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- STAND FAST, CRAIG-ROYSTON! (VOLUME II)
-
-
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-
-Title: Stand Fast, Craig-Royston! (Volume II)
-Author: William Black
-Release Date: May 17, 2013 [EBook #42730]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STAND FAST, CRAIG-ROYSTON!
-(VOLUME II) ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
- STAND FAST, CRAIG-ROYSTON!
-
- A Novel
-
-
- BY
-
- WILLIAM BLACK,
-
- AUTHOR OF
- "A DAUGHTER OF HETH," "MACLEOD OF DARE," ETC.
-
-
-
- _IN THREE VOLUMES._
- VOL. II.
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON, LIMITED
- St. Dunstan's House
- FETTER LANE, FLEET STREET, E.C.
- 1891.
-
- [_All rights reserved._]
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
- STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
-
-CHAPTER
-
- I. Doubts and Dreams
- II. By Northern Seas
- III. "Holy Palmer's Kiss"
- IV. Interposition
- V. The Gnawing Fox
- VI. Put to the Proof
- VII. Renewing is of Love
- VIII. On the Brink
- IX. "And hast thou played me this!"
-
-
-
-
- STAND FAST, CRAIG-ROYSTON!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- DOUBTS AND DREAMS.
-
-
-And at first Vincent was for rebelliously thrusting aside and ignoring
-this information that had reached him so unexpectedly. Was he, on the
-strength of a statement forwarded by an unknown correspondent in New
-York, to suspect--nay, to condemn unheard--this proud and solitary old
-man with whom he had all this while been on terms of such close and
-friendly intimacy? Had he not had ample opportunities of judging
-whether George Bethune was the sort of person likely to have done this
-thing that was now charged against him? He went over these past weeks
-and months. Was it any wonder that the old man's indomitable courage,
-his passionate love of his native land, and the constant and assiduous
-care and affection he bestowed on his granddaughter, should have aroused
-alike the younger man's admiration and his gratitude? What if he talked
-with too lofty an air of birth and lineage, or allowed his enthusiasm
-about Scotland and Scottish song to lead him into the realms of
-rodomontade: may not an old man have his harmless foibles? Any one who
-had witnessed Maisrie's devotion to her grandfather, her gentle
-forbearance and consideration, her skilful humouring of him, and her
-never-failing faith in him, must have got to know what kind of man was
-old George Bethune.
-
-And yet, when Vincent turned to the letter, it seemed terribly simple,
-and straightforward, and sincere. There was no vindictiveness in it at
-all; rather there was a pained surprise on the part of the writer that a
-loyal Scot--one, too, who had been admitted into that fraternity of
-song-writing exiles over the water--should have been guilty of such a
-flagrant breach of trust. Then Lord Musselburgh's patronage, as the
-young man knew very well, had taken the form of a cheque; so that the
-charge brought by the writer of this letter practically was that George
-Bethune had obtained, and might even now be obtaining, money by fraud
-and false pretences. It was a bewildering thing--an impossible
-thing--to think of. And now, as he strove to construct all sorts of
-explanatory hypotheses, there seemed to stand in the background the
-visionary form of Mrs. Ellison; and her eyes were cold and inquiring.
-How had she come to suspect? It was not likely that she could be
-familiar with the Scotch-American newspaper offices of the United
-States.
-
-No, he could make nothing of it; his perplexity only increased. All
-kinds of doubts, surmises, possible excuses went chasing each other
-through his brain. Perhaps it was only literary vanity that had
-prompted the old man to steal this project when it was placed before
-him? Or perhaps he thought he had a better right to it, from his wide
-knowledge of the subject? Vincent knew little of the laws and bye-laws
-of the literary world; perhaps this was but a bit of rivalry carried too
-far; and in any case, supposing the old man had erred in his eagerness
-to claim this topic as his own, surely that did not prove him to be a
-charlatan all the way through, still less a professional impostor? But
-then his making use of this scheme to obtain money--and that not only
-from Lord Musselburgh? Oh, well (the young man tried to convince
-himself) there might not be so much harm in that. No doubt he looked
-forward to issuing the volume, and giving his patrons value in return.
-Old George Bethune, as he knew, was quite careless about pecuniary
-matters: for example, if the bill for those little dinners at the
-various restaurants was paid by some one, that was enough; the old
-gentleman made no further inquiries. He was content to let his young
-friend settle these trivial details; and Master Vin was willing enough.
-In fact, the latter had devised a system by which the awkwardness of
-calling for the bill in Maisrie's presence was avoided; this system
-worked admirably; and Mr. Bethune asked no questions. Doubtless, if he
-had remembered, or taken the trouble, he would have paid his shot like
-anyone else.
