don't be afraid, take my arm, and
+let us----"
+
+"If I could sit down?" she murmured. Then he saw that the color had
+again left her cheeks.
+
+There was an old wheelbarrow inside the door, half full of dead
+leaves. He swept it clear, and she sat down on the edge of it. He
+stood by her, puzzled, and at a loss.
+
+Certainly he had played a trick on her, and he had been a little rough
+because he had felt her impulse to resist. But she must have known
+that he would kiss her sooner or later. And she was no child. Her
+convent days were not of yesterday. She was a woman. He did not
+understand it.
+
+Alas, she did understand it. It was not her lover's kisses, it was not
+his passion or his roughness that had shaken Mary. She was not a prude
+and she was a woman. That which had overwhelmed her was the knowledge,
+the certainty forced on her by his embrace, that she did not love him!
+That, however much she might have deluded herself a few weeks earlier,
+however far she might have let the lure of love mislead her, she did
+not love this man! And she was betrothed to him, she was promised to
+him, she was his! On her engagement to him, on her future with him had
+been based--a moment before--all her plans and all her hopes for the
+future.
+
+No wonder that the color was struck from her face, that she was shaken
+to the depths of her being. For, indeed, she knew something more--that
+she had had her warning and had closed her eyes to it. That evening,
+when she had heard Basset's step come through the hall, that moment
+when his presence had lifted the burden of suspense from her, should
+have made her wise. And for an instant the veil had been lifted, and
+she had been alarmed. But she reflected that the passing doubt was due
+to her lover's absence and his coldness; and she had put the doubt
+from her. When Audley returned all would be well, she would feel as
+before. She was hipped and lonely and the other was kind to her--that
+was all!
+
+Now she knew that that was not all. She did not love Audley and she
+did love some one else. And it was too late. She had misled herself,
+she had misled the man who loved her, she had misled that other whom
+she loved. And it was too late!
+
+For a time that was short, yet seemed long to her companion, who stood
+watching her, she sat lost in thought and unconscious of his presence.
+At length he could bear it no longer. Pale cheeks and dull eyes had no
+charm for him! He had not come, he had not met her, for this.
+
+"Come!" he said, "come, Mary, you will catch cold sitting there! One
+might suppose I was an ogre!"
+
+She smiled wanly. "Oh no!" she said, "It is I--who am foolish. Please
+forgive me."
+
+"If you would like to go back?"
+
+But her ear detected temper in his tone, and with a newborn fear of
+him she hastened to appease him. "Oh no!" she said. "You were going to
+show me the gardens!"
+
+"Such as they are. Well, so you will see what there is to be seen. It
+is a sorry sight, I can tell you." She rose and, taking her arm, he
+led her some fifty yards along the alley in which they were, then,
+turning to the right, he stopped. "There," he said. "What do you think
+of it?"
+
+They had before them the long, dank, weed-grown walk, broken midway by
+the cracked fountain and closed at the far end by the broad flight of
+broken steps that led upward to the terrace and so to the great lawn.
+When Audley had last stood on this spot the luxuriance of autumn had
+clothed the neglected beds. A tangle of vegetation, covering every
+foot of soil with leaf and bloom, had veiled the progress of neglect.
+Now, as by magic, all was changed. The sun still shone, but coldly and
+on a bald scene. The roses that had run riot, the spires of hollyhocks
+that had risen above them, the sunflowers that had struggled with the
+encroaching elder, nay, the very bindweed that had strangled all alike
+in its green embrace, were gone, or only reared naked stems to the
+cold sky. Gone, too, were the Old Man, the Sweet William, the St.
+John's Wort, the wilderness of humbler growths that had pressed about
+their feet; and from the bare earth and leafless branches, the
+fountain and the sundial alone, like mourners over fallen grandeur,
+lifted gray heads.
+
+There is no garden that has not its sad season, its days of stillness
+and mourning, but this garden was sordid as well as sad. Its dead lay
+unburied.
+
+Involuntarily Mary spoke. "Oh, it is terrible!" she cried.
+
+"It is terrible," he answered gloomily.
+
+Then she feared that, preoccupied as she was with other thoughts, she
+had hurt him. She was trying to think of something to comfort him,
+when he repeated, "It is terrible! But, d--n it, let us see the rest
+of it! We've come here for that! Let us see it!"
+
+Together they went slowly along the walk. They came by and by to the
+sundial. She hung a moment, wishing to read the inscription, but he
+would not stay. "It's the old story," he said. "We are gay fellows in
+the sunshine, but in the shadow--we are moths."
+
+He did not explain his meaning. He drew her on. They mounted the wide
+flight which had once, flanked by urns and nymphs and hot with summer
+sunshine, echoed the tread of red-heeled shoes and the ring of spurs.
+Now, elder grew between the shattered steps, weeds clothed them, the
+nymphs mouldered, lacking arms and heads, the urns gaped.
+
+Mary felt his depression and would have comforted him, but her brain
+was numbed by the discovery which she had made; she was unable to
+think, without power to help. She shared, she more than shared, his
+depression. And it was not until they had surmounted the last flight
+and stood gazing on the Great House that she found her voice. Then, as
+the length and vastness of the pile broke upon her, she caught her
+breath. "Oh," she cried. "It is immense!"
+
+"It's a nightmare," he replied. "That is Beaudelays! That is," with
+bitterness, "the splendid seat of Philip, fourteenth Lord Audley--and
+a millstone about his neck! It is well, my dear, that you should see
+it! It is well that you should know what is before you! You see your
+home! And what you are marrying--if you think it worth while!"
+
+If she had loved him she would have been strong to comfort him. If she
+had even fancied that she loved him, she would have known what to
+answer. As it was, she was dumb; she scarcely took in the significance
+of his words. Her mind--so much of it as she could divert from
+herself--was engaged with the sight before her, with the long rows of
+blank and boarded windows, the smokeless chimneys, the raw, unfinished
+air that, after eighty years, betrayed that this had never been a
+home, had never opened its doors to happy brides, nor heard the voices
+of children.
+
+At last she spoke. "And this is Beaudelays?" she said.
+
+"This is my home," he replied. "That's the place I've come to own!
+It's a pleasant possession! It promises a cheerful homecoming, doesn't
+it?"
+
+"Have you never thought of--of doing anything to it?" she asked
+timidly.
+
+"Do you mean--have I thought of completing it? Of repairing it?"
+
+"I suppose I meant that," she replied.
+
+"I might as well think," he retorted, "of repairing the Tower of
+London! All I have in the world wouldn't do it! And I cannot pull it
+down. If I did, the lawyers first and the housebreakers afterwards,
+would pull down all I have with it! There is no escape, my dear," he
+continued slowly. "Once I thought there was. I had my dream. I've
+stood on this lawn on summer days and I've told myself that I would
+build it up again, and that the name of Audley should not be lost. But
+I am a peer, what can I do? I cannot trade, I cannot plead. For a peer
+there is but one way--marriage. And there were times when I had
+visions of repairing the breach--in that way; when I thought that I
+could set the old name first and my pleasure second; when I dreamed of
+marrying a great dowry that should restore us to the place we once
+enjoyed. But--that is over! That is over," he repeated in a sinking
+voice. "I had to choose between prosperity and happiness; I made my
+choice. God grant that we may never repent it!"
+
+He sank into silence, waiting for her to speak; he waited with
+exasperation. She did not, and he looked down at her. Then, "I
+believe," he said, "that you have not heard a word I have said!"
+
+She glanced up, startled. "I am afraid I have not," she answered
+meekly. "Please forgive me. I was thinking of my uncle, and wondering
+where he died."
+
+It was all that Audley could do to check the oath that rose to his
+lips. For he had spoken with intention; he had given her, as he
+thought, a lead, an opening; and he had wasted his pains. He could
+hardly believe that she had not heard. He could almost believe that
+she was playing with him. But in truth she had barely recovered from
+the shock of her discovery, and the thing before her eyes--the
+house--held her attention.
+
+"I believe that you think more of your uncle than of me!" he cried.
+
+"No," she replied, "but he is gone and I have you." She was beginning
+to be afraid of him; afraid of him, because she felt that she was in
+fault.
+
+"Yes," he replied. "But you must be more kind to me--or I don't know
+that you will keep me."
+
+She thought that he spoke in jest, and she pressed his arm.
+
+"You don't want to go into the house?"
+
+"Oh no! I could not bear it to-day."
+
+"Then you must not mind if I leave you for a moment. I have to look to
+something inside. I shall not be more than five minutes. Will you walk
+up and down?"
+
+She assented, thankful to be alone with her thoughts; and he left her.
+A burly, stately figure, he passed across the lawn and disappeared
+round the corner of the old wing where the yew trees grew close to
+the walls. He let himself into the house. He wished to examine the
+strong-room for himself and to see what traces were left of the
+tragedy which had taken place there.
+
+But when he stood inside and felt the icy chill of the house, where
+each footstep awoke echoes, and a ghostly tread seemed to follow him,
+he went no farther than the shadowy drawing-room with its mouldering
+furniture and fallen screen. There, placing himself before an
+unshuttered pane, he stood some minutes without moving, his hands
+resting on the head of his cane, his eyes fixed on Mary. The girl was
+slowly pacing the length of the terrace, her head bent.
+
+Whether the lonely figure, with its suggestion of sadness, made its
+appeal, or the attraction of a grace that no depression could mar,
+overcame the dictates of prudence, he hesitated. At last, "I can't do
+it!" he muttered, "hanged if I can! I suppose I ought not to have
+kissed her if I meant to do it to-day. No, I can't do it."
+
+And when, half an hour later, he parted from her at the old Cross at
+the foot of the hill, he had not done it.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+ THE MEETING AT THE MAYPOLE
+
+
+Within twenty-four hours there were signs that Bosham's brush with his
+lordship and the show of feeling outside Hatton's Works had set a
+sharper edge on the fight. Trifles as these were, the farmers about
+Riddsley took them up and resented them. The feudal feeling was not
+quite extinct. Their landlord was still a great man to them, and even
+those who did not love him believed that he was fighting their battle.
+An insult to him seemed, in any case, a portent, but that such a poor
+creature as Bosham--Ben Bosham of the Bridge End--should insult him,
+went beyond bearing.
+
+Moreover, it was beginning to be whispered that Ben was tampering with
+the laborers. One heard that he was preaching higher wages in the
+public houses, another that he was asking Hodge what he got out of
+dear bread, a third that he was vaporing about commons and enclosures.
+The farmers growled. The farmers' sons began to talk together outside
+the village inn. The farmers' wives foresaw rick-burning, maimed
+cattle, and empty hen coops, and said that they could not sleep in
+their beds for Ben.
+
+Meanwhile those who, perhaps, knew something of the origin of these
+rumors, and could size up the Boshams to a pound, were not unwilling
+to push the matter farther. Men who fancied with Stubbs that repeal of
+the corn-taxes meant the ruin of the country-side, were too much in
+earnest to pick and choose. They believed that this was a fight
+between the wholesome country and the black, sweating town, between
+the open life of the fields and the tyranny of mill and pit; and that
+the only aim of the repealer was to lower wages, and so to swell the
+profits that already enabled him to outshine the lords of the soil.
+They were prone, therefore, to think that any stick was good enough to
+beat so bad a dog, and if the stout arms of the farmers could redress
+the balance, they were in no mood to refuse their help.
+
+Nor were sharpeners wanting on the other side. The methods of the
+League were brought into play. Women were sent out to sing through the
+streets of an evening, and the townsfolk ate their muffins to the
+doleful strains of:
+
+
+ Child, is thy father dead?
+ Father is gone.
+ Why did they tax his bread?
+ God's will be done!
+
+
+And as there were enthusiasts on this side, too, who saw the work of
+the Corn Laws in the thin cheeks of children and the coffins of babes,
+the claims of John Barley-corn, roared from the windows of the
+Portcullis and the Packhorse, did not seem a convincing answer. A big
+loaf and a little loaf, carried high through the streets, made a wide
+appeal to non-voters; and a banner with, "You be taxing, we be
+starving!" had its success. Then, on the evening of the market-day, a
+band of Hatton's men, fresh from the Three Tailors, came to blows with
+a market-peart farmer, and a "hand" was not only knocked down, but
+locked up. Hatton's and Banfield's men were fired with indignation at
+this injustice, and Hatton himself said a little more at the Institute
+than Basset thought prudent.
+
+These things had their effect, and more, perhaps, than was expected.
+For Stubbs, going back to his office one afternoon, suffered an
+unpleasant shock. Bosham's impudence had not moved him, nor the jeers
+of Hatton's men. But this turned out to be another matter.
+Farthingale, the shabby clerk with the high-bred nose, had news for
+him which he kept until the office door was locked. And the news was
+so bad that Stubbs stood aghast.
+
+"What? All nine?" he cried. "Impossible, man! The woman's made a fool
+of you!"
+
+But Farthingale merely looked at him over his steel-rimmed spectacles.
+"It's true," he said.
+
+"I'll never believe it!" cried the lawyer.
+
+Farthingale shook his head. "That won't alter it," he said patiently.
+"It's true."
+
+"Dyas the butcher! Why, he served me for years! For years! I go to him
+at times now."
+
+"Only for veal," replied the clerk, who knew everything "Pitt, of the
+sausage shop, and Badger, the tripeman, are in his pocket--buy his
+offal. With the other six, it's mainly the big loaf--Lake has a sister
+with seven children, and Thomas a father in the almshouse. Two more
+have big families, and the women have got hold of them!"
+
+"But they've always voted right!" Stubbs urged, with a sinking heart.
+"What's taken them?"
+
+"If you ask me," the clerk answered, "I should say it was partly
+Squire Basset--he talks straight and it takes. And partly the split.
+When a party splits you can't expect to keep all. I doubted Dyas from
+the first. He's the head. They were all at his house last night and a
+prime supper he gave them."
+
+Stubbs groaned. At last, "How much?" he asked.
+
+Farthingale shook his head. "Nix," he said. "You may be shaking Dyas's
+hand and find it's Hatton's. If you take my advice, you'll leave it
+alone."
+
+"Well," the lawyer cried, "of all the d--d ingratitude I ever heard
+of! The money Dyas has had from me!"
+
+Farthingale's lips framed the words "only veal," but no sound came.
+Devoted as he was to his employer, he was enjoying himself. Election
+times were meat and drink--especially drink--to him. At such times his
+normal wage was royally swollen by Election extras, such as: "To
+addressing one hundred circulars, one guinea. To folding and closing
+the same, half a guinea. To watering the same, half a guinea. To
+posting the same, half a guinea." A whole year's score, chalked up
+behind the door at the Portcullis, vanished as by magic at this
+season.
+
+And then he loved the importance of it, and the secrecy, and the
+confidence that was placed in him and might safely be placed. The
+shabby clerk who had greased many a palm was himself above bribes.
+
+But Stubbs was aghast. Scarcely could he keep panic at bay. He had
+staked his reputation for sagacity on the result. He had made himself
+answerable for success, to his lordship, to the candidate, to the
+party. Not once, but twice, he had declared in secret council that
+defeat was impossible--impossible! Had he not done so, the contest,
+which his own side had invited, might have been avoided.
+
+And then, too, his heart was in the matter. He honestly believed that
+these poor creatures, these weaklings whose defection might cost so
+much, were voting for the ruin of their children, for the
+impoverishment of the town. They would live to see the land pass into
+the hands of men who would live on it, not by it. They would live to
+see the farmers bankrupt, the country undersold, the town a desert!
+
+The lawyer had counted on a safe majority of twenty-two on a register
+of a hundred and ninety voters. And twenty-two had seemed a buckler,
+sufficient against all the shafts and all the spite of fortune. But a
+majority of four--for that was all that remained if these nine went
+over--a majority of four was a thing to pale the cheek. Perspiration
+stood on his brow as he thought of it. His hand shook as he shuffled
+the papers on his desk, looking for he knew not what. For a moment he
+could not face even Farthingale, he could not command his eye or his
+voice.
+
+At last, "Who could get at Dyas?" he muttered.
+
+Farthingale pondered for a time, but shook his head. "No one," he
+said. "You might try Hayward if you like. They deal."
+
+"What's to be done, then?"
+
+"There's only one way that I can think of," the clerk replied, his
+eyes on his master's face. "Rattle them! Set the farmers on them! Show
+them that what they're doing will be taken ill. Show 'em we're in
+earnest. Badger's a poor creature and Thomas's wife's never off the
+twitter. I'd try it, if I were you. You'd pull some back."
+
+They talked for a time in low voices and before he went into the
+Portcullis that night Farthingale ordered a gig to be ready at
+daylight.
+
+It might have been thought that with this unexpected gain, Basset
+would be in clover. But he, too, had his troubles and vexations. John
+Audley's death and Mary's loneliness had made drafts on his time as
+well as on his heart. For a week he had almost withdrawn from the
+contest, and when he returned to it it was to find that the extreme
+men--as is the way of extreme men--had been active. In his address and
+in his speeches he had declared himself a follower of Peel. He had
+posed as ready to take off the corn-tax to meet an emergency, but not
+as convinced that free trade was always and everywhere right. He had
+striven to keep the question of Irish famine to the front, and had
+constantly stated that that which moved his mind was the impossibility
+of taxing food in one part of the country while starvation reigned in
+another. Above all, he had tried to convey to his hearers his notion
+of Peel. He had pictured the statesman's dilemma as facts began to
+coerce him. He had showed that in the same position many would have
+preferred party to country and consistency to patriotism. He had
+painted the struggle which had taken place in the proud man's mind. He
+had praised the decision to which Peel had come, to sacrifice his
+name, his credit, and his popularity to his country's good.
+
+But when Basset returned to his Committee Room, he found that the men
+to whom Free Trade was the whole truth, and to whom nothing else was
+the truth, had stolen a march on him. They had said much which he
+would not have said. They had set up Cobden where he had set up Peel.
+To crown all, they had arranged an open-air meeting, and invited a man
+from Lancashire--whose name was a red rag to the Tories--to speak at
+it.
+
+Basset was angry, but he could do nothing. He had an equal distaste
+for the man and the meeting, but his supporters, elated by their
+prospects, were neither to coax nor hold. For a few hours he thought
+of retiring. But to do so at the eleventh hour would not only expose
+him to obloquy and injure the cause, but it would condemn him to an
+inaction from which he shrank.
+
+For all that he had seen of Mary, and all that he had done for her,
+had left him only the more restless and more unhappy. To one in such a
+mood success, which began to seem possible, promised something--a new
+sphere, new interests, new friends. In the hurly-burly of the House
+and amid the press of business, the wound that pained him would heal
+more quickly than in the retirement of Blore; where the evenings would
+be long and lonely, and many a time Mary's image would sit beside his
+fire and regret would gnaw at his heart.
+
+The open-air meeting was to be held at the Maypole, in the wide street
+bordered by quaint cottages, that served the town for a cattle-market.
+The day turned out to be mild for the season, the meeting was a
+novelty, and a few minutes before three the Committee began to
+assemble in strength at the Institute, which stood no more than a
+hundred yards from the Maypole, but in another street. Hatton was
+entertaining Brierly, the speaker from Lancashire, and in making him
+known to the candidate, betrayed a little too plainly that he thought
+that he had scored a point.
+
+"You'll see something new now, sir," he said, rubbing his hands.
+"What's wanting, he'll win! He's addressed as many as four thousand
+persons at one time, Mr. Brierly has!"
+
+"Ay, and not such as are here, Squire," Brierly boomed. He was a tall,
+bulky man with an immense chin, who moved his whole body when he
+turned his head. "Not country clods, but Lancashire men! No throwing
+dust i' their eyes!"
+
+"Still, I hope you'll deal with us gently," Basset said. "Strong meat,
+Mr. Brierly, is not for babes. We must walk before we can run."
+
+"Nay, but the emptier the stomach, the more need o' meat!" Brierly
+replied, and he rumbled with laughter. "An' a bellyful I'll give them!
+Truth's truth and I'm no liar!"
+
+"But to different minds the same words do not convey the same thing,"
+Basset urged.
+
+The man stared over his stiff neck-cloth. "That'ud not go down i'
+Todmorden," he said. "Nor i' Burnley nor i' Bolton! We're down-right
+chaps up North, and none for chopping words. Hands off the hands'
+loaf, is Lancashire gospel, and we're out to preach it! We're out to
+preach it, and them that clems folk and fats pheasants may make what
+mouth o'er it they like!"
+
+Fortunately the order to start came at this moment, and Basset had to
+fall in and move forward with Hatton, the chairman of the day.
+Banfield followed with the stranger, and the rest of the Committee
+came on two by two, the smaller men enjoying the company in which
+they found themselves. So they marched solemnly into the street, a
+score of Hatton's men forming a guard of honor, and a long tail of the
+riff-raff of the town falling in behind with orange flags and favors.
+These at a certain signal set up a shrill cheer, a band struck up
+"See, the Conquering Hero Comes!" and the sixteen gentlemen marched,
+some proudly and some shamefacedly, into the wider street, wherein a
+cart drawn up at the foot of the Maypole awaited them.
+
+On such occasions Englishmen out of uniform do not show well. The
+daylight streamed without pity on the Committee as they stalked or
+shambled along in their Sunday clothes, and Basset at least felt the
+absurdity of the position. With the tail of his eye he discerned that
+the stranger was taking off a large white hat, alternately to the
+right and left, in acknowledgment of the cheers of the crowd, while
+ominous sniggers of laughter mingled here and there with the applause.
+Banfield's men, with another hundred or so of the town idlers, were
+gathered about the cart, but of the honest and intelligent voters
+there were scanty signs.
+
+The crowd greeted the appearance of each of the principals with cheers
+and a shaft or two of Stafford wit.
+
+"Hooray! Hooray!" shouted Hatton's men as he climbed into the cart.
+
+"Hatton's a great man now!" a bass voice threw in.
+
+"But he's never lost his taste for tripe!" squeaked a shrill treble.
+The gibe won roars of laughter, and the back of the chairman's neck
+grew crimson.
+
+"Hurrah for Banfield and the poor man's loaf!" shouted his supporters,
+as he mounted in his turn.
+
+"It's little of the crumb he'll leave the poor man!" squeaked the
+treble.
+
+It was the candidate's turn to mount next. "Hooray! Hooray!" shouted
+the crowd with special fervor. Handkerchiefs were waved from windows,
+the band played a little more of the Conquering Hero.
+
+As the music ceased, "What's he doing, Tommy, along o' these chaps?"
+asked the treble voice.
+
+"He's waiting for that there Samaritan, Sammy?" answered the bass.
+
+"Ay, ay? And the wine and oil, Sammy?"
+
+It took the crowd a little time to digest this, but in time they did
+so, and the gust of laughter that followed covered the appearance of
+the stranger. He was not to escape, however, for as the noise ceased,
+"Is this the Samaritan, Sammy?" asked the bass.
+
+"Where's your eyes?" whined the treble. "He's the big loaf! and, lor,
+ain't he crumby!"
+
+"If I were down there----" the Burnley man began, leaning over the
+side of the cart.
+
+"He's crusty, too!" cried the wit.
+
+But this was too much for the chairman. "Silence! Silence!" he cried,
+and, as at a signal, there was a rush, the two interrupters were
+seized and, surrounded by a gang of hobbledehoys, were hustled down
+the road, fighting furiously and shouting, "Blues! Blues!"
+
+The chairman made use of the lull to step to the edge of the cart and
+take off his hat. He looked about him, pompous and important.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began, "free and independent electors of our ancient
+borough! At a crisis such as this, a crisis the most momentous--the
+most momentous----" he paused and looked into his hat, "that history
+has known, when the very staff of life is, one may say, the apple of
+discord, it is an honor to me to take the chair!"
+
+"The cart you mean!" cried a voice, "you're in the cart!"
+
+The speaker cast a withering glance in the direction whence the voice
+came, lost his place and, failing to find it, went on in a different
+strain. "I'm a business man," he said, "you all know that! I'm a
+business man, and I'm not ashamed of it. I stick to my business and my
+business to-day----"
+
+"Better go on with it!"
+
+But he was getting set, and he was not to be abashed. "My business
+to-day," he repeated, "is to ask your attention for the distinguished
+candidate who seeks your suffrages, and for the--the distinguished
+gentleman on my left who will presently follow me."
+
+A hollow groan checked him at this point, but he recovered himself.
+"First, however," he continued, "I propose, with your permission, to
+say a word on the--the great question of the day--if I may call it so.
+It is to the food of the people I refer!"
+
+He paused for cheers, under cover of which Banfield murmured to his
+neighbor that Hatton was set now for half an hour. He had yet to learn
+that open-air meetings have their advantages.
+
+"The food of the people!" Hatton repeated, uplifted by the applause.
+"It is to me a sacred thing! My friends, it is to me the Ark of the
+Covenant. The bread is the life. It should go straight, untaxed,
+untouched from the field of the farmer to the house of--of the widow
+and the orphan!"
+
+"Hear! Hear! Hear! Hear!" Then, "What about the miller?"
+
+"It should go from where it is grown," Hatton repeated, "to where it
+is needed; from where it is grown to the homes of the poor! And to the
+man," slipping easily and fatally into his Sunday vein, "that lays his
+'and upon it, let him be whom he may, I say with the Book, 'Thou shalt
+not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn!' The Law, ay, and the
+Prophets----"
+
+"Ay, Hatton's profits! Hands off them!" roared the bass voice.
+
+"Low bread and high profits!" shrieked the treble. "Hatton and thirty
+per cent!"
+
+A gust of laughter swept all away for a time, and when the speaker
+could again get a hearing he had lost his thread and his temper.
+"That's a low insinuation!" he cried, crimson in the face. "A low
+insinuation! I scorn to answer it!"
+
+"Regular old Puseyite you be," shouted a new tormentor. "Quoting
+Scripture."
+
+Hatton shook his fist at the crowd. "A low, dirty insinuation!" he
+cried. "I scorn----"
+
+"You don't scorn the profits!"
+
+"Listen! Silence!" Then, "I shall not say another word! You're not
+worth it! You're below it! I call on Mr. Brierly of Manchester to
+propose a resolution."
+
+And casting vengeful glances here and there where he fancied he
+detected an opponent, he stood back. He began for the first time to
+think the meeting a mistake. Basset, who had held that opinion from
+the first, scanned the crowd and had his misgivings.
+
+The man from Manchester, however, had none. He stood forward, a smile
+on his broad face, his chest thrown forward, a something easy in his
+air, as became one who had confronted thousands and was not to be put
+out of countenance by a few hisses. He waited good-humoredly for
+silence. Nor could he see that, behind the cart, there had been
+gathering for some time a band of men of a different air from those
+who faced the platform. These men were still coming up by twos and
+threes, issuing from side-streets; men clad in homespun and with ruddy
+faces, men in smocked frocks, men in velveteens; a few with belcher
+neckerchiefs and slouched felts, whom their mothers would not have
+known. When Brierly raised his hand and opened his mouth there were
+over two score of these men--and they were still coming up.
+
+But Brierly was unaware of them, and, complacent and confident of the
+effect he would produce, he opened his mouth.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began. His voice, strong and musical, reached the edge
+of the meeting. "Gentlemen, free electors! And I tell you straight no
+man is free, no man had ought to be free----"
+
+Boom! and again, Boom! Boom! Not four paces behind him a drum rolled
+heavily, drowning his voice. He stopped, his mouth open; for an
+instant surprise held the crowd also. Then laughter swept the meeting
+and supplied a treble to the drum's persistent bass.
+
+And still the drum went on, Boom! Boom! amid cheers, yells, laughter.
+Then, as suddenly as it had started, it stopped. More slowly, the
+hurrahs, yells, laughter, died down, the laughter the last to fail,
+for not only had the big man's face of surprise tickled the crowd, but
+the drum had so nicely taken the pitch of his voice that the
+interruption seemed even to his friends a joke.
+
+He seized the opportunity, but defiance not complacency was now his
+note. "Gentlemen," he said, "it's funny, but you don't drum me down,
+let me tell you! You don't drum me down! What I said I'm going to say
+again, and shame the devil and the landlords! Free men----"
+
+But he did not say it. Boom, boom, rolled the drum, drowning his voice
+beyond hope. And this time, with the fourth stroke, a couple of fifes
+struck into a sprightly measure, and the next moment three score
+lively voices were roaring:
+
+
+ You've here the little Peeler,
+ Out of place he will not go!
+ But to keep it, don't he turn about
+ And jump Jim Crow!
+
+ But to keep it see him turn about
+ And jump Jim Crow!
+ Turn about, and wheel about
+ And do just so!
+
+ _Chorus_
+
+ The only dance Sir Robert knows
+ Is Jump Jim Crow!
+ The only dance Sir Robert knows
+ Is Jump Jim Crow!
+
+
+For a verse or two the singers had it their own way. Then the band of
+the meeting struck in with "See, the Conquering Hero Comes!" and as
+the airs clashed in discord, the stalwarts of the two parties clashed
+also in furious struggle. In a twinkling and as by magic the scene
+changed. Women, children, lads, fled every way, screaming and falling.
+Shrieks of alarm routed laughter. The crowd swayed stormily, flowed
+this way, ebbed that way. The clatter of staves on clubs rang above
+oaths and shouts of defiance, as the Yellows made a rush for the drum.
+Men were down, men were trampled on, men strove to scale the cart,
+others strove to descend from it. But to descend from it was to
+descend into a mle of random fists and falling sticks, and the man
+from Manchester bellowed to stand fast; while Hatton shouted to "clear
+out these rogues," and Banfield called on his men to charge. Basset
+alone stood silent, measuring the conflict with his eyes. With an odd
+exultation he felt his spirits rise to meet the need.
+
+He saw quickly that the orange favors were outnumbered, and were
+giving way; and almost as quickly that, so far as mischief was meant,
+it was aimed at the Manchester man. He was a stranger, he was the
+delegate of the League, he was a marked man. Already there were cries
+to duck him. Basset tapped Banfield on the shoulder.
+
+"They'll not touch us," he shouted in the man's ear, "but we must get
+Brierly away. There's Pritchard's house opposite. We must fight our
+way to it. Pass the word!" Then to Brierly, "Mr. Brierly, we must get
+you away. There's a gang here means mischief."
+
+"Let them come on!" cried the Manchester man, "I'm not afraid."
+
+"No, but I am," Basset replied. "We're responsible, and we'll not have
+you hurt here. Down all!" he cried raising his voice, as he saw the
+band whom he had already marked, pressing up to the cart through the
+mle--they moved with the precision of a disciplined force, and most
+of their faces were muffled. "Down all!" he shouted. "Yellows to the
+rescue! Down before they upset us!"
+
+The leaders scrambled out of the cart, some panic-stricken, some
+enjoying the scuffle. They were only just in time. The Yellows were in
+flight, amid yells and laughter, and before the last of the platform
+was over the side, the cart was tipped up by a dozen sturdy arms.
+Hatton and another were thrown down, but a knot of their men, the last
+with fight in them, rallied to the call, plucked the two to their
+feet, and, striking out manfully, covered the rear of the retreating
+force.
+
+The men with the belcher neckerchiefs pressed on silently, brandishing
+their clubs, and twice with cries of "Down him! Down him!" made a rush
+for Brierly, striking at him over the shoulders of his companions. But
+it was plain that the assailants shrank from coming to blows with the
+local magnates; and Basset seeing this handed Brierly over to an older
+man, and himself fell back to cover the retreat.
+
+
+"Fair play, men," he cried, good humoredly. And he laughed in their
+faces as he fell back before them. "Fair play! You're too many for us
+to-day, but wait till the polling-day!"
+
+They hooted him. "Yah! Yah!" they cried. "You'd ruin the land that
+bred you! You didn't ought to be there!" "Give us that fustian rascal!
+We'll club him!"
+
+"Who makes cloth o' devil's dust?" yelled another. "Yah! You d--d
+cotton-spawn!"
+
+Basset laughed in their faces, but he was not sorry when the friendly
+doorway received his party. The country gang, satisfied with their
+victory, began to fall back after breaking a dozen panes of glass; and
+the panting and discomfited Yellows, thronging the passage and pulling
+their coats into shape, were free to exchange condolences or
+recriminations as they pleased. More than one had been against the
+open-air meeting, and Hatton, a sorry figure, hatless, and with a
+sprained knee, was not likely to hear the end of it. Two or three had
+black eyes, one had lost two teeth, another his hat, and Brierly his
+note-book.
+
+But almost before a word had been exchanged, a man pushed his way
+among them. He had slipped into the house by the back way. "For God's
+sake, gentlemen," he cried, "get the constable, or there'll be
+murder!"
+
+"What is it?" asked a dozen voices.
+
+"They've got Ben Bosham, half a hundred of them! They're away to the
+canal with him. They're that mad with him they'll drown him!"
+
+So far Basset had treated the affair as a joke. But Bosham's plight in
+the hands of a mob of angry farmers seemed more than a joke. Murder
+might really be done. He snatched a thick stick from a corner--he had
+been hitherto unarmed--and raised his voice. "Mr. Banfield," he said,
+"go to Stubbs and tell him what is doing! He can control them if any
+one can. And do some of you, gentlemen, come with me! We must get him
+from them."
+
+"But we're not enough," a man protested.
+
+"The man must not be murdered," Basset replied. "Come, gentlemen,
+they'll not dare to touch us who know them, and we've the law with us!
+Come on!"
+
+"Well done, Squire!" cried Brierly. "You're a man!"
+
+
+"Ay, but I'm not man enough to take you!" Basset retorted. "You stay
+here, please!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+ BY THE CANAL
+
+
+It was noon on that day, the day of the meeting at Riddsley, and Mary
+was sitting in the parlor at the Gatehouse. She was stooping over the
+fire with her eyes on the embers. The old hound lay beside her with
+his muzzle resting on her shoe, and Mrs. Toft, solidly poised on her
+feet, on the farther side of the table, rolled her apron about her
+arms and considered the pair.
+
+"It's given us all a rare shock," she said as she marked the girl's
+listless pose, "the poor Master's death! That sudden and queer, too! I
+don't know that I'm better for it, myself, and Toft goes up and down
+like a toad under a harrow, he's that restless! For 'Truria, she's
+fairly mazed. Her body's here and her thoughts are lord knows
+where. Toft, he seems to think something will come of her and her
+reverend----"
+
+"I hope so," Mary said gently.
+
+"But it's beyond me what Toft thinks these days. I asked him
+point--blank yesterday, 'Toft,' I says, 'are we going or are we
+staying?' And, bless the man, he looks at me as if he'd eat me. 'Take
+time and you'll know,' he says. 'But whose is the house?' I asks, 'and
+who's to pay us?' 'God knows!' he says, and whiffs out of the room
+like one of these lucifers!"
+
+"I think that the house is Mr. Basset's," Mary explained, "for the
+rest of the lease; that's about three years."
+
+"But you'll not be staying, begging your pardon, Miss? I suppose
+you'll be naming the day soon? The Master's gone and his lordship will
+be wanting you somewhere else than here."
+
+"Yes, Mrs. Toft," Mary said quietly. "I suppose so."
+
+Mrs. Toft looked for a blush and saw none, and she drew her
+conclusions. She went on another tack. "There's like to be a fine
+rumpus in the town to-day," she said comfortably. "The Squire's
+brought a foreigner down to trim their nails, and there's to be a
+wagon and speaking and such like foolishness at the Maypole. As if all
+the speeches of all the fools in Staffordshire would lower the
+quartern loaf! Anyway, if what Petch says is true, the farmers are
+that mad there's like to be lives lost!"
+
+Mary stooped and carefully put a piece of wood on the fire.
+
+"And, to be sure, they're a rough lot," Mrs. Toft continued, dropping
+her apron. "I'm not forgetting what happened to the reverend Colet,
+and I wish the young master safe out of it. It's all give and no take
+with him, too much for others and too little for himself! I'm thinking
+if anybody's hurt he'll be there or thereabouts."
+
+Mary turned. "Is Petch--couldn't Petch go down and----"
+
+"La, Miss," Mrs. Toft answered--the girl's face told her all that she
+wished to know--"Petch don't dare, with his lordship on the other
+side! But, all said and done, I'll be bound the young master'll come
+through. It's a pity, though," she continued thoughtfully, as she
+began to dust the sideboard, "as people don't know their own minds.
+There's the Squire, now. He's lived quiet and pleasant all these years
+and now he must dip his nose into this foolishness, same as if he
+dipped it into hot worts when Toft's a-brewing! I don't know what's
+come to him. He goes riding up to Blore these winter nights, twenty
+miles if it's a furlong, when this house is his! He's more like to
+take his death that way, if I'm a judge."
+
+"Is he doing that?" Mary asked in a small voice.
+
+"To be sure," Mrs. Toft returned. "What else! Which reminds me, Miss,
+are those papers to go to the bank to-day?"
+
+"I believe so."
+
+"Well, you're looking that peaky, you'd best take a jaunt with them.
+Why not? It's a fine day, and if there is a bit of a clash there's
+none will hurt you. Do you go, Miss, and get a little color in your
+cheeks. At worst, you'll bring back the news and I'm sure we're that
+dead-alive and moped a little's a godsend!"
+
+"I think I will go," Mary said.
+
+So when the gig, which was to convey the boxes to the bank, arrived
+about three, she mounted beside the driver. Here, were it only for an
+hour, was distraction and a postponement of that need to decide, to
+choose between two courses, which was crushing her under its weight.
+
+For Mary was very unhappy. That moment which had proved to her that
+she did not love the man she was to marry and did love another, had
+stamped itself on her memory, never to be wiped from it. In Audley's
+company, and for a time after they had parted, the shock had numbed
+her mind and dulled her feelings. But once alone and free to think,
+she had grasped all that the discovery meant--to her and to him; and
+from that moment she had not known an instant of ease.
+
+She saw that she had made a terrible mistake, and one so vital that,
+if nothing could be done, it must wreck her happiness and another's
+happiness. And what was she to do? What ought she to do? In a moment
+of emotion, led astray by that love of love which is natural to women,
+and something swayed--so she told herself in scorn--by
+
+
+ Those glories of our blood and state,
+
+
+which to women are not shadows, she had made this mistake, and now,
+self-tricked, she had only herself to blame if
+
+
+ Sceptre and crown
+ Were tumbled down
+ And in the dust were lesser made
+ Than the poor crooked scythe and spade!
+
+
+But to see her folly did not avail. What was she to do?
+
+Ought she to tell the truth, however painful it might be, to the man
+whom she had deceived? Or ought she to go through with it, to do her
+duty and save him at least from hurt? Either way, she had wrecked her
+own craft, but she might still hope to save his. Or--might she hope?
+She was not certain even of this.
+
+What was she to do? Hour after hour she asked herself the question,
+sometimes looking through the windows with eyes that saw nothing, at
+others pacing her room in a fever of anxiety. What was she to do? She
+could not decide. Now she thought one thing, now another. And time was
+passing. No wonder that she was glad even of the distraction of this
+journey to Riddsley that at another time had been so dull an
+adventure! It was, at least, a reprieve, a respite from the burden of
+decision.
+
+She would not own, even to herself, that she had any other thought in
+going, or that anxiety had any part in her restlessness. From that
+side of the battle she turned her eyes with all the strength of her
+will. Her conduct had been that of a silly girl rather than that of a
+woman who had seen and suffered; but she was not light--and besides
+Basset was cured. She was only unfortunate, and desperately unhappy.
+
+As they drove by the old Cross at the foot of the hill she averted her
+eyes. Surely it must have been in some other life that she had made it
+the object of a walk, and had told herself that she would never forget
+it.
+
+Alas, she had been right. She would never forget it!
+
+The man who drove saw that her face matched her mourning, and he left
+her to her thoughts, so that hardly a word passed between them until
+they were close upon the outskirts of the town. Then the driver, to
+whom the dull winter landscape, the lines of willows, and the low
+water-logged fields, were no novelty, pricked up his ears.
+
+"Dang me!" he said, "they've started! There's a fine rumpus in the
+town. Do you hear 'em, Miss? That's a band I'm thinking?"
+
+"I hope no one will be hurt."
+
+The man winked at his horse. "None of the right side, Miss," he said
+slyly. "But it might be a hanging, front o' Stafford gaol, by the
+roar! I met a tidy lot going in as I came out, a right tidy lot! I'm
+blest," after listening a moment, "if they're not coming this way!"
+
+"I hope they won't do anything to----"
+
+"La, Miss," the man answered, misreading her anxiety and interrupting
+her, "they'll never touch us. And for the old nag, he's yeomanry. He'd
+not start if he met a mile o' funerals!"
+
+Certainly the noise was growing. But the lift of the canal bridge and
+bank, which crossed the road a hundred yards before them, hid all of
+the town from them save a couple of church towers, some tiled roofs,
+and the brick gable of Hatton's Works. The man whipped up his horse.
+
+"Teach they Manchester chaps a trick!" he muttered. "Shouldn't wonder
+if there'll be work for the crowner out of this! Gee-up, old nag,
+let's see what's afoot! 'Pears to me," as the shouting grew plainer,
+"we'll be in at the death yet, Miss!"
+
+Mary winced at the word, but if the man feared that she would refuse
+to go on, he was mistaken. On the contrary, she looked eagerly to
+the front as the old horse, urged by the whip, took the rise of the
+bridge at a canter, and, having reached the crown, relapsed into an
+absent-minded walk.
+
+"Dang me!" cried the driver, greatly excited, "but they do mean
+business! It's in knee in neck with 'em! Never thought it would come
+to this. And who is't they've got, Miss?"
+
+Certainly there was something out of the common on foot. Moving to
+meet the gig, and filling the road from ditch to ditch, appeared a
+disorderly crowd of two or three hundred persons. Cheering, hooting,
+and brandishing sticks, they came on at something between a walk and a
+run, although in the heart of the mass there was a something that now
+and again checked the movement, and once brought it to a stand. When
+this happened the crowd eddied and flowed about the object in its
+centre and presently swept on again with the same hooting and
+laughter.
+
+But in the laughter, as in the hooting, there was, after each of these
+pauses, a more savage note.
+
+"What is it?" Mary cried, as the driver, scared by the sight, pulled
+up his horse. "What is it?"
+
+"D--n me," the man replied, forgetting his manners, "if I don't think
+it's Ben Bosham they've got! It is Ben! And they're for ducking him!
+It's mortal deep by the bridge there, and s'help me, if it's not ten
+to one they drown him!"
+
+"Ben Bosham?" Mary repeated. Then she recalled the name. She
+remembered what Mrs. Toft had said of him--that the man had a wife
+and would bring her to ruin. The crowd was not fifty yards from them
+now and was still coming on. To the left a track ran down to the
+towing-path and the canal, and already the leaders of the mob were
+swerving in that direction. As they did so--and were once more checked
+for a moment--Mary espied among them a man's bald head twisting this
+way and that, as he strove to escape. The man was struggling
+desperately, his clothes almost torn from his back, but he was
+helpless in the hands of a knot of stout fellows, and after a brief
+resistance he was hauled forcibly on. A hundred jeering voices rose
+about him, and a something cruel in the sound chilled Mary's blood.
+The dreary scene, the sluggish canal, the flat meadows, the rising
+mist, all pressed on her mind and deepened the note of tragedy.
+
+But on that she broke the spell. The blood in her spoke. She clutched
+the driver's arm and shook it. "Go on!" she cried. "Go on! Drive into
+them!"
+
+The man hesitated--he saw that the crowd was in no jesting mood. But
+the old horse felt the twitch on the reins and started, and having the
+slope with him, trotted gently forward as if the road were empty
+before him. The crowd waved and shouted, and cursed the driver. But
+the horse, thinking perhaps that this was some new form of parade,
+only cocked his ears and ambled on till he reached the foremost. Then
+a man seized the rein, jerked it, and stopped him.
+
+In a moment Mary sprang down, heedless of the fact that she was one
+woman among a hundred men. She faced the crowd, her eyes bright with
+indignation. "Let that man go," she cried. "Do you hear? Do you want
+to murder him?" And, advancing a step, she laid her hand on Ben
+Bosham's ragged, filthy sleeve--he had been down more than once and
+been rolled in the mud. "Let him go!" she continued imperiously. "Do
+you know who I am, you cowards? Let him go!"
+
+"Yah!" shouted the crowd, and drowned her voice and pressed roughly
+about her, threatened her. One of the foremost asked her what she
+would do, another cried that she had best make herself scarce! Furious
+faces surrounded her, fists were shaken at her. But Mary was not
+daunted. "If you don't let him go, I shall go to Lord Audley!" she
+said.
+
+"You're a fool meddling in this!" cried a voice. "We're only going to
+wash the devil!"
+
+"You will let him go!" she replied, facing them all without fear and,
+advancing a step, she actually plucked the man from the hands that
+held him. "I am Miss Audley! If you do not let him go----"
+
+"We're only going to wash him, lady," whined one of the men who held
+him.
+
+"That's all, lady!" chimed in half-a-dozen. "He wants it!"
+
+But Ben was not of that opinion, or he did not value cleanliness.
+"They're going to drown me!" he spluttered, his eyes wild. All the
+fight had been knocked out of him. "They're paid to do it! They'll
+drown me!"
+
+"And sarve him right!" shouted half-a-dozen at the rear of the crowd.
+"Sarve him right, the devil!"
+
+"They will not do it!" Mary said firmly. "They'll not lay another hand
+on you. Get in! Get in here!" And then to the crowd, "For shame!" she
+cried. "Stand back!"
+
+The man was so shaken that he could not help himself, but she pushed,
+the driver pulled, and in a trice, before the mob had recovered from
+its astonishment, Ben was above their heads, on the seat of the gig--a
+blubbering, ragged, mud-caked figure with a white face and bleeding
+lips. "Go on!" Mary said in the same tone, and the gig moved forward,
+the old yeomanry horse tossing its head. She moved on beside it with
+her hand on the rail.
+
+The mob let them pass, but closed in behind them, and after a pause
+began to jeer--a little in amusement, a little to cover its defeat. In
+a moment farce took the place of tragedy; the danger was over. "We'll
+tell your wife, Ben!" screamed a youth, and the crowd laughed and
+followed. Other wits took their turn. "You'll want a new coat for the
+wedding, Ben!" cried one. And now and again amid the laughter a
+sterner note survived. "We'll ha' you yet, Ben!" a man would cry.
+"You're not out of the wood yet, Ben!"
+
+Mary's face burned, but she stuck to her post, plodding on beside the
+gig, and after this fashion the queer procession, heralded by a score
+of urchins crying the news, entered the streets of the town. On either
+side women thronged the doorways and steps, and while some cried,
+"Bravo, Miss!" others laughed and called to their neighbors to come
+out and see the sight. And still the crowd clung to the rear of the
+gig, and hooted and laughed and pretended to make forays on it.
+
+Mary had hoped to shake them off, but as they persisted in following
+and no relief came--for Basset and his rescue party had gone to the
+canal by another road--she saw nothing for it but to go on to Lord
+Audley's. With a curt word she made the man turn that way.
+
+The crowd still attended, curious, amused. It had doubled its numbers,
+nay, had trebled them. There were friends as well as foes among them
+now, some of Hatton's men, some of Banfield's, yellow favors as well
+as blue. If Mary had known it, she might have set Ben down and not a
+hand would have been laid upon him. Even the leaders of the riot were
+now thankful that they had not carried the matter farther. Enough had
+been done.
+
+But Mary did not know this. She thought that the man was still in
+peril. She did not dream of leaving him. And it was at the head of a
+crowd of three or four hundred of the riff-raff of Riddsley that she
+broke in upon the quiet of the suburban road in which The Butterflies
+stood. Tumultuously, followed by laughter and hooting and cheers, she
+swept along it with her train, and came to a halt before the house.
+
+No house was ever more surprised. Mrs. Wilkinson's scared face peered
+above one blind, her sisters' caps showed above another. Was it an
+accident? Was it a riot? Was it a Puseyite protest? What was it? Every
+servant, every neighbor, Lord Audley himself came to the windows.
+
+Mary signed to the driver to help Ben down, and the moment the man's
+foot touched the ground she grasped his arm. With a burning face, but
+with her head in the air, she guided his stumbling footsteps through
+the gate and along the paved walk. They came together to the door.
+They went in.
+
+The crowd formed up five deep along the railings, and waited in
+wondering silence to see what would happen. What would his lordship
+say? What would his lordship do? This was bringing the election to his
+doors with a vengeance, and there were not a few of the better sort
+who saw the fun of the situation.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+ MY LORD SPEAKS OUT
+
+
+Mary had passed through twenty minutes of tense excitement. The risk
+had been slight, after the first moment of intervention, but she had
+not known this, and she was still trembling with indignation, a
+creature all fire and passion, when the door of The Butterflies opened
+to admit her. Leaving Ben Bosham on the threshold she lost not a
+moment, but with her story on her lips, hurried up the stairs, and on
+the landing came plump upon Lord Audley.
+
+From the window he had seen something of what was afoot below. He had
+recognized Mary and the tattered Bosham, and he had read the riddle,
+grasped the facts, and cursed the busybody, all within thirty seconds.
+"D--n it! this passes everything," he had muttered to himself as he
+turned from the window in disgust. "This is altogether too much!" And
+he had opened the door--ready also to open his mind to her!
+
+"What in the world is it?" he asked. He held the door for her to
+enter. "What has happened? I could not believe my eyes when I saw you
+in company with that wretched creature!" he continued. "And all the
+tagrag and bobtail in the place behind you? What is it, Mary?"
+
+She felt the check, and the color, which excitement had brought to her
+cheeks, faded. But she thought that it was only that he did not
+understand, and, "That wretched creature, as you call him," she cried,
+"has just escaped from death. They were going to murder him!"
+
+"Murder him?" Audley repeated. He raised his eyebrows. "Murder him?"
+coldly. "My dear girl, don't be silly! Don't let yourself be carried
+away. You've lost your head. And, pardon me for saying it, I am afraid
+have made a fool of yourself! And of me!"
+
+"But they were going to throw him into the canal!" she protested.
+
+"Going to wash him!" he replied cynically. "And a good thing too! It's
+a pity they left the job undone. The man is a low, pestilent fellow!"
+he continued severely, "and obnoxious to me and to all decent people.
+The idea of bringing him, and that pleasant tail, to my house--my dear
+girl, it's absurd!"
+
+He made no attempt to soften his tone or suppress his annoyance, and
+she stared at him in astonishment. Yet she still thought, or she
+strove to think, that he did not understand, and tried to make the
+facts clear. "But you don't know what they were like," she protested.
+"You were not there. They had torn the clothes from his back----"
+
+"I can see that."
+
+"And he was so terrified that it was dreadful to see him! They were
+handling him brutally, horribly! And then I came up and----"
+
+"And lost your head!" he said. "I dare say you thought all this. But
+do you know anything about elections?"
+
+"No----"
+
+"Have you ever see an election in progress before?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Just so," he replied dryly. "Well, if you had, you would know that
+brawls of this kind are common things, the commonest of things at such
+a time, and that sensible people turn their backs on them. You've
+chosen to turn the farce into a tragedy, and in doing so you've made
+yourself ridiculous--and me too!"
+
+"If you had seen them," she said, "I do not think you would speak as
+you are speaking."
+
+"My dear girl," he replied, and shrugged his shoulders, "I have seen
+many such things, many. But there is one thing I have never seen, and
+that is a man killed in an election squabble! The whole thing is
+childish--silly! The least knowledge of the world--"
+
+"Would have saved me from it?"
+
+"Exactly! Would have saved you from it!" he answered austerely. "And
+me from a very annoying incident! Peers have nothing to do with
+elections, as you ought to know; and to bring this mob of all sorts to
+my door as if the matter touched me, is to compromise me. It is past a
+joke!"
+
+Mary stared. She was trying to place herself. Certainly this was the
+room in which she had taken tea, and this was the man who had welcomed
+her, who had hung over her, whose eyes had paid her homage, who had
+foreseen her least want, who had lapped her in observance. This was
+the man and this the room, and there was the chair in which good Mrs.
+Wilkinson had sat and beamed on her.
+
+But there was a change somewhere; and the change was in the man. Could
+it mean that he, too, had made a mistake and now recognized it? That
+he, too, had found that he did not love? But in that case this was not
+the way to confess an error. His tone, his manner, which held no
+respect for the woman and no softness for the sweetheart, were far
+from the tone of one in the wrong. On the contrary, they presented a
+side of him which had been hitherto hidden from her; a phase of the
+strength that she had admired, which shocked her even while, as deep
+calls to deep, it roused her pride. She remembered that she was his
+betrothed, and that he had wooed her, he had chosen her. And on slight
+provocation he spoke to her in this strain!
+
+She sought the clue, she fancied that she held it, and from this
+moment she was on her guard. She was quiet, but there was a
+smouldering fire in her eyes. "Perhaps I was wrong," she said. "I have
+had little experience of these things. But are not you, on your side,
+making too much of this? Too much of a very small, a very natural
+mistake? Isn't it a trifle after all?"
+
+"Not so much of a trifle as you think!" he retorted. "A man in my
+position has to follow a certain line of conduct. A girl in yours
+should be careful to guide herself by my views. Instead, out of a
+foolish sentimentality, you run directly counter to them! It is too
+late to consider your relation to me when the harm is done, my dear."
+
+"Perhaps we have neither of us considered the relation quite enough?"
+she said.
+
+"I am not sure that we have." And again, "I am not sure, Mary, that we
+have," he repeated more soberly.
+
+She knew what he meant now--knew what was in his mind almost as
+clearly as if, instead of grasping his conclusion, she had been a
+party to his reasons. And she closed her lips, a spot of color in each
+cheek. In other circumstances she would have taken on herself a full,
+nay, the main share, of the blame. She would have been quick to admit
+that she, too, had made a mistake, and that no harm was done.
+
+But his manner opened her eyes to many things that had been a puzzle
+to her. Thought is swift, and in a flash her mind had travelled over
+the whole course of their engagement, had recalled his long absence,
+the chill of his letters, the infrequency of his visits; and she saw
+by that light that this was no sudden shift, but an occasion sought
+and seized. Therefore she would not help him. She at least had been
+honest, she at least had been in earnest. She had tricked, not him
+only, but herself!
+
+She closed her lips and waited, therefore. And he, knowing that he had
+now burned his boats, had to go on. "I am not sure that we did think
+enough about it?" he said doggedly. "I have suspected for some time
+that I acted hastily in--in asking you to be my wife, Mary."
+
+"Indeed?" she said.
+
+"Yes. And what has happened to-day, proving that we look at things
+so differently, has confirmed my suspicion. It has convinced me--"
+he looked down at his table, avoiding her eyes, but continued
+firmly--"that we are not suited to one another. The wife of a man,
+placed as I am, should have an idea of values, a certain reserve, that
+comes of a knowledge of the world; above all, no sentimental notions
+such as lead to mistakes like this." He indicated the street by a
+gesture. "If I was mistaken a while ago in listening to my feelings
+rather than to my prudence, if I gave you credit for knowledge which
+you had had no means of gaining, I wronged you, Mary, and I am sorry
+for it. But I should be doing you a far greater wrong if I remained
+silent now."
+
+"Do you mean," she asked in a low voice, "that you wish it to be at an
+end between us? That you wish to--to throw me over?"
+
+He smiled awry. "That is an unpleasant way of putting it, isn't it?"
+he said. "However, I am in the wrong, and I have no right to quarrel
+with a word. I do think that to break off our engagement at once is
+the best and wisest thing for both of us."
+
+"How long have you felt this?" she asked.
+
+"For some time," he replied, measuring his words, "I have been coming
+slowly--to that conclusion."
+
+"That I am not fitted to be your wife?"
+
+"If you like to put it so."
+
+Then her anger, hitherto kept under, flamed up. "Then what right," she
+cried, "if that was in your mind, had you to treat me as you treated
+me at Beaudelays--in the garden? What right had you to kiss me?
+Rather, what right had you to insult me? For it was an insult--it was
+an insult, if you were not going to marry me! Don't you know, sir,
+that it was vile? That it was unforgivable?"
+
+She had never looked more handsome, never more attractive than at this
+moment. The day was failing, but the glow of the fire fell on her
+face, and on her eyes sparkling with anger. He took in the picture, he
+owned her charm, he even came near to repenting. But it was too late,
+and "It may have been vile--and you may not forgive it," he answered
+hardily, "but I'd do it again, my dear, on the same provocation!"
+
+"You would----"
+
+"I would do it again," he repeated coolly. "Don't you know that you
+are handsome enough to turn any man's head? And what is a kiss after
+all? We are cousins. If you were not such a prude, I would kiss you
+now?"
+
+She was furiously angry--or she fancied that she was. But it may be
+that, deep down in her woman's mind, she was not truly angry. And,
+indeed, how could she be angry when in her heart a little bird was
+beginning to sing--was telling her that she was free, that presently
+this cloud would be behind her, and that the sky would be blue?
+Already the message was making itself heard, already she was finding
+it hard to keep up appearances, to frown upon him and play her part.
+
+Yet she flashed out at him. Was he not going too fast, was he not
+riding off too lightly? "Oh!" she cried, "You dare to say that! Even
+while you break off with me!"
+
+But his selfish, masterful nature had now the upper hand. He had eaten
+his leek and he was anxious to be done with it. "And what then?" he
+said. "I believe that you know that I am right. I believe that you
+know that we are not suited to one another."
+
+"And you think I will let you go at a word?"
+
+"I think you will let me go," he said, "because you are not a fool,
+Mary. You know as well as I do that you might be 'my lady' at too high
+a price. I'm not the most manageable of men. I'd make a decent
+husband, all being well. But I'm not meek and I'd make a very unhandy
+husband _malgr moi_."
+
+The threat exasperated her. "I know this at least," she retorted,
+"that I would not marry you now, if you were twenty times my lord! You
+have behaved meanly, and I believe falsely! Not to-day! You are
+speaking the truth to-day. But I believe that from the start you had
+this in your mind, that you foresaw this, and were careful not to
+commit yourself too publicly! What I don't understand is why you ever
+asked me to be your wife--at all?"
+
+"Look in the glass!" he answered impudently.
+
+She put that aside. "But I suppose that you had a reason!" she
+returned. "That you loved me, that you felt for me anything worthy of
+the name of love is impossible! For the rest, let me tell you this! If
+I ever felt thankful for anything I am thankful for the chance that
+brought me to your house to-day--and brought me to the truth!"
+
+"Anything more to say?" he asked flippantly. The way she was taking it
+suited him better than if she had wept and appealed. And then she was
+so confoundedly good-looking in her tantrums!
+
+"Nothing more," she said. "I think that we understand one another now.
+At any rate, I understand you. Perhaps you will kindly see if I can
+leave the house without annoyance."
+
+He looked into the street. Dusk had fallen, the lamplighter was going
+his rounds. Of the crowd that had attended Mary to the house no more
+than a handful remained; the nipping air, the attractions of free
+beer, the sound of the muffin-bell, had drawn away the rest. The
+driver of the gig was moving to and fro, now looking disconsolately at
+the windows, now beating his fingers on his chest.
+
+"I think you can leave with safety," Audley said with irony. "I will
+see you downstairs."
+
+"I will not trouble you," she answered.
+
+"But, surely, we may still be friends?"
+
+She looked him in the face. "We need not be enemies," she answered.
+"And, perhaps, some day I may be able to think more kindly of you. If
+that day comes I will tell you. Good-bye." She went out without
+touching his hand. She went down the stairs.
+
+She drove through the dusky, dimly-lighted streets in a kind of dream,
+seeing all things through a pleasant haze. The bank was closed and to
+deliver up her papers she had to go into the bank-house. The glimpse
+she had of the cheerful parlor, of the manager's wife, of his two
+children playing the Royal Game of Goose at a round table, enchanted
+her. Presently she was driving again through the darkling streets,
+passing the Maypole, passing the quaint, low-browed shops, lit only by
+an oil lamp or a couple of candles. The Audley Arms, the Packhorse,
+the Portcullis, were all alight and buzzing with the voices of those
+who fought their battles over again or laid bets on this candidate or
+that. What the speaker had said to Lawyer Stubbs and what Lawyer
+Stubbs had said to the speaker, what the "Duke" thought, who would
+have to pay for the damage, and the odds the stout farmer would give
+that wheat wouldn't be forty shillings a quarter this day twelvemonth
+if the Repeal passed--scraps of these and the like poured from the
+doorways as she drove by.
+
+All fell in delightfully with her mood and filled her with a sense of
+well-being. Even when the streets lay behind her, and the driver
+hunched his shoulders to meet the damp night-fog and the dreary
+stretch that lay beyond the canal-bridge, Mary found the darkness
+pleasant and the chill no more than bracing. For what were that night,
+that chill beside the numbing grip from which she had just--oh, thing
+miraculous!--escaped! Beside the fetters that had been lifted from her
+within the last hour! O foolish girl, O ineffable idiot, to have ever
+fancied that she loved that man!
+
+No, for her it was a charming night! The owl that, far away towards
+the Great House, hooted dolefully above the woods--no nightingale
+had been more tuneful. Ben Bosham--she laughed, thinking of his
+plight--blessings on his bare, bald head and his ragged shoulders! The
+old horse plodding on, with the hill that mounts to the Gatehouse
+sadly on his mind--he should have oats, if oats there were in the
+Gatehouse stables! He should have oats in plenty, or what he would if
+oats failed!
+
+"What do you give him when he's tired?" she asked.
+
+"Well," the driver replied with diplomacy, "times a quart of ale,
+Miss. He'll take it like a Christian."
+
+"Then a quart of ale he shall have to-night!" she said with a happy
+laugh. "And you shall have one, too, Simonds."
+
+Her mood held to the end, so that before she was out of her wraps,
+Mrs. Toft was aware of the change in her. "Why, Miss," she said, "you
+look like another creature! It isn't the bank, I'll be bound, has put
+that color in your cheeks!"
+
+"No!" Mary answered, "I've had an adventure, Mrs. Toft. And briefly
+she told the tale of Ben Bosham's plight and of her gallant rescue.
+She began herself to see the comic side of it.
+
+"He always was a fool, was Ben!" Mrs. Toft commented. "And that," she
+continued shrewdly, "was how you come to see his lordship was it,
+Miss?"
+
+"How did you know I saw him?" Mary asked in surprise. "But you're
+right, I did." Then, as she entered the parlor, "Perhaps I'd better
+tell you, Mrs. Toft," she said, "that the engagement between my cousin
+and myself is at an end. You were one of the very few who knew of it,
+and so I tell you."
+
+Mrs. Toft showed no surprise. "Indeed, Miss," she answered, stooping
+to the hearth to light the candles with a piece of wood. "Well, one
+thing's certain, and many a time my mother's drummed it into me,
+'Better a plain shoe than one that pinches!' And again, 'Better live
+at the bottom of the hill than the top,' she'd say. 'You see less but
+you believe more.'"
+
+Neither she nor Mary saw Toft. But Toft, who had entered the hall a
+moment before, was within hearing, and Mary's statement, so coolly
+received by his wife, had an extraordinary effect on the man-servant.
+He stood an instant, his lank figure motionless. Then he opened the
+door beside him, slipped out into the chill and the darkness, and
+silently, but with extravagant gestures, he broke into a dance, now
+waving his thin arms in the air, now stooping with his hands locked
+between his knees. Whether he thus found vent for joy or grief was a
+secret which he kept to himself.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+ THE RIDDSLEY ELECTION
+
+
+The riot at Riddsley found its way into the London Press, and gained
+for the contest a certain amount of notoriety. The _Morning Chronicle_
+pointed out that the election had been provoked by the Protectionists
+in a constituency in Sir Robert's own country; and the writer inferred
+that, foreseeing defeat, the party of the land were now resorting to
+violence. The _Morning Herald_ rejoiced that there were still places
+which would not put up with the incursions of the Manchester League,
+"the most knavish, pestilent body of men that ever plagued this or any
+country!" In the House, where the tempest of the Repeal debate already
+raged, and the air was charged with the stern invective of Disraeli,
+or pulsed to the cheering of Peel's supporters--even here men
+discussed the election at Riddsley, considered it a clue to the
+feeling in the country, and on the one side hardly dared to hope, on
+the other refused to fear. What? cried the Land Party. Be defeated in
+an agricultural borough? Never!
+
+For a brief time, then, the contest filled the public eye and
+presented itself as a thing of more than common interest. Those who
+knew little weighed the names and the past of the candidates; those
+behind the scenes whispered of Lord Audley. Whips gave thought to him,
+and that one to whom his lordship was pledged, wrote graciously,
+hinting at the pleasant things that might happen if all went well, and
+the present winter turned to a summer of fruition.
+
+Alas, Audley felt that the Whip's summer, and
+
+
+ The friendly beckon towards Downing Street,
+ Which a Premier gives to one who wishes
+ To taste of the Treasury loaves and fishes,
+
+
+were very remote, whereas, if the other Whip, he who had the honors
+under his hand and the places in his power, had written so! But that
+cursed Stubbs had blocked his play in that direction by asserting that
+it was hopeless, though Audley himself began at this late hour to
+suspect that it had not been hopeless! That it had been far from
+hopeless!
+
+In his chagrin my lord tore the Whip's letter across and across, and
+then prudently gummed it together again and locked it away. Certainly
+the odds were long that it would never be honored; on the one side
+stood Peel with four-fifths of his Cabinet and half his party, with
+all the Whigs, all the Radicals, all the League, and the Big Loaf: on
+the other stood the landed interest! Just the landed interest led by
+Lord George Bentinck, handsome and debonair, the darling of the Turf,
+the owner of Crucifix; but hitherto a silent member, and one at whom,
+as a leader, the world gaped. Only, behind this Joseph there lurked a
+Benjamin, one whose barbed shafts were many a time to clear the field.
+The lists were open, the lances were levelled, the slogan of Free
+Trade was met by the cry of "The Land and the Constitution!" and while
+old friendships were torn asunder and old allies cut adrift, town and
+country, forge and field, met in a furious grapple that promised to be
+final.
+
+If, amid the dust of such a conflict, the riot at Riddsley obtained a
+passing notice in London, intense it may be believed was the
+excitement which it caused in the borough. Hatton and Banfield and
+their men went about, vowing to take vengeance at the hustings. The
+mayor went about, swearing in constables. The farmers and their allies
+went about grinning. Fights took place nightly behind the Packhorse
+and the Portcullis, while very old ladies, peering over their blinds,
+talked of the French Revolution, and very young ones thought that the
+Militia, adequately officered, should be brought into the town.
+
+The spirit of which Basset had given proof was blazoned about; and he
+gained in another way. He was one of those to whom a spice of danger
+is a fillip, whom a little peril shakes out of themselves. On the day
+after the riot he came upon a score of people collected round a Cheap
+Jack in the market. The man presently closed his patter and his stall,
+and, on the impulse of the moment, Basset took his place and made the
+crowd a speech as short as it was simple. He told them that in his
+opinion it was impossible to keep food out of the country by a tax
+while Ireland was threatened by famine. Secondly, that the sacrifice
+which Peel was making of his party, his reputation, and his
+consistency was warrant that in his view the change was urgently
+needed. Thirdly, he asked them whether the farmers were so prosperous
+and the laborers so comfortable that change must be for the worse. But
+here he came on delicate ground; murmurs arose and some hisses, and he
+broke off good-humoredly, thanked the crowd, which had grown to a good
+size, and, stepping down from his barrow, he walked away amid
+plaudits. The thing was reported, and though the Tories sneered at it
+as a hole-and-corner meeting, Farthingale held another view. He told
+Mr. Stubbs that it was a neat thing--very well done.
+
+Stubbs grunted. "Will it change a vote?" he growled.
+
+"Change a----"
+
+"Will it change a vote, man? You heard what I said."
+
+"Lord, no!" the clerk answered. "I never said it would!"
+
+"Then why trouble about it?" Stubbs retorted fretfully. "Get on with
+those poll-cards! I don't pay you a guinea a day at election time to
+praise monkey-tricks."
+
+For Stubbs was not happy. He knew, indeed, that the breaking-up of the
+open-air meeting had been fairly successful. It had brought back two
+votes to the fold; and he calculated that the seat would be held. But
+by a majority how narrow, how fallen, how discreditable! He blushed to
+think of it.
+
+And other things made him unhappy. Those who are politicians by trade
+are like cardplayers, who play for the game's sake; one game lost,
+they cut and deal as keenly as before. Behind the politicians,
+however, are a few to whom the stake is something; and of these was
+Stubbs. To him, as we know, the Corn-Tax was no mere toll, but the
+protection of agriculture, the well-head that guarded the pure waters,
+the fence that saved from smoke and steam, from slag-heap and
+brickfield, the smiling face of England. For him, the home of his
+fathers, the land of field and stubble, of plough and pinfold, was at
+stake; nay, was passing, wasted by men who thought in percentages and
+saw no farther than the columns of their ledgers. To that England of
+his memory--whether it had ever existed in fact or no--a hundred
+associations bound the lawyer; things tender and things true; quaint
+memories of his first turkey's nest, of the last load of the harvest,
+of the loosened plough horses straying to the water at the close of
+day, of the flat paintings of the Durham Ox and the Coke Ram that
+adorned the farm parlor.
+
+To the men who bade him look up and see that in his Elysium the farmer
+struggled and the laborer starved, his answer was short. "Better ten
+shillings and fresh air, than shoddy dust and a pound a week!"
+
+In the country as a whole--and as time went on--he despaired of
+success. But he found Lord George a leader after his own heart, and
+many an evening he pored over the long paragraphs of his long-winded
+speeches. When he heard that the owner of Crucifix had dismissed his
+trainers, released his jockeys, sold his stud, and turned his back on
+the turf, he could have wept. Lord George and Stubbs, indeed, were the
+true country party. For Lord George's sake Stubbs was prepared to
+taken even the "Jew boy" to his heart.
+
+As to the potato famine, he did not believe a word of it. He called
+the Premier, "Potato Peel!"
+
+The rains of February are apt to damp enthusiasm, but before eleven
+o'clock on the nomination day Riddsley was like a hive of bees about
+to swarm. The throng in the streets was such that Mottisfont could
+hardly pass through it. He made his entry into the borough on
+horseback at the head of a hundred mounted farmers wearing blue sashes
+and favors. Before him reeled a huge banner upheld by eight men and
+bearing on one side the legend, "The Land and the Constitution," on
+the other, "Mottisfont the Farmers' Friend!" Behind the horsemen, and
+surrounded by a guard of laborers in smocked frocks, moved a plough
+mounted on a wain and drawn by eight farm horses. Flags with "Speed
+the Plough," "England's Share is England's Fare," and "Peace and
+Plenty," streamed from it. Three bands of varying degrees of badness
+found their places where they could, and thumped and blared against
+one another until the panes rattled in the deafened streets. The
+butchers, with marrow-bones and cleavers, brought up the rear, and in
+comparison were tuneful.
+
+Had Basset got his way, he would have dispensed with pomp and walked
+the hundred yards which separated his quarters at the Swan from the
+hustings. But he was told that this would never do. What would the
+landlord of the Swan say, who kept postchaises? And the postboys who
+looked for a golden tip? And the men who would hand him in and hand
+him out, and the men who would open the door and shut the door, and
+the men who would raise the steps and lower the steps, who would all
+look for the same tip? So, perforce, he drove in state to the Town
+Hall--before which the hustings stood--in a barouche and four
+accompanied by Banfield and Hatton and his agent. The rest of his
+Committee followed in postchaises. A bodyguard of "hands" escorted
+them, and they, too, had their bands--of equal badness--and their
+yellow banners with "Down with the Corn Laws," "Vote for Basset the
+Poor Man's Friend," and "No Bread Taxes." The great and little loaf
+pranced in front of him on spears, and if his procession was not quite
+so fine or so large as his opponent's, it must be admitted that the
+blackguards of the town showed no preference and that he could boast
+about an equal number of the tagrag and bobtail.
+
+The left hand of the hustings was allotted to him, the right hand to
+Mottisfont, and by a little after eleven both parties had crammed and
+crushed,
+
+
+ With blustering, bullying, and brow-beating,
+ A little pummelling and maltreating,
+ And elbowing, jostling and cajoling,
+
+
+into their places in front of the platform, the bullies and
+truncheon-men being posted well to the fore, or craftily ranged where
+the frontiers met. The bands boomed and blared, the men huzzaed, the
+air shook, the banners waved, every window that looked out upon the
+seething mob was white with faces, every 'vantage-point was occupied.
+It was such a day and such a contest as Riddsley had never seen. The
+eyes of the country, it was felt, were upon it! Fights took place
+every five minutes, oaths and bets flew like hail over the heads of
+the crowd, coarse wit met coarser nicknames, and now and again shrieks
+varied the hubbub as the huge press of people, gathered from miles
+round, swayed under the impact of some vicious rush.
+
+"Hurrah! Hurrah! Mottisfont for ever! Basset! Basset and the Big Loaf!
+Basset! Basset! Hurrah! Mottisfont! Hurrah!"
+
+Then, in a short-lived silence, "Ten to one on Mottisfont! Three
+cheers for the Duke!" and a roar of laughter.
+
+Or a hundred voices would raise
+
+
+ John Barley-corn, my Joe, John!
+ When we were first acquaint!
+
+
+but never got beyond the first two lines, either because they were
+howled down or they knew no more of the words. The Peelites answered
+with their mournful,
+
+
+ Child, is thy father dead?
+ Father is gone!
+ Why did they tax his bread?
+ God's will be done!
+
+
+or with the quicker,
+
+
+ Oh, landlords' devil take
+ Thy own elect I pray!
+ Who taxed our cake, and took our cake,
+ And threw our cake away!
+
+
+On this would ensue a volley of personalities. "What would you be
+without your starch, Hayward?" "How's your dad, Farthingale?" "Who
+whopped his wife last Saturday?" "Hurrah! Hurrah! Who said Potatoes?"
+
+For nearly an hour this went on, the blare of the bands, the uproar,
+the cheering, the abuse never ceasing. Then the town-crier appeared
+upon the vacant hustings. He rang his bell for silence and for a
+moment obtained it. On his heels entered, first the mayor and his
+assistants, then the candidates, the proposers, the seconders. Each,
+as he made his appearance, was greeted with a storm of groans, cheers,
+and cat-calls. Each put on to meet it such a show of ease as he could,
+some smiling, some affecting ignorance. The candidates and their
+supporters filed to either side, while the flustered mayor took his
+stand in the middle with the town clerk at his elbow.
+
+Basset, nearly at the end of his troubles, sought comfort in looking
+beyond the present moment. He feared that he was not likely to win,
+but he had done his duty, he had made his effort, and soon he would be
+free to repeat that effort on a smaller stage. Soon, these days, that
+in horror rivalled the middle passage of the slave trade, would be
+over, and if he were not elected he would be free to retire to Blore,
+and to spend days, lonely and sad indeed, but clean, in the
+improvement of his acres and his people. His eyes dwelt upon the sea
+of faces, and from time to time he smiled; but his mind was far away.
+He thought with horror of elections, and with loathing of the sordid
+round of flattery and handshaking, of bribery and intimidation from
+which he emerged. Thank God, the morrow would see the end! He would
+have done his best, and played his part. And it would be over.
+
+What the mayor said and what the town clerk said is of no importance,
+for no one heard them. The proposers, the seconders, the candidates,
+all spoke in dumb show. Basset dwelt briefly on the crisis in Ireland,
+the integrity of Peel, and the doubtful wisdom of taxing that which,
+to the poorest, was a necessity of life. If bread were cheaper all
+would have more to spend on other things and the farmer would have a
+wider market for his meat, his wool, and his cheese. It read well in
+the local paper.
+
+But one man was heard. This was a man who was not expected to speak,
+whose creed it had ever been that speeches were useless, and whom
+tradition almost forbade to speak, for he was an agent. At the last
+moment, when a seconder for a formal motion was needed, he thrust
+himself forward to the astonishment of all. The same astonishment
+stilled the mob as they gazed on the well-known figure. For a minute
+or two, curiosity and the purpose in the man's face, held even his
+opponents silent.
+
+The man was Stubbs; and from the moment he showed himself it was plain
+that he was acting under the stress of great emotion. The very
+fuglemen forgot to interrupt him. They scented something out of the
+common.
+
+"I have never spoken on the hustings in my life," he said. "I speak
+now to warn you. I believe that you, the electors of Riddsley, are
+going to sell the birthright of health which you have received; and
+the heritage of freedom which this land has enjoyed for generations
+and on which the power of Bonaparte broke as on a rock. You think you
+are going to have cheap bread, and, maybe, you are! But at what a
+cost! Cheap bread is foreign bread. To you, the laborers, I say that
+foreign bread means that the fields you till will be laid to grass and
+you will go to work in Dudley and Walsall and Bury and Bolton, in
+mills and pits and smoke and dust! And your children will be dwarfed
+and wizened and puny! Foreign bread means that. And it means that the
+day will come when war will cut off your bread and you will starve; or
+the will of the foreigner who feeds you will cut it off--for he will
+be your master. I say, grow your own bread and eat your own bread, and
+you will be free men. Eat foreign bread and in time you will be
+slaves! No land that is fed by another land----"
+
+His last words were lost. Signals from furious principals roused the
+fuglemen, and he was howled down, and stood back ashamed of the
+impulse which had moved him and little less astonished than those
+about him. Young Mottisfont clapped him on the back and affected to
+make much of him. But even he hardly knew how to take it. Some said
+that Stubbs had had tears in his eyes, while the opposing agent
+whispered to his neighbor that the lawyer was breaking and would never
+handle another contest. Sober men shook their heads; agents should
+hardly be seen, much less heard!
+
+But Stubbs's words were marked, and when the bad times came thirty
+years later, aged farmers recalled them and thought over them. Nor
+were they without fruit at the time. For next morning when the poll
+opened, Basset's people suffered a shock. Two men on whom he had
+counted appeared and voted short and sharp for Mottisfont. Basset's
+agent asked them pleasantly if they were not making a mistake; and
+then less pleasantly had the Bribery Oath administered to them. But
+they stuck to their guns, the votes were recorded, and Mottisfont
+shook hands with them. Later in the day when the two were fuddled they
+denied that they had voted for Mottisfont. They had voted for old
+Stubbs--and they would do it again and fight any man who said to the
+contrary. Their desire in this direction was quickly met, and both, to
+the indignation of the Tories, were fined five shillings at the next
+petty sessions.
+
+Whether this start gave the Protectionists a fillip or no, they were
+in great spirits, and Mottisfont was up and down shaking hands all the
+morning. At noon the figures as exhibited outside the Mottisfont
+Committee-room--amid tremendous cheering--were:
+
+
+ Mottisfont . . . 41
+ Basset . . . . . 30
+
+
+though Basset outside his Committee-room claimed one more. Soon after
+twelve Hatton brought up the two Boshams in his carriage, and Ben,
+recovered from his fright, flung his hat before him into the booth,
+danced a war-dance on the steps, and gave three cheers for Basset as
+he came down. Banfield brought up three more voters in his carriage
+and thence onward until one o'clock the polling was rapid. The one
+o'clock board showed:
+
+
+ Mottisfont . . . 60
+ Basset . . . . . 57
+
+
+with seventy votes to poll. The Mottisfont party began to look almost
+as blue as their favors, but Stubbs, returned to his senses, continued
+to read his newspaper in a closet behind the Committee-room, as if
+there were no contest within a hundred miles of Riddsley.
+
+During the next three hours little was done. The poll-clerks sent
+out for pots of beer, the watchers drowsed, the candidates were
+invisible--some said that they had gone to dine with the mayor. The
+bludgeon-men and blackguards went home to sleep off their morning's
+drink, and to recruit themselves for the orgy of the Chairing. The
+crowd before the polling booth shrank to a knot of loafing lads and a
+stray dog. At four Mottisfont still held the lead with 64 to 61.
+
+But as the clock struck four the town awoke. Word went round that
+a message from Sir Robert Peel would be read outside Basset's
+Committee-room. Hearers were whipped up, and the message, having been
+read with much parade, was posted up through the town and as promptly
+pulled down. Animated by the message, and making as much of it as if
+it had not been held back for the purpose, the Peelites polled
+five-and-twenty votes in rapid succession, and at half-past four
+issued a huge placard with:
+
+
+ Basset . . . . . 87
+ Mottisfont . . . 83
+ Vote for Basset and the Big Loaf!
+ Basset wins!
+
+
+Great was the enthusiasm, loud the cheering, vast the stir outside
+their Committee-room. The Big and the Little Loaf waltzed out on their
+poles. The placard, mounted as a banner, was entrusted to the two
+Boshams. The band was ready, a dozen flares were ready, the Committee
+were ready, all was ready for a last rally which might decide the one
+or two doubtful voters. All was ready, but where was Mr. Basset? Where
+was the candidate?
+
+He could not be found, and great was the hubbub, vast the running to
+and fro. "The Candidate? Where's the Candidate?" One ran to the Swan,
+another to the polling-booth, a third to his agent's office. He could
+not be found. All that was known of him or could be learned was that a
+tall man, who looked like an undertaker, had stopped him near the
+polling-booth and had kept him in talk for some minutes. From that
+time he had been seen by no one.
+
+Foul play was talked of, and the search went on, but meantime the
+procession--the poll closed at half-past six--must start if it was to
+do any good. It did so, and with its flares, its swaying placard, its
+running riff-raff, now luridly thrown up by the lights, now lost in
+shadow, formed the most picturesque scene that the election had
+witnessed. The absence of the candidate was a drawback, and some shook
+their heads over it. But the more knowing put their tongues in their
+cheeks, aware that whether he were there or not, and whether they
+marched or stayed at home, neither side would be a vote the better!
+
+At half--past five the figures were,
+
+ Basset . . . . . 87
+
+ Mottisfont . . . 86
+
+
+There were still fourteen votes to poll, and on the face of things
+victory hung in the balance.
+
+But at that hour Stubbs moved. He laid down his newspaper, gave
+Farthingale an order, took up a slip of paper and his hat, and went by
+way of the darkest street to The Butterflies. He walked thoughtfully,
+with his chin on his breast, as if he had no great appetite for the
+interview before him. By the time he reached the house the poll stood
+at
+
+
+ Mottisfont . . . 96
+ Basset . . . . . 87
+
+
+And long and loud was the cheering, wild the triumph of the landed
+interest. The town was fuller than ever, for during the last hour the
+farmers and their men had trooped in, Brown Heath had sent its
+colliers, and a crowd filling every yard of space within eye-shot of
+the polling-booth greeted the news. To hell with Peel! Down with
+Cobden! Away with the League! Hurrah! Hurrah! Stubbs, had he been
+there, would have been carried shoulder-high. Old Hayward was lifted
+and carried, old Musters of the Audley Arms, one or two of the
+Committee. It was known that four votes only remained unpolled, so
+that Mottisfont's victory was secure.
+
+At The Butterflies, whither the cheering of the crowd came in gusts
+that rose and fell by turns, Stubbs nodded to the maid and went up the
+stairs unannounced. Audley was writing at a side-table facing the
+room. He looked up eagerly. "Well?" he said, putting down his quill.
+"Is it over?"
+
+Stubbs laid the slip of paper before him. "It's not over, my lord," he
+answered soberly. "But that is the result. I am sorry that it is no
+better."
+
+Audley looked at the paper. "Nine!" he exclaimed. He looked at Stubbs,
+he looked again at the paper. "Nine? Good G--d, man, you don't mean
+it? You can't mean it! You don't mean that that is the best we could
+do?"
+
+"We hold the seat, my lord," Stubbs said.
+
+"Hold the seat!" Audley replied, staring at him with furious eyes.
+"Hold the seat? But I thought that it was a safe seat? I thought that
+it was a seat that couldn't be lost! When five, only five, votes would
+have cast it the other way! Why, man, you cannot have known anything
+about it! No more about it than the first man in the street!"
+
+"My lord----"
+
+"Not a jot more!" Audley repeated. He had been prepared for something
+like this, but the certainty that if he had cast his weight on the
+other side, the side that had sinecures and places and pensions, he
+would have turned the scale--this was too much for his temper. "Nine!"
+he rapped out with another oath. "I can only think that the Election
+has been mismanaged! Grievously, grievously mismanaged, Mr. Stubbs!"
+
+"If your lordship thinks so----"
+
+"I do!" Audley retorted, his certainty that the man before him had
+thwarted his plans, carrying him farther than he intended. "I do!
+Nine! Good G--d, man! When you assured me----"
+
+"Whatever I assured your lordship," Stubbs said firmly, "I believed.
+And--no, my lord, you must allow me to speak now--what I promised
+would have been borne out--fully borne out by the result in normal
+times. But I did not allow enough for the split in the party, nor for
+the wave of madness----"
+
+"As you think it!"
+
+"And surely as your lordship also thinks it!" Stubbs rejoined smartly,
+"that has swept over the country! In these circumstances it is
+something to hold the seat, which a return to sanity will certainly
+assure to us at the next election."
+
+"The next election!" Audley muttered scornfully. For the moment he was
+too angry to play a part or to drape his feelings.
+
+"But if your lordship is dissatisfied----"
+
+"Dissatisfied? I am d--nably dissatisfied."
+
+"Then your lordship has the power," Stubbs said slowly, "to dispense
+with my services."
+
+"I know that, sir."
+
+"And if you do not think fit to take that step, my lord----"
+
+"I shall consider it!"
+
+Another word or two and the deed had been done, for both men were too
+angry to fence. But before that last word was spoken Audley's man
+entered. He handed a card to his master and waited.
+
+Audley looked at the card longer than was necessary and under cover of
+the pause regained control of himself. "Who brought this?" he asked.
+
+"A messenger from the Swan, my lord."
+
+"Tell him----" He broke off. Holding out the card for Stubbs to take,
+"Do you know anything about this?" he asked.
+
+Stubbs returned the card. "No, my lord," he said coldly. "I know
+nothing."
+
+"Business of great importance to me? D--n his impudence, what business
+important to me can he have?" Audley muttered. Then, "My compliments
+to Mr. Basset and I am leaving in the morning, but I shall be at home
+this evening at nine."
+
+The servant retired. Audley looked askance at his agent. "You'd better
+be here," he muttered ungraciously. "We can settle what we were
+talking about later."
+
+"Very good, my lord," Stubbs answered. And nothing more being said, he
+took himself off.
+
+He was not sorry that they had been interrupted. Much of his income
+and more of his importance sprang from the Audley agency, but rather
+than be treated as if he were a servant, he would surrender both--in
+his way he was a proud man. Still he did not want to give up either;
+and if time were given he thought that his lordship would think better
+of the matter.
+
+As he returned to his office, choosing the quiet streets by which
+he had come, he had a glimpse, through an opening, of the distant
+Market-place. A sound of cheering, a glare of smoky light, a medley of
+leaping, running forms, a something uplifted above the crowd, moved
+across his line of vision. Almost as quickly it vanished, leaving only
+the reflection of retreating torches. "Hurrah! Hurrah for Mottisfont!
+Hurrah!" Still the cheering came faintly to his ears.
+
+He sighed. Riddsley had remained faithful-by nine! But he did not
+deceive himself. It was the writing on the wall. The Corn Laws were
+doomed, and with them much that he had loved, much that he cherished,
+much in which he believed.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+ A TURN OF THE WHEEL
+
+
+Audley was suspicious and ill at ease. Standing on the hearth-rug with
+his back to the fire, he fixed the visitor with his eyes, and with
+secret anxiety asked himself what he wanted. The possibility that
+Basset came to champion Mary had crossed his mind more than once; if
+that were so he would soon dispose of him! In the meantime he took
+civility for his cue, exchanged an easy word or two about the poll and
+the election, and between times nodded to Stubbs to be seated. Through
+all, his eyes were watchful and he missed nothing.
+
+"I asked Mr. Stubbs to be here," he said when a minute or two had been
+spent in this by-play, "as you spoke of business. You don't object?"
+
+"Not at all," Basset replied. His face was grave. "I should tell you
+at once, Audley," he added, "that my mission is not a pleasant one."
+
+The other raised his eyebrows. "You are sure that it concerns me?"
+
+"It certainly concerns you. Though, as things stand, not very
+materially. I knew nothing of the matter myself until three o'clock
+to-day, and at first I doubted if it was my duty to communicate it.
+But the facts are known to a third person, they may be used to annoy
+you in the future, and though the task is unpleasant, I decided that I
+had no option."
+
+Audley set his broad shoulders against the mantel-shelf. "But if the
+facts don't affect me?" he said.
+
+"In a way they do. Not as they might under other circumstances. That
+is all."
+
+"And yet you are making our hair stand on end! I confess you puzzle
+me. Well, let us have it. What is it all about?"
+
+"A little time ago you recovered, if you remember, your Family Bible."
+"Well? What of that?"
+
+"I have just learned that the man did not hand over all that he had.
+He kept back--it now appears--certain papers."
+
+"Ah!" Audley's voice was stern. "Well, he has had his chance. This
+time, I can promise him a warrant will follow."
+
+"Perhaps you will hear me out first?"
+
+"No," was the sharp reply. Audley's temper was getting the better of
+him. "Last time, my dear fellow, you compounded with him; your motive
+an excellent one I don't doubt. But if he now thinks to get more money
+from me--and for other papers--I can promise him that he will see the
+inside of Stafford gaol. Besides, my good friend, you gave us to
+understand that he had surrendered all he had."
+
+"I am afraid I did, and I fear I was wrong. Why he deceived me, and
+has now turned about, I know no more than you do!"
+
+"I think I can enlighten you," the other answered--his fears as well
+as his temper were aroused. "The rogue is shallow. He thinks to be
+paid twice. Once by you and once by me. But you can tell him that this
+time he will be paid in other coin."
+
+"I'm afraid that there is more in it than that," Basset said. "The
+fact is the papers he now produces, Audley, are of another character."
+
+"Oh! The wind blows in that quarter, does it?" my lord replied. "You
+don't mean that you've come here--why, d--n it, man," with sudden
+passion, "either you are very simple, or you are art and part----"
+
+"Steady, steady, my lord," Stubbs said, interposing discreetly.
+Hitherto he had not spoken. "There's no need to quarrel! I am sure
+that Mr. Basset's intentions are friendly. It will be better if he
+just tells us what these documents are which are now put forward. We
+shall then be able to judge where we stand."
+
+"Go ahead," Audley said, averting his face and sulkily relapsing
+against the mantel-shelf. "Put your questions! And, for God's sake,
+let's get to the point!"
+
+"The paper that is pertinent is a deed," Basset explained. "I have the
+heads of it here. A deed made between Peter Paravicini Audley, your
+ancestor, the Audley the date of whose marriage has been always in
+issue--between him on the one side, and his father and two younger
+brothers on the other."
+
+"What is the date?" Stubbs asked.
+
+"Seventeen hundred and four."
+
+"Very good, Mr. Basset." Stubbs's tone was now as even as he could
+make it, but an acute listener would have detected a change in it.
+"Proceed, if you please."
+
+Before Basset could comply, my lord broke in. "What's the use of this?
+Why the d--l are we going into it?" he cried. "If this man is out for
+plunder I will make him smart as sure as my name is Audley! And any
+one who supports him. In the meantime I want to hear no more of it!"
+
+Basset moved in his chair as if he would rise. Stubbs intervened.
+
+"That is one way of looking at it, my lord," he said temperately. "And
+I'm not saying that it is the wrong way. But I think we had better
+hear what Mr. Basset has to say. He is probably deceived----"
+
+"He has let himself be used as a catspaw!" Audley cried. His face was
+flushed and there was an ugly look in his eyes.
+
+"But he means us well, I am sure," the lawyer interposed. "At present
+I don't see"--he turned and carefully snuffed one of the candles--"I
+don't see----"
+
+"I think you do!" Basset answered. He had had a long day and he had
+come on an unpleasant business. His own temper was not too good. "You
+see this, at any rate, Mr. Stubbs, that such a deed may be of vital
+import to your client."
+
+"To me?" Audley exclaimed. Was it possible that the thing he had so
+long feared--and had ceased to fear--was going to befall him? Was it
+possible that at the eleventh hour, when he had burnt his boats, when
+he had thought all danger at an end--no, it was impossible! "To me?"
+he repeated passionately.
+
+"Yes," Basset replied. "Or, rather, it would be of vital import to you
+in other circumstances."
+
+"In what other circumstances? What do you mean?"
+
+"If you were not about to marry the only person who, with you, is
+interested."
+
+Audley cut short, by a tremendous effort, the execration that burst
+from his lips. His face, always too fleshy for his years, swelled till
+it was purple. Then, and as quickly, the blood ebbed, leaving it gray
+and flabby. He would have given much, very much at this moment to be
+able to laugh or to utter a careless word. But he could do neither.
+The blow had been too sudden, too heavy, too overwhelming. Only in his
+nightmares had he seen what he saw now!
+
+Meanwhile Stubbs, startled by the half-uttered oath and a little out
+of his depth--for he had heard nothing of the engagement--intervened.
+"I think, my lord," he said, "you had better leave this to me. I think
+you had, indeed. We are quite in the dark and we are not getting
+forward. Let us have the facts, Mr. Basset. What is the gist of this
+deed? Or, first, have you seen it?"
+
+"I have."
+
+"And read it?"
+
+"I have."
+
+"It appears to you--I only say it appears--to be genuine?"
+
+"I have no doubt that it is genuine," Basset replied. "It bears the
+marks of age, and it was found in the chest with the old Bible. If the
+book is genuine----"
+
+The lawyer raised his hand. "Too fast," he said. "You say it was
+found! You mean that this man says it was found?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Precisely. But there is a difference. Still, we have cleared the
+ground. Now, what does this deed purport to be?"
+
+Basset produced a slip of paper. "An agreement," he read from it,
+"between Peter Paravicini Audley and his father and his two younger
+brothers. After admitting that the entry of the marriage in the
+register is misleading and that no marriage took place until after the
+birth of his son, Peter Paravicini undertakes that, in consideration
+of his father and his brothers taking no action and making no attack
+upon his wife's reputation, she being their cousin, he will not set up
+for the said son, or the issue of the said son, any claim to the title
+or estates."
+
+Audley listened to the description, so clear and so precise, and he
+recognized that it tallied with the deed which tradition had always
+held to exist but of which John Audley had been able to give no proof.
+He heard, he understood; yet while he listened and understood, his
+mind was working to another end, and viewing with passion the tragedy
+which fate had prepared for him. Too late! Too late! Had this become
+known a week, only a week, earlier, how lightly had the blow fallen!
+How impotently! But he had cut the rope, he had severed the strands
+once carefully twisted, that bound him to safety! And then the irony,
+the bitterness, the cruelty of those words of Basset's, "in other
+circumstances!" They bit into his mind.
+
+Still he suffered in silence, and only his stillness and his unhealthy
+color betrayed the despair that gripped and benumbed his soul. Stubbs
+did not look at him; perhaps he was careful not to look at him. The
+lawyer sat thinking and drumming gently with his fingers on the table.
+"Just so, just so," he said presently. "On the face of it, the
+document of which Mr. John Audley tried to give secondary evidence,
+and which a person fraudulently inclined would of course concoct. That
+touch of the cousin well brought in!"
+
+"But the lady was his cousin," Basset said.
+
+"All the world knows it," the lawyer retorted coolly, "and use has
+been made of the knowledge. But, of course, there are a hundred things
+to be proved before any weight can be given to this document; its
+origin, the custody from which it comes, the signatures, the
+witnesses. Its production by a man who has once endeavored to
+blackmail is alone suspicious. And the deed itself is at variance with
+the evidence of the Bible."
+
+"But that variance bears out the deed, which is to secure the younger
+sons' rights while covering the reputation of the lady."
+
+The lawyer shook his head. "Very clever," he said. "But, frankly, the
+matter has an ugly look, Mr. Basset."
+
+"Lord Audley says nothing," Basset replied, nettled by the lawyer's
+phrase.
+
+"And will say nothing," Stubbs rejoined genially, "if he is advised by
+me. In the circumstances, as I understand them, he is not affected as
+he might be, but this is still a serious matter. We are not
+quarrelling with you for coming to us, Mr. Basset. On the contrary.
+But I would like to know why the man came to you."
+
+"The answer is simple," Basset explained. "I am Mr. Audley's executor.
+On his account, I am obliged to be interested. The moment I learned
+this I saw that, be it true or false, I must disclose it to Miss
+Audley. But I thought it fair to open it to Lord Audley first that he
+might tell the young lady himself, if he preferred to do so."
+
+Stubbs nodded. "Very proper," he replied. "And where, in the meantime,
+is this--precious document?"
+
+"I lodged it with Mr. Audley's bankers this afternoon."
+
+Stubbs nodded again. "Also very proper," he said. "Just so."
+
+Basset rose. "I've told you what I know. If there is nothing more?" he
+said. He looked at Audley, who had turned his back on them and, with
+his hands in his pockets and one foot on the fender, was gazing into
+the fire.
+
+"I think that's all," Stubbs hastened to say. "I am sure that his
+lordship is obliged to you, Mr. Basset, though it is a hundred to one
+that there is nothing in this."
+
+At that, however, Audley turned about. He had pulled himself together,
+and his manner was excellent. "I would like to say that for myself,"
+he said frankly, "I owe you many thanks for the straightforward course
+you have taken, Basset. You must pardon my momentary annoyance.
+Perhaps you will kindly keep this business to yourself for--shall we
+say--three days? I will speak myself to my cousin, but I should like
+to make one or two inquiries first."
+
+Basset agreed willingly. He hated the whole thing and his part in it.
+It forced him to champion, or to seem to champion, Mary against her
+betrothed; and so set him in that kind of opposition to his rival
+which he loathed. It was only after some hesitation that he had
+determined to see Audley, and now that he had seen him, the sooner he
+was clear of the matter the happier he would be. So, "Certainly," he
+repeated, thinking that the other was taking it very well. "And now,
+as I have had a hard day, I will say good-night."
+
+"Good-night, and believe me," my lord added warmly, "we recognize the
+friendliness of your action."
+
+Outside, in the darkness of the road, Basset drew a breath of relief.
+He had had a hard day and he was utterly weary. But he had come now,
+thank God, to an end of many things; of the canvass he had detested
+and the contest in which he had been beaten; of his relations with
+Mary, whom he had lost; of this imbroglio, which he hated; of Riddsley
+and the Gatehouse and the old life there! He could go to his inn and
+sleep the clock round. In his bed he would be safe, he would be free
+from troubles. It seemed to him a refuge. Till the morrow he need
+think of nothing, and when he came forth again it would be to a new
+life. Henceforth Blore, his old house and his starved acres must bound
+his ambitions. With the money which John Audley had left him he would
+dig and drain and fence and build, and be by turns Talpa the mole and
+Castor the beaver. In time, as he began to see the fruit of his toil,
+he would win to some degree of content, and be glad, looking back,
+that he had made this trial of his powers, this essay towards a wider
+usefulness. So, in the end, he would come through to peace.
+
+But at this point the current of his thoughts eddied against Toft, and
+he cursed the man anew. Why had he played these tricks? Why had he
+kept back this paper? Why had he produced it now and cast on others
+this unpleasant task?
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+ TOFT'S LITTLE SURPRISE
+
+
+Toft had gone into Riddsley on the polling-day, but had returned
+before the result was known. "What the man was thinking of," his wife
+declared in wrath, "beats me! To be there hours and hours and come out
+no wiser than he went, and we waiting to hear--a babe would ha' had
+more sense! The young master that we've known all our lives, to be in
+or out, and we to know nothing till morning! It passes patience!"
+
+Mary had her own feelings, but she concealed them. "He must know how
+it was going when he left?" she said.
+
+"He doesn't know an identical thing!" Mrs. Toft replied. "And all he'd
+say was, 'There, there, what does it matter?' For all the world as if
+he spoke to a child! 'What else matters, man?' says I. 'What did you
+go for?' But there, Miss, he's beyond me these days! I believe he's
+going like the poor master, that had a bee in his bonnet, God forgive
+me for saying it! But what'd one not say, and we to wait till morning
+not knowing whether those plaguy Repealers are in or out!"
+
+"But Mr. Basset is for Repeal," Mary said.
+
+"What matter what he's for, if he's in?" Mrs. Toft replied loftily.
+"But to wait till morning to know--the man's no better than a numps!"
+
+In the end, it was Mr. Colet who brought the news to the Gatehouse. He
+brought it to Etruria and so much of moment with it that before noon
+the election result had been set aside as a trifle, and Mary found
+herself holding a kind of court in the parlor--Mr. Colet plaintiff,
+Etruria defendant, Mrs. Toft counsel for the defence. Absence had but
+strengthened Mr. Colet's affection, and he came determined to come to
+an understanding with his mistress. He saw his way to making a small
+income by writing sermons for his more indolent brethren, and, in the
+meantime, Mr. Basset was giving him food and shelter; in return he was
+keeping Mr. Basset's accounts, and he was saving a little, a very
+little, money. But the body of his plea rested not on these counts,
+but on the political change. Repeal was in the air, repeal was in the
+country. Vote as Riddsley might, the Corn Laws were doomed. His
+opinions would no longer be banned; they would soon be the opinions of
+the majority, and with a little patience he might find a new curacy.
+When that happened he wished to marry Etruria.
+
+"And why not?" Mary asked.
+
+"I will never marry him to disgrace him," Etruria replied. She stood
+with bowed head, her hands clasped before her, her beautiful eyes
+lowered.
+
+"But you love him?" Mary said, blushing at her own words.
+
+"If I did not love him I might marry him," Etruria rejoined. "I am a
+servant, my father's a servant. I should be wronging him, and he would
+live to know it."
+
+"To my way o' thinking, 'Truria's right," her mother said. "I never
+knew good come of such a marriage! He's poor, begging his reverence's
+pardon, but, poor or rich, his place is there." She pointed to the
+table. "And 'Truria's place is behind his chair."
+
+"But you forget," Mary said, "that when she is Mr. Colet's wife her
+place will be by his side."
+
+"And much good that'll do him with the parsons and such like, as are
+all gleg together! If he's in their black books for preaching too
+free--and when you come to tithes one parson is as like another as
+pigs o' the same litter--he'll not better himself by taking such as
+Etruria, take my word for it, Miss!"
+
+"I will never do it," said Etruria.
+
+"But," Mary protested, "Mr. Colet need not live here, and in another
+part people will not know what his wife has been. Etruria has good
+manners and some education, Mrs. Toft, and what she does not know she
+will learn. She will be judged by what she is. If there is a drawback,
+it is that such a marriage will divide her from you and from her
+father. But if you are prepared for that?"
+
+Mrs. Toft rubbed her nose. "We'd be willing if that were all," she
+said. "She'd come to us sometimes, and there'd be no call for us to go
+to her."
+
+Mr. Colet looked at Etruria. "If Etruria will come to me," he said, "I
+will be ashamed neither of her nor her parents."
+
+"Bravely said!" Mary cried.
+
+"But there's more to it than that," Mrs. Toft objected. "A deal more.
+Mr. Colet nor 'Truria can't live upon air. And it's my opinion that if
+his reverence gets a curacy, he'll lose it as soon as it's known who
+his wife is. And he can't dig and he can't beg, and where'll they be
+with the parsons all sticking to one another as close as wax?"
+
+"He'll not need them!" replied a new speaker, and that speaker was
+Toft. He had entered silently, none of them had seen him, and the
+interruption took them aback. "He'll not need them," he repeated, "nor
+their curacies. He'll not need to dig nor beg. There's changes coming.
+There's changes coming for more than him, Miss. If Mr. Colet's willing
+to take my girl she'll not go to him empty-handed."
+
+"I will take her as she stands," Mr. Colet said, his eyes shining.
+"She knows that."
+
+"Well, you'll take her, sir, asking your pardon, with what I give
+her," Toft answered. "And that'll be five hundred pounds that I have
+in hand, and five hundred more that I look to get. Put 'em together
+and they'll buy what's all one with a living, and you'll be your own
+rector and may snap your fingers at 'em!"
+
+They stared at the man, while Mrs. Toft, in an awestruck tone, cried,
+"You're out of your mind, Toft! Five hundred pounds! Whoever heard of
+the like of us with that much money?"
+
+"Silence, woman," Toft said. "You know naught about it."
+
+"But, Toft," Mary said, "are you in earnest? Do you understand what a
+large sum of money this is?"
+
+"I have it," the man replied, his sallow cheek reddening. "I have it,
+and it's for Etruria."
+
+"If this be true," Mr. Colet said slowly, "I don't know what to say,
+Toft."
+
+"You've said all that is needful, sir," Toft replied. "It's long
+I've looked forward to this. She's yours, and she'll not come to you
+empty-handed, and you'll have no need to be ashamed of a wife that
+brings you a living. We'll not trouble except to see her at odd times
+in the year. It will be enough for her mother and me that she'll be a
+lady. She never was like us."
+
+"Hear the man!" cried Mrs. Toft between admiration and protest. "You'd
+suppose she wasn't our child!"
+
+But Mary went to him and gave him her hand. "That's very fine, Toft,"
+she said. "I believe Etruria will be as happy as she is good, and Mr.
+Colet will have a wife of whom he may be proud. But Etruria will not
+be Etruria if she forgets her parents or your gift. Only you are sure
+that you are not deceiving yourself?"
+
+"There's my bank-book to show for half of it," Toft replied. "The
+other half is as certain if I live three months!"
+
+"Well, I declare!" Mrs. Toft cried. "If anybody'd told me yesterday
+that I'd have--'Truria, han't you got a word to say?"
+
+Etruria's answer was to throw her arms round her father's neck. Yet
+it is doubtful if the moment was as much to her as to the ungainly,
+grim--visaged man, who looked so ill at ease in her embrace.
+
+The contrast between them was such that Mary hastened to relieve the
+sufferer. "Etruria will have more to say to Mr. Colet," she said,
+"than to us. Suppose we leave them to talk it over."
+
+She saw the Tofts out after another word or two, and followed them.
+"Well, well, well!" said Mrs. Toft, when they stood in the hall. "I'm
+sure I wish that everybody was as lucky this day--if all's true as
+Toft tells us."
+
+"There's some in luck that don't know it!" the man said oracularly.
+And he slid away.
+
+"If he said black was white, I'd believe him after this," his wife
+exclaimed, "asking your pardon, Miss, for the liberties we've taken!
+But you'd always a fancy for 'Truria. Anyway, if there's one will be
+pleased to hear the news, it's the Squire! If I'd some of those nine
+here that voted against him I'd made their ears burn!"
+
+"But perhaps they thought that Mr. Basset was wrong," Mary said.
+
+"What business had they o' thinking?" Mrs. Toft replied. "They had
+ought to vote; that's enough for them."
+
+"Well, it does seem a pity," Mary allowed. And then, because she
+fancied that Mrs. Toft looked at her with meaning, she went upstairs
+and, putting on her hat and cloak, went out. The day was cold and
+bright, a sprinkling of snow lay on the ground, and a walk promised
+her an opportunity of thinking things over. Between the Butterflies,
+at the entrance to the flagged yard, she hung a moment in doubt, then
+she set off across the park in the direction of the Great House.
+
+At first her thoughts were busy with Etruria's fortunes and the
+mysterious windfall which had enriched Toft. How had he come by it?
+How could he have come by it? And was the man really sane? But soon
+her mind took another turn. She had strayed this way on the morning
+after her arrival at the Gatehouse, and, remembering this, she looked
+across the gray, frost-bitten park, with its rows of leafless trees
+and its naked vistas. Her mind travelled back to that happy morning,
+and involuntarily she glanced behind her.
+
+But to-day no one followed her, no one was thinking of her. Basset was
+gone, gone for good, and it was she who had sent him away. The May
+morning when he had hurried after her, the May sunshine, gay with the
+songs of larks and warm with the scents of spring were of the past.
+To-day she looked on a bare, cold landscape and her thoughts matched
+it. Yet she had no ground to complain, she told herself, no reason to
+be unhappy. Things might have been worse, ah, so much worse, she
+reflected. For a week ago she had been a captive, helpless, netted in
+her own folly! And now she was free.
+
+Yes, she ought to be happy, being free; and, more than free,
+independent.
+
+But she must go from here. And for many reasons the thought of going
+was painful to her. During the nine months which she had spent at the
+Gatehouse it had become a home. Its panelled rooms, its austerity, its
+stillness, the ancient woodlands about it were endeared to her by the
+memory of lamp-lit evenings and long summer days. The very plainness
+and solitude of the life, which had brought the Tofts and Etruria so
+near to her, had been a charm. And if her sympathy with her uncle had
+been imperfect, still he had been her uncle and he had been kind to
+her.
+
+All this she must leave, and something else which she did not define;
+which was bound up with it, and which she had come to value when it
+was too late. She had taken brass for gold, and tin for silver! And
+now it was too late. So that it was no wonder that when she came to
+the hawthorn-tree where she had gathered her may that morning, a sob
+rose in her throat. She knew the tree! She had marked it often. But
+to-day there was no one to follow her, no one to call her back, no one
+to say that she should go no farther. Basset was gone, her uncle was
+dead.
+
+Telling herself that, as she would never see it again, she would go as
+far as the Great House, she pushed on to the Yew Walk. Its recesses
+showed dark, the darker for the sprinkling of snow that lay in the
+park. But it was high noon, there was nothing to fear, and she pursued
+the path until she came to the crumbling monster that tradition said
+was a butterfly.
+
+She was still viewing it with awe, thinking now of the duel which had
+taken place there, now of her uncle's attack, when a bird moved in the
+copse and she glanced nervously behind her, expecting she knew not
+what. The dark yews shut her in, and involuntarily she shivered. What
+if, in this solitary place--and then through the silence the sharp
+click of the Iron Gate reached her ear.
+
+The stillness and the associations shook her nerves. She heard
+footsteps and, hardly knowing what she feared, she slipped among the
+trees and stood half-hidden. A moment passed and a man appeared. He
+came from the Great House. He crossed the opening slowly, his chin
+sunk upon his breast, his eyes bent on the path before him. A moment
+and he was gone, the way she had come, without seeing her.
+
+It was Lord Audley, and foolish as the impulse to hide herself had
+been, she blessed it. Nothing pleasant, nothing good, could have come
+of their meeting; and into her thoughts of him had crept so much of
+distaste that she was glad that she had not met him in this lonely
+spot. She went on to the Iron Gate, and viewed for a few moments the
+desolate lawn and the long, gaunt front. Then, reflecting that if she
+turned back at once she might meet him, she took a side-path through
+the plantation, and emerged on the park at another point.
+
+She was careful not to reach home until late in the day and then she
+learned that he had called, that he had waited, and that in the end
+Toft had seen him; and that he had departed in no good temper. "What
+Toft said to him," Mrs. Toft reported, "I know no more than the moon,
+but whatever it was his lordship marched off, Miss, as black as
+thunder."
+
+After that nothing happened, and of the four at the Gatehouse Etruria
+alone was content. Mrs. Toft was uneasy about the future--what were
+they going to do?--and perplexed by Toft's mysterious fortune--how had
+he come by it? Toft himself was on the rack, looking for things to
+happen--and nothing happened. And Mary knew that she must take action.
+She could not stay at the Gatehouse, she could not remain as the guest
+either of Basset or of Lord Audley.
+
+But she did not know where to go, and no suggestion reached her. At
+length she wrote, two days after Lord Audley's visit, to Quebec
+Street, to the house where she had stayed with her father many years
+before. It was the only address of the kind that she knew. But she
+received no answer, and her heart sank. The difficulty, small as it
+was, harassed her; she had no adviser, and ten times a day, to keep up
+her spirits, she had tell herself that she was independent, that she
+had eight thousand pounds, that the whole world was open to her, and
+that compared with the penniless girl who had lived on the upper floor
+of the Htel Lambert she was fortunate!
+
+But in the Htel Lambert she had had work to do, and here she had
+none!
+
+She thought of taking rooms in Riddsley, but Lord Audley was there and
+she shrank from meeting him. She would wait another week for the
+answer from London, and then, if none came, she must decide what she
+would do. But in her room that night the thought that Basset had
+abandoned her, that he no longer cared, no longer desired to come near
+her, broke her down. Of course, he was not to blame. He fancied her
+still engaged to her cousin and receiving from him all the advice, all
+the help, all the love, she needed. He fancied her happy and content,
+in no need of him. And, alas, there was the pinch. She had written to
+him to tell him of her engagement. She could not write to him to tell
+him that it was at an end!
+
+And then, by the morrow's post, there came a long letter from Basset,
+and in the letter the whole astonishing, overwhelming story of the
+discovery of the document which John Audley had sought so long, and in
+the end so disastrously.
+
+
+"No doubt," the writer added, "Lord Audley has made you acquainted
+with the facts, but I think it my duty as your uncle's executor to
+lay them before you in detail and also to advise you that in your
+interest and in view of the change in your position--and in Lord
+Audley's--which this imports, it is proper that you should have
+independent advice."
+
+
+The blood ebbed and left Mary pale; it returned in a flood as with a
+bounding heart and shaking fingers she read and turned and re-read
+this letter. At length she grasped its meaning, and truly what
+astounding, what overwhelming news! What a shift of fortune! What a
+reversal of expectations! And how strangely, how singularly had all
+things shaped themselves to bring this about--were it true!
+
+Unable to sit still, unable to control her excitement--and no
+wonder--she rose and paced the floor. If she were indeed Lady Audley!
+If this were indeed all hers! This dear house and the Great House!
+This which had seemed to its possessor so small, so meagre, so
+cramping an inheritance, but was to her fortune, an old name, a great
+place, a firm position in the world! A position that offered so many
+opportunities and so much power for good!
+
+She walked the room with throbbing pulses, the letter now crushed in
+her hand, now smoothed out that she might assure herself of its
+meaning, might read again some word or some sentence, might resolve
+some doubt. Oh, it was a wonderful, it was a marvellous, it was an
+incredible turn of fortune! And presently her mind began to deal with
+and to sift the past. And, enlightened, she understood many of the
+things that had perplexed her, and read many of the riddles that had
+baffled her. And her cheeks burned, her heart was hot with
+indignation.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+ THE DEED OF RENUNCIATION
+
+
+Basset moved in his chair. He was unhappy and ill at ease. He looked
+at the fire, he looked askance at Mary. "But do you mean," he said,
+"that you knew nothing about this until you had my letter?"
+
+"Nothing," Mary answered, "not a word." She, too, found it more easy
+to look at the fire.
+
+"You must have been very much surprised?"
+
+"I was. It was for that reason that I asked you to bring me the
+papers--to bring me everything, so that I might see for myself how it
+was."
+
+"I don't understand why Audley did not tell you. He said he would."
+
+It was the question Mary had foreseen and dreaded. She had slept two
+nights upon the letter and given a long day's thought to it, and
+she had made up her mind what she would do and how she would do it.
+But between the planning and the doing there were passages which she
+would fain have shunned, fain have omitted, had it been possible; and
+this was one of them. She saw that there was nothing else for it,
+however--the thing must be told, and told by her. She tried, and not
+without success, to command her voice. "He did not tell me," she said.
+"Indeed I have not seen him. And I ought to say, Mr. Basset, you ought
+to know in these circumstances--that the engagement between my cousin
+and myself is at an end."
+
+He may have started--he might well be astonished, in view of the
+business which brought him there. But he did not speak, and Mary could
+not tell what effect it had on him. She only knew that the silence
+seemed age-long, the pause cruel, and that her heart was beating so
+loudly that it seemed to her that he must hear it. At last, "Do you
+mean," he asked, his voice muffled and uncertain, "that it is all over
+between you?"
+
+"It is quite over between us," she answered soberly. "It was a mistake
+from the beginning."
+
+"When--when did he----"
+
+"Oh, before this arose. Some time before this arose." She spoke
+lightly, but her cheeks were hot.
+
+"He did not tell me."
+
+"No?"
+
+"No," Basset repeated. He spoke angrily, as if he felt this a
+grievance, but in no other way could he have masked his emotion.
+Perhaps he did not mask it altogether, for she was observing him--ah,
+how keenly was she observing him! "On the contrary, he led me to
+believe," he continued, "that things were as before between you, and
+that he would tell you this himself. It was for that reason that I let
+a week go by before I wrote to you."
+
+"Just so," she said, squeezing her handkerchief into a ball, and
+telling herself that the worst was over now, the story told, that in
+another minute this would be done and past. "Just so, I quite
+understand. At any rate there is no longer any question of that, Mr.
+Basset. And now," briskly, "may I see this famous deed which is to do
+so much. You brought it with you, I hope?"
+
+"Yes, I brought it," he answered heavily. He took a packet of papers
+from his breast-pocket, and it did not escape her--she was cooler
+now--that his fingers were not as steady as a man's fingers should be.
+The packet he brought out was tied about with old and faded green
+ribbon, and bore a docket on the outside. She looked at it with
+curiosity. That ribbon had been tied by a long-dead hand in the reign
+of Queen Anne! Those yellowish papers had lain in damp and darkness a
+hundred and forty years, that in the end they might take John Audley's
+life! "I brought them from the bank this afternoon," he explained.
+"They have been in the bank's custody since they were handed to me,
+and I must return them to the bank to-night."
+
+"Everything depends upon them, I suppose?"
+
+"Everything."
+
+"But I thought that it was a deed--just one paper?" she said.
+
+"The actual instrument is a deed. This one!" He took it from the
+series as he untied the packet. "The other papers are of value as
+corroboration. They are letters, original letters, bearing on the
+preparation of the agreement. They were found all together as they are
+now, and in the same order. I did not disclose the letters to Audley,
+or to his lawyer, because I had not then gone through them; nor was it
+necessary to disclose them. I have since examined them, and they
+provide ample proof of the genuineness of the deed."
+
+"So that you think...?"
+
+"I do not think that it can be contested. I am sure that it
+cannot--with success. And if it be admitted, your opponent's case is
+gone. It was practically common ground in the former suit that if this
+agreement could be produced and proved his claim fell to the ground.
+Yours remains. I do not suppose," Basset concluded, "that he will
+contest it, save as a matter of form."
+
+"I am sorry for him," she said thoughtfully. And almost for the first
+time her eyes met his. But he was not responsive. He shrugged his
+shoulders. "He has had it long enough to feel the loss of it," she
+continued, still bidding for his sympathy. "May I look at that
+now--the deed?" She held out her hand.
+
+He gave it to her. It was a folded sheet of parchment, yellow with age
+and not very large, perhaps ten inches square. Three or four seals of
+green wax on ribbon ends dangled from it. It was written all over in a
+fine and curious penmanship, its initial letter adorned with a
+portrait of Queen Anne; altogether a pretty and delicate thing, but
+small--so small, she thought, to effect so great a change, to carry,
+to wreck, to make the fortunes of a house!
+
+She handled it gently, almost fearfully, with awe and a little
+distaste. She turned it, she read the signatures. They were clear but
+faint. The ink had turned brown.
+
+"Peter Paravicini Audley," she murmured. "He must have signed it
+sadly, to save his wife, his cousin, a young girl, a girl of my age
+perhaps! To save her name!" There was a quaver in her voice. Basset
+moved uncomfortably.
+
+"They are all dead," he said.
+
+"Yes, they are all dead," she agreed. "And their joys and failings,
+hopes and fears--all dead! It seems a pity that this should live to
+betray them."
+
+"Not a pity on your account."
+
+"No. You are glad, of course?"
+
+"That you should have your rights?" he said manfully. "Of course I
+am."
+
+"And you congratulate me?" She rose and held out her hand. Her eyes
+were shining, there were tears in them, and her face was marvellously
+soft. "You will be the first, won't you, to congratulate me? You who
+have done so much for me, you who have been my friend through all? You
+who have brought me this? You will wish me joy?"
+
+He was deeply moved; how deeply he could not hide from her, and her
+last doubt faded. He took her hand--his own was cold--but he could not
+speak. At last, "May you be very happy! It is my one wish, Lady
+Audley!"
+
+She let his hand fall. "Thank you," she said gently. "I think that I
+shall be happy. And now--now," in a firmer tone, "will you do
+something for me, Mr. Basset? It is not much. Will you deal with Toft
+for me? You told me in your letter that he held my uncle's note for
+800, to be paid in the event of the discovery of these papers? And
+that 300, already paid, might be set off against this?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"The money should be paid, of course."
+
+"I fear it must be paid."
+
+"Will you see him and tell him that it shall be. I--I am fond of
+Etruria, but I am not so fond of Toft, and I would rather not--would
+you see him about this?"
+
+"I quite understand," Basset answered. "Of course I will do it." They
+had both regained the ordinary plane of feeling and he spoke in his
+usual tone. "You would like me to see him now?"
+
+"If you please."
+
+He went from the room. There were other things that as executor he
+must arrange, and when he had dealt with Toft, and not without a hard
+word or two that went home, had settled that matter, he went round the
+house and gave the orders he had to give. The light was beginning to
+fail and shadows to fill the corners, and as he glanced into this room
+and that and viewed the long-remembered places and saw ghosts and
+heard the voices of the dead, he knew that he was taking leave of many
+things, of things that had made up a large part of his life.
+
+And he had other thoughts hardly more cheering. Mary's engagement was
+broken off. But how? By whom? Had she freed herself? Or had Audley,
+_immemor Divum_, and little foreseeing the discovery that trod upon
+his threshold, freed her? And if so, why? He was in the dark as to
+this and as to all--her attitude, her thoughts, her feelings. He knew
+only that while her freedom trebled the moment of the news he had
+brought, the gifts of fortune which that news laid at her feet, rose
+insuperable between them and formed a barrier he could not pass.
+
+For he could never woo her now. Whatever dawn of hope crept quivering
+above the horizon--and she had been kind, ah, in that moment of
+softness and remembrance she had been kind!--he could never speak now.
+
+The dusk was far advanced and firelight was almost the only light
+when, after half an hour's absence, he returned to the parlor. Mary
+was standing before the hearth, her slender figure darkly outlined
+against the blaze. She held the poker in her hand, and she was
+stooping forward; and something in her pose, something in the tense
+atmosphere of the room, drew his gaze--he never knew why--to the table
+on which he had left the papers. It was bare. He looked round, he
+could not see them, a cry broke from him. "Mary!"
+
+"They don't burn easily," she said, a quaver of exultation and
+defiance in her tone. "Parchment is so hard to burn--it burns so
+slowly, though I made a good fire on purpose!"
+
+"D--n!" he cried, and he was going to seize, he tried to seize her
+arm. But he saw the next moment that it was useless, he saw that it
+was too late. "Are you mad? Are you mad?" he cried. Frantically, he
+went down on his knees, he raked among the embers. But he knew that it
+was futile, he had known it before he knelt, and he stood up again
+with a gesture of despair. "My G--d!" he said. "Do you know what you
+have done? You have destroyed what cannot be replaced! You have ruined
+your claim! You must have been mad! Mad, to do it!"
+
+"Why, mad? Because I do not wish to be Lady Audley?" she said, facing
+him calmly, with her hands behind her.
+
+"Mad!" he repeated, bitter self-reproach in his voice. For he felt
+himself to blame, he felt the full burden of his responsibility. He
+had left the papers with her, the true value of which she might not
+have known! And she had done this dreadful, this fatal, this
+irreparable thing!
+
+She faced his anger without a quiver. "Why, mad!" she repeated. She
+was quite at her ease now. "Because, having been jilted by my cousin,
+I do not wish for this common, this vulgar, this poor revenge? Because
+I will not stoop to the game he plays and has played? Because I will
+not take from him what is little to me who have not had it, but much,
+nay all, to him who has?"
+
+"But your uncle?" he cried. He was striving desperately to collect
+himself, trying to see the thing all round and not only as she saw it,
+but in its consequences. "Your uncle, whose one aim, whose one object
+in life----"
+
+"Was to be Lord Audley? Believe me," she replied gently, "he sees more
+clearly now. And he is dead."
+
+"But there are still--those who come after you?"
+
+"Will they be better, happier, more useful?" she answered. "Will they
+be less Audleys, with less of ancient blood running in their veins
+because of what I have done? Because I have refused to rake up this
+old, pitiful, forgotten stain, this scandal of Queen Elizabeth? No, a
+thousand times no! And do not think, do not think," she continued more
+soberly, "that I have acted in haste or on impulse. I have not had
+this out of my thoughts for a moment since I knew the truth. I have
+weighed, carefully weighed, the price, and as carefully decided to pay
+it. My duty? I can do it, I hope, as well in one station as another.
+For the rest there is only one who will lose by it"--she faced him
+bravely now--"only one who will have the right to blame me--ever."
+
+"I may have no right----"
+
+"No you have no right at present."
+
+"Still----"
+
+"When you have the right--when you have gained the right, if ever--you
+may blame me."
+
+Was he deceived? Was it the fact or only his fancy, a mere
+will-o'-the-wisp inviting him to trouble that led him to imagine that
+she looked at him queerly? With a mingling of raillery and tenderness,
+with a tear and a smile, with something in her eyes that he had never
+seen in them before? With--with--but her face was in shadow, she had
+her back to the blaze that filled the room with dancing lights, and
+his thoughts were in a turmoil of confusion. "I wish I knew," he said
+in a low voice, "what you meant by that?"
+
+"By what?"
+
+"By what you have just said. Did you mean that now that he--now that
+Audley is out of the way, there was a chance for me?"
+
+"A chance for you?" she repeated. She stared at him in seeming
+astonishment.
+
+"Don't play with me!" he cried, advancing upon her. "You understand
+me? You understand me very well! Yes, or no, Mary?"
+
+She did not flinch. "There is no chance for you," she answered slowly,
+still confronting him. "If there be a second chance for me----"
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"For me, Peter?" And with that her tone told him all, all there was to
+tell. "If you are willing to take me second-hand," she continued, with
+a tremulous laugh, "you may take me. I don't deserve it, but I know my
+own mind now. I have known it since the day my uncle died and I heard
+your step come through the hall. And if you are still willing?"
+
+He did not answer her, but he took her. He held her to him, his heart
+too full for anything but a thankfulness beyond speech, while she,
+shaken out of her composure, trembled between tears and laughter.
+"Peter! Peter!" she said again and again. And once, "We are the same
+height, Peter!" and so showed him a new side of her nature which
+thrilled him with surprise and happiness.
+
+That she brought him no title, no lands, that by her own act she had
+flung away her inheritance and came to him almost empty-handed was no
+pain to him, no subject for regret. On the contrary, every word she
+had said on that, every argument she had used, came home to him now
+with double force. It had been a poor, it had been a common, it had
+been a pitiful revenge! It had mingled the sordid with the cup, it had
+cast the shadow of the Great House on their happiness. In that room in
+which they had shared their first meal on that far May morning, and
+where the light of the winter fire now shone on the wainscot, now
+brought life to the ruffed portraits above it, there was no question
+of name or fortune, or more or less.
+
+So much so, that when Mrs. Toft came in with the tea she well-nigh
+dropped the tray in her surprise. As she said afterwards, "The sight
+of them two as close as chives in a barrel, I declare you might ha'
+knocked me down with a straw! God bless 'em!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XL
+
+ "LET US MAKE OTHERS THANKFUL"
+
+
+A man can scarcely harbor a more bitter thought than that he has lost
+by foul play what fair play would have won for him. This for a week
+was Lord Audley's mood and position; for masterful as he was he owned
+the power of Nemesis, he felt the force of tradition, nor, try as he
+might, could he convince himself that in face of this oft-cited deed
+his chance of retaining the title and property was anything but
+desperate. He made the one attempt to see Mary of which we know; and
+had he seen her he would have done his best to knot again the tie
+which he had cut. But missing her by a hair's breadth, and confronted
+by Toft who knew all, he had found even his courage unequal to a
+second attempt. The spirit in which Mary had faced the breach had
+shown his plan to be from the first a counsel of despair, and
+despairing he let her go. In a dark mood he sat down to wait for the
+next step on the enemy's part, firmly resolved that whatever form it
+might take he would contest the claim to the bitter end.
+
+And Stubbs was scarcely in happier case. At the time, and face to face
+with Basset, he had borne up well, but the production of the fateful
+deed had none the less fallen on him with stunning effect. He
+appreciated--none better and more clearly now--what the effect of his
+easiness would have been had Lord Audley not been engaged to his
+cousin; nor did his negligence appear in a less glaring light because
+his patron was to escape its worst results. He foresaw that whatever
+befel he must suffer, and that the agency which his family had so long
+enjoyed--that, that at any rate was forfeit.
+
+This was enough to make him a most unhappy, a most miserable man. But
+it did not stand alone. Everything seemed to him to be going wrong.
+All good things, public and private, seemed to be verging on their
+end. The world as he had known it for sixty years was crumbling about
+his ears. It was time that he was gone.
+
+Certainly the days of that Protection with which he believed the
+welfare of the land to be bound up, were numbered. In the House Lord
+George and Mr. Disraeli--those strangest of bedfellows!--might rage,
+the old Protectionist party might foam, invective and sarcasm, taunt
+and sneer might rain upon the traitor as he sat with folded arms and
+hat drawn down to his eyes, rectors might fume and squires swear; the
+end was certain, and Stubbs saw that it was. Those rascals in the
+North, they and their greed and smoke, that stained the face of
+England, would win and were winning. He had saved Riddsley by
+nine--but to what end? What was one vote among so many? He thought of
+the nut-brown ale, the teeming stacks, the wagoner's home,
+
+
+ Hard-by, a cottage chimney smokes
+ From betwixt two aged oaks.
+
+
+He thought of the sweet cow-stalls, the brook where he had bent his
+first pin, and he sighed. Half the country folk would be ruined, and
+Shoddy from Halifax and Brass from Bury would buy their lands and walk
+in gaiters where better men had foundered. The country would be full
+of new men--Peels!
+
+Well, it would last his time. But some day there would rise another
+Buonaparte and they would find Cobden with his calico millennium a
+poor stay against starvation, his lean and flashy songs a poor
+substitute for wheat. It was all money now; the kindly feeling, the
+Christmas dole, the human ties, where father had worked for father and
+son for son, and the thatch had covered three generations--all these
+were past and gone. He found one fault, it is true, in the past. He
+had one regret, as he looked back. The laborers' wage had been too
+low; they had been left outside the umbrella of Protection. He saw
+that now; there was the weak point in the case. "That's where they hit
+us," he said more than once, "the foundation was too narrow." But the
+knowledge came too late.
+
+Naturally he buried his private mishap--and my lord's--in silence. But
+his mien was changed. He was an altered, a shaken man. When he passed
+through the streets, he walked with his chin on his breast, his
+shoulders bowed. He shunned men's eyes. Then one day Basset entered
+his office and for a long time was closeted with him.
+
+When he left Stubbs left also, and his bearing was so subtly changed
+as to impress all who met him; while Farthingale, stepping out in his
+absence, drank his way through three brown brandies in a silence which
+grew more portentous with every glass. At The Butterflies, whither the
+lawyer hastened, Audley met him with moody and repellent eyes, and in
+the first flush of the news which the lawyer brought refused to
+believe it. It was not only that the tidings seemed too good to be
+true, the relief from the nightmare which weighed upon him too great
+to be readily accepted. But the thing that Mary had done was so far
+out of his ken and so much beyond his understanding that he could not
+rise to it, or credit it. Even when he at last took in the truth of
+the story he put upon it the interpretation that was natural to him.
+
+"It was a forgery!" he cried with an oath. "You may depend upon it, it
+was a forgery and they discovered it."
+
+But Stubbs would not agree to that. Stubbs was very stout about it,
+and giving details of his conversation with Basset gradually persuaded
+his patron. In one way, indeed, the news coming through him wrought a
+benefit which neither Mary nor Basset had foreseen. It once more
+commended him to Audley, and by and by healed the breach which had
+threatened to sever the long connection between the lawyer and
+Beaudelays. If Stubbs's opinion of my lord could never again be wholly
+what it had been, if Audley still had hours of soreness when the
+other's negligence recurred to his mind, at least they were again at
+one as to the future. They were once more free to look forward to a
+time when a marriage with Lady Adela, or her like, would rebuild the
+fortunes of the Great House. Of Audley, whose punishment if short had
+been severe, one thing at least may be ventured with safety--and
+beyond this we need not inquire; that to the end his first, last,
+greatest thought would be--himself!
+
+Late in June, the Corn Laws were repealed. On the same day Sir Robert
+Peel, in the eyes of some the first, in the eyes of others the last of
+men, was forced to resign. Thwarted by old friends and abandoned by
+new ones, he fell by a man[oe]uvre which even his enemies could not
+defend. Whether he was more to be blamed for blindness than he was to
+be praised for rectitude, are questions on which party spirit has much
+to say, nor has history as yet pronounced a final decision. But if his
+hand gave the victory to the class from which he sprang, he was at
+least free from the selfishness of that class. He had ideals, he was a
+man,
+
+
+ He nothing common did nor mean,
+ Upon that memorable scene,
+ But bowed his comely head,
+ Down as upon a bed.
+
+
+Nor is it possible, even for those who do not agree with him, to think
+of his dramatic fall without sympathy.
+
+In the same week Basset and Mary were married. They spent their
+honeymoon after a fashion of their own, for they travelled through the
+north of England, and beginning with the improvements which Lord
+Francis Egerton was making along the Manchester Canal, they continued
+their quiet journey along the inland waterways which formed in the
+'forties a link, now forgotten, between the great cities. In this
+way--somewhat to the disgust of Mary's new maid, whose name was
+Josphine--they visited strange things; the famous land-warping upon
+the Humber, the Doncaster drainage system in Yorkshire, the Horsfall
+dairies. They brought back to the old gabled house at Blore some ideas
+which were new even to old Hayward--though the "Duke" would never have
+admitted this.
+
+"Now that we are not protected, we must bestir ourselves," Basset said
+on the last evening before their return. "I'll inquire about a seat,
+if you like," he added reluctantly.
+
+Mary was standing behind him. She put her hand on his shoulder. "You
+are paying me out, Peter," she said. "I know now that I don't know as
+much as I thought I knew."
+
+"Which means?" Basset said, smiling.
+
+"That once I thought that nothing could be done without an earthquake.
+I know now that it can be done with a spade."
+
+"So that where Mary was content with nothing but a gilt coach, Mrs.
+Basset is content with a nutshell."
+
+"If you are in the nutshell," Mary answered softly, "only--for what we
+have received, Peter--let us make other people thankful."
+
+"We will try," he answered.
+
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Great House, by Stanley J. Weyman
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT HOUSE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39294-8.txt or 39294-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/2/9/39294/
+
+Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by the
+Web Archive (University of Michigan)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/39294-8.zip b/old/39294-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..72107b0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/39294-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/39294.txt b/old/39294.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..43f85a3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/39294.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14728 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Great House, by Stanley J. Weyman
+
+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: The Great House
+
+Author: Stanley J. Weyman
+
+Release Date: March 28, 2012 [EBook #39294]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT HOUSE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by the
+Web Archive (University of Michigan)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+ 1. Page scan source:
+ http://www.archive.org/details/greathouseastor00weymgoog
+ (University of Michigan)
+
+ 2. The diphthong oe is represented by [oe].
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+ THE HOUSE OF THE WOLF
+ THE NEW RECTOR
+ THE STORY OF FRANCIS CLUDDE
+ A GENTLEMAN OF FRANCE
+ THE MAN IN BLACK
+ UNDER THE RED ROBE
+ MY LADY ROTHA
+ MEMOIRS OF A MINISTER OF FRANCE
+ THE RED COCKADE
+ SHREWSBURY
+ THE CASTLE INN
+ SOPHIA
+ COUNT HANNIBAL
+ IN KINGS' BYWAYS
+ THE LONG NIGHT
+ THE ABBESS OF VLAYE
+ STARVECROW FARM
+ CHIPPINGE
+ LAID UP IN LAVENDER
+ THE WILD GEESE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+ BY
+
+ STANLEY J. WEYMAN
+
+ Author of "The Castle Inn," "Chippinge,"
+ "A Gentleman of France," etc., etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
+ FOURTH AVENUE AND 30th STREET
+ 1919
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1919
+ BY
+ STANLEY J. WEYMAN
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+
+ I. The Hotel Lambert--Upstairs.
+
+ II. The Hotel Lambert--Downstairs.
+
+ III. The Lawyer Abroad.
+
+ IV. Homeward Bound.
+
+ V. The London Packet.
+
+ VI. Field and Forge.
+
+ VII. Mr. John Audley.
+
+ VIII. The Gatehouse.
+
+ IX. Old Things.
+
+ X. New Things.
+
+ XI. Tact and Temper.
+
+ XII. The Yew Walk.
+
+ XIII. Peter Pauper.
+
+ XIV. The Manchester Men.
+
+ XV. Strange Bedfellows.
+
+ XVI. The Great House at Beaudelays.
+
+ XVII. To the Rescue.
+
+ XVIII. Masks and Faces.
+
+ XIX. The Corn Law Crisis.
+
+ XX. Peter's Return.
+
+ XXI. Toft at the Butterflies.
+
+ XXII. My Lord Speaks.
+
+ XXIII. Blore Under Weaver.
+
+ XXIV. An Agent of the Old School.
+
+ XXV. Mary is Lonely.
+
+ XXVI. Missing.
+
+ XXVII. A Footstep in the Hall.
+
+ XXVIII. The News from Riddsley.
+
+ XXIX. The Audley Bible.
+
+ XXX. A Friend in Need.
+
+ XXXI. Ben Bosham.
+
+ XXXII. Mary Makes a Discovery.
+
+ XXXIII. The Meeting at the Maypole.
+
+ XXXIV. By the Canal.
+
+ XXXV. My Lord Speaks Out.
+
+ XXXVI. The Riddsley Election.
+
+ XXXVII. A Turn of the Wheel.
+
+ XXXVIII. Toft's Little Surprise.
+
+ XXXIX. The Deed of Renunciation.
+
+ XL. "Let Us Make Others Thankful."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GREAT HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ THE HOTEL LAMBERT--UPSTAIRS
+
+
+On an evening in March in the 'forties of last century a girl looked
+down on the Seine from an attic window on the Ile St. Louis. The
+room behind her--or beside her, for she sat on the window-ledge, with
+her back against one side of the opening and her feet against the
+other--was long, whitewashed from floor to ceiling, lighted by five
+gaunt windows, and as cold to the eye as charity to the recipient.
+Along each side of the chamber ran ten pallet beds. A black door broke
+the wall at one end, and above the door hung a crucifix. A painting of
+a Station of the Cross adorned the wall at the other end. Beyond this
+picture the room had no ornament; it is almost true to say that beyond
+what has been named it had no furniture. One bed--the bed beside the
+window at which the girl sat--was screened by a thin curtain which did
+not reach the floor. This was her bed.
+
+But in early spring no window in Paris looked on a scene more cheerful
+than this window; which as from an eyrie commanded a shining reach of
+the Seine bordered by the lawns and foliage of the King's Garden, and
+closed by the graceful arches of the Bridge of Austerlitz. On the
+water boats shot to and fro. The quays were gay with the red trousers
+of soldiers and the coquettish caps of soubrettes, with students in
+strange cloaks, and the twin kling wheels of yellow cabriolets. The
+first swallows were hawking hither and thither above the water, and a
+pleasant hum rose from the Boulevard Bourdon.
+
+Yet the girl sighed. For it was her birthday, she was twenty this
+twenty-fifth of March, and there was not a soul in the world to know
+this and to wish her joy. A life of dependence, toned to the key of
+the whitewashed room and the thin pallets, lay before her; and though
+she had good reason to be thankful for the safety which dependence
+bought, still she was only twenty, and springtime, viewed from prison
+windows, beckons to its cousin, youth. She saw family groups walking
+the quays, and father, mother, children, all, seen from a distance,
+were happy. She saw lovers loitering in the garden or pacing to and
+fro, and romance walked with every one of them; none came late, or
+fell to words. She sighed more deeply; and on the sound the door
+opened.
+
+"_Hola!_" cried a shrill voice, speaking in French, fluent, but oddly
+accented. "Who is here? The Princess desires that the English
+Mademoiselle will descend this evening."
+
+"Very good," the girl in the window replied pleasantly. "At the same
+hour, Josephine?"
+
+"Why not, Mademoiselle?" A trim maid, with a plain face and the
+faultless figure of a Pole, came a few steps into the room. "But you
+are alone?"
+
+"The children are walking. I stayed at home."
+
+"To be alone? As if I did not understand that! To be alone--it is the
+luxury of the rich."
+
+The girl nodded. "None but a Pole would have thought of that," she
+said.
+
+"Ah, the crafty English Miss!" the maid retorted. "How she flatters!
+Perhaps she needs a touch of the tongs to-night? Or the loan of a pair
+of red-heeled shoes, worn no more than thrice by the Princess--and
+with the black which is convenable for Mademoiselle, oh, so neat! Of
+the _ancien regime_, absolutely!"
+
+The other laughed. "The _ancien regime_, Josephine--and this!" she
+replied, with a gesture that embraced the room, the pallets, her own
+bed. "A curled head--and this! You are truly a cabbage----"
+
+"But Mademoiselle descends!"
+
+"A cabbage of--foolishness!"
+
+"Ah, well, if I descended, you would see," the maid retorted. "I am
+but the Princess's second maid, and I know nothing! But if I descended
+it would not be to this dormitory I should return! Nor to the
+tartines! Nor to the daughters of Poland! Trust me for that--and I
+know but my prayers. While Mademoiselle, she is an artist's daughter."
+
+"There spoke the Pole again," the girl struck in with a smile.
+
+"The English Miss knows how to flatter," Josephine laughed. "That is
+one for the touch of the tongs," she continued, ticking them off on
+her fingers. "And one for the red-heeled shoes. And--but no more! Let
+me begone before I am bankrupt!" She turned about with a flirt of her
+short petticoats, but paused and looked back, with her hand on the
+door. "None the less, mark you well, Mademoiselle, from the whitewash
+to the ceiling of Lebrun, from the dortoir of the Jeunes Filles to the
+Gallery of Hercules, there are but twenty stairs, and easy, oh, so
+easy to descend! If Mademoiselle instead of flattering Josephine, the
+Cracovienne, flattered some pretty gentleman--who knows? Not I! I know
+but my prayers!" And with a light laugh the maid clapped to the door
+and was gone.
+
+The girl in the window had not throughout the parley changed her pose
+or moved more than her head, and this was characteristic of her. For
+even in her playfulness there was gravity, and a measure of stillness.
+Now, left alone, she dropped her feet to the floor, turned, and knelt
+on the sill with her brow pressed against the glass. The sun had set,
+mists were rising from the river, the quays were gray and cold. Here
+and there a lamp began to shine through the twilight. But the girl's
+thoughts were no longer on the scene beneath her eyes.
+
+"There goes the third who has been good to me," she pondered. "First
+the Polish lodger who lived on the floor below, and saved me from that
+woman. Then the Princess's daughter. Now Josephine. There are still
+kind people in the world--God grant that I may not forget it! But how
+much better to give than to take, to be strong than to be weak, to be
+the mistress and not the puppet of fortune! How much better--and, were
+I a man, how easy!"
+
+But on that there came into her remembrance one to whom it had not
+been easy, one who had signally failed to master fortune, or to
+grapple with circumstances. "Poor father!" she whispered.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ THE HOTEL LAMBERT--DOWNSTAIRS
+
+
+When ladies were at home to their intimates in the Paris of the
+'forties, they seated their guests about large round tables with a
+view to that common exchange of wit and fancy which is the French
+ideal. The mode crossed to England, and in many houses these round
+tables, fallen to the uses of the dining-room or the nursery, may
+still be seen. But when the Princess Czartoriski entertained in the
+Hotel Lambert, under the ceiling painted by Lebrun, which had looked
+down on the arm-chair of Madame de Chatelet and the tabouret of
+Voltaire, she was, as became a Pole, a law to herself. In that
+beautiful room, softly lit by wax candles, her guests were free to
+follow their bent, to fall into groups, or to admire at their ease the
+Watteaus and Bouchers which the Princess's father-in-law, old Prince
+Adam, had restored to their native panels.
+
+Thanks to his taste and under her rule the gallery of Hercules
+presented on this evening a scene not unworthy of its past. The
+silks and satins of the old regime were indeed replaced by the
+high-shouldered coats, the stocks, the pins and velvet vests of the
+dandies; and Thiers beaming through his glasses, or Lamartine, though
+beauty, melted by the woes of Poland, hung upon his lips, might have
+been thought by some unequal to the dead. But they were now what those
+had been; and the women peacocked it as of old. At any rate the effect
+was good, and a guest who came late, and paused a moment on the
+threshold to observe the scene, thought that he had never before done
+the room full justice. Presently the Princess saw him and he went
+forward. The man who was talking to her made his bow, and she pointed
+with her fan to the vacant place. "Felicitations, my lord," she said.
+She held out her gloved hand.
+
+"A thousands thanks," he said, as he bent over it. "But on what,
+Princess?"
+
+"On the success of a friend. On what we have all seen in the
+_Journal_. Is it not true that you have won your suit?"
+
+"I won, yes." He shrugged his shoulders. "But what, Madame? A bare
+title, an empty rent-roll."
+
+"For shame!" she answered. "But I suppose that this is your English
+phlegm. Is it not a thing to be proud of--an old title? That which
+money cannot buy and the wisest would fain wear? M. Guizot, what would
+he not give to be Chien de Race? Your Peel, also?"
+
+"And your Thiers?" he returned, with a sly glance at the little man in
+the shining glasses.
+
+"He, too! But he has the passion of humanity, which is a title in
+itself. Whereas you English, turning in your unending circle, one out,
+one in, one in, one out, are but playing a game--marking time! You
+have not a desire to go forward!"
+
+"Surely, Princess, you forget our Reform Bill, scarce ten years old."
+
+"Which bought off your cotton lords and your fat bourgeois, and left
+the people without leaders and more helpless than before. No, my lord,
+if your Russell--Lord John, do you call him?--had one jot of M.
+Thiers' enthusiasm! Or your Peel--but I look for nothing there!"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "I admit," he said, "that M. Thiers has an
+enthusiasm beyond the ordinary."
+
+"You do? Wonderful!"
+
+"But," with a smile, "it is, I fancy, an enthusiasm of which the
+object is--M. Thiers!"
+
+"Ah!" she cried, fanning herself more quickly. "Now there spoke not
+Mr. Audley, the attache--he had not been so imprudent! But--how do you
+call yourself now?"
+
+"On days of ceremony," he replied, "Lord Audley of Beaudelays."
+
+"There spoke my lord, unattached! Oh, you English, you have no
+enthusiasm. You have only traditions. Poor were Poland if her fate
+hung on you!"
+
+"There are still bright spots," he said slyly. And his glance returned
+to the little statesman in spectacles on whom the Princess rested the
+hopes of Poland.
+
+"No!" she cried vividly. "Don't say it again or I shall be displeased.
+Turn your eyes elsewhere. There is one here about whom I wish to
+consult you. Do you see the tall girl in black who is engaged with the
+miniatures?"
+
+"I saw her some time ago."
+
+"I suppose so. You are a man. I dare say you would call her handsome?"
+
+"I think it possible, were she not in this company. What of her,
+Princess?"
+
+"Do you notice anything beyond her looks?"
+
+"The picture is plain--for the frame in which I see her. Is she one of
+the staff of your school?"
+
+"Yes, but with an air----"
+
+"Certainly--an air!" He nodded.
+
+"Well, she is a countrywoman of yours and has a history. Her father, a
+journalist, artist, no matter what, came to live in Paris years ago.
+He went down, down, always down; six months ago he died. There was
+enough to bury him, no more. She says, I don't know"--the Princess
+indicated doubt with a movement of her fan--"that she wrote to friends
+in England. Perhaps she did not write; how do I know? She was at the
+last sou, the street before her, a hag of a concierge behind, and
+withal--as you see her."
+
+"Not wearing that dress, I presume?" he said with a faint smile.
+
+"No. She had passed everything to the Mont de Piete; she had what she
+stood up in--yet herself! Then a Polish family on the floor below, to
+whom my daughter carried alms, told Cecile of her. They pitied her,
+spoke well of her, she had done--no matter what for them--perhaps
+nothing. Probably nothing. But Cecile ascended, saw her, became
+enamoured, _enragee!_ You know Cecile--for her all that wears feathers
+is of the angels! Nothing would do but she must bring her here and set
+her to teach English to the daughters during her own absence."
+
+"The Princess is away?"
+
+"For four weeks. But in three days she returns, and you see where I
+am. How do I know who this is? She may be this, or that. If she were
+French, if she were Polish, I should know! But she is English and of a
+calm, a reticence--ah!"
+
+"And of a pride too," he replied thoughtfully, "if I mistake not. Yet
+it is a good face, Princess."
+
+She fluttered her fan. "It is a handsome one. For a man that is the
+same."
+
+"With all this you permit her to appear?"
+
+"To be of use. And a little that she may be seen by some English
+friend, who may tell me."
+
+"Shall I talk to her?"
+
+"If you will be so good. Learn, if you please, what she is."
+
+"Your wishes are law," he rejoined. "Will you present me?"
+
+"It is not necessary," the Princess answered. She beckoned to a stout
+gentleman who wore whiskers trimmed a la mode du Roi, and had laurel
+leaves on his coat collar. "A thousand thanks."
+
+He lingered a moment to take part in the Princess's reception of the
+Academician. Then he joined a group about old Prince Adam Czartoriski,
+who was describing a recent visit to Cracow, that last morsel of free
+Poland, soon to pass into the maw of Austria. A little apart, the girl
+in black bent over the case of miniatures, comparing some with a list,
+and polishing others with a square of silk. Presently he found himself
+beside her. Their eyes met.
+
+"I am told," he said, bowing, "that you are my countrywoman. The
+Princess thought that I might be of use to you."
+
+The girl had read his errand before he spoke and a shade flitted
+across her face. She knew, only too well, that her hold on this rock
+of safety to which chance had lifted her--out of a gulf of peril and
+misery of which she trembled to think--was of the slightest. Early,
+almost from the first, she had discovered that the Princess's
+benevolence found vent rather in schemes for the good of many than in
+tenderness for one. But hitherto she had relied on the daughter's
+affection, and a little on her own usefulness. Then, too, she was
+young and hopeful, and the depths from which she had escaped were such
+that she could not believe that Providence would return her to them.
+
+But she was quick-witted, and his opening frightened her. She guessed
+at once that she was not to be allowed to await Cecile's return, that
+her fate hung on what this Englishman, so big and bland and forceful,
+reported of her.
+
+She braced herself to meet the danger. "I am obliged to the Princess,"
+she said. "But my ties with England are slight. I came to France with
+my father when I was ten years old."
+
+"I think you lost him recently?" He found his task less easy than it
+should have been.
+
+"He died six months ago," she replied, regarding him gravely. "His
+illness left me without means. I was penniless, when the young
+Princess befriended me and gave me a respite here. I am no part of
+this," with a glance at the salon and the groups about them. "I teach
+upstairs. I am thankful for the privilege of doing so."
+
+"The Princess told me as much," he said frankly. "She thought that,
+being English, I might advise you better than she could; that possibly
+I might put you in touch with your relations?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Or your friends? You must have friends?"
+
+"Doubtless my father had--once," she said in a low voice. "But as his
+means diminished, he saw less and less of those who had known him. For
+the last two years I do not think that he saw an Englishman at home.
+Before that time I was in a convent school, and I do not know."
+
+"You are a Roman Catholic, then?"
+
+"No. And for that reason--and for another, that my account was not
+paid"--her color rose painfully to her face--"I could not apply to the
+Sisters. I am very frank," she added, her lip trembling.
+
+"And I encroach," he answered, bowing. "Forgive me! Your father was an
+artist, I believe?"
+
+"He drew for an Atelier de Porcelaine--for the journals when he could.
+But he was not very successful," she continued reluctantly. "The china
+factory which had employed him since he came to Paris, failed. When I
+returned from school he was alone and poor, living in the little
+street in the Quartier, where he died."
+
+"But forgive me, you must have some relations in England?"
+
+"Only one of whom I know," she replied. "My father's brother. My
+father had quarrelled with him--bitterly, I fear; but when he was
+dying he bade me write to my uncle and tell him how we were placed. I
+did so. No answer came. Then after my father's death I wrote again. I
+told my uncle that I was alone, that I was without money, that in a
+short time I should be homeless, that if I could return to England I
+could live by teaching French. He did not reply. I could do no more."
+
+"That was outrageous," he answered, flushing darkly. Though well under
+thirty he was a tall man and portly, with one of those large faces
+that easily become injected. "Do you know--is your uncle also in
+narrow circumstances?"
+
+"I know no more than his name," she said. "My father never spoke of
+him. They had quarrelled. Indeed, my father spoke little of his past."
+
+"But when you did not hear from your uncle, did you not tell your
+father?"
+
+"It could do no good," she said. "And he was dying."
+
+He was not sentimental, this big man, whose entrance into a room
+carried with it a sense of power. Nor was he one to be lightly moved,
+but her simplicity and the picture her words drew for him of the
+daughter and the dying man touched him. Already his mind was made up
+that the Czartoriski should not turn her adrift for lack of a word.
+Aloud, "The Princess did not tell me your name," he said. "May I know
+it?"
+
+"Audley," she said. "Mary Audley."
+
+He stared at her. She supposed that he had not caught the name. She
+repeated it.
+
+"Audley? Do you really mean that?"
+
+"Why not?" she asked, surprised in her turn. "Is it so uncommon a
+name?"
+
+"No," he replied slowly. "No, but it is a coincidence. The Princess
+did not tell me that your name was Audley."
+
+The girl shook her head. "I doubt if she knows," she said. "To her I
+am only 'the English girl.'"
+
+"And your father was an artist, resident in Paris? And his name?"
+
+"Peter Audley."
+
+He nodded. "Peter Audley," he repeated. His eyes looked through her at
+something far away. His lips were more firmly set. His face was grave.
+"Peter Audley," he repeated softly. "An artist resident in Paris!"
+
+"But did you know him?" she cried.
+
+He brought his thoughts and his eyes back to her. "No, I did not know
+him," he said. "But I have heard of him." And again it was plain that
+his thoughts took wing. "John Audley's brother, the artist!" he
+muttered.
+
+In her impatience she could have taken him by the sleeve and shaken
+him. "Then you do know John Audley?" she said. "My uncle?"
+
+Again he brought himself back with an effort. "A thousand pardons!" he
+said. "You see the Princess did not tell me that you were an Audley.
+Yes, I know John Audley--of the Gatehouse. I suppose it was to him you
+wrote?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And he did not reply?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+He laughed, as at something whimsical. It was not a kindly laugh, it
+jarred a little on his listener. But the next moment his face
+softened, he smiled at her, and the smile of such a man had its
+importance, for in repose his eyes were hard. It was clear to her that
+he was a man of position, that he belonged of right to this keen
+polished world at which she was stealing a glance. His air was
+distinguished, and his dress, though quiet, struck the last note of
+fashion.
+
+"But I am keeping you in suspense," he said. "I must tell you, Miss
+Audley, why it surprised me to learn your name. Because I, too, am an
+Audley."
+
+"You!" she cried.
+
+"Yes, I," he replied. "What is more, I am akin to you. The kinship is
+remote, but it happens that your father's name, in its place in a
+pedigree, has been familiar to me of late, and I could set down the
+precise degree of cousinship in which you stand to me. I think your
+father was my fourth cousin."
+
+She colored charmingly. "Is it possible?" she exclaimed.
+
+"It is a fact, proved indeed, recently, in a court of law," he
+answered lightly. "Perhaps it is as well that we have that warrant for
+a conversation which I can see that the Princess thinks long. After
+this she will expect to hear the whole of your history."
+
+"I fear that she may be displeased," the girl said, wincing a little.
+"You have been very kind----"
+
+"Who should be kind," he replied, "if not the head of your family? But
+have no fear, I will deal with the Princess. I shall be able to
+satisfy her, I have no doubt."
+
+"And you"--she looked at him with appeal in her eyes--"will you be
+good enough to tell me who you are?"
+
+"I am Lord Audley. To distinguish me from another of the same name, I
+am called Audley of Beaudelays."
+
+"Of Beaudelays?" she repeated. He thought her face, her whole bearing,
+singularly composed in view of his announcement. "Beaudelays?" she
+repeated thoughtfully. "I have heard the name more than once. Perhaps
+from my father."
+
+"It were odd if you had not," he said. "It is the name of my house,
+and your uncle, John Audley, lives within a mile of it."
+
+"Oh," she said. The name of the uncle who had ignored her appeals fell
+on her like a cold douche.
+
+"I will not say more now," Lord Audley continued. "But you shall hear
+from me. To--morrow I quit Paris for three or four days, but when I
+return have no fear. You may leave the matter in my hands in full
+confidence that I shall not fail--my cousin."
+
+He held out his hand and she laid hers in it. She looked him frankly
+in the face. "Thank you," she said. "I little thought when I descended
+this evening that I should meet a kinsman."
+
+"And a friend," he answered, holding her hand a little longer than was
+needful.
+
+"And a friend," she repeated. "But there--I must go now. I should have
+disappeared ten minutes ago. This is my way." She inclined her head,
+and turning from him she pushed open a small door masked by a picture.
+She passed at once into a dark corridor, and threading its windings
+gained the great staircase.
+
+As she flitted upwards from floor to floor, skirting a long procession
+of shadowy forms, and now ogled by a Leda whose only veil was the
+dusk, now threatened by the tusks of the great boar at bay, she
+was not conscious of thought or surprise. It was not until she had
+lighted her taper outside the dormitory door, and, passing between the
+rows of sleeping children, had gained her screened corner, that she
+found it possible to think. Then she set the light in her tiny
+washing-basin--such was the rule--and seated herself on her bed. For
+some minutes she stared before her, motionless and unwinking, her
+hands clasped about her knees, her mind at work.
+
+Was it true, or a dream? Had this really happened to her since she had
+viewed herself in the blurred mirror, had set a curl right and,
+satisfied, had turned to go down? The danger and the delivery from it,
+the fear and the friend in need? Or was it a Cinderella's treat, which
+no fairy godmother would recall to her, with which no lost slipper
+would connect her? She could almost believe this. For no Cinderella,
+in the ashes of the hearth, could have seemed more remote from the gay
+ball-room than she crouching on her thin mattress, with the breathing
+of the children in her ears, from the luxury of the famous salon.
+
+Or, if it was true, if it had happened, would anything come of it?
+Would Lord Audley remember her? Or would he think no more of her,
+ignoring to-morrow the poor relation whom it had been the whim of the
+moment to own? That would be cruel! That would be base! But if Mary
+had fallen in with some good people since her father's death, she had
+also met many callous, and a few cruel people. He might be one. And
+then, how strange it was that her father had never named this great
+kinsman, never referred to him, never even, when dying, disclosed his
+name!
+
+The light wavered in the draught that stole through the bald, undraped
+window. A child whimpered in its sleep, awoke, began to sob. It was
+the youngest of the daughters of Poland. The girl rose, and going on
+tip-toe to the child, bent over it, kissed it, warmed it in her bosom,
+soothed it. Presently the little waif slept again, and Mary Audley
+began to make ready for bed.
+
+But so much turned for her on what had happened, so much hung in the
+balance, that it was not unnatural that as she let down her hair and
+plaited it in two long tails for the night, she should see her new
+kinsman's face in the mirror. Nor strange that as she lay sleepless
+and thought-ridden in her bed the same face should present itself anew
+relieved against the background of darkness.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ THE LAWYER ABROAD
+
+
+Half an hour later Lord Audley paused in the hall at Meurice's, and
+having given his cloak and hat to a servant went thoughtfully up the
+wide staircase. He opened the door of a room on the first floor. A
+stout man with a bald head, who had been for some time yawning over
+the dying fire, rose to his feet and remained standing.
+
+Audley nodded. "Hallo, Stubbs!" he said carelessly, "not in bed yet?"
+
+"No, my lord," the other answered. "I waited to learn if your lordship
+had any orders for England."
+
+"Well, sit down now. I've something to tell you." My lord stooped as
+he spoke and warmed his hands at the embers; then rising, he stood
+with his back to the hearth. The stout man sat forward on his
+chair with an air of deference. His double chin rested on the ample
+folds of a soft white stock secured by a gold pin in the shape of a
+wheat-sheaf. He wore black knee-breeches and stockings, and his dress,
+though plain, bore the stamp of neatness and prosperity.
+
+For a minute or two Audley continued to look thoughtfully before him.
+At length, "May I take it that this claim is really at an end now?" he
+said. "Is the decision final, I mean?"
+
+"Unless new evidence crops up," Stubbs answered--he was a lawyer--"the
+decision is certainly final. With your lordship's signature to the
+papers I brought over----"
+
+"But the claimant might try again?"
+
+"Mr. John Audley might do anything," Stubbs returned. "I believe him
+to be mad upon the point, and therefore capable of much. But he could
+only move on new evidence of the most cogent nature. I do not believe
+that such evidence exists."
+
+His employer weighed this for some time. At length, "Then if you were
+in my place," he said, "you would not be tempted to hedge?"
+
+"To hedge?" the lawyer exclaimed, as if he had never heard the word
+before. "I am afraid I don't understand."
+
+"I will explain. But first, tell me this. If anything happens to me
+before I have a child, John Audley succeeds to the peerage? That is
+clear?"
+
+"Certainly! Mr. John Audley, the claimant, is also your heir-at-law."
+
+"To title and estates--such as they are?"
+
+"To both, my lord."
+
+"Then follow me another step, Stubbs. Failing John Audley, who is the
+next heir?"
+
+"Mr. Peter Audley," Stubbs replied, "his only brother, would succeed,
+if he were alive. But it is common ground that he is dead. I knew Mr.
+Peter, and, if I may say it of an Audley, my lord, a more shiftless,
+weak, improvident gentleman never lived. And obstinate as the devil!
+He married into trade, and Mr. John never forgave it--never forgave
+it, my lord. Never spoke of his brother or to his brother from that
+time. It was before the Reform Bill," the lawyer continued with a
+sigh. "There were no railways then and things were different. Dear,
+dear, how the world changes! Mr. Peter must have gone abroad ten years
+ago, but until he was mentioned in the suit I don't think that I had
+heard his name ten times in as many years. And he an Audley!"
+
+"He had a child?"
+
+"Only one, a daughter."
+
+"Would she come in after Mr. John?"
+
+"Yes, my lord, she would--if living."
+
+"I've been talking to her this evening."
+
+"Ah!" The lawyer was not so simple as he seemed, and for a minute or
+two he had foreseen the _denouement_. "Ah!" he repeated, thoughtfully
+rubbing his plump calf. "I see, my lord. Mr. Peter Audley's daughter?
+Really! And if I may venture to ask, what is she like?"
+
+Audley paused before he answered. Then, "If you have painted the
+father aright, Stubbs, I should say that she was his opposite in all
+but his obstinacy. A calm and self-reliant young woman, if I am any
+judge."
+
+"And handsome?"
+
+"Yes, with a look of breeding. At the same time she is penniless and
+dependent, teaching English in a kind of charity school, cheek by jowl
+with a princess!"
+
+"God bless my soul!" cried the lawyer, astonished at last. "A
+princess!"
+
+"Who is a good creature as women go, but as likely as not to send her
+adrift to-morrow."
+
+"Tut-tut-tut!" muttered the other.
+
+"However, I'll tell you the story," Audley concluded. And he did so.
+
+When he had done, "Well," Stubbs exclaimed, "for a coincidence----"
+
+"Ah, there," the young man broke in, "I fancy, all's not said. I take
+it the Princess noted the name, but was too polite to question me.
+Anyway, the girl is there. She is dependent, friendless; attractive,
+and well-bred. For a moment it did occur to me--she is John Audley's
+heiress--that I might make all safe by----" His voice dropped. His
+last words were inaudible.
+
+"The chance is so very remote," said the lawyer, aware that he was on
+delicate ground, and that the other was rather following out his own
+thoughts than consulting him.
+
+"It is. The idea crossed my mind only for a moment--of course it's
+absurd for a man as poor as I am. There is hardly a poorer peer out of
+Ireland--you know that. Fourteenth baron without a roof to my house
+or a pane of glass in my windows! And a rent-roll when all is told
+of----"
+
+"A little short of three thousand," the lawyer muttered.
+
+"Two thousand five hundred, by God, and not a penny more! If any man
+ought to marry money, I am that man, Stubbs!"
+
+Mr. Stubbs, staring at the fire with a hand on each knee, assented
+respectfully. "I've always hoped that you would, my lord," he said,
+"though I've not ventured to say it."
+
+"Yes! Well--putting that aside," the other resumed, "what is to be
+done about her? I've been thinking it over, and I fancy that I've hit
+on the right line. John Audley's given me trouble enough. I'll give
+him some. I'll make him provide for her, d--n him, or I don't know my
+man!"
+
+"I'd like to know, my lord," Stubbs ventured thoughtfully, "why he
+didn't answer her letters. He hated her father, but it is not like Mr.
+John to let the young lady drift. He's crazy about the family, and she
+is his next heir. He's a lonely man, too, and there is room at the
+Gatehouse."
+
+Audley paused, half-way across the room. "I wish we had never leased
+the Gatehouse to him!"
+
+"It's not everybody's house, my lord. It's lonely and----"
+
+"It's too near Beaudelays!"
+
+"If your lordship were living at the Great House, quite so," the
+lawyer agreed. "But, as it is, the rent is useful, and the lease was
+made before our time, so that we have no choice."
+
+"I shall always believe that he had a reason for going there!"
+
+"He had an idea that it strengthened his claim," the lawyer said
+indulgently. "Nothing beyond that, my lord."
+
+"Well, I've made up my mind to increase his family by a niece!" the
+other replied. "He shall have the girl whether he likes it or not.
+Take a pen, man, and sit down. He's spoiled my breakfast many a time
+with his confounded Writs of Error, or whatever you call them, and for
+once I'll be even with him. Say--yes, Stubbs, say this:
+
+"'I am directed by Lord Audley to inform you that a young lady,
+believed to be a daughter of the late Mr. Peter Audley, and recently
+living in poverty in an obscure'--yes, Stubbs, say obscure--'part of
+Paris, has been rescued by the benevolence of a Polish lady. For the
+present she is in the lady's house in a menial capacity, and is
+dependent on her charity. Lord Audley is informed that the young lady
+made application to you without result, but this report his lordship
+discredits. Still, he feels himself concerned; and if those to whom
+she naturally looks decline to aid her, it is his lordship's intention
+to make such provision as may enable her to live respectably. I am to
+inform you that Miss Audley's address is the Hotel Lambert, He St.
+Louis, Paris. Letters should be addressed "Care of the Housekeeper."'"
+
+"He won't like the last touch!" the young man continued, with a quiet
+chuckle. "If that does not touch him on the raw, I'll yield up the
+title to-morrow. And now, Stubbs, good-night."
+
+But Stubbs did not take the hint. "I want to say one word, my lord,
+about the borough--about Riddsley," he said. "We put in Mr. Mottisfont
+at the last election, your lordship's interest just tipping the scale.
+We think, therefore, that a word from you may set right what is going
+wrong."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"There's a strong feeling," the lawyer answered, his face serious,
+"that the party is not being led aright. And that Mr. Mottisfont, who
+is old----"
+
+"Is willing to go with the party, eh, Stubbs?"
+
+"No, my lord, with the party leaders. Which is a different thing.
+Sir Robert Peel--the land put him in, but, d--n me, my lord"--the
+lawyer's manner lost much of its deference and he spoke bluntly and
+strongly--"it looks as if he were going to put the land out! An
+income-tax in peace time, we've taken that. And less protection for
+the farmer, very good--if it must be. But all this taking off of
+duties, this letting in of Canadian corn--I tell you, my lord, there's
+an ugly feeling abroad! There are a good many in Riddsley say that he
+is going to repeal the Corn Laws altogether; that he's sold us to the
+League, and won't be long before he delivers us!"
+
+The big man sitting back in his chair smiled. "It seems to me," he
+said, "that you are travelling rather fast and rather far, Stubbs!"
+
+"That's just what we fear Sir Robert is doing!" the lawyer retorted
+smartly, the other's rank forgotten. "And you may take it from me the
+borough won't stand it, my lord, and the sooner Mr. Mottisfont has a
+hint the better. If he follows Peel too far, the bottom will fall out
+of his seat. There's no Corn Law leaguer will ever sit for Riddsley!"
+
+"With your help, anyway, Stubbs," my lord said with a smile. The
+lawyer's excitement amused him.
+
+"No, my lord! Never with my help! I believe that on the landed
+interest rests the stability of the country! It was the landed
+interest that supported Pitt and beat Bony, and brought us through
+the long war. It was the landed interest that kept us from revolution
+in the dark days after the war. And now because the men that turn
+cotton and iron and clay into money by the help of the devil's
+breath--because they want to pay lower wages----"
+
+"The ark of the covenant is to be overthrown, eh?" the young man
+laughed. "Why, to listen to you, Stubbs, one would think that you were
+the largest landowner in the county!"
+
+"No, my lord," the lawyer answered. "But it's the landowners have made
+me what I am. And it's the landowners and the farmers that Riddsley
+lives by and is going to stand by! And the sooner Mr. Mottisfont knows
+that the better. He was elected as a Tory, and a Tory he must stop,
+whether Sir Robert turns his coat or not!"
+
+"You want me to speak to Mottisfont?"
+
+"We do, my lord. Just a word. I was at the Ordinary last fair day, and
+there was nothing else talked of. Free Canadian corn was too like free
+French corn and free Belgian corn for Stafford wits to see much
+difference. And Peel is too like repeal, my lord. We are beginning to
+see that."
+
+Audley shrugged his shoulders. "The party is satisfied," he said. "And
+Mottisfont? I can't drive the man."
+
+"No, but a word from you----"
+
+"Well, I'll think about it. But I fancy you're overrunning the scent."
+
+"Then the line is not straight!" the lawyer retorted shrewdly.
+"However, if I have been too warm, I beg pardon, my lord."
+
+"I'll bear it in mind," Audley answered. "Very good. And now,
+good-night, Stubbs. Don't forget to send the letter to John Audley as
+soon as you reach London."
+
+Stubbs replied that he would, and took his leave. He had said his say
+on the borough question, lord or no lord; which to a Briton--and he
+was a typical Briton--was a satisfaction.
+
+But half an hour later, when he had drawn his nightcap down to his
+ears and stood, the extinguisher in his hand, he paused. "He's a sober
+hand for a young man," he thought, "a very sober hand. I warrant he
+will never run his ship on the rocks for lack of a good look-out!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ HOMEWARD BOUND
+
+
+In the corner of the light diligence, seating six inside, which had
+brought her from Montreuil, Mary Audley leant forward, looking out
+through the dingy panes for the windmills of Calais. Josephine slept
+in the corner facing her, as she had slept for two hours past. Their
+companions, a French shopkeeper and her child, and an English bagman,
+sighed and fidgeted, as travellers had cause to sigh and fidget in
+days when he was lucky who covered the distance from Paris to Calais
+in twenty-five hours. The coach rumbled on. The sun had set, a small
+rain was falling. The fading light tinged the plain of the Pas de
+Calais with a melancholy which little by little dyed the girl's
+thoughts.
+
+She was on her way to her own country, to those on whom she might be
+dependent without shame. And common sense, of which she had a large
+share, told her that she had cause, great cause to be thankful. But
+the flush of relief, to which the opening prospect had given rise, was
+ebbing. The life before her was new, those amongst whom she must lead
+that life were strange; nor did the cold phrases of her uncle's
+invitation, which ignored both her father and the letters that she had
+written, promise an over-warm welcome.
+
+Still, "Courage!" Mary murmured to herself, "Courage!" And she
+recalled a saying which she had learned from the maid, "At the worst,
+ten fingers!" Then, seeing that at last they were entering the streets
+of the town and that the weary journey was over--she had left Paris
+the day before--she touched Josephine. "We are there," she said.
+
+The maid awoke with her eyes on the bagman, who was stout. "Ah!" she
+muttered. "In England they are like that! No wonder that they travel
+seeing that their bones are so padded! But, for me I am one ache."
+
+They jolted over the uneven pavement, crossed a bridge, lumbered
+through streets scarcely wider than the swaying diligence, at last
+with a great cracking of whips they swerved to the left and drew up
+amid the babel of the quay. In a twinkling they were part of it.
+Porters dragged down, fought for, snatched up their baggage.
+English-speaking touts shook dirty cards in their faces. Tide-waiters
+bawled questions in their ears. The postilion, the conductor, all the
+world stretched greedy palms under their noses. Other travellers ran
+into them, and they ran into other travellers. All this, in the dusk,
+in the rain, while the bell on the deck overhead clanged above the
+roar of the escaping steam, and a man shouted without ceasing, "Tower
+steamer! Tower steamer! Any more for England?"
+
+Josephine, after one bitter exchange of words with a lad who had
+seized her handbag, thrust her fingers into her ears and resigned
+herself. Even Mary for a moment was aghast. She was dragged this way
+and that, she lost one article and recovered it, lost another and
+recovered that, she lost her ticket and rescued it from a man's hand.
+At last, her baggage on board, she found herself breathless at the
+foot of the ladder, with three passengers imploring her to ascend, and
+six touts clinging to her skirts and crying for drink-money. She had
+barely time to make her little gift to the kind-hearted maid--who was
+returning to Paris by the night coach--and no time to thank her,
+before they were parted. Mary was pushed up the ladder. In a moment
+she was looking down from the deck on the wet, squalid quay, the pale
+up-turned faces, the bustling crowd.
+
+She picked out the one face which she knew, and which it pained her to
+lose. By gestures and smiles, with a tear in the eye, she tried to
+make amends to Josephine for the hasty parting, the half-spoken words.
+The maid on her side was in tears, and after the French fashion was
+proud of them. So the last minute came. The paddles were already
+turning, the ship was going slowly astern, when a man pushed his way
+through the crowd. He clutched the ladder as it was unhooked, and at
+some risk and much loss of dignity he was bundled on board. There was
+a lamp amidships, and, as he regained his balance, Mary, smiling in
+spite of herself, saw that he was an Englishman, a man about thirty,
+and plainly dressed. Then in her anxiety to see the last of Josephine
+she crossed the deck as the ship went about, and she lost sight of
+him.
+
+She continued to look back and to wave her handkerchief, until
+nothing remained but a light or two in a bank of shadow. That was the
+last she was to see of the land which had been her home for ten years;
+and chilled and lonely she turned about and did what, had she been
+an older traveller, she would have done before. She sought the
+after-cabin. Alas, a glance from the foot of the companion was enough!
+Every place was taken, every couch occupied, and the air, already
+close, repelled her. She climbed to the deck again, and was seeking
+some corner where she could sit, sheltered from the wind and rain,
+when the captain saw her and fell foul of her.
+
+"Now, young lady," he said, "no woman's allowed on deck at night!"
+
+"Oh, but," she protested, "there's no room downstairs!"
+
+"Won't do," he answered roughly. "Lost a woman overboard once, and as
+much trouble about her as about all the men, drunk or sober, I've ever
+carried. All women below, all women below, is the order! Besides,"
+more amicably, as he saw by a ray of lantern-light that she was young
+and comely, "it's wet, my dear, and going to be d--d wet, and as dark
+as Wapping!"
+
+"But I've a cloak," she petitioned, "if I sit quite still, and----"
+
+A tall form loomed up at the captain's elbow. "This is the lady I am
+looking for," the new-comer said. "It will be all right, Captain
+Jones."
+
+The captain turned sharply. "Oh, my lord," he said, "I didn't know;
+but with petticoats and a dark night, blest if you know where you are!
+I'm sure I beg the young lady's pardon. Quite right, my lord, quite
+right!" With a rough salute he went forward and the darkness swallowed
+him.
+
+"Lord Audley?" Mary said. She spoke quietly, but to do so she had to
+steady her voice.
+
+"Yes," he replied. "I knew that you were crossing to-night, and as I
+had to go over this week I chose this evening. I've reserved a cabin
+for you."
+
+"Oh, but," she remonstrated, "I don't think you should have done that!
+I don't know that I can----"
+
+"Afford it?" he said coolly. "Then--as it is a matter of some
+shillings--your kinsman will presume to pay for it."
+
+It was a small thing, and she let it pass. "But who told you," she
+asked, "that I was crossing to-night?"
+
+"The Princess. You don't feel, I suppose, that as you are crossing, it
+was my duty to stay in France?"
+
+"Oh no!" she protested.
+
+"But you are not sure whether you are more pleased or more vexed?
+Well, let me show you where your cabin is--it is the size of a
+milliner's box, but by morning you will be glad of it, and that may
+turn the scale. Moreover," as he led the way across the deck, "the
+steward's boy, when he is not serving gin below, will serve tea above,
+and at sea tea is not to be scorned. That's your number--7. And there
+is the boy. Boy!" he called in a voice that ensured obedience, "Tea
+and bread and butter for this lady in number 7 in an hour. See it is
+there, my lad!"
+
+She smiled. "I think the tea and bread and butter may turn the scale,"
+she said.
+
+"Right," he replied. "Then, as it is only eight o'clock, why should we
+not sit in the shelter of this tarpaulin? I see that there are two
+seats. They might have been put for us."
+
+"Is it possible that they were?" she asked shrewdly. "Well, why not?"
+
+She had no reason to give--and the temptation was great. Five minutes
+before she had been the most lonely creature in the world. The parting
+from Josephine, the discomfort of the boat, the dark sea and the
+darker horizon, the captain's rough words, had brought the tears to
+her eyes. And then, in a moment, to be thought of, provided for,
+kindly entreated, to be lapped in attentions as in a cloak--in very
+fact, in another second a warm cloak was about her--who could expect
+her to refuse this? Moreover, he was her kinsman; probably she owed it
+to him that she was here.
+
+At any rate she thought that it would be prudish to demur, and she
+took one of the seats in the lee of the screen. Audley tucked the
+cloak about her, and took the other. The light of a lantern fell on
+their faces and the few passengers who still tramped the windy deck
+could see the pair, and doubtless envied him their shelter. "Are you
+comfortable?" he inquired--but before she could answer he whistled
+softly.
+
+"What is it?" Mary asked.
+
+"Not much." He laughed to himself.
+
+Then she saw coming along the deck towards them a man who had not
+found his sea-legs. As he approached he took little runs, and now
+brought up against the rail, now clutched at a stay. Mary knew the man
+again. "He nearly missed the boat," she whispered.
+
+"Did he?" her companion answered in the same tone. "Well, if he had
+quite missed it, I'd have forgiven him. He is going to be ill, I'll
+wager!"
+
+When the man was close to them he reeled, and to save himself he
+grasped the end of their screen. His eyes met theirs. He was past much
+show of emotion, but his voice rose as he exclaimed, "Audley. Is that
+you?"
+
+"It is. We are in for a rough night, I'm afraid."
+
+"And--pardon me," the stranger hesitated, peering at them, "is that
+Miss Audley with you?"
+
+"Yes," Mary said, much surprised.
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"This is Mr. Basset," Audley explained. Mary stared at the stranger.
+The name conveyed nothing to her.
+
+"I came to meet you," he said, speaking with difficulty, and now and
+again casting a wild eye abroad as the deck heaved under him. "But I
+expected to find you at the hotel, and I waited there until I nearly
+missed the boat. Even then I felt that I ought to learn if you were on
+board, and I came up to see."
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," Mary answered politely, "but I am
+quite comfortable, thank you. It is close below, and Lord Audley found
+this seat for me. And I have a cabin."
+
+"Oh yes!" he answered. "I think I will go down then if you--if you are
+sure you want nothing."
+
+"Nothing, thank you," Mary answered with decision.
+
+"I think I--I'll go, then. Good-night!"
+
+With that he went, making desperate tacks in the direction of the
+companion. Unfortunately what he gained in speed he lost in dignity,
+and before he reached the hatch Lord Audley gave way to laughter.
+
+"Oh, don't!" Mary cried. "He will hear you. And it was kind of him to
+look for me when he was not well."
+
+But Audley only laughed the more. "You don't catch the full flavor of
+it," he said. "He's come three hundred miles to meet you, and he's too
+ill to do anything now he's here!"
+
+"Three hundred miles to meet me!" she cried in astonishment.
+
+"Every yard of it! Don't you know who he is? He's Peter Basset, your
+uncle's nephew by marriage, who lives with him. He's come, or rather
+your uncle has sent him, all the way from Stafford to meet you--and
+he's gone to lie down! He's gone to lie down! There's a squire of
+dames for you! Upon my honor, I never knew anything richer!"
+
+And my lord's laughter broke out anew.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ THE LONDON PACKET
+
+
+Mary laughed with him, but she was not comfortable. What she had seen
+of the stranger, a man plain in feature and ordinary in figure, one
+whom the eye would not have remarked in a crowd, did not especially
+commend him. And certainly he had not shown himself equal to a
+difficult situation. But the effort he had made to come to her help
+appealed to her generosity, and she was not sure how far she formed a
+part of the comedy. So her laughter was from the lips only, and brief.
+Then, "My uncle's nephew?" she asked thoughtfully.
+
+"His wife's nephew. Your uncle married a Basset."
+
+"But why did he send him to meet me?"
+
+"For a simple reason--I should say that he had no one else to send.
+Your uncle is not a man of many friends."
+
+"I understood that some one would meet the boat in London," she said.
+"But I expected a woman."
+
+"I fancy the woman would be to seek," he replied. "And Basset is a
+kind of tame cat at the Gatehouse. He lives there a part of the year,
+though he has an old place of his own up the country. He's a
+Staffordshire man born and bred, and I dare say a good fellow in his
+way, but a dull dog! a dull dog! Are you sure that the wind does not
+catch you?"
+
+She said that she was very comfortable, and they were silent awhile,
+listening to the monotonous slapping of a rope against the mast and
+the wash of the waves as they surged past the beam. A single light at
+the end of the breakwater shone in the darkness behind them. She
+marked the light grow smaller and more distant, and her thoughts went
+back to the convent school, to her father, to the third-floor where
+for a time they had been together, to his care for her--feeble and
+inefficient, to his illness. And a lump rose in her throat, her hands
+gripped one another as she strove to hide her feelings. In her heart
+she whispered a farewell. She was turning her back on her father's
+grave. The last tendril which bound her to the old life was breaking.
+
+The light vanished, and gradually the girl's reflections sought a new
+channel. They turned from the past to the present, and dwelt on the
+man beside her, who had not only thought of her comfort, who had not
+only saved her from some hours of loneliness, but had probably wrought
+this change in her life. This was the third time only that she had
+seen him. Once, some days after that memorable evening, he had called
+at the Hotel Lambert, and her employer had sent for her. He had
+greeted her courteously in the Princess's presence, had asked her
+kindly if she had heard from England, and had led her to believe that
+she would hear. And she remembered with a blush that the Princess had
+looked from one to the other with a smile, and afterwards had had
+another manner for her.
+
+Meanwhile the man wondered what she was thinking, and waited for her
+to give him the clue. But she was so long silent that his patience
+wore thin. It was not for this, it was not to sit silent beside her,
+that he had taken a night journey and secured these cosey seats.
+
+"Well?" he said at last.
+
+She turned to him, her eyes wet with tears. "It seems so strange," she
+murmured, "to be leaving all and going into a world in which I know no
+one."
+
+"Except the head of your family."
+
+"Except you! I suppose that I owe it to you that I am here?"
+
+"I should be happy if I thought so," he replied, with careful
+reticence. "But we set a stone rolling, we do not know where it falls.
+You will soon learn--Basset will tell you, if I don't--that your uncle
+and I are not on good terms. Therefore it is unlikely that he was
+moved by what I said."
+
+"But you said something?"
+
+"If I did," he answered, smiling, "it was against the grain--who likes
+to put his finger between the door and the jamb? And let me caution
+you. Your uncle will not suffer meddling on my part, still less a
+reminder of it. Therefore, as you are going to owe all to him, you
+will do well to be silent about me."
+
+She was sure that she owed all to him, and she might have said so, but
+at that moment the boat changed its course and the full force of the
+wind struck them. The salt spray whipped and stung their faces. Her
+cloak flew out like a balloon, her scarf pennon-wise, the tarpaulin
+flapped like some huge bird. He had to spring to the screen, to adjust
+it to the new course, to secure and tuck in her cloak--and all in
+haste, with exclamations and laughter, while Mary, sharing the joy of
+the struggle, and braced by the sting of the salt wind, felt her heart
+rise. How kind he was, and how strong. How he towered above ordinary
+men. How safe she felt in his care.
+
+When they were settled anew, she asked him to tell her something about
+the Gatehouse.
+
+"It's a lonely place," he said. "It is quite out of the world. I don't
+know, indeed, how you will exist after the life you have led."
+
+"The life I have led!" she protested. "But that is absurd! Though you
+saw me in the Princess's salon, you know that my life had nothing in
+common with hers. I was downstairs no more than three or four times,
+and then merely to interpret. My life was spent between whitewashed
+walls, on bare floors. I slept in a room with twenty children, ate
+with forty--onion soup and thick tartines. The evening I saw you I
+wore shoes which the maid lent me. And with all that I was thankful,
+most thankful, to have such a refuge. The great people who met at the
+Princess's----"
+
+"And who thought that they were making history!" he laughed. "Did you
+know that? Did you know that the Princess was looking to them to save
+the last morsel of Poland?"