-
-But amid all these conflicting speculations, there was one point on
-which the mind of this young man remained clear and unswerving; and that
-was that whatever might be the character or career of old George
-Bethune, his principles or his practice, Maisrie was as far apart and
-dissociated from them as if worlds intervened. If there had been any
-malfeasance in this matter, she, at least, was no sharer in it. And the
-more he pondered, the more anxious he became to know whether Maisrie had
-any idea of the position in which her grandfather was placed. How much
-would he be entitled to tell her, supposing she was in ignorance? And
-when could he hope for an opportunity? And then again, failing an
-opportunity, how was he to go and spend the evening with those two
-friends of his, pretending to be entirely engrossed by their little
-amusements and occupations outdoors and in, while all the time there was
-lying in his pocket this letter, unanswered and perhaps unanswerable?
-
-Fortune favoured him. Towards evening, a little before six o'clock, he
-heard a door shut on the other side of the street; and, lifting his
-head, he perceived that it was Mr. Bethune who had just come out of the
-house, alone. Here was a chance not to be missed. Waiting for a couple
-of minutes, to make sure that the coast was clear, he passed downstairs,
-crossed the little thoroughfare, and knocked. The landlady told him
-that Miss Bethune was upstairs, and upstairs he went. The next moment a
-voice that he knew well invited him to enter, and therewithal the two
-young people found themselves face to face.
-
-"You are early," she said, with a little smile of welcome, as she
-stopped in her sewing.
-
-"Yes," said he, and he added quite frankly, "I saw your father go out,
-and I wished to speak with you alone. The fact is, Maisrie," he
-continued, taking a chair opposite her, "I have heard from America
-to-day about that proposal I made--to get some one to collect materials
-for your grandfather's book; and the answer is rather a strange one--I
-don't quite understand--perhaps you can tell me something about it." He
-hesitated, and then went on: "Maisrie, I suppose it never occurred to
-you that--that some one else in America might be proposing to bring out
-a similar book?"
-
-She looked up quickly, and with a certain apprehension in her eyes.
-
-"Oh, yes, I knew. My grandfather told me there had been talk of such a
-thing. What have you heard?"
-
-He stared at her.
-
-"You knew?" said he. "Then surely you might have told me!"
-
-There was something in his tone--some touch of reproach--that brought
-the blood to her face; and yet she answered calmly and without
-resentment----
-
-"Did I not tell you?--nor my grandfather? But perhaps neither of us
-thought it of much importance. It was only some vague talk, as I
-understood; for everyone must have known that no one was so familiar
-with the subject as my grandfather, and that it would be foolish to try
-to interfere with him. At the same time I have always been anxious that
-he should get on with the book, for various reasons; and if you have
-heard anything that will induce him to begin at once, so much the
-better."
-
-It was clear that she was wholly in ignorance of the true state of the
-case.
-
-"No," said he, watching her the while. "What I have heard will not have
-that effect, but rather the reverse. To tell you the plain truth, the
-American or Scotch-American writer has finished his book, and it will be
-out almost directly."
-
-She sprang to her feet with an involuntary gesture, and stood still for
-a moment, her lips grown suddenly pale, and her eyes bewildered: and
-then she turned away from him to hide her emotion, and walked to the
-window. Instantly he followed her.
-
-"Maisrie, what is the matter!" he exclaimed in astonishment, for he
-found that tears had sprung to her eyes.
-
-"Oh, it is a shame--it is a shame," she said, in broken accents, and her
-hands were clenched, "to steal an old man's good name from him, and that
-for so small a thing! What harm had he ever done them? The book was
-such a small thing--they might have left it to him--what can they gain
-from it----"
-
-"But Maisrie----!"
-
-"Oh, you don't understand, Vincent, you don't understand at all," she
-said, in a despairing sort of way, "how my grandfather will be
-compromised! He undertook to bring out the book; he got friends to help
-him with money; and now--now--what will they think?--what can I say to
-them?--what can I do? I--I must go to them--but--but what can I say?"
-
-Her tears were running afresh now; and at sight of them the young man
-threw to the winds all his doubts and conjectures concerning George
-Bethune's honesty. That was not the question now.
-
-"No, you shall not go to them!" said he, with indignant eyes.
-"You?--you go to any one--in that way? No, you shall not. I will go.
-It is a question of money: I will pay them their money back. Tell me
-who they are, and the amounts; and they shall have every farthing of
-their money back, and at once: what can they ask for more?"
-
-For a second she regarded him with a swift glance of more than
-gratitude; but it was only to shake her head.
-
-"No, how could I allow you to do that? What explanation could you make?