+
+"No," she said. "I did not know. I am very ignorant. But if I were a
+man, I should love to do things like that."
+
+"I believe you would!" he replied. "Well, there are crusades in
+England. Only I fear that you will not be in the way of them."
+
+"And I am not a princess! But tell me, please, what are they?"
+
+"You will not be long before you come upon one," he replied, a hint of
+derision in his tone. "You will see a placard in the streets, '_Shall
+the people's bread be taxed?_' Not quite so romantic as the
+independence of Poland? But I can tell you that heads are quite as
+likely to be broken over it."
+
+"Surely," she said, "there can be only one answer to that."
+
+"Just so," he replied dryly. "But what is the answer? The land
+claims high prices that it may thrive; the towns claim cheap bread
+that they may live. Each says that the country depends upon it.
+'England self-supporting!' says one. 'England the workshop of the
+world!' says the other."
+
+"I begin to see."
+
+"'The land is the strength of the country,' argues the squire. 'Down
+with monopoly,' cries the cotton lord. Then each arms himself with a
+sword lately forged and called 'Philanthropy,' and with that he
+searches for chinks in the other's armor. 'See how factories work the
+babes, drive the women underground, ruin the race,' shout the squires.
+'Vote for the land and starvation wages,' shout the mill-owners."
+
+"But does no one try to find the answer?" she asked timidly. "Try to
+find out what is best for the people?"
+
+"Ah!" he rejoined, "if by the people you mean the lower classes, they
+cry, 'Give us not bread, but votes!' And the squires say that that is
+what the traders who have just got votes don't mean to give them; and
+so, to divert their attention, dangle cheap bread before their noses!"
+
+Mary sighed. "I am afraid that I must give it up," she said. "I am so
+ignorant."
+
+"Well," he replied thoughtfully. "Many are puzzled which side to take,
+and are waiting to see how the cat jumps. In the meantime every fence
+is placarded with 'Speed the Plough!' on one side, and 'The Big Loaf!'
+on the other. The first man you meet thinks the landlord a devourer of
+widows' houses; to the next the mill-owner is an ogre grinding men's
+bones to make his bread. Even at the Gatehouse I doubt if you will
+escape the excitement, though there is not a field of wheat within a
+mile of it!"
+
+"To me it is like a new world," she said.
+
+"Then, when you are in the new world," he replied, smiling as he rose,
+"do not forget Columbus! But here is the lad to tell you that your tea
+is ready."
+
+He repented when Mary had left him that he had not made better use of
+his time. It had been his purpose to make such an impression on the
+girl as might be of use in the future, and he wondered why he had not
+devoted himself more singly to this; why he had allowed minutes which
+might have been given to intimate subjects to be wasted in a dry
+discussion. But there was a quality in Mary that did not lightly
+invite to gallantry--a gravity and a balance that, had he looked
+closely into the matter, might have explained his laches.
+
+And in fact he had builded better than he knew, for while he
+reproached himself, Mary, safe within the tiny bathing machine which
+the packet company called a cabin, was giving much thought to him. The
+dip-candle, set within a horn lantern, threw its light on the one
+comfortable object, the tea-tray, seated beside which she reviewed
+what had happened, and found it all interesting; his meeting with her,
+his thought for her, the glimpses he had given her of things beyond
+the horizon of the convent school, even his diversion into politics.
+He was not on good terms with her uncle, and it was unlikely that she
+would see more of him. But she was sure that she would always remember
+his appearance on the threshold of her new life, that she would always
+recall with gratitude this crossing and the kindness which had lapped
+her about and saved her from loneliness.
+
+In her eyes he figured as one of the brilliant circle of the Hotel
+Lambert. For her he played a part in great movements and high
+enterprises such as those which he had revealed to her. His light
+treatment of them, his air of detachment, had, indeed, chilled her at
+times; but these were perhaps natural in one who viewed from above and
+from a distance the ills which it was his task to treat. How ignorant
+he must think her! How remote from the plane on which he lived, the
+standards by which he judged, the objects at which he aimed! Yet he
+had stooped to explain things to her and to make them clear.
+
+She spent an hour deep in thought, and, strange as the life of the
+ship was to her, she was deaf to the creaking of the timbers, and the
+surge of the waves as they swept past the beam. At intervals hoarse
+orders, a rush of feet across the deck, the more regular tramp of rare
+passengers, caught her attention, only to lose it as quickly. It was
+late when she roused herself. She saw that the candle was burning low,
+and she began to make her arrangements for the night.
+
+Midway in them she paused, and colored, aware that she knew his tread
+from the many that had passed. The footstep ceased. A hand tapped at
+her door. "Yes?" she said.
+
+"We shall be in the river by daybreak," Audley announced. "I thought
+that you might like to come on deck early. You ought not to miss the
+river from the Nore to the Pool."
+
+"Thank you," she answered.
+
+"You shouldn't miss it," he persisted. "Greenwich especially!"
+
+"I shall be there," she replied. "It is very good of you. Good-night."
+
+He went away. After all, he was the only man on board shod like a
+gentleman; it had been odd if she had not known his step! And for
+going on deck early, why should she not? Was she to miss Greenwich
+because Lord Audley went to a good bootmaker?
+
+So when Peter Basset, still pale and qualmish, came on deck in the
+early morning, a little below the Pool, the first person he saw was
+the girl whom he had come to escort. She was standing high above him
+on the captain's bridge, her hands clasping the rail, her hair blown
+about and shining golden in the sunshine. Lord Audley's stately form
+towered above her. He was pointing out this and that, and they were
+talking gaily; and now and again the captain spoke to them, and many
+were looking at them. She did not see Basset; he was on the deck
+below, standing amid the common crowd, and so he was free to look at
+her as he pleased. He might be said not to have seen her before, and
+what he saw now bewildered, nay, staggered him. Unwillingly, and to
+please his uncle, he had come to meet a girl of whom they knew no more
+than this, that, rescued from some backwater of Paris life, into which
+a weak and shiftless father had plunged her, she had earned her
+living, if she had earned it at all, in a dependent capacity. He had
+looked to find her one of two things; either flashy and underbred,
+with every fault an Englishman might consider French, or a nice
+mixture of craft and servility. He had not been able to decide which
+he would prefer.
+
+Instead he saw a girl tall, slender, and slow of movement, with eyes
+set under a fine width of brow and grave when they smiled, a chin
+fuller than perfect beauty required, a mouth a little large, a perfect
+nose. Auburn hair, thick and waving, drooped over each temple, and
+framed a face as calm as it was fair. "Surely a pearl found on a
+midden!" he thought. And as the thought passed through his mind, Mary
+looked down. Her eyes roved for a moment over the crowded deck, where
+some, like Basset, returned her gaze with interest, while others
+sought their baggage or bawled for missing companions. He was not a
+man, it has been said, to stand out in a crowd, and her eyes travelled
+over him without seeing him. Audley spoke to her, she lifted her eyes,
+she looked ashore again. But the unheeding glance which had not
+deigned to know him stung Basset! He dubbed her, with all her beauty,
+proud and hard. Still--to be such and to have sprung from such a life!
+It was marvellous.
+
+He knew nothing of the convent school with its hourly discipline
+lasting through years. He did not guess that the obstinacy which had
+been weakness in the father was strength in the child. Much less could
+he divine that the improvidence of that father had become a beacon,
+warning the daughter off the rocks which had been fatal to him! Mary
+was no miracle, but neither was she proud or hard.
+
+They had passed Erith, and Greenwich with its stately pile and formal
+gardens glittering in the sunshine of an April morning. The ripple of
+a westerly wind, meeting the flood, silvered the turbid surface. A
+hundred wherries skimmed like water-flies hither and thither, long
+lines of colliers fringed the wharves, tall China clippers forged
+slowly up under a scrap of foresail, dumb barges deep laden with hay
+or Barclay's Entire, moved mysteriously with the tide. On all sides
+hoarse voices bawled orders or objurgations. Charmed with the gayety,
+the movement, the color, Mary could not take her eyes from the scene.
+The sunshine, the leap of life, the pulse of spring, moved in her
+blood and put to flight the fears that had weighed on her at
+nightfall. She told herself with elation that this was England, this
+was her native land, this was her home.
+
+Meanwhile Audley's mind took another direction. He reflected that in a
+few minutes he must part from the girl, and must trust henceforth to
+the impression he had made. For some hours he had scarcely given a
+thought to Basset, but he recalled him now, and he searched for him in
+the throng below. He found him at last, pressed against the rail
+between a fat woman with a basket and a crying child. Their eyes met.
+My lord glanced away, but he could not refrain from a smile as he
+pictured the poor affair the other had made of his errand. And
+Basset saw the smile and read its meaning, and though he was not
+self--assertive, though he was, indeed, backward to a fault, anger ran
+through his veins. To have travelled three hundred miles in order to
+meet this girl, to have found her happy in another's company, and to
+have accepted the second place--the position had vexed him even under
+the qualms of illness. This morning, and since he had seen her, it
+stirred in him an unwonted resentment. He d--d Audley under his
+breath, disengaged himself from the basket which the fat woman was
+thrusting into his ribs, lifted the child aside. He escaped below to
+collect his effects.
+
+But in a short time he recovered his temper. When the boat began to go
+about in the crowded Pool and Mary reluctantly withdrew her eyes from
+the White Tower, darkened by the smoke and the tragedies of twenty
+generations, she found him awaiting them at the foot of the ladder. He
+was still pale, and the girl's conscience smote her. For many hours
+she had not given him a thought. "I hope you are better," she said
+gently.
+
+"Horrid thing, _mal de mer!_" remarked my lord, with a gleam of humor
+in his eye.
+
+"Thank you, I am quite right this morning," Basset answered.
+
+"You go from Euston Grove, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes. The morning train starts in a little over an hour."
+
+No more was said, and they went ashore together. Audley, an old
+traveller, and one whose height and presence gave weight to his
+orders, saw to Mary's safety in the crowd, shielded her from touts and
+tide-waiters, took the upper hand. He watched the aproned porters
+disappearing with the baggage in the direction of the Custom House,
+and a thought struck him. "I am sorry that my servant is not here," he
+said. "He would see our things through without troubling us." His eyes
+met Basset's.
+
+Basset disdained to refuse. "I will do it," he said. He received the
+keys and followed the baggage.
+
+Audley looked at Mary and laughed. "I think you'll find him useful,"
+he said. "Takes a hint and is not too forward."
+
+"For shame!" she cried. "It is very good of him to go." But she could
+not refrain from a smile.
+
+"Well trained," Audley continued in a whimsical tone, "fetches and
+carries, barks at the name of Peel and growls at the name of Cobden,
+gives up a stick when required, could be taught to beg--by the right
+person."
+
+She laughed--she could not resist his manner. "But you are not very
+kind," she said. "Please to call a--whatever we need. He shall not do
+everything."
+
+"Everything?" Lord Audley echoed. "He should do nothing," in a lower
+tone, "if I had my way."
+
+Mary blushed.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ FIELD AND FORGE
+
+
+The window of the clumsy carriage was narrow, but Mary gazed through
+it as if she could never see enough of the flying landscape, the
+fields, the woods, the ivy-clad homes and red-roofed towns that passed
+in procession before her. The emotions of those who journeyed for the
+first time on a railway at a speed four times as great as that of the
+swiftest High-flier that ever devoured the road are forgotten by this
+generation. But they were vivid. The thing was a miracle. And though
+by this time men had ceased to believe that he who passed through the
+air at sixty miles an hour must of necessity cease to breathe, the
+novice still felt that he could never tire of the panorama so swiftly
+unrolled before him.
+
+And it was not only wonder, it was admiration that held Mary chained
+to the window. Her infancy had been spent in a drab London street, her
+early youth in the heart of a Paris which was still gloomy and
+mediaeval. Some beautiful things she had seen on fete days, the
+bend of the river at Meudon or St. Germain, and once the Forest
+of Fontainebleau; on Sundays the Bois. But the smiling English
+meadows, the gray towers of village churches, the parks and lawns of
+manor-houses, the canals with their lines of painted barges, and here
+and there a gay packet boat--she drank in the beauty of these, and
+more than once her eyes grew dim. For a time Basset, seated in the
+opposite corner, did not exist for her; while he, behind the _Morning
+Chronicle_, made his observations and took note of her at his leisure.
+The longer he looked the more he marvelled.
+
+He asked himself with amusement what John Audley would think of her
+when he, too, should see her. He anticipated the old man's surprise on
+finding her so remote from their preconceived ideas of her. He
+wondered what she would think of John Audley.
+
+And while he pondered, and now scanned his paper without reading it,
+and now stole another glance at her, he steeled himself against her.
+She might not have been to blame, it might not have been her fault;
+but, between them, the two on the boat had put him in his place and he
+could not forget it. He had cut a poor figure, and he resented it. He
+foresaw that in the future she would be dependent on him for society,
+and he would be a fool if he then forgot the lesson he had learned.
+She had a good face, but probably her up-bringing had been anything
+but good. Probably it had taught her to make the most of the moment
+and of the man of the moment, and he would be foolish if he let her
+amuse herself with him. He had seen in what light she viewed him when
+other game was afoot, and he would deserve the worst if he did not
+remember this.
+
+Presently an embankment cut off the view, and she withdrew her eyes
+from the window. In her turn she took the measure of her companion. It
+seemed to her that his face was too thoughtful for his years, and that
+his figure was insignificant. The eye which had accustomed itself to
+Lord Audley's port and air found Basset slight and almost mean. She
+smiled as she recalled the skill with which my lord had set him aside
+and made use of him.
+
+Still, he was a part of the life to which she was hastening, and
+curiosity stirred in her. He was in possession, he was in close
+relations with her uncle, he knew many things which she was anxious to
+know. Much of her comfort might depend on him. Presently she asked him
+what her uncle was like.
+
+"You will see for yourself in a few hours," he replied, his tone cold
+and almost ungracious. "Did not Lord Audley describe him?"
+
+"No. And you seem," with a faint smile, "to be equally on your guard,
+Mr. Basset."
+
+"Not at all," he retorted. "But I think it better to leave you to
+judge for yourself. I have lived too near to Mr. Audley to--to
+criticise him."
+
+She colored.
+
+"Let me give you one hint, however," he continued in the same dry
+tone; "you will be wise not to mention Lord Audley to him. They are
+not on good terms."
+
+"I am sorry."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "It cannot be said to be unnatural, after
+what has happened."
+
+She considered this. "What has happened?" she asked after a pause.
+
+"Well, the claim to the peerage, if nothing else----"
+
+"What claim?" she asked. "Whose claim? What peerage? I am quite in the
+dark."
+
+He stared. He did not believe her. "Your uncle's claim," he said
+curtly. Then as she still looked a question, "You must know," he
+continued, "that your uncle claimed the title which Lord Audley bears,
+and the property which goes with it. And that the decision was only
+given against him three months ago."
+
+"I know nothing of it," she said. "I never heard of the claim."
+
+"Really?" he replied. He hardly deigned to veil his incredulity. "Yet
+if your uncle had succeeded you were the next heir."
+
+"I?"
+
+"Yes, you."
+
+Then her face shook his unbelief. She turned slowly and painfully red.
+"Is it possible?" she said. "You are not playing with me?"
+
+"Certainly I am not. Do you mean that Lord Audley never told you that?
+Never told you that you were interested?"
+
+"Never! He only told me that he was not on good terms with my uncle,
+and that for that reason he would leave me to learn the rest at the
+Gatehouse."
+
+"Well, that was right," Basset answered. "It is as well, since you
+have to live with Mr. Audley, that you should not be prejudiced
+against him."
+
+"No doubt," she said dryly. "But I do not understand why he did not
+answer my letters."
+
+"Did you write to him?"
+
+"Twice." She was going to explain the circumstances, but she
+refrained. Why appeal to the sympathies of one who seemed so cold, so
+distant, so indifferent?
+
+"He cannot have had the letters," Basset decided after a pause.
+
+"Then how did he come to write to me at last?"
+
+"Lord Audley sent your address to him."
+
+"Ah!" she said. "I supposed so." With an air of finality she turned to
+the window, and for some time she was silent. Her mind had much upon
+which to work.
+
+She was silent for so long that before more was said they were running
+through the outskirts of Birmingham, and Mary awoke with a shock to
+another and sadder side of England. In place of parks and homesteads
+she saw the England of the workers--workers at that time exploited to
+the utmost in pursuance of a theory of economy that heeded only the
+wealth of nations, and placed on that wealth the narrowest meaning.
+They passed across squalid streets, built in haste to meet the needs
+of new factories, under tall chimneys the smoke of which darkened the
+sky without hindrance, by vile courts, airless and almost sunless.
+They looked down on sallow children whose only playground was the
+street and whose only school-bell was the whistle that summoned them
+at dawn to premature toil. Haggard women sat on doorsteps with puling
+babes in their arms. Lines of men, whose pallor peered through the
+grime, propped the walls, or gazed with apathy at the train. For a few
+minutes Mary forgot not only her own hopes and fears, but the
+aloofness and even the presence of her companion. When they came to a
+standstill in the station, where they had to change on to the Grand
+Junction Railway, Basset had to speak twice before she understood that
+he wished her to leave the carriage.
+
+"What a dreadful place!" she exclaimed.
+
+"Well, it is not beautiful," Basset admitted. "One does not look for
+beauty in Birmingham and the Black Country."
+
+He got her some tea, and marshalled her carefully to the upper line.
+But his answer had jarred upon her, and when they were again seated,
+Mary kept her thoughts to herself. Beyond Birmingham their route
+skirted towns rather than passed through them, but she saw enough to
+deepen the impression which the lanes and alleys of that place had
+made upon her. The sun had set and the cold evening light revealed in
+all their meanness the rows of naked cottages, the heaps of slag and
+cinders, the starveling horses that stood with hanging heads on the
+dreary lands. As darkness fell, fires shone out here and there, and
+threw into Dantesque relief the dark forms of half-naked men toiling
+with fury to feed the flames. The change which an hour had made in all
+she saw seemed appalling to the girl; it filled her with awe and
+sadness. Here, so near the paradise of the country and the plough, was
+the Inferno of the town, the forge, the pit! Here, in place of the
+thatched cottage and the ruddy faces, were squalor and sunken cheeks
+and misery and dearth.
+
+She thought of the question which Lord Audley had raised twenty-four
+hours before, and which he had told her was racking the minds of
+men--should food be taxed? And she fancied that there was, there could
+be, but one answer. These toiling masses, these slaves of the hammer
+and the pick, must be fed, and, surely, so fed that a margin, however
+small, however meagre, might be saved out of which to better their
+sordid lot.
+
+"We call this the Black Country," Basset explained, feeling the
+silence irksome. After all, she was in his charge, in a way she was
+his guest. He ought to amuse her.
+
+"It is well named," she answered. "Is there anything in England worse
+than this?"
+
+"Well, round Hales Owen and Dudley," he rejoined, "it may be worse.
+And at Cradley Heath it may be rougher. More women and children are
+employed in the pits; and where women make chains--well, it's pretty
+bad."
+
+She had spoken dryly to hide her feelings. He replied in a tone as
+matter-of-fact, through lack of feeling. For this he was not so much
+to blame as she fancied, for that which horrified her was to him an
+everyday matter, one of the facts of life with which he had been
+familiar from boyhood. But she did not understand this. She judged him
+and condemned him. She did not speak again.
+
+By and by, "We shall be at Penkridge in twenty minutes," he said.
+"After that a nine-miles drive will take us to the Gatehouse, and your
+journey will be over. But I fear that you will find the life quiet
+after Paris."
+
+"I was very quiet in Paris."
+
+"But you were in a large house."
+
+"I was at the Princess Czartoriski's."
+
+"Of course. I suppose it was there that you met Lord Audley?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, after that kind of life, I am afraid that the Gatehouse will
+have few charms for you. It is very remote, very lonely."
+
+She cut him short with impatience, the color rising to her face. "I
+thought you understood," she said, "that I was in the Princess's house
+as a governess? It was my business to take care of a number of
+children, to eat with them, to sleep with them, to see that they
+washed their hands and kept their hair clean. That was my position,
+Mr. Basset. I do not wish it to be misunderstood."
+
+"But if that were so," he stammered, "how did you----"
+
+"Meet Lord Audley," she replied. "Very simply. Once or twice the
+Princess ordered me to descend to the salon to interpret. On one of
+these occasions Lord Audley saw me and learned--who I was."
+
+"Indeed," he said. "I see." Perhaps he had had it in his mind to test
+her and the truth of Audley's letter, which nothing in her or in my
+lord's conduct seemed to confirm. He did not know if this had been in
+his mind, but in any case the result silenced him. She was either very
+honest or very clever. Many girls, he knew, would have slurred over
+the facts, and not a few would have boasted of the Princess's
+friendship and the Princess's society, and the Princess's hotel, and
+brought up her name a dozen times a day.
+
+She is very clever, he thought, or she is--good. But for the moment he
+steeled himself against the latter opinion.
+
+No other travellers alighted at Penkridge, and he went away to claim
+the baggage, while she waited, cold and depressed, on the little
+platform which, lit by a single oil lamp, looked down on a dim
+churchyard. Dusk was passing into night, and the wind, sweeping across
+the flat, whipped her skirts and chilled her blood. Her courage sank.
+A light or two betrayed the nearness of the town, but in every other
+direction dull lines of willows or pale stretches of water ran into
+the night.
+
+Five minutes before she had resented Basset's company, now she was
+glad to see him return. He led the way to the road in silence. "The
+carriage is late," he muttered, but even as he spoke the quick tramp
+of a pair of horses pushed to speed broke on them, lights appeared, a
+moment later a fly pulled up beside them and turned. "You are late,"
+Basset said.
+
+"There!" the man replied. "Minutes might be guineas since trains came
+in, dang 'em! Give me the days when five minutes made neither man nor
+mouse, and gentry kept their own time."
+
+"Well, let us get off now."
+
+"I ask no better, Squire. Please yourself and you'll please me."
+
+When they were shut in, Basset laughed. "Stafford manners!" he said.
+"You'll become used to them!"
+
+"Is this my uncle's carriage?" she asked.
+
+"No," he replied, smiling in the darkness. "He does not keep one."
+
+She said no more. Though she could not see him, her shoulder touched
+his, and his nearness and the darkness in which they sat troubled her,
+though she was not timid. They rode thus for a minute or two, then
+trundled through a narrow street, dimly lit by shop windows; again
+they were in the dark and the country. Presently the pace dropped to a
+walk as they began to ascend.
+
+She fancied, peering out on her side, that they were winding up
+through woods. Branches swept the sides of the carriage. They jolted
+into ruts and jolted out of them. By and by they were clear of the
+trees and the road seemed to be better. The moon, newly risen, showed
+her a dreary upland, bare and endless, here dotted with the dark
+stumps of trees, there of a deeper black as if fire had swept over it
+and scarred it. They met no one, saw no sign of habitation. To the
+girl, accustomed all her life to streets and towns, the place seemed
+infinitely desolate--a place of solitude and witches and terror and
+midnight murder.
+
+"What is this?" she asked, shivering.
+
+"This is the Great Chase," he said. "Riddsley, on the farther side, is
+our nearest town, but since the railway was opened we use Penkridge
+Station."
+
+His practical tone steadied her, but she was tired, and the loneliness
+which she had felt while she waited on the bleak platform weighed
+heavily on her. To what was she going? How would her uncle receive
+her? This dreary landscape, the gaunt signpost that looked like a
+gibbet and might have been one, the skeleton trees that raised bare
+arms to heaven, the scream of a dying rabbit, all added to the
+depression of the moment. She was glad when at last the carriage
+stopped at a gate. Basset alighted and opened the gate. He stepped in
+again, they went on. There were now shadowy trees about them, sparsely
+set. They jolted unevenly over turf.
+
+"Are we there?" she asked, a tremor in her voice.
+
+"Very nearly," he said. "Another mile and we shall be there. This is
+Beaudelays Park."
+
+She called pride to her aid, and he did not guess--for all day he had
+marked her self-possession--that she was trembling. Vainly she told
+herself that she was foolish, that nothing could happen to her,
+nothing that mattered. What, after all, was a cold reception, what was
+her uncle's frown beside the poverty and the hazards from which she
+had escaped? Vainly she reassured herself; she could not still the
+rapid beating of her heart.
+
+He might have said a word to cheer her. But he did not know that she
+was suffering, and he said no word. She came near to hating him for
+his stolidity and his silence. He was inhuman! A block!
+
+She peered through the misty glass, striving to see what was before
+them. But she could make out no more than the dark limbs of trees, and
+now and then a trunk, which shone as the light of the lamp slipped
+over it, and as quickly vanished. Suddenly they shot from turf to hard
+road, passed through an open gateway, for an instant the lamp on her
+side showed a grotesque pillar--they wheeled, they stopped. Within a
+few feet of her a door stood open, and in the doorway a girl held a
+lantern aloft in one hand, and with the other screened her eyes from
+the light.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ MR. JOHN AUDLEY
+
+
+An hour later Basset was seated on one side of a wide hearth,
+on the other John Audley faced him. The library in which they sat was
+the room which Basset loved best in the world. It was a room of
+silence and large spaces, and except where four windows, tall and
+narrow, broke one wall, it was lined high with the companions of
+silence--books. The ceiling was of black oak, adorned at the crossings
+of the joists and beams with emblems, butterflies, and Stafford knots
+and the like, once bright with color, and still soberly rich. A
+five-sided bay enlarged each of the two inner corners of the
+room and broke the outlines. One of these bays shrined a window,
+four-mullioned, the other a spiral staircase. An air of comfort and
+stateliness pervaded the whole; here the great scutcheon over the
+mantel, there the smaller coats on the chair-backs blended their or
+and gules with the hues of old rugs and the dun bindings of old
+folios. There were books on the four or five tables, and books on the
+Cromwell chairs; and charts and deeds, antique weapons and silver
+pieces, all the tools and toys of the antiquary, lay broadcast.
+Against the door hung a blazoned pedigree of the Audleys of
+Beaudelays. It was six feet long and dull with age.
+
+But Basset, as he faced his companion, was not thinking of the room,
+or of the pursuits with which it was connected in his mind, and which,
+more than affection and habit, bound him to John Audley. He moved
+restlessly in his chair, then stretched his legs to meet the glow of
+the wood fire. "All the same," he said, "I think you would have done
+well to see her to-night, sir."
+
+"Pooh! pooh!" John Audley answered with lazy good humor. "Why? It
+doesn't matter what I think of her or she thinks of me. It's what
+Peter thinks of Mary and Mary thinks of Peter that matters. That's
+what matters!" He chuckled as he marked the other's annoyance. "She is
+a beauty, is she?"
+
+"I didn't say so."
+
+"But you think it. You don't deceive me at this time of day. And
+stand-off, is she? That's for the marines and innocent young fellows
+like you who think women angels. I'll be bound that she's her mother's
+daughter, and knows her value and will see that she fetches it!
+Trading blood will out!"
+
+To the eye that looked and glanced away John Audley, lolling in his
+chair, in a quilted dressing-gown with silk facings, was a plump and
+pleasant figure. His face was fresh-colored, and would have been
+comely if the cheeks had not been a little pendulous. His hair was
+fine and white and he wore it long, and his hands were shapely and
+well cared for. As he said his last word he poured a little brandy
+into a glass and filled it up with water. "Here's to the wooing that's
+not long adoing!" he said, his eyes twinkling. He seemed to take a
+pleasure in annoying the other.
+
+He was so far successful that Basset swore softly. "It's silly to talk
+like that," he said, "when I have hardly known the girl twenty-four
+hours and have scarcely said ten times as many words to her."
+
+"But you're going to say a good many more words to her!" Audley
+retorted, grinning. "Sweet, pretty words, my boy! But there, there,"
+he continued, veering between an elfish desire to tease and a desire
+equally strong to bring the other to his way of thinking. "I'm only
+joking. I know you'll never let that devil have his way! You'll never
+leave the course open for _him!_ I know that. But there's no hurry!
+There's no hurry. Though, lord, how I sweated when I read his letter!
+I had never a wink of sleep the night after."
+
+"I don't suppose that he's given a thought to her in that way," Basset
+answered. "Why should he?"
+
+John Audley leant forward, and his face underwent a remarkable change.
+It became a pale, heavy mask, out of which his eyes gleamed, small and
+malevolent. "Don't talk like a fool!" he said harshly. "Of course he
+means it. And if she's fool enough all my plans, all my pains, all my
+rights--and once you come to your senses and help me I shall have my
+rights--all, all, all will go for nothing. For nothing!" He sank back
+in his chair. "There! now you've excited me. You've excited me, and
+you know that I can't bear excitement!" His hand groped feebly for his
+glass, and he raised it to his lips. He gasped once or twice. The
+color came back to his face.
+
+"I am sorry," Basset said.
+
+"Ay, ay. But be a good lad. Be a good lad. Make up your mind to help
+me at the Great House."
+
+Basset shook his head.
+
+"To help me, and twenty-four hours--only twenty-four hours, man--may
+make all the difference! All the difference in the world to me."
+
+"I have told you my views about it," Basset said doggedly. He shifted
+uneasily in his chair. "I cannot do it, sir, and I won't."
+
+John Audley groaned. "Well, well!" he answered. "I'll say no more now.
+I'll say no more now. When you and she have made it up"--in vain
+Basset shook his head--"you'll see the question in another light. Ay,
+believe me, you will. It'll be your business then, and your interest,
+and nothing venture, nothing win! You'll see it differently. You'll
+help the old man to his rights then."
+
+Basset shrugged his shoulders, but thought it useless to protest. The
+other sighed once or twice and was silent also. At length, "You never
+told me that you had heard from her," Basset said.
+
+"That I'd----" John Audley broke off. "What is it, Toft?" he asked
+over his shoulder.
+
+A man-servant, tall, thin, lantern-jawed, had entered unseen. "I came
+to see if you wanted anything more, sir?" he said.
+
+"Nothing, nothing, Toft. Good-night!" He spoke impatiently, and he
+watched the man out before he went on. Then, "Perhaps I heard from
+her, perhaps I didn't," he said. "It's some time ago. What of it?"
+
+"She was in great distress when she wrote."
+
+John Audley raised his eyebrows. "What of it!" he repeated.
+"She was that woman's daughter. When Peter married a tradesman's
+daughter--married a----" He did not continue. His thoughts trickled
+away into silence. The matter was not worthy of his attention.
+
+But by and by he roused himself. "You've ridiculous scruples," he
+said. "Absurd scruples. But," briskly, "there's that much of good in
+this girl that I think she'll put an end to them. You must brighten
+up, my lad, and spark it a little! You're too grave."
+
+"Damn!" said Basset. "For God's sake, don't begin it all again. I've
+told you that I've not the least intention----"
+
+"She'll see to that if she's what I think her," John Audley retorted
+cheerfully. "If she's her mother's daughter! But very well, very well!
+We'll change the subject. I've been working at the Feathers--the
+Prince's Feathers."
+
+"Have you gone any farther?" Basset asked, forcing an interest which
+would have been ready enough at another time.
+
+"I might have, but I had a visitor."
+
+Visitors were rare at the Gatehouse, and Basset wondered. "Who was
+it?" he asked.
+
+"Bagenal the maltster from Riddsley. He came about some political
+rubbish. Some trouble they are having with Mottisfont. D--n
+Mottisfont! What do I care about him? They think he isn't running
+straight--that he's going in for corn-law repeal. And Bagenal and the
+other fools think that that will be the ruin of the town."
+
+"But Mottisfont is a Tory," Basset objected.
+
+"So is Peel. They are both in Bagenal's bad books. Bagenal is sure
+that Peel is going back to the cotton people he came from. Spinning
+Jenny spinning round again!"
+
+"I see."
+
+"I asked him," Audley continued, rubbing his knees with sly enjoyment,
+"what Stubbs the lawyer was doing about it. He's the party manager.
+Why didn't he come to me?"
+
+Basset smiled. "What did he say to that?"
+
+"Hummed and hawed. At last he said that owing to Stubbs's connection
+with--you know who--it was thought that he was not the right person to
+come to me. So I asked him what Stubbs's employer was going to do
+about it."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"He didn't know what to say to that, the ass! Thought I should go the
+other way, you see. So I told him"--John Audley laughed maliciously as
+he spoke--"that, for the landed interest, the law had taken away my
+land, and, for politics, I would not give a d--n for either party in a
+country where men did not get their rights! Lord! how he looked!"
+
+"Well, you didn't hide your feelings."
+
+"Why should I?" John Audley asked cheerfully. "What will they do for
+me? Nothing. Will they move a finger to right me? No. Then a plague on
+both their houses!" He snapped his fingers in schoolboy fashion and
+rose to his feet. He lit a candle, taking a light from the fire with a
+spill. "I am going to bed now, Peter. Unless----" he paused, the
+candlestick in his hand, and gazed fixedly at his companion. "Lord,
+man, what we could do in two or three hours! In two or three hours.
+This very night!"
+
+"I've told you that I will have nothing to do with it!" Basset
+repeated.
+
+John Audley sighed, and removing his eyes, poked the wick of the
+candle with the snuffers. "Well," he said, "good-night. We must look
+to bright eyes and red lips to convert you. What a man won't do for
+another he will do for himself, Peter. Good-night."
+
+Left alone, Basset stared fretfully at the fire. It was not the first
+time by scores that John Audley had tried him and driven him almost
+beyond bearing. But habit is a strong tie, and a common taste is a
+bond even stronger. In this room, and from the elder man, Basset had
+learned to trace a genealogy, to read a coat, to know a bar from a
+bend, to discourse of badges and collars under the guidance of the
+learned Anstie or the ingenious Le Neve. There he had spent hours
+flitting from book to book and chart to chart in the pursuit, as
+thrilling while it lasted as any fox-chase, of some family link, the
+origin of this, the end of that, a thing of value only to those who
+sought it, but to them all-important. He could recall many a day so
+spent while rain lashed the tall mullioned windows or sunlight flooded
+the window-seat in the bay; and these days had endeared to him every
+nook in the library from the folio shelves in the shadowy corner under
+the staircase to the cosey table near the hearth which was called "Mr.
+Basset's," and enshrined in a long drawer a tree of the Bassets of
+Blore.
+
+For he as well as Audley came of an ancient and shrunken stock. He
+also could count among his forbears men who had fought at Blore Heath
+and Towton, or had escaped by a neck from the ruin of the Gunpowder
+Plot. So he had fallen early under the spell of the elder man's
+pursuits, and, still young, had learned from him to live in the past.
+Later the romantic solitude of the Gatehouse, where he had spent more
+of the last six years than in his own house at Blore, had confirmed
+him in the habit.
+
+Under the surface, however, the two men remained singularly unlike.
+While a fixed idea had narrowed John Audley's vision to the inhuman,
+the younger man, under a dry and reserved exterior--he was shy, and
+his undrained acres, his twelve hundred a year, poorly supported an
+ancient name--was not only human, but in his way was something of an
+idealist. He dreamed dreams, he had his secret aspirations, at times
+ambition of the higher kind stirred in him, he planned plans and
+another life than this. But always--this was a thing inbred in him--he
+put forward the commonplace, as the cuttle-fish sheds ink, and hid
+nothing so shyly as the visions which he had done nothing to make
+real. On those about him he made no deep impression, though from one
+border of Staffordshire to the other his birth won respect. Politics
+viewed as a game, and a selfish game, had no attraction for him.
+Quarter Sessions and the Bench struck no spark from him. At the Races
+and the County Ball richer men outshone him. But given something to
+touch his heart and fire his ambition, he had qualities. He might
+still show himself in another light.
+
+Something of this, for no reason that he could imagine, some feeling
+of regret for past opportunities, passed through his mind as he sat
+fretting over John Audley's folly. But after a time he roused himself
+and became aware that he was tired; and he rose and lit a candle. He
+pushed back the smouldering logs and slowly and methodically he put
+out the lights. He gave a last thought to John Audley. "There was
+always one maggot in his head," he muttered, "now there's a second.
+What I would not do to please him, he thinks I shall do to please
+another! Well, he does not know her yet!"
+
+He went to bed.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ THE GATEHOUSE
+
+
+It is within the bounds of imagination that death may make no greater
+change in our inner selves than is wrought at times by a new mood or
+another outlook. When Mary, an hour before the world was astir on the
+morning after her arrival, let herself out of the Gatehouse, and from
+its threshold as from a ledge saw the broad valley of the Trent
+stretched before her in all the beauty of a May morning, her alarm of
+the past night seemed incredible. At her feet a sharp slope, clothed
+in gorse and shrub, fell away to meet the plain. It sank no more than
+a couple of hundred feet, but this was enough to enable her to follow
+the silver streak of the river winding afar between park and coppice
+and under many a church tower. Away to the right she could see the
+three graceful spires of Lichfield, and southward, where an opal haze
+closed the prospect, she could imagine the fringe of the Black
+Country, made beautiful by distance.
+
+In sober fact few parts of England are less inviting than the low
+lands of Staffordshire, when the spring floods cover them or the fogs
+of autumn cling to the cold soil. But in spring, when larks soar above
+them and tall, lop-sided elms outline the fields, they have their
+beauty; and Mary gazed long at the fair prospect before she turned her
+back on it and looked at the house that was fated to be her home.
+
+It was what its name signified, a gatehouse; yet by turns it could be
+a sombre and a charming thing. Some Audley of noble ideas, a man long
+dead, had built it to be the entrance to his demesne. The park wall,
+overhung by trees, still ran right and left from it, but the road
+which had once passed through the archway now slid humbly aside and
+entered the park by a field gate. A wide-latticed Tudor tower, rising
+two stories above the arch and turreted at the four corners, formed
+the middle. It was buttressed on either hand by a lower building,
+flush with it and of about the same width. The tower was of yellowish
+stone, the wings were faced with stained stucco. Right and left of the
+whole a plot of shrubs masked on the one hand the stables, on the
+other the kitchens--modern blocks set back to such a distance that
+each touched the old part at a corner only.
+
+He who had planned the building had set it cunningly on the brow of
+the Great Chase, so that, viewed from the vale, it rose against the
+skyline. On dark days it broke the fringe of woodland and stood up,
+gloomy and forbidding, the portal of a Doubting Castle. On bright
+days, with its hundred diamond panes a-glitter in the sunshine, it
+seemed to be the porch of a fairy palace, the silent home of some
+Sleeping Beauty. At all times it imposed itself upon men below and
+spoke of something beyond, something unseen, greater, mysterious.
+
+To Mary Audley, who saw it at its best, the very stains of the plaster
+glorified by the morning light, it was a thing of joy. She fancied
+that to live behind those ancient mullioned windows, to look out
+morning and evening on that spacious landscape, to feel the bustle of
+the world so remote, must in itself be happiness. For a time she could
+not turn from it.
+
+But presently the desire to explore her new surroundings seized her
+and she re-entered the house. A glance at the groined roof of the
+hall--many a gallant horseman had ridden under it in his time--proved
+that it was merely the archway closed and fitted with a small door and
+window at either end. She unlocked the farther door and passed into a
+paved court, in which the grass grew between the worn flags. In the
+stables on the left a dog whined. The kitchens were on the other hand,
+and before her an opening flanked by tall heraldic beasts broke a low
+wall, built of moss-grown brick. She ventured through it and uttered a
+cry of delight.
+
+Near at hand, under cover of a vast chestnut tree, were traces of
+domestic labor: a grindstone, a saw-pit, a woodpile, coops with
+clucking hens. But beyond these the sward, faintly lined at first with
+ruts, stretched away into forest glades, bordered here by giant oaks
+brown in bud, there by the yellowish-green of beech trees. In the
+foreground lay patches of gorse, and in places an ancient thorn, riven
+and half prostrate, crowned the russet of last year's bracken with a
+splash of cream. Heedless of the spectator, rabbits sat making their
+toilet, and from every brake birds filled the air with a riot of song.
+
+To one who had seen little but the streets of Paris, more sordid then
+than now, the scene was charming. Mary's eyes filled, her heart
+swelled. Ah, what a home was here! She had espied on her journey many
+a nook and sheltered dell, but nothing that could vie with this!
+Heedless of her thin shoes, with no more than a handkerchief on her
+head, she strayed on and on. By and by a track, faintly marked, led
+her to the left. A little farther, and old trees fell into line on
+either hand, as if in days long gone, before age thinned their ranks,
+they had formed an avenue.
+
+For a time she sat musing on a fallen trunk, then the hawthorn that a
+few paces away perfumed the spring air moved her to gather an armful
+of it. She forgot that time was passing, almost she forgot that she
+had not breakfasted, and she might have been nearly a mile from the
+Gatehouse when she was startled by a faint hail that seemed to come
+from behind her. She looked back and saw Basset coming after her.
+
+He, too, was hatless--he had set off in haste--and he was out of
+breath. She turned with concern to meet him. "Am I very late, Mr.
+Basset?" she asked, her conscience pricking her. What if this first
+morning she had broken the rules?
+
+"Oh no," he said. And then, "You've not been farther than this?"
+
+"No. I am afraid my uncle is waiting?"
+
+"Oh no. He breakfasts in his own room. But Etruria told me that
+you had gone this way, and I followed. I see that you are not
+empty-handed."
+
+"No." And she thrust the great bunch of may under his nose--who would
+not have been gay, who would not have lost her reserve in such a
+scene, on such a morning? "Isn't it fresh? Isn't it delicious?"
+
+As he stooped to the flowers his eyes met hers smiling through the
+hawthorn sprays, and he saw her as he had not seen her before. Her
+gravity had left her. Spring laughed in her eyes, youth fluttered in
+the tendrils of her hair, she was the soul of May. And what she had
+found of beauty in the woodland, of music in the larks' songs, of
+perfume in the blossoms, of freshness in the morning, the man found in
+her; and a shock, never to be forgotten, ran through him. He did not
+speak. He smelled the hawthorn in silence.
+
+But a few seconds later--as men reckon time--he took note of his
+feelings, and he was startled. He had not been prepared to like her,
+we know; many things had armed him against her. But before the
+witchery of her morning face, the challenge of her laughing eyes, he
+awoke to the fact that he was in danger. He had to own that if he must
+live beside her day by day and would maintain his indifference, he
+must steel himself. He must keep his first impressions of her always
+before him, and be careful. And be very careful--if even that might
+avail.
+
+For a hundred paces he walked at her side, listening without knowing
+what she said. Then his coolness returned, and when she asked him why
+he had come after her without his hat he was ready.
+
+"I had better tell you," he answered, "this path is little used. It
+leads to the Great House, and your uncle, owing to his quarrel with
+Lord Audley, does not like any one to go farther in that direction
+than the Yew Tree Walk. You can see the Walk from here--the yews mark
+the entrance to the gardens. I thought that it would be unfortunate if
+you began by displeasing him, and I came after you."
+
+"It was very good of you," she said. Her face was not gay now. "Does
+Lord Audley live there--when he is at home?"
+
+"No one lives there," he explained soberly. "No one has lived there
+for three generations. It's a ruin--I was going to say, a nightmare.
+The greater part of the house was burnt down in a carouse held to
+celebrate the accession of George the Third. The Audley of that day
+rebuilt it on a great scale, but before it was finished he gave a
+housewarming, at which his only son quarrelled with a guest. The two
+fought at daybreak, and the son was killed beside the old Butterfly in
+the Yew Walk--you will see the spot some day. The father sent away the
+builders and never looked up again. He diverted much of his property,
+and a cousin came into the remainder and the title, but the house was
+never finished, the windows in the new part were never glazed. In the
+old part some furniture and tapestry decay; in the new are only bats
+and dust and owls. So it has stood for eighty years, vacant in the
+midst of neglected gardens. In the sunlight it is one of the most
+dreary things you can imagine. By moonlight it is better, but
+unspeakably melancholy."
+
+"How dreadful," she said in a low voice. "I almost wish, Mr. Basset,
+that you had not told me. They say in France that if you see the dead
+without touching them, you dream of them. I feel like that about the
+house."
+
+It crossed his mind that she was talking for effect. "It is only a
+house after all," he said.
+
+"But our house," with a touch of pride. Then, "What are those?"
+she asked, pointing to the gray shapeless beasts, time-worn and
+weather-stained, that flanked the entrance to the courtyard.
+
+"They are, or once were, Butterflies, the badge of the Audleys. These
+hold shields. You will see the Butterflies in many places in the
+Gatehouse. You will find them with men's faces and sometimes with a
+fret on the wings. Your uncle says that they are not butterflies, but
+moths, that have eaten the Audley fortunes."
+
+It was a thought that matched the picture he had drawn of the deserted
+house, and Mary felt that the morning had lost its brightness. But not
+for long. Basset led her into a room on the right of the hall, and the
+sight drew from her a cry of pleasure. On three sides the dark
+wainscot rose eight feet from the floor; above, the walls were
+whitewashed to the ceiling and broken by dim portraits, on stretchers
+and without frames. On the fourth side where the panelling divided the
+room from a serving-room, once part of it, it rose to the ceiling. The
+stone hearth, the iron dogs, the matted floor, the heavy chairs and
+oak table, all were dark and plain and increased the austerity of the
+room.
+
+At the end of the table places were laid for three, and Toft, who had
+set on the breakfast, was fixing the kettle amid the burning logs.
+
+"Is Mr. Audley coming down?" Basset asked.
+
+"He bade me lay for him," Toft replied dryly. "I doubt if he will
+come. You had better begin, sir. The young lady," with a searching
+look at her, "must want her breakfast."
+
+"I am afraid I do," Mary confessed.
+
+"Yes, we will begin," Basset said. He invited her to make the tea.
+
+When they were seated, "You like the room?"
+
+"I love it," she answered.
+
+"So do I," he rejoined, more soberly. "The panelling is linen--pattern
+of the fifteenth century--you see the folds? It was saved from the old
+house. I am glad you like it."
+
+"I love it," she said again. But after that she grew thoughtful, and
+during the rest of the meal she said little. She was thinking of what
+was before her; of the unknown uncle, whose bread she was eating, and
+upon whom she was going to be dependent. What would he be like? How
+would he receive her? And why was every one so reticent about him--so
+reticent that he was beginning to be something of an ogre to her? When
+Toft presently appeared and said that Mr. Audley was in the library
+and would see her when she was ready, she lost color. But she answered
+the man with self-possession, asked quietly where the library was, and
+had not Basset's eyes been on her face he would have had no notion
+that she was troubled.
+
+As it was, he waited for her to avow her misgiving--he was prepared to
+encourage her. But she said nothing.
+
+None the less, at the last moment, with her hand on the door of the
+library, she hesitated. It was not so much fear of the unknown
+relative whom she was going to see that drove the blood from her
+cheek, as the knowledge that for her everything depended upon him. Her
+new home, its peace, its age, its woodland surroundings, fascinated
+her. It promised her not only content, but happiness. But as her stay
+in it hung upon John Audley's will, so her pleasure in it, and her
+enjoyment of it, depended upon the relations between them. What would
+they be? How would he receive her? What would he be like? At last she
+called up her courage, turned the handle, and entered the library.
+
+For a moment she saw no one. The great room, with its distances and
+its harmonious litter, appeared to be empty. Then, "Mary, my dear,"
+said a pleasant voice, "welcome to the Gatehouse!" And John Audley
+rose from his seat at a distant table and came towards her.
+
+The notion which she had formed of him vanished in a twinkling, and
+with it her fears. She saw before her an elderly gentleman, plump
+and kindly, who walked with a short tripping step, and wore the
+swallow-tailed coat with gilt buttons which the frock-coat had
+displaced. He took her hand with a smile, kissed her on the forehead,
+and led her to a chair placed beside his own. He sat for a moment
+holding her hand and looking at her.
+
+"Yes, I see the likeness," he said, after a moment's contemplation.
+"But, my dear, how is this? There are tears in your eyes, and you
+tremble."
+
+"I think," she said, "I was a little afraid of you, sir."
+
+"Well, you are not afraid now," he replied cheerfully. "And you won't
+be again. You won't be again. My dear, welcome once more to the
+Gatehouse. I hope that it may be your home until another is offered
+you. Things came between your father and me--I shall never mention
+them again, and don't you, my dear!"--this a little hurriedly--"don't
+you; all that is buried now, and I must make it up to you. Your
+letters?" he continued, patting her hand. "Yes, Peter told me that you
+wrote to me. I need not say that I never had them. No, never had
+them--Toft, what is it?"
+
+The change in his voice struck her. The servant had come in quietly.
+"Mr. Basset, sir, has lost----"
+
+"Another time!" John Audley replied curtly. "Another time! I am
+engaged now. Go!" Then when the door had closed behind the servant,
+"No, my dear," he continued, "I need not say that I never had them, so
+that I first heard of your troubles through a channel upon which I
+will not dwell. However, many good things come by bad ways, Mary. I
+hope you like the Gatehouse?"
+
+"It is charming!" she cried with enthusiasm.
+
+"It has only one drawback," he said.
+
+She was clever enough to understand that he referred to its owner, and
+to escape from the subject. "This room," she said, "is perfection. I
+have never seen anything like it, sir."
+
+"It is a pleasant room," he said, looking round him. "There is our
+coat over the mantel, gules, a fret or; like all old coats, very
+simple. Some think it is the Lacy Knot; the Audley of Edward the
+First's time married a Lacy. But we bore our old coat of three
+Butterflies later than that, for before the fall of Roger Mortimer,
+who was hung at Tyburn, he married his daughter to an Audley, and the
+escheaters found the wedding chamber in his house furnished with our
+Butterflies. Later the Butterfly survived as our badge. You see it
+there!" he continued, pointing it out among the mouldings of the
+ceiling. "There is the Stafford Knot, the badge of the great Dukes of
+Buckingham, the noblest of English families; it is said that the last
+of the line, a cobbler, died at Newport, not twenty miles from here.
+We intermarried with them, and through them with Peter's people, the
+Bassets. That is the Lovel Wolf, and there is the White Wolf of the
+Mortimers--all badges. But you do not know, I suppose, what a badge
+is?"
+
+"I am afraid not," she said, smiling. "But I am as proud of our
+Butterfly, and as proud to be an Audley, sir, as if I knew more."
+
+"Peter must give you some lessons in heraldry," he answered. "We live
+in the past here, my dear, and we must indoctrinate you with a love of
+our pursuits or you will be dull." He paused to consider. "I am afraid
+that we cannot allot you a drawing-room, but you must make your room
+upstairs as comfortable as you can. Etruria will see to that. And
+Peter shall arrange a table for you in the south bay here, and it
+shall be your table and your bay. That is his table; this is mine. We
+are orderly, and so we do not get in one another's way."
+
+She thanked him gratefully, and with tears in her eyes, she said
+something to which he would not listen--he only patted her hand--as to
+his kindness, his great kindness, in receiving her. She could not,
+indeed, put her relief into words, so deep was it. Nowhere, she felt,
+could life be more peaceful or more calm than in this room which no
+sounds of the outer world except the songs of birds, no sights save
+the swaying of branches disturbed; where the blazoned panes cast their
+azure and argent on lines of russet books, where an aged hound
+sprawled before the embers, and the measured tick of the clock alone
+vied with the scratching of the pen. She saw herself seated there
+during drowsy summer days, or when firelight cheered the winter
+evenings. She saw herself sewing beside the hearth while her
+companions worked, each within his circle of light.
+
+Then, she also was an Audley. She also had her share in the race which
+had lived long on this spot. Already she was fired with the desire to
+know more of them, and that flame John Audley was well fitted to fan.
+For he was not of the school of dry-as-dust antiquaries. He had the
+knack of choosing the picturesque in story, he could make it stand out
+for others, he could impart life to the actors in it. And, anxious to
+captivate Mary, he bent himself for nearly an hour to the display of
+his knowledge. Taking for his text one or other of the objects about
+him, he told her of great castles, from which England had been ruled,
+and through which the choicest life of the country had passed, that
+now were piles of sherds clothed with nettles. He told her of that
+woodland country on the borders of three counties, where the papists
+had long lived undisturbed and where the Gunpowder Plot had had its
+centre. He told her of the fashion which came in with Richard the
+Second, of adorning the clothes with initials, reading and writing
+having become for the first time courtly accomplishments; and to
+illustrate this he showed her the Westminster portrait of Richard in a
+robe embroidered with letters of R. He quoted Chaucer:
+
+
+ And thereon hung a broch of gold ful schene
+ On which was first i-written a crowned A
+ And after that, Amor vincit omnia.
+
+
+Then, turning his back on her, he produced from some secret place a
+key, and opening a masked cupboard in the wall, he held out for her
+inspection a small bowl, bent and mis-shapen by use, and supported by
+two fragile butterflies. The whole was of silver so thin that to
+modern eyes it seemed trivial. Traces of gilding lingered about some
+parts of it, and on each of the wings of the butterflies was a capital
+A.
+
+She was charmed. "Of all your illustrations," she cried, "I prefer
+this one! It is very old, I suppose?"
+
+"It is of the fifteenth century," he said, turning it about. "We
+believe that it was made for the Audley who fell early in the Wars of
+the Roses. Pages and knights, maids and matrons, gloves of silk and
+gloves of mail, wrinkled palms and babies' fingers, the men, the
+women, the children of twelve generations of our race, my dear, have
+handled this. Once, according to an old inventory, there were six;
+this one alone remains."
+
+"It must be very rare?" she said, her eyes sparkling.
+
+"It is very rare," he said, and he handled it as if he loved it. He
+had not once allowed it to go out of his fingers. "Very rare. I doubt
+if, apart from the City Companies, there is another in the hands of
+the original owners."
+
+"And it came to you by descent, sir?"
+
+He paused in the act of returning it to its hiding-place. "Yes, that
+is how it came to me," he said in a muffled tone. But he seemed to be
+a long time putting it away; and when he turned with the key in his
+hand his face was altered, and he looked at her--well, had she done
+anything to anger him, she would have thought he was angry. "To whom
+besides me could it descend!" he asked, his voice raised a tone. "But
+there, I must not grow excited. I think--I think you had better go
+now. Go, my dear, now. But come back presently."
+
+Mary went. But the change in tone and face had been such as to startle
+her and to dash the happy mood of a few moments earlier. She wondered
+what she had said to annoy him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ OLD THINGS
+
+
+The Gatehouse, placed on the verge of the upland, was very solitary.
+Cut off from the vale by an ascent which the coachmen of the great
+deemed too rough for their horses, it was isolated on the other three
+sides by Beaudelays Park and by the Great Chase, which flung its
+barren moors over many miles of table-land. In the course of the
+famous suit John Audley had added to the solitude of the house by a
+smiling aloofness which gave no quarter to those who agreed with his
+rival. The result was that when Mary came to live there, few young
+people would have found the Gatehouse a lively abode.
+
+But to Mary during the quiet weeks that followed her arrival it seemed
+a paradise. She spent long hours in the open air, now seated on a
+fallen trunk in some glade of the park, now watching the squirrels in
+the clear gloom of the beech-wood, or again, lying at length on the
+carpet of thyme and heather that clothed the moor. She came to know by
+heart every path through the park--except that which led to the Great
+House; she discovered where the foxgloves clustered, where the
+meadow-sweet fringed the runlet, where the rare bog-bean warned the
+traveller to look to his footing. Even the Great Chase she came to
+know, and almost daily she walked to a point beyond the park whence
+she could see the distant smoke of a mining village. That was the one
+sign of life on the Chase; elsewhere it stretched vast and unpeopled,
+sombre under a livid sky, smiling in sunshine, here purple with ling,
+there scarred by fire--always wide under a wide heaven, raised high
+above the common world. Now and again she met a shepherd or saw a gig,
+lessened by distance, making its slow way along a moorland track. But
+for days together she might wander there without seeing a human being.
+
+The wide horizon became as dear to her as the greenwood. Pent as she
+had been in cities, straitened in mean rooms where sight and smell had
+alike been outraged, she revelled in this sweet and open life. The hum
+of bees, the scent of pines, the flight of the ousel down the water,
+the whistle of the curlew, all were to her pleasures as vivid as they
+were new.
+
+Meantime Basset made no attempt to share her excursions. He was
+fighting a battle with himself, and he knew better than to go out of
+his way to aid the enemy. And for her part she did not miss him. She
+did not dislike him, but the interest he excited in her was feeble.
+The thought of comparing him with Lord Audley, with the man to whose
+intervention she owed this home, this peace, this content, never
+occurred to her. Of Audley she did think as much perhaps as was
+prudent, sometimes with pensive gratitude, more rarely with a smile
+and a blush at her folly in dwelling on him. For always she thought of
+him as one, high and remote, whom it was not probable that she would
+ever see again, one whose course through life lay far from hers.
+
+Presently, it is not to be denied, Basset began to grow upon her. He
+was there. He was part of her life. Morning and evening she had to do
+with him. Often she read or sewed in the same room with him, and in
+many small ways he added to her comfort. Sometimes he suggested things
+which would please her uncle; sometimes he warned her of things which
+she would do well to avoid. Once or twice he diverted to himself a
+spirt of John Audley's uncertain temper; and though Mary did not
+always detect the man[oe]uvre, though she was far from suspecting the
+extent of his vigilance or the care which he cast about her, it would
+have been odd if she had not come to think more kindly of him, and to
+see merits in him which had escaped her at first.
+
+Meanwhile he thought of her with mingled feelings. At first with
+doubt--it was never out of his mind that she had made much of Lord
+Audley and little of him. Then with admiration which he withstood more
+feebly as time went on, and the cloven hoof failed to appear. Later,
+with tenderness, which, hating the scheme John Audley had formed, he
+masked even from himself, and which he was sure that he would never
+have the courage to express in her presence.
+
+For Basset was conscious that, aspire as he might, he was not a hero.
+The clash of life, the shock of battle, had no attraction for him. The
+library at the Gatehouse was, he owned it frankly, his true sphere.
+She, on the other hand, had had experiences. She had sailed through
+unknown seas, she had led a life strange to him. She had seen much,
+done much, suffered much, had held her own among strangers. Before her
+calmness and self-possession he humbled himself. He veiled his head.
+
+He did not attempt, therefore, to accompany her abroad, but at home he
+had no choice save to see much of her. There was only one living room
+for all, and she glided with surprising ease into the current of the
+men's occupations. At first she was astray on the sea of books. Her
+knowledge was not sufficient to supply chart or compass, and it fell
+to Basset to point the way, to choose her reading, to set in a proper
+light John Audley's vivid pictures of the past, to teach her the
+elements of heraldry and genealogy. She proved, however, an apt
+scholar, and very soon she dropped into the position of her uncle's
+secretary. Sometimes she copied his notes, at other times he set her
+on the track of a fact, a relationship, a quotation, and she would
+spend hours in a corner, embedded in huge tomes of the county
+histories. Dugdale, Leland, Hall, even Polydore Vergil, became her
+friends. She pored over the Paston Letters, probed the false pedigrees
+of Banks, and could soon work out for herself the famous discovery
+respecting the last Lovel.
+
+For a young girl it was an odd pursuit. But the past was in the
+atmosphere of the house, it went with the fortunes of a race whose
+importance lay in days long gone. Then all was new to her, enthusiasm
+is easily caught, and Mary, eager to please her uncle, was glad to be
+of use. She found the work restful after the suspense of the past
+year. It sufficed for the present, and she asked no more.
+
+She never forgot the lamplit evenings of that summer; the spacious
+room, the fluttering of the moths that entered by the open windows,
+the flop of the old dog as it sought a cooler spot, the whisper of
+leaves turned ceaselessly in the pursuit of a fact or a fancy. In the
+retrospect all became less a picture than a frame containing a past
+world, a fifteenth-century world of color and movement, of rooms
+stifled in hangings and tapestries, of lines of spear-points and rows
+of knights in surcoats, of tolling bells and praying monks, of
+travellers kneeling before wayside shrines, of strange changes of
+fortune. For says the chronicler:
+
+
+"I saw one of them, who was Duke of Exeter (but he concealed his name)
+following the Duke of Burgundy's train barefoot and bare-legged,
+begging his bread from door to door--this person was the next of the
+House of Lancaster and had married King Edward's sister."
+
+
+And of dark sayings:
+
+
+"Thys sayde Edward, Duke of Somerset, had herde a fantastyk prophecy
+that he sholde dy under a Castelle, wherefore he, as meche as in him
+was, he lete the King that he sholde not come in the Castelle of
+Wynsore, dredynge the sayde prophecy; but at Seint Albonys there was
+an hostelry havyng the sygne of a Castelle, and before that hostelry
+he was slayne."
+
+
+"His badge was a Portcullis," her uncle said, when she read this to
+him, "so it was natural that he should fall before a castle. He used
+the Beanstalk, too, and if his name had been John, a pretty thing
+might have been raised upon it. But you're divagating, my dear," he
+continued, smiling--and seldom had Mary seen him in a better
+humor--"you're divagating, whereas I--I believe that I have solved the
+problem of the Feathers."
+
+"The Prince of Wales's? No!"
+
+"I believe so. Of course there is no truth in the story which traces
+them to the blind King of Bohemia, killed at Crecy. His crest was two
+vulture wings."
+
+"But what of Arderne, who was the Prince's surgeon?" Basset objected.
+"He says clearly that the Prince gained it from the King of Bohemia."
+
+"Not at all!" John Audley replied arrogantly--at this moment he was an
+antiquary and nothing more. "Where is the Arderne extract? Listen.
+'Edward, son of Edward the King, used to wear such a feather, and
+gained that feather from the King of Bohemia, whom he slew at Crecy,
+and so assumed to himself that feather which is called an ostrich
+feather which the first-named most illustrious King, used to wear on
+his crest.' Now who was the first-named most illustrious King, who
+before that used to wear it?"
+
+"The King of Bohemia."
+
+"Rubbish! Arderne means his own King, 'Edward the King.' He means that
+the Black Prince, after winning his spurs by his victory over the
+Bohemian, took his father's insignia. He had only been knighted six
+weeks and waited to wear his father's crest until he had earned it."
+
+"By Jove, sir!" Basset exclaimed, "I believe you are right!"
+
+"Of course I am! The evidence is all that way. The Black Prince's
+brothers wore it; surely not because their brother had done something,
+but because it was their father's crest, probably derived from their
+mother, Philippa of Hainault? If you will look in the inventory of
+jewels made on the usurpation of Henry the Fourth you will see this
+item, 'A collar of the livery of the Queen, on whom God have mercy,
+with an ostrich.'"
+
+"But that," Basset interposed, "was Queen Anne of Bohemia--she died
+seven years before. There you get Bohemia again!"
+
+"Compare this other entry," replied the antiquary, unmoved: "'A collar
+of the livery of Queen Anne, of branches of rosemary.' Now either
+Queen Anne of Bohemia had two liveries--which is unlikely--or the
+inventory made by order of Henry IV. quotes verbatim from lists made
+during the lifetime of Queen Anne; if this be the case, the last
+deceased Queen, on whom God have mercy, would be Philippa of Hainault;
+and we have here a clear statement that her livery was an ostrich, of
+which ostrich her husband wore a feather on his crest."
+
+Basset clapped his hands. Mary beat applause on the table. "Hurrah!"
+she cried. "Audley for ever!"
+
+"Miss Audley," Basset said, "Toft shall bring in hot water, and we
+will have punch!"
+
+"Miss Audley!" her uncle exclaimed, with a wrinkling nose. "Why don't
+you call her Mary? And why, child, don't you call him Peter?"
+
+Mary curtseyed. "Why not, my lord?" she said. "Peter it shall
+be--Peter who keeps the keys that you discover!"
+
+And Peter laughed. But he saw that she used his name without a blush
+or a tremor, whereas he knew that if he could force his lips to frame
+her name, the word would betray him. For by this time, from his seat
+at his remote table, and from the ambush of his book, he had watched
+her too often for his peace, and too closely not to know that she was
+indifferent to him. He knew that at the best she felt a liking for
+him, the growth of habit, and tinged, he feared, with contempt.
+
+He was so far right that there were three persons in the house who had
+a larger share of the girl's thoughts than he had. The first was John
+Audley. He puzzled her. There were times when she could not doubt his
+affection, times when he seemed all that she could desire, kind,
+good-humored, frank, engaged with the simplicity of a child in
+innocent pursuits, and without one thought beyond them. But touch
+a certain spot, approach with steps ever so delicate a certain
+subject--Lord Audley and his title--and his manner changed, the very
+man changed, he became secretive, suspicious, menacing. Nor, however
+quickly she might withdraw from the danger-line, could the harm be
+undone at once. He would remain for hours gloomy and thoughtful, would
+eye her covertly and with suspicion, would sit silent through meals,
+and at times mutter to himself. More rarely he would turn on her with
+a face which rage made inhuman, a face that she did not know, and with
+a shaking hand he would bid her go--go, and leave the room!
+
+The first time that this happened she feared that he might follow up
+his words by sending her away. But nothing ensued, then or later. For
+a while after each outburst he would appear ill at ease. He would
+avoid her eyes, and look away from her in a manner almost as
+unpleasant as his violence; later, in a shamefaced way, he would tell
+her that she must not excite him, she must not excite him, it was bad
+for him. And the man-servant meeting her in the hall, would take the
+liberty of giving her the same advice.
+
+Toft, indeed, was the second who puzzled her. He was civil, with the
+civility of the trained servant, but always there was in his manner a
+reserve. And she fancied that he watched her. If she left the house
+and glanced back she was certain to see his face at a window, or his
+figure in a doorway. Within doors it was the same. He slept out,
+living with his wife in the kitchen wing, which had a separate
+entrance from the courtyard. But he was everywhere at all hours. Even
+his master appeared uneasy in his presence, and either broke off what
+he was saying when the man entered, or continued the talk on another
+note. More rarely he turned on Toft and without rhyme or reason would
+ask him harshly what he wanted.
+
+The third person to share Mary's thoughts, but after a more pleasant
+fashion, was Toft's daughter, Etruria. "I hope you will like her, my
+dear," John Audley had said. "She will give you such attendance as you
+require, and will share the south wing with you at night. The two
+bedrooms there are on a separate staircase. I sleep above the library
+in this wing, and Peter in the tower room--we have our own staircase.
+I have brought her into the house because I thought you might not like
+to sleep alone in that wing."
+
+Mary had thanked him, and had said how much she liked the girl. And
+she had liked her, but for a time she had not understood her. Etruria
+was all that was good and almost all that was beautiful. She was
+simple, kindly, helpful, having the wide low brow, the placid eyes,
+and perfect complexion of a Quaker girl--and to add to these
+attractions she was finely shaped, though rather plump than slender;
+and she was incredibly neat. Nor could any Quaker girl have been more
+gentle or more demure.
+
+But she might have had no tongue, she was so loth to use it; and a
+hundred times Mary wondered what was behind that reticence. Sometimes
+she thought that the girl was merely stupid. Sometimes she yoked her
+with her father in the suspicions she entertained of him. More often,
+moved by the girl's meek eyes, she felt only a vague irritation. She
+was herself calm by nature, and reserved by training, the last to
+gossip with a servant, even with one whose refinement appeared innate.
+But Etruria's dumbness was beyond her.
+
+One day in a research which she was making she fancied that she had
+hit on a discovery. It happened that Etruria came into the room at the
+moment, and in the fulness of her heart Mary told her of it.
+"Etruria," she said, "I've made a discovery all by myself."
+
+"Yes, Miss."
+
+"Something that no one has known for hundreds of years! Think of
+that!"
+
+"Indeed, Miss."
+
+Provoked, Mary took a new line. "Etruria," she asked, "are you happy?"
+
+The girl did not answer.
+
+"Don't you hear me? I asked if you were happy."
+
+"I am content, Miss."
+
+"I did not ask that. Are you happy?"
+
+And then, moved on her side, perhaps, by an impulse towards
+confidence, Etruria yielded. "I don't think that we can any of us be
+happy, Miss," she said, "with so much sorrow about us."
+
+"You strange girl!" Mary cried, taken aback. "What do you mean?"
+
+But Etruria was silent.
+
+"Come," Mary insisted. "You must tell me what you mean."
+
+"Well, Miss," the girl answered reluctantly, "I'm sad and loth to
+think of all the suffering in the world. It's natural that you should
+not think of it, but I'm of the people, and I'm sad for them."
+
+Balaam when the ass spoke was scarcely more surprised than Mary.
+"Why?" she asked.
+
+The girl pointed to the open window. "We've all we could ask,
+Miss--light and air and birds' songs and sunshine. We've all we need,
+and more. But I come of those who have neither light nor air, nor
+songs nor sunshine, who've no milk for children nor food for mothers!
+Who, if they've work, work every hour of the day in dust and noise and
+heat. Who are half clemmed from year's end to year's end, and see no
+close to it, no hope, no finish but the pauper's deals! It's for them
+I'm sad, Miss."
+
+"Etruria!"
+
+"They've no teachers and no time to care," Etruria continued in
+desperate earnest now that the floodgates were raised. "They're just
+tools to make money, and, like the tools, they wear out and are cast
+aside! For there are always more to do their work, to begin where they
+began, and to be worn out as they were worn out!"
+
+"Don't!" Mary cried.
+
+Etruria was silent, but two large tears rolled down her face. And Mary
+marvelled. So this mild, patient girl, going about her daily tasks,
+could think, could feel, could speak, and upon a plane so high that
+the listener was sensible of humiliation as well as surprise! For a
+moment this was the only effect made upon her. Then reflection did its
+part--and memory. She recalled that glimpse of the under-world which
+she had had on her journey from London. She remembered the noisome
+alleys, the cinder wastes, the men toiling half-naked at the furnaces,
+the pinched faces of the women; and she remembered also the account
+which Lord Audley had given her of the fierce contest between town and
+country, plough and forge, land-lord and cotton-lord, which had struck
+her so much at the time.
+
+In the charms of her new life, in her new interests, these things had
+faded from her mind. They recurred now, and she did not again ask
+Etruria what she meant. "Is it as bad as that?" she asked.
+
+"It is not as bad as it has been," Etruria answered. "Three years ago
+there were hundreds of thousands out of work. There are thousands,
+scores of thousands, still; and thousands have no food but what's
+given them. And charity is bitter to many," she added, "and the
+poorhouse is bitter to all."
+
+"But what has caused things to be so bad?"
+
+"Some say one thing and some another. But most that machines lower
+wages, Miss, and the bread-tax raises food."
+
+"Ah!" Mary said. And she looked more closely at the girl who knew so
+much that was at odds with her station.
+
+"Others," Etruria continued, a faint color in her cheeks, "think that
+it is selfishness, that every one is for himself and no one for one
+another, and----"
+
+"Yes?" Mary said, seeing that she hesitated.
+
+"And that if every one thought as much of his neighbor as of himself,
+or even of his neighbor as well as of himself, it would not be
+machines nor corn-taxes nor poorhouses would be strong enough to take
+the bread out of the children's mouths or the work out of men's
+hands!"
+
+Mary had an inspiration. "Etruria," she cried, "some one has been
+teaching you this."
+
+The girl blushed. "Well, Miss," she said simply, "it was at church I
+learned most of it."
+
+"At church? What church? Not Riddsley?" For it was to Riddsley, to a
+service as dull as it was long, that they proceeded on Sundays in a
+chaise as slow as the reader.
+
+"No, Miss, not Riddsley," Etruria answered. "It's at Brown Heath on
+the Chase. But it's not a real church, Miss. It's a room."
+
+"Oh!" Mary replied. "A meeting-house!"
+
+For some reason Etruria's eyes gleamed. "No, Miss," she said. "It's
+the curate at Riddsley has a service in a room at Brown Heath on
+Thursdays."
+
+"And you go?"
+
+"When I can, Miss."
+
+The idea of attending church on a week-day was strange to Mary; as
+strange as to that generation was the zeal that passed beyond the
+common channel to refresh those whom migrations of population or
+changes in industry had left high and dry. The Tractarian movement was
+giving vigor not only to those who supported it, but to those who
+withstood it.
+
+"And you've a sermon?" Mary said. "What was the text last Thursday,
+Etruria?"
+
+The girl hesitated, considered, then looked with appeal at her
+mistress. She clasped her hands. "'Two are better than one,'" she
+replied, "'because they have good reward for their labor. For if they
+fall, one will lift up his fellow, but woe to him that is alone when
+he falleth, for he hath not another to lift him up.'"
+
+"Gracious, Etruria!" Mary cried. "Is that in the Bible?"
+
+Etruria nodded.
+
+"And what did your preacher say about it?"
+
+"That the employer and the workman were fellows, and if they worked
+together and each thought for the other they would have a good reward
+for their labor; that if one fell, it was the duty of the other to
+help him up. And again, that the land and the mill were fellows--the
+town and the country--and if they worked together in love they would
+have a good return, and if trouble came to one the other should
+bear with him. But all the same," Etruria added timidly, "that the
+bread-taxes were wrong."
+
+"Etruria," Mary said. "To-morrow is Thursday. I shall go with you to
+Brown Heath."
+
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ NEW THINGS
+
+
+Mary Audley, crossing the moor to a week-day service, was but one of
+many who in the 'forties were venturing on new courses. In religion
+there were those who fancied that by a return to primitive forms they
+might recapture the primitive fervor; and those again who, like the
+curate whom Mary was going to hear, were bent on pursuing the beaten
+path into new places. Some thought that they had found a panacea for
+the evils of the day in education, and put their faith in workmen's
+institutes and night schools. Others were satisfied with philanthropy,
+and proclaimed that infants of seven ought not to toil for their
+living, that coal-pits were not fit places for women, and that what
+paid was not the only standard of life. A few dreamt of a new England
+in which gentle and simple were to mix on new-old terms; and a
+multitude, shrewd and hard-headed, believed in the Corn Law League,
+whose speakers travelled from Manchester to carry the claims of cheap
+bread to butter crosses and market towns, and there bearded the very
+landlord's agent.
+
+The truth was that the country was lying sick with new evils, and had
+perforce to find a cure, whether that cure lay in faith, or in the
+primer, or in the Golden Rule, or in Adam Smith. For two generations
+men had been quitting the field for the mill, the farm for the
+coal-pit. They had followed their work into towns built haphazard,
+that grew presently into cities. There, short of light, of air, of
+water, lacking decency, lacking even votes--for the Reform Bill,
+that was to give everything to everybody, had stopped at the
+masters--lacking everything but wages, they swarmed in numbers
+stupendous and alarming to the mind of that day. And then the wages
+failed. Machines pushed out hands, though
+
+
+ Tools were made, and born were hands,
+ Every farmer understands.
+
+
+Machines lowered wages, machines glutted the markets. Men could get no
+work, masters could sell no goods. On the top of this came bad seasons
+and dear bread. Presently hundreds of thousands were living on public
+charity, long lists of masters were in the _Gazette_. In the gloomy
+cities of the North, masses of men heaved and moaned as the sea when
+the south-west wind falls upon it.
+
+All but the most thoughtless saw danger as well as unhappiness in
+this, and called on their gods. The Chartists proclaimed that safety
+lay in votes. The landed interest thought that a little more
+protection might mend matters. The Golden Rulers were for shorter
+hours. But the men who were the loudest and the most confident cried
+that cheap bread would mend all. The poor, they said, would have to
+eat and to spend. They would buy goods, the glut would cease. The
+wheels would turn again, there would be work and wages. The Golden Age
+would return. So preached the Manchester men.
+
+In the meantime the doctors wrangled, and the patient grew a little,
+not much, better. And Mary Audley and Etruria walked across the
+moorland in the evening sunshine, with a light breeze stirring the
+bracken, and waves of shadow moving athwart the stretches of purple
+ling. They seemed very far, very remote from the struggle for life and
+work and bread that was passing in the world below.
+
+Presently they dropped into a fern-clad dingle and saw below them,
+beside the rivulet that made music in its bottom, a house or two.
+Descending farther, they came on more houses, crawling up the hill
+slopes, and on a few potato patches and ash-heaps. As the sides of the
+valley rose higher and closed in above the walkers cottages fell into
+lines on either side of the brook, and began to show one behind the
+other in rough terraces, with middens that slid from the upper to the
+lower level. The valley bent to the left, and quickly tall chimneys
+became visible, springing from a huddle of mean roofs through which no
+other building of size, no tower, no steeple, rose to break the ugly
+sameness. This was Brown Heath.
+
+"It's a rough place," Etruria said as they picked their way. "But
+don't be afraid, Miss. I'm often passing, and they know me."
+
+Still it was a rough place. The roadway was a cinder-track, and from
+the alleys and lanes above it open drains wormed their way across the
+path and into the stream, long grown foul. The air was laden with
+smoke, coal dust lay everywhere; the most cleanly must have despaired.
+Men seated, pipe in mouth, on low walls, watched the two go by--not
+without some rude banter; frowsy women crouching on door-steps and
+nursing starveling babes raised sullen faces. Lads in clogs made way
+for them unwillingly. In one place a crowd seethed from a side street
+and, shouting and struggling, overflowed the roadway before them and
+threatened to bar their path.
+
+"It's a dog-fight," Etruria said. "They are rare and fond of them,
+Miss. We'd best get by quickly."
+
+They passed in safety, passed, too, a brawl between two colliers, the
+air about them thick with oaths, passed a third eddy round two women
+fighting before a public-house. "The chaps are none so gentle,"
+Etruria said, falling unconsciously into a commoner way of speaking.
+"They're all for fighting, dogs or men, and after dark I'm not saying
+we'd be safe. But we'll be over the moor by dusk, Miss."
+
+They came, as she spoke, to a triangular space, sloping with the hill,
+skirted by houses, and crossed by an open sewer. It was dreary and
+cinder-covered, but five publics looked upon it and marked it for the
+centre of Brown Heath. Etruria crossed the triangle to a building a
+little cleaner than its neighbors; it was the warehouse, she told her
+mistress, of a sack-maker who had failed. She entered, and her
+companion followed her.
+
+Mary found herself in a bare barn-like room, having two windows set
+high in the walls, the light from which fell coldly on a dozen benches
+ranged one behind the other, but covering only a portion of the floor.
+On these were seated, when they entered, about twenty persons, mainly
+women, but including three or four men of the miner class. No attempt
+had been made to alter the character of the place, and of formality
+there was as little. The two had barely seated themselves before a
+lean young man, with a long pale face and large nose, rose from the
+front bench, and standing before the little congregation, opened his
+book. He wore shabby black, but neither surplice nor gown.
+
+The service lasted perhaps twenty minutes, and Mary was not much
+moved by it. The young man's voice was weak, the man himself looked
+under-fed. She noticed, however, that as the service went on the
+number in the room grew, and when it closed she found that all the
+seats were filled, and that there were even a few men--some of them
+colliers fresh from the pit--standing at the back. Remembering the odd
+text that the clergyman had given out the week before, she wondered
+what he would choose to-day, and, faintly amused, she stole a glance
+at her companion. But Etruria's rapt face was a reproach to her
+levity.
+
+The young clergyman pushed back the hair from his forehead. His
+posture was ungainly, he did not know what to do with his hands, he
+opened his mouth and shut it again. Then with an effort he began. "My
+text, my friends," he said, "is but one word, 'Love.' Where will you
+find it in the Scriptures? In every chapter and in every verse. In the
+dark days of old the order was 'Thou shalt live!' The new order in
+these days is 'Thou shalt love!'" He began by describing the battle of
+life in the animal and vegetable world, where all things lived at the
+cost of others; and he admitted that the struggle for life, for bread,
+for work, as they saw it around them, resembled that struggle. In
+moving terms he enlarged on the distress, on the vast numbers lately
+living on the rates, on the thousands living, where even the rates
+fell short, on Government aid. He described the fireless homes, the
+foodless children, the strong men hopeless. And he showed them that
+others were stricken, that masters suffered, tradesmen were ruined,
+the country languished. "The worst may be past," he said. "You are
+working half-time, you are living on half-wages, you are thankful that
+things are better." Then he told them that for his part he did not
+presume to say what was at the root of these unhappy conditions, but
+that of one thing he felt sure--and this was his message to them--that
+if the law of love, if the golden rule of preferring another to one's
+self, if the precept of that charity,
+
+
+ Which seeketh not itself to please
+ Nor for itself hath any care,
+ But for another gives its ease,
+
+
+if that were followed by all, then all
+
+
+ Might build a heaven in hell's despair.
+
+
+And in words more eloquent than he had yet compassed he begged them to
+set that example of brotherhood, in the certainty that the worst
+social evils, nay, all evils save pain and death, would be cured by
+the love that thought for others, that in the master preferred the
+servant's welfare and in the servant put first his master's interests.
+Finally he quoted his old text, "Let two work together, for if they
+fall, one will lift up his fellow!"
+
+It seemed as if he had done. He was silent; his hearers waited. Then
+with an effort he continued:
+
+"I have a word to say about something which fell from me in this place
+last week. While I did not venture, unskilled as I am, to say where
+lies the cause of our distress, I did say that I found it hard to
+believe that the system which taxes the bread you earn in the sweat of
+your brow, which takes a disproportionate part from the scanty crust
+of the widow and from the food of the child, was in accordance with
+the law of love. I repeat that now; and because I have been told that
+I dare not say in the pulpit of Riddsley church what I say here, I
+shall on the first opportunity state my belief there. You may ask why
+I have not done so; my answer is, that I am there the representative
+of another, whereas in this voluntary work I am myself more
+responsible. In saying that I ask you to judge me, as we should judge
+all, with that charity which believeth no evil."
+
+A moment later Mary, deeply moved, was passing out with the crowd. As
+she stood, caught in the press by the door, an old man in horn-rimmed
+glasses, who was waiting there, held out his hand. She was going to
+take it, when she saw that it was not meant for her, but for the young
+clergyman who was following at her heels.
+
+"Master, dunno you do it," the old fellow growled. "You'll break your
+pick, and naught gotten. Naught gotten, that'll serve. Your gaffer'll
+not abide it, and you'll lose your job!"
+
+"Would you have me take it," the young man answered, "and not do the
+work, Cluff? Never fear for me."
+
+"Dunno you be rash, master!" the other rejoined, clutching his sleeve
+and detaining him. "You be sure----"
+
+Mary heard no more. She felt Etruria's hand pressing her arm. "We'd
+best lose no time," the girl whispered. And she drew Mary onward,
+across the triangle and into the lane which led to the moor.
+
+"Are we so late?" The sun had set, but it was still light. "We'd best
+hurry," Etruria persisted, increasing her speed.
+
+Mary looked at her and saw that she was troubled, but at the moment
+she set this down to the influence of the sermon, and her own mind
+went back to it. "I am glad you brought me, Etruria," she said. "I
+shall always be glad that I came."
+
+"We'd best be getting home now," was Etruria's only answer, but this
+time Mary's ear caught the sound of footsteps behind them, and she
+turned. The young clergyman was hastening after them.
+
+"Etruria!" he cried.
+
+For a moment Mary fancied that Etruria did not hear. The girl hurried
+on. But Mary saw no occasion to run away, and she halted. Then
+Etruria, with a gesture of despair, stopped.
+
+"It is no use," she said.
+
+The young man came up with them. His head was bare, his hat was in his
+hand, his long plain face was aglow with the haste he had made. He had
+heard Etruria's words, and "It is of every use," he said.
+
+"This is--my mistress," Etruria said.
+
+"Miss Audley?"
+
+"I am Miss Audley," Mary announced, wondering much.
+
+"I thought that it might be so," he replied. "I have waited for such
+an occasion. I am Mr. Colet, the curate at Riddsley. Etruria and I
+love one another," he continued. "We are going to be married, if ever
+my means allow me to marry."
+
+"No, we are not," the girl rejoined sharply. "Mr. Colet knows my
+mind," she continued, her eyes turned away. "I have told him many
+times that I am a servant, the daughter of a servant, in a different
+class from his, and I'll never be the one to ruin him and be a
+disgrace to him! I'll never marry him! Never!"
+
+"And I have told Etruria," he replied, "that I will never take that
+answer. We love one another. It is nothing to me that she is a
+servant. My work is to serve. I am as poor as it is possible to be,
+with as poor prospects as it is possible to have. I shall never be
+anything but what I am, and I shall think myself rich when I have a
+hundred pounds a year. I who have so little, who look for so little,
+am I to give up this happiness because Etruria has less? I, too, say,
+Never!"
+
+Mary, standing between them, did not know what to answer, and it was
+Etruria who replied. "It is useless," she said. And then, in a tone of
+honest scorn, "Who ever heard," she cried, "of a clergyman who married
+a servant? Or who ever heard of good coming of it?"
+
+Mary had an inspiration. "Does Etruria's father know?" she asked.
+
+"He knows and approves," the young man replied, his eyes bent fondly
+on his mistress.
+
+Mary too looked at Etruria--beautiful, patient, a servant, loved. And
+she wondered. All these weeks she had been rubbing elbows with this
+romance, and she had not discerned it! Now, while her sympathies flew
+to the lover's side, her prejudices rose up against him. They echoed
+Etruria's words, "Who ever heard of good coming of such a match?" The
+days had been, as Mary knew, when the chaplain had married the lady's
+maid. But those days were gone. Meantime the man waited, and she did
+not know what to say.
+
+"After all," she said at last, "it is for Etruria to decide."
+
+"No, it is for us both to decide," he replied. And then, as if he
+thought that he had sufficiently stated his case, "I ask your pardon,
+Miss Audley, for intruding," he continued. "I am keeping you, and as I
+am going your way that is needless. I have had a message from a sick
+woman, and I am on my way to see her."
+
+He took permission for granted, and though Etruria's very shoulders
+forbade him, he moved on beside them. "Conditions are better here than
+in many places," he said, "but in this village you would see much to
+sadden you."
+
+"I have seen enough," Mary answered, "to know that."
+
+"Ten years ago there was not a house here. Now there is a population
+of two thousand, no church, no school, no gentry, no one of the better
+class. There is a kind of club, a centre of wild talk; better that,
+perhaps, than apathy."
+
+"Is it in Riddsley parish?" Mary asked. They were nearly clear of the
+houses, and the slopes of the hill, pale green in the peaceful evening
+light, began to rise on either side. It was growing dusk, and from the
+moorland above came the shrill cries of plovers.
+
+"Yes, it is in Riddsley parish," he answered, "but many miles from the
+town, and as aloof from it--Riddsley is purely agricultural--as black
+from white. In such places as this--and there are many of them in
+Staffordshire, as raw, as rough, and as new--there is work for plain
+men and plain women. In these swarming hives there is no room for any
+refinement but true refinement. And the Church must learn to do her
+work with plain tools, or the work will pass into other hands."
+
+"You may cut cheese with an onion knife," Etruria said coldly. "I
+don't know that people like it."
+
+"I know nothing better than onions in the right place," he replied.
+
+"That's not in cheese," she rejoined, to Mary's amusement.
+
+"The poor get little cheese," he said, "and the main thing is to cut
+their bread for them. But here I must leave you. My errand is to that
+cottage."
+
+He pointed to a solitary house, standing a few score paces above the
+road on the hillside. Mary shook hands with him, but Etruria turned
+her shoulder resolutely.
+
+"Good-bye, Etruria," he said. And then to Mary, "I hope that I have
+made a friend?"
+
+"I think you have," she answered. "I am sure that you deserve one."
+
+He colored, raised his hat, and turned away, and the two went on,
+without looking back; darkness was coming apace, and they were still
+two miles from home. Mary kept silence, prudently considering how she
+should deal with the matter, and what she should say to her companion.
+As it fell out, events removed her difficulty. They had not gone more
+than two hundred yards, and were still some way below the level of the
+Chase, when a cry reached them. It came out of the dusk behind them,
+and might have been the call of a curlew on the moor. But first one,
+and then the other stood. They turned, and listened, and suddenly
+Etruria, more anxious or sharper of eye than her mistress, uttered a
+cry and broke away at a run across the sloping turf towards the
+solitary cottage. Alarmed, Mary looked intently in that direction, and
+made out three or four figures struggling before the door of the
+house. She guessed then that the clergyman was one of them, and that
+the cry had come from him, and without a thought for herself she set
+off, running after Etruria as fast as she could.
+
+Twice Etruria screamed as she ran, and Mary echoed the cry. She saw
+that the man was defending himself against the onset of three or
+four--she could hear the clatter of sticks on one another. Then she
+trod on her skirt and fell. When she had got, breathless, to her feet
+again, the clergyman was down and the men appeared to be raining blows
+on him. Etruria shrieked once more and the next moment was lost amid
+the moving figures, the brandished sticks, the struggle.
+
+Mary ran on desperately. She caught sight of the girl on her knees
+over the fallen man, she saw her fend off more than one blow, she
+heard more than one blow fall with a sickening thud. She came up to
+them. With passion that drove out fear, she seized the arm of the
+nearest and dragged him back.
+
+"You coward!" she cried. "You coward! I am Miss Audley! Do you hear!
+Leave him! Leave him, I say!"
+
+Her appearance, the surprise, checked the man; her fearlessness,
+perhaps her name, gave the others pause. They retreated a step. The
+man she had grasped shook himself free, but did not attempt to strike
+her. "Oh, d--n the screech-owls!" he cried. "The place is alive with
+them! Hold your noise, you fools! We'll have the parish on us!"
+
+"I am Miss Audley!" Mary repeated, and in her indignation she advanced
+on him. "How dare you?" Etruria, still on her knees, continued to
+shriek.
+
+"You're like to get a wipe over the head, dang you!" the man growled,
+"whoever you be! Go to---- and mind your own brats! He'll know better
+now than to preach against them as he gets his living by! You be
+gone!"
+
+But Mary stood her ground. She declared afterwards that, brutally as
+the man spoke, the fight had gone out of him. Etruria, on the
+contrary, maintained that, finding only women before them, the
+ruffians would have murdered them. Fortunately, while the event hung
+in the balance, "What is it?" some one shouted from the road below.
+"What's the matter there?"
+
+"Murder!" cried Etruria shrilly. "Help! Help!"
+
+"Help!" cried Mary. She still kept her face to the men, but for the
+first time she began to know fear.
+
+Footsteps thudded softly on the turf, figures came into view, climbing
+the slope. It needed no more. With a volley of oaths the assailants
+turned tail and made off. In a trice they were round the corner of the
+house and lost in the dusk.
+
+A moment later two men, equally out of breath and each carrying a gun,
+reached the spot. "Well!" said the bigger of the two, "What is it?"
+
+He spoke as if he had not come very willingly, but Mary did not notice
+this. The crisis over, her knees shook, she could barely stand, she
+could not speak. She pointed to the fallen man, over whom Etruria
+still crouched, her hair dragged down about her shoulders, her
+neckband torn, a ghastly blotch on her white cheek.
+
+"Is he dead?" the new-comer asked in a different tone.
+
+"Ay, dead!" Etruria echoed. "Dead!"
+
+Fortunately the curate gave the lie to the word. He groaned, moved,
+with an effort he raised himself on his elbow. "I'm--all right!" he
+gasped. "All right!"
+
+Etruria sprang to her feet. She stepped back as if the ground had
+opened before her.
+
+"I'm not--hurt," Colet added weakly.
+
+But it was evident that he was hurt, even if no bones were broken.
+When they came to lift him he could not stand, and he seemed to be
+uncertain where he was. After watching him a moment, "He should see a
+doctor," said the man who had come up so opportunely. "Petch," he
+continued, addressing his companion, who wore a gamekeeper's dress,
+"we must carry him to the trap and get him down to Brown Heath. Who is
+he, do you know? He looks like a parson."
+
+"He's Mr. Colet of Riddsley," Mary said.
+
+The man turned and looked at her. "Hallo!" he exclaimed. And then in
+the same tone of surprise, "Miss Audley!" he said. "At this time of
+night?"
+
+Mary collected herself with an effort. "Yes," she said, "and very
+fortunately, for if we had not been here the men would have murdered
+him. As it is, you share the credit of saving him, Lord Audley."
+
+"The credit of saving you is a good deal more to me," he answered
+gallantly. "I did not think that we should meet after this fashion."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ TACT AND TEMPER
+
+
+He looked at Etruria, and Mary explained who she was.
+
+"I am afraid that she is hurt."
+
+The girl's temple was bruised and there was blood on her cheek; more
+than one of the blows aimed at her lover had fallen on her. But she
+said eagerly that it was "Nothing! Nothing!"
+
+"Are you sure, Etruria?" Mary asked with concern.
+
+"It is nothing, indeed, Miss," the girl repeated. She was trying with
+shaking fingers to put up her hair.