-There must be some other way--often I have wished that ray grandfather
-would let me try to earn something--I am willing enough--and I am never
-sure of my grandfather, because he can believe things so easily." She
-had grown calmer now; and over her face there had come the curious look
-of resignation that he had noticed when first he saw her, and that
-seemed so strange in a young girl. "I might have expected this," she
-went on, absently and sadly. "My grandfather can persuade himself of
-anything: if he thinks a thing is done, that is enough. I am sure I
-have urged him to get on with this book--not that I thought anybody
-could be so mean and cruel as to step in and forestall him--but that he
-might get free from those obligations; but I suppose when he had once
-arranged all the materials in his own mind he felt that the rest was
-easy enough and that there was no hurry. He takes things so
-lightly--and now--the humiliation--well, I shall have to bear that----"
-
-"I say you shall not," he said, hotly. "I claim the privilege of a
-friend, and you cannot refuse. Who are the people to whom your
-grandfather is indebted over this volume?" he demanded.
-
-"For one, there is Lord Musselburgh," she said, but indifferently, as if
-no hope lay that way. "And there is Mr. Carmichael, who owns an
-Edinburgh paper--the _Chronicle_."
-
-"Very well," said he, promptly. "What is to hinder my explaining to
-them that circumstances have occurred to prevent Mr. Bethune bringing
-out the volume he had projected; and that he begs to return them the
-money they had been good enough to advance?"
-
-She shook her head again and sighed.
-
-"No. It is very kind of you: You are always kind. But I could not
-accept it. I must try some way myself--though I am rather helpless: it
-is so difficult to get my grandfather to see things. I told you before:
-he lives in a world of imagination, and he can persuade himself that
-everything is well, no matter how we are situated. But it was shameful
-of them," she said, with her indignation returning, and her lips
-becoming at once proud and tremulous, "to cheat an old man out of so
-poor and small a thing! Why, they all knew he was going to write this
-book--all the writers themselves--they were known to himself
-personally--and glad enough they were to send him their verses. Well,
-perhaps they are not to blame. Perhaps they may have been told that he
-had given up the idea--that is quite likely. At all events, I don't
-envy the miserable creature who has gone and taken advantage of my
-grandfather's absence--"
-
-She could say no more just then, for there was a sound below of the door
-being opened and shut; and the next minute they could hear old George
-Bethune coming with his active step up the flight of stairs, while he
-sang aloud, in fine bravura fashion, "'Tis the march--'tis the
-march--'tis the march of the Cameron men!"
-
-The little dinner in the restaurant that evening was altogether unlike
-those that had preceded it. The simple and innocent gaiety--the sense of
-snugness and good-comradeship--appeared to have fled, leaving behind it
-a certain awkwardness and restraint. Vincent was entirely perplexed.
-The story he had heard from America was in no way to be reconciled with
-Maisrie's interpretation of her grandfather's position; but it was
-possible that the old man had concealed from her certain material facts;
-or perhaps had been able to blind himself to them. But what troubled
-the young man most of all was to notice that the old look of pensive
-resignation had returned to Maisrie's face. For a time a brighter life
-had shone there; the natural animation and colour of youth had appeared
-in her cheeks; and her eyes had laughter in them, and smiles, and
-kindness and gratitude; but all that had gone now--quite suddenly, as it
-seemed--and there had come back that strange sadness, that look of
-unresisting and hopeless acquiescence. Alone of the little party of
-three George Bethune retained his usual equanimity; nay, on this
-particular evening he appeared to be in especial high spirits; and in
-his careless and garrulous good-humour he took little heed of the
-silence and constraint of the two younger folk. They made all the
-better audience; and he could enforce and adorn his main argument with
-all the illustrations he could muster; he was allowed to have everything
-his own way.
-
-And perhaps Vincent, thinking of Maisrie, and her tears, and the
-hopelessness and solitariness of her position, may have been inclined to
-resent what he could not but regard as a callous and culpable
-indifference. At all events, he took the first opportunity that
-presented itself of saying--
-
-"I hope I am not the bearer of ill-news, Mr. Bethune; but I have just
-heard from New York that someone over there has taken up your subject,
-and that a volume on the Scotch poets in America is just about ready,
-and will be published immediately."
-
-Maisrie glanced timidly at her grandfather; but there was nothing to
-fear on his account; he was not one to quail.
-
-"Oh, indeed, indeed," said he, with a lofty magnanimity. "Well, I hope
-it will be properly and satisfactorily done: I hope it will be done in a
-way worthy of the subject. Maisrie, pass the French mustard, if you
-please. A grand subject: for surely these natural and simple
-expressions of the human heart are as deeply interesting as the more
-finished, the more literary, productions of the professional poet. A
-single verse, rough and rugged as you like--and the living man stands
-revealed. Ay, ay, so the book is coming out. Well, I hope the public
-will be lenient; I hope the public will understand that these men are
-not professional poets, who have studied and written in leisure all
-their lives; it is but a homely lilt they offer; but it is genuine; it
-is from the heart--and it speaks to the heart----"
-
-"But, grandfather," said Maisrie, "you were to have written the book!"