+
+"Then the sooner," Audley rejoined, "we get this--this gentleman to my
+dogcart, the better. Take his other arm, Petch. Miss Audley, can you
+carry my gun?--it is not loaded. And you," he continued to Etruria,
+"if you are able, take Petch's."
+
+They took the guns, and the little procession wound down the path to
+the road, where they found a dogcart awaiting them, and, peering from
+the cart, two setters, whining and fretting. The dogs were driven
+under the seat, and the clergyman, still muttering that he was all
+right, was lifted in. "Steady him, Petch," Audley said; "and do you
+drive slowly," he added, to the other man. "You will be at the
+surgeon's at Brown Heath in twenty minutes. Stay with him, Petch, and
+send the cart back for me."
+
+"But are you not going?" Mary cried.
+
+"I am not going to leave you in the dark with only your maid," he
+answered with severity. "One adventure a night is enough, Miss
+Audley."
+
+She murmured a word or two, but submitted. The struggle had shaken
+her; she could still see the men's savage faces, still hear the thud
+of their blows. And she and Etruria had nearly a mile to go before
+they reached the park.
+
+When they were fairly started, "How did it happen?" he asked.
+
+Mary told the story, but said no word of Etruria's romance.
+
+"Then you were not with him when they set on him?"
+
+"No, we had parted."
+
+"And you went back?"
+
+"Of course we did!"
+
+"It was imprudent," he said, "very imprudent. If we had not come up at
+that moment you might have been murdered."
+
+"And if we had not gone back, Mr. Colet might have been murdered!" she
+answered. "What he had done to offend them----"
+
+"I think I can tell you that. He's the curate at Riddsley, isn't he?
+Who's been preaching up cheap bread and preaching down the farmers?"
+
+"Perhaps so," Mary answered. "He may be. But is he to be murdered for
+that? From your tone one might think so."
+
+"No," he replied slowly, "he is not to be murdered for it. But whether
+he is wise to preach cheap bread to starving men, whether he is wise
+to tell them that they would have it but for this man or that man,
+this class or that class--is another matter."
+
+She was not convinced--the sermon had keyed her thoughts to a high
+pitch. But he spoke reasonably, and he had the knack of speaking with
+authority, and she said no more. And on his side he had no wish to
+quarrel. He had come down to Riddsley partly to shoot, partly to look
+into the political situation, but a little--there was no denying
+it--to learn how Mary Audley fared with her uncle.
+
+For he had thought much of her since they had parted, and much of the
+fact that she was John Audley's heir. Her beauty, her spirit, her
+youth, had caught his fancy. He had looked forward to renewing his
+acquaintance with her, and he was in no mood, now he saw her, to spoil
+their meeting by a quarrel. He thought Colet, whose doings had been
+reported to him, a troublesome, pestilent fellow, and he was not sorry
+that he had got his head broken. But he need not tell her that.
+Circumstances had favored him in bringing them together and giving him
+the beau role, and he was not going to cross his luck.
+
+So, "Fire is an excellent thing of course," he continued with an air
+of moderation, "but, believe me, it's not safe amid young trees in a
+wind. Whatever your views, to express them in all companies may be
+honest, but is not wise. I have no doubt that a parson is tried. He
+sees the trouble. He is not always the best judge of the remedy.
+However, enough of that. We shall agree at least in this, that our
+meetings are opportune?"
+
+"Most opportune," Mary answered. "And from my point of view very
+fortunate!"
+
+"There really is a sort of fate in it. What but fate could have
+brought about our meeting at the Hotel Lambert? What but fate could
+have drawn us to the same spot on the Chase to-night?"
+
+There was a tone in his voice that brought the blood to her cheek and
+warned her to keep to the surface of things. "The chance that men call
+fate," she answered lightly.
+
+"Or the fate that fools call chance," he urged, half in jest, half in
+earnest. "We have met by chance once, and once again--with results!
+The third time--what will the third time bring? I wonder."
+
+"Not a fright like this, I hope!" Mary answered, remaining cheerfully
+matter of fact. "Or if it does," with a flash of laughter, "I trust
+that the next time you will come up a few moments earlier!"
+
+"Ungrateful!"
+
+"I?" she replied. "But it was Etruria who was in danger!"
+
+For the peril had left her with a sense of exhilaration, of lightness,
+of ease. She was pleased to feel that she could hold her own with him,
+relieved that she was not afraid of him. And she was glad--she was
+certainly glad--to see him again. If he were inclined to make the most
+of his advantage, well, a little gallantry was quite in the picture;
+she was not deceived, and she was not offended. While he on his side,
+as they walked over the moor, thought of her as a clever little witch
+who knew her value and could keep her head; and he liked her none the
+less for it.
+
+When they came at last to the gap in the wall that divided the Chase
+from the park, a figure, dimly outlined, stood in the breach waiting
+for them. "Is that you?" a voice asked.
+
+The voice was Basset's, and Mary's spirits sank. She felt that the
+meeting was ill-timed. "Yes," she answered.
+
+Unluckily, Peter was one of those whose anxiety takes an irritable
+form. "What in the world has happened?" he asked. "I couldn't believe
+that you were still out. It's really not safe. Hallo!" breaking off
+and speaking in a different tone, "is some one with you?"
+
+"Yes," Mary said. They were within touch now and could see one
+another. "We have had an adventure. Lord Audley was passing, he came
+to our rescue, and has very kindly seen us home."
+
+"Lord Audley!" Basset was taken by surprise and his tone was much as
+if he had said, "The devil!"
+
+"By good fortune, Basset," Audley replied. He may have smiled in the
+darkness--we cannot say. "I was returning from shooting, heard cries
+for help, and found Miss Audley playing the knight-errant, encircled
+by prostrate bodies!"
+
+Basset could not frame a word, so great was his surprise, so
+overwhelming his chagrin. Was this man to spring up at every turn? To
+cross him on every occasion? To put him in the background perpetually?
+To intrude even on the peace and fellowship of the Gatehouse? It was
+intolerable!
+
+When he did not answer, "It was not I who was the knight-errant," Mary
+said. "It was Etruria. She is a little the worse for it, I fear, and
+the sooner she is in bed the better. As Mr. Basset is here," she
+continued, turning to Audley, "we must not take you farther. Your cart
+is no doubt waiting for you. But you will allow us to thank you again.
+We are most grateful to you--both Etruria and I."
+
+She spoke more warmly, perhaps she let her hand rest longer in his, to
+make up for Basset's silence. For that silence provoked her. She had
+gathered from many things that Basset did not love the other; but to
+stand mute and churlish on such an occasion, and find no word of
+acknowledgment--this was too bad.
+
+And Basset knew, he too knew that he ought to thank Audley. But the
+black dog was on his back, and while he hesitated, the other made
+his adieux. He said a pleasant word to Etruria, tossed a careless
+"Good-night" to the other man, turned away, and was gone.
+
+For awhile the three who remained trudged homewards in silence. Then,
+"What happened to you?" Basset asked grudgingly.
+
+Vexed and indignant, Mary told the story.
+
+"I did not know that you knew Mr. Colet!"
+
+"When a man is being murdered," she retorted, "one does not wait for
+an introduction."
+
+He was a good fellow, but jealousy was hot within him, and he could
+not bridle his tongue. "Oh, but murdered?" he said. "Isn't that rather
+absurd? Who would murder Colet?"
+
+Mary did not deign to reply.
+
+Baffled, he sought for another opening. "I do not know what your uncle
+will say."
+
+"Because we rescued Mr. Colet? And perhaps saved his life?"
+
+"No, but----"
+
+"Or because Lord Audley rescued us?"
+
+"He will certainly not be pleased to hear that," he retorted
+maliciously. He knew that he was misbehaving, but he could not
+refrain. "If you take my advice you will not mention it."
+
+"I shall tell him the moment I reach the house," she declared.
+
+"You will be very unwise if you do."
+
+"I shall be honest at least! For the rest I would rather not discuss
+the matter, Mr. Basset. I am a good deal shaken by what we have gone
+through, and I am very tired."
+
+He muttered humbly that he was sorry--that he only meant----
+
+"Please leave it there," she said. "Enough has been said."
+
+Too late the anger and the spirit died out of the unlucky man, and he
+would have grovelled before her, he would have done anything to earn
+his pardon. But Etruria's presence tied his tongue, and gloomy and
+wretched--oh, why had he not gone farther to meet them, why had he not
+been the one to rescue her?--he walked on beside them, cursing his
+unhappy temper. It was dark, the tired girls lagged, Etruria hung
+heavily on her mistress's arm; he longed to help them. But he did not
+dare to offer. He knew too well that Mary would reject the offer.
+
+Etruria had her own dreams, and in spite of an aching head was happy.
+But to Mary, fatigued by the walk, and vexed by Basset's conduct, the
+way seemed endless. At last the house loomed dark above them, their
+steps rang hard on the flagged court. The outer door stood ajar, and
+entering, they found a lamp burning in the hall; but the silence which
+prevailed, above and below, struck a chill. Silence and an open door
+go ill together.
+
+Etruria at Mary's bidding went up at once to her room. Basset called
+angrily for Toft. But no Toft appeared, and Mary, resentment still hot
+in her, opened the door of the library and went in to see her uncle.
+She felt that the sooner her story was told the better.
+
+But the library was empty. Lights burned on the several tables, the
+wood fire smouldered on the hearth, the tall clock ticked in the
+silence, the old hound flopped his tail. But John Audley was not
+there.
+
+"Where is my uncle?" she asked, as she stood in the open doorway.
+
+Basset looked over her shoulder. He saw that the room was empty. "He
+may have gone to look for us."
+
+"And Toft?"
+
+"And Toft, too, I suppose."
+
+"But why should my uncle go to look for us?" she asked, aghast at the
+thought--he troubled himself so little for others, he lived so
+completely his own life!
+
+"He might," Basset replied. He stood for a moment, thinking. Then--for
+the time they had forgotten their quarrel--"You had better get
+something to eat and go to bed," he said. "I will send Mrs. Toft to
+you."
+
+She had not the strength to resist. "Very well," she said. "Are you
+going to look for them?"
+
+"Perhaps Mrs. Toft will know where they are."
+
+She took her candle and went slowly up the narrow winding staircase
+that led to her room and to Etruria's. As she passed, stair by stair,
+the curving wainscot of dull wood which so many generations had
+rubbed, she carried with her the picture of Basset standing in thought
+in the middle of the hall, his eyes on the doorway that gaped on the
+night. Then a big man with a genial face usurped his place; and she
+smiled and sighed.
+
+A moment later she went into Etruria's room to learn how she was, and
+caught the girl rising from her knees. "Oh, Miss," she said, coloring
+as she met Mary's eyes, "if we had not been there!"
+
+"And yet--you won't marry him, you foolish girl?"
+
+"Oh no, no!"
+
+"Although you love him!"
+
+"Love him!" Etruria murmured, her face burning. "It is because I love
+him, Miss, that I will never, never marry him."
+
+Mary wondered. "And yet you love him?" she said, raising the candle so
+that its light fell on the other's face.
+
+Etruria looked this way and that way, but there was no escape. In a
+very small voice she said,
+
+
+ "Love seeketh not itself to please
+ Nor for itself hath any care!"
+
+
+She covered her hot cheeks with her hands. But Mary took away the
+hands and kissed her.
+
+"Oh, Miss!" Etruria exclaimed.
+
+Mary went out then, but on the threshold of her own room she paused to
+snuff her candle. "So that is love," she thought. "It's very
+interesting, and--and rather beautiful!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ THE YEW WALK
+
+
+Basset had been absent the greater part of the day, and returning at
+sunset had learned that Miss Audley had not come back from Brown
+Heath. The servant had hinted alarm--the Chase was lonely, the hour
+late; and Basset had hurried off without more, not doubting that John
+Audley was in the house.
+
+Now he was sure that John Audley had been abroad at the time, and he
+suspected that Toft had known it, and had kept it from him. He stood
+for a moment in thought, then he crossed the court to Toft's house.
+Mrs. Toft was cooking something savory in a bonnet before the fire,
+and the contrast between her warm cheerful kitchen and the stillness
+of the house from which he came struck him painfully. He told her that
+her daughter had received a blow on the head, and that Miss Audley
+needed supper--she had better attend to them.
+
+Mrs. Toft was a stout woman, set by a placid and even temper above
+small surprises. She looked at the clock, a fork in her hand. "I can't
+hurry it, Mr. Basset," she said. "You may be Sir Robert Peel himself,
+but meat's your master and will have its time. A knock on the head?"
+she continued, with a faint stirring of anxiety. "You don't say so?
+Lor, Mr. Basset, who'd go to touch Etruria?"
+
+"You'd better go and see."
+
+"But where's Toft?"
+
+Basset's temper gave way at that. "God knows!" he said. "He ought to
+be here--and he's not!" He went out.
+
+Mrs. Toft stared after him, and by and by she let down her skirt and
+prepared to go into the house. "On the head?" she ruminated. "Well,
+'Truria's a tidy lot of hair! And I will say this, if there's few
+points a man gives a woman, hair's one of them."
+
+Meanwhile Basset had struck across the court and taken in the darkness
+the track which led in the direction of the Great House. The breeze,
+light but of an autumn coldness, swept the upland, whispering through
+the dying fern, and rustling in the clumps of trees by which he
+steered his course. He listened more than once, hoping that he might
+hear approaching footsteps, but he heard none, and presently he came
+to the yew-trees that masked the entrance to the gardens.
+
+The trees formed a wall of blackness exceeding that of the darkest
+night, and Basset hesitated before he plunged into it. The growth of a
+century had long trespassed on the walk, a hundred and fifty yards
+long, which led through the yew-wood, and had been in its time a
+stately avenue trimmed to the neatness of a bowling green. Now it was
+little better than a tunnel, dark even at noon, and at night bristling
+with a hundred perils. Basset peered into the blackness, listened,
+hesitated. But he was honestly anxious on John Audley's account, and
+contenting himself with exclaiming that the man was mad, he began to
+grope his way along the path.
+
+It was no pleasant task. If he swerved from his course he stumbled
+over roots, branches swept his cheek, jagged points threatened his
+eyes, and more than once he found himself in the hedge. Half-way
+through the wood he came to a circular clearing, some twenty yards
+across; and here a glimmer of light enabled him to avoid the crumbling
+stone Butterfly that crouched on its mouldering base in the centre of
+the clearing--much as a spider crouches in its web. It seemed in that
+dim light to be the demon of this underworld, a monster, a thing of
+evil.
+
+The same gleam, however, disclosed the opposite opening, and for
+another seventy yards he groped his way onward, longing to be clear of
+the stifling air, and the brooding fancies that dwelt in it, longing
+to plant his feet on something more solid than this carpet of rotting
+yew. At last he came to the tall, strait gate, wrought of old iron,
+that admitted to the pleasance. It was ajar. He passed through it, and
+with relief he felt the hard walk under his feet, the fresh air on his
+face. He crossed the walk, and stepping on to the neglected lawn, he
+halted.
+
+The Great House loomed before him, a hundred yards away. The moon had
+not risen, but the brightness which goes before its rising lightened
+the sky behind the monstrous building. It outlined the roof but left
+the bulk in gloom. No light showed in any part, and it was only the
+watcher's memory that pictured the quaint casements of the north wing,
+or filled in the bald rows of unglazed windows, which made of the new
+portion a death-mask. In that north wing just eighty years before, in
+a room hung with old Cordovan leather, the fatal house-warming had
+been held. The duel had been fought at sunrise within a pace or two of
+the moss-grown Butterfly that Basset had passed; and through the gate
+of ironwork, wood-smelted and wrought with the arms of Audley, which
+had opened at his touch, they had carried the dead heir back to his
+father. Tradition had it that the servant who bore in the old lord's
+morning draught of cool ale had borne also the tragic news to his
+bedside.
+
+Basset remembered that the hinges of the gate, seldom as it was used,
+had not creaked, and he felt sure that he was on the right track. He
+scanned the dark house, and tried to sift from the soughing of the
+wind any sound that might inform him.
+
+Presently he moved forward and scrutinized with care the north wing,
+which abutted on the yew-wood. There lay between the two only a strip
+of formal garden, once set with rows of birds and beasts cut in yew.
+Time had turned these to monsters, huge, amorphous, menacing, amidst
+which rank grass rioted and elder pushed. Even in daylight it seemed
+as if the ancient trees stretched out arms to embrace and strangle the
+deserted house.
+
+But the north wing remained as dark as the bulk of the house, and
+Basset uttered a sigh of relief. Ill-humor began to take the place of
+misgiving. He called himself a fool for his pains and anticipated with
+distaste a return through the yew-walk. However, the sooner he
+undertook the passage the sooner it would be over, and he was turning
+on his heel when somewhere between him and the old wing a stick
+snapped.
+
+Under a foot, he fancied; and he waited. In two or three minutes the
+moon would rise.
+
+Again he caught a faint sound. It resembled the stealthy tread of some
+one approaching from the north wing, and Basset, peering that way, was
+striving to probe the darkness, when a gleam of light shot across his
+eyes. He turned and saw in the main building a bright spark. It
+vanished. He waited to see it again, and while he waited a second
+stick snapped. This time the sound was behind him, and near the iron
+gate.
+
+He had been outflanked, and he had now to choose which he would stalk,
+the footstep or the light. He chose the latter, the rather as while he
+stood with his eyes fixed on the house the upper edge of a rising moon
+peeped above the roof.
+
+He stepped back to the gate, and in the shadow of the trees he waited.
+Two or three minutes passed. The moon rose clear of the roof,
+outlining the stately chimneys and gables and flooding with cold light
+the lower part of the lawn. With the rising of the moon the air grew
+more chilly. He shivered.
+
+At length a dull sound reached him--the sound of a closing door or a
+shutter cast back. A minute later he heard the footsteps of some one
+moving along the walk towards him. The man trod with care, but once he
+stumbled.
+
+Basset advanced. "Is that you, sir?" he asked.
+
+"D--n!" John Audley replied out of the darkness. He halted, breathing
+quickly.
+
+"I say d--n, too!" Basset replied. As a rule he was patient with the
+old man, but to-night his temper failed him.
+
+The other came on. "Why did you follow me?" he asked. "What is the
+use? What is the use? If you are willing to help me, good! But if not,
+why do you follow me?"
+
+"To see that you don't come to harm," Basset retorted. "As you
+certainly will one of these nights if you come here alone."
+
+"Well, I haven't come to harm to-night! On the contrary---- But there,
+there, man, let us get back."
+
+"The sooner the better," Basset replied. "I nearly put out an eye as I
+came."
+
+John Audley laughed. "Did you come through the yews in the dark?" he
+asked.
+
+"Didn't you?"
+
+"No, I brought a lantern." He removed as he spoke the cap of a small
+bull's-eye lantern and threw its light on the path. "Who's the fool
+now?"
+
+"Let us get home," Basset snapped.
+
+John Audley locked the iron gate behind them and they started. The
+light removed their worst difficulties and they reached the open park
+without mishap. But long before they gained the house the elder man's
+strength failed, and he was glad to lean on Basset's arm. On that a
+sense of weakness on the one side and of pity on the other closed
+their differences. "After all," Audley said wearily, "I don't know
+what I should have done if you had not come."
+
+"You'd have stayed there!"
+
+"And that would have been--Heavens, what a pity that would have been!"
+Audley paused and struck his stick on the ground. "I must take care of
+myself, I must take care of myself! You don't know, Basset, what
+I----"
+
+"And I don't want to know--here!" Basset replied. "When you are safe
+at home, you may tell me what you like."
+
+In the courtyard they came on Toft, who was looking out for them with
+a lantern. "Thank God, you're safe, sir," he said. "I was growing
+alarmed about you."
+
+"Where were you," Basset asked sharply, "when I came in?" John Audley
+was too tired to speak.
+
+"I had stepped out at the front to look for the master," Toft replied.
+"I fancied that he had gone out that way."
+
+Basset did not believe him, but he could not refute the story. "Well,
+get the brandy," he said, "and bring it to the library. Mr. Audley has
+been out too long and is tired."
+
+They went into the library and Toft pulled off his master's boots and
+brought his slippers and the spirit-tray. That done, he lingered, and
+Basset thought that he was trying to divine from the old man's looks
+whether the journey had been fruitful.
+
+In the end, however, the man had to go, and Audley leant forward to
+speak.
+
+"Wait!" Basset muttered. "He is coming back."
+
+"How do you know?"
+
+Basset raised his hand. The door opened. Toft came in. "I forgot to
+take your boots, sir," he said.
+
+"Well, take them now," his master replied peevishly. When the man had
+again withdrawn, "How did you know?" he asked, frowning at the fire.
+
+"I saw him go to take your boots--and leave them."
+
+Audley was silent for a time, then "Well," he said, "he has been with
+me many years and I think he is faithful."
+
+"To his own interests. He dogged you to-night."
+
+"So did you!"
+
+"Yes, but I did not hide! And he did, and hid from me, too, and lied
+about it. How long he had been watching you, I cannot say, but if you
+think that you can break through all your habits, sir, and be missing
+for two hours at night and a man as shrewd as Toft suspect nothing,
+you are mistaken. Of course he wonders. The next time he thinks it
+over. The third time he follows you. Presently whatever you know he
+will know."
+
+"Confound him!" Audley turned to the table and jerked some brandy into
+a glass. Then, "You haven't asked yet," he said, "what I've done."
+
+"If I am to choose," Basset replied, "I would rather not know. You
+know my views."
+
+"I know that you didn't think I should do it? Well, I've done it!"
+
+"Do you mean that--you've found the evidence?"
+
+"Is it likely?" the other replied petulantly. "No, but I've been in
+the Muniment Room. It is fifty years since I heard my father describe
+its position, but I could have gone to it blindfold! I was a boy then,
+and the name--he was telling a story of the old lord--took my fancy. I
+listened. In time the thing faded, but one day when I was at the
+lawyer's and some one mentioned the Muniment Room, the story came back
+to me so clearly, that I could almost repeat my father's words."
+
+"And you've been in the room?"
+
+"I've been in it. Why not? A door two inches thick and studded with
+iron, and a lock that one out of any dozen big keys would open!" He
+rubbed his calves in his satisfaction. "In twenty minutes I was
+inside."
+
+"And it was empty?"
+
+"It was empty," the other agreed, with a cunning smile. "As bare as a
+board. A little whitewashed room, just as my father described it!"
+
+"They had removed the papers?"
+
+"To the bank, or to London, or to Stubbs's. The place was as clean as
+a platter! Not a length of green tape or an end of parchment was
+left!"
+
+"Then what have you gained?" Basset asked.
+
+Audley looked slyly at him, his head on one side. "Ay, what?" he said.
+"But I'll tell you my father's story. At one time the part of the room
+under the stairs was crumbling and the rats got in. The steward told
+the old lord and he went to see it. 'Brick it up!' he said. The
+steward objected that there would not be room--the place was full;
+there were boxes everywhere, some under the stairs. The old lord
+tapped one of the boxes with his gold-headed cane. 'What's in these!'
+he asked. 'Old papers,' the steward explained. 'Of no use, my lord,
+but curious; old leases for lives, and terriers.' 'Terriers?' cried
+the old lord. 'Then, by G--d, brick 'em up with the rats!' And that
+day at dinner he told my father the story and chuckled over it."
+
+"And that's what you've had in your mind all this time?" Basset said.
+"Do you think it was done?"
+
+"The old lord bricked up many a pipe of port, and I think that he
+would do it for the jest's sake. And"-- John Audley turned and looked
+in his companion's face--"the part under the stairs _is bricked up_,
+and the room is as square and as flush as the family vault--and very
+like it. The old lord," he added sardonically, "knows what it is to be
+bricked up himself now."
+
+"And still there may be nothing there to help you."
+
+Audley rose from his chair. "Don't say it!" he cried passionately. "Or
+I'll say that there's no right in the world, no law, no providence, no
+God! Don't dare to say it!" he continued, his cheeks trembling with
+excitement. "If I believed that I should go mad! But it is there! It
+is there! Do you think that it was for naught I heard that story? That
+it was for naught I remembered it, for naught I've carried the story
+in my mind all these years? No, they are there, the papers that will
+give me mine and give it to Mary after me! They are there! And you
+must help me to get them."
+
+"I cannot do it, sir," Basset replied firmly. "I don't think that you
+understand what you ask. To break into Audley's house like any common
+burglar, to dig down his wall, to steal his deeds----"
+
+John Audley shook his fist in the young man's face. "His house!" he
+shrieked. "His wall! His deeds! No, fool, but my house, my wall, my
+deeds! my deeds! If the papers are there all's mine! All! And I am but
+taking my own! Can't you see that? Can't you see it? Have I no right
+to take what is my own?"
+
+"But if the papers are not there?" Basset replied gravely. "No, sir,
+if you will take my advice you will tell your story, apply to the
+court, and let the court examine the documents. That's the
+straightforward course."
+
+John Audley flung out his arms. "Man!" he cried. "Don't you know that
+as long as he is in possession he can sit on his deeds, and no power
+on earth can force him to show them?"
+
+Basset drew in his breath. "If that is so," he said, "it is hard. Very
+hard! But to go by night and break into his house--sticks in my
+gizzard, sir. I'm sorry, but that is the way I look at it. The man's
+here too. I saw him this evening. The fancy might have taken him to
+visit the house, and he might have found you there?"
+
+Audley's color faded, he seemed to shrink into himself. "Where did you
+see him?" he faltered.
+
+Basset told the story. "I don't suppose that the girls were really in
+danger," he continued, "but they thought so, and Audley came to the
+rescue and brought them as far as the park gap."
+
+The other took out his silk handkerchief and wiped his brow. "As near
+as that," he muttered.
+
+"Ay, and if he had found you at the house, he might have guessed your
+purpose."
+
+John Audley held out a hand trembling with passion. "I would have
+killed him!" he cried. "I would have killed him--before he should have
+had what is there!"
+
+"Exactly," Basset replied. "And that is why I will have nothing to do
+with the matter! It's too risky, sir. If you take my advice you will
+give it up."
+
+Audley did not answer. He sat awhile, his shoulders bowed, his eyes
+fixed on the hearth, while the other wondered for the hundredth time
+if he were sane. At length, "What is he doing here?" the old man asked
+in a lifeless tone. The passion had died out of him.
+
+"Shooting, I suppose. But there was some talk in Riddsley of his
+coming down to stir up old Mottisfont."
+
+"What about?"
+
+"Against the corn-law repeal, I suppose."
+
+Audley nodded. But after a while, "That's a pretext," he said. "And so
+is the shooting. He has followed the girl."
+
+Basset started. "Followed Mary!" he exclaimed.
+
+"What else? I have looked for it from the first. I've pressed you to
+come to an understanding with her for that reason. Why the devil can't
+you? If you leave it much longer you'll be too late! Too late! And, by
+G--d, I'll never forgive you!" with a fresh spirt of passion. "Never!
+Never, man!"
+
+"I've not said that I meant to do it."
+
+"You've not said!" Audley replied contemptuously. "Do you think that I
+don't know that she's all the world to you? Do you think that I've no
+eyes? Do you think that when you sit there watching her from behind
+your book by the hour together, I have not my sight? Man, I'm not a
+fool! And I tell you that if you're not to lose her you must speak!
+You must speak! Stand by another month, wait a little longer, and
+Philip Audley will put in his oar, and I'll not give that for your
+chances!" He snapped his fingers.
+
+"Why should he put in his oar?" Basset asked sullenly. His face had
+turned a dull red.
+
+John Audley shrugged his shoulders. "Do you think that she is without
+attractions?"
+
+"But Audley lives in another world."
+
+"The more likely to have attractions for her!"
+
+"But surely he'll look for--for something more," Basset stammered.
+
+"For a rich wife? For an alliance, as the saying is? And sleep ill of
+nights? And have bad dreams? No, he is no fool, if you are. He sees
+that if he marries the girl he makes himself safe. He makes himself
+safe! After me, it lies between them."
+
+"I take it that he does think himself safe."
+
+"Not he!" Audley replied. He was stooping over the ashes, warming his
+hands, but at that he jumped up. "Not he! he knows better than you!
+And fears! And sleeps ill of nights, d--n him! And dreams! But there,
+I must not excite myself. I must not excite myself. Only, if he once
+begins, he'll be no laggard in love as you are! He'll not sit puling
+and peeping and looking at the back of her head by the hour together!
+He'll be up and at her--I know what that big jowl means! And she'll be
+in his arms in half the time that you've taken to count her
+eyelashes!" He turned in a fresh fit of fury and seized his candle.
+"In his arms, I tell you, fool, while you are counting her eyelashes.
+Well, lose her, lose her, and I never want to see you again, or her!
+Never! I'll curse you both!"
+
+He stumbled to the door and went out, a queer, gibbering, shaking
+figure; and Basset had no doubt at such moments that he was mad. But
+on this occasion he was afraid--he was very much afraid, as he sat
+pondering in his chair, that there was method in his madness!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ PETER PAUPER
+
+
+The impression which the events of the evening had made on Mary's mind
+was still lively when she awoke next day. It was not less clear,
+because like the feminine letter of the 'forties, crossed and
+recrossed, it had stamped itself in two layers on her mind, of which
+the earlier was the more vivid.
+
+The solitude in which her days had of late been spent had left her
+peculiarly open to new ideas, while the quiet and wholesome life of
+the Gatehouse had prepared her to answer any call which those ideas
+might make upon her. Rescued from penury, lifted above anxiety about
+bed and board, no longer exposed to the panic-fears which in Paris had
+beset even her courageous nature, Mary had for a while been content
+simply to rest. She had taken the sunshine, the beauty, the ease and
+indolence of her life as a convalescent accepts idleness, without
+scruple or question.
+
+But this could not last. She was young, nature soon rallied in her,
+and she had seen things and done things during the last two years
+which forbade her to accept such a limited horizon as satisfied most
+of the women of that day. Unlike them, she had viewed the world from
+more than one standpoint; through the grille of a convent school, from
+the grimy windows of a back-street in Paris; again, as it moved
+beneath the painted ceilings of a French salon. And now, as it
+presented itself in this retired house.
+
+Therefore she could not view things as those saw them whose standpoint
+had never shifted. She had suffered, she still had twinges--for who,
+with her experience, could be sure that the path would continue easy?
+And so to her Mr. Colet's sermon had made a strong appeal.
+
+It left the word which Mr. Colet had taken for his text sounding in
+her ears. Borne upward on the eloquence which earnestness had lent to
+the young preacher, she looked down on a world in torment, a world
+holding up piteous hands, craving, itself in ignorance, the help of
+those who held the secret, and whose will might make that secret
+sufficient to save. Love! To do to others as she would have others do
+to her! With every day, with every hour, with every minute to do
+something for others! Always to give, never to take! Above all to give
+herself, to do her part in that preference of others to self, which
+could alone right these mighty wrongs, could find work for the idle,
+food for the hungry, roofs for the homeless, knowledge for the blind,
+healing for the sick! Which could save all this world in torment, and
+could
+
+
+ "Build a Heaven in Hell's despair!"
+
+
+It was a beautiful vision, and in this her first glimpse of it, Mary's
+fancy was not chilled by the hard light of experience. It seemed so
+plain that if the workman had his master's profit at heart, and the
+master were as anxious for the weal of his men, the interests of the
+two would be one. Equally plain it seemed that if they who grew the
+food aimed at feeding the greatest number, and they who ate had the
+same desire to reward the grower, if every man shrank from taking
+advantage of other men, if the learned lived to spread their
+knowledge, and the strong to help the weak, if no man wronged his
+neighbor, but
+
+
+ "Each for another gave his ease,"
+
+
+then it seemed equally plain that love would indeed be lord of all!
+
+Later, she might discover that it takes two to make a bargain; that
+charity does bless him who gives but not always him who takes; even,
+that cheap bread might be a dear advantage--that at least it might
+have its drawbacks.
+
+But for the moment it was enough for Mary that the vision was
+beautiful and, as a theory, true. So that, gazing upward at the faded
+dimity of her tester, she longed to play her part in it. That world in
+torment, those countless hands stretched upward in appeal, that murmur
+of infinite pain, the cry of the hungry, of the widow, of men sitting
+by tireless hearths, of children dying in mill and mine--the picture
+wrought on her so strongly, that she could not rest. She rose, and
+though the hoar frost was white on the grass and the fog of an autumn
+morning still curtained the view, she began to dress.
+
+Perhaps the chill of the cold water in which she washed sobered her.
+At any rate, with the comb in one hand and her hair in the other, she
+drifted down another line of thought. Lord Audley--how strange was the
+chance which had again brought them together! How much she owed him,
+with what kindness had he seen to her comfort, how masterfully had he
+arranged matters for her on the boat. And then she smiled. She
+recalled Basset's ill-humor, or his--jealousy. At the thought of what
+the word implied, Mary colored.
+
+There could be nothing in the notion, yet she probed her own feelings.
+Certainly she liked Lord Audley. If he was not handsome, he had that
+air of strength and power which impresses women; and he had ease and
+charm, and the look of fashion which has its weight with even the most
+sensible of her sex. He had all these and he was a man, and she
+admired him and was grateful to him. And yesterday she might have
+thought that her feeling for him was love.
+
+But this morning she had gained a higher notion of love. She had
+learned from Etruria how near to that pattern of love which Mr. Colet
+preached the love of man and woman could rise. She had a new
+conception of its strength and its power to expel what was selfish or
+petty. She had seen it in its noblest form in Etruria, and she knew
+that her feeling for Lord Audley was not in the same world with
+Etruria's feeling for the curate. She laughed at the notion.
+
+"Poor Etruria!" she meditated. "Or should it be, happy Etruria? Who
+knows? I only know that I am heart-whole!"
+
+And she knotted up her hair and, Diana-like, went out into the pure
+biting air of the morning, along the green rides hoary with dew and
+fringed with bracken, under the oak trees from which the wood-pigeons
+broke in startled flight.
+
+But if the energy of her thoughts carried her out, fatigue soon
+brought her to a pause. The evening's excitement, the strain of the
+adventure had not left her, young as she was, unscathed. The springs
+of enthusiasm waned with her strength, and presently she felt jaded.
+She perceived that she would have done better had she rested longer;
+and too late the charms of bed appealed to her.
+
+She was at the breakfast table when Basset--he, too, had had a
+restless night and many thoughts--came down. He saw that she was pale
+and that there were shadows under her eyes, and the man's tenderness
+went out to her. He longed, he longed above everything to put himself
+right with her; and on the impulse of the moment, "I want you to
+know," he said, standing meekly at her elbow, "that I am sorry I lost
+my temper last evening."
+
+But she was out of sympathy with him. "It is nothing," she said. "We
+were all tired, I think. Etruria is not down yet."
+
+"But I want to ask your----"
+
+"Oh dear, dear!" she cried, interrupting him with a gesture of
+impatience. "Don't let us rake it up again. If my uncle has not
+suffered, there is no harm done. Please let it rest."
+
+But he could not let it rest. He longed to put his neck under her
+foot, and he did not see that she was in the worst possible mood for
+his purpose. "Still," he said, "you must let me say----"
+
+"Don't!" she cried. She put her hands to her ears. Then, seeing that
+she had wounded him, she dropped them and spoke more kindly. "Don't
+let us make much of little, Mr. Basset. It was all natural enough. You
+don't like Lord Audley----"
+
+"I don't."
+
+"And you did not understand that we had been terribly frightened, and
+had good reason to be grateful to him. I am sure that if you had known
+that, you would have behaved differently. There!" with a smile. "And
+now that I have made the amende for you, let us have breakfast. Here
+is your coffee."
+
+He knew that she was holding him off, and all his alarms of the night
+were quickened. Again and again had John Audley's warning recurred to
+him and as often he had striven to reject it, but always in vain. And
+gradually, slowly, it had kindled his resolution, it had fired him to
+action. Now, the very modesty which had long kept him silent and
+withheld him from enterprise was changed--as so often happens with
+diffident man--into rashness. He was as anxious to put his fate to the
+test as he had before been unwilling.
+
+Presently, "You will not need to tell your uncle about Lord Audley,"
+he said. "I've done it."
+
+"I hope you told him," she answered gravely, "that we were indebted to
+Lord Audley for our safety."
+
+"You don't trust me?"
+
+"Don't say things like that!" she cried. "It is foolish. I have no
+doubt that in telling my uncle you meant to relieve me. You have
+helped me more than once in that way. But----"
+
+"But this is a special occasion?"
+
+She looked at him. "If you wish us to be friends----"
+
+"I don't," he answered roughly. "I don't want to be friends with you."
+
+Then, ambiguous as his words were, she saw where she stood, and she
+mustered her presence of mind. She rose from her seat. "And I," she
+said, "am not going to quarrel with you, Mr. Basset. I am going now to
+learn how Etruria is. And then I shall see my uncle."
+
+She escaped before he could answer.
+
+Once or twice it had crossed her mind that he looked at her with
+intention; and once reading that look in his eyes she had felt her
+color rise, and her heart beat more quickly. But the absence on her
+side of any feeling, except that which a sister might feel for a kind
+brother, this and the reserve of his manner had nipped the fancy as
+soon as it budded. And if she had given it a second thought, it had
+been only to smile at her vanity.
+
+Now she had no doubt of the fact, no doubt that it was jealousy that
+moved him, and her uppermost, almost her only feeling was vexation.
+Because they had lived in the same house for five months, because he
+had been useful and she had been grateful, because they were man and
+woman, how foolish it was! How absurd! How annoying! She foresaw from
+it many, many, inconveniences; a breach in their pleasant intercourse,
+displeasure on her uncle's part, trouble in the house that had been so
+peaceful--oh, many things. But that which vexed her most was the fear
+that she had, all unwittingly, encouraged him.
+
+She believed that she had not. But while she talked to Etruria, and
+later, as she went down the stairs to interview her uncle, she had
+this weight on her mind. She strove to recall words and looks, and
+upon the whole she was sure that she could acquit herself, sure that
+of this evil no part lay at her door. But it was very, very vexatious!
+
+On the threshold of the library she wrested her thoughts back to the
+present, and paused a moment, considering what she should say to her
+uncle.
+
+She need not have troubled herself, for he was not there. At the first
+glance she took the room to be empty; a second showed her Basset. She
+turned to retire, but too late; he stepped between her and the door
+and closed it. He was a little paler than usual, and his air of
+purpose was not to be mistaken.
+
+She stiffened. "I came to see my uncle," she said.
+
+"I am the bearer of a message from him," he answered. "He asked me to
+say that he considers the matter at an end. He does not wish it to be
+mentioned again. Of course he does not blame you."
+
+"But, Mr. Basset----"
+
+But he would not let her speak. "That was his message," he continued,
+"and I am glad to be the messenger because it gives me a chance of
+speaking to you. Will you sit down?"
+
+"But we have only just parted," she remonstrated, struggling against
+her fate. "I don't understand what you want----"
+
+"To say? No, I am going to explain it--if you will sit down."
+
+She sat down then with the feeling that she was trapped. And since it
+was clear that she must go through with it, she was glad that his
+insistence hardened her heart and dried up the springs of pity.
+
+He went to the fire, stooped and moved the wood. "You won't come
+nearer?" he said.
+
+"No," she replied. How foolish to trap her like this if he thought to
+get anything from her!
+
+He turned to her and his face was changed. Under his wistful look she
+discovered that it was not so easy to be hard, not so easy to maintain
+her firmness. "You would rather escape?" he said, reading her mind. "I
+know. But I can't let you escape. You are thinking that I have trapped
+you? And you are fearing that I am going to make you unhappy for--for
+half an hour perhaps? I know. And I am fearing that you are going to
+make me unhappy for--always."
+
+No, she could not retain her hardness. She knew that she was going to
+feel pity after all. But she would not speak.
+
+"I have only hope," he went on. "There is only one thing I am clinging
+to. I have read that when a man loves a woman very truly, very deeply,
+as I love you, Mary"--she started violently, and blushed to the roots
+of her hair, so sudden was the avowal--"as I love you," he repeated
+sorrowfully, "I have read that she either hates him or loves him. His
+love is a fire that either warms her or scorches her, draws her or
+repels her. I thought of that last night, as I thought of many things,
+and I was sure, I was confident that you did not hate me."
+
+"Oh no," she answered, unsteadily. "Indeed, indeed, I don't! I am very
+grateful to you. But the other--I don't think it is true."
+
+"No?" he said, keeping his eyes on her face. "And then, you don't
+doubt that I love you?"
+
+"No." The flush had faded from her face and left her pale. "I don't
+doubt that--now."
+
+"It is so true that--you know that you have sometimes called me Peter?
+Well, I would have given much, very much to call you Mary. But I did
+not dare. I could not. For I knew that if I did, only once, my voice
+would betray me, and that I should alarm you before the time! I knew
+that that one word--that word alone--would set my heart upon my sleeve
+for all to see. And I did not want to alarm you. I did not want to
+hurry you. I thought then that I had time, time to make myself known
+to you, time to prove my devotion, time to win you, Mary. I thought
+that I could wait. Now, since last night, I am afraid to wait. I
+doubt, nay I am sure, that I have no time, that I dare not wait."
+
+She did not answer, but the color mounted again to her face.
+
+He turned and knocked the fire together with his foot. Then he took a
+step towards her. "Tell me," he said, "have I any chance? Any chance
+at all, Mary?"
+
+She shook her head; but seeing then that he kept his eyes fixed on her
+and would not take that for an answer, "None," she said as kindly as
+she could. "I must tell you the truth. It is useless to try to break
+it. I have never once, not once thought of you but as a friend,
+Peter."
+
+"But now," he said, "cannot you regard me differently--now! Now that
+you know? Cannot you begin to think of me as--a lover?"
+
+"No," Mary said frankly and pitifully. "I should not be honest if I
+said that I could. If I held out hopes. You have been always good to
+me, kind to me, a dear friend, a brother when I had need of one. And I
+am grateful, Mr. Basset, honestly, really grateful to you. And fond of
+you--in that way. But I could not think of you in the way you desire.
+I know it for certain. I know that there is no chance."
+
+He stood for a moment without speaking, and seeing how stricken he
+looked, how sad his face, her eyes filled with tears. Then, "Is there
+any one else?" he asked slowly, his eyes on her face.
+
+She did not answer. She rose to her feet.
+
+"Is there any one else?" he repeated, a new note in his voice. He
+moved forward a step.
+
+"You have no right to ask that," she said.
+
+"I have every right," he replied. "What?" he continued, moving still
+nearer to her, his whole bearing changed in a moment by the sting of
+jealousy. "I am condemned, I am rejected, and I am not to ask why?"
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"But I do ask!" he retorted with a passion which surprised and alarmed
+her; he was no longer the despondent lover of five minutes before, but
+a man demanding his rights. "Have you no heart? Have you no feeling
+for me? Do you not consider what this is to me?"
+
+"I consider," Mary replied with a warmth almost equal to his own,
+"that if I answered your question I should humiliate myself. No one,
+no one has a right, sir, to ask that question. And least of all you!"
+
+"And I am to be cast aside, I am to be discarded without a reason?"
+
+That word "discarded" seemed so unjust, and so uncalled for, seeing
+that she had given him no encouragement, that it stung her to anger.
+"Without a reason?" she retorted. "I have given you a reason--I do not
+return your love. That is the only reason that you have a right to
+know. But if you press me, I will tell you why what you propose is
+impossible. Because, if I ever love a man I hope, Mr. Basset, that it
+will be one who has some work in the world, something to do that shall
+be worth the doing, a man with ambitions above mere trifling, mere
+groping in the dust of the past for facts that, when known, make no
+man happier, and no man better, and scarce a man wiser! Do you ever
+think," she continued, carried away by the remembrance of Mr. Colet's
+zeal, "of the sorrow and pain that are in the world? Of the vast
+riddles that are to be solved? Of the work that awaits the wisest and
+the strongest, and at which all in their degree can help? My uncle is
+an old man, it is well he should play with the past. I am a girl, it
+may serve for me. But what do you here?" She pointed to his table,
+laden with open folios and calf-bound volumes. "You spend a week in
+proving a Bohun marriage that is nothing to any one. Another, in
+raking up a blot that is better forgotten! A third in tracing to its
+source some ancient tag! You move a thousand books--to make one
+knight! Is that a man's work?"
+
+"At least," he said huskily, "I do no harm."
+
+"No harm?" Mary replied, swept away by her feelings. "Is that enough?
+Because in this quiet corner, which is home to my uncle and a refuge
+to me, no call reaches you, is it enough that you do no harm? Is there
+no good to be done? Think, Mr. Basset! I am ignorant, a woman. But I
+know that to-day there are great questions calling for an answer,
+wrongs clamoring to be righted, a people in travail that pleads for
+ease! I know that there is work in England for men, for all! Work,
+that if there be any virtue left in ancient blood should summon you as
+with a trumpet call!"
+
+He did not answer. Twice, early in her attack he had moved as if he
+would defend himself. Then he had let his chin fall and he had
+listened with his eyes on the table. And--but she had not seen it--he
+had more than once shivered under her words as under a lash. For he
+loved her and she scourged him. He loved her, he desired her, he had
+put her on a pedestal, and all the time she had been viewing him with
+the clear merciless eyes of youth, trying him by the standard of her
+dreams, probing his small pretensions, finding him a potterer in a
+library--he who in his vanity had raised his eyes to her and sought to
+be her hero!
+
+It was a cruel lesson, cruelly given; and it wounded him to the heart.
+So that she, seeing too late that he made no reply, seeing the
+grayness of his face, and that he did not raise his eyes, had a
+too-late perception of what she had done, of how cruel she had been,
+of how much more she had said than she had meant to say. She stood
+conscience-stricken, remorseful, ashamed.
+
+And then, "Oh, I am sorry!" she cried. "I am sorry! I should not have
+said that! You meant to honor me and I have hurt you."
+
+He looked up then, but neither the shadow nor the grayness left his
+face. "Perhaps it was best," he said dully. "I am sure that you meant
+well."
+
+"I did," she cried. "I did! But I was wrong. Utterly wrong!"
+
+"No," he said, "you were not wrong. The truth was best."
+
+"But perhaps it was not the truth," she replied, anxious at once,
+miserably anxious to undo what she had done, to unsay what she had
+said, to tell him that she was conceited, foolish, a mere girl! "I am
+no judge--after all what do I know of these things? What have I done
+that I should say anything?"
+
+"I am afraid that what is said is said," he replied. "I have always
+known that I was no knight-errant. I have never been bold until
+to-day--and it has not answered," with a sickly smile. "But we
+understand one another now--and I relieve you."
+
+He passed her on his way to the door, and she thought that he was
+going to hold it open for her to go out. But when he reached the door
+he fumbled for the handle, found it as a blind man might find it, and
+went out himself, without turning his head.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ THE MANCHESTER MEN
+
+
+Basset knew every path that crossed the Chase, and had traversed them
+at all seasons, and in all weathers. But when, some hours later, he
+halted on a scarred and blackened waste that stretched to the horizon
+on every side, he would have been hard put to it to say how he came to
+be there. He wore his hat, he carried his stick, but he could not
+remember how he had become possessed of either.
+
+For a time the shock of disappointment, the numbing sense of loss had
+dulled his mind. He had walked as in a dream, repeating over and over
+again that that was what she thought of him--and he had loved her. It
+was possible that in the interval he had sworn at fate, or shrieked
+against the curlews, or cursed the inhuman sky that mocked him with
+its sameness. But he did not think that he had. He felt the life in
+him too low for such outbursts. He told himself that he was a poor
+creature, a broken thing, a failure. He loved her, and--and that was
+what she thought of him.
+
+He sat on the stump of an ancient thorn-tree that had been a landmark
+on the burnt heath longer than the oldest man could remember, and he
+began to put together what she had said. He was trifling away his
+life, picking stray finds from the dust-heap of the past, making no
+man wiser and no man better, doing nothing for any one! Was she right?
+The Bohun pedigree, at which he had worked so long? He had been proud
+of his knowledge of Norman descents, proud of the research which had
+won that knowledge, proud of his taste for following up recondite
+facts. Were the knowledge, the research, the taste, all things for
+which he ought to blush? Certainly, tried by the test, _cui bono?_
+they came off but poorly. And perhaps, to sit down at his age, content
+with such employments, might seem unworthy and beneath him, if there
+were other calls upon him. But were there other calls?
+
+Time had been when his family had played a great part, not in
+Staffordshire only but in England; and then doubtless public service
+had been a tradition with them. But the tradition had waned with their
+fortunes. In these days he was only a small squire, a little more
+regarded than the new men about him; but with no ability to push his
+way in a crowd, no mastery among his fellow-men, one whom character
+and position alike cast for a silent part.
+
+Of course she knew none of these things, but with the enthusiasm of
+youth she looked to find in every man the qualities of the leading
+role. He who seldom raised his voice at Quarter Sessions or on the
+Grand Jury--to which his birth rather than his possessions called
+him--she would have had him figure among the great, lead causes,
+champion the oppressed! It was pitiful, if it had not been absurd!
+
+He walked on by and by, dwelling on the pity of it, a very unhappy
+man. He thought of the evenings in the library when she had looked
+over his shoulder, and one lamp had lighted them; of the mornings when
+the sun had gilded her hair as she bent over the task she was even
+then criticizing; of afternoons when the spirit of the chase had been
+theirs, and the sunshine and the flowers had had no charm strong
+enough to draw them from the pursuit of--alas! something that could
+make no man better or wiser. He had lost her; and if aught mattered
+apart from that, she had for ever poisoned the springs of content,
+muddied the wells of his ordered life.
+
+Beyond doubt she loved the other, for had she not, she would have
+viewed things differently. Beyond doubt in her love for the other lay
+the bias that weighted her strictures. And yet, making all allowance
+for that, there was so much of truth in what she had said, so much
+that hit the mark, that he could never be the same again, never give
+himself with pleasure to his former pursuits, never find the old life
+a thing to satisfy!
+
+And still, like the tolling of a death bell above the city's life, two
+thoughts beat on his mind again and again, and gave him intolerable
+pain. That was what she thought of him! And he had lost her! That was
+what she thought of him! And he had lost her! Her slender gracious
+figure, her smiling eyes, the glint in her hair, her goodness, her
+very self--all were for another! All were lost to him!
+
+Presently the day began to draw in, and fagged and hopeless he turned
+and began to make his way back. His road lay through Brown Heath, the
+mining village, where in all the taverns and low-browed shops they
+were beginning to light their candles. He crossed the Triangle, and
+made his way along the lane, deep in coal-dust and foul with drains,
+that ran upwards to the Chase. A pit, near at hand, had just turned
+out its shift, and in the dusk tired men, swinging tins in their
+hands, were moving by twos and threes along the track. With his bent
+shoulders and weary gait he was lost among them, he walked one with
+them; yet here and there an older man espied the difference,
+recognized him, and greeted him with rough respect. Presently the
+current slackened; something, he could not see what, dammed the
+stream. A shrewish voice rose in the darkness before him, and other
+voices, angry, clamant, protesting, struck in. A few of the men pushed
+by the trouble, others stood, here and there a man added a taunt to
+the brawl. In his turn Basset came abreast of the quarrel. He halted.
+
+A farm cart blocked the roadway. Over the tail hung three or four
+wailing children; into it a couple of sturdy men were trying to lift
+an old woman, seated in a chair. A dingy beadle and a constable, who
+formed the escort and looked ill at ease, stood beside the cart, and
+round it half a score of slatternly women pushed and shrieked and
+gesticulated. On the group and the whole dreary scene nightfall cast a
+pallid light.
+
+"What is it?" Basset asked.
+
+"They're shifting Nan Oates to the poorhouse," a man answered. "Her
+son died of the fever, and there's none to keep her or the little uns.
+She've done till now, but they'll not give her bite nor sup out of the
+House--that's the law now't seems. So the House it be!"
+
+"Her'd rather die than go!" cried a girl.
+
+"D--n them and their Bastilles!" exclaimed a younger man. "Are we free
+men, or are we not?"
+
+"Free men?" shrieked a woman, who had seized the horse's rein and was
+loudest in her outcry. "No, nor Staffordshire men, nor Englishmen, nor
+men at all, if you let an old woman that's always lived decent go to
+their stone jug this way. Give me Stafford Gaol--'tis miles afore it!"
+
+"Ay, you're at home there, Bet!" a voice in the crowd struck in, and
+the laugh that followed lightened matters.
+
+Basset looked with pity at the old woman. Her head sunk upon her
+breast, her thin shawl tucked about her shoulders, her gray hair in
+wisps on her cheeks, she gazed in tearless grief upon the hovel which
+had been home to her. "Who's to support her," he asked, "if she
+stays?"
+
+"For the bite and sup there's neighbors," a man answered. "Reverend
+Colet he said he might do something. But he's been lammed. And there's
+the rent. The boy's ten, and he made four shilling a week in the pit,
+but the new law's stopped the young uns working."
+
+"Ay, d--n all new laws!" cried another. "Poor laws and pit laws we're
+none but the worse for them!"
+
+The men were preparing to move the cart. The woman who held the rein
+clung to it. "Now, Bet, have a care!" said the constable. "Or you'll
+go home by Weeping Cross again!"
+
+"Cross? I'll cross you!" the termagant retorted. "Selling up widows'
+houses is your bread and meat! May the devil, hoof and horn, with his
+scythe on his back, go through you! If there were three men here, ay,
+men as you'd call men----"
+
+"Easy, woman, easy!"
+
+"Woman, dang you! You call me woman----"
+
+"Now, let go, Bet! You'll be in trouble else!" some one said.
+
+But she held on, and the crowd were beginning to jostle the men in
+charge when Basset stepped forward. "Steady, a moment," he said. "Will
+the guardians let the woman stop if the rent is provided?"
+
+"Who be you, master?" the constable asked. "You'd best let us do our
+duty."
+
+"Dang it, man," an old fellow interposed, "it's Squire Basset of
+Blore. Dunno you know him? Keep a civil tongue in your head, will
+you!"
+
+"Ay," chimed in another, pushing forward with a menacing gesture. "You
+be careful, Jack! You be Jack in office, but 'twon't always be so!
+'Twon't always be so!"
+
+"Mr. Colet knows the old woman?" Basset asked.
+
+"Sure, sir, the curate knows her."
+
+"Well, I'll find the rent," Basset said, addressing the constable, "if
+you'll let her be. I'll see the overseer about her in the morning."
+
+"So long as she don't come on the rates, sir?"
+
+"She'll not come on the rates for six months," Basset said. "I'll be
+answerable for so much."
+
+The men had little stomach for their task, and with a good excuse they
+were willing enough to desist. A woman fetched a stub of a pen and a
+drop of ink and Basset wrote a word for their satisfaction. While he
+did so, "O'd Staffordshire! O'd Staffordshire!" a man explained in the
+background. "Bassets of Blore--they be come from an Abbey and come to
+a Grange, as the saying is. You never heard of the Bassets of Blore,
+you be neither from Mixen nor Moor!" In old Stafford talk the rich
+lands of Cheshire stood for the "mixen" as against the bare heaths of
+the home county.
+
+In five minutes the business was done, the woman freed, and Basset was
+trudging away through the gathering darkness. But the incident had
+done him good. It had lightened his heart. It had changed ever so
+little the direction of his thoughts. Out of his own trouble he had
+stretched a hand to another; and although he knew that it was not by
+stray acts such as this that he could lift himself to Mary's standard,
+though the battle over the new Poor Law had taught him, and many
+others, that charity may be the greatest of evils, what he had done
+seemed to bring him nearer to her. A hardship of the poor, which he
+might have seen with blind eyes, or viewed from afar as the inevitable
+result of the stay of outdoor relief, had come home to him. As he
+plodded across the moor he carried with him a picture of the old woman
+with her gray hair falling about her wrinkled face, and her hands
+clasped in hopeless resignation. And he felt that his was not the only
+trouble in the world.
+
+When he had passed the wall of Beaudelays Park, Basset struck--not far
+from the Gatehouse--into the road leading down to the Vale, and a
+couple of hours after dark he plodded into Riddsley. He made for the
+Audley Arms, a long straggling house on the main street, in one part
+of two stories, in another of three, with a big bay window at the end.
+Entering the yard by the archway he ordered a gig to go to the
+Gatehouse for his portmanteau. Then he turned into the inn, and
+scribbled a note to John Audley, stating that he was called away, and
+would explain matters when he wrote again. He sent it by the driver.
+
+It was eight o'clock. "I am afraid, Squire," the landlord said, "that
+there's no fire upstairs. If you'd not mind our parlor for once,
+there's no one there and it's snug and warm."
+
+"I'll do that, Musters," he said. He was cold and famished and he was
+not sorry to avoid the company of his own thoughts. In the parlor,
+next door to the Snug, he might be alone or listen to the local gossip
+as he pleased.
+
+Ten minutes later he sat in front of a good plain meal, and for the
+time the pangs of appetite overcame those of disappointment. About
+nine the landlord entered on some errand. "I suppose, sir," he said,
+lingering to see that his guest had all that he wanted, "you've heard
+this about Mr. Mottisfont?"
+
+"No, Musters, what is it? Get a clean glass and tell me about it."
+
+"He's to resign, sir, I hear. And his son is to stand."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Along o' this about Sir Robert Peel, I understand. They have it that
+Sir Robert's going to repeal the corn taxes--some say that he's been
+for it all through, and some talk about a potato failure. Mr.
+Mottisfont sees that that'll never do for Riddsley, but he don't want
+to part from his leader, after following him all these years; so he'll
+go out and the young gentleman will take his place."
+
+"Do you think it is true about Peel?"
+
+"They're saying it, and Mr. Stubbs, he believes it. But it'll never go
+down in Riddsley, Squire. We're horn and corn men here, two to one of
+us. There's just the two small factories on the other side, and most
+of the hands haven't votes. But here's Mr. Stubbs himself."
+
+The lawyer had looked into the room in passing. Seeing Basset he
+removed his hat. "Pardon, Squire," he said. "I did not know that you
+were here."
+
+"Not at all," Basset answered. He knew the lawyer locally, and had
+seen him often--at arm's length--in the peerage suit. "Will you take a
+glass of wine with me?"
+
+Stubbs said that he would with pleasure, if he might take it
+standing--his time was short. The landlord was for withdrawing, but
+Stubbs detained him. "No, John, with Mr. Basset's leave I've a bone to
+pick with you," he said. "Who are these men who are staying here?"
+
+Musters's face fell. "Lord, Mr. Stubbs," he said, "have you heard of
+them?"
+
+"I hear most things," the lawyer answered. "But repealers talking
+treason at the Audley Arms is a thing I never thought to hear. They
+must go."
+
+The landlord rubbed his head. "I can't turn 'em out," he said. "They'd
+have the law of me. His lordship couldn't turn 'em out."
+
+"I don't know about that," Stubbs replied. "He's a good landlord, but
+he likes his own way."
+
+"But what can I do?" the stout man protested. "When they came I knew
+no more about them than a china babe. When they began to talk, so glib
+that no one could answer them, I was more took aback than anybody.
+Seems like the world's coming to an end with Manchester men coming
+here."
+
+"Perhaps it is," Basset said.
+
+Stubbs met his eye and took his meaning. Later the lawyer maintained
+that he had his suspicions from that moment. At the time he only
+answered, "Not in our day, Mr. Basset. Peel or Repeal, there's no one
+has attacked the land yet but the land has broken them. And so it will
+be this time. John, the sooner those two are out of your house the
+better."
+
+"But, dang me, sir, what am I to do?"
+
+"Put 'em in the horse trough for what I care!" the lawyer replied.
+"Good-evening, Squire. I hope the Riddsley parliament mayn't disturb
+you."
+
+The landlord followed him out, after handing something through the
+hatch, which opened into the Snug. He left the hatch a little ajar
+when he had done so, and the voices of those who gathered there
+nightly, as to a club, reached Basset. At first he caught no more than
+a word here or there, but as the debate grew warm the speakers raised
+their voices.
+
+"All mighty fine," some one said, laying down the law, "but you're
+like the rest, you Manchester chaps. You've your eyes on your own rack
+and manger!"
+
+"I'm not denying it," came the answer in a Lancashire accent, "I'm not
+saying that cheap bread won't suit us. But it isn't for that----"
+
+"No, no, of course not," the former speaker replied with heavy
+irony--Basset thought that the voice belonged to Hayward of the
+Leasows, a pompous old farmer, dubbed behind his back "The Duke." "You
+don't want low wages i' your mills, of course!"
+
+"Cheap bread doesn't make low wages," the other rejoined. "That's
+where you mistake, sir. Let me put it to you. You've known wheat
+high?"
+
+"It was seventy-seven shillings seven years back," the farmer
+pronounced. "And I ha' known it a hundred shillings a quarter for
+three years together."
+
+"And I suppose the wages at that time were the highest you've ever
+known?"
+
+"Well, no," the farmer admitted, "I'm not saying that."
+
+"And seven years ago when wheat was seventy-seven--it is fifty-six
+now--were wages higher then than now?"
+
+"Well," the Duke answered reluctantly, "I don't know as they were,
+mister, not to take notice of."
+
+"Think it out for yourself, sir," the other replied. "I don't think
+you'll find that wages are highest when wheat is highest, nor lowest
+when wheat is lowest."
+
+The farmer, more weighty than ready, snorted. But another speaker took
+up the cudgels. "Ay, but one minute," he said. "It's the price of
+wheat fixes the lowest wages. If it's two pound of bread will keep a
+man fit to work--just keep him so and no more--it's the price of bread
+fixes whether the lowest wages is eightpence a day or a shilling a
+day."
+
+"Well, but----"
+
+"Well, but by G--d, he's got you there!" the Duke cried, and smacked
+his fat thigh in triumph. "We've some sense i' Riddsley yet. Here's
+your health and song, Dr. Pepper!" At which there was some laughter.
+
+"Well, sir, I'll not say yes, nor no, to that," the Lancashire man
+replied, as soon as he could get a hearing. "But, gentlemen, it's not
+low wages we want. I'll tell you the two things we do want, and why we
+want cheap bread; first, that your laborers after they have bought
+bread may have something over to buy our woollens, and our cottons,
+and your pots. And secondly, if we don't take foreign wheat in payment
+how are foreigners to pay for our goods?"
+
+But at this half a dozen were up in arms. "How?" cried the Duke, "why
+wi' money like honest men at home! But there it is! There's the
+devil's hoof! It's foreign corn you're after! And with foreign corn
+coming in at forty shillings where'll we be?"
+
+"No wheat will ever be grown at that price," declared the free trader
+with solemnity, "here or abroad!"
+
+"So you say!" cried Hayward. "But put it at forty-five. We'll be on
+the rates, and our laborers, where'll they be?"
+
+"I don't like such talk in my house!" said Musters.
+
+"I'd certainly like an answer to that," Pepper the surgeon said. "If
+the farmers are broke where'll their laborers be but flocking to your
+mills to put down wages there!"
+
+"The laborers? Well, they're protected now, that's true."
+
+"Lucky for them!" cried two or three.
+
+"They are protected now," the stranger repeated slowly. "And I'll tell
+you what one of them said to me last year. 'I be protected,' he said,
+'and I be starving!'"
+
+"Dang his impudence!" muttered old Hayward. "That's the kind of thing
+they two Boshams at the Bridge talk. Firebrands they be!"
+
+But the shot had told; no one else spoke.
+
+"That man's wages," the Manchester man continued, "were six shillings
+a week--it was in Wiltshire. And you are protected too, sir," he
+continued, turning suddenly on the Duke. "Have you made a fortune,
+sir, farming?"
+
+"I don't know as I have," the farmer answered sulkily--and in a lower
+voice, "Dang his impudence again!"
+
+"Why not? Because you are paying a protected rent. Because you pay
+high for feeding-stuff. Because you pay poor-rates so high you'd be
+better off paying double wages. There's only one man benefits by the
+corn-tax, sir, there's only one who is truly protected, and that is
+the landlord!"
+
+But to several in the room this was treason, and they cried out upon
+it. "Ay, that's the bottom of it, mister," one roared, "down with the
+landlords and up with the cotton lords!" "There's your Reform Bill,"
+shouted another, "we've put the beggars on horseback, and none's to
+ride but them now!" A third protested that cheap bread was a herring
+drawn across the track. "They're for cheap bread for the poor man, but
+no votes! Votes would make him as good as them!"
+
+"Anyway," the stranger replied patiently, "it's clear that neither the
+farmer nor the laborer grows fat on Protection. Your wages are nine
+shillings----"
+
+"Ten and eleven!" cried two or three.
+
+"And your farmers are smothered in rates. If that's all you get by
+Protection I'd try another system."
+
+"Anyways, I'll ask you to try it out of my house," Musters said. "I've
+a good landlord and I'll not hear him abused!"
+
+"Hear! Hear! Musters! Quite right!"
+
+"I've not said an uncivil word," the Manchester man rejoined. "I shall
+leave your house to-morrow, not an hour before. I'll add only one
+word, gentlemen. Bread is the staff of life. Isn't it the last thing
+you should tax?"
+
+"True," Mr. Pepper replied. "But isn't agriculture the staple
+industry? Isn't it the base on which all other industries stand? Isn't
+it the mainstay of the best constitution in the world? And wasn't it
+the land that steadied England, and kept it clear of Bonaparte and
+Wooden Shoes----"
+
+"Ay, wooden ships against wooden shoes for ever!" broke in old
+Hayward, in great excitement. "Where were the oaks grown as beat Bony!
+No, master, protect the oak and protect the wheat, and England'll
+never lack ships nor meat! Your cotton-printers and ironfounders
+they're great folks now, great folks, with their brass and their
+votes, and so they've a mind to upset the gentry. It's the town
+against the country, and new money against the old acres that have fed
+us and our fathers before us world without end! But put one of my lads
+in your mills, and amid your muck, and in twelve months he'd not pitch
+hay, no not three hours of the day!"
+
+Basset could hear the free trader's chair grate on the sanded floor as
+he pushed it back. "Well, gentlemen," he said, "I'll not quarrel with
+you. I wish you all the protection you deserve--and I think Sir Robert
+will give it you! For us, I'm not saying that we are not thinking of
+our own interests."
+
+"Devil a doubt of that!" muttered the farmer.
+
+"And some of us may have been cold-shouldered by my lord. But you
+may take it from me that there's some of us, too, are as anxious to
+better the poor man's lot--ay, as Lord Ashley himself! That's all!
+Good-night, gentlemen."
+
+When he was gone, "Gi' me a coal for my pipe, John," said the Duke. "I
+never heard the like of that in Riddsley. He's a gallus glib chap
+that!"
+
+"I won't say," said Mr. Pepper cautiously, "that there's nothing in
+it."
+
+"Plenty in it for the cotton people and the coal people, and the
+potters. But not for us!"
+
+"But if Sir Robert sees it that way?" queried the surgeon, delicately.
+
+"Then if Sir Robert were member for Riddsley," Hayward answered
+stubbornly, "he'd get his notice to quit, Dr. Pepper! You may bet your
+hat on that!"
+
+"There's one got a lesson last night," a new-comer chimed in. "Parson
+Colet got so beaten on the moor he's in bed I am told. He's been
+speaking free these last two months, and I thought he'd get it. Three
+lads from your part I am told, Hayward."
+
+"Well, well!" the farmer replied with philosophy. "There's good in
+Colet, and maybe it'll be a lesson to him! Anyway, good or bad, he's
+going."
+
+"Going?" cried two or three, speaking at once.
+
+"I met Rector not two hours back. He'd a letter from Colet saying he
+was going to preach the same rubbish here as he's fed 'em with at
+Brown Heath--cheap bread and the rest of it. Rector's been to him--he
+wouldn't budge, and he got his notice to quit right straight. Rector
+was fit to burst when I saw him."
+
+"Colet be a born fool!" cried Musters. "Who's like to employ him after
+that? Wheat is tithe and the parsons are as fond of their tithe as any
+man. You may look a long way before you'll find a parson that's a
+repealer."
+
+"Serves Colet right!" said one. "But I'm sorry for him all the same.
+There's worse men than the Reverend Colet."
+
+Basset could never say afterwards what moved him at this point, but
+whatever it was he got up and went out. The boots was lounging at the
+door of the inn. He asked the man where Mr. Colet lodged, and learning
+that it was in Stream Street, near the Maypole, he turned that way.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ STRANGE BEDFELLOWS
+
+
+Had any one told Basset, even that morning, that before night he would
+seek the advice of the Riddsley curate, he would have met the
+suggestion with unmeasured scorn. Probably he had not since his
+college days spent an hour in intimate talk with a man so far from him
+in fortune and position, and so unlike him in those things which bring
+men together. Nor in the act of approaching Colet--under the impulse
+of a few casual words and a sudden thought--was he able to understand
+or to justify himself.
+
+But when he rose to his feet after an hour spent beside the curate's
+dingy hearth--over the barber's shop in Stream Street--he did not need
+to justify the step. He had said little but he had heard much. Colet's
+tongue had been loosened by the sacrifice he had made, and inspired by
+that love of his kind which takes refuge in the most unlikely shapes,
+he had poured forth at length his beliefs and his aspirations. And
+Basset, whose world had tottered since morning, for whom common things
+had lost their poise and life its wonted aspect, began to think that
+he had found in the other's aims a new standpoint and the offer of a
+new beginning.
+
+The dip candles, which had been many times snuffed, were burning low
+when the two rose. The curate, whose pale cheeks matched his bandaged
+head, had a last word to say. "Of the need I am sure," he repeated, as
+Basset's eye sought the cheap clock on the mantelpiece. "If I have not
+proved that, the fault, sir, is mine. But the means--they are a
+question for you; almost any man may see them more clearly than I do.
+By votes, it may be, and so through the people working out their own
+betterment. Or by social measures, as Lord Ashley thinks, through the
+classes that are fitted by education to judge for all. Or by the wider
+spread, as I hold, of self-sacrifice by all for all--to me, the ideal.
+But of one thing I am convinced; that this tax upon the commonest
+food, which takes so much more in proportion from the poor than from
+the rich, is wrong. Certainly wrong, Mr. Basset,--unless the gain and
+the loss can be equally spread. That's another matter."
+
+"I will not say any more now," Basset answered cautiously, "than that
+I am inclined to your view. But for yourself, are there not others who
+will not pay so dearly for maintaining it?"
+
+A redness spread over the curate's long horse-face. "No, Mr. Basset,"
+he rejoined, "if I left my duty to others I should pay still more
+dearly. I am my own man. I will remain so."
+
+"But what will you do when you leave here?" Basset inquired, casting
+his eyes round the shabby room. He did not see it as he had seen it on
+his entrance. He discerned that, small as it was, and shabby as it
+was, it might be a man's home. "I fear that there are few incumbents
+who hold your views."
+
+"There are absentees," Colet replied with a smile, "who are not so
+particular; and in the north there are a few who think as I think. I
+shall not starve."
+
+"I have an old house on the Derbyshire border twenty miles from here,"
+Basset said. "A servant and his wife keep it, and during some months
+of the year I live there. It is an out-of-the-way place, Mr. Colet,
+but it is at your service--if you don't get work?"
+
+The curate seemed to shrink into himself. "I couldn't trespass on
+you," he said.
+
+"I hope you will," Basset replied. "In the meantime, who was the man
+you quoted a few minutes ago?"
+
+"Francis Place. He is a good man though not as we"--he touched his
+threadbare cloth--"count goodness. He is something of a Socialist,
+something of a Chartist--he might frighten you, Mr. Basset. But he has
+the love of the people in him."
+
+"I will see him."
+
+"He has been a tailor."
+
+That hit Basset fairly in the face. "Good heavens!" he said. "A
+tailor?"
+
+"Yes," Colet replied, smiling. "But a very uncommon tailor. Let me
+tell you why I quoted him. Because, though he is not a Christian, he
+has ideals. He aims higher than he can shoot, while the aims of the
+Manchester League, though I agree with them upon the corn-tax, seem to
+me to be bounded by the material and warped by their own interests."
+
+Basset nodded. "You have thought a good deal on these things," he
+said.
+
+"I live among the poor. I have them always before me."
+
+"And I have thought so little that I need time. You must think no
+worse of me if I wait a while. And now, good-night."
+
+But the other did not take the hand held out to him. He was staring at
+the candle. "I am not clear that I have been quite frank with you," he
+said awkwardly. "You have offered me the shelter of your house though
+I am a stranger, Mr. Basset, and though you must suspect that to
+harbor me may expose you to remark. Well, I may be tempted to avail
+myself of your kindness. But I cannot do so unless you know more of my
+circumstances."
+
+"I know all that is necessary."
+
+"You don't know what I am going to tell you," Colet persisted. "And I
+think that you should. I am going to marry the daughter of your
+uncle's servant, Toft."
+
+"Good Lord!" cried Basset. This was a second and more serious blow. It
+brought him down from the clouds.
+
+"That shocks you, Mr. Basset," the curate continued with dignity,
+"that I should marry one in her position? Well, I am not called upon
+to justify it. Why I think her worthy, and more than worthy to share
+my life, is my business. I only trouble you with the matter because
+you have made me an offer which you might not have made had you known
+this."
+
+Basset did not deny the fact. He could not, indeed. His taste, his
+prejudice, his traditions all had received a blow, all were up in
+arms; and, for the moment, at any rate he repented of his visit. He
+felt that in stepping out of the normal round he had made a mistake.
+He should have foreseen, he should have known that he would meet with
+such shocks. "You have certainly astonished me," he said after a pause
+of dismay. "I cannot think the match suitable, Mr. Colet. May I ask if
+my uncle knows of this?"
+
+"Miss Audley knows of it."
+
+"But--you cannot yourself think it suitable!"
+
+"I have," Colet replied dryly, "or rather I had seventy pounds a year.
+What girl, born in comfort, gently bred, sheltered from childhood
+could I ask to share that? How could I, with so little in the present
+and no prospects, ask a gentlewoman to share my lot?"
+
+Basset did not reply, but he was not convinced. A clergyman to marry a
+servant, good and refined as Etruria was! It seemed to him to be
+unseemly, to be altogether wrong.
+
+Colet too was silent a moment. Then, "I am glad I have told you this,"
+he said. "I shall not now trespass on you. On the other hand, I hope
+that you may still do something--and with your name, you can do
+much--for the good cause. If rumor goes for anything, many will in the
+next few months examine the ground on which they stand. It will be
+much, if what I have said has weight with you."
+
+He spoke with constraint, but he spoke like a man, and Basset owned
+his equality while he resented it. He felt that he ought to renew his
+offer of hospitality, but he could not--reserve and shyness had him
+again in their grip. He muttered something about thinking it over,
+added a word or two of thanks--which were cut short by the flickering
+out of the candle--and a minute later he was in the dark deserted
+street, and walking back to his inn--not over well content with
+himself, if the truth be told.
+
+Either he should not have gone, he felt, or he should have gone the
+whole way, sunk his ideas of caste, and carried the thing through.
+What was it to him if the man was going to marry a servant?
+
+But that was a detail. The main point was that he should not have
+gone. It had been a foolish impulse--he saw it now--which had taken
+him to the barber's shop; and one which he might have known that he
+would repent. He ought to have foreseen that he could not place
+himself on Colet's level without coming into collision with him; that
+he could not draw wisdom from him without paying toll.
+
+An impossible person, he thought, a man of ideas quite unlike his own!
+And yet the man had spoken well and ably, and spoken from experience.
+He had told the things that he had seen as he passed from house to
+house, hard, sad facts, the outcome of rising numbers and falling
+wages, of over-production, of mouths foodless and unwanted. And all
+made worse, as he maintained, by this tax on bread, that barely
+touched the rich man's income, yet took a heavy toll from the small
+wage.
+
+As he recalled some of the things that he had heard, Basset felt his
+interest revive. Colet had dealt with facts; he had attempted no
+oratory, he had cast no glamour over them. But he had brought to bear
+upon them the light of an ideal--the Christian ideal of unselfishness;
+and his hearer, while he doubted, while he did not admit that the
+solution was practical, owned its beauty.
+
+For he too, as we know, had had his aspirations, though he had rarely
+thought of turning them into action. Instead, he had hidden them
+behind the commonplace; and in this he had matched the times, which
+were commonplace. For the country lay in the trough of the wave.
+Neither the fine fury of the generation which had adored the rights of
+man, nor the splendid endurance which the great war had fostered, nor
+the lesser ardors of the Reform era, which found its single panacea in
+votes, touched or ennobled it. Great wealth and great poverty,
+jostling one another, marked a material age, seeking remedies in
+material things, despising arms, decrying enthusiasm; an age which
+felt, but hardly bowed as yet, to the breath of the new spirit.
+
+But Basset--perhaps because the present offered no great prospect to
+the straitened squire--had had his glimpses of a life higher and
+finer, devoted to something above the passing whim and the day's
+indulgence, a life that should not be useless to those who came after
+him. Was it possible that he now heard the call? Could this be the
+crusade of which he had idly dreamed? Had the trumpet sounded at the
+moment of his utmost need?
+
+If only it were so! During the evening he had kept his sorrow at bay
+as well as he could, distracting his thoughts with passing objects.
+Now, as the boots ushered him up the close-smelling stairs to the
+inn's best room, and he stood in his hat and coat, looking on the cold
+bare aspect and the unfamiliar things--he owned himself desolate. The
+thought of Mary, of his hopes and plans and of the end of these,
+returned upon him in an irresistible flood. The waters which he had
+stemmed all day, though all day they had lapped his lips, overwhelmed
+him with their bitterness. Mary! He had loved her and she--he knew
+what she thought of him.
+
+He could not take up the old life. She had made an end of that, the
+rather as from this time onward the Gatehouse would be closed to him
+by her presence. And the old house near Wootton where he had been wont
+to pass part of his time? That hardly met his needs or his
+aspirations. Unhappy as he was, he could not see himself sitting down
+in idleness, to brood and to rust in a home so remote, so quiet, so
+lost among the stony hills that the country said of it,
+
+
+ "Wootton under Weaver
+ Where God came never!"
+
+
+No, he could hardly face that. Hitherto he had not been called upon to
+say what he would do with his life. Now the question was put to him
+and he had to answer it. He had to answer it. For many minutes he sat
+on the bed staring before him. And from time to time he sighed.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ THE GREAT HOUSE AT BEAUDELAYS
+
+
+It was about a week after this that two men stood on the neglected
+lawn, contemplating the long blind front of Beaudelays House. With all
+its grandeur the house lacked the dignity of ruin, for ruin presumes a
+past, and the larger part of the Great House had no past. The ancient
+wing that had welcomed brides, and echoed the laughter of children and
+given back the sullen notes of the passing-bell did not suffice to
+redeem the whole. By night the house might pass; the silent bulk
+imposed on the eye. By day it required no effort of fancy to see the
+scaffold still clinging to the brickwork, or to discern that the grand
+entrance had never opened to guest or neighbor, that everyday life had
+never gazed through the blank windows of the long facade.
+
+The house, indeed, was not only dead. It had never lived.
+
+Certainly Nature had done something to shroud the dead. The lawn was
+knee-deep in weeds, and the evergreens about it had pushed out
+embracing arms to narrow the vista before the windows. At the lower
+end of the lawn a paved terrace, the width of the house, promised a
+freer air, but even here grass sprouted between the flags, and elders
+labored to uproot the stately balustrade that looked on the lower
+garden. This garden, once formal, was now a tangle of vegetation, a
+wilderness amid whose broad walks Venuses slowly turned to Dryads, and
+classic urns lay in fragments, split by the frosts of some excessive
+winter. Only the prospect of the Trent Valley and the Derbyshire
+foot-hills, visible beyond the pleasance, still pleased; and this view
+was vague and sad and distant. For the Great House, as became its
+greatness, shunned the public eye, and, lying far back, set a wide
+stretch of park between its bounds and the verge of the upland.
+
+One of the two men was the owner. The other who bore a bunch of keys
+was Stubbs. Both had a depressed air. It would have been hard to say
+which of the two entered more deeply into the sadness of the place.
+
+Presently my lord turned his back on the house. "The view is fine," he
+said. "The only fine thing about the place," he added bitterly. "Isn't
+there a sort of Belvedere below the garden?"
+
+"There is, my lord. But I fear that it is out of repair."
+
+"Like everything else! There, don't think I'm blaming you for it, man.
+You cannot make bricks without straw. But let us look at this
+Belvedere."
+
+They descended the steps, and passed slowly along the grass-grown
+walk, now and again stepping aside to avoid the clutch of a straggling
+rose bough, or the fragments of a broken pillar. They paused to
+inspect the sundial, a giant Butterfly with closed wings, a replica of
+the stone monster in the Yew Walk. Lord Audley read the inscription,
+barely visible through the verdigris that stained the dial-plate:
+
+
+ "Non sine sole volo!"
+
+
+"Just so!" he said. "A short life and a merry one!"
+
+A few paces farther along the walk they stopped to examine the basin
+of the great fountain. Cracked from edge to centre, and become a
+shallow bed of clay and weeds, it was now as unsightly as it had been
+beautiful in the days when fair women leaning over it had fed the gold
+fish, or viewed their mirrored faces in its waters.
+
+"The fortunes of the Audleys in a nutshell!" muttered the unlucky
+owner. And turning on his heel, "Confound it, Stubbs," he cried, "I
+have had as much of this as I can stand! A little more and I shall go
+back and cut my throat! It is beginning to rain, too. D--n the
+Belvedere! Let us go into the house. That cannot be as bad as this."
+
+Without waiting for an answer, or looking behind him, he strode back
+the way they had come. Stubbs followed in silence, and they regained
+the lawn.
+
+"I tell you what it is," Audley continued, letting the agent come
+abreast of him. "You must find some vulgarian to take the place--iron
+man or cotton man, I don't care who he is, if he has got the cash I
+You must let it, Stubbs. You must let it! It's a white elephant, it's
+the d--ndest White Elephant man ever had!"
+
+The lawyer shook his head. "You may be sure, my lord," he said mildly,
+"I should have advised that long ago, if it were possible. But we
+couldn't let it in its present state--for a short term; and we have no
+more power to lease it for a long one than, as your lordship knows, we
+have power to sell it."
+
+The other swore. At the outset he had scarcely felt his poverty. But
+he was beginning to feel it. There were moments such as this when his
+withers were wrung; when the consequence which the title had brought
+failed to soften the hardships of his lot--a poor peer with a vast
+house. Had he tried to keep the Great House in repair it would have
+swallowed the whole income of the peerage--a sum which, as it was,
+barely sufficed for his needs as a bachelor.
+
+Already Stubbs had hinted that there was one way out--a rich marriage.
+And Audley had received the hint with the easiness of a man who was in
+no haste to marry and might, likely enough, marry where money was. But
+once or twice during the last few days, which they had been spending
+in a review of the property, my lord had shown irritation. When an old
+farmer had said to his face, that he must bring home a bride with a
+good fat chest, "and his lordship would be what his forbears had
+been," the great man, in place of a laughing answer, had turned glumly
+away.
+
+Presently the two halted at the door of the north wing. Stubbs
+unlocked it and pushed it open. They entered an ante-room of moderate
+size.
+
+"Faugh!" Audley cried. "Open a window! Break one if necessary."
+
+Stubbs succeeded in opening one, and they passed on into the great
+hall, a room sixty feet long and open to the roof, a gallery running
+round it. A withdrawing-room of half the length opened at one end, and
+midway along the inner side a short passage led to a second hall--the
+servants' hall--the twin of this. Together they formed an H, and were
+probably a Jacobean copy of a Henry the Eighth building. A long table,
+some benches, and a score of massive chairs furnished the room.
+Between the windows hung a few ragged pictures, and on either side of
+the farther door a piece of tapestry hung askew.
+
+Audley looked about him. In this room eighty years before the old lord
+had held his revels. The two hearths had glowed with logs, a hundred
+wax-lights had shone on silver and glass and the rosy tints of old
+wine. Guests in satin and velvet, henchmen and led captains, had
+filled it with laughter and jest, and song. With a foot on the table
+they had toasted the young king--not stout Farmer George, not the old,
+mad monarch, but the gay young sovereign. To-day desolation reigned.
+The windows gray with dirt let in a grisly light. All was bare and
+cold and rusty--the webs of spiders crossed the very hearths. The old
+lord, mouldering in his coffin, was not more unlike that Georgian
+reveller than was the room of to-day unlike the room of eighty years
+before.
+
+Perhaps the thought struck his descendant. "God! What a
+charnel-house!" he cried. "To think that men made merry in this room.
+It's a vault, it's a grave! Let us get away from it. What's through,
+man?"
+
+They passed into the withdrawing-room, where panels of needlework of
+Queen Anne's time, gloomy with age, filled the wall spaces, and a few
+pieces of furniture crouched under shrouds of dust. As they stood
+gazing two rats leapt from a screen of Cordovan leather that lay in
+tatters on the floor. The rats paused an instant to stare at the
+intruders, then fled in panic.
+
+The younger man advanced to one of the panels in the wall. "A hunting
+scene?" he said. "These may be worth money some day."
+
+The lawyer looked doubtful. "It will be a long day first, I am
+afraid," he said. "It's funereal stuff at the best, my lord."
+
+"At any rate it is out of reach of the rats," Lord Audley answered. He
+cast a look of distaste at the shreds of the screen. He touched them
+with his foot. A third rat sprang out and fled squeaking to covert.
+"Oh, d--n!" he said. "Let us see something else."
+
+The lawyer led the way upstairs to the ghostly, echoing gallery that
+ran round the hall. They glanced into the principal guest-room, which
+was over the drawing-room. Then they went by the short passage of the
+H to the range of bedrooms over the servants' hall. For the most part
+they opened one from the other.
+
+"The parents slept in the outer and the young ladies in the inner,"
+Audley said, smiling. "Gad! it tells a tale of the times!"
+
+Stubbs opened the nearest door and recoiled. "Take care, my lord!" he
+said. "Here are the bats!"
+
+"Faugh! What a smell! Can't you keep them out?"
+
+"We tried years ago--I hate them like poison--but it was of no use.
+They are in all these upper rooms."
+
+They were. For when Stubbs, humping his shoulders as under a shower,
+opened a second door, the bats streamed forth in a long silent
+procession, only to stream back again as silently. In a dusky corner
+of the second room a cluster, like a huge bunch of grapes, hung to one
+of the rafters. Now and again a bat detached itself and joined the
+living current that swept without a sound through the shadowy rooms.
+
+"There's nothing beyond these rooms?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then let us go down. Rats and bats and rottenness! _Non sine sole
+volo!_ We may not, but the bats do. Let us go down! Or no! I was
+forgetting. Where is the Muniment Room?"
+
+"This way, my lord," Stubbs replied, turning with suspicious
+readiness--the bats were his pet aversion. "I brought a candle and
+some of the new lucifers. This way, my lord."
+
+He led the way down to a door set in a corner of the ante-room. He
+unlocked this and they found themselves at the foot of a circular
+staircase. On the farther side of the stairfoot was another door which
+led, Stubbs explained, into the servants' quarters. "This turret," he
+added, "is older even than the wing, and forms no part of the H. It
+was retained because it supplied a second staircase, and also a short
+cut from the servants' hall to the entrance. The Muniment Room is over
+this lobby on the first floor. Allow me to go first, my lord."
+
+The air was close, but not unpleasant, and the stairs were clean. On
+the first floor a low-browed door, clamped and studded with iron,
+showed itself. Stubbs halted before it. There was a sputter. A light
+shone out. "Wonderful invention!" he said. "Electric telegraph not
+more wonderful, though marvellous invention that, my lord."
+
+"Yes," the other answered dryly. "But--when were you here last,
+Stubbs?"
+
+"Not for a twelvemonth, my lord."
+
+"Leave your candle?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then what's that?" The young man pointed to something that lay in the
+angle between a stair and the wall.
+
+"God bless my soul!" the lawyer cried. "It's a candle."
+
+"And clean. It has not been there a week. Who has been here, my
+friend?"
+
+Stubbs reflected. "No one with my authority," he said. "But if the
+devil himself has been here," he continued, stoutly recovering
+himself, "he can have done no harm. I can prove that in five minutes,
+my lord--if you will kindly hold the light." He inserted a large key
+in the lock, and with an effort, he shot back the bolts. He pushed
+open the door and signed to Lord Audley to enter.
+
+He did so, and Stubbs followed. They stood and looked about them. They
+were in a whitewashed chamber twelve feet square, clean, bare, empty.
+The walls gave back the light so that the one candle lit the place
+perfectly.
+
+"It's as good as air-tight," Stubbs said with pride. "And you see, my
+lord, we swept it as bare as the palm of my hand. I can answer for it
+that not a shred of paper or a piece of wax was left."
+
+Audley, gazing about him, seemed satisfied. His face relaxed. "Yes,"
+he said, "you could not overlook anything in a place like this. I'm
+glad I've seen it."
+
+He was turning to go when a thought struck him. He lowered the light
+and scanned the floor. "All the same, somebody has been here!" he
+exclaimed. "There's one of the things you are so pleased with--a
+lucifer!"
+
+Stubbs stooped and looked. "A lucifer?" he repeated. He picked up the
+bit of charred wood and examined it. "Now how did that come here? I
+never used one till six months ago."
+
+My lord frowned. "Who is it?" he asked.
+
+"Some one, I fear, who has had a key made," the agent answered,
+shaking his head,
+
+"I can see that for myself. But has he learned anything?"
+
+Stubbs stared. "There's nothing to learn, my lord," he said. "You can
+see that. Whoever he is, he has cracked the nut and found no kernel!"
+
+The young man looked round him again. He nodded. "I suppose so," he
+said. But he seemed ill at ease and inclined to find fault. He threw
+the light of the candle this way and that, as if he expected the clean
+white walls to tell a tale. "What's that?" he asked suddenly. "A
+crack? Or what?"
+
+Stubbs looked, passed his hand over the mark on the wall, effaced it.
+"No, my lord, a cobweb," he said. "Nothing."
+
+There was no more to be seen, yet Audley seemed loth to go. At length
+he turned and went out. Stubbs closed and locked the door behind them,
+then he took the candle from his lordship and invited him to go down
+before him. Still the young man hesitated. "I suppose we can learn
+nothing more?" he said.
+
+"Nothing, my lord," Stubbs answered. "To tell you the truth, I have
+long thought Mr. John mad, and it is possible that his madness has
+taken this turn. But I am equally sure that there is nothing for him
+to discover, if he spends every day of his life here."
+
+"All the same I don't like it," the owner objected. "Whoever has been
+here has no right here. It is odd that I had some notion of this
+before we came. You may depend upon it that this was why he fixed
+himself at the Gatehouse."
+
+"He may have had something of the sort in his mind," Stubbs admitted.
+"But I don't think so, my lord. More probably, being here and idle, he
+took to wandering in for lack of something to do."
+
+"And by and by, had a key made and strayed into the Muniment Room! No,
+that won't do, Stubbs. And frankly there should be closer supervision
+here. It should not have remained for me to discover this."
+
+He began to descend, leaving Stubbs to digest the remark; who for his
+part thought honestly that too much was being made of the matter.
+Probably the intruder was John Audley; the man had a bee in his
+bonnet, and what more likely than that he should be taken with a craze
+to haunt the house which he believed was his own? But the agent was
+too prudent to defend himself while the young man's vexation was
+fresh. He followed him down in silence, and before many minutes had
+passed, they were in the open air, and had locked the door behind
+them.
+
+Clouds hung low on the tops of the trees, mist veiled the view, and a
+small rain was falling on the wet lawn. Nevertheless the young man
+moved into the open. "Come this way," he said.
+
+The lawyer turned up the collar of his coat and followed him
+unwillingly. "Where does he get in?" my lord asked. It seemed as if
+the longer he dwelt on the matter the less he liked it. "Not by that
+door--the lock is rusty. The key had shrieked in it. Probably he
+enters by one of the windows in the new part."
+
+He walked towards the middle of the lawn and Stubbs, thankful that he
+wore Wellington boots, followed him.
+
+The lawyer thought that he had never seen the house wear so dreary an
+aspect as it wore under the gray weeping sky. But his lordship was
+more practical. "These windows look the most likely," he said after a
+short survey: and he dragged his unwilling attendant to the point he
+had marked.
+
+A nearer view strengthened his suspicions. On the sill of one of the
+windows were scratches and stains. "You see?" he said. "It should not
+have been left to me to discover this! Probably John Audley comes from
+the Gatehouse by the Yew Walk." He turned to measure the distance with
+his eye, the distance which divided the spot from the Iron Gate.
+"That's it," he said, "he comes----"
+
+Then, "Good G--d!" he muttered. "Look! Look!" Stubbs looked. They both
+looked. Beyond the lawn, on the farther side of the iron grille and
+clinging to it with both hands, a man stood bareheaded under the rain.
+Whether he had come uncovered, or his hat had been jerked from him by
+some movement caused by their appearance, they could not tell; nor how
+long he had stood thus, gazing at them through the bars. But they
+could see that his eyes never wavered, that his hands gripped the
+iron, and the two knew by instinct that in the intensity of his hate,
+the man was insensible alike to the rain that drenched him, and to the
+wind that blew out the skirts of his thin black coat.
+
+Even Stubbs held his breath. Even he felt that there was something
+uncanny and ominous in the appearance. For the gazer was John Audley.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ TO THE RESCUE
+
+
+Stubbs was the first to collect himself, but a minute elapsed before
+he spoke. Then, "He must be mad," he cried, "mad, to expose himself to
+the weather at his age. If I had not seen it, I couldn't believe it!"
+
+"I suppose it is John Audley?"
+
+"Yes." Then raising his voice, "My lord! I don't think I would go to
+him now!"
+
+But Audley was already striding across the lawn towards the gate. The
+lawyer hesitated, gave way, and followed him.
+
+They were within twenty paces of the silent watcher when he moved--up
+to that time he might have been a lay figure. He shook one hand in the
+air, as if he would beat them off, then he turned and walked stiffly
+away. Half a dozen steps took him out of sight. The Yew Walk swallowed
+him.
+
+But, quickly as he vanished, the lawyer had had time to see that he
+staggered. "I fear, my lord, he is ill," he said. "He will never reach
+the Gatehouse in that state. I had better follow him."
+
+"Why the devil did he come here?" Audley retorted savagely. The
+watcher's strange aspect, his face, white against the dark yews, his
+stillness, his gesture, a something ominous in all, had shaken him.
+"If he had stopped at home----"
+
+"Still----"
+
+"D--n him, it's his affair!"
+
+"Still we cannot leave him if he has fallen, my lord," Stubbs replied
+with decision. And without waiting for his employer's assent he tried
+the gate. It was locked, but in a trice he found the key on his bunch,
+turned it, and pushed back the gate. Audley noticed that it moved
+silently on its hinges.
+
+Stubbs, the gate open, began to feel ashamed of his impulse. Probably
+there was nothing amiss after all. But he had hardly looked along the
+path before he uttered a cry, and hurrying forward, stooped over a
+bundle of clothes that lay in the middle of the walk. It was John
+Audley. Apparently he had tripped over a root and lain where he had
+fallen.
+
+Stubbs's cry summoned the other, who followed him through the gate, to
+find him on his knees supporting the old man's head. The sight
+recalled Audley to his better self. The mottled face, the staring
+eyes, the helpless limbs shocked him. "Good G--d!" he cried, "you were
+right, Stubbs! He might have died if we had left him."
+
+"He would have died," Stubbs answered. "As it is--I am not sure." He
+opened the waistcoat, felt for the beating of the heart, bent his ear
+to it. "No, I don't think he's gone," he said, "but the heart is
+feeble, very feeble. We must have brandy! My lord, you are the more
+active. Will you go to the Gatehouse--there is no nearer place--and
+get some? And something to carry him home! A hurdle if there is
+nothing better, and a couple of men?"
+
+"Right!" Audley cried.
+
+"And don't lose a minute, my lord! He's nearly gone."
+
+Audley stripped off his overcoat. "Wrap this about him!" he said. And
+before the other could answer he had started for the Gatehouse, at a
+pace which he believed that he could keep up.
+
+Pad, pad, my lord ran under the yew trees, swish, swish across the
+soaking grass, about the great Butterfly. Pad, pad, again through the
+gloom under the yews! Not too fast, he told himself--he was a big man
+and he must save himself. Now he saw before him the opening into the
+park, and the light falling on the pale turf. And then, at a point not
+more than twenty yards short of the open ground, he tripped over a
+root, tried to recover himself, struck another root, and fell.
+
+The fall shook him, but he was young, and he was quickly on his feet.
+He paused an instant to brush the dirt from his hands and knees; and
+it was during that instant that his inbred fear of John Audley, and
+the certainty that if John Audley died he need fear no more, rose
+before him.
+
+Yes, if he died--this man who was even now plotting against him--there
+was an end of that fear! There was an end of uneasiness, of anxiety,
+of the alarm that assailed him in the small hours, of the forebodings
+that showed him stripped of title and income and consequence. Stripped
+of all!
+
+Five seconds passed, and he still stood, engaged with his hands. Five
+more; it was his knees he was brushing now--and very carefully.
+Another five--the sweat broke out on his brow though the day was cold.
+Twenty seconds, twenty-five! His face showed white in the gloom. And
+still he stood. He glanced behind him. No one could see him.
+
+But the movement discovered the man to himself, and with an oath he
+broke away. He thrust the damning thought from him, he sprang forward.
+He ran. In ten strides he was in the open park, and trotting steadily,
+his elbows to his sides, across the sward. The blessed light was about
+him, the wind swept past his ears, the cleansing rain whipped his
+face. Thank God, he had left behind him the heavy air and noisome
+scent of the yews. He hated them. He would cut them all down some day.
+
+For in a strange way he associated them with the temptation which had
+assailed him. And he was thankful, most thankful, that he had put that
+temptation from him--had put it from him, when most men, he thought,
+would have succumbed to it. Thank God, he had not! The farther he
+went, indeed, the better he felt. By the time he saw the Gatehouse
+before him, he was sure that few men, exposed to that temptation,
+would have overcome it. For if John Audley died what a relief it would
+be! And he had looked very ill; he had looked like a man at the point
+of death. The brandy could not reach him under--well, under half an
+hour. Half an hour was a long time, when a man looked like that. "I'll
+do my best," he thought. "Then if he dies, well and good. I've always
+been afraid of him."
+
+He did not spare himself, but he was not in training, and he was well
+winded when he reached the Gatehouse. A last effort carried him
+between the Butterflies, and he halted on the flags of the courtyard.
+A woman, whose skirts were visible, but whose head and shoulders were
+hidden by an umbrella, was standing in the doorway on his left,
+speaking to some one in the house. She heard his footsteps and turned.
+
+"Lord Audley!" she exclaimed--for it was Mary Audley. Then with a
+woman's quickness, "You have come from my uncle?" she cried. "Is he
+ill?"
+
+Audley nodded. "I am come for some brandy," he gasped.
+
+She did not waste a moment. She sped into the house, and to the
+dining-room. "I had missed him," she cried over her shoulder. "The
+man-servant is away. I hoped he might be with him."
+
+In a trice she had opened a cellarette and taken from it a decanter of
+brandy. Then she saw that he could not carry this at any speed, and
+she turned to the sideboard and took a wicker flask from a drawer.
+With a steady hand and without the loss of a minute--he found her
+presence of mind admirable--she filled this.
+
+As she corked it, Mrs. Toft appeared, wiping her hands on her apron.
+"Dear, dear, miss," she said, "is the master bad? But it's no wonder
+when he, that doesn't quit the fire for a week together, goes out like
+this? And Toft away and all!" She stared at his lordship. Probably she
+knew him by sight.
+
+"Will you get his bed warmed, Mrs. Toft," Mary answered. She gave Lord
+Audley the flask. "Please don't lose a moment," she urged. "I am
+following--oh yes, I am. But you will go faster."
+
+She had not a thought, he saw, for the disorder of her dress, or for
+her hair dishevelled by the wind, and scarce a thought for him. He
+decided that he had never seen her to such advantage, but it was no
+time for compliments, nor was she in the mood for them. Without more
+he nodded and set off on his return journey--he had not been in the
+house three minutes. By and by he looked back, and saw that Mary was
+following on his heels. She had snatched up a sun-bonnet, discarded
+the umbrella, and, heedless of the rain, was coming after him as
+swiftly and lightly as Atalanta of the golden apple. "Gad, she's not
+one of the fainting sort!" he reflected; and also that if he had given
+way to that d--d temptation he could not have looked her in the face.
+"As it is," his mind ran, "what are the odds the old boy's not dead
+when we get there? If he is--I am safe! If he is not, I might do worse
+than think of her. It would checkmate him finely. More"--he looked
+again over his shoulder--"she's a fine mover, by Gad, and her figure's
+perfect! Even that rag on her head don't spoil her!" Whereupon he
+thought of a certain Lady Adela with whom he was very friendly, who
+had political connections and would some day have a plum. The
+comparison was not, in the matter of fineness and figure, to Lady
+Adela's advantage. Her lines were rather on the Flemish side.
+
+Meanwhile Mary was feeling anything but an Atalanta. Wind and rain and
+wet grass, loosened hair and swaying skirts do not make for romance.
+But in her anxiety she gave small thought to these. Her one instinct
+was to help. With all his oddity her uncle had been kind to her, and
+she longed to show him that she was grateful. And he was her one
+relative. She had no one else in the world. He had given her what of
+home he had, and ease, and a security which she had never known
+before. Were she to lose him now--the mere fancy spurred her to fresh
+exertions, and in spite of a pain in her side, in spite of clinging
+skirts, and shoes that threatened to leave her feet, she pushed on.
+She was not far behind Audley when he reached the Yew Walk.
+
+She saw him plunge into it, she followed, and was on the scene not
+many seconds later. When she caught sight of the little group kneeling
+about the prostrate man, that sense of tragedy, and of the inevitable,
+which assails at such a time, shook her. The thing always possible,
+never expected, had happened at last.
+
+Then the coolness which women find in these emergencies returned. She
+knelt between the men, took the insensible head on her arm, held out
+her other hand for the cup. "Has he swallowed any?" she asked, taking
+command of the situation.
+
+"No," Toft answered--and she became aware that the man with Lord
+Audley was the servant.
+
+She waited for no more, she tilted the cup, and by some knack she
+succeeded where Toft had failed. A little of the spirit was swallowed.
+She improvised a pillow and laid the head down on it. "The lower the
+better," she murmured. She felt the hands and began to rub one. "Rub
+the other," she said to Toft. "The first thing to do is to get him
+home! Have you a carriage? How near can you bring it, Lord Audley?"
+
+"We can bring it to the park at the end of the walk," he answered. "My
+agent has gone to fetch it."
+
+"Will you hasten it?" she replied. "Toft will stay with me. And bring
+something, please, on which you can carry him to it."
+
+"At once," Audley answered, and he went off in the direction of the
+Great House.
+
+"I've seen him as bad before, Miss," Toft said. "I found that he had
+gone out without his hat and I followed him, but I could not trace him
+at once. I don't think you need feel alarmed."
+
+Certainly the face had lost its mottled look, the eyes were now shut,
+the limbs lay more naturally. "If he were only at home!" Mary
+answered. "But every moment he is exposed to the cold is against him.
+He must be wet through."
+
+She induced the patient to swallow another mouthful of brandy, and
+with their eyes on his face the two watched for the first gleam of
+consciousness. It came suddenly. John Audley's eyes opened. He stared
+at them.
+
+His mind, however, still wandered. "I knew it!" he muttered. "They
+could not be there and I not know it! But the wall! The wall is
+thick--thick and----" He was silent again.
+
+The rambling mind is to those who are not wont to deal with it a most
+uncanny thing, and Mary looked at Toft to see what he made of it. But
+the servant had eyes only for his master. He was gazing at him with an
+absorbed face.
+
+"Ay, a thick wall!" the sick man murmured. "They may look and look,
+they'll not see through it." He was silent a moment, then, "All bare!"
+he murmured. "All bare!" He chuckled faintly, and tried to raise
+himself, but sank back. "Fools!" he whispered, "fools, when in ten
+minutes if they took out a brick----"
+
+The servant cut him short. "Here's his lordship!" he cried. He spoke
+so sharply that Mary looked up in surprise, wondering what was amiss.
+Lord Audley was within three or four paces of them--the carpet of yew
+leaves had deadened his footsteps. "Here's his lordship, sir!" Toft
+repeated in the same tone, his mouth close to John Audley's ear.
+
+The servant's manner shocked Mary. "Hush, Toft!" she said. "Do you
+want to startle him?"
+
+"His lordship will startle him," Toft retorted. He looked over his
+shoulder, and without ceremony he signed to Lord Audley to stand back.
+
+"Bare, quite bare!" John Audley muttered, his mind still far away.
+"But if they took out--if they took out----"
+
+Toft waved his hand again--waved it wildly.
+
+"All right, I understand," Lord Audley said. He had not at first
+grasped what was wanted, but the man's repeated gestures enlightened
+him. He retired to a position where he was out of the sick man's
+sight.
+
+The servant wiped the sweat from his brow. "He mustn't see him!" he
+repeated insistently. "Lord! what a turn it gave me. I ask your
+pardon, Miss," he continued, "but I know the master so well." He cast
+an uneasy glance over his shoulder. "If the master's eyes lit on him
+once, only once, when he's in this state, I'd not answer for his
+life."
+
+Mary reproached herself. "You are quite right, Toft," she said. "I
+ought to have thought of that myself."
+
+"He must not see any strangers!"
+
+"He shall not. You are quite right."
+
+But Toft was still uneasy. He looked round. Stubbs and a man who had
+been working in the neighborhood were bringing up a sheep-hurdle, and
+again the butler's anxiety overcame him. "D--n!" he said: and he rose
+to his feet. "I think they want to kill him amongst them! Why can't
+they keep away?"
+
+"Hush! Toft. Why----"
+
+"He mustn't see the lawyer! He must not see him on any account."
+
+Mary nodded. "I will arrange it!" she said. "Only don't excite him.
+You will do him harm that way if you are not careful. I will speak to
+them."
+
+She went to meet them and explained, while Stubbs, who had not seen
+her before, considered her with interest. So this was Miss Audley,
+Peter Audley's daughter! She told them that she thought it better that
+her uncle should not find strangers about him when he came to himself.
+They agreed--it seemed quite natural--and it was arranged that Toft
+and the man should carry him as far as the carriage, while Mary walked
+beside him; and that afterwards she and Toft should travel with him.
+The carriage cushions were placed on the hurdle, and the helpless man
+was lifted on to them. Toft and the laborer raised their burden, and
+slowly and heavily, with an occasional stagger, they bore it along the
+sodden path. Mary saw that the sweat sprang out on Toft's sallow face
+and that his knees shook under him. Clearly the man was taxing his
+strength to the utmost, and she felt some concern--she had not given
+him credit for such fidelity. However, he held out until they reached
+the carriage.
+
+Babbling a word now and again, John Audley was moved into the vehicle.
+Mary mounted beside him and supported his head, while Toft climbed to
+the box, and at a footpace they set off across the sward, the laborer
+plodding at the tail of the carriage, and Lord Audley and Stubbs
+following a score of paces behind. The rain had ceased, but the clouds
+were low and leaden, the trees dripped sadly, and the little
+procession across the park had a funereal look. To Mary the way seemed
+long, to Toft still longer. With every moment his head was round. His
+eyes were now on his master, now jealously cast on those who brought
+up the rear. But everything comes to an end, and at length they swung
+into the courtyard, where Mrs. Toft, capable and cool, met them and
+took a load off Mary's shoulders.
+
+"He's that bad is he?" she said calmly. "Then the sooner he's in his
+bed the better. 'Truria's warming it. How will we get him up? I could
+carry him myself if that's all. If Toft'll take his feet, I'll do the
+rest. No need for another soul to come in!" with a glance at Lord
+Audley. "But if they would fetch the doctor I'd not say no, Miss."
+
+"I'll ask them to do that," Mary said.
+
+"And don't you worrit, Miss," Mrs. Toft continued, eyeing the sick man
+judicially. "He's been nigh as bad as this before and been about
+within the week. There's some as when they wool-gathers, there's no
+worse sign. But the master he's never all here, nor all there, and
+like a Broseley butter-pot another touch of the kiln will neither make
+him nor break him. Now, Toft, wide of the door-post, and steady, man."
+
+Lord Audley and Stubbs had remained outside, but when they saw Mary
+coming towards them, the young man left Stubbs and went to meet her.
+"How is he?" he asked.
+
+"Mrs. Toft thinks well of him. She has seen him nearly as ill before,
+she says. But if he recovers," Mary continued gratefully, "we owe his
+life to you. Had you not found him he must have died. And if you had
+lost a moment in bringing the news, I am sure that we should have been
+too late."
+
+The young man might have given some credit to Stubbs, but he did not;
+perhaps because time pressed, perhaps because he felt that his virtue
+in resisting a certain temptation deserved its reward. Instead he
+looked at Mary with a sympathy so ardent that her eyes fell. "Who
+would not have done as much?" he said. "If not for him--for you."
+
+"Will you add one kindness then?" she answered. "Will you send Dr.
+Pepper as quickly as possible?"
+
+"Without the loss of a minute," he said. "But one thing before I go. I
+cannot come here to inquire, yet I should like to know how he goes on.
+Will you walk a little way down the Riddsley road at noon to-morrow,
+and tell me how he fares?"
+
+Mary hesitated. But when he had done so much for them, when he had as
+good as saved her uncle's life, how could she be churlish? How could
+she play the prude? "Of course I will," she said frankly. "I hope I
+shall bring a good report."
+
+"Thank you," he said. "Until to-morrow!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ MASKS AND FACES
+
+
+Cherbuliez opens one of his stories with the remark that if the law of
+probabilities ruled, the hero and heroine would never have met, seeing
+that the one lived in Venice and the other seldom left Paris. That in
+spite of this they fell in with one another was enough to suggest to
+the lady that Destiny was at work to unite them.
+
+He put into words a thought which has entertained millions of lovers.
+If in face of the odds of three hundred and sixty-four to one Phyllis
+shares her birthday with Corydon, if Frederica sprains her ankle and
+the ready arm belongs to a Frederic, if Mademoiselle has a _grain de
+beaute_ on the right ear, and Monsieur a plain mole on the left--here
+is at once matter for reverie, and the heart is given almost before
+the hands have met.
+
+This was the fourth occasion on which Audley had come to Mary's
+rescue, and, sensible as she was, she was too thoroughly woman to be
+proof against the suggestion. On three of the four occasions the odds
+had been against his appearance. Yet he had come. To-day in
+particular, as if no pain that threatened her could be indifferent to
+him, as if no trouble approached her but touched a nerve in him, he
+had risen from the very ground to help and sustain her.
+
+Could the coldest decline to feel interest in one so strangely linked
+with her by fortune? Could the most prudent in such a case abstain
+from day dreams, in which love and service, devotion and constancy,
+played their parts?
+
+_Sic itur ad astra!_ So men and women begin to love.
+
+She spent the morning between the room in which John Audley was making
+a slow recovery, and the deserted library which already wore a cold
+and unused aspect. In the one and the other she felt a restlessness
+and a disturbance which she was fain to set down to yesterday's alarm.
+The old interests invited her in vain. Do what she would, she could
+not keep her mind off the appointment before her. Her eyes grew
+dreamy, her thoughts strayed, her color came and went. At one moment
+she would plunge into a thousand attentions to her uncle, at another
+she opened books only to close them. She looked at the clock--surely
+the hands were not moving! She looked again--it could not be as late
+as that! The truth was that Mary was not in love, but she was ready to
+be in love. She was glad and sorry, grave and gay, without reason;
+like a stream that dances over the shallows, and rippling and
+twinkling goes its way through the sunshine, knowing nothing of the
+deep pool that awaits it.
+
+Presently, acting upon some impulse, she opened a drawer in one of the
+tables. It contained a portrait in crayons of Peter Basset, which John
+Audley had shown her. She took out the sketch and set it against a
+book where the light fell upon it, and she examined it. At first with
+a smile--that he should have been so mad as to think what he had
+thought! And then with a softer look. How hard she had been to him!
+How unfeeling! Nay, how cruel!
+
+She sat for a long time looking at the portrait. But in fact she had
+forgotten that it was before her, when the clock, striking the
+half--hour before noon, surprised her. Then she thrust the portrait
+back into its drawer, and went with a composed face to put on her hat.
+
+The past summer had been one of the wettest ever known, for rain had
+fallen on five days out of seven. But to-day it was fine, and as Mary
+descended the road that led from the house towards Riddsley, a road
+open to the vale on one side and flanked on the other by a rising
+slope covered with brushwood, a watery sun was shining. Its rays,
+aided by the clearness of the air, brought out the colors of stubble
+and field, flood and coppice, that lay below. And men looking up
+from toil or pleasure, leaning on spades or pausing before they
+crossed a stile, saw the Gatehouse transformed to a fairy lodge, gray,
+clear--cut, glittering, breaking the line of forest trees--saw it as
+if it had stood in another world.
+
+Mary looked back, looked forward, admired, descended. She had made up
+her mind that Lord Audley would meet her at a turn near the foot of
+the hill, where a Cross had once stood, and where the crumbling base
+and moss-clothed steps still bade travellers rest and be thankful.
+
+He was there, and Mary owned the attraction of the big smiling face
+and the burly figure, that in a rough, caped riding-coat still kept an
+air of fashion. He on his side saw coming to meet him, through the
+pale sunshine, not as yesterday an Atalanta, but a cool Dian, with her
+hands in a large muff.
+
+"You bring a good report, I hope?" he cried before they met.
+
+"Very good," Mary replied, sparkling a little as she looked at
+him--was not the sun shining? "My uncle is much better this morning.
+Dr. Pepper says that it was mainly exertion acting on a weak heart. He
+expects him to be downstairs in a week and to be himself in a
+fortnight. But he will have to be more careful in future."
+
+"That is good!"
+
+"He says, too, that if you had not acted so promptly, my uncle must
+have died."
+
+"Well, he was pretty far gone, I must say."
+
+"So, as he will not thank you himself, you must let me thank you." And
+Mary held out the hand she had hitherto kept in her muff. She was
+determined not to be a prude.
+
+He pressed it discreetly. "I am glad," he said. "Very glad. Perhaps
+after this he may think better of me."
+
+She laughed. "I don't think that there is a chance of it," she said.
+
+"No? Well, I suppose it was foolish, but do you know, I did hope that
+this might bring us together."
+
+"You may dismiss it," she answered, smiling.
+
+"Ah!" he said. "Then tell me this. How in the world did he come to be
+there? Without a hat? Without a coat? And so far from the house?"
+
+Mary hesitated. He had turned, they were walking side by side. "I am
+not sure that I ought to tell you," she said. "What I know I gathered
+from a word that Mr. Audley let fall when he was rambling. He seems to
+have had some instinct, some feeling that you were there and to have
+been forced to learn if it was so."
+
+"But forced? By what?" Lord Audley asked. "I don't understand."
+
+"I don't understand either," Mary answered.
+
+"He could not know that we were there?"
+
+"But he seems to have known."
+
+"Strange," he murmured. "Does he often stray away like that?"
+
+"He does, sometimes," she admitted reluctantly.
+
+"Ah!" Audley was silent a moment. Then, "Well, I am glad he is
+better," he said in the tone of one who dismisses a subject. "Let us
+talk of something else--ourselves. Are you aware that this is the
+fourth time that I have come to your rescue?"
+
+"I know that it is the fourth time that you have been very useful,"
+she admitted. She wished that she had been able to control her color,
+but though he spoke playfully there was meaning in his voice.
+
+"I, too, have a second sense it seems," he said, almost purring as he
+looked at her. "Did you by any chance think of me, when you missed
+your uncle?"
+
+"Not for a moment," she retorted.
+
+"Perhaps--you thought of Mr. Basset?"
+
+"No, nor of Mr. Basset. Had he been at the Gatehouse I might have. But
+he is away."
+
+"Away, is he? Oh!" He looked at her with a whimsical smile. "Do you
+know that when he met us the other evening I thought that he was a
+little out of temper? It was not a continuance of that which took him
+away, I suppose?"
+
+Mary would have given the world to show an unmoved face at that
+moment. But she could not. Nor could she feel as angry as she wished.
+"I thought we were going to talk of ourselves," she said.
+
+"I thought that we were talking of you."
+
+On that, "I am afraid that I must be going back," she said. And she
+stopped.
+
+"But I am going back with you!"
+
+"Are you? Well, you may come as far as the Cross."
+
+"Oh, hang the Cross!" he answered with a masterfulness of which Mary
+owned the charm, while she rebelled against it. "I shall come as far
+as I like! And hang Basset too--if he makes you unhappy!" He laughed.
+"We'll talk of--what shall we talk of, Mary? Why, we are cousins--does
+not that entitle me to call you 'Mary'?"
+
+"I would rather you did not," she said, and this time there was no
+lack of firmness in her tone. She remembered what Basset had said
+about her name and--and for the moment the other's airiness displeased
+her.
+
+"But we are cousins."
+
+"Then you can call me cousin," she answered.
+
+He laughed. "Beaten again!" he said.
+
+"And I can call you cousin," she said sedately. "Indeed, I am going to
+treat you as a cousin. I want you, if not to do, to think of doing
+something for me. I don't know," nervously, "whether I am asking more
+than I ought--if so you must forgive me. But it is not for myself."
+
+"You frighten me!" he said. "What is it?"
+
+"It's about Mr. Colet, the curate whom you helped us to save from
+those men at Brown Heath. He has been shamefully treated. What they
+did to him might be forgiven--they knew no better. But I hear that
+because he preaches what is not to everybody's taste, but what
+thousands and thousands are saying, he is to lose his curacy. And
+that is his livelihood. It seems most wicked to me, because I am told
+that no one else will employ him. And what is he to do? He has no
+friends----"
+
+"He has one eloquent friend."
+
+"Don't laugh at me!" she cried.
+
+"I am not laughing," he answered. He was, in fact, wondering how he
+should deal with this--this fad of hers. A little, too, he was
+wondering what it meant. It could not be that she was in love with
+Colet. Absurd! He recalled the look of the man. "I am not laughing,"
+he repeated more slowly. "But what do you want me to do?"
+
+"To use your influence for him," Mary explained, "either with the
+rector to keep him or with some one else to employ him."
+
+"I see."
+
+"He only did what he thought was his duty. And--and because he did it,
+is he to pay with all he has in the world?"
+
+"It seems a hard case."
+
+"It is more, it is an abominable injustice!" she cried.
+
+"Yes," he said slowly. "It seems so. It certainly seems hard. But let
+me--don't be angry with me if I put another side." He spoke with
+careful moderation. "It is my experience that good, easy men, such as
+I take the rector of Riddsley to be, rarely do a thing which seems
+cruel, without reason. A clergyman, for instance; he has generally
+thought out more clearly than you or I what it is right to say in the
+pulpit; how far it is lawful, and then again how far it is wise to
+deal with matters of debate. He has considered how far a pronouncement
+may offend some, and so may render his office less welcome to them.
+That is one consideration. Probably, too, he has considered that a
+statement, if events falsify it, will injure him with his poorer
+parishioners who look up to him as wiser than themselves. Well, when
+such a man has laid down a rule and finds a younger clergyman bent
+upon transgressing it, is it unreasonable if he puts his foot down?"
+
+"I had not looked at it in that way."
+
+"And that, perhaps, is not all," he resumed. "You know that a thing
+may be true, but that it is not always wise to proclaim it. It may be
+too strong meat. It may be true, for instance, that corn-dealers make
+an unfair profit out of the poor; but it is not a truth that you would
+tell a hungry crowd outside the corn-dealer's shop on a Saturday
+night."
+
+"No," Mary allowed reluctantly. "Perhaps not."
+
+"And again--I have nothing to say against Colet. It is enough for me
+that he is a friend of yours----"
+
+"I have a reason for being interested in him. I am sure that if you
+heard him----"
+
+"I might be carried away? Precisely. But is it not possible that he
+has seen much of one side of this question, much of the poverty for
+which a cure is sought, without being for that reason fitted to decide
+what the cure should be?"
+
+Mary nodded. "Have you formed any opinion yourself?" she asked.
+
+But he was too prudent to enter on a discussion. He saw that so far he
+had impressed her with what he had said, and he was not going to risk
+the advantage he had gained. "No," he said, "I am weighing the matter
+at this moment. We are on the verge of a crisis on the Corn Laws, and
+it is my duty to consider the question carefully. I am doing so. I
+have hitherto been a believer in the tax. I may change my views, but I
+shall not do so hastily. As for your friend, I will consider what can
+be done, but I fear that he has been imprudent."
+
+"Sometimes," she ventured, "imprudence is a virtue."
+
+"And its own reward!" he retorted. They had passed the Cross, they
+were by this time high on the hill, with one accord they came to a
+stand. "However, I will think it over," he continued. "I will think it
+over, and what a cousin may, a cousin shall."
+
+"A cousin may much when he is Lord Audley."
+
+"A poor man in a fine coat! A butterfly in an east wind." He
+removed his curly-brimmed hat and stood gazing over the prospect,
+over the wide valley that far and near gleamed with many a sheet of
+flood-water. "Have you ever thought, Mary, what that means?" he
+continued with feeling. "To be the shadow of a name! A ghost of the
+past! To have for home a ruin, and for lands a few poor farms--in
+place of all that we can see from here! For all this was once ours. To
+live a poor man among the rich! To have nothing but----"
+
+"Opportunities!" she answered, her voice betraying how deeply she was
+moved--for she too was an Audley. "For, with all said and done, you
+start where others end. You have no need to wait for a hearing. Doors
+stand open to you that others must open. Your name is a passport--is
+there a Stafford man who does not thrill to it? Surely these things
+are something. Surely they are much?"
+
+"You would make me think so!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Believe me, they are."
+
+"They would be if I had your enthusiasm!" he answered, moved by her
+words. "And, by Jove," gazing with admiration at her glowing face, "if
+I had you by me to spur me on there's no knowing, Mary, what I might
+not try! And what I might not do!"
+
+Womanlike, she would evade the crisis which she had provoked. "Or fail
+to do!" she replied. "Perhaps the most worthy would be left undone.
+But I must go now," she continued. "I have to give my uncle his
+medicine. I fear I am late already."
+
+"When shall I see you again?" he asked, trying to detain her.
+
+"Some day, I have no doubt. But good-bye now! And don't forget Mr.
+Colet! Good-bye!"
+
+He stood awhile looking after her, then he turned and went down the
+hill. By the time he was at the place where he had met her he was glad
+that she had broken off the interview.
+
+"I might have said too much," he reflected. "She's handsome enough to
+turn any man's head! And not so cold as she looks. And she spells
+safety. But there's no hurry--and she's inclined to be kind, or I am
+mistaken! That clown, Basset, too, has got his dismissal, I fancy, and
+there's no one else!"
+
+Presently his thoughts took another turn. "What maggots women get into
+their heads!" he muttered. "That pestilent Colet--I'm glad the rector
+acted on my hint. But there it is; when a woman meddles with politics
+she's game for the first spouter she comes across! Fine eyes, too, and
+the Audley blood! With a little drilling she would hold her own
+anywhere."
+
+Altogether, he found the walk to the place where he had left his
+carriage pleasant enough and his thoughts satisfactory. With Mary and
+safety on one side, and Lady Adela and a plum on the other--it would
+be odd if he did not bring his wares to a tolerable market.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+ THE CORN LAW CRISIS
+
+
+He had been right in his forecast when he told Mary that a political
+crisis was at hand. That which had been long whispered, was beginning
+to be stated openly in club and market-place. The Corn Laws, the
+support of the country, the mainstay, as so many thought, of the
+Constitution, were in danger; and behind closed doors, while England
+listened without, the doctors were met to decide their fate.
+
+Potatoes! The word flew from mouth to mouth that wet autumn, from town
+to country, from village to village. Potatoes! The thing seemed
+incredible. That the lordly Corn Laws, the bulwark of the landed
+interest, the prop of agriculture, that had withstood all attacks for
+two generations, and maintained themselves alike against high prices
+and the Corn Law League--that these should go down because a vulgar
+root like the potato had failed in Ireland--it was a thing passing
+belief. It couldn't be. With the Conservatives in power, it seemed
+impossible.
+
+Yet it was certain that the position was grave, if not hopeless. Never
+since the Reform Bill had there been such meetings of the Cabinet, so
+frequent, so secret. And strange things were said. Some who had
+supported Peel yet did not trust him, maintained that this was the
+natural sequel of his measures, the point to which he had been moving
+through all the years of his Ministry. Potatoes--bah! Others who still
+supported him, yet did not trust him, brooded nervously over his
+action twenty years before, when he had first resisted and then
+accepted the Catholic claims. Tories and Conservatives alike, wondered
+what they were there to conserve, if such things were in the wind;
+they protested, but with growing misgiving, that the thing could not
+be. While those among them who had seats to save and majorities to
+guard, met one another with gloomy looks, whispered together in
+corners and privately asked themselves what they would do--if he did.
+Happy in these circumstances were those who like Mottisfont, the
+father, were ready to retire; and still happier those who like
+Mottisfont, the son, knew the wishes of their constituents and could
+sing "John Barleycorn, my Joe, John," with no fear of being jilted.
+
+Their anxieties--they were politicians--were mainly personal--and
+selfish. But there were some, simple people like Mr. Stubbs at
+Riddsley, who really believed, when these rumors reached them, that
+the foundations of things were breaking up, and that the world in
+which they had lived was sinking under their feet. Already in fancy
+they saw the glare of furnaces fall across the peaceful fields.
+Already they heard the tall mill jar and quiver where the cosey
+homestead and the full stackyard sprawled. They saw a weakly race,
+slaves to the factory bell, overrun the land where the ploughman still
+whistled at his work and his wife suckled healthy babes. To these men,
+if the rumors they heard were true, if Peel had indeed sold the pass,
+it meant the loss of all. It meant the victory of coal and cotton, the
+ruling of all after the Manchester pattern, the reign of Cash, the
+Lord, and ten per cent. his profit. It meant the end of the old
+England they had loved.
+
+Not that Stubbs said this at Riddsley, or anything like it. He smiled
+and kept silence, as became a man who knew much and was set above
+common rumor. The landlord of the Audley Arms, the corndealer, the
+brewer, the saddler went away from him with their fears allayed merely
+by the way in which he shrugged his shoulders. At the farmers'
+ordinary he had never been more cheerful. He gave the toast of "Horn
+and Corn, gentlemen! And when potatoes take their place you may come
+and tell me!" And he gave it so heartily that the farmers went home,
+market-peart and rejoicing, laughed at their doubting neighbors, and
+quoted a hundred things that Lawyer Stubbs had not said.
+
+But a day or two later the lawyer sustained an unpleasant shock. He
+had been little moved by Lord John's manifesto--the declaration in
+which the little Whig Leader, seeing that the Government hesitated,
+had plumped for total repeal. That was in the common course of things.
+It had heartened him, if anything. It was natural. It would bring the
+Tories into line and put an end to trimming. But this--this which
+confronted him one morning when he opened his London paper was
+different. He read it, he held his breath, he stood aghast a long
+minute, he swore. After a few minutes he took his hat and the
+newspaper, and went round to the house in which Lord Audley lived when
+he was at Riddsley.
+
+It was a handsome Georgian house, built of brick with stone facings,
+and partly covered with ivy. A wide smooth lawn divided it from the
+road. The occupant was a curate's widow who lived there with her two
+sisters and eked out their joint means by letting the first floor to
+her landlord. For "The Butterflies" was Audley property, and the
+clergyman's widow was held to derogate in no way by an arrangement
+which differed widely from a common letting of lodgings. Mrs.
+Jenkinson was stout, short, and fussy, her sisters were thin, short,
+and precise, but all three overflowed with words as kindly as their
+deeds. Good Mrs. Jenkinson, in fact, who never spoke of his lordship
+behind his back but with distant respect, sometimes forgot in his
+presence that he was anything but a "dear young man," and when he had
+a cold, would prescribe a posset or a warming-pan with an insistence
+which at times amused and more often bored him.
+
+Stubbs found his lordship just risen from a late lunch, and in his
+excitement, the lawyer forgot his manners. "By G--d, my lord!" he
+cried, "he's resigned."
+
+Audley looked at him with displeasure. "Who's resigned?" he asked
+coldly.
+
+"Peel!"
+
+Against that news the young man was not proof. He caught the
+infection. "Impossible!" he said, rising to his feet.
+
+"It's true! It's in the _Morning Post_, my lord! He saw the Queen
+yesterday. She's sending for Lord John. It's black treachery! It's the
+blackest of treachery! With a majority in the House, with the peers in
+his pocket, the country quiet, trade improving, everything in his
+favor, he's sold us--sold us to Cobden on some d--d pretext of famine
+in Ireland!"
+
+Audley did not answer at once. He stood deep in thought, his eyes on
+the floor, his hands in his pockets. At length, "I don't follow it,"
+he said. "How is Russell, who is in a minority, to carry repeal?"
+
+"Peel's promised his support!" Stubbs cried. Like most honest men, he
+was nothing if not thorough. "You may depend upon it, my lord, he has!
+He won't deceive me again. I know him through and through, now. He'll
+take with him Graham and Gladstone and Herbert, his old tail, Radicals
+at heart every man of them, and he's the biggest!"
+
+"Well," Audley said slowly, "he might have done one thing worse. He
+might have stayed in and passed repeal himself!"
+
+"Good G--d!" the lawyer cried, "Judas wouldn't have done that! All he
+could do, he has done. He has let in corn from Canada, cattle from
+Heaven knows where, he has let in wool. All that he has done. But even
+he has a limit, my lord! Even he! The man who was returned to support
+the Corn Laws--to repeal them. Impossible!"
+
+"Well?" Audley said. "There'll be an election, I suppose?"
+
+"The sooner the better," Stubbs answered vengefully. "And we shall see
+what the country thinks of this. In Riddsley we've been ready for
+weeks--as you know, my lord. But a General Election? Gad! I only hope
+they will put up some one here, and we will give them such a beating
+as they've never had!"
+
+Audley pondered. "I suppose Riddsley is safe," he said.
+
+"As safe as Burton Bridge, my lord!"
+
+The other rattled the money in his pocket. "As long as you give them a
+lead, Stubbs, I suppose? But if you went over? What then?"
+
+Stubbs opened his eyes. "Went over?" he ejaculated.
+
+"Oh, I don't mean," my lord said airily, "that you're not as staunch
+as Burton Bridge. But supposing you took the other side--it would make
+a difference, I suppose?"
+
+"Not a jot!" the lawyer answered sturdily.
+
+"Not even if the two Mottisfonts sided with Peel?"
+
+"If they did the old gentleman would never see Westminster again,"
+Stubbs cried, "nor the young one go there!"
+
+"Or," Audley continued, setting his shoulders against the
+mantel-shelf, and smiling, "suppose I did? If the Beaudelays interest
+were cast for repeal? What then?"
+
+"What then?" Stubbs answered. "You'll pardon me, my lord, if I am
+frank. Then the Beaudelays influence, that has held the borough time
+out of mind, that returned two members before '32, and has returned
+one since--there'd be an end of it! It would snap like a rotten stick.
+The truth is we hold the borough while we go with the stream. In fair
+weather when it is a question of twenty votes one way or the other, we
+carry it. And you've the credit, my lord."
+
+Audley moved his shoulders restlessly. "It's all I get by it," he
+said. "If I could turn the credit into a snug place of two thousand a
+year, Stubbs--it would be another thing. Do you know," he continued,
+"I've often wondered why you feel so strongly on the corn-taxes?"
+
+"You asked me that once before, my lord," the agent answered slowly.
+"All that I can say is that more things than one go to it. Perhaps the
+best answer I can make is that, like your lordship's influence in the
+borough, it's part sentiment and part tradition. I have a picture in
+my mind--it's a picture of an old homestead that my grandfather lived
+in and died in, and that I visited when I was a boy. That would be
+about the middle nineties; the French war going, corn high, cattle
+high, a good horse in the gig and old ale for all comers. There was
+comfort inside and plenty without; comfort in the great kitchen, with
+its floor as clean as a pink, and greened in squares with bay leaves,
+its dresser bright with pewter, its mantel with Toby jugs! There was
+wealth in the stackyard, with the poultry strutting and scratching,
+and more in the byres knee-deep in straw, and the big barn where they
+flailed the wheat! And there were men and maids more than on two farms
+to-day, some in the house, some in thatched cottages with a run on the
+common and wood for the getting. I remember, as if they were
+yesterday, hot summer afternoons when there'd be a stillness on the
+farm and all drowsed together, the bees, and the calves, and the old
+sheep-dog, and the only sounds that broke the silence were the cluck
+of a hen, or the clank of pattens on the dairy-floor, while the sun
+fell hot on the orchard, where a little boy hunted for damsons! That's
+what I often see, my lord," Stubbs continued stoutly. "And may Peel
+protect me, if I ever raise a finger to set mill and furnace, devil's
+dust and slave-grown cotton, in place of that!"
+
+My lord concealed a yawn. "Very interesting, Stubbs," he said. "Quite
+a picture! Peace and plenty and old ale! And little Jack Horner
+sitting in a corner! No, don't go yet, man. I want you." He made a
+sign to Stubbs to sit down, and settling his shoulders more firmly
+against the mantel-shelf, he thrust his hands deeper into his
+trouser-pockets. "I'm not easy in my mind about John Audley," he said.
+"I'm not sure that he has not found something."
+
+Stubbs stared. "There's nothing to find," he said. "Nothing, my lord!
+You may be sure of it."
+
+"He goes there."
+
+"It's a craze."
+
+"It's a confoundedly unpleasant one!"
+
+"But harmless, my lord. Really harmless."
+
+The younger man's impatience darkened his face, but he controlled
+it--a sure sign that he was in earnest. "Tell me this," he said. "What
+evidence would upset us? You told me once that the claim could be
+reopened on fresh evidence. On what evidence?"
+
+"I regard the case as closed," Stubbs answered stubbornly. "But if you
+put the question--" he seemed to reflect--"the point at issue, on
+which the whole turned, was the legitimacy of your great-grandfather,
+my lord, Peter Paravicini Audley's son. Mr. John's great-grandfather
+was Peter Paravicini's younger brother. The other side alleged, but
+could not produce, a family agreement admitting that the son was
+illegitimate. Such an agreement, if Peter Paravicini was a party
+to it, if it was proved, and came from the proper custody, would
+be an awkward document and might let in the next brother's
+descendants--that's Mr. John. But in my opinion, its existence is a
+fairy story, and in its absence, the entry in the register stands
+good."
+
+"But such a document would be fatal?"
+
+"If it fulfilled the conditions it would be serious," the lawyer
+admitted. "But it does not exist," he added confidently.
+
+"And yet--I'm not comfortable, Stubbs," Audley rejoined. "I can't get
+John Audley's face out of my mind. If ever man looked as if he had his
+enemy by the throat, he looked it; a d--d disinheriting face I thought
+it! I don't mind telling you," the speaker continued, some disorder in
+his own looks, "that I awoke at three o'clock this morning, and I saw
+him as clearly as I see you now, and at that moment I wouldn't have
+given a thousand pounds for my chance of being Lord Audley this time
+two years!"
+
+"Liver!" said Stubbs, unmoved. "Liver, my lord, asking your pardon!
+Nothing else--and the small hours. I've felt like that myself. Still,
+if you are really uneasy there is always a way out, though it may be
+impertinent of me to mention it."
+
+"The old way?"
+
+"You might marry Miss Audley. A handsome young lady, if I may presume
+to say so, of your own blood and name, and no disparagement except in
+fortune. After Mr. John, she is the next heir, and the match once made
+would checkmate any action on his part."
+
+"I am afraid I could not afford such a marriage," Audley said coldly.
+"But I am to you. As for this news--" he flicked the newspaper that
+lay on the table--"it may be true or it may not. If it is true, it
+will alter many things. We shall see. If you hear anything fresh let
+me know."
+
+Stubbs said that he would and took his leave, wondering a little, but
+having weightier things on his mind. He sought his home by back ways,
+for he did not wish to meet Dr. Pepper or Bagenal the brewer, or even
+the saddler, until he had considered what face he would put on Peel's
+latest move. He felt that his reputation for knowledge and sagacity
+was at stake.
+
+Meanwhile his employer, left alone, fell to considering, not what face
+he should put upon the matter, but how he might at this crisis turn
+the matter and the borough to the best account. Certainly Stubbs was
+discouraging, but Stubbs was a fool. It was all very well for him; he
+drew his wages either way. But a man of the world did not cling to the
+credit of owning a borough for the mere name of the thing. If he were
+sensible he looked to get something more from it than that. And it was
+upon occasions such as this that the something more was to be had by
+those who knew how to go about the business.
+
+Here, in fact, was the moment, if he was the man.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+ PETER'S RETURN
+
+
+Not a word or hint of John Audley's illness had come to Basset's ears.
+At the time of the alarm he had been in London, and it was not until
+some days later that he took his seat in the morning train to return
+to Stafford. On his way to town, and for some days after his arrival,
+he had been buoyed up by plans, nebulous indeed, but sufficient. He
+came back low in his mind and in poor spirits. The hopes, if not the
+aspirations, which Colet's enthusiasm had generated in him had died
+down, and the visit to Francis Place had done nothing to revive them.
+
+Some greatness in the man, a largeness of ideas, an echo of the
+revolutionary days when the sanest saw visions, Basset was forced to
+own. But the two stood too far apart, the inspired tailor and the
+country squire, for sympathy. They were divided by too wide a gulf of
+breeding and prejudice to come together. Basset was not even a
+Radical, and his desire to improve things, and to better the world,
+fell very far short of the passion of humanity which possessed the
+aged Republican--the man who for half a century had been so forward in
+all their movements that his fellows had christened him the "_Old
+Postilion_."
+
+Nothing but disappointment, therefore, had come of the meeting. The
+two had parted with a little contempt on the one side, a sense of
+failure on the other. If a man could serve his neighbors only in
+fellowship with such, if the cause which for a few hours had promised
+to fill the void left by an unhappy love, could be supported only by
+men who held such opinions, then Basset felt that the thing was not
+for him. For six or seven days he went up and down London at odds with
+himself and his kind, and ever striving to solve a puzzle, the answer
+to which evaded him. Was the hope that he might find a mission and
+found a purpose on Colet's lines, was it just the desire to set the
+world right that seized on young men fresh from college? And if this
+were so, if this were all, what was he to do? Whither was he to turn?
+How was he going to piece together the life which Mary had broken? How
+was he going to arrange his future so that some thread of purpose
+might run through it, so that something of effort might still link
+together the long bede-roll of years?
+
+He found no answer to the riddle. And it was in a gloomy, unsettled
+mood, ill-content with himself and the world, that he took his seat in
+the train. Alas, he could not refrain from recalling the May morning
+on which he had taken his seat in the same train with Mary. How ill
+had he then appreciated her company, how little had he understood, how
+little had he prized his good fortune! He who was then free to listen
+to her voice, to meet her eyes, to follow the changes of her mood from
+grave to gay! To be to her--all that he could! And that for hours, for
+days, for weeks!
+
+He swore under his breath and sat back in the shadow of the corner.
+And a man who entered late, and saw that he kept his eyes shut,
+fancied that he was ill; and when he muttered a word under his breath,
+asked him if he spoke.
+
+"No," Basset replied rather curtly. And that he might be alone with
+his thoughts he took up a newspaper and held it before him. But not a
+word did he read. After a long interval he looked over the journal and
+met the other's eyes.
+
+"Surprising news this," the stranger said. He had the look of a
+soldier, and the bronzed face of one who had lived under warm skies.
+
+Basset murmured that it was.
+
+"The Whigs have a fine opportunity," the other pursued. "But I am not
+sure that they will use it."
+
+"You are a Whig, perhaps?"
+
+The stranger smiled. "No," he replied. "I am not. I have lived so long
+abroad that I belong to no party. I am an Englishman."
+
+"Ah?" Basset rejoined, curiosity beginning to stir in him. "That's
+rather a fine idea."
+
+"Apparently it's a novel one. But it seems natural to me. I have lived
+for fifteen years in India and I have lost touch with the cant of
+parties. Out there, we do honestly try to rule for the good of the
+people; their prosperity is our interest. Here, during the few weeks I
+have spent in England I see things done, not because they are good,
+but because they suit a party, or provide a cry, or put the other side
+in a quandary."
+
+"There's a good deal of that, I suppose."
+
+"Still," the stranger continued, "I know a great man, and I know a
+fine thing when I see them. And I fancy that I see them here!" He
+tapped his paper.
+
+"Has Lord John formed his ministry, then?"
+
+"No, I am not sure that he will. I am not thinking of him, I am
+thinking of Peel."
+
+"Oh! Of Peel?"
+
+"He has done a fine thing! As every man does who puts what is right
+before what is easy. May I tell you a story of myself?" the Indian
+continued. "Some years ago in the Afghan war I was unlucky enough
+to command a small frontier post. My garrison consisted of two
+companies and six or seven European officers. The day came when I had
+to choose between two courses. I must either hold my ground until our
+people advanced, or I must evacuate the post, which had a certain
+importance--and fall back into safety. The men never dreamed of
+retiring. The officers were confident that we could hold out. But we
+were barely supplied for forty days, and in my judgment no
+reinforcement was possible under seventy. I made my choice, breached
+the place, and retired. But I tell you, sir, that the days of that
+retreat, with sullen faces about me, and hardly a man in my company
+who did not think me a poltroon, were the bitterest of my life. I knew
+that if the big-wigs agreed with them I was a ruined man, and after
+ten years service I should go home disgraced. Fortunately the General
+saw it as I saw it, and all was well. But--" he looked at Basset with
+a wry smile--"it was a march of ten days to the base, and to-day the
+sullen looks of those men come back to me in my dreams."
+
+"And you think," Basset said--the other's story had won his
+respect--"that Peel has found himself in such a position?"
+
+"To compare great issues with small, I do. I suspect that he has gone
+through an agony--that is hardly too strong a word--such as I went
+through. My impression is that when he came into office he was in
+advance of his party. He saw that the distress in the country called
+for measures which his followers would accept from no one else. He
+believed that he could carry them with him. Perhaps, even then, he
+held a repeal of the Corn Laws possible in some remote future; perhaps
+he did not, I don't know. For suddenly there came on him the fear of
+this Irish famine--and forced his hand."
+
+"But don't you think," Basset asked, "that the alarm is premature?" A
+dozen times he had heard the famine called a flam, a sham, a bite,
+anything but a reality.
+
+"You have never seen a famine?" the other replied gravely. "You have
+never had to face the impossibility of creating food where it does not
+exist, or of bringing it from a distance when there are no roads. I
+have had that experience. I have seen people die of starvation by
+hundreds, women, children, babes, when I could do nothing because
+steps had not been taken in time. God forbid that that should happen
+in Ireland! If the fear does not outrun the dearth, God help the poor!
+Now I am told that Peel witnessed a famine in Ireland about '17 or
+'18, and knows what it is."
+
+"You have had interesting experiences?"
+
+"The experience of every Indian officer. But the burden which rests on
+us makes us alive to the difficulties of a statesman's position. I see
+Peel forced--forced suddenly, perhaps, to make a choice; to decide
+whether he shall do what is right or what is consistent. He must
+betray his friends, or he must betray his country. And the agony of
+the decision is the greater if he has it burnt in on his memory that
+he did this thing once before, that once before he turned his back on
+his party--and that all the world knows!"
+
+"I see."
+
+"If a man in that position puts self, consistency, reputation all
+behind him--believe me, he is doing a fine thing."
+
+Basset assented. "But you speak," he added, "as if Sir Robert were
+going to do the thing himself--instead of merely standing aside for
+others to do it."
+
+"A distinction without much difference," the other rejoined. "Possibly
+it will turn out that he is the only man who can do it. If so, he will
+have a hard row to hoe. He will need the help of every moderate man in
+the country, if he is not to be beaten. For whether he succeeds or
+fails, depends not upon the fanatics, but upon the moderate men. I
+don't know what your opinions are?"
+
+"Well," Basset said frankly, "I am not much of a party-man myself. I
+am inclined to agree with you, so far."
+
+"Then if you have any influence, use it. Unfortunately, I am out of it
+for family reasons."
+
+Basset looked at the stranger. "You are not by any chance Colonel
+Mottisfont?" he said.
+
+"I am. You know my brother? He is member for Riddsley."
+
+"Yes. My name is Basset."
+
+"Of Blore? Indeed. I knew your father. Well, I have not cast my seed
+on stony ground. Though you are stony enough about Wootton under
+Weaver."
+
+"True, worse luck. Your brother is retiring, I hear?"
+
+"Yes, he has just horse sense, has Jack. He won't vote against Peel.
+His lad has less and will take his place and vote old Tory. But there,
+I mustn't abuse the family."
+
+They had still half an hour to spend together before Basset got out at
+Stafford. He had time to discover that the soldier was faced by a
+problem not unlike his own. His service over, he had to consider what
+he would do. "All I know," the Colonel said breezily, "is that I won't
+do nothing. Some take to preaching, others to Bath, but neither will
+suit me. But I'll not drift. I kept from brandy pawnee out there, and
+I am going to keep from drift here. For you, you're a young man,
+Basset, and a hundred things are open to you. I am over the top of the
+hill. But I'll do something."
+
+"You have done something to-day," Basset said. "You have done me
+good."
+
+Later he had time to think it over during the long journey from
+Stafford to Blore. He drove by twisting country roads, under the gray
+walls of Chartley, by Uttoxeter and Rocester. Thence he toiled uphill
+to the sterile Derbyshire border, the retreat of old families and old
+houses. He began to think that he had gained some ideas with which he
+could sympathize, ideas which were at one with Mary Audley's burning
+desire to help, while they did not clash with old prejudices. If he
+threw himself into Peel's cause, he would indeed be seen askance by
+many. He would have to put himself forward after a fashion that gave
+him the goose-flesh when he thought of it. A landowner, he would have
+to go against the land. But he would not feel, in his darker moods,
+that he was the dupe of cranks and fanatics. He saw Peel as Mottisfont
+had pictured him, as a man putting all behind him except the right;
+and his heart warmed to the picture. Many would fall away, few would
+be staunch. From this ship, as from every sinking ship, the rats would
+flee. But so much the stronger was the call.
+
+The result was that the Peter Basset who descended at the porch of the
+old gabled house, that sat low and faced east in the valley under
+Weaver, was a more hopeful man than he who had entered the train at
+Euston. A purpose, a plan--he had gained these, and the hope that
+springs from them.
+
+He had barely doffed his driving-coat, however, before his thoughts
+were swept in another direction. On the hall table lay two letters. He
+took up one. It was from Colet and written in deep dejection. "The
+barber was a Tory and had given him short notice. Feeling ran high in
+the town, and other lodgings were not to be had. The Bishop had
+supported the rector's action, and he saw no immediate prospect of
+further work." He did not ask for shelter, but it was plain that he
+was at his wit's end, and more than a little surprised by the storm
+which he had raised.
+
+Basset threw down the letter. "He shall come here," he thought. "What
+is it to me whom he marries?" Many solitary hours spent in the streets
+of London had gone some way towards widening Peter's outlook.
+
+He took up the second letter. It was from John Audley, and before
+he had read three lines, he rang the bell and ordered that the
+post-chaise which had brought him from Stafford should be kept: he
+would want it in the morning. John Audley wrote that he had been very
+ill--he was still in bed. He must see Basset. The matter was urgent,
+he had something to tell him. He hinted that if he did not come
+quickly it might be too late.
+
+Basset could not refuse to go; summoned after this fashion, he must
+go. But he tried to believe that he was not glad to go. He tried to
+believe that the excitement with which he looked forward to the
+journey had to do with his uncle. It was in vain; he knew that he
+tricked himself. Or if he did not know this then, his eyes were opened
+next day, when, after walking up the hill to spare the horses--and a
+little because he shrank at the last from the meeting--he came in
+sight of the Gatehouse, and saw Mary Audley standing in the doorway.
+The longing that gripped him then, the emotion that unmanned him, told
+him all. It was of Mary he had been thinking, towards Mary he had been
+travelling, of her work it was that the miles had seemed leagues! He
+was not cured. He was not in the way to be cured. He was the same
+love-sick fool whom she had driven from her with contumely an age--it
+seemed an age, ago.
+
+He bent his head as he approached, that she might not see his face.
+His knees shook and a tremor ran through him. Why had he come back?
+Why had he come back to face this anguish?
+
+Then he mastered himself; indeed he took himself the more strongly in
+hand for the knowledge he had gained. When they met at the door it was
+Mary, not he, whose color came and went, who spoke awkwardly, and
+rushed into needless explanations. The man listened with a stony face,
+and said little, almost nothing.
+
+After the first awkward greeting, "Your room has been airing," she
+continued, avoiding his eyes. "My uncle has been expecting you for
+some days. He has asked for you again and again."
+
+He explained that he had been in London--hence the delay; and,
+further, that he must return to Blore that day. She felt that she was
+the cause of this, and she colored painfully. But he seemed to be
+indifferent. He noticed a trifling change in the hall, asked a
+question or two about his uncle's state, and inquired what had caused
+his sudden illness.
+
+She told the story, giving details. He nodded. "Yes, I have seen him
+in a similar attack," he said. "But he gets older. I am afraid it
+alarmed you?"
+
+She forced herself to describe Lord Audley's part in the matter--and
+Mr. Stubbs's, and was conscious that she was dragging in Mr. Stubbs
+more often than was necessary. Basset listened politely, remarked that
+it was fortunate that Audley had been on the spot, added that he was
+sure that everything had been done that was right.
+
+When he had gone upstairs to see John Audley she escaped to her room.
+Her cheeks were burning, and she could have cried. Basset's coldness,
+his distance, the complete change in his manner all hurt her more than
+she could say. They brought home to her, painfully home to her what
+she had done. She had been foolish enough to fling away the friend,
+when she need only have discarded the lover!
+
+But she must face it out now, the thing was done, and she must put up
+with it. And by and by, fearing that Basset might suppose that she
+avoided him, she came down and waited for him in the deserted library.
+She had waited some minutes, moving restlessly to and fro and wishing
+the ordeal of luncheon were over, when her eyes fell on the door of
+the staircase that led up to her uncle's room. It was ajar.
+
+She stared at it, for she knew that she had closed it after Basset had
+gone up. Now it was ajar. She reflected. The house was still, she
+could hear no one moving. She went out quickly, crossed the hall,
+looked into the dining-room. Toft was not there, nor was he in the
+pantry. She returned to the library, and went softly up the stairs.
+
+So softly that she surprised the man before he could raise his head
+from the keyhole. He saw that he was detected, and for an instant he
+scowled at her in the half-light of the narrow passage, uncertain what
+to do. Mary beckoned to him, and went down before him to the library.
+
+There she turned on him. "Shut the door," she said. "You were
+listening! Don't deny it. You have acted disgracefully, and it will be
+my duty to tell Mr. Audley what has happened."
+
+The man, sallow with fear, tried to brave it out.
+
+"You will only make mischief, Miss," he said sullenly. "You'll come
+near to killing the master."
+
+"Very good!" Mary said, quivering with indignation. "Then instead of
+telling Mr. Audley I shall tell Mr. Basset. It will be for him to
+decide whether Mr. Audley shall know. Go now."
+
+But Toft held his ground. "You'll be doing a bad day's work, Miss," he
+said earnestly. "I want to run straight." He raised his hand to his
+forehead, which was wet with perspiration. "I swear I do! I want to
+run straight."
+
+"Straight!" Mary cried in scorn. "And you listen at doors!"
+
+The man made a last attempt to soften her. "For God's sake, be warned,
+Miss!" he cried. "Don't drive me. If you knew as much as I do----"
+
+"I should not listen to learn the rest!" replied Mary without pity.
+"That is enough. Please to see that lunch is ready." She pointed to
+the door. She was not an Audley for nothing.
+
+Toft gave way and went, and she remained alone, perplexed as well as
+angry. Mrs. Toft and Etruria were good simple folk; she liked them.
+But Toft had puzzled her from the first. He was so silent, so
+secretive, he was for ever appearing without warning and vanishing
+without noise. She had often suspected that he spied on his master.
+
+But she had never caught him in the act, and the certainty that he did
+so, filled her with dismay. It was fortunate, she thought, that Basset
+was there, and that she could consult him. And the instant that he
+appeared, forgetting their quarrel and the strained relations between
+them, she poured out her story. Toft was ungrateful, treacherous, a
+danger! With Mr. Audley so helpless, the house so lonely, it
+frightened her.
+
+It was only when she had run on for some time that Basset's air of
+detachment struck her. He listened, with his back to the fire, and his
+eyes bent on the floor, but he did not speak until she had told her
+story, and expressed her misgivings.
+
+When he did, "I am not surprised," he said. "I've suspected this for
+some time. But I don't know that anything can be done."
+
+"Do you mean that--you would do nothing?"
+
+"The truth is," he answered, "Toft is pretty far in his master's
+confidence. And what he does not know he wishes to know. When he knows
+it, he will find it a mare's nest. The truth--as I see it at any
+rate--is that your uncle is possessed by a craze. He wants me to help
+him in it. I cannot. I have told him so, firmly and finally, to-day.
+Well, I suspect that he will now turn to Toft. I hope not, but he may,
+and if we report the man's misconduct, it will only precipitate
+matters and hasten an understanding. That is the position, and if I
+were you, I should let the matter rest."
+
+"You mean that?" she exclaimed.
+
+"I do."
+
+"But--but I have spoken to Toft!" Her eyes were bright with anger.
+
+He kept his on the floor. It was only by maintaining the distance
+between them that he could hope to hide what he felt. "Still I would
+let him be," he repeated. "I do not think that Toft is dangerous. He
+has surprised one half of a secret, and he wishes to learn the other
+half. That is all."
+
+"And I am to take no notice?"
+
+"I believe that will be your wisest course."
+
+She was shocked, and she was still more hurt. He pushed her aside, he
+pushed her out of his confidence, out of her uncle's confidence! His
+manner, his indifference, his stolidity showed that she had not only
+killed his fancy for her at a stroke, but that he now disliked her.
+
+And still she protested. "But I must tell my uncle!" she cried.
+
+"I think I would not," he repeated. "But there--" he paused and looked
+at his watch--"I am afraid that if you are going to give me lunch I
+must sit down. I've a long journey before me."
+
+Then she saw that no more could be said, and with an effort she
+repressed her feelings. "Yes," she said, "I was forgetting. You must
+be hungry."
+
+She led the way to the dining-room, and sat down with him, Toft
+waiting on them with the impassive ease of the trained man. While they
+ate, Basset talked of indifferent things, of his journey from town, of
+the roads, of London, of Colonel Mottisfont--an interesting man whom
+he had met in the train. And as he talked, and she made lifeless
+answers, her indignation cooled, and her heart sank.
+
+She could have cried, indeed. She had lost her friend. He was gone to
+an immense distance. He was willing to leave her to deal with her
+troubles and difficulties, it might be, with her dangers. In killing
+his love with cruel words--and how often had she repented, not of the
+thing, but of the manner!--she had killed every feeling, every liking,
+that he had entertained for her.
+
+It was clear that this was so, for to the last he maintained his
+coldness and indifference. When he was gone, when the sound of the
+chaise-wheels had died in the distance, she felt more lonely than she
+had ever felt in her life. In her Paris days she had had no reason to
+blame herself, and all the unturned leaves of life awaited her. Now
+she had turned over one page, and marred it, she had won a friend and
+lost him, she had spoiled the picture, which she had not wished to
+keep!
+
+Her uncle lay upstairs, ready to bear, but hardly welcoming her
+company. He had his secrets, and she stood outside them. She sat
+below, enclosed in and menaced by the silence of the house. Yet it was
+not fear that she felt so much as a sadness, a great depression, a
+gray despondency. She craved something, she did not know what. She
+only knew that she was alone--and sad.
+
+She tried to fight against the feeling. She tried to read, to work,
+even to interest herself in Toft and his mystery. She failed. And at
+last she gave up the attempt and with her elbows on her knees and her
+eyes on the fire she fell to musing, the ticking of the tall clock and
+the fall of the embers the only sounds that broke the stillness of the
+shadowy room.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+ TOFT AT THE BUTTERFLIES
+
+
+Basset's view of Toft, if it did not hit, came very near the mark. For
+many years the man had served his master with loyalty, the relations
+between them being such as were common in days when servants stayed
+long in a place and held themselves a part of the family. The master
+had been easy, the man had had no ambitions beyond those of his
+fellows, and no temptations except those which turned upon the
+cellar-book.
+
+But a year before Mary Audley's arrival two things had happened. First
+the curate had fallen in love with Etruria, and the fact had become
+known to her father, to whom the girl was everything. Her refinement,
+her beauty, her goodness were his secret delight. And the thought that
+she might become a lady, that she might sit at the table at which he
+served had taken hold of the austere man's mind and become a passion.
+He was ready to do anything and to suffer anything to bring this
+about. Nor was he deceived when Etruria put the offer aside. She was
+nothing if not transparent, and he was too fond of her not to see that
+her happiness was bound up with the man who had stooped to woo her.
+
+He was not blind to the difficulties or to the clergyman's poverty.
+But he saw that Colet, poor as he was, could raise his daughter in the
+social scale; and he spent long hours in studying how the marriage
+might be brought about. He hugged the matter to him, and brooded over
+it, but he never discovered his thoughts or his hopes either to his
+wife, or to Etruria.
+
+Then one day the sale of a living happened to be discussed in his
+presence, and as he went, solemn and silent, round the table he
+listened. He learned that livings could be bought. He learned that the
+one in question, with its house and garden and three hundred a year,
+had fetched a thousand guineas, and from that day Toft's aim was by
+hook or crook to gain a thousand guineas. He revelled in impossible
+dreams of buying a living, of giving it to Etruria, and of handing
+maid and dowry to the fortunate man who was to make her a lady.
+
+There have been more sordid and more selfish ambitions.
+
+But a thousand guineas was a huge sum to the manservant. True, he had
+saved a hundred and twenty pounds, and for his position in life he
+held himself a rich man. But a thousand guineas? He turned the matter
+this way and that, and sometimes he lost hope, and sometimes he pinned
+his faith to a plan that twenty-four hours showed to be futile. All
+the time his wife who lay beside him, his daughter who waited on him,
+his master on whom he waited, were as far from seeing into his mind as
+if they had lived in another planet.
+
+Then the second thing happened. He surprised, wholly by chance, a
+secret which gave him a hold over John Audley. Under other
+circumstances he might have been above using the advantage; as it was,
+he was tempted. He showed his hand, a sum of four hundred pounds was
+named; for a week he fancied that he had performed half his task. Then
+his master explained with a gentle smile that to know and to prove
+were two things, and that whereas Toft had for a time been able to do
+both, John Audley had now destroyed the evidence. The master had in
+fact been too sly for the man, and Toft found himself pretty well
+where he had been. In the end Audley thought it prudent to give him a
+hundred pounds, which did but whet his desire and sharpen his wits.
+
+For he had now tasted blood. He had made something by a secret. There
+might be others to learn. He kept his eyes open, and soon he became
+aware of his master's disappearances. He tracked him, he played the
+spy, he discovered that John Audley was searching for something in the
+Great House. The words that the old man let fall, while half-conscious
+in the Yew Walk, added to his knowledge, and at the same time scared
+him. A moment later, and Lord Audley might have known as much as he
+knew--and perhaps more!
+
+For he did not as yet know all, and it was in the attempt to complete
+his knowledge that Mary had caught him listening at the door. The blow
+was a sharp one. He was still so far unspoiled, still so near the old
+Toft that he could not bear that his wife and daughter should learn
+the depth to which he had fallen. And John Audley? What would he do,
+if Mary told him?
+
+Toft could not guess. He knew that his master was barely sane, if he
+was sane; but he knew also that he was utterly inhuman. John Audley
+would put him and his family to the door without mercy if that seemed
+to him the safer course. And that meant an end of all his plans for
+Etruria, for Colet, for them all.
+
+True, he might use such power as he had. But it was imperfect, and in
+its use he must come to grips with one who had shown himself his
+better both in courage and cunning. He had imbibed a strong fear of
+his master, and he could not without a qualm contemplate a struggle
+with him.
+
+For a week after his detection by Mary, he went about his work in a
+fever of anxiety. And nothing happened; it was that which tried him.
+More than once he was on the point of throwing himself at her feet, of
+telling her all he knew, of imploring her pardon. It was only her
+averted eyes and cold tone that held him back.
+
+Such a crisis makes a man either better or worse, and it made Toft
+worse. At the end of three days a chance word put a fine point on his
+fears and stung him to action. He might not know enough to face John
+Audley, but he thought that he knew enough to sell his secret--in the
+other camp. His lordship was young and probably malleable. He would go
+to him and strike a bargain.
+
+Arrived at this point the man did not hide from himself that he was
+going to do a hateful thing. He thought of his wife and her wonder
+could she know. He thought of Etruria's mild eyes and her goodness.
+And he shivered. But it was for her. It was for them. Within
+twenty-four hours he was in Riddsley.
+
+As he passed the Maypole, where Mr. Colet had his lodgings, he noticed
+that the town wore an unusual aspect. Groups of men stood talking in
+the doorway, or on the doorsteps. A passing horseman was shouting to a
+man at a window. Nearer the middle of the town the stir was greater.
+About the saddler's door, about the steps leading up to the Audley
+Arms, and round the yard of the inn, knots of men argued and
+gesticulated. Toft asked the saddler what it was.
+
+"Haven't you heard?"
+
+"No. What's the news?"
+
+"The General Election's off!" The saddler proclaimed it with an
+inflamed look. "Peel's in again! And damn me, after this," he
+continued, "there's nothing I won't swallow! He come in in the farming
+interest, and the hunting interest, and the racing interest, and the
+gentlemanly interest, that I live by, and you too, Mr. Toft! And it
+was bad enough when he threw it up! But to go in again and to take our
+money and do the Radicals' work!" The saddler spat on the brick
+pavement. "Why, there was never such a thing heard of in the 'varsal
+world! Never! If Tamworth don't blush for him and his pigs turn pink,
+I'm d--d, and that's all."
+
+Toft had to ask half a dozen questions before he grasped the position.
+Gradually he learned that after Peel had resigned the Whigs had tried
+to form a government; that they had failed, and that now Peel was to
+come in again, expressly to repeal the Corn Laws. The Corn Laws which
+he had taken office to support, and to the maintenance of which his
+party was pledged!
+
+The thing was not much in Toft's way, nor his interest in it great,
+but as he passed along he caught odds and ends of conversation. "I
+don't believe a word of it!" cried an angry man. "The Radicals have
+invented it!" "Like enough!" replied another. "Like enough! There's
+naught they wouldn't do!" "Well, after all," suggested a third in a
+milder tone, "cheap bread is something." "What? If you've got no money
+to buy it? You're a fool! I tell you it'll be the ruin of Riddsley!"
+"You're right there, Joe!" answered the first speaker. "You're right!
+There'll be no farmer for miles round'll pay his way!"
+
+At the door of Mr. Stubbs's office three excited clients were
+clamoring for entrance; an elderly clerk with a high bridge to his
+nose was withstanding them. Before the Mechanics' Institute the
+secretary, a superior person of Manchester views, was talking
+pompously to a little group. "We must take in the whole field," Toft
+heard him say. "If you'll read Mr. Carlyle's tract on----" Toft lost
+the rest. The Institute readers belonged mainly to Hatton's Works or
+Banfield's, and the secretary taught in an evening school. He was
+darkly suspected of being a teetotaller, but it had never been proved
+against him.
+
+Toft began to wonder if he had chosen his time well, but he was near
+The Butterflies and he hardened his heart; to retreat now were to dub
+himself coward. He told the maid that he came from the Gatehouse, and
+that he was directed to deliver a letter into his lordship's own hand,
+and in a moment he found himself mounting the shallow carpeted stairs.
+In comparison with the Gatehouse, the house was modern, elegant,
+luxurious, the passages were warm.
+
+When he was ushered in, his lordship, a dressing-gown cast over a
+chair beside him as if he had just put on his coat, was writing near
+the fireplace. After an interval that seemed long to Toft, who eyed
+his heavy massiveness with a certain dismay, he laid down his pen, sat
+back, and looked at the servant.
+
+"From the Gatehouse?" he asked, after a leisurely survey.
+
+"Yes, my lord," Toft answered respectfully. "I was with Mr. Audley
+when he was taken ill in the Yew Walk."
+
+"To be sure! I thought I knew your face. You've a letter for me?"
+
+Toft hesitated. "I wished to see you, my lord," he said. The thing was
+not as easy as he had hoped it would be; the man was more formidable.
+"On a matter of business."
+
+Audley raised his eyebrows. "Business?" he said. "Isn't it Mr. Stubbs
+you want to see?"
+
+"No, my lord," Toft answered. But the sweat broke out on his forehead.
+What if his lordship took a high tone, ordered him out, and reported
+the matter to his master? Too late it struck Toft that a gentleman
+might take that line.
+
+"Well, be quick," Audley replied. Then in a different tone, "You don't
+come from Miss Audley?"
+
+"No, my lord."
+
+"Then what is it?"
+
+Toft turned his hat in his hands. "I have information"--it was with
+difficulty he could control his voice--"which it is to your lordship's
+interest to have."
+
+There was a pregnant pause. "Oh!" the young man said at last. "And you
+come--to sell it?"
+
+Toft nodded, unable to speak. Yet he was getting on as well as could
+be expected.
+
+"Rather an unusual position, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, my lord."
+
+"The information should be unusual?"
+
+"It is, my lord."
+
+Lord Audley smiled. "Well," he answered, "I'll say this, my man. If
+you are going to sell me a spavined horse, don't! It will not be to
+your advantage. What's it all about?"
+
+"Mr. Audley's claim, my lord."
+
+Audley had expected this, yet he could not quite mask the effect which
+the statement made upon him. The thing that he had foreseen and
+feared, that had haunted him in the small hours and been as it were a
+death's-head at his feast, was taking shape. But he was quick to
+recover himself, and "Oh!" said he. "That's it, is it! Don't you know
+that that's all over, my man?"
+
+"I think not, my lord."
+
+The peer took up a paper-knife and toyed with it. "Well," he said,
+"what is it? Come, I don't buy a pig in a poke."
+
+"Mr. Audley has found----"
+
+"Found, eh?" raising his eyebrows.
+
+Toft corrected himself. "He has in his power papers that upset your
+lordship's case. I can still enable you to keep those papers in your
+hands."
+
+Audley threw down the paper-cutter. "They are certainly worthless," he
+said. His voice was contemptuous, but there was a hard look in his
+eyes.
+
+"Mr. Audley thinks otherwise."
+
+"But he has not seen them?"
+
+"He knows what's in them, my lord. He has been searching for them for
+weeks."
+
+The young man weighed this, and Toft's courage rose, and his
+confidence. The trumps were in his hand, and though for a moment he
+had shrunk before the other's heavy jaw he was glad now that he had
+come; more glad when the big man after a long pause asked quietly,
+"What do you want?"
+
+"Five hundred pounds, my lord."
+
+The other laughed, and Toft did not like the laugh. "Indeed? Five
+hundred pounds? That's a good deal of money!"
+
+"The information is worth that, or it is worth nothing."
+
+"I quite agree!" the peer answered lightly. "You're a wit, my man. But
+that's not saying you've a good case. However, I'll put you to the
+test. You know where the papers are?"
+
+"I do, my lord."
+
+"Very good. There's a piece of paper. Write on one side the precise
+place where they lie. I will write on the other a promise to pay L500
+if the papers are found in that place, and are of the value you
+assert. That is a fair offer."
+
+Toft stood irresolute. He thought hard.
+
+My lord pushed the paper across. "Come!" he said; "write! Or I'll
+write first, if that is your trouble." With decision he seized a
+quill, held it poised a moment, then he wrote four lines and signed
+them with a flourish, added the date, and read them to himself. With a
+grim smile he pushed the paper across to Toft. "There," he said. "What
+more do you want, my man, than that?"
+
+Toft took the paper and read what was written on it, from the "In
+consideration of," that began the sentence, to the firm signature
+"Audley of Beaudelays" that closed it. He did not speak.
+
+"Come! You can't want anything more than that!" my lord said. "You
+have only to write, read me the secret, and keep the paper until it is
+redeemed."
+
+"Yes, my lord."
+
+"Then take the pen. Of course the place must be precise. I am not
+going to pull down Beaudelays House to find a box of papers that I do
+not believe is there!"
+
+Toft's face was gray, the sweat stood on his lip. "I did not say," he
+muttered, the paper rustling in his unsteady hand, "that they were in
+Beaudelays House."
+
+"No?" Audley replied. "Perhaps not. And for the matter of that, it is
+not a question of saying anything. It is a question of writing. You
+can write, I suppose?"
+
+Toft did not speak. He could not speak. He had supposed that the power
+to put his lordship on the scent would be the same as pulling down the
+fox. When he had said that the papers were in the house, that they
+were behind a wall, that Mr. Audley knew where they were, he would
+have earned--he thought--his money!
+
+But he had not known the man with whom he had to deal. And challenged
+to set down the place where the papers lay, he knew that he could not
+do it. In the house? Behind a wall? He saw now that that would not do.
+That would not satisfy the big smiling gentleman who sat opposite him,
+amused at the dilemma in which he found himself.
+
+He knew that he was cornered, and he lost his countenance and his
+manners. He swore.
+
+The young man laughed. "The biter bit," he said. "Five hundred pounds
+you said, didn't you? I wonder whether I ought to send for the
+constable? Or tell Mr. Audley? That would be wiser perhaps? What do
+you think you deserve, my man?"
+
+Toft stretched out a shaking arm towards the paper. But my lord was
+before him. His huge hand fell on it. He tore it across and across,
+and threw the pieces under the table.
+
+"No," he said, "that won't do! You will write at a venture and if you
+are right you will claim the money, and if you are wrong you will have
+this paper to show that I bargained with you. But I never meant to
+bargain with you, my good rascal. I knew you were a fraud. I knew it
+from the beginning. And now I've only one thing to say. Either you
+will tell me freely what you know, and in that case I shall say
+nothing. Or I report you to your master. That's my last word."
+
+Toft shook from head to foot. He had done a hateful thing, he had been
+defeated, and exposure threatened him. As far as his master was
+concerned he could face it. But his wife, his daughter? Who thought
+him honest, loyal, who thought him a man! Who believed in him! How
+could he, how would he face them, if this tale were told?
+
+My lord saw the change in him, saw how he shrank, and, smiling, he
+fancied that he had the man in his grasp, fancied that he would tell
+what he knew, and tell it for nothing. And twice Toft opened his lips
+to speak, and twice no words came. For at the last moment, in this
+strait, what there was of good in him--and there was good--rose up,
+and had the better; had the better, reinforced perhaps by his hatred
+of the heavy smiling face that gloated upon him.
+
+For at the last moment, "No, my lord," he said desperately, "I'll not
+speak. I'm d--d if I do! You may do what you like."
+
+And before his lordship, taken by surprise, could interpose, the
+servant had turned and made for the door. He was half-way down the
+stairs before the other had risen from his seat. He had escaped. He
+was clear for the time, and safe in the road he breathed more freely.
+But he had gone a hundred yards on his way before he remarked that he
+was in the open air, or bethought himself to put on his hat.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+ MY LORD SPEAKS
+
+
+For a few moments Audley had certainly hoped that he was going to
+learn all that Toft knew, and to learn it for nothing. He had been
+baulked in this. But when he came to think over the matter he was not
+ill content with himself, nor with his conduct of the interview. He
+had dealt with the matter with presence of mind, and in the only safe
+way; and he had taught the man a lesson. "He knows by this time," he
+reflected, "that if I am a lord, I am not a fool!"
+
+But this mood did not last long, and it was succeeded by one less
+cheerful. The death's-head had never been wanting at his feast. The
+family tradition which had come down to him with his blood had never
+ceased to haunt him, and in the silence of the night he had many a
+time heard John Audley at work seeking for the means to displace him.
+Even the great empty house had seemed to mock his pretensions.
+
+But until the last month his fears had been vague and shadowy, and in
+his busy hours he had laughed at them. He was Lord Audley, he sat, he
+voted, the doors of White's, of Almack's were open to him. In town he
+was a personage, in the country a divinity still hedged him, no
+tradesman spoke to him save hat in hand. Then, lately, the traces
+which he had found in the Great House had given a shape to his fears;
+and within the last hour he had learned their solidity. Sane or mad,
+John Audley was upon his track, bent upon displacing him, bent upon
+ruining him; and this very day the man might be laying his hand upon
+the thing he needed.
+
+Audley did not doubt the truth of Toft's story. It confirmed his fears
+only too well; and the family tradition--that too weighed with him. He
+sat for a long time staring before him, then, uneasy and restless, he
+rose and paced the floor. He went to and fro, to and fro, until
+by-and-by he came to a stand before one of the windows. He drummed
+with his fingers on the glass. There was one way, certainly. Stubbs
+had said so, and Stubbs was right. There was one way, if he could make
+up his mind to the limitations it would impose upon him. If he could
+make up his mind to be a poor man.
+
+The window at which he stood looked on a road of quiet dignity, a
+little removed from the common traffic of the town. But the windows,
+looking sideways, commanded also a more frequented thoroughfare which
+crossed this street. His thoughts far away and sombrely engaged, the
+young man watched the stream of passers, as it trickled across the
+distant opening.
+
+Suddenly his eyes recalled his mind to the present. He started,
+turned, in three strides he was beside the hearth. He rang the bell
+twice, the signal for his man. He waited impatiently.
+
+"My hat and coat!" he cried to the servant. "Quick, I'm in a hurry!"
+Like most men who have known vicissitudes he had a superstitious side,
+and the figure which he had seen pass across the end of the road had
+appeared so aptly, so timely, had had so much the air of an answer to
+his doubts that he took it for an inspiration.
+
+He ran down the stairs, but he knew that his comings and goings were
+marked, and once outside the house he controlled his impatience. He
+walked slowly, humming a tune and swaying his cane, and it was a very
+stately gentleman taking the air and acknowledging with courtesy the
+respectful salutations of the passers, who came on Mary Audley as she
+turned from Dr. Pepper's door in the High Street.
+
+He stood. "Miss Audley!" he cried.
+
+Mary was flushed with exercise, ruffled by the wind, travel-stained.
+But she would have cared little for these things if she could have
+governed the blood that rose to her cheeks at his sudden appearance.
+To mask her confusion she rushed into speech.
+
+"You cannot be more surprised than I am," she said. "My uncle is not
+so well to-day, and in a panic about his medicine. Toft, who should
+have come in to town to fetch it, was not to be found, so I had to
+come."
+
+"And you have walked in?"
+
+Smiling, she showed him her boots. "And I am presently going to walk
+out," she said.
+
+"You will never do it?"
+
+"Before dark? No, perhaps not!" She raised her hand and put back a
+tress of hair which had strayed from its fellows. "And I shall be
+tired. But I shall be much surprised if I cannot walk ten miles at a
+pinch."
+
+"I shall be surprised if you walk ten miles to-day," he retorted. "My
+plans for you are quite different. Have you got what you came to
+fetch?"
+
+She had steadied herself, and was by this time at her ease. She made a
+little grimace. "No," she said. "It will not be ready for quarter of
+an hour."
+
+He rang Dr. Pepper's bell. An awestruck apprentice, who had watched
+the interview through the dusty window of the surgery, showed himself.
+
+"Be good enough to send the medicine for Miss Audley to Mrs.
+Jenkinson's," Audley said. "You understand?"
+
+"Yes, my lord! Certainly, my lord!" She was going to protest. He
+turned to her, silenced her. "And now I take possession of you," he
+said, supremely careless what the lad heard. "You are coming to The
+Butterflies to take tea, or sherry, or whatever you take when you have
+walked five miles."
+
+"Oh, Lord Audley!"
+
+"And then I am going to drive you as far as the old Cross, and walk up
+the hill with you--as far as I choose."
+
+"Oh, but I cannot!" Mary cried, coloring charmingly, but whether with
+pleasure or embarrassment she could not tell. She only knew that his
+ridiculous way of taking possession of her, the very masterfulness of
+it, moved her strangely. "I cannot indeed. What would my uncle say?"
+
+"I don't know, and I don't care!" he replied, swinging his walking
+cane, and smiling as he towered above her.
+
+"He may go hang--for once!"
+
+She hesitated. "It is very good of you," she said. "I confess I did
+not look forward to the walk back. But----"
+
+"There is no--but," he replied. "And no walk back! It is arranged. It
+is time--" his eyes dwelt kindly on her as she turned with him--"it
+is time that some one took it in hand to arrange things for you.
+Five miles in and five miles out over dirty roads on a winter
+afternoon--and Miss Audley! No, no! And now--this way, please!"
+
+She yielded, she could not tell why, except that it was difficult to
+resist him, and not unpleasant to obey him. And after all, why should
+she not go with him? She had been feeling fagged and tired, depressed,
+moreover, by her uncle's fears. The low-lying fields, the town, the
+streets, all dingy under a gray autumn sky, had given her no welcome.
+
+And her thoughts, too, had been dun-colored. She had felt very lonely
+the last few days, doubtful of the future, without aim, hipped. And
+now in a moment all seemed changed. She was no longer alone, nor
+fearful. The streets were no longer dingy nor dreary. There were still
+pleasant things in the world, kindness, and thought for others, and
+friendship and--and tea and cake! Was it wonderful that as she walked
+along beside my lord her spirits rose? That she felt an unaccountable
+relief, and in the reaction of the moment smiled and sparkled more
+than her wont? That the muddy brick pavement, the low-browed shops,
+the leafless trees all seemed brighter than before, and that even the
+butcher's stall became almost a thing of beauty?
+
+And he responded famously. He swung his stick, he laughed, he was gay.
+"Don't pretend!" he said. "I see that you were glad enough to meet
+me!"
+
+"And the tea and cake!" she replied. "After five miles who would not
+be glad to meet them?"
+
+"Exactly! It is my belief that if I had not met you, you would have
+fallen by the way. You want some one to look after you, Miss Audley."
+The name was a caress.
+
+Nor was the pleasure all their own. Great was the excitement of the
+townsfolk as they passed. "His lordship and a young lady?" cried half
+Riddsley, running to the windows. "Quick, or you will miss them!" Some
+wondered who she could be; more had seen her at church and could
+answer. "Miss Audley? The young lady who had come to live at the
+Gatehouse? Indeed! You don't say so?" For every soul in Riddsley, over
+twelve years old, was versed in the Audley history, knew all about the
+suit, and could tell off the degrees of kindred as easily as they
+could tell the distance from the Audley Arms to the Portcullis. "Mr.
+Peter Audley's daughter who lived in Paris? Lady-in-waiting to a
+Princess. And now walking with his lordship as if she had known him
+all her life! What would Mr. John say? D'you see how gay he looks! Not
+a bit what he is when he speaks to us! Wonder whether there's anything
+in it!" And so on, and so on, with tit-bits from the history of Mary's
+father, and choice eccentricities from the life of John Audley.
+
+Mrs. Jenkinson's amazement, as she espied them coming up the path to
+the house, was a thing by itself. It was such that she set her door
+ajar that she might see them pass through the hall. She was all of a
+twitter, she said afterwards. And poor Jane and poor Sarah--who were
+out! What a miss they were having! It was not thrice in the twelve
+months that his lordship brought a lady to the house.
+
+A greater miss, indeed, it turned out, than she thought. For to her
+gratification Lord Audley tapped at her door. He pushed it open. "Mrs.
+Jenkinson," he said pleasantly, "this is my cousin, Miss Audley, who
+is good enough to take a cup of your excellent tea with me, if you
+will make it. She has walked in from the Gatehouse."
+
+Mrs. Jenkinson was a combination of an eager, bright-eyed bird and a
+stout, short lady in dove-colored silk--if such a thing can be
+imagined; and the soul of good-nature. She took Mary by both hands,
+beamed upon her, and figuratively took her to her bosom. "A little
+cake and wine, my dear," she chirruped. "After a long walk! And then
+tea. To be sure, my dear! I knew your father, Mr. Peter Audley, a
+dear, good gentleman. You would like to wash your hands? Yes, my dear!
+Not that you are not--and his lordship will wait for us upstairs. Yes,
+there's a step. I knew your father, to be sure, to be sure. A new
+brush, my dear. And now will you let me--not that your sweet face
+needs any ornament! Yes, I talk too much--but, there, my love, when
+you are as old----"
+
+She was a simple soul, and because her tongue rarely stopped she might
+have been thought to see nothing. But women, unlike men, can do two
+things at once, and little escaped her twinkling spectacles. As she
+told her sister later, "My dear, I saw it was spoons from the first.
+She sparkled all over, bless her innocent heart! And he, if she had
+been a duchess, could not have waited on her more elegant--well,
+elegantly, Sally, if you like, but we can't all talk like you. They
+thought, the dear creatures, that I saw nothing; but once he said
+something too low for me to hear and she looked up at him, and her
+pretty eyes were like stars. And he looked--well, Sally, I could not
+tell you how he looked!"
+
+"I am not sure that it would be proper," the spinster demurred.
+
+"Ah, well, it was as pretty a thing as you'd wish to see," the good
+creature ran on, drumming with her fingers on the lap of her silk
+gown. "And she, bless her, I dare say she was all of a twitter, but
+she didn't show it. No airs or graces either--but there, an Audley has
+no need! Why, God bless me, I said something about the Princess and
+what company she must have seen, and what a change for her, and she up
+and said--I am sure I loved her for it!--that she had been no more
+than a governess! My dear, an Audley a governess! I fancied my lord
+wasn't quite pleased, and very natural! But when a man is spoons----"
+
+"My dear sister!"
+
+"Vulgar? Well, perhaps so, I know I run on, but gentle or simple,
+they're the same when they're in love! And Jane will be glad to hear
+that she took two pieces of the sultana and two cups of tea, and he
+watching every piece she put in her mouth, and she coloring up, once
+or twice, so that it did my heart good to see them, the pretty dears.
+Jane will be pleased. And there might have been nothing but seed cake
+in the house. I shall remember more presently, but I was in such a
+twitter!"
+
+"What did she call him?" Miss Sarah asked.
+
+"To be sure, my dear, that was what I was going to tell you! I
+listened, and not a single thing did she call him. But once, when he
+gave her some cake, I heard him call her Mary, for all the world as if
+it was a bit of sugar in his mouth. And there came a kind of quiver
+over her pretty face, and she looked at her plate as much as to say it
+was a new thing. And I said to myself 'Philip and Mary'--out of the
+old school-books you know, but who they were I don't remember. But
+it's my opinion," Mrs. Jenkinson continued, rubbing her nose with the
+end of her spectacles, "that he had spoken just before they came in,
+Sally."
+
+"You don't say so?" Sarah cried.
+
+"If you ask me, there was a kind of softness about them both! Law,
+when I think what you and Jane missed through going to that stupid
+Institute! I am sure you'll never forgive yourselves!"
+
+The good lady had not missed much herself, but she was mistaken in
+thinking that the two had come to an understanding. Indeed when,
+leaving the warmth of her presence behind them, they drove out of
+town, with the servant seated with folded arms behind them and Mary
+snugly tucked in beside my lord, a new constraint began to separate
+them. The excitement of the meeting had waned, the fillip of the
+unwonted treat had lost its power. A depression for which she could
+not account beset Mary as they rolled through the dull outskirts and
+faced the flat mistridden pastures and the long lines of willows. On
+his side doubt held him silent. He had found it pleasant to come to
+the brink, he had not been blind to Mary's smiles and her rare
+blushes. But the one step farther--that could not be re-trodden, and
+it was in the nature of the man to hesitate at the last, and to
+consider if he were getting full value.
+
+So, as they drove through the dusk, now noiselessly over sodden
+leaves, now drumming along the hard road, the hint of a chill fell
+between them. Mary's thoughts went forward to the silent house and the
+lonely rooms, and she chid herself for ingratitude. She had had her
+pleasure, she had had an unwonted treat. What was wrong with her? What
+more did she want?
+
+It was nearly dark, and not many words had passed when Lord Audley
+pulled up the horses at the old Cross. The man leapt down and was
+going to help Mary to alight, when his master bade him take the
+box-seat and the reins.
+
+Mary remonstrated. "Oh, don't get down, please!" she cried. "Please!
+It is nothing to the house from here."
+
+"It is half a mile if it is a yard," he said. "And it is nearly dark.
+I am going with you." He bade the man walk the horses up and down.
+
+She ventured another protest, but he put it aside. He threw back the
+rug and lifted her down. For a moment he stamped about and stretched
+himself. Then "Come, Mary," he said. It was an order.
+
+She knew then what was at hand. And though she had a minute before
+looked forward with regret to the parting, all her thought now was how
+she might escape to the Gatehouse. It became a refuge. Her heart, as
+she started to walk beside him, beat so quickly that she could not
+speak. She was thankful that it was dark, and that he could not read
+her agitation in her face.