-
-"What matters it who compiles the pages?--that is nothing at all; that
-is in a measure mechanical. I am only anxious that it should be well
-done, with tact, and discretion, and modesty," he continued--and with
-such obvious sincerity that Vincent was more than ever perplexed. "For
-the sake of old Scotland I would willingly give my help for nothing--a
-little guidance here and there--a few biographical facts--even an
-amended line. But after all the men must speak for themselves; and well
-they will speak, if the public will but remember that these verses have
-for the most part been thought of during the busy rush of a commercial
-life, and written down in a chance evening hour. It will be a message
-across the sea, to show that Scotland's sons have not forgotten her.
-MacGregor Crerar--Donald Ramsay--Hugh Ainslie--Evan MacColl--Andrew
-Wanless--I wonder if they have got Wanless's address to the robin that
-was sent to him from Scotland--you remember, Maisrie?
-
- 'There's mair than you, my bonnie bird,
- Hae crossed the raging main,
- Wha mourn the blythe, the happy days,
- They'll never see again.
- Sweet bird, come sing a sang to me,
- Unmindfu' o' our ills;
- And let us think we're ance again
- 'Mang our ain heather hills!'
-
-The book will be welcomed by many a proud heart, and with moist eyes,
-when it gets away up among the glens, to be read by the fireside and
-repeated at the plough; and I think, Maisrie, when you and I take a walk
-along Princes-street in Edinburgh we may see more than one or two copies
-in the bookseller's windows. Then I hope _Blackwood_ will have a
-friendly word for it; and I am sure Mr. Carmichael will allow me to give
-it a hearty greeting in the _Weekly Chronicle_."
-
-"But, grandfather," said Maisrie, almost piteously, "surely you forget
-that you undertook to bring out this book yourself!"
-
-"Yes, yes," said he, with perfect good humour. "But 'the best laid
-schemes o' mice and men, gang aft agley.' And I do not grudge to some
-other what might have been mine--I mean the association of one's name
-with such a band of true and loyal Scotchmen. No; I do not grudge it;
-on the contrary I am prepared to give the volume the most generous
-welcome in my power; it is not for a brother Scot to find fault in such
-a case, or to be niggard of his praise. I hope we are capable of
-showing to the world that 'we're a' John Thampson's bairns.'"
-
-Maisrie was growing desperate. Her grandfather would not understand;
-and how was she to speak plain--with Vincent listening to every word?
-And yet she knew that now he was aware of all the circumstances;
-concealment was impossible; and so she forced herself to utterance.
-
-"Grandfather," said she--and her face was flushed a rose-red, though she
-seemed to take no heed of her embarrassment, so earnest and imploring
-was her speech, "You cannot forget the obligations you put yourself
-under--to Lord Musselburgh and Mr. Carmichael, and perhaps others. You
-undertook to write the book. If that is impossible now, it is a great
-misfortune; but at least there is one thing you must do; you must
-explain to them what has happened, and give them back the money."
-
-The old man could no longer shelter himself behind his gay and
-discursive optimism; he frowned impatiently.
-
-"I have already told you, Maisrie," said he, in severely measured
-accents, "--and you are grown up now, you might understand for
-yourself--that there are times and seasons when the introduction of
-business matters is uncalled for, and, in fact, unbecoming; and one of
-these is, surely, when we come out to spend a pleasant evening with our
-young friend here. I do not think it necessary that we should discuss
-our business affairs before him--I presume he would consider such a
-thing somewhat inappropriate at a dinner-table."
-
-Maisrie's lips quivered; and her grandfather saw it. Instantly he
-changed his tone.
-
-"Come, come," said he, with a cheerful good nature. "Enough, enough. I
-can quite comprehend how the _res angusta domi_ may tend to give money,
-and questions of money, an over-prominence in the minds of women. But
-money, and the obligations that money may place us under, are surely a
-very secondary affair, to one who looks at human nature with a larger
-view. I thank God," he went on, with much complacency, "that I have
-never been the slave of avarice, that even in times of great necessity I
-have kept subsidiary things in their proper sphere. I do not boast; our
-disposition is as much a matter of inheritance as the shape of our
-fingers or feet; and that disposition may be handed down without the
-accompanying circumstances that developed it. You follow me, Mr.
-Harris?"
-
-"Oh, yes," said the younger man, gloomily; that quiver of Maisrie's lips
-was still in his mind.