+
+He did not speak himself for some minutes. Then "Mary," he said
+abruptly, looking straight before him, "I am rather one for taking
+than asking, and that stands in my way now. When I've wanted a thing
+I've generally taken it. Now I want a thing I can't take--without
+asking. And I feel that I'm not good at the asking. But I want it
+badly, and I must do the best I can. I love you, Mary. I love you, and
+I want you for my wife."
+
+She could not find a word. When he went on his tone was lower.
+
+"I'm rather a lonely man," he said. "You didn't know that, or think
+it? But it is true. And such an hour as we have spent to-day is not
+mine often. It lies with you to say if I am going to have more of
+them. I might tell you with truth that I haven't much to offer my
+wife. That if I am Audley of Beaudelays, I am the poorest Audley that
+ever was. That my wife will be no great lady, and will step into no
+golden shoes. The butterflies are moths, Mary, nowadays, and if I am
+ever to be much she will have to help me. But I will tell no lies, my
+dear!" He turned to her then and stopped; and perforce, though her
+knees trembled, she had to stand also, and face him as he looked down
+at her. "I am not going to pretend that what I have to offer isn't
+enough. For you are lonely like me; you have no one but John Audley to
+look to, and I am big enough and strong enough to take care of you.
+And I will take care of you--if you will let me. If you will say the
+word, Mary?"
+
+He loomed above her in the darkness. He seemed already to possess her.
+She tried to think, tried to ask herself if she loved him, if she
+loved him enough; but the fancy for him which she had had from the
+beginning, that and his masterfulness swept her irresistibly towards
+him. She was lonely--more lonely than ever of late, and to whom was
+she to look? Who else had been as good to her, as kind to her, as
+thoughtful for her, as he who now wooed her so honestly, who offered
+her all he had to offer? She hesitated, and he saw that she hesitated.
+
+"Come, we've got to have this out," he said bluntly. And he put his
+hand on her shoulder. "We stand alone, both of us, you and I. We're
+the last of the old line, and I want you for my wife, Mary! With you I
+can do something, with you I believe that I can make something of my
+life! Without you--but there, if you say no, I won't take it! I won't
+take it, and I am going to have you, if not to-day, to-morrow, and if
+not to-morrow, the next day! Make no mistake about that!"
+
+She tried to fence with him. "I have not a penny," she faltered.
+
+"I don't ask you for a penny."
+
+Her instinct was still to escape. "You are Lord Audley," she said,
+"and I am a poor relation. Won't you--don't you think that you will
+repent presently!"
+
+"That's my business! If that be all--if there's no one else----"
+
+"No, there's no one else," she admitted. "But----"
+
+"_But_ be hanged!" he cried. "If there's no one else you are mine."
+And he passed his arm round her.
+
+For a moment she stepped back. "No!" she protested, raising her hands
+to push him off. "Please--please let me think."
+
+He let her be, for already he knew that he had won; and perhaps in his
+own mind he was beginning to doubt the wisdom of the step. "My uncle?
+Have you thought of him?" she asked. "What will he say?"
+
+"I have not thought of him," he cried grandly, "and I am not going to
+think of him. I am thinking, my dear, only of you. Do you love me?"
+
+She stood silent, gazing at him.
+
+"Don't play with me!" he said. "I've a right to an answer."
+
+"I think I do," she said softly. "Yes--I think--no, wait; that is not
+all."
+
+"It is all."
+
+"No," between laughing and crying. "You are not giving me time. I want
+to think. You are carrying me by storm, sir."
+
+"And a good way, too!" he rejoined. Then she did let him take her, and
+for a few seconds she was in his arms. He crushed her to him, she felt
+all the world turning. But before he found her lips, the crack of a
+whip startled them, the creak of a wheel sliding round the corner
+warned them, she slipped from his arms.
+
+"You little wretch!" he said.
+
+Breathless, hardly knowing what she felt, or what storm shook her, she
+could not speak. The wagon came creaking past them, the driver
+clinging to the chain of the slipper. When it was gone by she found
+her voice. "It shall be as you will," she said, and her tone thrilled
+him. "But I want to think. It has been so sudden, I am frightened. I
+am frightened, and--yes, I think I am happy. But please to let me go
+now. I am safe here--in two minutes I shall be at home."
+
+He tried to keep her, but "Let me go now," she pleaded. "Later it
+shall be as you wish--always as you wish. But let me go now."
+
+He gave way then. He said a few words while he held her hands, and he
+said them very well. Then he let her go. Before the dusk hid her she
+turned and waved her hand, and he waved his. He stood, listening. He
+heard the sound of her footsteps grow fainter and fainter as she
+climbed the hill, until they were lost in the rustle of the wind
+through the undergrowth. At last he turned and trudged down the hill.
+
+"Well, I've done it," he muttered presently. "And Uncle John may find
+what he likes, damn him! After all, she's handsome enough to turn any
+man's head, and it makes me safe! But I'll go slow. I'll go slow now.
+There's no hurry."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ BLORE UNDER WEAVER
+
+
+Gratitude and liking, and the worship of strength which is as natural
+in a woman as the worship of beauty in a man, form no bad imitation of
+love, and often pass into love as imperceptibly as the brook becomes a
+river. The morning light brought Mary no repentance. Misgivings she
+had, as what lover has not, were the truth told. Was her love as
+perfect as Etruria's, as unselfish, as absorbing? She doubted. But in
+all honesty she hoped that it might become so; and when she dwelt on
+the man who had done so much for her, and thought so well for her, who
+had so much to offer and made so little of the offering, her heart
+swelled with gratitude, and if she did not love she fancied that she
+did.
+
+So much was changed for her! She had wondered more than once what
+would happen to her, if her uncle died. That fear was put from her.
+Toft--she had been vexed with Toft. How small a matter that seemed
+now! And Peter Basset? He had been kind to her, and a pang did pierce
+her heart on his account. But he had recovered very quickly, she
+reflected. He had shown himself cold enough and distant enough at his
+last visit! And then she smiled as she thought how differently her new
+lover had assailed her, with what force, what arrogance, what
+insistence--and yet with a force and arrogance and insistence to which
+it was pleasant to yield.
+
+She did not with all this forget that she would be Lady Audley, she,
+whose past had been so precarious, whose prospects had been so dark,
+whose fate it might have been to travel through life an obscure
+teacher! She had not been woman if she had not thought of this; nor if
+she had failed, when she thought of it, to breathe a prayer for the
+gallant lover who had found her and saved her, and had held it enough
+that she was an Audley. He might have chosen far and wide. He had
+chosen her.
+
+No wonder that Mrs. Toft saw a change in her. "Law, Miss," she
+remarked, when she came in to remove the breakfast. "One would think a
+ten-mile walk was the making of you! It's put a color into your cheeks
+that would shame a June rose! And to be sure," with a glance at the
+young lady's plate, "not much eaten either!"
+
+"I am not hungry, Mrs. Toft," Mary said meekly. "I drove back to the
+foot of the hill."
+
+"And I'd like to sort Toft for it! Ifs he who should have gone! He's
+upstairs now, keeping out of my way, and that grim and gray you'd
+think he'd seen a ghost! And 'Truria, silly girl, she's all of a
+quiver this morning. It's 'Mother, let me do this!' and 'Mother, I'll
+do that!' all because her reverend--not, as I tell her, that aught
+will ever come of it--has got a roof over his head at last."
+
+"But that's good news! Has Mr. Colet got some work?"
+
+"Not he, the silly man! Nor likely! There's mighty little work for
+them as go against the gentry. For what he's got he's to thank Mr.
+Basset."
+
+"Mr. Basset."
+
+"To be sure," Mrs. Toft answered, with a covert glance at the girl,
+"why not, Miss? Some talk and the wind goes by. There's plenty of
+those. And some say naught but do--and that's Mr. Basset. He's took in
+Mr. Colet till he can find a church. Etruria's that up about it, I
+tell her, smile before breakfast and sweat before night. And so she'll
+find it, I warrant!"
+
+"It is very good of Mr. Basset," Mary said gravely. And then, "Is that
+some one knocking, Mrs. Toft?"
+
+"It's well to have young ears!" Mrs. Toft took out the tray, and
+returned with a letter. "It's for you, Miss," she said. "The postman's
+late this morning, but cheap's a slow traveller. When a letter was a
+letter and cost ninepence it came to hand like a gentleman!"
+
+Mary waited to hear no more. She knew the handwriting, and as quickly
+as she could she escaped from the room. No one with any claim to taste
+used an envelope in those days, and to open a letter so that no rent
+might mar its fairness called for a care which she could not exercise
+in public.
+
+Alone, in her room, she opened it, and her eyes grew serious as they
+travelled down the page, which bore signs of haste.
+
+
+"Sweetheart," it began, and she thought that charming, "I do not ask
+if you reached the Gatehouse safely, for I listened and I must have
+heard, if harm befel you. I drove home as happy as a king, and grieved
+only that I had not had that of you which I had a right to have--damn
+that carter! This troubles me the more as I shall not see you again
+for a time, and if this does not disappoint you too, you're a
+deceiver! My plans are altered by to-day's news that Peel returns to
+office. In any event, I had to go to Seabourne's for Christmas, now I
+must be there for a meeting to-morrow and go from there to London on
+the same business. You would not have me desert my post, I am sure?
+Heaven knows how long I may be kept, possibly a fortnight, possibly
+more. But the moment I can I shall be with you.
+
+"Write to me at the Brunswick Hotel, Dover Street. Sweetheart, I am
+yours, as you, my darling, are
+
+ "Philip's.
+
+"_P. S_.--I must put off any communication to your uncle till I can see
+him. So for the moment, mum!"
+
+
+Mary read the letter twice; the first time with eager eyes, the second
+time more calmly. Nothing was more natural, she told herself, than
+that her spirits should sink--Philip was gone. The walk with him, the
+talk which was to bring them nearer, and to make them better known to
+one another, stood over. The day that was to be so bright was clouded.
+
+But beyond this the letter itself fell a little, a very little, short
+of her expectations. The beginning was charming! But after that--was
+it her fancy, or was her lover's tone a little flippant, a little
+free, a little too easy? Did it lack that tender note of reassurance,
+that chivalrous thought for her, which she had a right to expect in a
+first letter? She was not sure.
+
+And as to her uncle. She must, of course, be guided by her lover, his
+will must be her law now; and it was reasonable that in John Audley's
+state of health the mode of communication should be carefully weighed.
+But she longed to be candid, she longed to be open; and in regard to
+one person she would be open. Basset had let her see that her
+treatment had cured him. At their last meeting he had been cold,
+almost unkind; he had left her to deal with Toft as she could. Still
+she owed him, if any one, the truth, and, were it only to set herself
+right in her own eyes, she must tell him. If the news did nothing else
+it would open the way for his return to the Gatehouse, and the telling
+would enable her to make the _amende_.
+
+The letter was not written on that day nor the next. But on the fourth
+day after Audley's departure it arrived at Blore, and lay for an hour
+on the dusty hall table amid spuds and powder-flasks and old
+itineraries. There Mr. Colet found it and another letter, and removed
+the two for safety to the parlor, where litter of a similar kind
+struggled for the upper hand with piles of books and dog's-eared
+Quarterlies. The decay of the Bassets dated farther back than the
+decline of the Audleys, and the gabled house under the shadow of
+Weaver was little better, if something larger, than a farm-house.
+There had been a library, but Basset had taken the best books to the
+Gatehouse. And there were in the closed drawing-room, and in some of
+the bedrooms, old family portraits, bad for the most part; the best
+lay in marble in Blore Church. But in the parlor, which was the
+living-room, hung only paintings of fat oxen and prize sheep; and the
+garden which ran up to the walls of the house, and in summer was a
+flood of color, lay in these days dank and lifeless, ebbing away from
+bee-skips and chicken-coops. The park had been ploughed during the
+great war, and now pined in thin pasture. The whole of the valley was
+still Basset land, but undrained in the bottom and light on the
+slopes, it made no figure in a rent-roll. The present owner had
+husbanded the place, and paid off charges, and cleared the estate, but
+he had been able to do no more. The place was a poor man's place,
+though for miles round men spoke to the owner bareheaded. He was
+"Basset of Blore," as much a part of Staffordshire as Burton Bridge or
+the Barbeacon. The memories of the illiterate are long.
+
+He had been walking the hill that morning with a dog and a gun, and
+between yearnings for the woman he loved, and longings for some plan
+of life, some object, some aim, he was in a most unhappy mood. At one
+moment he saw himself growing old, without the energy to help himself
+or others, still toying with trifles, the last and feeblest of his
+blood. At another he thought of Mary, and saw her smiling through the
+flowering hawthorn, or bending over a book with the firelight on her
+hair. Or again, stung by the lash of her reproaches he tried to harden
+himself to do something. Should he take the land into his own hands,
+and drain and fence and breed stock and be of use, were it only as a
+struggling farmer in his own district? Or should he make that plunge
+into public life to which Colonel Mottisfont had urged him and from
+which he shrank as a shivering man shrinks from an icy bath?
+
+For there was the rub. Mary was right. He was a dreamer, a weakling,
+one in whom the strong pulse that had borne his forbears to the front
+beat but feebly. He was not equal to the hard facts of life. With what
+ease had Audley, whenever they had stood foot to foot, put him in the
+second place, got the better of him, outshone him!
+
+Old Don pointed in vain. His master shot nothing, for he walked for
+the most part with his eyes on the turf. If he raised them it was to
+gaze at the hamlet lying below him in the valley, the old house, the
+ring of buildings and cottages, the church that he loved--and that
+like the woman he loved, reproached him with his inaction.
+
+About two o'clock he turned homewards. How many more days would he
+will and not will, and end night by night where he had begun? In the
+main he was of even temper, but of late small things tried him, and
+when he entered the parlor and Colet rose at his entrance, he could
+not check his irritation.
+
+"For heaven's sake, man, sit still!" he cried. "And don't get up every
+time I come in! And don't look at me like a dog! And don't ask me if I
+want the book you are reading!"
+
+The curate stared, and muttered an apology. It was true that he did
+not wear the chain of obligation with grace.
+
+"No, it is I who am sorry!" Basset replied, quickly repenting. "I am a
+churlish ass! Get up when you like, and say what you like! But if you
+can, make yourself at home!"
+
+Then he saw the two letters lying on the table. He knew Mary's writing
+at a glance, and he let it lie, his face twitching. He took up the
+other, made as if he would open it, then he threw it back again, and
+took Mary's to the window, where he could read it unwatched.
+
+It was short.
+
+
+"Dear Mr. Basset," she wrote, "I should be paying you a poor
+compliment if I pretended that what I am writing will not pain you.
+But I hope, and since our last meeting, I have reason to believe that
+that pain will not be lasting.
+
+"My cousin, Lord Audley, has asked me to marry him, and I have
+consented. Nothing beyond this is fixed, and no announcement will be
+made until my uncle has recovered his strength. But I feel that I owe
+it to you to let you know this at once.
+
+"I owe you something more. You crowned your kindness by doing me a
+great honor. I could not reply in substance otherwise than I did, but
+for the foolish criticisms of an inexperienced girl, I ask you to
+believe that I feel deep regret.
+
+"When we meet I hope that we may meet as friends. If I can believe
+this it will add something to the happiness of my engagement. My uncle
+is better, but little stronger than when you saw him.
+
+ "I am, truly yours,
+
+ "Mary Audley."
+
+
+He stood looking at it for a long time, and only by an effort could he
+control the emotion that strove to master him. Then his thoughts
+travelled to the other, the man who had won her, the man who had got
+the better of him from the first, who had played the Jacob from the
+moment of their meeting on the steamer; and a passion of jealousy
+swept him away. He swore aloud.
+
+Mr. Colet leapt in his chair. "Mr. Basset!" he cried. And then, in a
+different tone, "You have bad news, I fear?"
+
+The other laughed bitterly. "Bad news?" he repeated, and Colet saw
+that his face was white and that the letter shook in his hand. "The
+Government's out, and that's bad news. The pig's ill, and that's bad
+news. Your mother's dead, and that's bad news!"
+
+"Swearing makes no news better," Colet said mildly.
+
+"Not even the pig? If your--if Etruria died, and some one told you
+that she was dead, you wouldn't swear? You wouldn't curse God?"
+
+"God forbid!" the clergyman cried in horror.
+
+"What would you do then?"
+
+"Try so to live, Mr. Basset, that we might meet again!"
+
+"Rubbish, man!" Basset retorted rudely. "Try instead not to be a
+prig!"
+
+"If I could be of use?"
+
+"You cannot, nor any one else," Basset answered. "There, say no more.
+The worst is over. We've played our little part and--what's the odds
+how we played it?"
+
+"Much when the curtain falls," the poor clergyman ventured.
+
+"Well, I'll go and eat something. Hunger is one more grief!" And
+Basset went out.
+
+He came back ten minutes later, pale but quiet. "Sorry, Colet," he
+said. "Very rude, I am afraid! I had bad news, but I am right now.
+Wasn't there another letter for me?"
+
+He found the letter and read it listlessly. He tossed it across the
+table to his guest. "News is plentiful to-day," he said.
+
+Colet took the letter and read it. It was from a Mr. Hatton, better
+known to him than to Basset, and the owner of one of the two small
+factories in Riddsley. It was an invitation to contest the borough in
+opposition to young Mottisfont.
+
+
+"If it were a question, respected sir," Hatton wrote, "of Whigs and
+Tories we should not approach you. But as the result must depend upon
+the proportions in which the Tory party splits for and against Sir
+Robert Peel upon the Corn Laws, we, who are in favor of repeal,
+recognize the advantage of being represented by a moderate Tory. The
+adherence to Sir Robert of Sir James Graham in the North and of Lord
+Lincoln in the Midlands proves that there are landowners who place
+their country before their rents, and it is in the hope that you, sir,
+are of the number that we invite you to give us that assistance which
+your ancient name must afford.
+
+"We are empowered to promise you the support of the Whig party in the
+borough, conditioned only upon your support of the repeal of the Corn
+Laws, leaving you free on other points. The Audley influence has been
+hitherto paramount, but we believe that the time has come to free the
+borough from the last remnant of the Feudal system.
+
+"A deputation will wait upon you to give you such assurances as you
+may desire. But as Parliament meets on an early date, and the present
+member may at once apply for the Chiltern Hundreds, we shall be glad
+to have your answer before the New Year."
+
+
+"Well?" Basset asked. "What do you think?"
+
+"It opens a wide door."
+
+"If you wish to have your finger pinched," Basset replied, flippantly,
+"it does. I don't know that it is an opening to anything else." And as
+Colet refrained from speaking, "You don't think," he went on, "that
+it's a way into Parliament? A repealer has as much chance of getting
+in for Riddsley against the Audley interest as you have of being an
+archdeacon! Of course the Radicals want a fight if they can find a man
+fool enough to spend his money. But as for winning, they don't dream
+of it."
+
+"It is better to lose in some causes than to win in others."
+
+Basset laughed. "Do you know why they have come to me? They think that
+I shall carry John Audley with me and divide the Audley interest.
+There's nothing in it, but that's the notion."
+
+"Why look at the seamy side?" Colet objected. "I suppose there always
+is one, but I don't think that it was at that side Sir Robert looked
+when he made up his mind to put the country first and his party
+second! I don't think that it was at that side he looked when he
+determined to eat his words and pocket his pride, rather than be
+responsible for famine in Ireland! Believe me, Mr. Basset," the
+clergyman continued earnestly, "it was no easy change of opinion.
+Before he came to that resolution, proud, cold man as I am told he is,
+many a sight and sound must have knocked at the door of his mind; a
+scene of poverty he passed in his carriage, a passage in some report,
+a speech through which he seemed to sleep, a begging letter--one by
+one they pressed the door inwards, till at last, with--it may be with
+misery, he came to see what he must do!"
+
+"Possibly."
+
+"The call came, he had to answer it. Here is a call to you."
+
+"And do you think," the other retorted, "that I can answer it more
+cheaply than Sir Robert? So far as I have thought it out, I am with
+him. But do you think I could do this," he tapped the letter, "without
+misery--of a different kind it may be? I am not a public man, I have
+served no apprenticeship to it, I've not addressed a meeting three
+times in my life, I don't know what I should say or how I should say
+it. And for Hatton and his friends, they would rub me up a dozen times
+a day."
+
+"_Non sine pulvere!_" Mr. Colet murmured.
+
+"Dust enough there'll be! I don't doubt that. And dirt. But there's
+another thing." He paused, and turning, knocked the fire together. He
+was nearly a minute about it, while the other waited. "There's another
+thing," he repeated. "I am not going into this business to pay out a
+private grudge, and I want to be clear that I am not doing that. And
+I'm not going into this simply for what I can get out of it. Ambition
+is a poor stayer with me, a washy chestnut. It would not carry me
+through, Colet. If I go into this, it will be because I believe in it.
+It seems as if I were preaching," he continued awkwardly. "But there's
+nothing but belief will carry me through, and unless I am clear--I'll
+not start. I'll not start, although I want to make a fresh start
+badly! Devilish badly, if you'll excuse me!"
+
+"And how will you----"
+
+"Make certain? I don't know. I must fight it out by myself--go up on
+the hill and think it out. I must believe in the thing, or I must
+leave it alone!"
+
+"Just so," said Mr. Colet. And prudent for once he said no more.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+ AN AGENT OF THE OLD SCHOOL
+
+
+It is doubtful if even the great Reform Bill of '32, which shifted the
+base of power from the upper to the middle class, awoke more bitter
+feelings that did the _volte face_ of Peel in the winter of '45. Since
+the days of Pitt no statesman had enjoyed the popularity or wielded
+the power which had been Sir Robert's when he had taken office four
+years before. He had been more than the leader of the Tory party; he
+had been its re-creator. He had been more than the leader of the
+landed interest; he had been its pride. Men who believed that upon the
+welfare of that interest rested the stability of the constitution, men
+with historic names had walked on his right hand and on his left, had
+borne his train and carried his messages. All things, his origin, his
+formality, his pride, his quiet domestic life, even his moderation,
+had been forgiven in the man who had guided the Tories through the bad
+days, had led them at last to power, and still stood between them and
+the mutterings of this new industrial England, that hydra-like
+threatened and perplexed them.
+
+And then--he had betrayed them. Suddenly, some held; in a panic,
+scared by God knows what bugbear! Coldly and deliberately, said
+others, spreading his treachery over years, laughing in his sleeve as
+he led them to the fatal edge. Those who took the former view made
+faint excuse for him, and perhaps still clung to him. Those who held
+the latter thought no price too high, no sacrifice too costly, no
+effort too great, if they could but punish the traitor! If they could
+but pillory him for all to see.
+
+So, in a moment, in the autumn of '45, as one drop of poison will
+cloud the fairest water, the face of public life was changed.
+Bitterness was infused into it, friend was parted from friend and son
+from father, the oldest alliances were dissolved. Men stood gaping, at
+a loss whither to turn and whom to trust. Many who had never in all
+their lives made up their own minds were forced to have an opinion and
+choose a side; and as that process is to some men as painful as a
+labor to a woman, the effect was to embitter things farther. How could
+one who for years past had cursed Cobden in all companies, and in
+moments of relaxation had drunk to a "Bloody War and a Wet Harvest,"
+turn round and join the Manchester School? It could be done, it was
+done, but with what a rending of bleeding sinews only the sufferers
+knew!
+
+Strange to say, few gave weight to Sir Robert's plea of famine in
+Ireland. Still more strange, when events bore out his alarm, when in
+the course of a year or two a quarter of a million in that unhappy
+country died of want, public feeling changed little. Those who had
+remained with him, stood with him still. Those who had banded
+themselves against him, held their ground. Only a handful allowed that
+he was honest, after all. Nor was it until he, who rode his horse like
+a sack, had died like a demi-god, with a city hanging on his breath,
+and weeping women filling all the streets about the house, that the
+traitor became the patriot.
+
+But this is to anticipate. In December of '45, few men believed in
+famine. Few thought much of dearth. The world was angry, blood was
+hot, many dreamt of vengeance. Meantime Manchester exulted, and Coal,
+Iron, Cotton toasted Peel. But even they marvelled that the man who
+had been chosen to support the Corn Laws had the courage to repeal
+them!
+
+Upon no one in the whole country did the news fall with more stunning
+effect than upon poor Stubbs at Riddsley. He had suspected Peel. He
+had disliked his measures, and doubted whither he was moving. He had
+even on the occasion of his resignation predicted that Sir Robert
+would support the repeal; but he had not thought worse of him than
+that, and the event left him not uncertain, nor under any stress as to
+making up his mind, but naked, as it were, in an east wind. He felt
+older. He owned that his generation was passing. He numbered the
+friends he had left and found them few. And though he continued to
+assert that no man had ever pitted himself against the land whom the
+land had not broken, doubt began to creep into his mind. There were
+hours when he foresaw the end of the warm farming days, of game and
+sport, of Horn and Corn, ay, and of the old toast, "The farmer's best
+friend--the landlord," to which he had replied at many an audit
+dinner.
+
+One thing remained--the Riddsley election. He found some comfort in
+that. He drew some pleasure from the thought that Sir Robert might do
+what he pleased at Tamworth, he might do what he pleased in the
+Cabinet, in the Commons--there were toadies and turn-coats everywhere;
+but Riddsley would have none of him! Riddsley would remain faithful!
+Stubbs steeped himself in the prospect of the election, and in
+preparations for it. A dozen times a day he thanked his stars that the
+elder Mottisfont's weakness for Peel had provided this opening for his
+energies.
+
+Not that even on this ground he was quite happy. There was a little
+bitter in the cup. He hardly owned it to himself, he did not dream of
+whispering it to others, but at the bottom of his mind he had ever so
+faint a doubt of his employer. A hint dropped here, a word there, a
+veiled question--he could not say which of these had given him the
+notion that his lordship hung between two opinions, and even--no
+wonder that Stubbs dared not whisper it to others--was weighing which
+would pay him best!
+
+Such a thought was treason, however, and Stubbs buried it and trampled
+on it, before he went jauntily into the snug little meeting at the
+Audley Arms, which he had summoned to hear the old member's letter
+read and to accept the son as a candidate in his father's place. Those
+whom the agent had called were few and trusty; young Mottisfont
+himself, the rector and Dr. Pepper, Bagenal the maltster, Hogg the
+saddler, Musters the landlord, the "Duke" from the Leasows (which was
+within the borough), and two other tradesmen. Stubbs had no liking for
+big meetings. He had been bred up to believe that speeches were lost
+labor, and if they must be made should be made at the Market Ordinary.
+
+At such a gathering as this he was happy. He had the strings in his
+own hands. The work to be done was at his fingers' ends. At this table
+he was as great a man as my lord. With young Mottisfont, who was by
+way of being a Bond Street dandy, solemn, taciturn, and without an
+opinion of his own, he was not likely to have trouble. The rector was
+enthusiastic but indolent, Pepper an old friend. The rest were
+Stubbs's most obedient.
+
+Stubbs read the retiring member's letter, and introduced the
+candidate. The rector boomed through a few phrases of approbation, Dr.
+Pepper seconded, the rest cried "Hear! hear!"
+
+"There's little to say," Stubbs went on. "I take it that we are all of
+one mind, gentlemen, to return Mr. Mottisfont in his father's place?"
+
+"Hear! hear!" from all. "In the old interest?" Stubbs went on, looking
+round the table. "And on the clear understanding that Mr. Mottisfont
+is returned to oppose any tampering with the protection of
+agriculture."
+
+"That is so," said Mr. Mottisfont.
+
+"I will see that that is embodied in Mr. Mottisfont's address," Stubbs
+continued. "There must be no mistake. These are queer times----"
+
+"Sad times!" said the rector, shaking his head.
+
+"Terrible times!" said the maltster, shaking his.
+
+"Never did I dream I should live to see 'em," said old Hayward.
+"'Tisn't a month since a chap came on my land, ay, up to my very door,
+and said things--I'll be damned if I did not think he'd turn the cream
+sour! And when I cried 'Sam! fetch a pitchfork and rid me of this
+rubbish----'"
+
+"I know, Hayward," Stubbs said, cutting him short. "I know. You told
+me about it. You did very well. But to business. It shall be a short
+address--just that one point. We are all agreed, I think, gentlemen?"
+
+All were agreed.
+
+"I'll see that it is printed in good time," Stubbs continued. "I don't
+think that we need trouble you further, Mr. Mottisfont. There's a
+fat-stock sale this day fortnight. Perhaps you'll dine and say a few
+words? I'll let you know if it is necessary. There'll be no
+opposition. Hatton will have a meeting at the Institute, but nothing
+will come of it."
+
+"That's all then, is it?" said the London man, sticking his glass in
+his eye with a sigh of relief.
+
+"That's all," Stubbs replied. "If you can attend this day fortnight so
+much the better. The farmers like it, and they've fourteen votes in
+the borough. Thank you, gentlemen, that's all."
+
+"I think you've forgotten one thing, Mr. Stubbs," said old Hayward,
+with a twinkle.
+
+"To be sure, I have. Ring the bell, Musters, and send up the two
+bottles of your '20 port that I ordered and some glasses. A glass of
+Musters' '20 port, Mr. Mottisfont, won't hurt you this cold day. And
+we must drink your health. And, Musters, when these gentlemen go down,
+see that they have what they call for."
+
+The port was sipped, tasted. Mr. Mottisfont's health was drunk, and
+various compliments were paid to his father. The rector took his two
+glasses; so did young Mottisfont, who woke up and vowed that he had
+tasted none better in St. James's Street. "Is it Garland's?" he asked.
+
+"It is, sir," Musters said, much pleased.
+
+"I thought it was--none better!" said young Mottisfont, also pleased.
+"The old Duke drinks no other."
+
+"Fine tipple! Fine tipple!" said the other "Duke." In the end a third
+bottle was ordered, of which Musters and old Hayward drank the better
+part.
+
+At one of these meetings a sad thing had happened. A rash tradesman
+had proposed his lordship's health. Of course he had been severely
+snubbed. It had been considered most indecent. But on this occasion no
+one was so simple as to name my lord, and Stubbs felt with
+satisfaction that all had passed as it should. So had candidates been
+chosen as long as he could remember.
+
+But call no man happy until the day closes. As he left the house
+Bagenal the maltster tacked himself on to him. "I'd a letter from
+George this morning," he said. George was his son, articled to Mr.
+Stubbs, and now with Mr. Stubbs's agents in town. "He saw his lordship
+one day last week."
+
+"Ay, ay. I suppose Master George was in the West End? Wasting his
+time, Bagenal, I'll be bound."
+
+"I don't know about that. Young fellows like to see things. He went
+with a lot of chaps to see the crowd outside Sir Robert's. They'd read
+in a paper that all the nobs were to be seen going in and out. Anyway,
+he went, and the first person he saw going in was his lordship!"
+
+Mr. Stubbs walked a few yards in silence. Then, "Well, he's no sight
+to George," he said. "It seems to me they were both wasting their
+time. I told his lordship he'd do no good. When half the dukes in
+England have been at Peel, d--n him, it wasn't likely he'd change his
+course for his lordship! It wasn't to be expected, Bagenal. Did George
+stop to see him come out?"
+
+"He did. And in a thundering temper my lord looked."
+
+"Ay, ay! Well I told him how it would be."
+
+"They were going in and out like bees, George said."
+
+"Ay, ay."
+
+They parted on that, and the lawyer went into his office. But his face
+was gloomy. "Ay, like bees!" he muttered. "After the honey! I wonder
+what he asked for! Whatever it was he couldn't have paid the price! I
+thought he knew that. I've a good mind--but there, we've held it so
+long, grandfather, father, and son--I can't afford to give it up."
+
+He turned into his office, but the day was spoiled for him. And the
+day was not done yet. He had barely sat down before his clerk a thin,
+gray-haired man, high-nosed, with a look of breeding run to seed, came
+in, and closed the door behind him. Farthingale was as well known in
+Riddsley as the Maypole; gossip had it that he was a by-blow of an old
+name. "I've heard something," he said darkly, "and the sooner you know
+it the better. They've got a man."
+
+Stubbs shrugged his shoulders. "For repeal in Riddsley?" he said.
+"You're dreaming."
+
+The clerk smiled. "Well, you'd best be awake," he said. He had been
+long enough with Stubbs to take a liberty. "Who do you think it is?"
+he continued, rubbing his chin with the feather-end of a quill.
+
+"Some methodist parson!"
+
+Farthingale shook his head. "Guess again, sir," he said. "You're cold
+at present. It's a bird of another feather."
+
+"A pretty big fool whoever he is!"
+
+"Mr. Basset of Blore. I have it on good authority."
+
+Stubbs stared. He was silent for a time, thinking hard. "Somebody's
+fooled you," he said at last, but in a different tone. "He's never
+shown a sign of coming out."
+
+The clerk looked wise. "It's true," he said. "It cost me four goes of
+brown brandy at the Portcullis."
+
+"Well, you may score that to me," Stubbs answered. "Basset, eh? Well,
+he's throwing his money into the gutter if it's true, and he hasn't
+much to spare. I see Hatton's point. He's not the fool."
+
+"No. He's an old bird is Hatton."
+
+"But I don't see where Squire Basset comes in."
+
+Farthingale looked wiser than ever. "Well," he said, "he may have a
+score to pay, too. And if he has, there's more ways than one of paying
+it!"
+
+"What score?"
+
+"Ah, I'm not saying that. Mr. John Audley's may be--against his
+lordship."
+
+"Umph! If you paid off yours at the Portcullis," Stubbs retorted,
+losing his temper, "the landlord wouldn't be sorry! Scores are a deal
+too much in your way, Farthingale!" he continued, severely, forgetting
+in his annoyance the four goes of brown brandy. "You're too much at
+home among 'em. Don't bring me cock-and-bull stories like this! I
+don't believe it. And get to that lease!"
+
+But sure enough Farthingale's story proved to be well founded, for a
+week later it was known for certain in Riddsley that Mr. Basset of
+Blore was coming out, and that there would be a fight for the borough.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+ MARY IS LONELY
+
+
+Mary Audley was one of the last to hear the news. Etruria brought it
+from the town one day in January, when the evenings were beginning to
+lengthen, and the last hour of daylight was the dreariest of the
+twenty-four. It had rained, and the oaks in the park were a-drip, the
+thorn trees stood in tiny pools, the moorland lay stark under a pall
+of fog. In the vale the Trent was in flood, its pale waters swirling
+past the willow-stools, creeping over the chilled meadows, and
+stealing inch by inch up the waterside lanes. Etruria's feet were wet,
+and she was weary with her trudge through the mud; but when Mary met
+her on the tiny landing on which their rooms opened, there was a
+sparkle in the girl's eyes as bright as the red petticoat that showed
+below her tucked-up gown.
+
+"You didn't forget----" Mary was beginning, and then, "Why, Etruria,"
+she exclaimed, "I believe you have seen Mr. Colet?"
+
+Etruria blushed like the dawn. "Oh no, Miss!" she said. "He's at
+Blore."
+
+"To be sure! Then what is it?"
+
+"I've heard some news, Miss," Etruria said. "I don't know whether
+you'll be pleased or not."
+
+"But it is certain that you are!" Mary replied with conviction. "What
+is it?"
+
+The girl told what she had heard: that there was to be an election at
+Riddsley in three weeks, and not only an election but a contest, and
+that the candidate who had come forward to oppose the Corn Laws was no
+other than Mr. Basset--their Mr. Basset! More, that only the evening
+before he had held his first meeting at the Institute, and though he
+had been interrupted and the meeting had been broken up, his short
+plain speech had made a considerable impression.
+
+"Indeed, Miss," Etruria continued, carried away by the subject, "there
+was one told me that when he stood up to speak she could see his hand
+shake, and his face was the color of a piece of paper. But when they
+began to boo and shout at him, he grew as cool as cool, and the longer
+they shouted the braver he was, until they saw that if they let him go
+on he would be getting a hearing! So they put out the lights and
+stormed the platform, and there was a fine Stafford row, I'm told. Of
+course," Etruria added simply, "the drink was in them."
+
+Mary hardly knew what her feelings were. "Mr. Basset?" she said at
+last. "I can hardly believe it."
+
+"Nor could I, Miss, when I first heard it. But it seems they have
+known it there for ten days and more, and the town is agog with it,
+everybody taking sides, and some so much against him as never was.
+It's dreadful to think," Etruria continued, "how misguided men can be.
+But oh, Miss, I'm thankful he's on the right side, and for taking the
+burden off the bread! I'm sure it will be returned to him, win or
+lose. They're farmers' friends here, and they're saying shameful
+things of him in the market! But there's many a woman will bless him,
+and the lanes and alleys, they've no votes, but they'll pray for him!
+Sometimes," Etruria added shyly, "I think it is Mr. Colet has brought
+him to it."
+
+"Mr. Colet?" Mary repeated--she did not know why she disliked the
+notion. "Why do you think that?"
+
+"He's been at Blore," Etruria murmured. "Mr. Basset has been so good
+to him."
+
+"Mr. Basset has a mind of his own," Mary answered sharply. "He is
+quite capable of forming his own opinion."
+
+"Of course. Miss," Etruria said, abashed. "I should have known that."
+
+"Yes," Mary repeated. "But what was it they were saying of Mr. Basset
+in the market, Etruria? Not that it matters."
+
+"Well, Miss," Etruria explained, reluctantly. "They were saying it was
+some grudge Mr. Basset or the Master had against his lordship that
+brought Mr. Basset out."
+
+"Against Lord Audley?" Mary cried. And she blushed suddenly and
+vividly. "Why? What has he to do with it?"
+
+"Well, Miss, it's his lordship's seat," Etruria answered naively;
+"what he wishes has always been done in Riddsley. And he's for Mr.
+Mottisfont."
+
+Mary walked to a window and looked out. "Oh," she said, "I did not
+know that. But you'd better go now, Etruria, and change your shoes.
+Your feet must be wet."
+
+Etruria went, and Mary continued to gaze through the window. What
+strange news! And what a strange situation! The lover whom she had
+rejected and the lover whom she had taken, pitted against one another!
+And her words--she could hardly doubt it--the spur which had brought
+Basset to the post!
+
+So thinking, so pondering, she grew more and more ill at ease. Her
+sympathies should have been wholly with her betrothed, but they were
+not. She should have resented Basset's action. She did not. Instead
+she thought of his shaking hand and his pale face, and of the courage
+that had grown firmer in the face of opposition; and she found
+something fine in that, something that appealed to her. And the cause
+he had adopted? It was the cause to which she naturally inclined. She
+might be wrong, he might be wrong. Lord Audley knew so much more of
+these things and looked at them from so enlightened a standpoint, that
+they must be wrong. And yet--her heart warmed to that cause.
+
+She turned from the window in some trouble, wondering if she were
+disloyal, wondering why she felt as she did; wondering a little, too,
+why she had lost the first rapture of her love, and was less happy in
+it than she had been.
+
+True, she had not seen her lover again, and that might account for it.
+He had been detained at Lord Seabourne's, and in London; he had been
+occupied for days together with the crisis. But she had had three
+letters from him, busy as he was; three amusing letters, full of
+gossip and sprinkled with anecdotes of the great world. She had opened
+the first in something of a tremor; but her fingers had soon grown
+steady, and if she had blushed it had been for her expectation of a
+vulgar love-letter such as milkmaids prize. She had been silly to
+suppose that he would write in that strain.
+
+And yet she had felt a degree of disappointment. He might have written
+with less reserve, she thought; he might have discussed their plans
+and hopes, he might have let the fire peep somewhere through the
+chinks. But there, again, what a poor thing she was if her love must
+be fed with sweetmeats. How weak her trust, how poor her affection, if
+she could not bear a three weeks' parting! He had come to her, he had
+chosen her, what more did she want? Did she expect him to put aside
+the calls and the duties of his station, that he might hang on her
+apron-strings?
+
+Still, she was not in good spirits, and she felt her loneliness. The
+house, this gray evening, with the shadows gathering in the corners,
+weighed on her. Mrs. Toft was far away in her cosey kitchen, Etruria
+also had gone thither. Toft was with Mr. Audley in the other wing--he
+had been much with his master of late. So Mary was alone. She was not
+nervous, but she was depressed. The cold stairs, the austere parlor
+with its dim portraits, the matted hall, the fireless library--all
+struck a chill. She remembered other times and other evenings; cosey
+evenings, when the glow of the wood-fire had vied with the shaded
+lights, when the three heads had bent over the three tables, when the
+rustle of turning pages had blended with the snoring of the old hound,
+when the pursuit of some trifle had sped the pleasant hours. Alas,
+those evenings were gone, as if they had never been. The house was
+dull and melancholy.
+
+She might have gone to her uncle, but during the afternoon he had told
+her that he wished to be alone; he should go to bed betimes. So about
+seven o'clock she took her meal by herself, and when it was done she
+felt more at a loss than ever. Presently her thoughts went again to
+John Audley.
+
+Had she neglected him of late? Had she left him too much to Toft, and
+let her secret, which she hated to keep secret, come between them? Why
+should she not, even now, see him before he slept? She could take him
+the news of Mr. Basset's enterprise. It would serve for an excuse.
+
+Lest her courage should fail she went at once, shivering as she passed
+through the shadowy library, where a small lamp, burning on a table,
+did no more than light her to the staircase. She ran up the stairs and
+was groping for the handle of Mr. Audley's door when the door opened
+abruptly and Toft stepped out, a candle in his hand. She was so close
+to him that he all but touched her, and he was, if anything, more
+startled than she was. He stood gaping at her.
+
+Through the narrow opening she had a glimpse of her uncle, who was on
+his feet before the fire. He was fully dressed.
+
+That surprised her, for, even before this last attack, he had spent
+most of his time in his dressing-gown. Still more surprising was
+Toft's conduct. He shut the door and held it. "The master is going to
+bed, Miss," he said.
+
+"I see that he is dressed!" she replied. And she looked at Toft in
+such a way that the man gave way, took his hand from the door, and
+stood aside. She pushed the door open and went in. Her uncle, standing
+with his back to her, was huddling on his dressing-gown.
+
+"What is it?" he cried, his face averted. "Who is it?"
+
+"It is only I, sir," she replied. "Mary." She closed the door.
+
+"But I thought I told you that I didn't want you!" he retorted
+pettishly. "I am going to bed." He turned, having succeeded in girding
+on his dressing-gown. "Going to bed," he repeated. "Didn't I tell you
+so?"
+
+"I'm very sorry, sir," she said, "but I had news for you. News that
+has surprised me. I thought that you would like to hear it."
+
+He looked at her, his furtive eyes giving the lie to his plump face,
+which sagged more than of old. "News," he muttered, peevishly. "What
+news? I wish you wouldn't startle me. You ought to remember that--that
+excitement is bad for me. And you come at this time of night with
+news! What is it?" He was not looking at her. He seemed to be seeking
+something. "What is it?"
+
+"It's nothing very terrible," she answered, smiling. "Nothing to alarm
+you, uncle. Won't you sit down?"
+
+He looked about him like a man driven into a corner. "No, no, I don't
+want to sit down!" he said. "I ought to be in bed! I ought to be there
+now."
+
+"Well, I shall not keep you long," she answered, trying to humor his
+mood, while all the time she was wondering why he was dressed at this
+time, he whom she had not seen dressed for a fortnight. And why had
+Toft tried to keep her out? "It is only," she continued, "that I heard
+to-day that there is to be a contest at Riddsley. And that Mr. Basset
+is to be one of the candidates."
+
+"Is that all?" he said. "News, you said? That's no news! Bigger fool
+he, unless he does more for himself than he does for his friends!
+Peter the Hermit become Peter the Great! He'll soon find himself Peter
+the Piper, who picked a peck of pepper! Hot pepper he'll find it, d--n
+him!" with sudden spite. "He's no better than the rest! He's all for
+himself! All for himself!" he repeated, his voice rising in his
+excitement.
+
+"But----"
+
+"There, don't agitate me!" He wiped his brow with a shaking hand,
+while his eyes, avoiding hers, continued to look about him as if he
+sought something. "I knew how it would be. You've no thought for me.
+You don't remember how weak I am! Hardly able to crawl across the
+floor, to put one foot before another. And you come chattering!
+chattering!"
+
+She had thought him odd before, but never so odd as this evening; and
+she was sorry that she had come. She was going to say what she could
+and escape, when he began again. "You're the last person who should
+upset me! The very last!" he babbled. "When it's all for you! It's
+little good it can do me. And Basset, he'd the ball at his foot,
+and wouldn't kick it! But I'll show you, I'll show you all!" he
+continued, gesticulating with a violence that distressed Mary. "Ay,
+and I'll show _him_ what I am! He thinks he's safe, d--n him! He
+thinks he's safe! He's spending my money and adding up my balance!
+He's walking on my land and sleeping in my bed! He's peacocking in my
+name! But--but----" he stopped, struggling for words. For an instant
+he turned on her over his shoulder a face distorted by passion.
+
+Thoroughly alarmed, she tried to soothe him. "But I am sure, sir," she
+said, "Mr. Basset would never----"
+
+"Basset!"
+
+"I'm sure he never dreamt----"
+
+"Basset!" he repeated. "No! but Audley! Lord Audley, Audley of
+Beaudelays, Audley of nowhere and nothing! And no Audley! no Audley!"
+he repeated furiously, while again he fought for breath, and again he
+mastered himself and lowered his tone. "No Audley!" he whispered,
+pointing a hand at her, "but Jacob, girl! Jacob the supplanter, Jacob
+the changeling, Jacob the baseborn! And he thinks I lie awake of
+nights, hundreds of nights, for nothing! He thinks I dream of him--for
+nothing! He thinks I go out with the bats--for nothing! He thinks I
+have a canker here! Here!" And he clapped his hand to his breast, a
+grotesque, yet dreadful figure in his huddled dressing-gown, his
+flaccid cheeks quivering with rage. "For nothing! But I'll show him!
+I'll ruin him! I'll----"
+
+His voice, which had risen to a scream, stopped. Toft had opened the
+door. "Sir! Mr. Audley!" he cried. "For God's sake be calm! For God's
+sake have a care, sir! And you, Miss," he continued; "you see what you
+have done! If you'll leave him I'll get him to bed. I'll get him to
+bed and quiet him--if I can."
+
+Mary was shocked, and yet she felt that she could not go without a
+word. "Dear uncle," she said, "you wish me to go?"
+
+He had clutched one of the posts of the bed and was supporting himself
+by it. The fire had died down in him, he was no more now than a
+feeble, shaking old man. He wiped his brow and his lips. "Yes, go," he
+whispered. "Go."
+
+"I am very sorry I disturbed you," she said. "I won't do it again. You
+were right, Toft. Good-night."
+
+The man said "Good-night, Miss." Her uncle said nothing. He had let
+himself down on the bed, but he still clung to the post. Mary looked
+at him in sorrow, grieved to leave him in this state. But she had no
+choice, and she went out and, closing the door behind her, groped her
+way down the narrow staircase.
+
+It was a little short of ten when she reached the parlor, but she was
+in no mood for reading. What she had seen had shocked and frightened
+her. She was sure now that her uncle was not sane; and while she was
+equally sure that Toft exercised a strong influence over him, she had
+her misgivings as to that. Something must be done. She must consult
+some one. Life at the Gatehouse could not go on on this footing. She
+must see Dr. Pepper.
+
+Unluckily when she had settled this to her mind, and sought her bed,
+she could not sleep. Long after she had heard Etruria go to her room,
+long after she had heard the girl's shoes fall--familiar sound!--Mary
+lay awake, thinking now of her uncle's state and her duty towards him,
+nor of her own future, that future which seemed for the moment to have
+lost its brightness. Doubts that the sun dismisses, fears at which
+daylight laughs, are Giants of Despair in the dark watches. So it was
+with her. Misgivings which she would not have owned in the daylight,
+rose up and put on grisly shapes. Her uncle and his madness, her lover
+and his absence, passed in endless procession through her brain. In
+vain she tossed and turned, sat up in despair, tried the cooler side
+of the pillow. She could not rest.
+
+The door creaked. She fancied a step on the staircase, a hand on the
+latch. Far away in the depths of the house a clock struck. It was
+three o'clock--only three o'clock! And it would not be light before
+eight--not much before eight. Oh dear! Oh dear!
+
+And then she slept.
+
+When she awoke it was morning, the light was filtering in through the
+white dimity curtains, and some one was really at her door. Some one
+was knocking. She sat up. "What is it?" she cried.
+
+"Can I come in, Miss?"
+
+The voice was Mrs. Toft's, and Mary needed no second warning. She knew
+in a moment that the woman brought bad news. She sprang out of bed,
+put on a dressing-gown, and with bare feet she went to the door. She
+unlocked it. "What is it, Mrs. Toft?" she said.
+
+"Maybe not much," the woman answered cautiously. "I hope not, Miss,
+but I had to tell you. The Master is missing."
+
+"Missing?" Mary exclaimed, the blood leaving her face. "Impossible!
+Why, I saw him, I was in his room last evening after nine o'clock."
+
+"Toft was with him up to eleven," Mrs. Toft answered. Her face was
+grave. "But he's gone now?"
+
+"You mean that he is not in his room!" Mary said. "But have you
+looked----" and she named places where her uncle might be--places in
+the house.
+
+"We've looked there," Mrs. Toft answered. "Toft's been everywhere. The
+Master's not in the house. We're well-nigh sure of that. And the door
+in the courtyard was open this morning. I am afraid he's gone, Miss."
+
+"In his state and at night? Why, it's----" The girl broke off and took
+hold of herself. "Very well," she said. "I shall not be more than five
+minutes. I will come down."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+ MISSING
+
+
+Mary scrambled into her clothes without pausing to do more than knot
+up her hair. She tried to steady her nerves and to put from her the
+thought that it was her visit which had upset her uncle. That thought
+would only flurry her, and she must be cool. In little more than the
+five minutes that she had named she was in the hall, and found Mrs.
+Toft waiting for her. The door into the courtyard stood open, the
+bleak light and raw air of a January morning poured in, but neither of
+them heeded this. Their eyes met, and Mary saw that the woman, who was
+usually so placid, was frightened.
+
+"Where is Toft?" Mary asked.
+
+"He's away this ten minutes," Mrs. Toft replied. "He's gone to the Yew
+Walk, where you found the Master before. But law, Miss, if he's there
+in this weather!" She lifted up her hands.
+
+Mary controlled herself. "And Etruria?" she asked.
+
+"She's searching outside the house. If she does not find him she is to
+run over to Petch the keeper, and bring him."
+
+"Quite right," Mary said. "Did Toft take any brandy?"
+
+"He did. Miss. And the big kettle is on, if there is a bath wanted,
+and I've put a couple of bricks to heat in the oven."
+
+"You're sure you've looked everywhere in the house?"
+
+"As sure as can be, Miss! More by token, I've some coffee ready for
+you in the parlor."
+
+But Mary said, "Bring it here, Mrs. Toft." And snatching up a shawl
+and folding it about her, she stepped outside. It was a gray, foggy
+morning, and the flagged court wore a desolate air. In one corner a
+crowd of dead leaves were circling in the gusts of wind, in another a
+little pile of snow had drifted, and between the monsters that flanked
+the Gateway, the old hound, deaf and crippled, stood peering across
+the park. Mary fancied that the dog descried Toft returning, and she
+ran across the court. But no one was in sight. The park with its
+clumps of dead bracken, its naked trees and gnarled blackthorns,
+stretched away under a thin sprinkling of snow. Shivering she returned
+to the hall, where Mrs. Toft awaited her with the coffee.
+
+"Now," Mary said, "tell me about it, please--from the beginning."
+
+"Toft had left Mr. Audley about eleven," Mrs. Toft explained. "The
+Master had been a bit put out, and that kept him. But he'd settled
+down, and when Toft left him he was much as usual. It could not have
+been before eleven," Mrs. Toft continued, rubbing her nose, "for I
+heard the kitchen clock strike eleven, and I was asleep when Toft came
+in. The next I remember was finding Toft had got out of bed. 'What is
+it?' says I. He didn't answer, and I roused up and was going to get a
+light. But he told me not to make a noise, he'd been woke by hearing a
+door slam, and thought that some one had crossed the court. He was at
+the window then, looking out, but we heard nothing, and after a while
+Toft came back to bed."
+
+"What time was that?"
+
+"I couldn't say, Miss, and I don't suppose Toft could. It was dark and
+before six, because when I woke again it was on six. But God knows it
+was a thousand pities we didn't search then, for it's on my mind that
+it was the poor Master. And if we'd known, Toft would have stopped
+him."
+
+"Well?" Mary said gravely. "And when did you miss him?"
+
+"Most mornings Etruria'd let me into the house. But this morning she
+found the door unlocked; howsomever she thought nothing of it, for
+Toft has a key as well, and since the Master's illness and him coming
+and going at all hours, he has not always locked the door; so she made
+no remark. A bit before eight Toft came down--I didn't see him but I
+heard him--and at eight he took up the Master's cup of tea. Toft makes
+it in the pantry and takes it up."
+
+Mrs. Toft paused heavily--not without enjoyment.
+
+"Yes," Mary said anxiously, "and then?"
+
+"I suppose it was five minutes after, he came out to me--I was in the
+kitchen getting our breakfast--and he was shaking all over. I don't
+know that I ever saw a man more upset. 'He's gone!' he said. 'Law,
+Toft,' I said. 'What's the matter? Who's gone?' 'The Master!' he said.
+'Fiddlesticks!' says I. 'Where should he go?' And with that I went
+into the house and up to the Master's room. When I saw it was empty
+you could have knocked me down with a feather! I looked round a bit,
+and then I went up to Mr. Basset's room that's over, and down again to
+the library, and so forth. By that time Toft was there, gawpin about.
+'He's gone!' he kept saying. I don't know as I ever saw Toft truly
+upset before."
+
+"And what then?" Mary asked. Twice she had looked through the door,
+but to no purpose.
+
+"Well," I said, "if he's not here he can't be far! Don't twitter, man,
+but think! It's my belief he's away sleepwalking or what not, to the
+place you found him before. On that I gave Toft some brandy and he
+went off."
+
+"Shouldn't he be back by now?"
+
+"He should, Miss, if he's not found him," Mrs. Toft answered. "But, if
+he's found him, he couldn't carry him! Toft's not all that strong. And
+if the Master's lain out long, it's not all the brandy in the world
+will bring him round!"
+
+Mary shuddered, and moved by a common impulse the two went out and
+crossed the court. The old hound was still at gaze in the gateway,
+still staring with purblind eyes down the vistas of the park. "Maybe
+he sees more than we see," Mrs. Toft muttered. "He'd not stand there,
+would the old dog, as he's stood twenty minutes, for nothing."
+
+She was right, for the next moment three figures appeared hurrying
+across the park towards them. It was impossible to mistake Toft's
+lanky figure. The others were Etruria, with a shawl about her head,
+and the keeper Petch.
+
+Mary scanned them anxiously. "Have they found him?" she murmured.
+
+"No," Mrs. Toft said. "If they'd found him, one would have stopped
+with him."
+
+"Of course," Mary said. And heedless of the cold, searching wind that
+swung their skirts and carried showers of dead leaves sailing past
+them, they waited until Toft and the others, talking together, came
+up. Mary saw that, in spite of the pace at which he had walked, Toft's
+face was colorless. He was almost livid. His daughter wore an anxious
+look, while the keeper was pleasantly excited.
+
+As soon as the three were within hearing, "You've not found him?" Mary
+cried.
+
+"No, Miss," Etruria answered.
+
+"Nor any trace?"
+
+"No, Miss. My father has been as far as the iron gate, and found it
+locked. It was no use going on."
+
+"He could not have walked farther without help," Mrs. Toft said. "If
+the Master's not between us and the gardens he's not that way."
+
+"Then where is he?" Mary cried, aghast. She looked from one to the
+other. "Where can he be, Toft?"
+
+Toft raised his hands and let them fall. It was clear that he had
+given up hope.
+
+But his wife was of different mettle. "That's to be seen," she said
+briskly. "Anyway, you'll be perished here, Miss, and I don't want
+another invalid on my hands. We'll go in, if you please."
+
+Mary gave way. They turned to go in, but it was noticeable that as
+they moved towards the house each, stirred by the same thought, swept
+the extent of the park with eyes that clung to it, and were loth to
+leave it. Each hung for a moment, searching this alley or that,
+fancying a clue in some distant object, or taking a clump of gorse, or
+a jagged stump for the fallen man. All were harassed by the thought
+that they might be abandoning him; that in turning their backs on the
+bald, wintry landscape they might be carrying away with them his last
+chance.
+
+"'T would take a day to search the park," the keeper muttered. "And a
+dozen men, I'm afeared, to do it thoroughly."
+
+"Why not take a round yourself!" Mrs. Toft replied. "And if you find
+nothing be at the house in an hour, Petch, and we'll know better
+what's to do. The poor gentleman's off his head, I doubt, and there's
+no saying where he'd wander. But he can't be far, and I'm beginning to
+think he's in the house after all."
+
+The man agreed willingly, and strode away across the turf. The others
+entered the hall. Mary was for pausing there, but Mrs. Toft swept them
+all into the parlor where a good fire was burning. "You'll excuse me,
+Miss," she said, "but Toft will be the better for this," and without
+ceremony she poured out a cup of coffee, jerked into it a little
+brandy from the decanter on the sideboard, and handed it to her
+husband. "Drink that," she said, "and get your wits together, man!
+You're no better than a wisp of paper now, and it's only you can help
+us. Now think! You know him best. Where can he be? Did he say no word
+last night to give you a clue?"
+
+A little color came back to Toft's face. He sighed and passed his hand
+across his forehead. "If I'd never left him!" he said. "I never ought
+to have left him!"
+
+"It's no good going over that!" Mrs. Toft replied impatiently. "He
+means, Miss, that up to three nights ago he slept in the Master's
+room. Then when the Master seemed better Toft came back to his bed."
+
+"I ought to have stayed with him," Toft repeated. That seemed the one
+thought in his mind.
+
+"But where is he?" Mary cried. "Where? Every moment we stand
+talking--can't you think where he might go? Are there no
+hiding--places in the house? No secret passages?"
+
+Mrs. Toft raised her hands. "Lord's sake!" she exclaimed. "There's the
+locked closet in his room where he keeps his papers. I never looked
+there. It's seldom opened, and----"
+
+She did not finish. With one accord they hurried through the library
+and up the stairs to the old tapestried room, where Mr. Audley had
+slept and for the last month had lived. The others had been in it
+since his disappearance, Mary had not; and she felt a thrill of awe as
+she passed the threshold. The angular faces, the oblique eyes, of the
+watchers in the needlework on the wall, that from generation to
+generation had looked down on marriage and birth and death--what had
+they seen during the past night? On what had they gazed, she asked
+herself. Mrs. Toft, less fanciful or more familiar with the room, had
+no such thoughts. She crossed the floor to a low door which was
+outlined for those who knew of its existence, by rough cuts in the
+arras. It led into a closet, contained in one of the turrets.
+
+Mrs. Toft tried the door, shook it, knocked on it. Finally she set her
+eye to the keyhole. "He's not there," she said. "There's no key in the
+lock. He'd not take out the key, that's certain."
+
+Mary scanned the disordered room. Books lay in heaps on the deep
+window-seats, and even on the floor. A table by one of the windows was
+strewn with papers and letters; on another beside the bed-head stood a
+tray with night drinks, a pair of candles, an antique hour-glass, a
+steel pistol. The bedclothes were dragged down, as if the bed had been
+slept in, and over the rail at the foot, half hidden by the heavy
+curtains, hung a nightgown. She took this up and found beneath it a
+pair of slippers and a shoehorn.
+
+"He was dressed then?" she exclaimed.
+
+Toft eyed the things. "Yes, Miss, I've no doubt he was," he said
+despondently. "His overcoat's gone."
+
+"Then he meant to leave the house?" Mary cried.
+
+"God save us!"
+
+"He's taken his silver flask too," Etruria said in a low voice. She
+was examining the dressing-table. "And his watch."
+
+"His watch?"
+
+"Yes, Miss."
+
+"But that's odd," Mary said, fixing her eyes on Toft. "Don't you
+think that's odd? If my uncle had rambled out in some nightmare or--or
+wandering, would he have taken his flask and his watch, Toft? Are his
+spectacles there?"
+
+Toft inspected the table, raised the pillow, felt under the bolster.
+"No, Miss," he said; "he's taken them."
+
+"Ah!" Mary replied; "then I have hope. Wherever he is, he is in his
+senses. Now, Toft!"--she looked hard at the man--"think again! Surely
+since he had this in his mind last night he must have let something
+drop? Some word?"
+
+The man shook his head. "Not that I heard, Miss," he said.
+
+Mary sighed. But Mrs. Toft was less patient. She exploded. "You
+gaby!" she cried. "Where's your senses? It's to you we're looking, and
+a poor stick you are in time of trouble! I couldn't have believed it!
+Find your tongue, Toft, say something! You knew the Master down to his
+shoe leather. Let's hear what you do think! He couldn't walk far! He
+couldn't walk a mile without help. Where is he? Where do you think he
+is?"
+
+Toft's answer silenced them. If one of the mute, staring figures on
+the walls--that watched as from the boxes of a theatre the living
+actors--had stepped down, it would hardly have affected them more
+deeply. The man sat down on the bed, covered his face with his hands,
+and rocking himself to and fro broke into a passion of weeping. "The
+poor Master!" he cried between his sobs. "The poor Master!"
+
+Quickly at that Mary's feelings underwent a change. As if she had
+stood already beside her uncle's grave, sorrow took the place of
+perplexity. His past kindness dragged at her heart-strings. She forgot
+that she had never been able to love him, she forgot that behind the
+man whom she had known she had been ever conscious of another being,
+vague, shifting, inhuman. She remembered only the help he had given,
+the home he had offered, the rare hours of sympathy. "Don't, Toft,
+don't!" she cried, tears in her voice. She touched the man on the
+shoulder. "Don't give up hope!"
+
+As for Mrs. Toft, surprise silenced her. When she found her voice,
+"Well," she said, looking round her with a sort of pride, "who'll say
+after this that Toft's a hard man? Why, if the Master was lying on
+that bed ready for burial--and we're some way off that, the Lord be
+thanked!--he couldn't carry on more! But there, let's look now, and
+weep afterwards! Pull yourself together, Toft, or who's the young lady
+to depend on? If you take my advice, Miss," she continued, "we'll get
+out of this room. It always did give me the fantods with them
+Egyptians staring at me from the walls, and to-day it's worse than a
+hearse! Now downstairs----"
+
+"You are quite right, Mrs. Toft," Mary said. "We'll go downstairs."
+She shared to the full Mrs. Toft's distaste for the room. "We're doing
+no good here, and your husband can follow us when he is himself again.
+Petch should be back by this time, and we ought to arrange what is to
+be done outside."
+
+Toft made no demur, and they went down. They found the keeper waiting
+in the hall. He had made no discovery, and Mary, to whom Toft's
+breakdown had given fresh energy, took things into her own hands. She
+gave Petch his orders. He must get together a dozen men, and search
+the park and every place within a mile of the Gatehouse. He must
+report by messenger every two hours to the house, and in the meantime
+he must send a man on horseback to the town for Dr. Pepper.
+
+"And Mr. Basset?" Mrs. Toft murmured.
+
+"I will write a note to Mr. Basset," Mary said, "and the man must send
+it by post-horses from the Audley Arms. I will write it now." She sat
+down in the library, cold as the room was, and scrawled three lines,
+telling Basset that her uncle had disappeared during the night, and
+that, ill as he was, she feared the worst.
+
+Then, when Petch had gone to get his men together--a task which would
+take time as there were no farms at hand--she and Mrs. Toft searched
+the house room by room, while Etruria and her father went again
+through the outbuildings. But the quest was as fruitless as the former
+search had been.
+
+Mary had known many unhappy days in Paris, days of anxiety, of
+loneliness, of apprehension, when she had doubted where she would
+lodge or what she would eat for her next meal. Now she had a source of
+strength in her engagement and her love, which should have been
+inexhaustible. But she never forgot the misery of this day, nor ever
+looked back on it without a shudder. Probably there were moments when
+she sat down, when she took a tasty meal, when she sought Mrs. Toft in
+her warm kitchen or talked with Etruria before her own fire. But as
+she remembered the day, she spent the long hours gazing across the
+wintry park; now catching a glimpse of the line of beaters as it
+appeared for a moment crossing a glade, now watching the approach of
+the messenger who came to tell her that they had found nothing; or
+again straining her eyes for the arrival of Dr. Pepper, who, had she
+known it, was at the deathbed of an old patient, ten miles on the
+farther side of Riddsley.
+
+Now and again a hailstorm swept across the park, and Mrs. Toft came
+out and scolded her into shelter; or a farmer, whose men had been
+borrowed, "happened that way," and after a gruff question touched his
+hat and went off to join the searchers. Once a distant cry seemed to
+herald a discovery, and she tried to steady her leaping pulses. But
+nothing came of it except some minutes of anxiety. And once her
+waiting ear caught the clang of the bell that hung in the hall and she
+flew through the house to the front door, only to learn that the
+visitor was the carrier who three times a week called for letters on
+his way to town. The dreary house with its open doors, its cold
+draughts, its unusual aspect, the hurried meals, the furtive glances,
+the hours of suspense and fear--these stamped the day for ever on
+Mary's memory: as sometimes an hour of loneliness prints itself on the
+mind of a child who all his life long hears with distaste the clash of
+wedding bells.
+
+At length the wintry day with its gusts of snow began to draw in.
+Before four Petch sent in to say that he had beaten the park and also
+the gardens at the Great House, but had found nothing. Half his men
+were now searching the slope on either side of the Riddsley road. With
+the other half he was going to explore, while the light lasted, the
+fringe of the Chase towards Brown Heath.
+
+That left Mary face to face with the night; with the long hours of
+darkness, which inaction must render infinitely worse than those of
+the day. She had visions of the windswept park, the sullen ponds, the
+frozen moorland; they spread before her fraught with some brooding
+terror. She had never much marked, she had seldom felt the loneliness
+of the house. Now it pressed itself upon her, isolated her, menaced
+her. It made the thought of the night, that lay before her, almost
+unbearable.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+ A FOOTSTEP IN THE HALL
+
+
+Mrs. Toft bringing in candles, and looking grave enough herself,
+noticed the girl's pale face and chid her gently. "I don't believe
+that you've sat down this blessed day, Miss!" she said. "Nor no more
+than looked at good food. But tea you shall have and sit down to it,
+or my name's not Anne Toft! Fretting's no manner of use, and fasting's
+a poor stick to beat trouble with!"
+
+"But, Mrs. Toft," Mary said, her face piteous, "it's the thought that
+he may be lying out there, helpless and dying, while we sit here----"
+
+"Steady, Miss! Giving way does no good, and too much mind's worse than
+none. If he's out there he's gone, poor gentleman, long ago. And Dr.
+Pepper'll say the same. It's not in reason he should be alive if he's
+in the open. And, God knows, if he's under cover it's little better."
+
+"But then if he is alive!" Mary cried. "Think of another night!"
+
+"Ay, I know," Mrs. Toft said. "And hard it is! But you've been a model
+all this blessed day, and it's no time to break down now. Where that
+dratted doctor is, beats me, though he could do no more than we've
+done! But there, Mr. Basset will be with us to-morrow, and he'll find
+the poor gentleman dead or alive! There's some as are more to look at
+than the Squire, but there's few I'd put before him at a pinch!"
+
+"Where's Toft?" Mary asked.
+
+"He went to join Petch two hours ago," Mrs. Toft explained. "And there
+again, take Toft. He's a good husband, but there's no one would say he
+was a man to wear his heart outside. But you saw how hard he took it?
+I don't know," Mrs. Toft continued thoughtfully, "as I've seen Toft
+shed a tear these twenty years--no, nor twice since we went to
+church!"
+
+"You don't think," Mary asked, "that he knows more than he has told
+us?"
+
+The question took Mrs. Toft aback. "Why, Miss," she said, "you don't
+mean as you think he was putting on this morning?"
+
+"No," Mary answered. "But is it possible that he knows the worst and
+does not tell us?"
+
+"And why shouldn't he tell us? It would be strange if he wouldn't tell
+his own wife? And you that's Mr. Audley's nearest!"
+
+"It's all so strange," Mary pleaded. "My uncle is gone. Where has he
+gone?"
+
+Mrs. Toft did not answer the question. She could not. And there came
+an interruption. "That's Petch's voice," she said. "They're back."
+
+The men trooped into the hall. They advanced to the door of the
+parlor, Petch leading, a man whom Mary did not know next to him, after
+these a couple of farmers and Toft, in the background a blur of faces
+vaguely seen.
+
+"We've found something, Miss," Petch said. "At least Tom has. But I'm
+not sure it lightens things much. He was going home by the Yew Tree
+Walk and pretty close to the iron gate, when what should he see lying
+in the middle of the walk but this!"
+
+Petch held out a silver flask.
+
+"It's the Master's, sure enough," Mrs. Toft said.
+
+"Ay," Petch answered. "But the odd thing is, I searched that place
+before noon, a'most inch by inch, looking for footprints, and I went
+over it again when we were beating the Yew Tree Walk this afternoon,
+and I'm danged if that flask was there then!"
+
+"I don't think as you could ha' missed it, Mr. Petch," the finder
+said, "it was that bright and plain!"
+
+"But isn't the grass long there?" Mary asked. She had already as much
+mystery as she could bear and wanted no addition to it.
+
+"Not that long," said Tom.
+
+"No, not that long, the lad's right," Petch added. "I warrant I must
+have seen it."
+
+"That you must, Mr. Petch," a lad in the background said. "I was next
+man, and I wondered when you'd ha' done that bit."
+
+"But I don't understand," Mary answered. "If it was not there, this
+morning----"
+
+"I don't understand neither, lady," the keeper rejoined. "But it is on
+my mind that there's foul play!"
+
+"Oh, but," Mary protested, "who--why should any one hurt my uncle?"
+
+"I can't say as to that," Petch replied, darkly. "I don't know anybody
+as would. But there's the flask, and flasks don't travel without
+hands. If he took it out of the house with him----"
+
+"May he not have dropped it--this afternoon?" Mary suggested. "Suppose
+he wandered that way after you passed?"
+
+The keeper shook his head. "If he had passed that way this afternoon
+it isn't one but six pairs of eyes would ha' seen him."
+
+There was a murmur of assent. The searchers were keenly enjoying the
+drama, taking in every change that appeared on the girl's face. They
+were men into whose lives not much of drama entered.
+
+"But I cannot think that what you say is likely!" Mary protested. She
+had held her own stoutly through the day, but now with the eyes of all
+these men upon her she grew bewildered. The rows of faces, the bashful
+hands twisting caps, the blurred white of smocked frocks--grew and
+multiplied and became misty. She had to grasp the table to steady
+herself.
+
+Mrs. Toft saw how it was, and came to the rescue. "What's Toft say
+about it?" she asked.
+
+"Ay, to be sure, missus," Petch agreed. "I dunno as he's said anything
+yet."
+
+"I don't think the Master could have passed and not been seen," Toft
+replied. His tone was low, and in the middle of his speech he
+shivered. "But I'm not saying that the flask wasn't there this
+morning. It's a small thing."
+
+"It couldn't have been overlooked, Mr. Toft," the keeper replied
+firmly. "I speak as I know!"
+
+Again Mrs. Toft intervened. "I'm sure nobody would ha' laid a hand on
+the Master!" she said. "Nobody in these parts and nobody foreign, as I
+can fancy. I've no doubt at all the poor gentleman awoke with some
+maggot in his brain and wandered off, not knowing. The question is,
+what can we do? The young lady's had a sad day, and it's time she was
+left to herself."
+
+"There's nothing we can do now," Petch said flatly. "It stands to
+reason if we've found nothing in the daylight we'll find nothing in
+the dark. We'll be back at eight in the morning. Whether we'd ought to
+let his lordship know----"
+
+"Sho!" said Mrs. Toft with scorn. "What's he in it, I'd like to know?
+But there, you've said what you come to say and it's time we left the
+young lady to herself."
+
+Mary raised her head. "One moment," she said. "I want to thank you all
+for what you've done. And for what Petch says about the flask, he's
+right to speak out, but I can't think any one would touch my uncle.
+Only--can we do nothing? Nothing more? Nothing at all? If we don't
+find him to-night----" She broke off, overcome by her feelings.
+
+"I'm afraid not, Miss," Petch said gently. "We'd all be willing,
+but we don't know where to look. I own I'm fair beat. Still Tom and
+I'll stay an hour or two with Toft in case of anything happening.
+Good-night, Miss. You're very welcome, I'm sure."
+
+The others murmured their sympathy as they trooped out into the
+darkness. Mrs. Toft bustled away for the tea, and Mary was left alone.
+
+Suspense lay heavy on her. She felt that she ought to be doing
+something and she did not know what to do. Dr. Pepper did not come,
+the Tofts were but servants. They could not take the onus, they could
+not share her burden; and Toft was a broken reed. Meanwhile time
+pressed. Hours, nay, minutes might make all the difference between
+life and death.
+
+When Etruria came in with Mary's tea she found her mistress bending
+over the fire in an attitude of painful depression, and she said a few
+words, trying to impart to her something of her own patience. That
+patience was a fine thing in Etruria because it was natural. But Mary
+was of sterner stuff. She had a more lively imagination, and she could
+not be blind to the issues, or to the value of every moment that
+passed. Even while she listened to Etruria she saw with the eyes of
+fancy a hollow amid a clump of trees not far from a pool that she
+knew. In summer it was a pleasant dell, clothed with mosses and ferns
+and the flowers of the bog-bean; in winter a dank, sombre hollow.
+There she saw her uncle lie, amid the decaying leaves, the mud, the
+rank grass; and the vision was too much for her. What if he were
+really lying there, while she sat here by the fire? Sat here in this
+home which he--he had given her, amid the comforts which he had
+provided!
+
+The thought was horrible, and she turned fiercely on the comforter.
+"Don't!" she cried. "You don't think! You don't understand! We can't
+go through the night like this! They must go on looking! Fetch your
+father! And bring Petch! Bring them here!" she cried.
+
+Etruria went, alarmed by her excitement, but almost as quickly she
+came back. Toft had gone out with Petch and the other man. They would
+not be long.
+
+Mary cried out on them, but could do no more than walk the room, and
+after a time Etruria coaxed her to sit down and eat; and tea and food
+restored her balance. Still, as she sat and ate she listened--she
+listened always. And Etruria, taught by experience, let her be and
+said nothing.
+
+At last, "How long they are!" Mary cried. "What are they doing? Are
+they never----"
+
+She stopped. The footsteps of two men coming through the hall had
+reached her ears, and she recognized the tread of one--recognized it
+with a rush of relief so great, of thankfulness so overwhelming that
+she was startled and might well have been more than startled, had she
+been free to think of anything but the lost man. It was Basset's step,
+and she knew it--she would have known it, she felt, among a hundred!
+He had come! An instant later he stood in the doorway, booted and
+travel-stained, his whip in his hand, just as he had dropped from the
+saddle--and with a face grave indeed, but calm and confident. He
+seemed to her to bring relief, help, comfort, safety, all in one!
+
+"Oh!" she cried. "You are here! How--how good of you!"
+
+"Not good at all," he answered, advancing to the table and quietly
+taking off his gloves. "Your messenger met me half-way to Blore. I was
+coming into Riddsley to a meeting. I had only to ride on. Of course I
+came."
+
+"But the meeting?" she asked fearfully. Was he only come to go again?
+
+"D--n the meeting!" he answered, moved to anger by the girl's pale
+face. "Will you give me a cup of tea, Toft? I will hear Miss Audley's
+account first. Keep Petch and the other man. We shall want them. In
+twenty minutes I'll talk to you. That will do."
+
+Ah, with what gratitude, with what infinite relief, did Mary hear his
+tone of authority! He watched Toft out of the room and, alone with
+her, he looked at her. He saw that her hand shook as she filled the
+teapot, that her lips quivered, that she tried to speak and could not.
+And he felt an infinite love and pity, though he drove both out of his
+voice when he spoke. "Yes, tea first," he said coolly, as he took off
+his riding coat. "I've had a long journey. You must take another cup
+with me. You can leave things to me now. Yes, two lumps, please, and
+not too strong." He knocked together the logs, and warmed his hands,
+stooping over the fire with his back to her. Then he took his place at
+the table, and when he had drunk half a cup of tea, "Now," he said,
+"will you tell me the story from the beginning. And take time. More
+haste, less speed, you know."
+
+With a calmness that surprised herself, Mary told the tale. She
+described the first alarm, the hunt through the house, the discoveries
+in the bedroom, Toft's breakdown, last of all the search through the
+park and the finding of the flask.
+
+He listened gravely, asking a question now and then. When she had
+done, "What of Toft?" he inquired. "Not been very active, has he? Not
+given you much help?"
+
+"No! But how did you guess?" she asked in surprise.
+
+"I'm afraid that Toft knows more than he has told you. For the rest,"
+he looked at her kindly, "I want you to give up the hope of finding
+your uncle alive. I have none. But I think I can promise you that
+there has been no suffering. If it turns out as I imagine, he was dead
+before he was missed. What the doctor expected has happened. That is
+all."
+
+"I don't understand," she said.
+
+"And I don't want to say more until I know for certain. May I ring for
+Toft?" She nodded. He rang, and after a pause, during which he stood,
+silent and waiting, the servant came in. He shot a swift glance at
+them, and dropped his eyes.
+
+"Tell Petch and the other man to be ready to start with us in five
+minutes," Basset said. "Let them fetch a hurdle, and do you put a
+mattress on it. I suppose--you made sure he was dead, Toft, before you
+left him?"
+
+The man flinched before the sudden question, but he showed less
+emotion than Mary. Perhaps he had expected it. After a pause, during
+which Basset did not take his eyes from him, "I made sure," he said in
+a low voice. "As God sees me, I did! But if you think I raised a hand
+to him----"
+
+"I don't!" Basset said sternly. "I don't think so badly of you as
+that. But nothing but frankness can save you now. Is he in the Great
+House?"
+
+Toft opened his mouth, but he seemed unable to speak. He nodded.
+
+"What about the flask?"
+
+"I dropped it," the man muttered. He turned a shade paler. "I could
+not bear to think he was lying there. I thought it would lead the
+search--that way, and they would find him."
+
+"I see. That's enough now. Be ready to start at once."
+
+The man went out. "Good heavens!" Mary cried. She was horror-stricken.
+"And he has known it all this time! Do you think that he--he had any
+part----"
+
+"Oh no. He was alone with Mr. Audley when he collapsed, and he lost
+his head. They were together in the Great House--it was a difficult
+position--and he did not see his way to explain. He may have seen
+some advantage in gaining time--I don't know. The first thing to be
+done is to bring your uncle home. I will see to that. You have borne
+up nobly--you have done your part. Do you go to bed now."
+
+Something in his tone, and in his thought for her, brought old times
+to Mary's mind and the blood to her pale cheek. She did not say no,
+but she would not go to bed. She made Etruria come to her, and the two
+girls sat in the parlor listening and waiting, moving only when it was
+necessary to snuff the candles. It was a grim vigil. An hour passed,
+two hours. At length they caught the first distant murmur, the tread
+of men who moved slowly and heavily under a burden--there are few who
+have not at one time or another heard that sound. Little by little the
+shuffling feet, the subdued orders, the jar of a stumbling bearer,
+drew nearer, became more clear. A gust of wind swept through the hall,
+and moaned upwards through the ancient house. The candles on the table
+flickered. And still the two sat spell-bound, clasping cold hands, as
+the unseen procession passed over the threshold, and for the last time
+John Audley came home to sleep amid his books--heedless now of right
+or claim, or rank or blood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A few minutes later Basset entered the parlor. His face betrayed his
+fatigue, and his first act was to go to the sideboard and drink a
+glass of wine. Mary saw that his hand shook as he raised the glass,
+and gratitude for what he had done for her brought the tears to her
+eyes. He stood a moment, leaning in utter weariness against the
+wall--he had ridden far that day. And Mary had been no woman if she
+had not drawn comparisons.
+
+Opportunity had served him, and had not served the other. Nor, had her
+betrothed been here, could he have helped her in this pinch. He could
+not have taken Basset's place, nor with all the will in the world
+could he have done what Basset had done.
+
+That was plain. Yet deep down in her there stirred a faint resentment,
+a complaint hardly acknowledged. Audley was not here, but he might
+have been. It was his doing that she had not told her uncle, and that
+John Audley had passed away in ignorance. It was his doing that in her
+trouble she had had to lean on the other. It was not the first time
+during the long hours of the day that the thought had come to her; and
+though she had put it away, as she put it away now, the opening flower
+of love is delicate--the showers pass but leave their mark.
+
+When Etruria had slipped out, and left them, Basset came forward,
+and warmed himself at the fire. "Perhaps it is as well you did not go
+to bed," he said. "You can go now with an easy mind. It was as I
+thought--he lay on the stairs of the Great House and he had been dead
+many hours. Dr. Pepper will tell us more to-morrow, but I have no
+doubt that he died of syncope brought on by exertion. Toft had tried
+to give him brandy."
+
+Shocked and grieved, yet sensible of relief, she was silent for a
+time. She had known John Audley less than a year, but he had been good
+to her in his way and she sorrowed for him. But at least she was freed
+from the nightmare which had ridden her all day. Or was she? "May I
+know what took him there?" she asked in a low voice. "And Toft?"
+
+"He believed that there were papers in the Great House, which would
+prove his claim. It was an obsession. He asked me more than once to go
+with him and search for them, and I refused. He fell back on Toft.
+They had begun to search--so Toft tells me--when Mr. Audley was taken
+ill. Before he could get him down the stairs, the end came. He sank
+down and died."
+
+With a shudder Mary pictured the scene in the empty house. She saw the
+light of the lantern fall on the huddled group, as the panic-stricken
+servant strove to pour brandy between the lips of the dying man; and
+truly she was thankful that in this strait she had Basset to support
+her, to assist her, to advise her! "It is very dreadful," she said. "I
+do not wonder that Toft gave way. But had he--had my uncle--any right
+to be there?"
+
+"In his opinion, yes. And if the papers were there, they were his
+papers, the house was his, all was his. In my opinion he was wrong.
+But if he believed anything, he believed that he was justified in what
+he did."
+
+"I am glad of that!"
+
+"There must be an inquest, I am afraid," Basset continued. "One or two
+will know, and one or two more will guess what Mr. Audley's errand
+was. But Lord Audley will have nothing to gain by moving in it. And if
+only for your sake--but you must go to bed. Etruria is waiting in the
+hall. I will send her to you. Good-night."
+
+She stood up. She wished to thank him, she longed to say something,
+anything, which would convey to him what his coming had been to her.
+But she could not find words, she was tongue-tied. And Etruria came
+in.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+ THE NEWS FROM RIDDSLEY
+
+
+The business which had taken Audley away on the morrow of his
+engagement had been no mere pretext. The crisis in political life
+which Peel's return to office had brought about was one of those
+upheavals which are of rare promise to the adventurous. The wise
+foresaw that the party which Sir Robert had led would be riven from
+top to bottom. Old allies would be flung into opposing camps, and
+would be reaching out every way for support. New men would be learning
+their value, and to those who dared, all things might be added.
+Places, prizes, honors, all might be the reward of those who knew how
+to choose their side with prudence and to support it with courage. The
+clubs were like hives of bees. All day long and far into the winter
+night Pall Mall roared under the wheels of carriages. About the doors
+of Whitehall Gardens, where Peel lived, men gathered like vultures
+about the prey. And, lo, in a twinkling and as by magic the
+Conservative party vanished in a cloud of dust, to reappear a few days
+later in the guise of Peelites and Protectionists--Siamese twins, who
+would not live together, and could not live apart.
+
+At such a time it was Audley's first interest to be as near as
+possible to the hub of things and to place himself in evidence as a
+man concerned. He had a little influence in the Foreign Office, he had
+his vote in the House of Lords. And though he did not think that these
+would suffice, he trusted that, reinforced by the belief that he
+carried the seat at Riddsley in his pocket, they might be worth
+something to him.
+
+Unfortunately he could deal with one side only. If Stubbs were right
+he could pass for the owner of the borough only as long as he opposed
+Sir Robert. He could return the younger Mottisfont and have the credit
+of returning him, in the landed interest; but however much it might
+suit his book--and it was of that book he was thinking as he travelled
+to Lord Seabourne's--he could not, if Stubbs were right, return a
+member in the other interest.
+
+Now when a man can sell to one party only, tact is needed if he is to
+make a good bargain. Audley saw this. But he knew his own qualities
+and he did not despair. The occasion was unique, and he thought that
+it would be odd if he could not pluck from the confusion something
+worth having; some place under the Foreign Office, a minor embassy, a
+mission, something worth two, or three, or even four thousand a year.
+
+He travelled up to town thinking steadily of the course he would
+pursue, and telling himself that he must be as cunning as the serpent
+and as gentle as the dove. He must let no whip cajole him, and no Tory
+browbeat him. For he had only this to look to now: a rich marriage was
+no longer among the possibilities. Not that he regretted his decision
+in that matter as yet, but at times he wondered at it. He told himself
+that he had been impulsive, and setting this down to the charms of his
+mistress he gave himself credit for disinterested motives. And then,
+too, he had made himself safe!
+
+Still there were difficulties in the way of his ambition, which
+appeared more clearly at Seabourne Castle, where Lady Adela was a
+fellow-guest, and in London than at Riddsley; difficulties of shrewd
+whips, who knew the history of the borough by heart, and had figures
+at their fingers' ends; difficulties of arrogant leaders, who talked
+of his duty to the land and assumed that duty was its own reward.
+Above all, there was the difficulty that he could only sell to the
+party that was out of office and must pay in promises--bills drawn at
+long dates and for which no discounters could be found. For who could
+say when the landed interest, made up of stupid bull-headed men like
+Lord George Bentinck and Stubbs, a party without a leader and with
+divided counsels, would be in power? They were a mob rather than a
+party, and like every other mob were ready to sacrifice future
+prospects to present revenge.
+
+That was a terrible difficulty, and his lordship did not see how he
+was to get over it. To the Peelites who could pay, cash down, in
+honors and places, he could not sell. Nor to the Liberals under little
+Lord John, though to their promises some prospect of office gave
+value. So that at times he almost despaired. For he had only this to
+look to now; if he failed in this he would have love and he would have
+Mary, and he would have safety, but very little besides. If his word
+had not been given to Mary, he might almost have reconsidered the
+matter.
+
+The die was cast, however. Yet many a man has believed this, and then
+one fine morning he has begun to wonder if it is so--the cast was such
+an unlucky, if not an unfair one! And presently he has seen that at
+the cost of a little pride, or a little consistency, or what not, he
+might call the game drawn. That is, he might--if he were not the soul
+of honor that he is!
+
+By and by under the stress of circumstances his lordship began to
+consider that point. He did not draw back, he did not propose to draw
+back; but he thought that he would keep the door behind him ajar. To
+begin with, he did not overwhelm Mary with letters--his public
+engagements were so many; and when he wrote he wrote on ordinary
+matters. His pen ran more glibly on party gossip than on their joint
+future; he wrote as he might have written to a cousin rather than to
+his sweetheart. But he told himself that Mary was not versed in love
+letters, nor very passionate. She would expect no more.
+
+Then one fine morning he had a letter from Stubbs, which told him that
+there was to be a real contest in Riddsley, that the Horn and Corn
+platform was to be challenged, and that the assailant was Peter
+Basset. Stubbs added that the Working Men's Institute was beside
+itself with joy, that Hatton's and Banfield's hands were solid for
+repeal, and that the fight would be real, but that the issue was a
+foregone conclusion.
+
+The news was not altogether unwelcome. The contest gave value to the
+seat, and increased my lord's claim; on that party, unfortunately,
+they could only pay in promises. It also tickled my lord's vanity. His
+rival, unhorsed in the lists of love, had betaken himself, it seemed,
+to other lists, in which he would as surely be beaten.
+
+"Poor beggar!" Audley thought. "He was always a day late! Always came
+in second! I don't know that I ever knew anything more like him than
+this! From the day I first saw him, standing behind John Audley's
+counsel at the suit, right to this day, he has always been a loser!"
+
+And he smiled as he recalled the poor figure Basset had cut as a
+squire of dames.
+
+A week later Stubbs wrote again, and this time his news was startling.
+John Audley was dead. Stubbs wrote in the first alarm of the
+discovery, word of which had just been brought into the town. He knew
+no particulars, but thought that his lordship should be among the
+first to learn the fact. He added a hasty postscript, in which he said
+that Mr. Basset was proving himself a stronger candidate than either
+side had expected, and that not only were the brass-workers with him
+but a few of the smaller fry of tradesmen, caught by his cry of cheap
+bread. Stubbs closed, however, with the assurance that the landed
+interest would carry it by a solid majority.
+
+"D--n their impudence!" Lord Audley exclaimed. And after that he gave
+no further heed to the postscript. As long as the issue was certain,
+the election was Mottisfont's and Stubbs's affair. As for Basset, the
+more money he chose to waste the better.
+
+But John Audley's death was news--it was great news! So he was gone at
+last--the man whom he had always regarded as a menace! Whom he had
+feared, whose very name had rung mischief in his ears, by whom, during
+many a sleepless night, he had seen himself ousted from all that he
+had gained from title, income, lands, position! He was gone at last;
+and gone with him were the menace, the danger, the night alarms, the
+whole pile of gloomy fancies which apprehension had built up!
+
+The relief was immense. Audley read the letter twice, and it seemed to
+him that a weight was lifted from him. John Audley was dead. In his
+dressing-gown and smoking-cap my lord paced his rooms at the Albany
+and said again and again, "He's dead! By gad, he's dead!" Later, he
+could not refrain from the thought that if the death had taken place a
+few weeks earlier, in that first attack, he would have been under no
+temptation to make himself safe. As it was--but he did not pursue the
+thought. He only reflected that he had followed love handsomely!
+
+A day later a third letter came from Stubbs, and one from Mary. The
+tidings they brought were such that my lord's face fell as he read
+them, and he swore more than once over them. John Audley, the lawyer
+wrote, had been found dead in the Great House. He had been found lying
+on the stairs, a lantern beside him. Stubbs had visited the house the
+moment the facts became known. He had examined the muniment room and
+found part of the wall broken down, and in the room two boxes of
+papers which had been taken from a recess which the breach had
+disclosed. One of the boxes had been broken open. At present Stubbs
+could only say that the papers had been disturbed, he could not say
+whether any were missing. He begged his lordship--he was much
+disturbed, it was clear--to come down as quickly as possible. In the
+meantime, he would go through the papers and prepare a report. They
+appeared to be family documents, old, and not hitherto known to his
+lordship's advisers.
+
+Audley was still swearing, when his man came in. "Will you wear the
+black velvet vest, my lord?" he asked, "or the flowered satin?"
+
+"Go to the devil!" his master cried--so furiously that the man fled
+without more.
+
+When he was gone Audley read the letter again, and came to the
+conclusion that in making himself safe he had builded more wisely than
+he knew. For who could say what John Audley had found? Or who, through
+those papers, had a hold on him? He remembered the manservant's visit,
+and the thing looked black. Very black. Alive or dead, John Audley
+threatened him.
+
+Then he felt bitterly angry with Stubbs. There had been the most
+shocking carelessness. Had he not himself pointed out what was going
+on? Had he not put it to Stubbs that the place should be guarded? But
+the lawyer, stubborn in his belief that there were no papers there,
+had done nothing. Nothing! And this had come of it! This which might
+spell ruin!
+
+Or, no. Stubbs had indeed done his best to ruin him, but he had saved
+himself. He turned with relief to Mary's letter.
+
+It was written sadly, and it was rather cold. He noticed this, but her
+tone did not alarm him, because he set it down to the reserve of his
+own letters.
+
+He took care to answer this letter, however, by that day's post, and
+he wrote more affectionately than before--as if her trouble had broken
+down a reserve natural to him. He wrote with tact, too. He could not
+attend the funeral; the dead man's feelings towards him forbade that
+he should. But his agent would attend, and his carriage and servants.
+When he had written the letter he was satisfied with it: more than
+satisfied when he had added a phrase implying that their happiness
+would not long be postponed.
+
+After he had posted the letter he wondered if she would expect him to
+come to her. It was a lonely house and with death in it--but no, in
+the circumstances it was not possible. He would go down to The
+Butterflies next day. That would be the most that could be expected of
+him. He would be at hand if she needed anything.
+
+But when the next day came he did not go. A letter from a man
+belonging to the inner circle of politics reached him. The great man,
+who had been and might be again in the Cabinet, suggested a meeting.
+Nothing came of the meeting--it was one of those will-of-the-wisps
+that draw the unwary on until they find themselves committed. But it
+kept Audley in London, and it was not until the evening of Monday, the
+day of the funeral, that, chilled and out of temper, after posting the
+last stage from Stafford, he reached his quarters at The Butterflies,
+and gave short answers to Mrs. Jenkinson's inquiries after his health.
+
+"Poor dear young man!" she said, when she rejoined her sisters. "He
+has a kind heart and he feels it. Mr. John was Mr. John, and odd, very
+odd. But still he was an Audley!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ THE AUDLEY BIBLE
+
+
+Angry with Stubbs as he was--and with some reason--Lord Audley was
+not the man to bite off his nose to spite his face. He pondered long
+what he would say to him, and more than once he rehearsed the scene,
+toning down this phrase and pruning that. For he knew that after all
+Stubbs was a good agent. He was honest, he thought much and made much
+of the property, and nothing would be gained by changing him. Then his
+influence in the borough was such that even if my lord quarrelled with
+him, Mottisfont would hardly venture to discard him.
+
+For these reasons Audley had no mind to break with his agent. But he
+did wish to punish him. He did wish to make his displeasure felt. And
+he wished this the more because he began to suspect that if Stubbs had
+been less bigoted, he might have carried the borough the way he
+wished--the way that would pay him best.
+
+Stubbs on his side foresaw an unpleasant quarter of an hour. He had
+been too easy. He had paid too little heed to John Audley's
+trespasses, and had let things pass that he should have stopped. Then,
+too, he had been over-positive that there were no more documents at
+the Great House. Evil had not come of this, but it might have; and he
+made up his mind to hear some hard words.
+
+But when he obeyed my lord's summons his reception tried his patience.
+A bright fire burned in the grate, half a dozen wax candles shed a
+softened light on the room. The wine stood at Audley's elbow, and his
+glass was half full. But he did not give Stubbs even two fingers, nor
+did he ask him to take wine. And his tone was colder than Stubbs had
+ever known it. He made it plain that he was receiving a servant, and a
+servant with whom he was displeased.
+
+Still he was Lord Audley, something of divine right survived in him,
+and Stubbs knew that he had been himself in the wrong. He took the
+bull by the horns. "You are displeased, my lord," he said, as he took
+the seat to which the other pointed. "And I admit with some cause. I
+have been mistaken and, perhaps, a little remiss! But it is the
+exception, and it will be a lesson to me. I am sorry, my lord," he
+added frankly. "I can say no more than that."
+
+"And much good that will do us," my lord growled, "in certain events,
+Mr. Stubbs!"
+
+"At any rate it will be a sharp lesson to me," Stubbs replied. "It has
+cost Mr. Audley his life."
+
+"He had no right to be there!"
+
+"No, my lord, he had no right to be there. But he would not have been
+there if I had seen that the place was properly secured. I take all
+the blame."
+
+"Unfortunately," the other flung at him contemptuously, "you cannot
+pay the penalty; that may fall upon me. Anyway, it was a d--d silly
+thing, Mr. Stubbs, to leave the place open, and you see what has come
+of it."
+
+"I cannot deny it, my lord," Stubbs said patiently. "But I hope that
+nothing will come of it. I will tell your lordship first what my own
+observations were. I made a careful examination of the two chests of
+papers and I came to the conclusion that Mr. Audley had done little
+more than open the first when he was taken ill. One chest showed some
+disturbance. The upper layer had been taken out and replaced. The
+other box had not been opened."
+
+"What if he found what he wanted and searched no further?" Audley
+asked grimly. "But the point of the matter does not lie there. It lies
+in another direction, as I should have thought any lawyer would see."
+
+"My lord?"
+
+"Who was with him?" Lord Audley rapped the table with his fingers.
+"That's the point, sir! Who was with him?"
+
+"I think I have ascertained that," Stubbs replied, less put out than
+his employer expected. "I have little doubt that his man-servant, a
+man called Toft, was with him."
+
+"Ha!" the other exclaimed, "I expected that!"
+
+Stubbs raised his eyebrows. "You know him, my lord?"
+
+"I know him for a d--d blackmailing villain!" Audley broke out. Then
+he remembered himself. He had not told Stubbs of the blackmailing.
+And, after all, what did it matter? He had made himself safe. Whatever
+papers he had found, John Audley was dead, and John Audley's heiress
+was going to be his wife! The danger to him was naught, and the
+blackmailer was already disarmed. Still he was not going to spare
+Stubbs by telling him that. Instead, "What did the boxes contain?" he
+asked ungraciously.
+
+"Nothing of any value when I examined them, my lord. Old surrenders,
+fines, and recoveries with some ancient terriers. I could find no
+document among them that related to the title."
+
+"That may be," Audley retorted. "But John Audley expected to find
+something that related to the title! He knew more than we knew. He
+knew that those boxes existed, and he knew what he expected to find in
+them."
+
+"No doubt. And if your lordship had given me a little more time I
+should have explained before this that he was disappointed in his
+expectation; nay, more, that it was that disappointment--as I have
+little doubt--that caused his collapse and death."
+
+"How the devil do you know that?"
+
+"If your lordship will have patience I will explain," Stubbs said, a
+gleam of malice in his eyes. He rose from his seat and took from a
+chair beside the door a parcel which he had laid there on his
+entrance. "I have here that which he found, and that which I don't
+doubt caused his death."
+
+"The deuce you have!" Audley cried, rising to his feet in his
+surprise. And he watched with all his eyes while the lawyer slowly
+untied the tape and spread wide the wrappers. The action disclosed a
+thick quarto volume bound in blue leather, sprinkled on the sides with
+silver butterflies, and stamped with the arms of Audley. "Good G--d!"
+Audley continued, "the Family Bible!"
+
+"Yes, the Family Bible," the lawyer answered, gazing at it
+complacently, "about which there was so much talk at the opening of
+the suit. It was identified by a score of references, called for by
+both sides, sought for high and low, and never produced!"
+
+"And here it is!"
+
+"Here it is. Apparently at some time or other it went out of fashion,
+was laid aside and lost sight of, and eventually bricked up with a
+mass of old and valueless papers."
+
+Audley steadied his voice with difficulty. "And what is its effect?"
+he asked.
+
+"Its effect, my lord, is to corroborate our case in every particular,"
+the lawyer answered proudly. "Its entries form a history of the family
+for a long period, and amongst them is an entry of the marriage of
+Peter Paravicini Audley on the date alleged by us; an entry made in
+the handwriting of his father, and one of eleven made by the same
+hand. This entry agrees in every particular with the suspected
+statement in the register which we support, and fully bears out our
+case."
+
+"And John Audley found that?" my lord cried, after a moment of
+pregnant silence. He had regained his composure. His eyes were
+shining.
+
+"Yes, and it killed him," Stubbs said gravely. "Doubtless he came on
+it at the moment when he thought success was within his grasp, and the
+shock was too much for him."
+
+"Good Lord! Good Lord! And how did you get it?"
+
+"From Mr. Basset."
+
+"Basset?"
+
+"Who obtained it, I have no doubt, from the man, Toft, either by
+pressure or purchase."
+
+"The rascal! The d--d rascal! He ought to be prosecuted!"
+
+"Possibly," the lawyer agreed. "But he was only an accomplice, and we
+could not prosecute him without involving others; without bringing Mr.
+John's name into it--and he is dead. As a fact, I have passed my word
+to Mr. Basset that no steps should be taken against him, and I think
+your lordship will agree with me that I could not do otherwise."
+
+"Still--the man ought to be punished!"
+
+"He ought, but if any one has paid for his silence or for this book,
+it is not we."
+
+After that there was a little more talk about the Bible, which my lord
+examined with curiosity, about the singularity of its discovery, about
+the handwriting of the entries, which the lawyer said he could himself
+prove. Stubbs was made free of the decanter, and of everything but my
+lord's mind. For Audley said nothing of his engagement to Mary--the
+moment was hardly opportune; and nothing--it was too late in the
+day--of Toft's former exploit. He stood awhile absorbed and dreaming,
+staring through the haze of the candles. Here at last was final and
+complete relief. No more fears, no more calculations. Here was an end
+at last of the feeling that there was a mine under him. Traditions,
+when they are bred in the bone, die slowly, and many a time he had
+been hard put to it to resist the belief, so long whispered, that his
+branch was illegitimate. At last the tradition was dead. There was no
+more need to play for safety. What he had he had, and no one could
+take it from him.
+
+And presently the talk passed to the election.
+
+"There's no doubt," Stubbs said, "that Mr. Basset is a stronger
+candidate than either side expected."
+
+"But he's no politician! He has no experience!"
+
+The lawyer sat forward, with his legs apart and a hand on either knee.
+"No," he said. "But the truth is, though it is beyond me how a
+gentleman of his birth can be so misled, he believes what he says--and
+it goes down!"
+
+"Is he a speaker?"
+
+"He is and he isn't! I slipped in myself one night at the back of one
+of the new-fangled meetings his precious League has started. I wanted
+to see, my lord, if any of our people were there. I heard him for ten
+minutes, and at the start he was so jumpy I thought that he would
+break down. But when he got going--well, I saw how it was and what
+took the people. He believes what he says, and he says it plain. The
+way he painted Peel giving up everything, sacrificing himself,
+sacrificing his party, sacrificing his reputation, sacrificing all to
+do what he thought was right--the devil himself wouldn't have known
+his own!"
+
+"He almost converted you?"
+
+The lawyer laughed disdainfully. "Not a jot!" he said. "But I saw that
+he would convert some. Not many," Stubbs continued complacently.
+"There's some that mean to, but will think better of it at the last.
+And some would but daren't! Two or three may. Still, he's such a
+candidate as we've not had against us before, my lord. And with cheap
+bread and the preachings of this plaguy League--I shall be glad when
+it is over."
+
+Audley rose and poked the fire. "You're not going to tell me," he
+said, in a voice that was unnaturally even, "that he's going to beat
+us? You're not going, after all the assurances you've given me----"
+
+"God forbid," Stubbs replied. "No, no, my lord! Mr. Mottisfont will
+hold the seat! I mean only that it will be a nearer thing--a nearer
+thing than it has been."
+
+He had no idea that his patron was fighting a new spasm of anger; that
+the thought that he might, after all, have dealt with Sir Robert, the
+thought that he might, after all, have bargained with the party in
+power, was almost too much for the other's self-command. It was too
+late now, of course. It was too late. But if the contest was to be so
+close, surely if he had cast his weight on the other side, he might
+have carried it!
+
+And what if the seat were lost? Then this stubborn, confident fool,
+who was as bigoted in his faith as the narrowest Leaguer of them all,
+had done him a deadly injury! My lord bit off an oath, and young as he
+was, his face wore a very apoplectic look as he turned round, after
+laying down the poker.
+
+"That reminds me," the lawyer resumed, blandly unconscious of the
+crisis, and of the other's anger. "I meant to ask your lordship what's
+to be done about the two Boshams. You remember them, my lord? They've
+had the small holding by the bridge with the water meadow time out of
+mind--for seven generations they say. They pay eighteen pounds as
+joint tenants, and have votes as old freemen."
+
+"What of them?" the other asked impatiently.
+
+"Well, I'm afraid they'll not support us."
+
+"Do you mean that they'll not vote for Mottisfont?"
+
+"I'm afraid not," Stubbs answered. "They're as stubborn as their own
+pigs! I've spoken to them myself and told them that they've only one
+thing to expect if they go against their landlord."
+
+"And that is, to go out!" Audley said. "Well, make that quite clear to
+them, Stubbs, and depend upon it--they'll see differently."
+
+"I'm afraid they won't, my lord, and that is why I trouble you. They
+voted against the last lord--twice, I am told--and the story goes that
+he laid his stick about Ben Bosham's shoulders in the street--that
+would be in '31, I fancy. But he didn't turn them out--they'd been in
+the holding so long."
+
+"Two votes may have been nothing to him," Audley replied coldly. "They
+are something to me. They will vote for Mottisfont or they will go,
+Stubbs. That is flat, and do you see to it. There, I'm tired now," he
+continued, rising from his seat.
+
+Stubbs rose. "I don't know if your lordship's heard about Mr. John's
+will!"
+
+"No!" My lord straightened himself. Earlier in the day he had given
+some thought to this, and had weighed Mary Audley's chances of
+inheriting what John Audley had. "No!" he said. And he waited.
+
+"He has left the young lady eight thousand pounds."
+
+"Eight thousand!" Audley ejaculated. "Do you mean--he must have had
+more than that? He wasted a small fortune in that confounded suit. But
+he must have had--four times that, man!"
+
+"The residue goes to Mr. Basset."
+
+"Basset!" Audley cried, his face flushed with passion. "To Basset?" he
+repeated. "Good G--d!"
+
+"So I'm told, my lord," the lawyer answered, staggered by the temper
+in which his employer received the news.
+
+"But Miss Audley was his own niece! Basset? He was no relation to
+him!"
+
+"They were very old friends."
+
+"That's no reason why he should leave him thirty thousand pounds of
+Audley money! Money taken straight out of the Audley property! Thirty
+thousand----"
+
+"Not thirty, my lord," Stubbs ventured. "Not much above twenty, I
+should say. If you put it----"
+
+"If I put it that you were--something of a fool at times," the angry
+man cried, "I shouldn't be far wrong! But there, there, never mind!
+Good-night! Can't you see I'm dead tired and hardly know what I am
+saying? Come to-morrow! Come at eleven in the morning."
+
+Stubbs hardly knew how to take it. But after a moment's hesitation, he
+made the best of the apology, muttered something, and got out of the
+room. On the stairs he relieved his feelings by a word or two. In the
+street he wondered what had taken the man so suddenly. Surely he had
+not expected to get the money!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+ A FRIEND IN NEED
+
+
+Basset had obtained the missing Bible very much in the way the lawyer
+had indicated--partly by purchase and partly by pressure. Shocked as
+Toft had been by his master's sudden death, he had had the presence of
+mind to remember that he might make something of what they had
+discovered could he secrete it; and with every nerve quivering the man
+had fought down panic until he had hidden the parcel which had caused
+John Audley's collapse. Then he had given way. He had turned his back
+on the Great House, and shuddering, clutched at by grisly hands,
+pursued by phantom feet, he had fled through the night and the Yew
+Walk, to hide, for the present at least, his part in the tragedy.
+
+Basset, however, had known too much for him, and the servant, shaken
+by what had happened, had not been able to persist in his denials. But
+to tell and to give were two things, and it is doubtful whether he
+would have released his plunder if Basset had not in the last resort
+disclosed to him Miss Audley's engagement to her cousin.
+
+The change which this news wrought in Toft had astonished Basset. The
+man had gone down under it as under a blow on the head. The spirit had
+gone out of him, and he had taken with thankfulness the sum which
+Basset, as John Audley's representative, had offered him--rather out
+of pity than because it seemed necessary. He had given up the parcel
+on the night before the funeral.
+
+The book in his hands, Basset had hastened to be rid of it. Cynically
+he had told himself that he did so, lest he too might give way to the
+ignoble impulse to withhold it. Audley was his rival, but that he
+might have forgiven, as men forgive great wrongs and in time smile on
+their enemies. But the little wrongs, who can forgive these--the
+slight, the sneer, the assumption of superiority, the upper hand
+lightly taken and insolently held?
+
+Not Peter Basset, at a moment when he was being tried almost beyond
+bearing. For every day, between the finding of the body and the
+funeral, and often more than once in the day he had to see Mary, he
+had to advise her, he had--for there was no one else--to explain
+matters to her, to bear her company. He had to quit this meeting and
+that Ordinary--for election business stops for no man--and to go to
+her. He had to find her alone and to see her face light up at his
+entrance; he had to look back, and to see her watch him as he rode
+from the door. Nor when he was absent from the Gatehouse was it any
+better; nay, it was worse. For then he was forced to think of her as
+alone and sad, he had to picture her brooding over the fire, he had to
+fancy her at her solitary meals. And alike, with her or away from her,
+he had to damp down the old passion, as well as the new regret that
+each day and each hour and every kind look on her part fanned into a
+flame. Nor was even this all; every day he saw that she grew more
+grave, daily he saw her color fading, and he did not know what qualms
+she masked, what nightmares she might be suffering in that empty
+house--nay, what cause for unhappiness she might be hiding. At
+last--it was the afternoon before the funeral--he could bear it no
+longer, and he spoke.
+
+"You ought not to be here!" he said bluntly. "Why doesn't Audley fetch
+you away?" He was standing before the fire drawing on his gloves as he
+prepared to leave. The room was full of shadows, for he had chosen a
+time when she could not see his face.
+
+She tried to fence with him. "I am afraid," she said, "that some
+formalities will be necessary before he can do that."
+
+"Then why is he not here?" he retorted. "Or why doesn't he send some
+one to be with you? You ought not to be alone. Mrs. Jenkinson at The
+Butterflies--she's a good soul--you know her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"She'd come at a word. I know it's not my business----"
+
+"Or you would go about it, I am sure," she replied gently, "with as
+much respect to my wishes as Lord Audley shows."
+
+"Your wishes? But why--why do you wish----"
+
+"Why do I wish to be alone?" she answered. "Because I owe something to
+my uncle. Because I owe him a little thought and some remembrance. He
+made my old life for me--would you have me begin the new one before he
+is in the grave? This was his house--would you have me entertain Lord
+Audley in it?" She stood up, slender and straight, with the table
+between them--and he did not guess that her knees were trembling.
+"Please to understand," she continued, "that Lord Audley and I are
+entirely at one in this. We have our lives before us, and it were
+indeed selfish of us, and ungrateful of me, if we grudged a few days
+to remembrance. As selfish," she continued bravely--and he did not
+know that she braced herself anew--"as if I were ever to forget the
+friend who was _his_ friend, whose kindness has never failed me, whose
+loyalty has never--" she broke down there. She could not go on.
+
+"Add, too," he said gruffly, "who has robbed you of the greater part
+of your inheritance! Don't forget that!" He had been explaining the
+effect of John Audley's will to her. It had been opened that morning.
+
+His roughness helped her to recover herself. "I do not know what you
+mean by 'inheritance,'" she said. "My uncle has left me the portion
+his wife brought to him. I am more than satisfied. I am very grateful.
+My only fear is that, had he known of my engagement, he would not have
+wished me to have this."
+
+"The will was made before you came to live here," Basset said. "The
+eight thousand was left to you because you were his brother's child.
+It was the least he could do for you, and had he made a new will he
+would doubtless have increased it. But," breaking off, "I must be
+going." Yet he still stood, and he still tapped the table with the
+end of his riding-crop. "When is Audley coming?" he asked suddenly.
+"To-morrow?"
+
+"Yes, to-morrow."
+
+"Well he ought to," he replied, without looking at her. "You should
+not be here a day longer by yourself. It is not fitting. I shall see
+you in the morning before we start for the church, but the lawyer will
+be here and I shall not be able to come again. But I must be sure that
+there is some one here." He spoke almost harshly, partly to impress
+her, partly to hide his own feelings; and he did not suspect that she,
+too, was fighting for calmness; that she was praying that he would go,
+before she showed more clearly how much the parting tried her--before
+every kind word, every thoughtful act, every toilsome journey taken on
+her behalf, rose to her remembrance and swept away the remnants of her
+self-control.
+
+She had not imagined that she would feel the leave-taking as she did.
+She could not speak, and she was thankful that it was too dark for him
+to see her face. Would he never go? And still the slow tap-tap of his
+whip on the table went on. It seemed to her that she would never
+forget the sound! And if he touched her----
+
+But he had no thought of touching her.
+
+"Good-night," he said at last. He turned, moved away, lingered. At the
+door he looked back. "I am going into the library," he said. "The
+coffin will be closed in the morning."
+
+"Yes, good-night," she muttered, thankful that the thought of the dead
+man steadied her and gave her power to speak. "I shall see him in the
+morning."
+
+He closed the door, and she crept blindly to a chair, and covered by
+the darkness she gave way. She told herself that she was thinking of
+her uncle. But she knew that she deceived herself. She knew that her
+uncle had little to do with her tears, or with the feeling of
+loneliness that overcame her. Once more she had lost her friend--and a
+friend so good, so kind. Only now did she know his value!
+
+Five minutes later Basset crossed the court in search of his horse.
+Mrs. Toft's door stood open and a stream of firelight and candlelight
+poured from it and cut the January fog. She was hard at work, cooking
+funeral meats with the help of a couple of women; for quietly as John
+Audley had lived, he could not be buried without some stir. Odd people
+would come, drawn by the Audley name, squires who boasted some distant
+connection with the line, a few who had been intimate with him in past
+days. And the gentry far and wide would send their carriages, and the
+servants must be fed. Still the preparations jarred on Basset as he
+crossed the court. He felt the bustle an outrage on the mourning girl
+he had left, and on his own depression.
+
+Probably Mrs. Toft had set the door open that she might waylay him,
+for as he went by she came out and stopped him. "Mr. Basset, sir!" she
+said in a low voice. "Is this true, what Toft tells me? I declare,
+when I heard it, you could ha' knocked me down with a common dip!" She
+was wiping her hands on her apron. "That the young lady is to marry
+his lordship?"
+
+"I believe it is true," Basset said coldly. "But you had better let
+her take her own time to make it known. Toft should not have told
+you."
+
+"Never fear, sir, I'll not let on. But, Lord's sakes, who'd ha'
+thought it? And she'll be my lady! Not that she's not an Audley, and
+there's small differ, and she'll make none, or I don't know her! Well,
+indeed, I hope she's wise, but wedding cake, make it as rich as you
+like, it's soon stale. And for him, I don't know what the Master would
+have said if he'd known it! I thought things would come out," with a
+quick look at Basset, "quite otherways! And wished it, too!"
+
+"Thank you, Mrs. Toft," he said quietly.
+
+"Just so, sir, you'll excuse me. Well, it's not many months since the
+young lady came, and look at the changes! With the old Master dead,
+and you going in for elections--drat 'em, I say, plaguy things that
+set folks by the ears--and Mr. Colet gone and 'Truria that unsettled,
+and Toft for ever wool-gathering, I shall be glad when tomorrow's over
+and I can sit down and sort things out a bit!"
+
+"Yes, Mrs. Toft."
+
+"And speaking of elections reminds me. You know they two Boshams of
+the Bridge End, sir?"
+
+"I know them. Yes."
+
+Mrs. Toft sniffed. "They're sort of kin to me, and middling honest as
+town folks go. But two silly fellows, always meddling and making and
+gandering with things they'd ought to leave to the gentry! The old
+lord was soft with them, and so they've a mind now to see who is the
+stronger, they or his lordship."
+
+"If you mean that they have promised to vote for me----"
+
+"That's it, sir! Vote their living away, they will, and leave 'em
+alone! Votes are for poor men to make a bit of money by, odd times;
+but they two Boshams I've no patience with. Sally, Ben's wife, was
+with me to-day, and the long and the short of it is, Mr. Stubbs has
+told them that if they vote for you they'll go into the street."
+
+"It's a hard case," Basset said. "But what can I do?"
+
+"Don't ha' their votes. What's two votes to you? For the matter of
+that," Mrs. Toft continued, thoroughly wound up, "what's all the
+votes--put together? Bassets and Audleys, Audleys and Bassets were
+knights of the shire, time never was, as all the country knows! But
+for this little borough--place it's what your great-grandfather
+wouldn't ha' touched with a pair of gloves! I'd leave it to the
+riff-raff that's got money and naught else, and builds Institutes and
+such like!"
+
+"But you'd like cheap bread?" Basset said, smiling.
+
+"Bread? Law, Mr. Basset, what's elections to do wi' bread? It's not
+bread they're thinking of, cheap or dear. It's beer! Swim in it they
+do, more shame to you gentry! I'll be bound to say there's three goes
+to bed drunk in the town these days for two that goes sober! But
+there, you speak to they Boshams, Mr. Basset, sir, and put some sense
+into them!"
+
+"I'm afraid I can't promise," he answered. "I'll see!"
+
+But it was not of the Boshams he thought as he rode down the hill with
+a tight rein--for between fog and frost the road was treacherous. He
+was thinking of the man who had been his friend and of whose face,
+sphinx-like in death, he had taken farewell in the library. And solemn
+thoughts, thoughts such as at times visit most men, calmed his spirit.
+The fret of the contest, the strivings of the platform, the rubs of
+vanity flitted to a distance, they became small things. Even passion
+lost its fever and love its selfishness; and he thought of Audley with
+patience and of Mary as he would think of her in years to come, when
+time had enshrined her, and she was but a memory, one of the things
+that had shaped his life. He knew, indeed, that this mood would pass;
+that passion would surge up again, that love would reach out to its
+object, that memory would awake and wound him, that pain and
+restlessness would be his for many days. But he knew also--in this
+hour of clear views--that all these things would have an end, and only
+the love,
+
+
+ That seeketh not itself to please
+ Nor of itself hath any care,
+
+
+would remain with him.
+
+Already it had carried him some way. In the matter of the election,
+indeed, he might be wrong. He might have entered on it too
+hastily--often he thought that he had--he might be of fibre too weak
+for the task. It cost him much to speak, and the occasional failure,
+the mistake, the rebuff, worried him for hours and even days. Trifles,
+too, that would not have troubled another, troubled his conscience;
+side-issues that were false, but that he must not the less support,
+workers whom he despised and must still use, tools that soiled his
+hands but were the only tools. Then the vulgar greeting, the tipsy
+grasp, the friend in the market-place:--
+
+
+ The man who hails you Tom or Jack
+ And proves by thumps upon your back
+ How he esteems your merit!
+ Who's such a friend that one had need
+ Be very much his friend indeed
+ To pardon or to bear it!
+
+
+these humiliated him. But worse, far worse, than all was his unhappy
+gift of seeing the merits of the other side and of doubting the cause
+which he had set out to champion. He had fits of lowness when he was
+tempted to deny that honesty existed anywhere in politics; when Sir
+Robert Peel no less than Lord George Bentinck--who was coming to the
+front as the spokesman of the land--Cobden the Radical no less than
+Lord John Russell, seemed to be bent only on their own advancement,
+when all, he vowed, were of the School of the Cynics!
+
+But were he right or wrong in his venture--and right or wrong he had
+small hope of winning--he would not the less cling to the thing which
+Mary had given him--the will to make something of his life, the
+determination that he would leave the world, were it only the few
+hundred acres that he owned, or the hamlet in which he lived, better
+than he had found them. The turmoil of the election over, he would
+devote himself to his property at Blore. There John Audley's twenty
+thousand pounds opened a wide door. He would build, drain, manure,
+make roads, re-stock. He would make all things new. From him as from a
+centre comfort should flow. He saw himself growing old in the middle
+of his people, a lonely, but not an unhappy man.
+
+As he passed the bridge at Riddsley he thought of the Boshams, and
+weary as he was, he drew rein at their door. Ben Bosham came out,
+bare-headed; a short, elderly man with a bald forehead and a dirty
+complexion, a man who looked like a cobbler rather than the cow-keeper
+he was.
+
+"Shut your door, Bosham," Basset said. "I want a word with you."
+
+And when the man had done this, he stooped from the saddle and said a
+few words to him in a low voice.
+
+"Well, I'm dommed!" the other answered, peering up through the
+darkness. "It be you, Squire, bain't it? But you're not meaning it?"
+
+"I am," Basset replied in a low voice. "I'd not say, vote for him,
+Bosham. But leave it alone. You're not called upon to ruin yourself."
+
+"But ha' you thought," the man exclaimed, "that our two votes may make
+the differ? That they may make you or mar you, Squire!"
+
+"Well, I'd rather be marred than see you put out of your place,"
+Basset answered. "Think it over, Bosham."
+
+But Bosham repudiated even thought of it. This vote and his use of it,
+this defiance of a lord, was, for the time, his very life. "I'll not
+do it," he declared. "I couldn't do it! Nor I won't!" he repeated.
+"We're freemen o' Riddsley, and almost the last of the freemen that
+has votes as freemen! And while free we are, free we'll be, and vote
+as we choose, Squire! Vote as we choose! I'd not show my face in the
+town else! Mr. Stubbs may talk as gallus as he likes--and main ashamed
+of himself he looked yesterday--he may talk as gallus as never was,
+we'll not bend to no landlord, nor to no golden image!"
+
+"Then there's no more to be said," Basset answered, feeling that he
+cut a poor figure. "I don't wish you to do anything against your
+conscience, Bosham, and I'm obliged to you and your brother for your
+staunchness. I only wanted you to know that I should understand if you
+stayed away."
+
+"I'd chop my foot off first!" cried the patriot.
+
+After which Basset had no choice but to leave him and to ride on,
+feeling that he was himself too soft for the business--that he was a
+round man in a square hole. He wondered what his committee would think
+of him if they knew, and what Bosham thought of him--who did know. For
+Bosham seemed to him at this moment a man of principle, a patriot,
+nay, a very Brutus: whereas, Ben was in truth no better than a small
+man of large conceit, whose vote was his one road to fame.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+ BEN BOSHAM
+
+
+It was Tuesday, market-day at Riddsley, and farmers' wives, cackling
+as loudly as the poultry they carried, elbowed one another on the
+brick pavements or clustered before the windows of the low-browed
+shops. Farmers in white great-coats, with huge handkerchiefs about
+their necks, streamed from the yards of the Packhorse and the Barley
+Mow, and meeting a friend planted themselves in the roadway as firmly
+as if they stood in their own pastures. Now and again a young spark,
+fancying all eyes upon his four-year-old, sidled through the throng
+with many a "Whoa!" and "Where be'st going, lad?" While on the steps
+of the Market-Cross and about the long line of carts that rested on
+their shafts in the open street, hucksters chaffered and house-wives
+haggled over the rare egg or the keg of salted butter.
+
+The quacking of ducks, the neighing of horses, the singsong of rustic
+voices filled the streets. It was common talk that the place was as
+full as at the March Fair. The excitement of the Election had gone
+abroad, the cry that the land was at stake had brought in some, others
+had come to see what was afoot. Many a stout tenant was here who at
+other times left the marketing to his womenfolk; and shrewd glances he
+cast at the gentry, as he edged past the justices who lounged before
+the Audley Arms and killed in gossip the interval between the
+Magistrates' Meeting, at which they had just assisted, and the
+Ordinary at which they were to support young Mottisfont.
+
+The great men talked loudly and eagerly, were passionate, were in
+earnest. Occasionally one of the younger of them would step aside to
+look at a passing hackney, or an older man would speak to a favorite
+tenant whom he called by his first name. But, for the most part,
+they clung together, fine upstanding figures, in high-collared
+riding-coats and top-boots. They were keen to a man; the farmers keen
+also, but not so keen. For the argument that high wheat meant high
+rents, and that most of the benefits of protection went to the
+landlords had got about even in Riddsley. The squires complained that
+the farmers would only wake up when it was too late!
+
+Still in such a place, and on market-day, four out of five were in the
+landed interest; four-fifths of the squires, four-fifths of the
+parsons, almost four-fifths of the tenants; for the laborers, no one
+asked what they thought of it--they had ten shillings a week and no
+votes. "Peel--'od rot him!" cried the majority, "might shift as often
+as his own spinning-jenny! But not they! No Manchester man, and no
+Tamworth man either, should teach them their business! Who would die
+if there were no potatoes? It was a flam, a bite, but it wouldn't
+bamboozle Stafford farmers!"
+
+Meanwhile Stubbs, moving quietly through the throng, spoke with one
+here and there. He had the same word for all. "Listen to me, John," he
+would say, his hand on the yeoman's shoulder. "Peel says he's been
+wrong all these years and is only right now. Then, if you believe him,
+he's a fool; and if you don't believe him, he's a knave. Not a very
+good vet., John, eh? Not the vet. for the old gray mare, eh?"
+
+This had a great effect. John went away and repeated it to himself,
+and presently grasped the dilemma and chuckled over it. Ten minutes
+later he imparted it, with the air of a Solomon, to the "Duke," who
+mouthed it and liked it and rolled it off to the first he met. It went
+the round of the inns and about four o'clock a farmer fresh from the
+"tap" put it to Stubbs and convinced him; and that night men,
+travelling home market-peart in the charge of their wives, bore it to
+many a snug homestead set in orchards of hard cider apples.
+
+Had the issue of the Election lain with the Market, indeed, it had
+been over. But of the hundred and ninety voters no more than fifteen
+were farmers, and though the main trade of the town sided with them,
+the two factories were in opposition; and cheap bread had its charms
+for the lesser fry. But the free traders were too wise to flaunt their
+views on market-day, and it was left for little Ben Bosham, whose vote
+was pretty near his all, to distinguish himself in the matter.
+
+He, too, had been at the tap, and about noon his voice was heard
+issuing from a group who stood near the Audley Arms. "Be I free, or
+bain't I?" he bawled. "Answer me that, Mr. Bagenal!"
+
+A knot of farmers had edged him into a corner and were disposed to
+bait him. A stubby figure in a velveteen coat and drab breeches, his
+hand on an ash-plant, he held his ground among them, tickled by the
+attention he excited and fired by his own importance. "Be I free, or
+bain't I?" he repeated.
+
+"Free?" Bagenal answered contemptuously. "You be free to make a fool
+of yourself, Ben! I'm thinking you'd ha' us all lay down the ground to
+lazy pasture and live by milk, as you do!"
+
+"Milk?" ejaculated a stout man of many acres, whose contempt for such
+traffic was above speech.
+
+"You'll be free to go out of Bridge End," cried a third. "That's what
+you'll be free to do! And where'll your vote be then, Ben?"
+
+But there Bosham was sure of himself. "That's where you be wrong, Mr.
+Willet," he retorted with gusto. "My vote dunno come o' my landlord,
+and in the Bridge End or out of the Bridge End, I've a vote while I've
+a breath! 'Tain't the landlord's vote, and why'd I give it to he? Free
+I be--not like you, begging your pardon! Freeman, old freeman, I be,
+of this borough! Freeman by marriage!"
+
+"Then you be a very rare thing!" Bagenal retorted slyly. "There's a
+many lose their freedom that way, but you be the first I ever heard of
+that got it!"
+
+"And a hard bargain, too, as I hear," said Willet.
+
+This drew a roar of laughter. The crowd grew thicker and the little
+man's temper grew short, for his wife was no beauty. He began to see
+that they were playing with him.
+
+"You leave me alone, Mr. Willet," he said angrily, "and I'll leave you
+alone!"
+
+"Leave thee alone!" said the farmer who had turned up his nose at
+milk. "So I would, same as any other lump o' dirt! But yo' don't let
+us. Yo' set up to know more than your betters! Pity the old lord ain't
+alive to put his stick about your back!"
+
+"Did it smart, Ben?" cried a lad who had poked himself in between his
+betters.
+
+"You let me catch you," Ben cried, "and I'll make you smart. You be
+all a set of slaves! You'd set your thatch afire if squires'd tell
+you! Set o' slaves, set o' slaves you be!"
+
+"And what be you, Bosham?" said a man who had just joined the group.
+"Head of the men, bain't you? Cheap bread and high wages, that's your
+line, ain't it!"
+
+"That's his line, be it?" said the old farmer slowly. "Bit of a rascal
+it seems yo' be? Don't yo' let me find you in my boosey pasture
+talking to no men o' mine, or I'll make yo' smart a sight more than
+his lordship did!"
+
+"Ay, that's Ben's line," said the new-comer.
+
+"You're a liar!" Ben shrieked. "A dommed liar you be! I see you not
+half an hour agone coming out of Stubbs's office! I know who told you
+to say that, you varmint! I'll have the law of you!"
+
+"Ben Bosham, the laborers' friend!" the man retorted.
+
+Ben was furious, for he was frightened. There was no feud so bitter in
+the 'forties as the feud between farmer and laborer. The laborer had
+no vote, he had lost his common rights, his wood, his cow-feed; he was
+famished, he was crushed by the new Poor Law, and so he was often in
+an ugly mood, as singed barns and burning stacks went to show. Bosham
+knew that he might flout the squires, and at worst be turned out of
+his holding; but woe betide him if he got the name of the laborers'
+friend. Moreover, there was just so much truth in the accusation as
+made it dangerous. Ben and his brother eked out the profits of the
+dairy by occasional labor, and Ben had sometimes vapored in tap-rooms
+where he had better have held his tongue. He shrieked furiously,
+therefore, at the false witness, and even tried to reach him with his
+ash-plant. "Who be you?" he screamed. "You be a lawyer's pup, you be!
+You'd ruin me, you would! Let me get a hold of you and I'll put a mark
+on you! You be lying!"
+
+"I don't know about that," said the big farmer slowly and weightily.
+"I'm feared yo're a bit of a rascal, Ben."
+
+"Ay, and fine he'll look in front of Stafford Gaol some morning!" said
+Willet. "At the end of a rope."
+
+On that in a happy moment for Ben, while he gaped for a retort and
+found none, two carriers' vans, huge wooden vehicles festooned with
+rabbits and market-baskets and drawn by three horses abreast, lumbered
+through the crowd and scattered it. In a twinkling Ben was left alone,
+an angry man, aware that he had cut but a poor figure!
+
+He had been frightened, too, and he resented it. He thirsted for some
+chance of setting himself right, of proving to others that he was a
+freeman and not as other men. And in the nick of time he saw a
+chance--if only he had the courage to rise to it. He saw moving
+towards him through the press a mail-phaeton and pair. On the box,
+caped and gloved, the pink of fashion, sat no less a person than his
+lordship himself. A servant in the well-known livery, a white coat
+with a blue collar, sat behind him.
+
+The vans which had freed Ben blocked the great man's way, and he was
+moving at a walk. All heads were bared as he passed, and he was
+acknowledging the courtesy with his whip when Ben stepped before the
+horses and lifted his hand. In an instant a hundred eyes were on the
+man and he knew that he had burned his boats. Bravado was now his only
+chance.
+
+"My lord," he cried, waving his hat impudently. "I want to know what
+you be going to do about me?"
+
+My lord hardly caught his words and did not catch his meaning, but he
+saw that the man was almost under the horses' feet and he checked
+them. Ben stood aside then but, as the carriage passed him, he laid
+his hand on the splashboard and walked beside it. He looked up at the
+great man and in the same impudent tone, "Be you agoing to turn me
+out, my lord?" he cried. "That's what I want to know."
+
+"I don't understand you," Audley said coldly. He guessed that the man
+referred to the Election, and what was the use of understrappers like
+Stubbs if he was to be exposed to this?
+
+"I'm Ben Bosham of the Bridge End, my lord, that's who I be," Ben
+replied brazenly. "I'm not ashamed of my name. I want to know whether
+you be agoing to turn me out, and my wife and my child! That's what I
+want to----"
+
+Then a farmer seized him and dragged him back, and others laid hands
+on him, though he still shouted. "Dunno be a fool!" cried the farmer,
+deeply shocked. "Drive on, drive on, my lord! Never heed him. He've
+had a glass too much!"
+
+"Packhorse beer, my lord," explained a second in stentorian
+tones--though he knew that Ben was fairly sober. "Ought to be ashamed
+of himself!" cried a third, and he shook the aggressor. Ben was in a
+minority of one, and those who held him were inclined to be rough.
+
+Audley waved his whip good-humoredly. "Take care of him!" he said.
+"Don't hurt him!" And he drove on, outwardly unmoved though inwardly
+fuming. Still had it ended there little harm would have been done. But
+word of the brawl outran the carriage and, as it chanced, reached the
+door of Hatton's Works as the men came out to dinner. Ben Bosham had
+spoken his mind to his lordship! His lordship had driven over him! The
+farmers had beaten him! The news passed from one to another like
+flame, and the hands stood, some two score of them, and hooted my lord
+loudly, shouting "Shame!" and jeering at him.
+
+Now had Audley been the candidate he would have thought nothing of it.
+He would have laughed in the men's faces and taken it as part of the
+day's work; or had he been the old lord, he would have flung a curse
+at the men and cut at the nearest with his whip--and forgotten it.
+
+But he was not the old lord, times were changed, and the thing angered
+him. It was in an ill-temper that he drove on along the road that rose
+by gentle degrees to the Great Chase.
+
+For the matter of that, he had been in a black mood for some time,
+because he could not make up his mind. Night and morning ambition
+whispered to him to put the vessel about; to steer the course which
+experience told him that it behooved a man to steer who was not
+steeped in romance, nor too greedy for the moment's enjoyment; the
+course which, beyond all doubt, he would have steered were he now
+starting!
+
+But he was not starting; and when he thought of shifting the helm he
+foresaw difficulties. He did not think that he was a soft-hearted man,
+yet he feared that when it came to the point he would flinch. Besides,
+he told himself that he was a man of honor; and the change was a
+little at odds with this. But there again, he reflected that truth was
+honor and in the end would cause less pain.
+
+Eight thousand pounds was so very small a portion! And for safety, he
+no longer needed to play for it. John Audley was dead and the Bible
+was in his hands; his case was beyond cavil or question, while the
+political situation was such that he saw no opening, no chance of
+enrichment in that direction. To make Mary, handsome, good, attractive
+as she was--to make her the wife of a poor peer, of a discontented,
+dissatisfied man--this, if he could only find it in his heart to tell
+her the truth, would be a cruel kindness.
+
+As he drove along the road, angry with the wretched Bosham, angry with
+Stubbs, angry with the fools who had hooted him, he was not sorry to
+feel his ill-temper increase. He might not find it so difficult to
+speak to her. A little effort and the thing would be done. Eight
+thousand pounds? The interest would barely dress her. Whereas, if she
+had played her cards well and been heir to her uncle's thirty
+thousand--the case would have been different. After all, the fault lay
+with her.
+
+He roused the off-horse with a sharp cut, and a moment later discerned
+at the end of a long, straight piece of road, the moss-clad steps of
+the old Cross and standing beside them a figure he knew.
+
+He was moved, even while, in his irritation, he was annoyed that she
+had come to meet him at a place that had recollections for him. It
+seemed to him that in doing this she was putting an undue, an unfair
+burden on him.
+
+She waved her hand and he raised his hat. The day was bright and cold,
+and the east wind had whipped a fine color into her cheeks. Perhaps
+that, too, was unfair. Perhaps that too was putting an undue burden on
+him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+ MARY MAKES A DISCOVERY
+
+
+But his face was not one to betray his thoughts, and as he drew up
+beside Mary, horses fretting, polechains jingling, the silver of the
+harness glittering from a score of points, he made a gallant show. The
+most eager lover, Apollo himself in the chariot of the sun, had
+scarcely made a better approach to his mistress, had hardly carried it
+more finely over a mind open to appearances.
+
+With a very fair show of haste he bade his man take the reins, and as
+the servant swung himself into the front seat the master sprang to the
+ground. His hand met Mary's, his curly-brimmed hat was doffed, his
+eyes smiled into hers. "Well, better late than never!" he said.
+
+"Yes," she answered. But she spoke more soberly than he expected and
+her face was grave. "You have been a long time away."
+
+That was their meeting. The servant was there; under his eyes it could
+not be warmer. Whether one or the other had foreseen this need not be
+asked.
+
+He spoke to the man, who, possessed by a natural curiosity, was all
+ears. "Keep them moving," he said. "Drive back a mile or two and
+return." Then to Mary, his hat still in his hand, "A long time away?
+Longer than I expected, and far longer than I hoped, Mary. Shall we go
+up the hill a little?"
+
+"I thought you would propose that," she said. "I am so glad that it is
+fine."
+
+The man had turned the horses. Audley took her hand again and pressed
+it, looking in her face, telling himself that she grew more handsome
+every day. Why hadn't she thirty thousand pounds? Aloud he said, "So
+am I, very glad. Otherwise you could not have met me, and I fancied
+that you might not wish me to come to the house? Was that so, dear?"
+
+"I think it was," she said. "He has been gone so very short a time.
+Perhaps it was foolish of me."
+
+"Not at all!" he answered, admiring the purity of her complexion. "It
+was like you."
+
+"If we had told him, it would have been different."
+
+"On the other hand," he said deftly, as he drew her hand through his
+arm, "it might have troubled his last days? And now, tell me all,
+Mary, from the beginning. You have gone through dark days and I have
+not been--I could not be with you. But I want to share them."
+
+She told the story of John Audley's disappearance, her cheeks growing
+pale as she described the alarm, the search, the approach of night and
+her anguish at the thought that her uncle might be lying in some place
+which they had overlooked! Then she told him of Basset's arrival, of
+the discovery, of the manner in which Peter had arranged everything
+and saved her in every way. It seemed to her that to omit this, to say
+nothing of him, would be as unfair to the one as uncandid to the
+other.
+
+My lord's comment was cordial, yet it jarred on her. "Well done!" he
+said. "He was made to be of use, poor chap! If it were any one else I
+should be jealous of him!" And he laughed, pressing her arm to his
+side.
+
+She was quivering with the memories which her story had called up, and
+it was only by an effort that she checked the impulse to withdraw her
+hand. "Had you been there----"
+
+"I hope I should have done as much," he replied complacently. "But it
+was impossible."
+
+"Yes," she said. And though she knew that her tone was cold, she could
+not help it. For many, many times during the last month she had
+pondered over his long absence and the chill of his letters. Many
+times she had told herself that he was treating her with scant
+affection, scant confidence, almost with scant respect. But then again
+she had reflected that she must be mistaken, that she brought him
+nothing but herself, and that if he did not love her he would not have
+sought her. And telling herself that she expected too much of love,
+too much of her lover, she had schooled herself to be patient, and had
+resolved that not a word of complaint should pass her lips.
+
+But to assume a warmth which she did not feel was another matter. This
+was beyond her.
+
+He, for his part, set down her manner to a natural depression. "Poor
+child!" he said, "you have had a sad time. Well, we must make up for
+it. As soon as we can make arrangements you must leave that gloomy
+house where everything reminds you of your uncle and--and we must make
+a fresh start. Do you know where I am taking you?"
+
+She saw that they had turned off the road and were following a track
+that scrambled upwards through the scrub that clothed the slope below
+the Gatehouse. It slanted in the direction of the Great House. "Not to
+Beaudelays?" she said.
+
+"Yes--to Beaudelays. But don't be afraid. Not to the house."
+
+"Oh no!" she cried. "I don't think I could bear to go there to-day!"
+
+"I know. But I want you to see the gardens. I want you to see what
+might have been ours, what we might have enjoyed had fortune been more
+kind to us! Had we been rich, Mary! It is hard to believe that you
+have never seen even the outside of the Great House."
+
+"I have never been beyond the Iron Gate."
+
+"And all these months within a mile!"
+
+"All these months within a mile. But he did not wish it. It was one of
+the first things he made me understand."
+
+"Ah! Well, there is an end of that!" And again so matter-of-fact was
+his tone that she had to struggle against the impulse to withdraw her
+arm. "Now, if there is any one who has a right to be there, it is you!
+And I want to be the one to take you there. I want you to see for
+yourself that it is only fallen grandeur that you are marrying, Mary,
+the thing that has been, not the thing that is. By G--d! I don't know
+that there is a creature in the world--certainly there is none in my
+world--more to be pitied than a poor peer!"
+
+"That's nothing to me," she said. And, indeed, his words had brought
+him nearer to her than anything he had said. So that when, taking
+advantage of the undergrowth which hid them from the road below, he
+put his arm about her and assisted her in her climb, she yielded
+readily. "To think," he said, "that you have never seen this place! I
+wonder that after we parted you did not go the very next morning to
+visit it!"
+
+"Perhaps I wished to be taken there by you."
+
+"By Jove! Do you know that that is the most lover-like thing you have
+said."
+
+"I may improve with practice," she rejoined. "Indeed, it is possible,"
+she continued demurely, "that we both need practice!"
+
+She had not a notion that he was in two minds; that one half of him
+was revelling in the hour, pleased with possession, enjoying her
+beauty, dwelling on the dainty curves of her figure, while the other
+uncertain, wavering, was asking continually, "Shall I or shall I not?"
+But if she did not guess thoughts to which she had no clue he was
+sharp enough to understand hers. "Ah! you are there, are you?" he
+said. "Wait! Presently, when we are out of sight of that cursed
+road----"
+
+"I didn't find fault!"
+
+On that there was a little banter between them, gallant and smiling on
+his part, playful and defensive on hers, which lasted until they
+reached a door leading into the lower garden. It was a rusty,
+damp-stained door, once painted green, and masked by trees somewhat
+higher than the underwood through which they had climbed. Ivy hung
+from the wall above it, rank grass grew against it, the air about
+it was dank, and in summer sent up the smell of wild leeks. Once
+under-gardeners had used it to come and go, and many a time on moonlit
+nights maids had stolen through it to meet their lovers in the coppice
+or on the road.
+
+Audley had brought the key and he set it in the lock and turned it.
+But he did not open the door. Instead, he turned to Mary with a smile.
+"This is my surprise," he said. "Shut your eyes and open them when I
+tell you. I will guide you."
+
+She complied without suspicion, and heard the door squeak on its rusty
+hinges. Guided by his hand she advanced three or four paces. She heard
+the door close behind her. He put his arm round her and drew her on.
+"Now?" she asked, "May I look?"
+
+"Yes, now!" he answered. As he spoke he drew her to him, and, before
+she knew what to expect, he had crushed her to his breast and was
+pressing kisses on her face and lips.
+
+She was taken by surprise and so completely, that for a moment she was
+helpless, without defence. Then the instinctive impulse to resist
+overcame her, and she struggled fiercely; and, presently, she released
+herself. "Oh, you shouldn't have done it!" she cried. "You shouldn't
+have done it!"
+
+"My darling!"
+
+"You--you hurt me!" she panted, her breath coming short and quick. She
+was as red now as she had for a moment been white. Her lips trembled,
+and there were tears in her eyes. He thought that he had been too
+rough with her, and though he did not understand, he stayed his
+impulse to seize her again. Instead, he stood looking down at her, a
+little put out.
+
+She tried to smile, tried bravely to pass it off; but she was put to
+it, he could see, not to burst into tears. "Perhaps I am foolish," she
+faltered, "but please don't do it again."
+
+"I can't promise--for always," he answered, smiling. But, none
+the less, he was piqued. What a prude the girl was! What a
+Sainte-ni-touche! To make such a fuss about a few kisses!
+
+She tried to take the same tone. "I know I am silly," she said, "but
+you took me by surprise."
+
+"You were very innocent, then, my dear. Still, I'll be good, and next
+time I will give you warning. Now, don't be afraid, take my arm, and
+let us----"
+
+"If I could sit down?" she murmured. Then he saw that the color had
+again left her cheeks.
+
+There was an old wheelbarrow inside the door, half full of dead
+leaves. He swept it clear, and she sat down on the edge of it. He
+stood by her, puzzled, and at a loss.
+
+Certainly he had played a trick on her, and he had been a little rough
+because he had felt her impulse to resist. But she must have known
+that he would kiss her sooner or later. And she was no child. Her
+convent days were not of yesterday. She was a woman. He did not
+understand it.
+
+Alas, she did understand it. It was not her lover's kisses, it was not
+his passion or his roughness that had shaken Mary. She was not a prude
+and she was a woman. That which had overwhelmed her was the knowledge,
+the certainty forced on her by his embrace, that she did not love him!
+That, however much she might have deluded herself a few weeks earlier,
+however far she might have let the lure of love mislead her, she did
+not love this man! And she was betrothed to him, she was promised to
+him, she was his! On her engagement to him, on her future with him had
+been based--a moment before--all her plans and all her hopes for the
+future.
+
+No wonder that the color was struck from her face, that she was shaken
+to the depths of her being. For, indeed, she knew something more--that
+she had had her warning and had closed her eyes to it. That evening,
+when she had heard Basset's step come through the hall, that moment
+when his presence had lifted the burden of suspense from her, should
+have made her wise. And for an instant the veil had been lifted, and
+she had been alarmed. But she reflected that the passing doubt was due
+to her lover's absence and his coldness; and she had put the doubt
+from her. When Audley returned all would be well, she would feel as
+before. She was hipped and lonely and the other was kind to her--that
+was all!
+
+Now she knew that that was not all. She did not love Audley and she
+did love some one else. And it was too late. She had misled herself,
+she had misled the man who loved her, she had misled that other whom
+she loved. And it was too late!
+
+For a time that was short, yet seemed long to her companion, who stood
+watching her, she sat lost in thought and unconscious of his presence.
+At length he could bear it no longer. Pale cheeks and dull eyes had no
+charm for him! He had not come, he had not met her, for this.
+
+"Come!" he said, "come, Mary, you will catch cold sitting there! One
+might suppose I was an ogre!"
+
+She smiled wanly. "Oh no!" she said, "It is I--who am foolish. Please
+forgive me."
+
+"If you would like to go back?"
+
+But her ear detected temper in his tone, and with a newborn fear of
+him she hastened to appease him. "Oh no!" she said. "You were going to
+show me the gardens!"
+
+"Such as they are. Well, so you will see what there is to be seen. It
+is a sorry sight, I can tell you." She rose and, taking her arm, he
+led her some fifty yards along the alley in which they were, then,
+turning to the right, he stopped. "There," he said. "What do you think
+of it?"
+
+They had before them the long, dank, weed-grown walk, broken midway by
+the cracked fountain and closed at the far end by the broad flight of
+broken steps that led upward to the terrace and so to the great lawn.
+When Audley had last stood on this spot the luxuriance of autumn had
+clothed the neglected beds. A tangle of vegetation, covering every
+foot of soil with leaf and bloom, had veiled the progress of neglect.
+Now, as by magic, all was changed. The sun still shone, but coldly and
+on a bald scene. The roses that had run riot, the spires of hollyhocks
+that had risen above them, the sunflowers that had struggled with the
+encroaching elder, nay, the very bindweed that had strangled all alike
+in its green embrace, were gone, or only reared naked stems to the
+cold sky. Gone, too, were the Old Man, the Sweet William, the St.
+John's Wort, the wilderness of humbler growths that had pressed about
+their feet; and from the bare earth and leafless branches, the
+fountain and the sundial alone, like mourners over fallen grandeur,
+lifted gray heads.
+
+There is no garden that has not its sad season, its days of stillness
+and mourning, but this garden was sordid as well as sad. Its dead lay
+unburied.
+
+Involuntarily Mary spoke. "Oh, it is terrible!" she cried.
+
+"It is terrible," he answered gloomily.
+
+Then she feared that, preoccupied as she was with other thoughts, she
+had hurt him. She was trying to think of something to comfort him,
+when he repeated, "It is terrible! But, d--n it, let us see the rest
+of it! We've come here for that! Let us see it!"
+
+Together they went slowly along the walk. They came by and by to the
+sundial. She hung a moment, wishing to read the inscription, but he
+would not stay. "It's the old story," he said. "We are gay fellows in
+the sunshine, but in the shadow--we are moths."
+
+He did not explain his meaning. He drew her on. They mounted the wide
+flight which had once, flanked by urns and nymphs and hot with summer
+sunshine, echoed the tread of red-heeled shoes and the ring of spurs.
+Now, elder grew between the shattered steps, weeds clothed them, the
+nymphs mouldered, lacking arms and heads, the urns gaped.
+
+Mary felt his depression and would have comforted him, but her brain
+was numbed by the discovery which she had made; she was unable to
+think, without power to help. She shared, she more than shared, his
+depression. And it was not until they had surmounted the last flight
+and stood gazing on the Great House that she found her voice. Then, as
+the length and vastness of the pile broke upon her, she caught her
+breath. "Oh," she cried. "It is immense!"
+
+"It's a nightmare," he replied. "That is Beaudelays! That is," with
+bitterness, "the splendid seat of Philip, fourteenth Lord Audley--and
+a millstone about his neck! It is well, my dear, that you should see
+it! It is well that you should know what is before you! You see your
+home! And what you are marrying--if you think it worth while!"
+
+If she had loved him she would have been strong to comfort him. If she
+had even fancied that she loved him, she would have known what to
+answer. As it was, she was dumb; she scarcely took in the significance
+of his words. Her mind--so much of it as she could divert from
+herself--was engaged with the sight before her, with the long rows of
+blank and boarded windows, the smokeless chimneys, the raw, unfinished
+air that, after eighty years, betrayed that this had never been a
+home, had never opened its doors to happy brides, nor heard the voices
+of children.
+
+At last she spoke. "And this is Beaudelays?" she said.
+
+"This is my home," he replied. "That's the place I've come to own!
+It's a pleasant possession! It promises a cheerful homecoming, doesn't
+it?"
+
+"Have you never thought of--of doing anything to it?" she asked
+timidly.
+
+"Do you mean--have I thought of completing it? Of repairing it?"
+
+"I suppose I meant that," she replied.
+
+"I might as well think," he retorted, "of repairing the Tower of
+London! All I have in the world wouldn't do it! And I cannot pull it
+down. If I did, the lawyers first and the housebreakers afterwards,
+would pull down all I have with it! There is no escape, my dear," he
+continued slowly. "Once I thought there was. I had my dream. I've
+stood on this lawn on summer days and I've told myself that I would
+build it up again, and that the name of Audley should not be lost. But
+I am a peer, what can I do? I cannot trade, I cannot plead. For a peer
+there is but one way--marriage. And there were times when I had
+visions of repairing the breach--in that way; when I thought that I
+could set the old name first and my pleasure second; when I dreamed of
+marrying a great dowry that should restore us to the place we once
+enjoyed. But--that is over! That is over," he repeated in a sinking
+voice. "I had to choose between prosperity and happiness; I made my
+choice. God grant that we may never repent it!"
+
+He sank into silence, waiting for her to speak; he waited with
+exasperation. She did not, and he looked down at her. Then, "I
+believe," he said, "that you have not heard a word I have said!"
+
+She glanced up, startled. "I am afraid I have not," she answered
+meekly. "Please forgive me. I was thinking of my uncle, and wondering
+where he died."
+
+It was all that Audley could do to check the oath that rose to his
+lips. For he had spoken with intention; he had given her, as he
+thought, a lead, an opening; and he had wasted his pains. He could
+hardly believe that she had not heard. He could almost believe that
+she was playing with him. But in truth she had barely recovered from
+the shock of her discovery, and the thing before her eyes--the
+house--held her attention.
+
+"I believe that you think more of your uncle than of me!" he cried.
+
+"No," she replied, "but he is gone and I have you." She was beginning
+to be afraid of him; afraid of him, because she felt that she was in
+fault.
+
+"Yes," he replied. "But you must be more kind to me--or I don't know
+that you will keep me."
+
+She thought that he spoke in jest, and she pressed his arm.
+
+"You don't want to go into the house?"
+
+"Oh no! I could not bear it to-day."
+
+"Then you must not mind if I leave you for a moment. I have to look to
+something inside. I shall not be more than five minutes. Will you walk
+up and down?"
+
+She assented, thankful to be alone with her thoughts; and he left her.
+A burly, stately figure, he passed across the lawn and disappeared
+round the corner of the old wing where the yew trees grew close to
+the walls. He let himself into the house. He wished to examine the
+strong-room for himself and to see what traces were left of the
+tragedy which had taken place there.
+
+But when he stood inside and felt the icy chill of the house, where
+each footstep awoke echoes, and a ghostly tread seemed to follow him,
+he went no farther than the shadowy drawing-room with its mouldering
+furniture and fallen screen. There, placing himself before an
+unshuttered pane, he stood some minutes without moving, his hands
+resting on the head of his cane, his eyes fixed on Mary. The girl was
+slowly pacing the length of the terrace, her head bent.
+
+Whether the lonely figure, with its suggestion of sadness, made its
+appeal, or the attraction of a grace that no depression could mar,
+overcame the dictates of prudence, he hesitated. At last, "I can't do
+it!" he muttered, "hanged if I can! I suppose I ought not to have
+kissed her if I meant to do it to-day. No, I can't do it."
+
+And when, half an hour later, he parted from her at the old Cross at
+the foot of the hill, he had not done it.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+ THE MEETING AT THE MAYPOLE
+
+
+Within twenty-four hours there were signs that Bosham's brush with his
+lordship and the show of feeling outside Hatton's Works had set a
+sharper edge on the fight. Trifles as these were, the farmers about
+Riddsley took them up and resented them. The feudal feeling was not
+quite extinct. Their landlord was still a great man to them, and even
+those who did not love him believed that he was fighting their battle.
+An insult to him seemed, in any case, a portent, but that such a poor
+creature as Bosham--Ben Bosham of the Bridge End--should insult him,
+went beyond bearing.
+
+Moreover, it was beginning to be whispered that Ben was tampering with
+the laborers. One heard that he was preaching higher wages in the
+public houses, another that he was asking Hodge what he got out of
+dear bread, a third that he was vaporing about commons and enclosures.
+The farmers growled. The farmers' sons began to talk together outside
+the village inn. The farmers' wives foresaw rick-burning, maimed
+cattle, and empty hen coops, and said that they could not sleep in
+their beds for Ben.
+
+Meanwhile those who, perhaps, knew something of the origin of these
+rumors, and could size up the Boshams to a pound, were not unwilling
+to push the matter farther. Men who fancied with Stubbs that repeal of
+the corn-taxes meant the ruin of the country-side, were too much in
+earnest to pick and choose. They believed that this was a fight
+between the wholesome country and the black, sweating town, between
+the open life of the fields and the tyranny of mill and pit; and that
+the only aim of the repealer was to lower wages, and so to swell the
+profits that already enabled him to outshine the lords of the soil.
+They were prone, therefore, to think that any stick was good enough to
+beat so bad a dog, and if the stout arms of the farmers could redress
+the balance, they were in no mood to refuse their help.
+
+Nor were sharpeners wanting on the other side. The methods of the
+League were brought into play. Women were sent out to sing through the
+streets of an evening, and the townsfolk ate their muffins to the
+doleful strains of:
+
+
+ Child, is thy father dead?
+ Father is gone.
+ Why did they tax his bread?
+ God's will be done!
+
+
+And as there were enthusiasts on this side, too, who saw the work of
+the Corn Laws in the thin cheeks of children and the coffins of babes,
+the claims of John Barley-corn, roared from the windows of the
+Portcullis and the Packhorse, did not seem a convincing answer. A big
+loaf and a little loaf, carried high through the streets, made a wide
+appeal to non-voters; and a banner with, "You be taxing, we be
+starving!" had its success. Then, on the evening of the market-day, a
+band of Hatton's men, fresh from the Three Tailors, came to blows with
+a market-peart farmer, and a "hand" was not only knocked down, but
+locked up. Hatton's and Banfield's men were fired with indignation at
+this injustice, and Hatton himself said a little more at the Institute
+than Basset thought prudent.
+
+These things had their effect, and more, perhaps, than was expected.
+For Stubbs, going back to his office one afternoon, suffered an
+unpleasant shock. Bosham's impudence had not moved him, nor the jeers
+of Hatton's men. But this turned out to be another matter.
+Farthingale, the shabby clerk with the high-bred nose, had news for
+him which he kept until the office door was locked. And the news was
+so bad that Stubbs stood aghast.
+
+"What? All nine?" he cried. "Impossible, man! The woman's made a fool
+of you!"
+
+But Farthingale merely looked at him over his steel-rimmed spectacles.
+"It's true," he said.
+
+"I'll never believe it!" cried the lawyer.
+
+Farthingale shook his head. "That won't alter it," he said patiently.
+"It's true."
+
+"Dyas the butcher! Why, he served me for years! For years! I go to him
+at times now."
+
+"Only for veal," replied the clerk, who knew everything "Pitt, of the
+sausage shop, and Badger, the tripeman, are in his pocket--buy his
+offal. With the other six, it's mainly the big loaf--Lake has a sister
+with seven children, and Thomas a father in the almshouse. Two more
+have big families, and the women have got hold of them!"
+
+"But they've always voted right!" Stubbs urged, with a sinking heart.
+"What's taken them?"
+
+"If you ask me," the clerk answered, "I should say it was partly
+Squire Basset--he talks straight and it takes. And partly the split.
+When a party splits you can't expect to keep all. I doubted Dyas from
+the first. He's the head. They were all at his house last night and a
+prime supper he gave them."
+
+Stubbs groaned. At last, "How much?" he asked.
+
+Farthingale shook his head. "Nix," he said. "You may be shaking Dyas's
+hand and find it's Hatton's. If you take my advice, you'll leave it
+alone."
+
+"Well," the lawyer cried, "of all the d--d ingratitude I ever heard
+of! The money Dyas has had from me!"
+
+Farthingale's lips framed the words "only veal," but no sound came.
+Devoted as he was to his employer, he was enjoying himself. Election
+times were meat and drink--especially drink--to him. At such times his
+normal wage was royally swollen by Election extras, such as: "To
+addressing one hundred circulars, one guinea. To folding and closing
+the same, half a guinea. To watering the same, half a guinea. To
+posting the same, half a guinea." A whole year's score, chalked up
+behind the door at the Portcullis, vanished as by magic at this
+season.
+
+And then he loved the importance of it, and the secrecy, and the
+confidence that was placed in him and might safely be placed. The
+shabby clerk who had greased many a palm was himself above bribes.
+
+But Stubbs was aghast. Scarcely could he keep panic at bay. He had
+staked his reputation for sagacity on the result. He had made himself
+answerable for success, to his lordship, to the candidate, to the
+party. Not once, but twice, he had declared in secret council that
+defeat was impossible--impossible! Had he not done so, the contest,
+which his own side had invited, might have been avoided.
+
+And then, too, his heart was in the matter. He honestly believed that
+these poor creatures, these weaklings whose defection might cost so
+much, were voting for the ruin of their children, for the
+impoverishment of the town. They would live to see the land pass into
+the hands of men who would live on it, not by it. They would live to
+see the farmers bankrupt, the country undersold, the town a desert!
+
+The lawyer had counted on a safe majority of twenty-two on a register
+of a hundred and ninety voters. And twenty-two had seemed a buckler,
+sufficient against all the shafts and all the spite of fortune. But a
+majority of four--for that was all that remained if these nine went
+over--a majority of four was a thing to pale the cheek. Perspiration
+stood on his brow as he thought of it. His hand shook as he shuffled
+the papers on his desk, looking for he knew not what. For a moment he
+could not face even Farthingale, he could not command his eye or his
+voice.
+
+At last, "Who could get at Dyas?" he muttered.
+
+Farthingale pondered for a time, but shook his head. "No one," he
+said. "You might try Hayward if you like. They deal."
+
+"What's to be done, then?"
+
+"There's only one way that I can think of," the clerk replied, his
+eyes on his master's face. "Rattle them! Set the farmers on them! Show
+them that what they're doing will be taken ill. Show 'em we're in
+earnest. Badger's a poor creature and Thomas's wife's never off the
+twitter. I'd try it, if I were you. You'd pull some back."
+
+They talked for a time in low voices and before he went into the
+Portcullis that night Farthingale ordered a gig to be ready at
+daylight.
+
+It might have been thought that with this unexpected gain, Basset
+would be in clover. But he, too, had his troubles and vexations. John
+Audley's death and Mary's loneliness had made drafts on his time as
+well as on his heart. For a week he had almost withdrawn from the
+contest, and when he returned to it it was to find that the extreme
+men--as is the way of extreme men--had been active. In his address and
+in his speeches he had declared himself a follower of Peel. He had
+posed as ready to take off the corn-tax to meet an emergency, but not
+as convinced that free trade was always and everywhere right. He had
+striven to keep the question of Irish famine to the front, and had
+constantly stated that that which moved his mind was the impossibility
+of taxing food in one part of the country while starvation reigned in
+another. Above all, he had tried to convey to his hearers his notion
+of Peel. He had pictured the statesman's dilemma as facts began to
+coerce him. He had showed that in the same position many would have
+preferred party to country and consistency to patriotism. He had
+painted the struggle which had taken place in the proud man's mind. He
+had praised the decision to which Peel had come, to sacrifice his
+name, his credit, and his popularity to his country's good.
+
+But when Basset returned to his Committee Room, he found that the men
+to whom Free Trade was the whole truth, and to whom nothing else was
+the truth, had stolen a march on him. They had said much which he
+would not have said. They had set up Cobden where he had set up Peel.
+To crown all, they had arranged an open-air meeting, and invited a man
+from Lancashire--whose name was a red rag to the Tories--to speak at
+it.
+
+Basset was angry, but he could do nothing. He had an equal distaste
+for the man and the meeting, but his supporters, elated by their
+prospects, were neither to coax nor hold. For a few hours he thought
+of retiring. But to do so at the eleventh hour would not only expose
+him to obloquy and injure the cause, but it would condemn him to an
+inaction from which he shrank.
+
+For all that he had seen of Mary, and all that he had done for her,
+had left him only the more restless and more unhappy. To one in such a
+mood success, which began to seem possible, promised something--a new
+sphere, new interests, new friends. In the hurly-burly of the House
+and amid the press of business, the wound that pained him would heal
+more quickly than in the retirement of Blore; where the evenings would
+be long and lonely, and many a time Mary's image would sit beside his
+fire and regret would gnaw at his heart.
+
+The open-air meeting was to be held at the Maypole, in the wide street
+bordered by quaint cottages, that served the town for a cattle-market.
+The day turned out to be mild for the season, the meeting was a
+novelty, and a few minutes before three the Committee began to
+assemble in strength at the Institute, which stood no more than a
+hundred yards from the Maypole, but in another street. Hatton was
+entertaining Brierly, the speaker from Lancashire, and in making him
+known to the candidate, betrayed a little too plainly that he thought
+that he had scored a point.
+
+"You'll see something new now, sir," he said, rubbing his hands.
+"What's wanting, he'll win! He's addressed as many as four thousand
+persons at one time, Mr. Brierly has!"
+
+"Ay, and not such as are here, Squire," Brierly boomed. He was a tall,
+bulky man with an immense chin, who moved his whole body when he
+turned his head. "Not country clods, but Lancashire men! No throwing
+dust i' their eyes!"
+
+"Still, I hope you'll deal with us gently," Basset said. "Strong meat,
+Mr. Brierly, is not for babes. We must walk before we can run."
+
+"Nay, but the emptier the stomach, the more need o' meat!" Brierly
+replied, and he rumbled with laughter. "An' a bellyful I'll give them!
+Truth's truth and I'm no liar!"
+
+"But to different minds the same words do not convey the same thing,"
+Basset urged.
+
+The man stared over his stiff neck-cloth. "That'ud not go down i'
+Todmorden," he said. "Nor i' Burnley nor i' Bolton! We're down-right
+chaps up North, and none for chopping words. Hands off the hands'
+loaf, is Lancashire gospel, and we're out to preach it! We're out to
+preach it, and them that clems folk and fats pheasants may make what
+mouth o'er it they like!"
+
+Fortunately the order to start came at this moment, and Basset had to
+fall in and move forward with Hatton, the chairman of the day.
+Banfield followed with the stranger, and the rest of the Committee
+came on two by two, the smaller men enjoying the company in which
+they found themselves. So they marched solemnly into the street, a
+score of Hatton's men forming a guard of honor, and a long tail of the
+riff-raff of the town falling in behind with orange flags and favors.
+These at a certain signal set up a shrill cheer, a band struck up
+"See, the Conquering Hero Comes!" and the sixteen gentlemen marched,
+some proudly and some shamefacedly, into the wider street, wherein a
+cart drawn up at the foot of the Maypole awaited them.
+
+On such occasions Englishmen out of uniform do not show well. The
+daylight streamed without pity on the Committee as they stalked or
+shambled along in their Sunday clothes, and Basset at least felt the
+absurdity of the position. With the tail of his eye he discerned that
+the stranger was taking off a large white hat, alternately to the
+right and left, in acknowledgment of the cheers of the crowd, while
+ominous sniggers of laughter mingled here and there with the applause.
+Banfield's men, with another hundred or so of the town idlers, were
+gathered about the cart, but of the honest and intelligent voters
+there were scanty signs.
+
+The crowd greeted the appearance of each of the principals with cheers
+and a shaft or two of Stafford wit.
+
+"Hooray! Hooray!" shouted Hatton's men as he climbed into the cart.
+
+"Hatton's a great man now!" a bass voice threw in.
+
+"But he's never lost his taste for tripe!" squeaked a shrill treble.
+The gibe won roars of laughter, and the back of the chairman's neck
+grew crimson.
+
+"Hurrah for Banfield and the poor man's loaf!" shouted his supporters,
+as he mounted in his turn.
+
+"It's little of the crumb he'll leave the poor man!" squeaked the
+treble.
+
+It was the candidate's turn to mount next. "Hooray! Hooray!" shouted
+the crowd with special fervor. Handkerchiefs were waved from windows,
+the band played a little more of the Conquering Hero.
+
+As the music ceased, "What's he doing, Tommy, along o' these chaps?"
+asked the treble voice.
+
+"He's waiting for that there Samaritan, Sammy?" answered the bass.
+
+"Ay, ay? And the wine and oil, Sammy?"
+
+It took the crowd a little time to digest this, but in time they did
+so, and the gust of laughter that followed covered the appearance of
+the stranger. He was not to escape, however, for as the noise ceased,
+"Is this the Samaritan, Sammy?" asked the bass.
+
+"Where's your eyes?" whined the treble. "He's the big loaf! and, lor,
+ain't he crumby!"
+
+"If I were down there----" the Burnley man began, leaning over the
+side of the cart.
+
+"He's crusty, too!" cried the wit.
+
+But this was too much for the chairman. "Silence! Silence!" he cried,
+and, as at a signal, there was a rush, the two interrupters were
+seized and, surrounded by a gang of hobbledehoys, were hustled down
+the road, fighting furiously and shouting, "Blues! Blues!"
+
+The chairman made use of the lull to step to the edge of the cart and
+take off his hat. He looked about him, pompous and important.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began, "free and independent electors of our ancient
+borough! At a crisis such as this, a crisis the most momentous--the
+most momentous----" he paused and looked into his hat, "that history
+has known, when the very staff of life is, one may say, the apple of
+discord, it is an honor to me to take the chair!"
+
+"The cart you mean!" cried a voice, "you're in the cart!"
+
+The speaker cast a withering glance in the direction whence the voice
+came, lost his place and, failing to find it, went on in a different
+strain. "I'm a business man," he said, "you all know that! I'm a
+business man, and I'm not ashamed of it. I stick to my business and my
+business to-day----"
+
+"Better go on with it!"
+
+But he was getting set, and he was not to be abashed. "My business
+to-day," he repeated, "is to ask your attention for the distinguished
+candidate who seeks your suffrages, and for the--the distinguished
+gentleman on my left who will presently follow me."
+
+A hollow groan checked him at this point, but he recovered himself.
+"First, however," he continued, "I propose, with your permission, to
+say a word on the--the great question of the day--if I may call it so.
+It is to the food of the people I refer!"
+
+He paused for cheers, under cover of which Banfield murmured to his
+neighbor that Hatton was set now for half an hour. He had yet to learn
+that open-air meetings have their advantages.
+
+"The food of the people!" Hatton repeated, uplifted by the applause.
+"It is to me a sacred thing! My friends, it is to me the Ark of the
+Covenant. The bread is the life. It should go straight, untaxed,
+untouched from the field of the farmer to the house of--of the widow
+and the orphan!"
+
+"Hear! Hear! Hear! Hear!" Then, "What about the miller?"
+
+"It should go from where it is grown," Hatton repeated, "to where it
+is needed; from where it is grown to the homes of the poor! And to the
+man," slipping easily and fatally into his Sunday vein, "that lays his
+'and upon it, let him be whom he may, I say with the Book, 'Thou shalt
+not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn!' The Law, ay, and the
+Prophets----"
+
+"Ay, Hatton's profits! Hands off them!" roared the bass voice.
+
+"Low bread and high profits!" shrieked the treble. "Hatton and thirty
+per cent!"
+
+A gust of laughter swept all away for a time, and when the speaker
+could again get a hearing he had lost his thread and his temper.
+"That's a low insinuation!" he cried, crimson in the face. "A low
+insinuation! I scorn to answer it!"
+
+"Regular old Puseyite you be," shouted a new tormentor. "Quoting
+Scripture."
+
+Hatton shook his fist at the crowd. "A low, dirty insinuation!" he
+cried. "I scorn----"
+
+"You don't scorn the profits!"
+
+"Listen! Silence!" Then, "I shall not say another word! You're not
+worth it! You're below it! I call on Mr. Brierly of Manchester to
+propose a resolution."
+
+And casting vengeful glances here and there where he fancied he
+detected an opponent, he stood back. He began for the first time to
+think the meeting a mistake. Basset, who had held that opinion from
+the first, scanned the crowd and had his misgivings.
+
+The man from Manchester, however, had none. He stood forward, a smile
+on his broad face, his chest thrown forward, a something easy in his
+air, as became one who had confronted thousands and was not to be put
+out of countenance by a few hisses. He waited good-humoredly for
+silence. Nor could he see that, behind the cart, there had been
+gathering for some time a band of men of a different air from those
+who faced the platform. These men were still coming up by twos and
+threes, issuing from side-streets; men clad in homespun and with ruddy
+faces, men in smocked frocks, men in velveteens; a few with belcher
+neckerchiefs and slouched felts, whom their mothers would not have
+known. When Brierly raised his hand and opened his mouth there were
+over two score of these men--and they were still coming up.
+
+But Brierly was unaware of them, and, complacent and confident of the
+effect he would produce, he opened his mouth.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began. His voice, strong and musical, reached the edge
+of the meeting. "Gentlemen, free electors! And I tell you straight no
+man is free, no man had ought to be free----"
+
+Boom! and again, Boom! Boom! Not four paces behind him a drum rolled
+heavily, drowning his voice. He stopped, his mouth open; for an
+instant surprise held the crowd also. Then laughter swept the meeting
+and supplied a treble to the drum's persistent bass.
+
+And still the drum went on, Boom! Boom! amid cheers, yells, laughter.
+Then, as suddenly as it had started, it stopped. More slowly, the
+hurrahs, yells, laughter, died down, the laughter the last to fail,
+for not only had the big man's face of surprise tickled the crowd, but
+the drum had so nicely taken the pitch of his voice that the
+interruption seemed even to his friends a joke.
+
+He seized the opportunity, but defiance not complacency was now his
+note. "Gentlemen," he said, "it's funny, but you don't drum me down,
+let me tell you! You don't drum me down! What I said I'm going to say
+again, and shame the devil and the landlords! Free men----"
+
+But he did not say it. Boom, boom, rolled the drum, drowning his voice
+beyond hope. And this time, with the fourth stroke, a couple of fifes
+struck into a sprightly measure, and the next moment three score
+lively voices were roaring:
+
+
+ You've here the little Peeler,
+ Out of place he will not go!
+ But to keep it, don't he turn about
+ And jump Jim Crow!
+
+ But to keep it see him turn about
+ And jump Jim Crow!
+ Turn about, and wheel about
+ And do just so!
+
+ _Chorus_
+
+ The only dance Sir Robert knows
+ Is Jump Jim Crow!
+ The only dance Sir Robert knows
+ Is Jump Jim Crow!
+
+
+For a verse or two the singers had it their own way. Then the band of
+the meeting struck in with "See, the Conquering Hero Comes!" and as
+the airs clashed in discord, the stalwarts of the two parties clashed
+also in furious struggle. In a twinkling and as by magic the scene
+changed. Women, children, lads, fled every way, screaming and falling.
+Shrieks of alarm routed laughter. The crowd swayed stormily, flowed
+this way, ebbed that way. The clatter of staves on clubs rang above
+oaths and shouts of defiance, as the Yellows made a rush for the drum.
+Men were down, men were trampled on, men strove to scale the cart,
+others strove to descend from it. But to descend from it was to
+descend into a melee of random fists and falling sticks, and the man
+from Manchester bellowed to stand fast; while Hatton shouted to "clear
+out these rogues," and Banfield called on his men to charge. Basset
+alone stood silent, measuring the conflict with his eyes. With an odd
+exultation he felt his spirits rise to meet the need.
+
+He saw quickly that the orange favors were outnumbered, and were
+giving way; and almost as quickly that, so far as mischief was meant,
+it was aimed at the Manchester man. He was a stranger, he was the
+delegate of the League, he was a marked man. Already there were cries
+to duck him. Basset tapped Banfield on the shoulder.
+
+"They'll not touch us," he shouted in the man's ear, "but we must get
+Brierly away. There's Pritchard's house opposite. We must fight our
+way to it. Pass the word!" Then to Brierly, "Mr. Brierly, we must get
+you away. There's a gang here means mischief."
+
+"Let them come on!" cried the Manchester man, "I'm not afraid."
+
+"No, but I am," Basset replied. "We're responsible, and we'll not have
+you hurt here. Down all!" he cried raising his voice, as he saw the
+band whom he had already marked, pressing up to the cart through the
+melee--they moved with the precision of a disciplined force, and most
+of their faces were muffled. "Down all!" he shouted. "Yellows to the
+rescue! Down before they upset us!"
+
+The leaders scrambled out of the cart, some panic-stricken, some
+enjoying the scuffle. They were only just in time. The Yellows were in
+flight, amid yells and laughter, and before the last of the platform
+was over the side, the cart was tipped up by a dozen sturdy arms.
+Hatton and another were thrown down, but a knot of their men, the last
+with fight in them, rallied to the call, plucked the two to their
+feet, and, striking out manfully, covered the rear of the retreating
+force.
+
+The men with the belcher neckerchiefs pressed on silently, brandishing
+their clubs, and twice with cries of "Down him! Down him!" made a rush
+for Brierly, striking at him over the shoulders of his companions. But
+it was plain that the assailants shrank from coming to blows with the
+local magnates; and Basset seeing this handed Brierly over to an older
+man, and himself fell back to cover the retreat.
+
+
+"Fair play, men," he cried, good humoredly. And he laughed in their
+faces as he fell back before them. "Fair play! You're too many for us
+to-day, but wait till the polling-day!"
+
+They hooted him. "Yah! Yah!" they cried. "You'd ruin the land that
+bred you! You didn't ought to be there!" "Give us that fustian rascal!
+We'll club him!"
+
+"Who makes cloth o' devil's dust?" yelled another. "Yah! You d--d
+cotton-spawn!"
+
+Basset laughed in their faces, but he was not sorry when the friendly
+doorway received his party. The country gang, satisfied with their
+victory, began to fall back after breaking a dozen panes of glass; and
+the panting and discomfited Yellows, thronging the passage and pulling
+their coats into shape, were free to exchange condolences or
+recriminations as they pleased. More than one had been against the
+open-air meeting, and Hatton, a sorry figure, hatless, and with a
+sprained knee, was not likely to hear the end of it. Two or three had
+black eyes, one had lost two teeth, another his hat, and Brierly his
+note-book.
+
+But almost before a word had been exchanged, a man pushed his way
+among them. He had slipped into the house by the back way. "For God's
+sake, gentlemen," he cried, "get the constable, or there'll be
+murder!"
+
+"What is it?" asked a dozen voices.
+
+"They've got Ben Bosham, half a hundred of them! They're away to the
+canal with him. They're that mad with him they'll drown him!"
+
+So far Basset had treated the affair as a joke. But Bosham's plight in
+the hands of a mob of angry farmers seemed more than a joke. Murder
+might really be done. He snatched a thick stick from a corner--he had
+been hitherto unarmed--and raised his voice. "Mr. Banfield," he said,
+"go to Stubbs and tell him what is doing! He can control them if any
+one can. And do some of you, gentlemen, come with me! We must get him
+from them."
+
+"But we're not enough," a man protested.
+
+"The man must not be murdered," Basset replied. "Come, gentlemen,
+they'll not dare to touch us who know them, and we've the law with us!
+Come on!"
+
+"Well done, Squire!" cried Brierly. "You're a man!"
+
+
+"Ay, but I'm not man enough to take you!" Basset retorted. "You stay
+here, please!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+ BY THE CANAL
+
+
+It was noon on that day, the day of the meeting at Riddsley, and Mary
+was sitting in the parlor at the Gatehouse. She was stooping over the
+fire with her eyes on the embers. The old hound lay beside her with
+his muzzle resting on her shoe, and Mrs. Toft, solidly poised on her
+feet, on the farther side of the table, rolled her apron about her
+arms and considered the pair.
+
+"It's given us all a rare shock," she said as she marked the girl's
+listless pose, "the poor Master's death! That sudden and queer, too! I
+don't know that I'm better for it, myself, and Toft goes up and down
+like a toad under a harrow, he's that restless! For 'Truria, she's
+fairly mazed. Her body's here and her thoughts are lord knows
+where. Toft, he seems to think something will come of her and her
+reverend----"
+
+"I hope so," Mary said gently.
+
+"But it's beyond me what Toft thinks these days. I asked him
+point--blank yesterday, 'Toft,' I says, 'are we going or are we
+staying?' And, bless the man, he looks at me as if he'd eat me. 'Take
+time and you'll know,' he says. 'But whose is the house?' I asks, 'and
+who's to pay us?' 'God knows!' he says, and whiffs out of the room
+like one of these lucifers!"
+
+"I think that the house is Mr. Basset's," Mary explained, "for the
+rest of the lease; that's about three years."
+
+"But you'll not be staying, begging your pardon, Miss? I suppose
+you'll be naming the day soon? The Master's gone and his lordship will
+be wanting you somewhere else than here."
+
+"Yes, Mrs. Toft," Mary said quietly. "I suppose so."
+
+Mrs. Toft looked for a blush and saw none, and she drew her
+conclusions. She went on another tack. "There's like to be a fine
+rumpus in the town to-day," she said comfortably. "The Squire's
+brought a foreigner down to trim their nails, and there's to be a
+wagon and speaking and such like foolishness at the Maypole. As if all
+the speeches of all the fools in Staffordshire would lower the
+quartern loaf! Anyway, if what Petch says is true, the farmers are
+that mad there's like to be lives lost!"
+
+Mary stooped and carefully put a piece of wood on the fire.
+
+"And, to be sure, they're a rough lot," Mrs. Toft continued, dropping
+her apron. "I'm not forgetting what happened to the reverend Colet,
+and I wish the young master safe out of it. It's all give and no take
+with him, too much for others and too little for himself! I'm thinking
+if anybody's hurt he'll be there or thereabouts."
+
+Mary turned. "Is Petch--couldn't Petch go down and----"
+
+"La, Miss," Mrs. Toft answered--the girl's face told her all that she
+wished to know--"Petch don't dare, with his lordship on the other
+side! But, all said and done, I'll be bound the young master'll come
+through. It's a pity, though," she continued thoughtfully, as she
+began to dust the sideboard, "as people don't know their own minds.
+There's the Squire, now. He's lived quiet and pleasant all these years
+and now he must dip his nose into this foolishness, same as if he
+dipped it into hot worts when Toft's a-brewing! I don't know what's
+come to him. He goes riding up to Blore these winter nights, twenty
+miles if it's a furlong, when this house is his! He's more like to
+take his death that way, if I'm a judge."
+
+"Is he doing that?" Mary asked in a small voice.
+
+"To be sure," Mrs. Toft returned. "What else! Which reminds me, Miss,
+are those papers to go to the bank to-day?"
+
+"I believe so."
+
+"Well, you're looking that peaky, you'd best take a jaunt with them.
+Why not? It's a fine day, and if there is a bit of a clash there's
+none will hurt you. Do you go, Miss, and get a little color in your
+cheeks. At worst, you'll bring back the news and I'm sure we're that
+dead-alive and moped a little's a godsend!"
+
+"I think I will go," Mary said.
+
+So when the gig, which was to convey the boxes to the bank, arrived
+about three, she mounted beside the driver. Here, were it only for an
+hour, was distraction and a postponement of that need to decide, to
+choose between two courses, which was crushing her under its weight.
+
+For Mary was very unhappy. That moment which had proved to her that
+she did not love the man she was to marry and did love another, had
+stamped itself on her memory, never to be wiped from it. In Audley's
+company, and for a time after they had parted, the shock had numbed
+her mind and dulled her feelings. But once alone and free to think,
+she had grasped all that the discovery meant--to her and to him; and
+from that moment she had not known an instant of ease.
+
+She saw that she had made a terrible mistake, and one so vital that,
+if nothing could be done, it must wreck her happiness and another's
+happiness. And what was she to do? What ought she to do? In a moment
+of emotion, led astray by that love of love which is natural to women,
+and something swayed--so she told herself in scorn--by
+
+
+ Those glories of our blood and state,
+
+
+which to women are not shadows, she had made this mistake, and now,
+self-tricked, she had only herself to blame if
+
+
+ Sceptre and crown
+ Were tumbled down
+ And in the dust were lesser made
+ Than the poor crooked scythe and spade!
+
+
+But to see her folly did not avail. What was she to do?
+
+Ought she to tell the truth, however painful it might be, to the man
+whom she had deceived? Or ought she to go through with it, to do her
+duty and save him at least from hurt? Either way, she had wrecked her
+own craft, but she might still hope to save his. Or--might she hope?
+She was not certain even of this.
+
+What was she to do? Hour after hour she asked herself the question,
+sometimes looking through the windows with eyes that saw nothing, at
+others pacing her room in a fever of anxiety. What was she to do? She
+could not decide. Now she thought one thing, now another. And time was
+passing. No wonder that she was glad even of the distraction of this
+journey to Riddsley that at another time had been so dull an
+adventure! It was, at least, a reprieve, a respite from the burden of
+decision.
+
+She would not own, even to herself, that she had any other thought in
+going, or that anxiety had any part in her restlessness. From that
+side of the battle she turned her eyes with all the strength of her
+will. Her conduct had been that of a silly girl rather than that of a
+woman who had seen and suffered; but she was not light--and besides
+Basset was cured. She was only unfortunate, and desperately unhappy.
+
+As they drove by the old Cross at the foot of the hill she averted her
+eyes. Surely it must have been in some other life that she had made it
+the object of a walk, and had told herself that she would never forget
+it.
+
+Alas, she had been right. She would never forget it!
+
+The man who drove saw that her face matched her mourning, and he left
+her to her thoughts, so that hardly a word passed between them until
+they were close upon the outskirts of the town. Then the driver, to
+whom the dull winter landscape, the lines of willows, and the low
+water-logged fields, were no novelty, pricked up his ears.
+
+"Dang me!" he said, "they've started! There's a fine rumpus in the
+town. Do you hear 'em, Miss? That's a band I'm thinking?"
+
+"I hope no one will be hurt."
+
+The man winked at his horse. "None of the right side, Miss," he said
+slyly. "But it might be a hanging, front o' Stafford gaol, by the
+roar! I met a tidy lot going in as I came out, a right tidy lot! I'm
+blest," after listening a moment, "if they're not coming this way!"
+
+"I hope they won't do anything to----"
+
+"La, Miss," the man answered, misreading her anxiety and interrupting
+her, "they'll never touch us. And for the old nag, he's yeomanry. He'd
+not start if he met a mile o' funerals!"
+
+Certainly the noise was growing. But the lift of the canal bridge and
+bank, which crossed the road a hundred yards before them, hid all of
+the town from them save a couple of church towers, some tiled roofs,
+and the brick gable of Hatton's Works. The man whipped up his horse.
+
+"Teach they Manchester chaps a trick!" he muttered. "Shouldn't wonder
+if there'll be work for the crowner out of this! Gee-up, old nag,
+let's see what's afoot! 'Pears to me," as the shouting grew plainer,
+"we'll be in at the death yet, Miss!"
+
+Mary winced at the word, but if the man feared that she would refuse
+to go on, he was mistaken. On the contrary, she looked eagerly to
+the front as the old horse, urged by the whip, took the rise of the
+bridge at a canter, and, having reached the crown, relapsed into an
+absent-minded walk.
+
+"Dang me!" cried the driver, greatly excited, "but they do mean
+business! It's in knee in neck with 'em! Never thought it would come
+to this. And who is't they've got, Miss?"
+
+Certainly there was something out of the common on foot. Moving to
+meet the gig, and filling the road from ditch to ditch, appeared a
+disorderly crowd of two or three hundred persons. Cheering, hooting,
+and brandishing sticks, they came on at something between a walk and a
+run, although in the heart of the mass there was a something that now
+and again checked the movement, and once brought it to a stand. When
+this happened the crowd eddied and flowed about the object in its
+centre and presently swept on again with the same hooting and
+laughter.
+
+But in the laughter, as in the hooting, there was, after each of these
+pauses, a more savage note.
+
+"What is it?" Mary cried, as the driver, scared by the sight, pulled
+up his horse. "What is it?"