-
-For the first time since he had known them Vincent was glad to get away
-from his companions that night: the situation in which he found them and
-himself alike involved was altogether so strange that he wanted time to
-think over it. And first of all he put aside that matter of the
-Scotch-American book as of minor importance: no doubt some kind of
-explanation was possible, if all the facts were revealed. It was when
-he came to consider the position and surroundings of Maisrie Bethune
-that the young man grew far more seriously concerned; indeed, his heart
-became surcharged with an immeasurable pity and longing to help. He
-began to understand how it was that a premature sadness and resignation
-was written on that beautiful face, and why her eyes so rarely smiled;
-and he could guess at the origin of that look of hopelessness, as though
-she despaired of getting her grandfather to acknowledge the realities
-and the responsibilities of the actual life around him. To Vincent the
-circumstances in which this young girl was placed seemed altogether
-tragic; and when he regarded the future that might lie before her, it
-was with a blank dismay.
-
-Moreover, he now no longer sought to conceal from himself the nature of
-this engrossing interest in all that concerned her, this fascination and
-glamour that drew him towards her, this constant solicitude about her
-that haunted him day and night. Love had originally sprung from pity,
-perhaps; her loneliness had appealed to him, and her youth, and the
-wistful beauty of her eyes. But even now that he knew what caused his
-heart to leap when he heard her footfall on the stairs, or when he
-happened to look up at the table to find her regard fixed on him, there
-was no wild desire for a declaration of his fond hopes and dreams.
-Rather he hung back--as if something mysteriously sacred surrounded her.
-He had asked her for a flower: that was all. Probably she had
-forgotten. There seemed no place for the pretty toyings of love-making
-in the life of this girl, who appeared to have missed the gaiety of
-childhood, and perhaps might slip on into middle-age hardly knowing what
-youth had been. And yet what a rose was ready to blow there--he said to
-himself--if only sunshine, and sweet rains, and soft airs were
-propitious! It was the wide, white days of June that were wanted for
-her, before the weeks and the months went by, and the darkness and the
-winter came.
-
-No, he did not speak; perhaps he was vaguely aware that any abrupt
-disclosure on his part might startle her into maiden reserve; whereas in
-their present relations there existed the frankest confidence. She made
-no secret of the subdued and happy content she experienced in this
-constant companionship; her eyes lit up when he approached; oftentimes
-she called him 'Vincent' without seeming to notice it. She had given
-him a flower?--yes, as she would have given him a handful at any or
-every hour of the day, if she fancied it would please him, and without
-ulterior thought. They were almost as boy and girl together in this
-daily intercourse, this open and avowed comradeship, this easy and
-unrestricted familiarity. But sometimes Vincent looked ahead--with dim
-forebodings. He had not forgotten the murmur of that wide sea of
-separation that he had beheld as it were in a vision; the sound of it,
-faint, and sad, and ominous, still lingered in his ears.
-
-It was in one of these darker moments that he resolved, at whatever
-risk, to acquaint old George Bethune with something of his irresolute
-hopes and fears. The opportunity arrived quite unexpectedly. One
-morning he was as usual on his way to his lodgings when, at the corner
-of Upper Grosvenor Street, he met Mr. Bethune coming into Park Lane
-alone.
-
-"Maisrie is well?" Vincent asked, in sudden alarm, for it was the rarest
-thing in the world to find grandfather and granddaughter separated.
-
-"Oh, yes, yes," the old man said. "She has some household matters to
-attend to--dressmaking, I think. Poor lass, she has to be economical;
-indeed, I think she carries it to an extreme; but it's no use arguing
-with Maisrie; I let her have her own way."
-
-"I wanted to speak to you--about her," Vincent said, and he turned and
-walked with the old man, across the street into Hyde Park. "I have
-often wished to speak to you--and--and of course there was no chance
-when she herself was present--"
-
-He hesitated, casting about for a beginning; then he pulled himself
-together, and boldly flung himself into it.
-
-"I hope you won't take it for impertinence," said he. "I don't mean it
-that way--very different from that. But you yourself, sir, you may
-remember, you spoke to me about Maisrie when we were down at Henley
-together--about what her future might be, if anything happened to
-you--and you seemed concerned. Well, it is easy to understand how you
-should be troubled--it is terrible to think of a young girl like
-that--so sensitive, too--being alone in the world, and not over
-well-provided for, as you have hinted to me. It would be so strange and
-unusual a position for a young girl to be in--without relations--without
-friends--and having no one to advise her or protect her in any way. Of
-course you will say it is none of my business----"
-
-"But you would like to have it made your business," said old George
-Bethune, with a bland and good-natured frankness that considerably
-astounded his stammering companion. "My dear young friend, I know
-perfectly what you would say. Do you think I have been blind to the
-friendly and even affectionate regard you have shown towards my
-granddaughter all this while, or to the pleasure she has enjoyed in
-having you take part in our small amusements? No, I have not been
-blind. I have looked on and approved. It has been an added interest to
-our lives; between you and her I have observed the natural sympathy of
-similar age; and I have been glad to see her enjoying the society of one
-nearer her own years. But now--now, if I guess aright, you wish for
-some more definite tie."