+
+"D--n me," the man replied, forgetting his manners, "if I don't think
+it's Ben Bosham they've got! It is Ben! And they're for ducking him!
+It's mortal deep by the bridge there, and s'help me, if it's not ten
+to one they drown him!"
+
+"Ben Bosham?" Mary repeated. Then she recalled the name. She
+remembered what Mrs. Toft had said of him--that the man had a wife
+and would bring her to ruin. The crowd was not fifty yards from them
+now and was still coming on. To the left a track ran down to the
+towing-path and the canal, and already the leaders of the mob were
+swerving in that direction. As they did so--and were once more checked
+for a moment--Mary espied among them a man's bald head twisting this
+way and that, as he strove to escape. The man was struggling
+desperately, his clothes almost torn from his back, but he was
+helpless in the hands of a knot of stout fellows, and after a brief
+resistance he was hauled forcibly on. A hundred jeering voices rose
+about him, and a something cruel in the sound chilled Mary's blood.
+The dreary scene, the sluggish canal, the flat meadows, the rising
+mist, all pressed on her mind and deepened the note of tragedy.
+
+But on that she broke the spell. The blood in her spoke. She clutched
+the driver's arm and shook it. "Go on!" she cried. "Go on! Drive into
+them!"
+
+The man hesitated--he saw that the crowd was in no jesting mood. But
+the old horse felt the twitch on the reins and started, and having the
+slope with him, trotted gently forward as if the road were empty
+before him. The crowd waved and shouted, and cursed the driver. But
+the horse, thinking perhaps that this was some new form of parade,
+only cocked his ears and ambled on till he reached the foremost. Then
+a man seized the rein, jerked it, and stopped him.
+
+In a moment Mary sprang down, heedless of the fact that she was one
+woman among a hundred men. She faced the crowd, her eyes bright with
+indignation. "Let that man go," she cried. "Do you hear? Do you want
+to murder him?" And, advancing a step, she laid her hand on Ben
+Bosham's ragged, filthy sleeve--he had been down more than once and
+been rolled in the mud. "Let him go!" she continued imperiously. "Do
+you know who I am, you cowards? Let him go!"
+
+"Yah!" shouted the crowd, and drowned her voice and pressed roughly
+about her, threatened her. One of the foremost asked her what she
+would do, another cried that she had best make herself scarce! Furious
+faces surrounded her, fists were shaken at her. But Mary was not
+daunted. "If you don't let him go, I shall go to Lord Audley!" she
+said.
+
+"You're a fool meddling in this!" cried a voice. "We're only going to
+wash the devil!"
+
+"You will let him go!" she replied, facing them all without fear and,
+advancing a step, she actually plucked the man from the hands that
+held him. "I am Miss Audley! If you do not let him go----"
+
+"We're only going to wash him, lady," whined one of the men who held
+him.
+
+"That's all, lady!" chimed in half-a-dozen. "He wants it!"
+
+But Ben was not of that opinion, or he did not value cleanliness.
+"They're going to drown me!" he spluttered, his eyes wild. All the
+fight had been knocked out of him. "They're paid to do it! They'll
+drown me!"
+
+"And sarve him right!" shouted half-a-dozen at the rear of the crowd.
+"Sarve him right, the devil!"
+
+"They will not do it!" Mary said firmly. "They'll not lay another hand
+on you. Get in! Get in here!" And then to the crowd, "For shame!" she
+cried. "Stand back!"
+
+The man was so shaken that he could not help himself, but she pushed,
+the driver pulled, and in a trice, before the mob had recovered from
+its astonishment, Ben was above their heads, on the seat of the gig--a
+blubbering, ragged, mud-caked figure with a white face and bleeding
+lips. "Go on!" Mary said in the same tone, and the gig moved forward,
+the old yeomanry horse tossing its head. She moved on beside it with
+her hand on the rail.
+
+The mob let them pass, but closed in behind them, and after a pause
+began to jeer--a little in amusement, a little to cover its defeat. In
+a moment farce took the place of tragedy; the danger was over. "We'll
+tell your wife, Ben!" screamed a youth, and the crowd laughed and
+followed. Other wits took their turn. "You'll want a new coat for the
+wedding, Ben!" cried one. And now and again amid the laughter a
+sterner note survived. "We'll ha' you yet, Ben!" a man would cry.
+"You're not out of the wood yet, Ben!"
+
+Mary's face burned, but she stuck to her post, plodding on beside the
+gig, and after this fashion the queer procession, heralded by a score
+of urchins crying the news, entered the streets of the town. On either
+side women thronged the doorways and steps, and while some cried,
+"Bravo, Miss!" others laughed and called to their neighbors to come
+out and see the sight. And still the crowd clung to the rear of the
+gig, and hooted and laughed and pretended to make forays on it.
+
+Mary had hoped to shake them off, but as they persisted in following
+and no relief came--for Basset and his rescue party had gone to the
+canal by another road--she saw nothing for it but to go on to Lord
+Audley's. With a curt word she made the man turn that way.
+
+The crowd still attended, curious, amused. It had doubled its numbers,
+nay, had trebled them. There were friends as well as foes among them
+now, some of Hatton's men, some of Banfield's, yellow favors as well
+as blue. If Mary had known it, she might have set Ben down and not a
+hand would have been laid upon him. Even the leaders of the riot were
+now thankful that they had not carried the matter farther. Enough had
+been done.
+
+But Mary did not know this. She thought that the man was still in
+peril. She did not dream of leaving him. And it was at the head of a
+crowd of three or four hundred of the riff-raff of Riddsley that she
+broke in upon the quiet of the suburban road in which The Butterflies
+stood. Tumultuously, followed by laughter and hooting and cheers, she
+swept along it with her train, and came to a halt before the house.
+
+No house was ever more surprised. Mrs. Wilkinson's scared face peered
+above one blind, her sisters' caps showed above another. Was it an
+accident? Was it a riot? Was it a Puseyite protest? What was it? Every
+servant, every neighbor, Lord Audley himself came to the windows.
+
+Mary signed to the driver to help Ben down, and the moment the man's
+foot touched the ground she grasped his arm. With a burning face, but
+with her head in the air, she guided his stumbling footsteps through
+the gate and along the paved walk. They came together to the door.
+They went in.
+
+The crowd formed up five deep along the railings, and waited in
+wondering silence to see what would happen. What would his lordship
+say? What would his lordship do? This was bringing the election to his
+doors with a vengeance, and there were not a few of the better sort
+who saw the fun of the situation.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+ MY LORD SPEAKS OUT
+
+
+Mary had passed through twenty minutes of tense excitement. The risk
+had been slight, after the first moment of intervention, but she had
+not known this, and she was still trembling with indignation, a
+creature all fire and passion, when the door of The Butterflies opened
+to admit her. Leaving Ben Bosham on the threshold she lost not a
+moment, but with her story on her lips, hurried up the stairs, and on
+the landing came plump upon Lord Audley.
+
+From the window he had seen something of what was afoot below. He had
+recognized Mary and the tattered Bosham, and he had read the riddle,
+grasped the facts, and cursed the busybody, all within thirty seconds.
+"D--n it! this passes everything," he had muttered to himself as he
+turned from the window in disgust. "This is altogether too much!" And
+he had opened the door--ready also to open his mind to her!
+
+"What in the world is it?" he asked. He held the door for her to
+enter. "What has happened? I could not believe my eyes when I saw you
+in company with that wretched creature!" he continued. "And all the
+tagrag and bobtail in the place behind you? What is it, Mary?"
+
+She felt the check, and the color, which excitement had brought to her
+cheeks, faded. But she thought that it was only that he did not
+understand, and, "That wretched creature, as you call him," she cried,
+"has just escaped from death. They were going to murder him!"
+
+"Murder him?" Audley repeated. He raised his eyebrows. "Murder him?"
+coldly. "My dear girl, don't be silly! Don't let yourself be carried
+away. You've lost your head. And, pardon me for saying it, I am afraid
+have made a fool of yourself! And of me!"
+
+"But they were going to throw him into the canal!" she protested.
+
+"Going to wash him!" he replied cynically. "And a good thing too! It's
+a pity they left the job undone. The man is a low, pestilent fellow!"
+he continued severely, "and obnoxious to me and to all decent people.
+The idea of bringing him, and that pleasant tail, to my house--my dear
+girl, it's absurd!"
+
+He made no attempt to soften his tone or suppress his annoyance, and
+she stared at him in astonishment. Yet she still thought, or she
+strove to think, that he did not understand, and tried to make the
+facts clear. "But you don't know what they were like," she protested.
+"You were not there. They had torn the clothes from his back----"
+
+"I can see that."
+
+"And he was so terrified that it was dreadful to see him! They were
+handling him brutally, horribly! And then I came up and----"
+
+"And lost your head!" he said. "I dare say you thought all this. But
+do you know anything about elections?"
+
+"No----"
+
+"Have you ever see an election in progress before?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Just so," he replied dryly. "Well, if you had, you would know that
+brawls of this kind are common things, the commonest of things at such
+a time, and that sensible people turn their backs on them. You've
+chosen to turn the farce into a tragedy, and in doing so you've made
+yourself ridiculous--and me too!"
+
+"If you had seen them," she said, "I do not think you would speak as
+you are speaking."
+
+"My dear girl," he replied, and shrugged his shoulders, "I have seen
+many such things, many. But there is one thing I have never seen, and
+that is a man killed in an election squabble! The whole thing is
+childish--silly! The least knowledge of the world--"
+
+"Would have saved me from it?"
+
+"Exactly! Would have saved you from it!" he answered austerely. "And
+me from a very annoying incident! Peers have nothing to do with
+elections, as you ought to know; and to bring this mob of all sorts to
+my door as if the matter touched me, is to compromise me. It is past a
+joke!"
+
+Mary stared. She was trying to place herself. Certainly this was the
+room in which she had taken tea, and this was the man who had welcomed
+her, who had hung over her, whose eyes had paid her homage, who had
+foreseen her least want, who had lapped her in observance. This was
+the man and this the room, and there was the chair in which good Mrs.
+Wilkinson had sat and beamed on her.
+
+But there was a change somewhere; and the change was in the man. Could
+it mean that he, too, had made a mistake and now recognized it? That
+he, too, had found that he did not love? But in that case this was not
+the way to confess an error. His tone, his manner, which held no
+respect for the woman and no softness for the sweetheart, were far
+from the tone of one in the wrong. On the contrary, they presented a
+side of him which had been hitherto hidden from her; a phase of the
+strength that she had admired, which shocked her even while, as deep
+calls to deep, it roused her pride. She remembered that she was his
+betrothed, and that he had wooed her, he had chosen her. And on slight
+provocation he spoke to her in this strain!
+
+She sought the clue, she fancied that she held it, and from this
+moment she was on her guard. She was quiet, but there was a
+smouldering fire in her eyes. "Perhaps I was wrong," she said. "I have
+had little experience of these things. But are not you, on your side,
+making too much of this? Too much of a very small, a very natural
+mistake? Isn't it a trifle after all?"
+
+"Not so much of a trifle as you think!" he retorted. "A man in my
+position has to follow a certain line of conduct. A girl in yours
+should be careful to guide herself by my views. Instead, out of a
+foolish sentimentality, you run directly counter to them! It is too
+late to consider your relation to me when the harm is done, my dear."
+
+"Perhaps we have neither of us considered the relation quite enough?"
+she said.
+
+"I am not sure that we have." And again, "I am not sure, Mary, that we
+have," he repeated more soberly.
+
+She knew what he meant now--knew what was in his mind almost as
+clearly as if, instead of grasping his conclusion, she had been a
+party to his reasons. And she closed her lips, a spot of color in each
+cheek. In other circumstances she would have taken on herself a full,
+nay, the main share, of the blame. She would have been quick to admit
+that she, too, had made a mistake, and that no harm was done.
+
+But his manner opened her eyes to many things that had been a puzzle
+to her. Thought is swift, and in a flash her mind had travelled over
+the whole course of their engagement, had recalled his long absence,
+the chill of his letters, the infrequency of his visits; and she saw
+by that light that this was no sudden shift, but an occasion sought
+and seized. Therefore she would not help him. She at least had been
+honest, she at least had been in earnest. She had tricked, not him
+only, but herself!
+
+She closed her lips and waited, therefore. And he, knowing that he had
+now burned his boats, had to go on. "I am not sure that we did think
+enough about it?" he said doggedly. "I have suspected for some time
+that I acted hastily in--in asking you to be my wife, Mary."
+
+"Indeed?" she said.
+
+"Yes. And what has happened to-day, proving that we look at things
+so differently, has confirmed my suspicion. It has convinced me--"
+he looked down at his table, avoiding her eyes, but continued
+firmly--"that we are not suited to one another. The wife of a man,
+placed as I am, should have an idea of values, a certain reserve, that
+comes of a knowledge of the world; above all, no sentimental notions
+such as lead to mistakes like this." He indicated the street by a
+gesture. "If I was mistaken a while ago in listening to my feelings
+rather than to my prudence, if I gave you credit for knowledge which
+you had had no means of gaining, I wronged you, Mary, and I am sorry
+for it. But I should be doing you a far greater wrong if I remained
+silent now."
+
+"Do you mean," she asked in a low voice, "that you wish it to be at an
+end between us? That you wish to--to throw me over?"
+
+He smiled awry. "That is an unpleasant way of putting it, isn't it?"
+he said. "However, I am in the wrong, and I have no right to quarrel
+with a word. I do think that to break off our engagement at once is
+the best and wisest thing for both of us."
+
+"How long have you felt this?" she asked.
+
+"For some time," he replied, measuring his words, "I have been coming
+slowly--to that conclusion."
+
+"That I am not fitted to be your wife?"
+
+"If you like to put it so."
+
+Then her anger, hitherto kept under, flamed up. "Then what right," she
+cried, "if that was in your mind, had you to treat me as you treated
+me at Beaudelays--in the garden? What right had you to kiss me?
+Rather, what right had you to insult me? For it was an insult--it was
+an insult, if you were not going to marry me! Don't you know, sir,
+that it was vile? That it was unforgivable?"
+
+She had never looked more handsome, never more attractive than at this
+moment. The day was failing, but the glow of the fire fell on her
+face, and on her eyes sparkling with anger. He took in the picture, he
+owned her charm, he even came near to repenting. But it was too late,
+and "It may have been vile--and you may not forgive it," he answered
+hardily, "but I'd do it again, my dear, on the same provocation!"
+
+"You would----"
+
+"I would do it again," he repeated coolly. "Don't you know that you
+are handsome enough to turn any man's head? And what is a kiss after
+all? We are cousins. If you were not such a prude, I would kiss you
+now?"
+
+She was furiously angry--or she fancied that she was. But it may be
+that, deep down in her woman's mind, she was not truly angry. And,
+indeed, how could she be angry when in her heart a little bird was
+beginning to sing--was telling her that she was free, that presently
+this cloud would be behind her, and that the sky would be blue?
+Already the message was making itself heard, already she was finding
+it hard to keep up appearances, to frown upon him and play her part.
+
+Yet she flashed out at him. Was he not going too fast, was he not
+riding off too lightly? "Oh!" she cried, "You dare to say that! Even
+while you break off with me!"
+
+But his selfish, masterful nature had now the upper hand. He had eaten
+his leek and he was anxious to be done with it. "And what then?" he
+said. "I believe that you know that I am right. I believe that you
+know that we are not suited to one another."
+
+"And you think I will let you go at a word?"
+
+"I think you will let me go," he said, "because you are not a fool,
+Mary. You know as well as I do that you might be 'my lady' at too high
+a price. I'm not the most manageable of men. I'd make a decent
+husband, all being well. But I'm not meek and I'd make a very unhandy
+husband _malgre moi_."
+
+The threat exasperated her. "I know this at least," she retorted,
+"that I would not marry you now, if you were twenty times my lord! You
+have behaved meanly, and I believe falsely! Not to-day! You are
+speaking the truth to-day. But I believe that from the start you had
+this in your mind, that you foresaw this, and were careful not to
+commit yourself too publicly! What I don't understand is why you ever
+asked me to be your wife--at all?"
+
+"Look in the glass!" he answered impudently.
+
+She put that aside. "But I suppose that you had a reason!" she
+returned. "That you loved me, that you felt for me anything worthy of
+the name of love is impossible! For the rest, let me tell you this! If
+I ever felt thankful for anything I am thankful for the chance that
+brought me to your house to-day--and brought me to the truth!"
+
+"Anything more to say?" he asked flippantly. The way she was taking it
+suited him better than if she had wept and appealed. And then she was
+so confoundedly good-looking in her tantrums!
+
+"Nothing more," she said. "I think that we understand one another now.
+At any rate, I understand you. Perhaps you will kindly see if I can
+leave the house without annoyance."
+
+He looked into the street. Dusk had fallen, the lamplighter was going
+his rounds. Of the crowd that had attended Mary to the house no more
+than a handful remained; the nipping air, the attractions of free
+beer, the sound of the muffin-bell, had drawn away the rest. The
+driver of the gig was moving to and fro, now looking disconsolately at
+the windows, now beating his fingers on his chest.
+
+"I think you can leave with safety," Audley said with irony. "I will
+see you downstairs."
+
+"I will not trouble you," she answered.
+
+"But, surely, we may still be friends?"
+
+She looked him in the face. "We need not be enemies," she answered.
+"And, perhaps, some day I may be able to think more kindly of you. If
+that day comes I will tell you. Good-bye." She went out without
+touching his hand. She went down the stairs.
+
+She drove through the dusky, dimly-lighted streets in a kind of dream,
+seeing all things through a pleasant haze. The bank was closed and to
+deliver up her papers she had to go into the bank-house. The glimpse
+she had of the cheerful parlor, of the manager's wife, of his two
+children playing the Royal Game of Goose at a round table, enchanted
+her. Presently she was driving again through the darkling streets,
+passing the Maypole, passing the quaint, low-browed shops, lit only by
+an oil lamp or a couple of candles. The Audley Arms, the Packhorse,
+the Portcullis, were all alight and buzzing with the voices of those
+who fought their battles over again or laid bets on this candidate or
+that. What the speaker had said to Lawyer Stubbs and what Lawyer
+Stubbs had said to the speaker, what the "Duke" thought, who would
+have to pay for the damage, and the odds the stout farmer would give
+that wheat wouldn't be forty shillings a quarter this day twelvemonth
+if the Repeal passed--scraps of these and the like poured from the
+doorways as she drove by.
+
+All fell in delightfully with her mood and filled her with a sense of
+well-being. Even when the streets lay behind her, and the driver
+hunched his shoulders to meet the damp night-fog and the dreary
+stretch that lay beyond the canal-bridge, Mary found the darkness
+pleasant and the chill no more than bracing. For what were that night,
+that chill beside the numbing grip from which she had just--oh, thing
+miraculous!--escaped! Beside the fetters that had been lifted from her
+within the last hour! O foolish girl, O ineffable idiot, to have ever
+fancied that she loved that man!
+
+No, for her it was a charming night! The owl that, far away towards
+the Great House, hooted dolefully above the woods--no nightingale
+had been more tuneful. Ben Bosham--she laughed, thinking of his
+plight--blessings on his bare, bald head and his ragged shoulders! The
+old horse plodding on, with the hill that mounts to the Gatehouse
+sadly on his mind--he should have oats, if oats there were in the
+Gatehouse stables! He should have oats in plenty, or what he would if
+oats failed!
+
+"What do you give him when he's tired?" she asked.
+
+"Well," the driver replied with diplomacy, "times a quart of ale,
+Miss. He'll take it like a Christian."
+
+"Then a quart of ale he shall have to-night!" she said with a happy
+laugh. "And you shall have one, too, Simonds."
+
+Her mood held to the end, so that before she was out of her wraps,
+Mrs. Toft was aware of the change in her. "Why, Miss," she said, "you
+look like another creature! It isn't the bank, I'll be bound, has put
+that color in your cheeks!"
+
+"No!" Mary answered, "I've had an adventure, Mrs. Toft. And briefly
+she told the tale of Ben Bosham's plight and of her gallant rescue.
+She began herself to see the comic side of it.
+
+"He always was a fool, was Ben!" Mrs. Toft commented. "And that," she
+continued shrewdly, "was how you come to see his lordship was it,
+Miss?"
+
+"How did you know I saw him?" Mary asked in surprise. "But you're
+right, I did." Then, as she entered the parlor, "Perhaps I'd better
+tell you, Mrs. Toft," she said, "that the engagement between my cousin
+and myself is at an end. You were one of the very few who knew of it,
+and so I tell you."
+
+Mrs. Toft showed no surprise. "Indeed, Miss," she answered, stooping
+to the hearth to light the candles with a piece of wood. "Well, one
+thing's certain, and many a time my mother's drummed it into me,
+'Better a plain shoe than one that pinches!' And again, 'Better live
+at the bottom of the hill than the top,' she'd say. 'You see less but
+you believe more.'"
+
+Neither she nor Mary saw Toft. But Toft, who had entered the hall a
+moment before, was within hearing, and Mary's statement, so coolly
+received by his wife, had an extraordinary effect on the man-servant.
+He stood an instant, his lank figure motionless. Then he opened the
+door beside him, slipped out into the chill and the darkness, and
+silently, but with extravagant gestures, he broke into a dance, now
+waving his thin arms in the air, now stooping with his hands locked
+between his knees. Whether he thus found vent for joy or grief was a
+secret which he kept to himself.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+ THE RIDDSLEY ELECTION
+
+
+The riot at Riddsley found its way into the London Press, and gained
+for the contest a certain amount of notoriety. The _Morning Chronicle_
+pointed out that the election had been provoked by the Protectionists
+in a constituency in Sir Robert's own country; and the writer inferred
+that, foreseeing defeat, the party of the land were now resorting to
+violence. The _Morning Herald_ rejoiced that there were still places
+which would not put up with the incursions of the Manchester League,
+"the most knavish, pestilent body of men that ever plagued this or any
+country!" In the House, where the tempest of the Repeal debate already
+raged, and the air was charged with the stern invective of Disraeli,
+or pulsed to the cheering of Peel's supporters--even here men
+discussed the election at Riddsley, considered it a clue to the
+feeling in the country, and on the one side hardly dared to hope, on
+the other refused to fear. What? cried the Land Party. Be defeated in
+an agricultural borough? Never!
+
+For a brief time, then, the contest filled the public eye and
+presented itself as a thing of more than common interest. Those who
+knew little weighed the names and the past of the candidates; those
+behind the scenes whispered of Lord Audley. Whips gave thought to him,
+and that one to whom his lordship was pledged, wrote graciously,
+hinting at the pleasant things that might happen if all went well, and
+the present winter turned to a summer of fruition.
+
+Alas, Audley felt that the Whip's summer, and
+
+
+ The friendly beckon towards Downing Street,
+ Which a Premier gives to one who wishes
+ To taste of the Treasury loaves and fishes,
+
+
+were very remote, whereas, if the other Whip, he who had the honors
+under his hand and the places in his power, had written so! But that
+cursed Stubbs had blocked his play in that direction by asserting that
+it was hopeless, though Audley himself began at this late hour to
+suspect that it had not been hopeless! That it had been far from
+hopeless!
+
+In his chagrin my lord tore the Whip's letter across and across, and
+then prudently gummed it together again and locked it away. Certainly
+the odds were long that it would never be honored; on the one side
+stood Peel with four-fifths of his Cabinet and half his party, with
+all the Whigs, all the Radicals, all the League, and the Big Loaf: on
+the other stood the landed interest! Just the landed interest led by
+Lord George Bentinck, handsome and debonair, the darling of the Turf,
+the owner of Crucifix; but hitherto a silent member, and one at whom,
+as a leader, the world gaped. Only, behind this Joseph there lurked a
+Benjamin, one whose barbed shafts were many a time to clear the field.
+The lists were open, the lances were levelled, the slogan of Free
+Trade was met by the cry of "The Land and the Constitution!" and while
+old friendships were torn asunder and old allies cut adrift, town and
+country, forge and field, met in a furious grapple that promised to be
+final.
+
+If, amid the dust of such a conflict, the riot at Riddsley obtained a
+passing notice in London, intense it may be believed was the
+excitement which it caused in the borough. Hatton and Banfield and
+their men went about, vowing to take vengeance at the hustings. The
+mayor went about, swearing in constables. The farmers and their allies
+went about grinning. Fights took place nightly behind the Packhorse
+and the Portcullis, while very old ladies, peering over their blinds,
+talked of the French Revolution, and very young ones thought that the
+Militia, adequately officered, should be brought into the town.
+
+The spirit of which Basset had given proof was blazoned about; and he
+gained in another way. He was one of those to whom a spice of danger
+is a fillip, whom a little peril shakes out of themselves. On the day
+after the riot he came upon a score of people collected round a Cheap
+Jack in the market. The man presently closed his patter and his stall,
+and, on the impulse of the moment, Basset took his place and made the
+crowd a speech as short as it was simple. He told them that in his
+opinion it was impossible to keep food out of the country by a tax
+while Ireland was threatened by famine. Secondly, that the sacrifice
+which Peel was making of his party, his reputation, and his
+consistency was warrant that in his view the change was urgently
+needed. Thirdly, he asked them whether the farmers were so prosperous
+and the laborers so comfortable that change must be for the worse. But
+here he came on delicate ground; murmurs arose and some hisses, and he
+broke off good-humoredly, thanked the crowd, which had grown to a good
+size, and, stepping down from his barrow, he walked away amid
+plaudits. The thing was reported, and though the Tories sneered at it
+as a hole-and-corner meeting, Farthingale held another view. He told
+Mr. Stubbs that it was a neat thing--very well done.
+
+Stubbs grunted. "Will it change a vote?" he growled.
+
+"Change a----"
+
+"Will it change a vote, man? You heard what I said."
+
+"Lord, no!" the clerk answered. "I never said it would!"
+
+"Then why trouble about it?" Stubbs retorted fretfully. "Get on with
+those poll-cards! I don't pay you a guinea a day at election time to
+praise monkey-tricks."
+
+For Stubbs was not happy. He knew, indeed, that the breaking-up of the
+open-air meeting had been fairly successful. It had brought back two
+votes to the fold; and he calculated that the seat would be held. But
+by a majority how narrow, how fallen, how discreditable! He blushed to
+think of it.
+
+And other things made him unhappy. Those who are politicians by trade
+are like cardplayers, who play for the game's sake; one game lost,
+they cut and deal as keenly as before. Behind the politicians,
+however, are a few to whom the stake is something; and of these was
+Stubbs. To him, as we know, the Corn-Tax was no mere toll, but the
+protection of agriculture, the well-head that guarded the pure waters,
+the fence that saved from smoke and steam, from slag-heap and
+brickfield, the smiling face of England. For him, the home of his
+fathers, the land of field and stubble, of plough and pinfold, was at
+stake; nay, was passing, wasted by men who thought in percentages and
+saw no farther than the columns of their ledgers. To that England of
+his memory--whether it had ever existed in fact or no--a hundred
+associations bound the lawyer; things tender and things true; quaint
+memories of his first turkey's nest, of the last load of the harvest,
+of the loosened plough horses straying to the water at the close of
+day, of the flat paintings of the Durham Ox and the Coke Ram that
+adorned the farm parlor.
+
+To the men who bade him look up and see that in his Elysium the farmer
+struggled and the laborer starved, his answer was short. "Better ten
+shillings and fresh air, than shoddy dust and a pound a week!"
+
+In the country as a whole--and as time went on--he despaired of
+success. But he found Lord George a leader after his own heart, and
+many an evening he pored over the long paragraphs of his long-winded
+speeches. When he heard that the owner of Crucifix had dismissed his
+trainers, released his jockeys, sold his stud, and turned his back on
+the turf, he could have wept. Lord George and Stubbs, indeed, were the
+true country party. For Lord George's sake Stubbs was prepared to
+taken even the "Jew boy" to his heart.
+
+As to the potato famine, he did not believe a word of it. He called
+the Premier, "Potato Peel!"
+
+The rains of February are apt to damp enthusiasm, but before eleven
+o'clock on the nomination day Riddsley was like a hive of bees about
+to swarm. The throng in the streets was such that Mottisfont could
+hardly pass through it. He made his entry into the borough on
+horseback at the head of a hundred mounted farmers wearing blue sashes
+and favors. Before him reeled a huge banner upheld by eight men and
+bearing on one side the legend, "The Land and the Constitution," on
+the other, "Mottisfont the Farmers' Friend!" Behind the horsemen, and
+surrounded by a guard of laborers in smocked frocks, moved a plough
+mounted on a wain and drawn by eight farm horses. Flags with "Speed
+the Plough," "England's Share is England's Fare," and "Peace and
+Plenty," streamed from it. Three bands of varying degrees of badness
+found their places where they could, and thumped and blared against
+one another until the panes rattled in the deafened streets. The
+butchers, with marrow-bones and cleavers, brought up the rear, and in
+comparison were tuneful.
+
+Had Basset got his way, he would have dispensed with pomp and walked
+the hundred yards which separated his quarters at the Swan from the
+hustings. But he was told that this would never do. What would the
+landlord of the Swan say, who kept postchaises? And the postboys who
+looked for a golden tip? And the men who would hand him in and hand
+him out, and the men who would open the door and shut the door, and
+the men who would raise the steps and lower the steps, who would all
+look for the same tip? So, perforce, he drove in state to the Town
+Hall--before which the hustings stood--in a barouche and four
+accompanied by Banfield and Hatton and his agent. The rest of his
+Committee followed in postchaises. A bodyguard of "hands" escorted
+them, and they, too, had their bands--of equal badness--and their
+yellow banners with "Down with the Corn Laws," "Vote for Basset the
+Poor Man's Friend," and "No Bread Taxes." The great and little loaf
+pranced in front of him on spears, and if his procession was not quite
+so fine or so large as his opponent's, it must be admitted that the
+blackguards of the town showed no preference and that he could boast
+about an equal number of the tagrag and bobtail.
+
+The left hand of the hustings was allotted to him, the right hand to
+Mottisfont, and by a little after eleven both parties had crammed and
+crushed,
+
+
+ With blustering, bullying, and brow-beating,
+ A little pummelling and maltreating,
+ And elbowing, jostling and cajoling,
+
+
+into their places in front of the platform, the bullies and
+truncheon-men being posted well to the fore, or craftily ranged where
+the frontiers met. The bands boomed and blared, the men huzzaed, the
+air shook, the banners waved, every window that looked out upon the
+seething mob was white with faces, every 'vantage-point was occupied.
+It was such a day and such a contest as Riddsley had never seen. The
+eyes of the country, it was felt, were upon it! Fights took place
+every five minutes, oaths and bets flew like hail over the heads of
+the crowd, coarse wit met coarser nicknames, and now and again shrieks
+varied the hubbub as the huge press of people, gathered from miles
+round, swayed under the impact of some vicious rush.
+
+"Hurrah! Hurrah! Mottisfont for ever! Basset! Basset and the Big Loaf!
+Basset! Basset! Hurrah! Mottisfont! Hurrah!"
+
+Then, in a short-lived silence, "Ten to one on Mottisfont! Three
+cheers for the Duke!" and a roar of laughter.
+
+Or a hundred voices would raise
+
+
+ John Barley-corn, my Joe, John!
+ When we were first acquaint!
+
+
+but never got beyond the first two lines, either because they were
+howled down or they knew no more of the words. The Peelites answered
+with their mournful,
+
+
+ Child, is thy father dead?
+ Father is gone!
+ Why did they tax his bread?
+ God's will be done!
+
+
+or with the quicker,
+
+
+ Oh, landlords' devil take
+ Thy own elect I pray!
+ Who taxed our cake, and took our cake,
+ And threw our cake away!
+
+
+On this would ensue a volley of personalities. "What would you be
+without your starch, Hayward?" "How's your dad, Farthingale?" "Who
+whopped his wife last Saturday?" "Hurrah! Hurrah! Who said Potatoes?"
+
+For nearly an hour this went on, the blare of the bands, the uproar,
+the cheering, the abuse never ceasing. Then the town-crier appeared
+upon the vacant hustings. He rang his bell for silence and for a
+moment obtained it. On his heels entered, first the mayor and his
+assistants, then the candidates, the proposers, the seconders. Each,
+as he made his appearance, was greeted with a storm of groans, cheers,
+and cat-calls. Each put on to meet it such a show of ease as he could,
+some smiling, some affecting ignorance. The candidates and their
+supporters filed to either side, while the flustered mayor took his
+stand in the middle with the town clerk at his elbow.
+
+Basset, nearly at the end of his troubles, sought comfort in looking
+beyond the present moment. He feared that he was not likely to win,
+but he had done his duty, he had made his effort, and soon he would be
+free to repeat that effort on a smaller stage. Soon, these days, that
+in horror rivalled the middle passage of the slave trade, would be
+over, and if he were not elected he would be free to retire to Blore,
+and to spend days, lonely and sad indeed, but clean, in the
+improvement of his acres and his people. His eyes dwelt upon the sea
+of faces, and from time to time he smiled; but his mind was far away.
+He thought with horror of elections, and with loathing of the sordid
+round of flattery and handshaking, of bribery and intimidation from
+which he emerged. Thank God, the morrow would see the end! He would
+have done his best, and played his part. And it would be over.
+
+What the mayor said and what the town clerk said is of no importance,
+for no one heard them. The proposers, the seconders, the candidates,
+all spoke in dumb show. Basset dwelt briefly on the crisis in Ireland,
+the integrity of Peel, and the doubtful wisdom of taxing that which,
+to the poorest, was a necessity of life. If bread were cheaper all
+would have more to spend on other things and the farmer would have a
+wider market for his meat, his wool, and his cheese. It read well in
+the local paper.
+
+But one man was heard. This was a man who was not expected to speak,
+whose creed it had ever been that speeches were useless, and whom
+tradition almost forbade to speak, for he was an agent. At the last
+moment, when a seconder for a formal motion was needed, he thrust
+himself forward to the astonishment of all. The same astonishment
+stilled the mob as they gazed on the well-known figure. For a minute
+or two, curiosity and the purpose in the man's face, held even his
+opponents silent.
+
+The man was Stubbs; and from the moment he showed himself it was plain
+that he was acting under the stress of great emotion. The very
+fuglemen forgot to interrupt him. They scented something out of the
+common.
+
+"I have never spoken on the hustings in my life," he said. "I speak
+now to warn you. I believe that you, the electors of Riddsley, are
+going to sell the birthright of health which you have received; and
+the heritage of freedom which this land has enjoyed for generations
+and on which the power of Bonaparte broke as on a rock. You think you
+are going to have cheap bread, and, maybe, you are! But at what a
+cost! Cheap bread is foreign bread. To you, the laborers, I say that
+foreign bread means that the fields you till will be laid to grass and
+you will go to work in Dudley and Walsall and Bury and Bolton, in
+mills and pits and smoke and dust! And your children will be dwarfed
+and wizened and puny! Foreign bread means that. And it means that the
+day will come when war will cut off your bread and you will starve; or
+the will of the foreigner who feeds you will cut it off--for he will
+be your master. I say, grow your own bread and eat your own bread, and
+you will be free men. Eat foreign bread and in time you will be
+slaves! No land that is fed by another land----"
+
+His last words were lost. Signals from furious principals roused the
+fuglemen, and he was howled down, and stood back ashamed of the
+impulse which had moved him and little less astonished than those
+about him. Young Mottisfont clapped him on the back and affected to
+make much of him. But even he hardly knew how to take it. Some said
+that Stubbs had had tears in his eyes, while the opposing agent
+whispered to his neighbor that the lawyer was breaking and would never
+handle another contest. Sober men shook their heads; agents should
+hardly be seen, much less heard!
+
+But Stubbs's words were marked, and when the bad times came thirty
+years later, aged farmers recalled them and thought over them. Nor
+were they without fruit at the time. For next morning when the poll
+opened, Basset's people suffered a shock. Two men on whom he had
+counted appeared and voted short and sharp for Mottisfont. Basset's
+agent asked them pleasantly if they were not making a mistake; and
+then less pleasantly had the Bribery Oath administered to them. But
+they stuck to their guns, the votes were recorded, and Mottisfont
+shook hands with them. Later in the day when the two were fuddled they
+denied that they had voted for Mottisfont. They had voted for old
+Stubbs--and they would do it again and fight any man who said to the
+contrary. Their desire in this direction was quickly met, and both, to
+the indignation of the Tories, were fined five shillings at the next
+petty sessions.
+
+Whether this start gave the Protectionists a fillip or no, they were
+in great spirits, and Mottisfont was up and down shaking hands all the
+morning. At noon the figures as exhibited outside the Mottisfont
+Committee-room--amid tremendous cheering--were:
+
+
+ Mottisfont . . . 41
+ Basset . . . . . 30
+
+
+though Basset outside his Committee-room claimed one more. Soon after
+twelve Hatton brought up the two Boshams in his carriage, and Ben,
+recovered from his fright, flung his hat before him into the booth,
+danced a war-dance on the steps, and gave three cheers for Basset as
+he came down. Banfield brought up three more voters in his carriage
+and thence onward until one o'clock the polling was rapid. The one
+o'clock board showed:
+
+
+ Mottisfont . . . 60
+ Basset . . . . . 57
+
+
+with seventy votes to poll. The Mottisfont party began to look almost
+as blue as their favors, but Stubbs, returned to his senses, continued
+to read his newspaper in a closet behind the Committee-room, as if
+there were no contest within a hundred miles of Riddsley.
+
+During the next three hours little was done. The poll-clerks sent
+out for pots of beer, the watchers drowsed, the candidates were
+invisible--some said that they had gone to dine with the mayor. The
+bludgeon-men and blackguards went home to sleep off their morning's
+drink, and to recruit themselves for the orgy of the Chairing. The
+crowd before the polling booth shrank to a knot of loafing lads and a
+stray dog. At four Mottisfont still held the lead with 64 to 61.
+
+But as the clock struck four the town awoke. Word went round that
+a message from Sir Robert Peel would be read outside Basset's
+Committee-room. Hearers were whipped up, and the message, having been
+read with much parade, was posted up through the town and as promptly
+pulled down. Animated by the message, and making as much of it as if
+it had not been held back for the purpose, the Peelites polled
+five-and-twenty votes in rapid succession, and at half-past four
+issued a huge placard with:
+
+
+ Basset . . . . . 87
+ Mottisfont . . . 83
+ Vote for Basset and the Big Loaf!
+ Basset wins!
+
+
+Great was the enthusiasm, loud the cheering, vast the stir outside
+their Committee-room. The Big and the Little Loaf waltzed out on their
+poles. The placard, mounted as a banner, was entrusted to the two
+Boshams. The band was ready, a dozen flares were ready, the Committee
+were ready, all was ready for a last rally which might decide the one
+or two doubtful voters. All was ready, but where was Mr. Basset? Where
+was the candidate?
+
+He could not be found, and great was the hubbub, vast the running to
+and fro. "The Candidate? Where's the Candidate?" One ran to the Swan,
+another to the polling-booth, a third to his agent's office. He could
+not be found. All that was known of him or could be learned was that a
+tall man, who looked like an undertaker, had stopped him near the
+polling-booth and had kept him in talk for some minutes. From that
+time he had been seen by no one.
+
+Foul play was talked of, and the search went on, but meantime the
+procession--the poll closed at half-past six--must start if it was to
+do any good. It did so, and with its flares, its swaying placard, its
+running riff-raff, now luridly thrown up by the lights, now lost in
+shadow, formed the most picturesque scene that the election had
+witnessed. The absence of the candidate was a drawback, and some shook
+their heads over it. But the more knowing put their tongues in their
+cheeks, aware that whether he were there or not, and whether they
+marched or stayed at home, neither side would be a vote the better!
+
+At half--past five the figures were,
+
+ Basset . . . . . 87
+
+ Mottisfont . . . 86
+
+
+There were still fourteen votes to poll, and on the face of things
+victory hung in the balance.
+
+But at that hour Stubbs moved. He laid down his newspaper, gave
+Farthingale an order, took up a slip of paper and his hat, and went by
+way of the darkest street to The Butterflies. He walked thoughtfully,
+with his chin on his breast, as if he had no great appetite for the
+interview before him. By the time he reached the house the poll stood
+at
+
+
+ Mottisfont . . . 96
+ Basset . . . . . 87
+
+
+And long and loud was the cheering, wild the triumph of the landed
+interest. The town was fuller than ever, for during the last hour the
+farmers and their men had trooped in, Brown Heath had sent its
+colliers, and a crowd filling every yard of space within eye-shot of
+the polling-booth greeted the news. To hell with Peel! Down with
+Cobden! Away with the League! Hurrah! Hurrah! Stubbs, had he been
+there, would have been carried shoulder-high. Old Hayward was lifted
+and carried, old Musters of the Audley Arms, one or two of the
+Committee. It was known that four votes only remained unpolled, so
+that Mottisfont's victory was secure.
+
+At The Butterflies, whither the cheering of the crowd came in gusts
+that rose and fell by turns, Stubbs nodded to the maid and went up the
+stairs unannounced. Audley was writing at a side-table facing the
+room. He looked up eagerly. "Well?" he said, putting down his quill.
+"Is it over?"
+
+Stubbs laid the slip of paper before him. "It's not over, my lord," he
+answered soberly. "But that is the result. I am sorry that it is no
+better."
+
+Audley looked at the paper. "Nine!" he exclaimed. He looked at Stubbs,
+he looked again at the paper. "Nine? Good G--d, man, you don't mean
+it? You can't mean it! You don't mean that that is the best we could
+do?"
+
+"We hold the seat, my lord," Stubbs said.
+
+"Hold the seat!" Audley replied, staring at him with furious eyes.
+"Hold the seat? But I thought that it was a safe seat? I thought that
+it was a seat that couldn't be lost! When five, only five, votes would
+have cast it the other way! Why, man, you cannot have known anything
+about it! No more about it than the first man in the street!"
+
+"My lord----"
+
+"Not a jot more!" Audley repeated. He had been prepared for something
+like this, but the certainty that if he had cast his weight on the
+other side, the side that had sinecures and places and pensions, he
+would have turned the scale--this was too much for his temper. "Nine!"
+he rapped out with another oath. "I can only think that the Election
+has been mismanaged! Grievously, grievously mismanaged, Mr. Stubbs!"
+
+"If your lordship thinks so----"
+
+"I do!" Audley retorted, his certainty that the man before him had
+thwarted his plans, carrying him farther than he intended. "I do!
+Nine! Good G--d, man! When you assured me----"
+
+"Whatever I assured your lordship," Stubbs said firmly, "I believed.
+And--no, my lord, you must allow me to speak now--what I promised
+would have been borne out--fully borne out by the result in normal
+times. But I did not allow enough for the split in the party, nor for
+the wave of madness----"
+
+"As you think it!"
+
+"And surely as your lordship also thinks it!" Stubbs rejoined smartly,
+"that has swept over the country! In these circumstances it is
+something to hold the seat, which a return to sanity will certainly
+assure to us at the next election."
+
+"The next election!" Audley muttered scornfully. For the moment he was
+too angry to play a part or to drape his feelings.
+
+"But if your lordship is dissatisfied----"
+
+"Dissatisfied? I am d--nably dissatisfied."
+
+"Then your lordship has the power," Stubbs said slowly, "to dispense
+with my services."
+
+"I know that, sir."
+
+"And if you do not think fit to take that step, my lord----"
+
+"I shall consider it!"
+
+Another word or two and the deed had been done, for both men were too
+angry to fence. But before that last word was spoken Audley's man
+entered. He handed a card to his master and waited.
+
+Audley looked at the card longer than was necessary and under cover of
+the pause regained control of himself. "Who brought this?" he asked.
+
+"A messenger from the Swan, my lord."
+
+"Tell him----" He broke off. Holding out the card for Stubbs to take,
+"Do you know anything about this?" he asked.
+
+Stubbs returned the card. "No, my lord," he said coldly. "I know
+nothing."
+
+"Business of great importance to me? D--n his impudence, what business
+important to me can he have?" Audley muttered. Then, "My compliments
+to Mr. Basset and I am leaving in the morning, but I shall be at home
+this evening at nine."
+
+The servant retired. Audley looked askance at his agent. "You'd better
+be here," he muttered ungraciously. "We can settle what we were
+talking about later."
+
+"Very good, my lord," Stubbs answered. And nothing more being said, he
+took himself off.
+
+He was not sorry that they had been interrupted. Much of his income
+and more of his importance sprang from the Audley agency, but rather
+than be treated as if he were a servant, he would surrender both--in
+his way he was a proud man. Still he did not want to give up either;
+and if time were given he thought that his lordship would think better
+of the matter.
+
+As he returned to his office, choosing the quiet streets by which
+he had come, he had a glimpse, through an opening, of the distant
+Market-place. A sound of cheering, a glare of smoky light, a medley of
+leaping, running forms, a something uplifted above the crowd, moved
+across his line of vision. Almost as quickly it vanished, leaving only
+the reflection of retreating torches. "Hurrah! Hurrah for Mottisfont!
+Hurrah!" Still the cheering came faintly to his ears.
+
+He sighed. Riddsley had remained faithful-by nine! But he did not
+deceive himself. It was the writing on the wall. The Corn Laws were
+doomed, and with them much that he had loved, much that he cherished,
+much in which he believed.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+ A TURN OF THE WHEEL
+
+
+Audley was suspicious and ill at ease. Standing on the hearth-rug with
+his back to the fire, he fixed the visitor with his eyes, and with
+secret anxiety asked himself what he wanted. The possibility that
+Basset came to champion Mary had crossed his mind more than once; if
+that were so he would soon dispose of him! In the meantime he took
+civility for his cue, exchanged an easy word or two about the poll and
+the election, and between times nodded to Stubbs to be seated. Through
+all, his eyes were watchful and he missed nothing.
+
+"I asked Mr. Stubbs to be here," he said when a minute or two had been
+spent in this by-play, "as you spoke of business. You don't object?"
+
+"Not at all," Basset replied. His face was grave. "I should tell you
+at once, Audley," he added, "that my mission is not a pleasant one."
+
+The other raised his eyebrows. "You are sure that it concerns me?"
+
+"It certainly concerns you. Though, as things stand, not very
+materially. I knew nothing of the matter myself until three o'clock
+to-day, and at first I doubted if it was my duty to communicate it.
+But the facts are known to a third person, they may be used to annoy
+you in the future, and though the task is unpleasant, I decided that I
+had no option."
+
+Audley set his broad shoulders against the mantel-shelf. "But if the
+facts don't affect me?" he said.
+
+"In a way they do. Not as they might under other circumstances. That
+is all."
+
+"And yet you are making our hair stand on end! I confess you puzzle
+me. Well, let us have it. What is it all about?"
+
+"A little time ago you recovered, if you remember, your Family Bible."
+"Well? What of that?"
+
+"I have just learned that the man did not hand over all that he had.
+He kept back--it now appears--certain papers."
+
+"Ah!" Audley's voice was stern. "Well, he has had his chance. This
+time, I can promise him a warrant will follow."
+
+"Perhaps you will hear me out first?"
+
+"No," was the sharp reply. Audley's temper was getting the better of
+him. "Last time, my dear fellow, you compounded with him; your motive
+an excellent one I don't doubt. But if he now thinks to get more money
+from me--and for other papers--I can promise him that he will see the
+inside of Stafford gaol. Besides, my good friend, you gave us to
+understand that he had surrendered all he had."
+
+"I am afraid I did, and I fear I was wrong. Why he deceived me, and
+has now turned about, I know no more than you do!"
+
+"I think I can enlighten you," the other answered--his fears as well
+as his temper were aroused. "The rogue is shallow. He thinks to be
+paid twice. Once by you and once by me. But you can tell him that this
+time he will be paid in other coin."
+
+"I'm afraid that there is more in it than that," Basset said. "The
+fact is the papers he now produces, Audley, are of another character."
+
+"Oh! The wind blows in that quarter, does it?" my lord replied. "You
+don't mean that you've come here--why, d--n it, man," with sudden
+passion, "either you are very simple, or you are art and part----"
+
+"Steady, steady, my lord," Stubbs said, interposing discreetly.
+Hitherto he had not spoken. "There's no need to quarrel! I am sure
+that Mr. Basset's intentions are friendly. It will be better if he
+just tells us what these documents are which are now put forward. We
+shall then be able to judge where we stand."
+
+"Go ahead," Audley said, averting his face and sulkily relapsing
+against the mantel-shelf. "Put your questions! And, for God's sake,
+let's get to the point!"
+
+"The paper that is pertinent is a deed," Basset explained. "I have the
+heads of it here. A deed made between Peter Paravicini Audley, your
+ancestor, the Audley the date of whose marriage has been always in
+issue--between him on the one side, and his father and two younger
+brothers on the other."
+
+"What is the date?" Stubbs asked.
+
+"Seventeen hundred and four."
+
+"Very good, Mr. Basset." Stubbs's tone was now as even as he could
+make it, but an acute listener would have detected a change in it.
+"Proceed, if you please."
+
+Before Basset could comply, my lord broke in. "What's the use of this?
+Why the d--l are we going into it?" he cried. "If this man is out for
+plunder I will make him smart as sure as my name is Audley! And any
+one who supports him. In the meantime I want to hear no more of it!"
+
+Basset moved in his chair as if he would rise. Stubbs intervened.
+
+"That is one way of looking at it, my lord," he said temperately. "And
+I'm not saying that it is the wrong way. But I think we had better
+hear what Mr. Basset has to say. He is probably deceived----"
+
+"He has let himself be used as a catspaw!" Audley cried. His face was
+flushed and there was an ugly look in his eyes.
+
+"But he means us well, I am sure," the lawyer interposed. "At present
+I don't see"--he turned and carefully snuffed one of the candles--"I
+don't see----"
+
+"I think you do!" Basset answered. He had had a long day and he had
+come on an unpleasant business. His own temper was not too good. "You
+see this, at any rate, Mr. Stubbs, that such a deed may be of vital
+import to your client."
+
+"To me?" Audley exclaimed. Was it possible that the thing he had so
+long feared--and had ceased to fear--was going to befall him? Was it
+possible that at the eleventh hour, when he had burnt his boats, when
+he had thought all danger at an end--no, it was impossible! "To me?"
+he repeated passionately.
+
+"Yes," Basset replied. "Or, rather, it would be of vital import to you
+in other circumstances."
+
+"In what other circumstances? What do you mean?"
+
+"If you were not about to marry the only person who, with you, is
+interested."
+
+Audley cut short, by a tremendous effort, the execration that burst
+from his lips. His face, always too fleshy for his years, swelled till
+it was purple. Then, and as quickly, the blood ebbed, leaving it gray
+and flabby. He would have given much, very much at this moment to be
+able to laugh or to utter a careless word. But he could do neither.
+The blow had been too sudden, too heavy, too overwhelming. Only in his
+nightmares had he seen what he saw now!
+
+Meanwhile Stubbs, startled by the half-uttered oath and a little out
+of his depth--for he had heard nothing of the engagement--intervened.
+"I think, my lord," he said, "you had better leave this to me. I think
+you had, indeed. We are quite in the dark and we are not getting
+forward. Let us have the facts, Mr. Basset. What is the gist of this
+deed? Or, first, have you seen it?"
+
+"I have."
+
+"And read it?"
+
+"I have."
+
+"It appears to you--I only say it appears--to be genuine?"
+
+"I have no doubt that it is genuine," Basset replied. "It bears the
+marks of age, and it was found in the chest with the old Bible. If the
+book is genuine----"
+
+The lawyer raised his hand. "Too fast," he said. "You say it was
+found! You mean that this man says it was found?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Precisely. But there is a difference. Still, we have cleared the
+ground. Now, what does this deed purport to be?"
+
+Basset produced a slip of paper. "An agreement," he read from it,
+"between Peter Paravicini Audley and his father and his two younger
+brothers. After admitting that the entry of the marriage in the
+register is misleading and that no marriage took place until after the
+birth of his son, Peter Paravicini undertakes that, in consideration
+of his father and his brothers taking no action and making no attack
+upon his wife's reputation, she being their cousin, he will not set up
+for the said son, or the issue of the said son, any claim to the title
+or estates."
+
+Audley listened to the description, so clear and so precise, and he
+recognized that it tallied with the deed which tradition had always
+held to exist but of which John Audley had been able to give no proof.
+He heard, he understood; yet while he listened and understood, his
+mind was working to another end, and viewing with passion the tragedy
+which fate had prepared for him. Too late! Too late! Had this become
+known a week, only a week, earlier, how lightly had the blow fallen!
+How impotently! But he had cut the rope, he had severed the strands
+once carefully twisted, that bound him to safety! And then the irony,
+the bitterness, the cruelty of those words of Basset's, "in other
+circumstances!" They bit into his mind.
+
+Still he suffered in silence, and only his stillness and his unhealthy
+color betrayed the despair that gripped and benumbed his soul. Stubbs
+did not look at him; perhaps he was careful not to look at him. The
+lawyer sat thinking and drumming gently with his fingers on the table.
+"Just so, just so," he said presently. "On the face of it, the
+document of which Mr. John Audley tried to give secondary evidence,
+and which a person fraudulently inclined would of course concoct. That
+touch of the cousin well brought in!"
+
+"But the lady was his cousin," Basset said.
+
+"All the world knows it," the lawyer retorted coolly, "and use has
+been made of the knowledge. But, of course, there are a hundred things
+to be proved before any weight can be given to this document; its
+origin, the custody from which it comes, the signatures, the
+witnesses. Its production by a man who has once endeavored to
+blackmail is alone suspicious. And the deed itself is at variance with
+the evidence of the Bible."
+
+"But that variance bears out the deed, which is to secure the younger
+sons' rights while covering the reputation of the lady."
+
+The lawyer shook his head. "Very clever," he said. "But, frankly, the
+matter has an ugly look, Mr. Basset."
+
+"Lord Audley says nothing," Basset replied, nettled by the lawyer's
+phrase.
+
+"And will say nothing," Stubbs rejoined genially, "if he is advised by
+me. In the circumstances, as I understand them, he is not affected as
+he might be, but this is still a serious matter. We are not
+quarrelling with you for coming to us, Mr. Basset. On the contrary.
+But I would like to know why the man came to you."
+
+"The answer is simple," Basset explained. "I am Mr. Audley's executor.
+On his account, I am obliged to be interested. The moment I learned
+this I saw that, be it true or false, I must disclose it to Miss
+Audley. But I thought it fair to open it to Lord Audley first that he
+might tell the young lady himself, if he preferred to do so."
+
+Stubbs nodded. "Very proper," he replied. "And where, in the meantime,
+is this--precious document?"
+
+"I lodged it with Mr. Audley's bankers this afternoon."
+
+Stubbs nodded again. "Also very proper," he said. "Just so."
+
+Basset rose. "I've told you what I know. If there is nothing more?" he
+said. He looked at Audley, who had turned his back on them and, with
+his hands in his pockets and one foot on the fender, was gazing into
+the fire.
+
+"I think that's all," Stubbs hastened to say. "I am sure that his
+lordship is obliged to you, Mr. Basset, though it is a hundred to one
+that there is nothing in this."
+
+At that, however, Audley turned about. He had pulled himself together,
+and his manner was excellent. "I would like to say that for myself,"
+he said frankly, "I owe you many thanks for the straightforward course
+you have taken, Basset. You must pardon my momentary annoyance.
+Perhaps you will kindly keep this business to yourself for--shall we
+say--three days? I will speak myself to my cousin, but I should like
+to make one or two inquiries first."
+
+Basset agreed willingly. He hated the whole thing and his part in it.
+It forced him to champion, or to seem to champion, Mary against her
+betrothed; and so set him in that kind of opposition to his rival
+which he loathed. It was only after some hesitation that he had
+determined to see Audley, and now that he had seen him, the sooner he
+was clear of the matter the happier he would be. So, "Certainly," he
+repeated, thinking that the other was taking it very well. "And now,
+as I have had a hard day, I will say good-night."
+
+"Good-night, and believe me," my lord added warmly, "we recognize the
+friendliness of your action."
+
+Outside, in the darkness of the road, Basset drew a breath of relief.
+He had had a hard day and he was utterly weary. But he had come now,
+thank God, to an end of many things; of the canvass he had detested
+and the contest in which he had been beaten; of his relations with
+Mary, whom he had lost; of this imbroglio, which he hated; of Riddsley
+and the Gatehouse and the old life there! He could go to his inn and
+sleep the clock round. In his bed he would be safe, he would be free
+from troubles. It seemed to him a refuge. Till the morrow he need
+think of nothing, and when he came forth again it would be to a new
+life. Henceforth Blore, his old house and his starved acres must bound
+his ambitions. With the money which John Audley had left him he would
+dig and drain and fence and build, and be by turns Talpa the mole and
+Castor the beaver. In time, as he began to see the fruit of his toil,
+he would win to some degree of content, and be glad, looking back,
+that he had made this trial of his powers, this essay towards a wider
+usefulness. So, in the end, he would come through to peace.
+
+But at this point the current of his thoughts eddied against Toft, and
+he cursed the man anew. Why had he played these tricks? Why had he
+kept back this paper? Why had he produced it now and cast on others
+this unpleasant task?
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+ TOFT'S LITTLE SURPRISE
+
+
+Toft had gone into Riddsley on the polling-day, but had returned
+before the result was known. "What the man was thinking of," his wife
+declared in wrath, "beats me! To be there hours and hours and come out
+no wiser than he went, and we waiting to hear--a babe would ha' had
+more sense! The young master that we've known all our lives, to be in
+or out, and we to know nothing till morning! It passes patience!"
+
+Mary had her own feelings, but she concealed them. "He must know how
+it was going when he left?" she said.
+
+"He doesn't know an identical thing!" Mrs. Toft replied. "And all he'd
+say was, 'There, there, what does it matter?' For all the world as if
+he spoke to a child! 'What else matters, man?' says I. 'What did you
+go for?' But there, Miss, he's beyond me these days! I believe he's
+going like the poor master, that had a bee in his bonnet, God forgive
+me for saying it! But what'd one not say, and we to wait till morning
+not knowing whether those plaguy Repealers are in or out!"
+
+"But Mr. Basset is for Repeal," Mary said.
+
+"What matter what he's for, if he's in?" Mrs. Toft replied loftily.
+"But to wait till morning to know--the man's no better than a numps!"
+
+In the end, it was Mr. Colet who brought the news to the Gatehouse. He
+brought it to Etruria and so much of moment with it that before noon
+the election result had been set aside as a trifle, and Mary found
+herself holding a kind of court in the parlor--Mr. Colet plaintiff,
+Etruria defendant, Mrs. Toft counsel for the defence. Absence had but
+strengthened Mr. Colet's affection, and he came determined to come to
+an understanding with his mistress. He saw his way to making a small
+income by writing sermons for his more indolent brethren, and, in the
+meantime, Mr. Basset was giving him food and shelter; in return he was
+keeping Mr. Basset's accounts, and he was saving a little, a very
+little, money. But the body of his plea rested not on these counts,
+but on the political change. Repeal was in the air, repeal was in the
+country. Vote as Riddsley might, the Corn Laws were doomed. His
+opinions would no longer be banned; they would soon be the opinions of
+the majority, and with a little patience he might find a new curacy.
+When that happened he wished to marry Etruria.
+
+"And why not?" Mary asked.
+
+"I will never marry him to disgrace him," Etruria replied. She stood
+with bowed head, her hands clasped before her, her beautiful eyes
+lowered.
+
+"But you love him?" Mary said, blushing at her own words.
+
+"If I did not love him I might marry him," Etruria rejoined. "I am a
+servant, my father's a servant. I should be wronging him, and he would
+live to know it."
+
+"To my way o' thinking, 'Truria's right," her mother said. "I never
+knew good come of such a marriage! He's poor, begging his reverence's
+pardon, but, poor or rich, his place is there." She pointed to the
+table. "And 'Truria's place is behind his chair."
+
+"But you forget," Mary said, "that when she is Mr. Colet's wife her
+place will be by his side."
+
+"And much good that'll do him with the parsons and such like, as are
+all gleg together! If he's in their black books for preaching too
+free--and when you come to tithes one parson is as like another as
+pigs o' the same litter--he'll not better himself by taking such as
+Etruria, take my word for it, Miss!"
+
+"I will never do it," said Etruria.
+
+"But," Mary protested, "Mr. Colet need not live here, and in another
+part people will not know what his wife has been. Etruria has good
+manners and some education, Mrs. Toft, and what she does not know she
+will learn. She will be judged by what she is. If there is a drawback,
+it is that such a marriage will divide her from you and from her
+father. But if you are prepared for that?"
+
+Mrs. Toft rubbed her nose. "We'd be willing if that were all," she
+said. "She'd come to us sometimes, and there'd be no call for us to go
+to her."
+
+Mr. Colet looked at Etruria. "If Etruria will come to me," he said, "I
+will be ashamed neither of her nor her parents."
+
+"Bravely said!" Mary cried.
+
+"But there's more to it than that," Mrs. Toft objected. "A deal more.
+Mr. Colet nor 'Truria can't live upon air. And it's my opinion that if
+his reverence gets a curacy, he'll lose it as soon as it's known who
+his wife is. And he can't dig and he can't beg, and where'll they be
+with the parsons all sticking to one another as close as wax?"
+
+"He'll not need them!" replied a new speaker, and that speaker was
+Toft. He had entered silently, none of them had seen him, and the
+interruption took them aback. "He'll not need them," he repeated, "nor
+their curacies. He'll not need to dig nor beg. There's changes coming.
+There's changes coming for more than him, Miss. If Mr. Colet's willing
+to take my girl she'll not go to him empty-handed."
+
+"I will take her as she stands," Mr. Colet said, his eyes shining.
+"She knows that."
+
+"Well, you'll take her, sir, asking your pardon, with what I give
+her," Toft answered. "And that'll be five hundred pounds that I have
+in hand, and five hundred more that I look to get. Put 'em together
+and they'll buy what's all one with a living, and you'll be your own
+rector and may snap your fingers at 'em!"
+
+They stared at the man, while Mrs. Toft, in an awestruck tone, cried,
+"You're out of your mind, Toft! Five hundred pounds! Whoever heard of
+the like of us with that much money?"
+
+"Silence, woman," Toft said. "You know naught about it."
+
+"But, Toft," Mary said, "are you in earnest? Do you understand what a
+large sum of money this is?"
+
+"I have it," the man replied, his sallow cheek reddening. "I have it,
+and it's for Etruria."
+
+"If this be true," Mr. Colet said slowly, "I don't know what to say,
+Toft."
+
+"You've said all that is needful, sir," Toft replied. "It's long
+I've looked forward to this. She's yours, and she'll not come to you
+empty-handed, and you'll have no need to be ashamed of a wife that
+brings you a living. We'll not trouble except to see her at odd times
+in the year. It will be enough for her mother and me that she'll be a
+lady. She never was like us."
+
+"Hear the man!" cried Mrs. Toft between admiration and protest. "You'd
+suppose she wasn't our child!"
+
+But Mary went to him and gave him her hand. "That's very fine, Toft,"
+she said. "I believe Etruria will be as happy as she is good, and Mr.
+Colet will have a wife of whom he may be proud. But Etruria will not
+be Etruria if she forgets her parents or your gift. Only you are sure
+that you are not deceiving yourself?"
+
+"There's my bank-book to show for half of it," Toft replied. "The
+other half is as certain if I live three months!"
+
+"Well, I declare!" Mrs. Toft cried. "If anybody'd told me yesterday
+that I'd have--'Truria, han't you got a word to say?"
+
+Etruria's answer was to throw her arms round her father's neck. Yet
+it is doubtful if the moment was as much to her as to the ungainly,
+grim--visaged man, who looked so ill at ease in her embrace.
+
+The contrast between them was such that Mary hastened to relieve the
+sufferer. "Etruria will have more to say to Mr. Colet," she said,
+"than to us. Suppose we leave them to talk it over."
+
+She saw the Tofts out after another word or two, and followed them.
+"Well, well, well!" said Mrs. Toft, when they stood in the hall. "I'm
+sure I wish that everybody was as lucky this day--if all's true as
+Toft tells us."
+
+"There's some in luck that don't know it!" the man said oracularly.
+And he slid away.
+
+"If he said black was white, I'd believe him after this," his wife
+exclaimed, "asking your pardon, Miss, for the liberties we've taken!
+But you'd always a fancy for 'Truria. Anyway, if there's one will be
+pleased to hear the news, it's the Squire! If I'd some of those nine
+here that voted against him I'd made their ears burn!"
+
+"But perhaps they thought that Mr. Basset was wrong," Mary said.
+
+"What business had they o' thinking?" Mrs. Toft replied. "They had
+ought to vote; that's enough for them."
+
+"Well, it does seem a pity," Mary allowed. And then, because she
+fancied that Mrs. Toft looked at her with meaning, she went upstairs
+and, putting on her hat and cloak, went out. The day was cold and
+bright, a sprinkling of snow lay on the ground, and a walk promised
+her an opportunity of thinking things over. Between the Butterflies,
+at the entrance to the flagged yard, she hung a moment in doubt, then
+she set off across the park in the direction of the Great House.
+
+At first her thoughts were busy with Etruria's fortunes and the
+mysterious windfall which had enriched Toft. How had he come by it?
+How could he have come by it? And was the man really sane? But soon
+her mind took another turn. She had strayed this way on the morning
+after her arrival at the Gatehouse, and, remembering this, she looked
+across the gray, frost-bitten park, with its rows of leafless trees
+and its naked vistas. Her mind travelled back to that happy morning,
+and involuntarily she glanced behind her.
+
+But to-day no one followed her, no one was thinking of her. Basset was
+gone, gone for good, and it was she who had sent him away. The May
+morning when he had hurried after her, the May sunshine, gay with the
+songs of larks and warm with the scents of spring were of the past.
+To-day she looked on a bare, cold landscape and her thoughts matched
+it. Yet she had no ground to complain, she told herself, no reason to
+be unhappy. Things might have been worse, ah, so much worse, she
+reflected. For a week ago she had been a captive, helpless, netted in
+her own folly! And now she was free.
+
+Yes, she ought to be happy, being free; and, more than free,
+independent.
+
+But she must go from here. And for many reasons the thought of going
+was painful to her. During the nine months which she had spent at the
+Gatehouse it had become a home. Its panelled rooms, its austerity, its
+stillness, the ancient woodlands about it were endeared to her by the
+memory of lamp-lit evenings and long summer days. The very plainness
+and solitude of the life, which had brought the Tofts and Etruria so
+near to her, had been a charm. And if her sympathy with her uncle had
+been imperfect, still he had been her uncle and he had been kind to
+her.
+
+All this she must leave, and something else which she did not define;
+which was bound up with it, and which she had come to value when it
+was too late. She had taken brass for gold, and tin for silver! And
+now it was too late. So that it was no wonder that when she came to
+the hawthorn-tree where she had gathered her may that morning, a sob
+rose in her throat. She knew the tree! She had marked it often. But
+to-day there was no one to follow her, no one to call her back, no one
+to say that she should go no farther. Basset was gone, her uncle was
+dead.
+
+Telling herself that, as she would never see it again, she would go as
+far as the Great House, she pushed on to the Yew Walk. Its recesses
+showed dark, the darker for the sprinkling of snow that lay in the
+park. But it was high noon, there was nothing to fear, and she pursued
+the path until she came to the crumbling monster that tradition said
+was a butterfly.
+
+She was still viewing it with awe, thinking now of the duel which had
+taken place there, now of her uncle's attack, when a bird moved in the
+copse and she glanced nervously behind her, expecting she knew not
+what. The dark yews shut her in, and involuntarily she shivered. What
+if, in this solitary place--and then through the silence the sharp
+click of the Iron Gate reached her ear.
+
+The stillness and the associations shook her nerves. She heard
+footsteps and, hardly knowing what she feared, she slipped among the
+trees and stood half-hidden. A moment passed and a man appeared. He
+came from the Great House. He crossed the opening slowly, his chin
+sunk upon his breast, his eyes bent on the path before him. A moment
+and he was gone, the way she had come, without seeing her.
+
+It was Lord Audley, and foolish as the impulse to hide herself had
+been, she blessed it. Nothing pleasant, nothing good, could have come
+of their meeting; and into her thoughts of him had crept so much of
+distaste that she was glad that she had not met him in this lonely
+spot. She went on to the Iron Gate, and viewed for a few moments the
+desolate lawn and the long, gaunt front. Then, reflecting that if she
+turned back at once she might meet him, she took a side-path through
+the plantation, and emerged on the park at another point.
+
+She was careful not to reach home until late in the day and then she
+learned that he had called, that he had waited, and that in the end
+Toft had seen him; and that he had departed in no good temper. "What
+Toft said to him," Mrs. Toft reported, "I know no more than the moon,
+but whatever it was his lordship marched off, Miss, as black as
+thunder."
+
+After that nothing happened, and of the four at the Gatehouse Etruria
+alone was content. Mrs. Toft was uneasy about the future--what were
+they going to do?--and perplexed by Toft's mysterious fortune--how had
+he come by it? Toft himself was on the rack, looking for things to
+happen--and nothing happened. And Mary knew that she must take action.
+She could not stay at the Gatehouse, she could not remain as the guest
+either of Basset or of Lord Audley.
+
+But she did not know where to go, and no suggestion reached her. At
+length she wrote, two days after Lord Audley's visit, to Quebec
+Street, to the house where she had stayed with her father many years
+before. It was the only address of the kind that she knew. But she
+received no answer, and her heart sank. The difficulty, small as it
+was, harassed her; she had no adviser, and ten times a day, to keep up
+her spirits, she had tell herself that she was independent, that she
+had eight thousand pounds, that the whole world was open to her, and
+that compared with the penniless girl who had lived on the upper floor
+of the Hotel Lambert she was fortunate!
+
+But in the Hotel Lambert she had had work to do, and here she had
+none!
+
+She thought of taking rooms in Riddsley, but Lord Audley was there and
+she shrank from meeting him. She would wait another week for the
+answer from London, and then, if none came, she must decide what she
+would do. But in her room that night the thought that Basset had
+abandoned her, that he no longer cared, no longer desired to come near
+her, broke her down. Of course, he was not to blame. He fancied her
+still engaged to her cousin and receiving from him all the advice, all
+the help, all the love, she needed. He fancied her happy and content,
+in no need of him. And, alas, there was the pinch. She had written to
+him to tell him of her engagement. She could not write to him to tell
+him that it was at an end!
+
+And then, by the morrow's post, there came a long letter from Basset,
+and in the letter the whole astonishing, overwhelming story of the
+discovery of the document which John Audley had sought so long, and in
+the end so disastrously.
+
+
+"No doubt," the writer added, "Lord Audley has made you acquainted
+with the facts, but I think it my duty as your uncle's executor to
+lay them before you in detail and also to advise you that in your
+interest and in view of the change in your position--and in Lord
+Audley's--which this imports, it is proper that you should have
+independent advice."
+
+
+The blood ebbed and left Mary pale; it returned in a flood as with a
+bounding heart and shaking fingers she read and turned and re-read
+this letter. At length she grasped its meaning, and truly what
+astounding, what overwhelming news! What a shift of fortune! What a
+reversal of expectations! And how strangely, how singularly had all
+things shaped themselves to bring this about--were it true!
+
+Unable to sit still, unable to control her excitement--and no
+wonder--she rose and paced the floor. If she were indeed Lady Audley!
+If this were indeed all hers! This dear house and the Great House!
+This which had seemed to its possessor so small, so meagre, so
+cramping an inheritance, but was to her fortune, an old name, a great
+place, a firm position in the world! A position that offered so many
+opportunities and so much power for good!
+
+She walked the room with throbbing pulses, the letter now crushed in
+her hand, now smoothed out that she might assure herself of its
+meaning, might read again some word or some sentence, might resolve
+some doubt. Oh, it was a wonderful, it was a marvellous, it was an
+incredible turn of fortune! And presently her mind began to deal with
+and to sift the past. And, enlightened, she understood many of the
+things that had perplexed her, and read many of the riddles that had
+baffled her. And her cheeks burned, her heart was hot with
+indignation.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+ THE DEED OF RENUNCIATION
+
+
+Basset moved in his chair. He was unhappy and ill at ease. He looked
+at the fire, he looked askance at Mary. "But do you mean," he said,
+"that you knew nothing about this until you had my letter?"
+
+"Nothing," Mary answered, "not a word." She, too, found it more easy
+to look at the fire.
+
+"You must have been very much surprised?"
+
+"I was. It was for that reason that I asked you to bring me the
+papers--to bring me everything, so that I might see for myself how it
+was."
+
+"I don't understand why Audley did not tell you. He said he would."
+
+It was the question Mary had foreseen and dreaded. She had slept two
+nights upon the letter and given a long day's thought to it, and
+she had made up her mind what she would do and how she would do it.
+But between the planning and the doing there were passages which she
+would fain have shunned, fain have omitted, had it been possible; and
+this was one of them. She saw that there was nothing else for it,
+however--the thing must be told, and told by her. She tried, and not
+without success, to command her voice. "He did not tell me," she said.
+"Indeed I have not seen him. And I ought to say, Mr. Basset, you ought
+to know in these circumstances--that the engagement between my cousin
+and myself is at an end."
+
+He may have started--he might well be astonished, in view of the
+business which brought him there. But he did not speak, and Mary could
+not tell what effect it had on him. She only knew that the silence
+seemed age-long, the pause cruel, and that her heart was beating so
+loudly that it seemed to her that he must hear it. At last, "Do you
+mean," he asked, his voice muffled and uncertain, "that it is all over
+between you?"
+
+"It is quite over between us," she answered soberly. "It was a mistake
+from the beginning."
+
+"When--when did he----"
+
+"Oh, before this arose. Some time before this arose." She spoke
+lightly, but her cheeks were hot.
+
+"He did not tell me."
+
+"No?"
+
+"No," Basset repeated. He spoke angrily, as if he felt this a
+grievance, but in no other way could he have masked his emotion.
+Perhaps he did not mask it altogether, for she was observing him--ah,
+how keenly was she observing him! "On the contrary, he led me to
+believe," he continued, "that things were as before between you, and
+that he would tell you this himself. It was for that reason that I let
+a week go by before I wrote to you."
+
+"Just so," she said, squeezing her handkerchief into a ball, and
+telling herself that the worst was over now, the story told, that in
+another minute this would be done and past. "Just so, I quite
+understand. At any rate there is no longer any question of that, Mr.
+Basset. And now," briskly, "may I see this famous deed which is to do
+so much. You brought it with you, I hope?"
+
+"Yes, I brought it," he answered heavily. He took a packet of papers
+from his breast-pocket, and it did not escape her--she was cooler
+now--that his fingers were not as steady as a man's fingers should be.
+The packet he brought out was tied about with old and faded green
+ribbon, and bore a docket on the outside. She looked at it with
+curiosity. That ribbon had been tied by a long-dead hand in the reign
+of Queen Anne! Those yellowish papers had lain in damp and darkness a
+hundred and forty years, that in the end they might take John Audley's
+life! "I brought them from the bank this afternoon," he explained.
+"They have been in the bank's custody since they were handed to me,
+and I must return them to the bank to-night."
+
+"Everything depends upon them, I suppose?"
+
+"Everything."
+
+"But I thought that it was a deed--just one paper?" she said.
+
+"The actual instrument is a deed. This one!" He took it from the
+series as he untied the packet. "The other papers are of value as
+corroboration. They are letters, original letters, bearing on the
+preparation of the agreement. They were found all together as they are
+now, and in the same order. I did not disclose the letters to Audley,
+or to his lawyer, because I had not then gone through them; nor was it
+necessary to disclose them. I have since examined them, and they
+provide ample proof of the genuineness of the deed."
+
+"So that you think...?"
+
+"I do not think that it can be contested. I am sure that it
+cannot--with success. And if it be admitted, your opponent's case is
+gone. It was practically common ground in the former suit that if this
+agreement could be produced and proved his claim fell to the ground.
+Yours remains. I do not suppose," Basset concluded, "that he will
+contest it, save as a matter of form."
+
+"I am sorry for him," she said thoughtfully. And almost for the first
+time her eyes met his. But he was not responsive. He shrugged his
+shoulders. "He has had it long enough to feel the loss of it," she
+continued, still bidding for his sympathy. "May I look at that
+now--the deed?" She held out her hand.
+
+He gave it to her. It was a folded sheet of parchment, yellow with age
+and not very large, perhaps ten inches square. Three or four seals of
+green wax on ribbon ends dangled from it. It was written all over in a
+fine and curious penmanship, its initial letter adorned with a
+portrait of Queen Anne; altogether a pretty and delicate thing, but
+small--so small, she thought, to effect so great a change, to carry,
+to wreck, to make the fortunes of a house!
+
+She handled it gently, almost fearfully, with awe and a little
+distaste. She turned it, she read the signatures. They were clear but
+faint. The ink had turned brown.
+
+"Peter Paravicini Audley," she murmured. "He must have signed it
+sadly, to save his wife, his cousin, a young girl, a girl of my age
+perhaps! To save her name!" There was a quaver in her voice. Basset
+moved uncomfortably.
+
+"They are all dead," he said.
+
+"Yes, they are all dead," she agreed. "And their joys and failings,
+hopes and fears--all dead! It seems a pity that this should live to
+betray them."
+
+"Not a pity on your account."
+
+"No. You are glad, of course?"
+
+"That you should have your rights?" he said manfully. "Of course I
+am."
+
+"And you congratulate me?" She rose and held out her hand. Her eyes
+were shining, there were tears in them, and her face was marvellously
+soft. "You will be the first, won't you, to congratulate me? You who
+have done so much for me, you who have been my friend through all? You
+who have brought me this? You will wish me joy?"
+
+He was deeply moved; how deeply he could not hide from her, and her
+last doubt faded. He took her hand--his own was cold--but he could not
+speak. At last, "May you be very happy! It is my one wish, Lady
+Audley!"
+
+She let his hand fall. "Thank you," she said gently. "I think that I
+shall be happy. And now--now," in a firmer tone, "will you do
+something for me, Mr. Basset? It is not much. Will you deal with Toft
+for me? You told me in your letter that he held my uncle's note for
+L800, to be paid in the event of the discovery of these papers? And
+that L300, already paid, might be set off against this?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"The money should be paid, of course."
+
+"I fear it must be paid."
+
+"Will you see him and tell him that it shall be. I--I am fond of
+Etruria, but I am not so fond of Toft, and I would rather not--would
+you see him about this?"
+
+"I quite understand," Basset answered. "Of course I will do it." They
+had both regained the ordinary plane of feeling and he spoke in his
+usual tone. "You would like me to see him now?"
+
+"If you please."
+
+He went from the room. There were other things that as executor he
+must arrange, and when he had dealt with Toft, and not without a hard
+word or two that went home, had settled that matter, he went round the
+house and gave the orders he had to give. The light was beginning to
+fail and shadows to fill the corners, and as he glanced into this room
+and that and viewed the long-remembered places and saw ghosts and
+heard the voices of the dead, he knew that he was taking leave of many
+things, of things that had made up a large part of his life.
+
+And he had other thoughts hardly more cheering. Mary's engagement was
+broken off. But how? By whom? Had she freed herself? Or had Audley,
+_immemor Divum_, and little foreseeing the discovery that trod upon
+his threshold, freed her? And if so, why? He was in the dark as to
+this and as to all--her attitude, her thoughts, her feelings. He knew
+only that while her freedom trebled the moment of the news he had
+brought, the gifts of fortune which that news laid at her feet, rose
+insuperable between them and formed a barrier he could not pass.
+
+For he could never woo her now. Whatever dawn of hope crept quivering
+above the horizon--and she had been kind, ah, in that moment of
+softness and remembrance she had been kind!--he could never speak now.
+
+The dusk was far advanced and firelight was almost the only light
+when, after half an hour's absence, he returned to the parlor. Mary
+was standing before the hearth, her slender figure darkly outlined
+against the blaze. She held the poker in her hand, and she was
+stooping forward; and something in her pose, something in the tense
+atmosphere of the room, drew his gaze--he never knew why--to the table
+on which he had left the papers. It was bare. He looked round, he
+could not see them, a cry broke from him. "Mary!"
+
+"They don't burn easily," she said, a quaver of exultation and
+defiance in her tone. "Parchment is so hard to burn--it burns so
+slowly, though I made a good fire on purpose!"
+
+"D--n!" he cried, and he was going to seize, he tried to seize her
+arm. But he saw the next moment that it was useless, he saw that it
+was too late. "Are you mad? Are you mad?" he cried. Frantically, he
+went down on his knees, he raked among the embers. But he knew that it
+was futile, he had known it before he knelt, and he stood up again
+with a gesture of despair. "My G--d!" he said. "Do you know what you
+have done? You have destroyed what cannot be replaced! You have ruined
+your claim! You must have been mad! Mad, to do it!"
+
+"Why, mad? Because I do not wish to be Lady Audley?" she said, facing
+him calmly, with her hands behind her.
+
+"Mad!" he repeated, bitter self-reproach in his voice. For he felt
+himself to blame, he felt the full burden of his responsibility. He
+had left the papers with her, the true value of which she might not
+have known! And she had done this dreadful, this fatal, this
+irreparable thing!
+
+She faced his anger without a quiver. "Why, mad!" she repeated. She
+was quite at her ease now. "Because, having been jilted by my cousin,
+I do not wish for this common, this vulgar, this poor revenge? Because
+I will not stoop to the game he plays and has played? Because I will
+not take from him what is little to me who have not had it, but much,
+nay all, to him who has?"
+
+"But your uncle?" he cried. He was striving desperately to collect
+himself, trying to see the thing all round and not only as she saw it,
+but in its consequences. "Your uncle, whose one aim, whose one object
+in life----"
+
+"Was to be Lord Audley? Believe me," she replied gently, "he sees more
+clearly now. And he is dead."
+
+"But there are still--those who come after you?"
+
+"Will they be better, happier, more useful?" she answered. "Will they
+be less Audleys, with less of ancient blood running in their veins
+because of what I have done? Because I have refused to rake up this
+old, pitiful, forgotten stain, this scandal of Queen Elizabeth? No, a
+thousand times no! And do not think, do not think," she continued more
+soberly, "that I have acted in haste or on impulse. I have not had
+this out of my thoughts for a moment since I knew the truth. I have
+weighed, carefully weighed, the price, and as carefully decided to pay
+it. My duty? I can do it, I hope, as well in one station as another.
+For the rest there is only one who will lose by it"--she faced him
+bravely now--"only one who will have the right to blame me--ever."
+
+"I may have no right----"
+
+"No you have no right at present."
+
+"Still----"
+
+"When you have the right--when you have gained the right, if ever--you
+may blame me."
+
+Was he deceived? Was it the fact or only his fancy, a mere
+will-o'-the-wisp inviting him to trouble that led him to imagine that
+she looked at him queerly? With a mingling of raillery and tenderness,
+with a tear and a smile, with something in her eyes that he had never
+seen in them before? With--with--but her face was in shadow, she had
+her back to the blaze that filled the room with dancing lights, and
+his thoughts were in a turmoil of confusion. "I wish I knew," he said
+in a low voice, "what you meant by that?"
+
+"By what?"
+
+"By what you have just said. Did you mean that now that he--now that
+Audley is out of the way, there was a chance for me?"
+
+"A chance for you?" she repeated. She stared at him in seeming
+astonishment.
+
+"Don't play with me!" he cried, advancing upon her. "You understand
+me? You understand me very well! Yes, or no, Mary?"
+
+She did not flinch. "There is no chance for you," she answered slowly,
+still confronting him. "If there be a second chance for me----"
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"For me, Peter?" And with that her tone told him all, all there was to
+tell. "If you are willing to take me second-hand," she continued, with
+a tremulous laugh, "you may take me. I don't deserve it, but I know my
+own mind now. I have known it since the day my uncle died and I heard
+your step come through the hall. And if you are still willing?"
+
+He did not answer her, but he took her. He held her to him, his heart
+too full for anything but a thankfulness beyond speech, while she,
+shaken out of her composure, trembled between tears and laughter.
+"Peter! Peter!" she said again and again. And once, "We are the same
+height, Peter!" and so showed him a new side of her nature which
+thrilled him with surprise and happiness.
+
+That she brought him no title, no lands, that by her own act she had
+flung away her inheritance and came to him almost empty-handed was no
+pain to him, no subject for regret. On the contrary, every word she
+had said on that, every argument she had used, came home to him now
+with double force. It had been a poor, it had been a common, it had
+been a pitiful revenge! It had mingled the sordid with the cup, it had
+cast the shadow of the Great House on their happiness. In that room in
+which they had shared their first meal on that far May morning, and
+where the light of the winter fire now shone on the wainscot, now
+brought life to the ruffed portraits above it, there was no question
+of name or fortune, or more or less.
+
+So much so, that when Mrs. Toft came in with the tea she well-nigh
+dropped the tray in her surprise. As she said afterwards, "The sight
+of them two as close as chives in a barrel, I declare you might ha'
+knocked me down with a straw! God bless 'em!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XL
+
+ "LET US MAKE OTHERS THANKFUL"
+
+
+A man can scarcely harbor a more bitter thought than that he has lost
+by foul play what fair play would have won for him. This for a week
+was Lord Audley's mood and position; for masterful as he was he owned
+the power of Nemesis, he felt the force of tradition, nor, try as he
+might, could he convince himself that in face of this oft-cited deed
+his chance of retaining the title and property was anything but
+desperate. He made the one attempt to see Mary of which we know; and
+had he seen her he would have done his best to knot again the tie
+which he had cut. But missing her by a hair's breadth, and confronted
+by Toft who knew all, he had found even his courage unequal to a
+second attempt. The spirit in which Mary had faced the breach had
+shown his plan to be from the first a counsel of despair, and
+despairing he let her go. In a dark mood he sat down to wait for the
+next step on the enemy's part, firmly resolved that whatever form it
+might take he would contest the claim to the bitter end.
+
+And Stubbs was scarcely in happier case. At the time, and face to face
+with Basset, he had borne up well, but the production of the fateful
+deed had none the less fallen on him with stunning effect. He
+appreciated--none better and more clearly now--what the effect of his
+easiness would have been had Lord Audley not been engaged to his
+cousin; nor did his negligence appear in a less glaring light because
+his patron was to escape its worst results. He foresaw that whatever
+befel he must suffer, and that the agency which his family had so long
+enjoyed--that, that at any rate was forfeit.
+
+This was enough to make him a most unhappy, a most miserable man. But
+it did not stand alone. Everything seemed to him to be going wrong.
+All good things, public and private, seemed to be verging on their
+end. The world as he had known it for sixty years was crumbling about
+his ears. It was time that he was gone.
+
+Certainly the days of that Protection with which he believed the
+welfare of the land to be bound up, were numbered. In the House Lord
+George and Mr. Disraeli--those strangest of bedfellows!--might rage,
+the old Protectionist party might foam, invective and sarcasm, taunt
+and sneer might rain upon the traitor as he sat with folded arms and
+hat drawn down to his eyes, rectors might fume and squires swear; the
+end was certain, and Stubbs saw that it was. Those rascals in the
+North, they and their greed and smoke, that stained the face of
+England, would win and were winning. He had saved Riddsley by
+nine--but to what end? What was one vote among so many? He thought of
+the nut-brown ale, the teeming stacks, the wagoner's home,
+
+
+ Hard-by, a cottage chimney smokes
+ From betwixt two aged oaks.
+
+
+He thought of the sweet cow-stalls, the brook where he had bent his
+first pin, and he sighed. Half the country folk would be ruined, and
+Shoddy from Halifax and Brass from Bury would buy their lands and walk
+in gaiters where better men had foundered. The country would be full
+of new men--Peels!
+
+Well, it would last his time. But some day there would rise another
+Buonaparte and they would find Cobden with his calico millennium a
+poor stay against starvation, his lean and flashy songs a poor
+substitute for wheat. It was all money now; the kindly feeling, the
+Christmas dole, the human ties, where father had worked for father and
+son for son, and the thatch had covered three generations--all these
+were past and gone. He found one fault, it is true, in the past. He
+had one regret, as he looked back. The laborers' wage had been too
+low; they had been left outside the umbrella of Protection. He saw
+that now; there was the weak point in the case. "That's where they hit
+us," he said more than once, "the foundation was too narrow." But the
+knowledge came too late.
+
+Naturally he buried his private mishap--and my lord's--in silence. But
+his mien was changed. He was an altered, a shaken man. When he passed
+through the streets, he walked with his chin on his breast, his
+shoulders bowed. He shunned men's eyes. Then one day Basset entered
+his office and for a long time was closeted with him.
+
+When he left Stubbs left also, and his bearing was so subtly changed
+as to impress all who met him; while Farthingale, stepping out in his
+absence, drank his way through three brown brandies in a silence which
+grew more portentous with every glass. At The Butterflies, whither the
+lawyer hastened, Audley met him with moody and repellent eyes, and in
+the first flush of the news which the lawyer brought refused to
+believe it. It was not only that the tidings seemed too good to be
+true, the relief from the nightmare which weighed upon him too great
+to be readily accepted. But the thing that Mary had done was so far
+out of his ken and so much beyond his understanding that he could not
+rise to it, or credit it. Even when he at last took in the truth of
+the story he put upon it the interpretation that was natural to him.
+
+"It was a forgery!" he cried with an oath. "You may depend upon it, it
+was a forgery and they discovered it."
+
+But Stubbs would not agree to that. Stubbs was very stout about it,
+and giving details of his conversation with Basset gradually persuaded
+his patron. In one way, indeed, the news coming through him wrought a
+benefit which neither Mary nor Basset had foreseen. It once more
+commended him to Audley, and by and by healed the breach which had
+threatened to sever the long connection between the lawyer and
+Beaudelays. If Stubbs's opinion of my lord could never again be wholly
+what it had been, if Audley still had hours of soreness when the
+other's negligence recurred to his mind, at least they were again at
+one as to the future. They were once more free to look forward to a
+time when a marriage with Lady Adela, or her like, would rebuild the
+fortunes of the Great House. Of Audley, whose punishment if short had
+been severe, one thing at least may be ventured with safety--and
+beyond this we need not inquire; that to the end his first, last,
+greatest thought would be--himself!
+
+Late in June, the Corn Laws were repealed. On the same day Sir Robert
+Peel, in the eyes of some the first, in the eyes of others the last of
+men, was forced to resign. Thwarted by old friends and abandoned by
+new ones, he fell by a man[oe]uvre which even his enemies could not
+defend. Whether he was more to be blamed for blindness than he was to
+be praised for rectitude, are questions on which party spirit has much
+to say, nor has history as yet pronounced a final decision. But if his
+hand gave the victory to the class from which he sprang, he was at
+least free from the selfishness of that class. He had ideals, he was a
+man,
+
+
+ He nothing common did nor mean,
+ Upon that memorable scene,
+ But bowed his comely head,
+ Down as upon a bed.
+
+
+Nor is it possible, even for those who do not agree with him, to think
+of his dramatic fall without sympathy.
+
+In the same week Basset and Mary were married. They spent their
+honeymoon after a fashion of their own, for they travelled through the
+north of England, and beginning with the improvements which Lord
+Francis Egerton was making along the Manchester Canal, they continued
+their quiet journey along the inland waterways which formed in the
+'forties a link, now forgotten, between the great cities. In this
+way--somewhat to the disgust of Mary's new maid, whose name was
+Josephine--they visited strange things; the famous land-warping upon
+the Humber, the Doncaster drainage system in Yorkshire, the Horsfall
+dairies. They brought back to the old gabled house at Blore some ideas
+which were new even to old Hayward--though the "Duke" would never have
+admitted this.
+
+"Now that we are not protected, we must bestir ourselves," Basset said
+on the last evening before their return. "I'll inquire about a seat,
+if you like," he added reluctantly.
+
+Mary was standing behind him. She put her hand on his shoulder. "You
+are paying me out, Peter," she said. "I know now that I don't know as
+much as I thought I knew."
+
+"Which means?" Basset said, smiling.
+
+"That once I thought that nothing could be done without an earthquake.
+I know now that it can be done with a spade."
+
+"So that where Mary was content with nothing but a gilt coach, Mrs.
+Basset is content with a nutshell."
+
+"If you are in the nutshell," Mary answered softly, "only--for what we
+have received, Peter--let us make other people thankful."
+
+"We will try," he answered.
+
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Great House, by Stanley J. Weyman
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT HOUSE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39294.txt or 39294.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/2/9/39294/
+
+Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by the
+Web Archive (University of Michigan)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/39294.zip b/old/39294.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..12ae0cd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/39294.zip
Binary files differ