-
-"Would it not be better?" the young man said, breathlessly. "If there
-were some clear understanding, would not a great deal of the uncertainty
-with regard to the future be removed? You see, Mr. Bethune, I haven't
-spoken a word to Maisrie--not a word. I have been afraid. Perhaps I
-have been mistaken in imagining that she might in time--be inclined to
-listen to me----"
-
-He stopped: then he proceeded more slowly--and it might have been
-noticed that his cheek was a little paler than usual. "Yes, it may be
-as you say. Perhaps it is only that she likes the companionship of one
-of her own age. That is natural. And then she is very kind and
-generous: I may have been mistaken in thinking there was a possibility
-of something more."
-
-He was silent now and abstracted: as he walked on he saw nothing of what
-was around him.
-
-"Come, come, my friend!" George Bethune exclaimed, with much benignity.
-"Do not vex yourself with useless speculations; you are looking too far
-ahead; you and she are both too young to burden yourselves with grave
-responsibilities. A boyish and girlish attachment is a very pretty and
-engaging thing; but it must not be taken too seriously----"
-
-And here for a second a flash of resentment fired through Vincent's
-heart: was it well of this old man to speak so patronisingly of Maisrie
-as but a child when it was he himself who had thrust upon her more than
-the responsibilities and anxieties of a grown woman?
-
-"Take things as they are! Do you consider that you have much cause to
-complain, either the one or the other of you?" old George Bethune
-resumed, in a still lighter strain. "You have youth and strength, good
-health, and a constant interest in the life going on around you: is not
-that sufficient? Why, here am I, nearing my three score years and ten;
-and every morning that I awake I know that there lies before me another
-beautiful, interesting, satisfactory day, that I am determined to enjoy
-to the very utmost of my power. To-morrow?--to-morrow never yet
-belonged to anybody--never was of any use to anybody: give me to-day,
-and I am content to let to-morrow shift for itself! Yes," he continued,
-in firm and proud and almost joyous accents, and he held his head erect,
-"you may have caught me in some unguarded moment--some moment of nervous
-weakness or depression--beginning to inquire too curiously into the
-future; but that was a transient folly; I thank God that it is not my
-habitual mood! Repining, complaining, anticipating: what good do you
-get from that? Surely I have had as much reason to repine and complain
-as most; but I do not waste my breath in remonstrating with 'fickle
-Fortune.' 'Fickle Fortune!'" he exclaimed, in his scorn--"if the
-ill-favoured jade were to come near me I would give her a wallop across
-the buttocks with my staff, and bid her get out of my road! 'Fickle
-Fortune!' She may 'perplex the poor sons of a day;' but she shall never
-perplex me--by God and Saint Ringan!"
-
-He laughed aloud in his pride.
-
-"Why," said he, suddenly changing into quite another vein, "have you not
-yet come to know that the one priceless thing to think of in the
-world--the one extraordinary thing--is that at this precise moment you
-can see? For millions and millions of years these skies have been
-shining, and the clouds moving, and the seas running blue all round the
-shores; and you were dead and blind to them; unknowing and unknown.
-Generation after generation of men--thousands and thousands of
-them--were looking at these things; they knew the hills and the clouds
-and the fields; the world existed for them; but you could see nothing,
-you were as if lying dead. Then comes your brief instant; it is your
-turn; your eyes are opened; and for a little while--a passing
-second--the universe is revealed to you. Don't you perceive that the
-marvellous thing is that out of the vast millions of ages it should be
-this one particular moment, this present moment, that happens to be
-given to you? And instead of receiving it with amazement and wonder and
-joy, why, you must begin to fret and worry and lay schemes, as if you
-were unaware that the gates of the empty halls of Pluto were waiting to
-engulf you and shut you up once more in darkness and blindness. Look at
-those elm-trees--at the water down there--at the moving clouds: isn't it
-wonderful to think that in the immeasurable life of the world this
-should happen to be the one moment when these things are made visible to
-you?"
-
-Vincent perceived in a kind of way what the old man meant; but he did
-not understand why this should make him less concerned about Maisrie's
-position, or less eagerly covetous of winning her tender regard.
-
-"Well, well," said old George Bethune, "perhaps it is but natural that
-youth should be impatient; while old age may well be content with such
-small and placid comforts as may be met with. I should have thought
-there was not much to complain of in our present manner of life--if you
-will allow me to include you in our tiny microcosm. It is not exciting;
-it is simple, and wholesome; and I hope not altogether base and gross.
-And as regards Maisrie, surely you and she have enough of each other's
-society even as matters stand. Let well alone, my young friend; let
-well alone; that is my advice to you. And I may say there are especial
-and important reasons why I should not wish her to be bound by any
-pledge. You know that I do not care to waste much thought on what may
-lie ahead of us; but still, at the same time, there might at any moment
-happen certain things which would make a great difference in Maisrie's
-circumstances----"
-
-Vincent had been listening in a kind of absent and hopeless way; but
-these few words instantly aroused his attention: perhaps this was the
-real reason why the old man wished Maisrie to remain free?
-
-"A great and marvellous change indeed," he continued, with some increase
-of dignity in his manner and in his mode of speech. "A change which
-would affect me also, though that would be of little avail now. But as
-regards my granddaughter, she might be called upon to fill a position
-very different from that she occupies at present; and I should not wish
-her to be hampered by anything pertaining to her former manner of life.
-Not that she would ever prove forgetful of past kindness; that is not in
-her nature; but in these new circumstances she might find herself
-confronted by other duties. Enough said, I hope, on that point. And
-well I know," he added, with something of a grand air, "that in whatever
-sphere Maisrie Bethune may be placed, she will act worthily of her name
-and of the obligations it entails."
-
-He suddenly paused. There was a poorly-clad woman going by, carrying in
-one arm a baby, while with the other hand she half dragged along a small
-boy of five or six. She did not look like a professional London beggar,
-nor yet like a country tramp; but of her extreme wretchedness there
-could be no doubt; while there was a pinched look as of hunger in her
-cheeks.
-
-"Wait a bit!--where are you going?" old George Bethune said to her, in
-blunt and ready fashion.
-
-The woman turned round startled and afraid.
-
-"I am making for home, sir," she said, timidly.
-
-"Where's that?" he demanded.
-
-"Out Watford way, sir--Abbot's Langley it is."
-
-"Where have you come from?"
-
-"From Leatherhead, sir."
-
-"On foot all the way?"
-
-"Yes, indeed, sir," she said, with a bit of a sigh.
-
-"And with very little food, I warrant?" said he.
-
-"Little indeed, sir."
-
-"Have you any money?"
-
-"Yes, sir--a matter of a few coppers left. I gave what I had to my old
-mother--she thought she was dying, and sent for me to bring the two
-little boys to see her--but she's better, sir, and now I'm making for
-home again."
-
-"Oh, you gave what you had to your mother? Well," said he, deliberately,
-"I don't know whether what I have will amount to as much, but whatever
-it is you are welcome to it."
-
-He dived into his trousers pockets and eventually produced about half a
-handful of shillings and pence; then he searched a small
-waistcoat-pocket and brought forth two sovereigns. It was all his
-wealth.
-
-"Here, take that, and in God's name get yourself some food, woman!" said
-he, unconsciously lapsing into a pronounced Scotch accent. "You look
-starved. And this bit of a laddie, here--buy him some sweet things as
-well as bread and butter when you get up to the shops. And then when
-you're outside the town, you'll just give some honest fellow a shilling,
-and you'll get a cast of an empty cart to help you on your road. Well,
-good-day to ye--no, no, take what there is, I tell ye, woman!--bless me,
-you'll need most of it before you get to your own fireside. On your
-ways, now!--and when you reach the shops, don't forget the barley-sugar
-for this young shaver."
-
-So he turned away, leaving the poor woman so overwhelmed that she had
-hardly a word of thanks; and when he had gone for some little distance
-all he said was--with something of a rueful laugh--
-
-"There went my luncheon; for I promised Maisrie I should not return home
-till near dinner-time."
-
-"And you have left yourself without a farthing?" the young man
-exclaimed. "Well, that's all right--I can lend you a few sovereigns."
-
-"No, no," said old George Bethune, with a smile, and he held up his hand
-in deprecation. "I am well pleased now; and if I should suffer any
-pangs of starvation during the day, I shall be glad to think that I can
-endure them better than that poor creature with the long tramp before
-her. To-night," said he, rubbing his palms together with much
-satisfaction, "to-night, when we meet at Mentavisti's, I shall be all
-the hungrier and all the happier. Ah, must you go now?--good-bye, then!
-We shall see you at half-past six, I suppose; and meantime, my friend,
-dismiss from your mind those cares and anxious thoughts about the
-future. 'To the gods belongs to-morrow!'"
-
-Now this little incident that had just happened in Hyde Park comforted
-Vincent exceedingly. Here was something definite that he could proudly
-set against the vague and unworthy suspicions of Mrs. Ellison. Surely
-the man was no plausible impostor, no charlatan, no crafty schemer, who
-could so readily empty his pockets, and look forward to a day's
-starvation, in order to help a poor and unknown vagrant-woman? No doubt
-it was but part and parcel of his habitual and courageous disregard of
-consequences, his yielding to the generous impulse of the moment; but,
-if the truth must be told, Master Vin was at times almost inclined to
-envy old George Bethune his splendid audacity and self-confidence. Why
-should the younger man be the one to take forethought for the morrow;
-while the venerable gray beard was gay as a lark, delighted with the
-present hour, and defiant of anything that might happen? And what if
-the younger man were to follow the precepts of the elder, and lapse into
-a careless content? Their way of living, as George Bethune had pointed
-out, was simple, happy, and surely harmless. There were those three
-forming a little coterie all by themselves; enjoying each other's
-society; interested in each other's pursuits. The hours of the daytime
-were devoted to individual work; then came the glad reunion of the
-evening and the sallying forth to this or the other restaurant;
-thereafter the little dinner in the corner, with its glimpses of foreign
-folk, and its gay talk filled with patriotism and poetry and
-reminiscences of other lands; finally the hushed enchantment of that
-little parlour, with Maisrie and her violin, with dominoes, and
-discussions literary and political, while always and ever there reigned
-a perfect frankness and good-fellowship. Yes, it seemed a happy kind of
-existence, for these three. And was not old George Bethune in the right
-in thinking that the young people should not hamper themselves by any
-too grave responsibilities? A boyish and girlish attachment (as he
-deemed it to be) was a pretty and amusing and engaging thing; quite a
-little idyll, in fact--but not to be taken too seriously. And where the
-future was all so uncertain, was it not better to leave it alone?
-
-Specious representations, indeed! But this young man, who had his own
-views and ways of thinking, remained stubbornly unconvinced. It was
-because the future was so vague that he wanted it made more definite;
-and as he thought of Maisrie, and of what might befall her when she was
-alone in the world, and as he thought of his own far-reaching resolves
-and purposes, he did not in the least consider the relationship now
-existing between him and her as being merely a pretty little pastoral
-episode, that would lead to nothing. No doubt their present way of
-living had many charms and fascinations, if only it would last. But it
-would not last; it was impossible it should last. Looking back over
-these past months, Vincent was surely grateful enough for all the
-pleasant and intimate companionship he had enjoyed; but his temperament
-was not like that of George Bethune; the passing moment was not
-everything to him. He had an old head on young shoulders; and it needed
-no profound reflection to tell him that life could not always consist of
-the Restaurant Mentavisti and _La Claire Fontaine_.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- BY NORTHERN SEAS.
-
-
-Here, in front of the great, square, old-fashioned Scotch mansion, which
-was pleasantly lit up by the morning sun, stood the family waggonette
-which had just been filled by those of the house-party who were bound
-for church; and here, too, in the spacious porch, was Mrs. Ellison,
-smiling her adieux with rather a sad air.
-
-"Good-bye, dear," said her kindly hostess. "I hope you will have got
-rid of your headache by the time we get back." And therewith the
-carriage was driven away along the pebbled pathway, through an avenue of
-magnificent wide-spreading elms.
-
-Then the tall and graceful young widow, who carried a book in her hand,
-glanced around her. There was no living thing near except a white
-peacock that was solemnly stalking across the lawn. Mrs. Ellison
-strolled towards a hammock slung between two maples, and stood there for
-a moment, and considered. Should she attempt it? There was no onlooker,
-supposing some slight accident befell. Finally, however, her courage
-gave way; she returned to the front of the house; and took possession of
-a long, low lounging-chair, where she could sit in the sun, and yet have
-the pages of her book in shadow.
-
-There was a footfall behind her: Lord Musselburgh made his appearance,
-smoking a cigarette.
-
-"Why," said she, with a prettily affected surprise, "haven't you gone to
-church? I made sure you had walked on."
-
-"How could I leave you all by yourself," said the young man, with tender
-sympathy, "and you suffering from a headache?"
-
-Then she professed to be vexed and impatient.
-
-"Oh, do go away to church!" she said. "You can be in plenty of time, if
-you walk fast enough. If you stop here you know what will go on at
-lunch. Those Drexel girls can look more mischief than any other twenty
-girls could say or do."
-
-"Oh, no," said he, plaintively, "don't send me away! Let us go for a
-walk rather. You know, a woman's headache is like her hat--she can put
-it on or off when she likes. Come!"
-
-"I consider you are very impertinent," said she, with something of
-offended dignity. "Do you think I shammed a headache in order to stay
-behind?"
-
-"I don't think anything," said he, discreetly.
-
-"You will be saying next that it was to have this meeting with you?"
-
-"Why, who could dare to imagine such a thing!"
-
-"Oh, very well, very well," said she, with a sudden change to
-good-nature, as she rose from the chair. "I forgive you. And I will be
-with you in a second."
-
-She was hardly gone a couple of minutes; but in that brief space of time
-she had managed to make herself sufficiently picturesque; for to the
-simple and neat grey costume which clad her tall and slim and elegant
-figure she had added a bold-sweeping hat of black velvet and black
-feathers, while round her neck she had wound a black boa, its two long
-tails depending in front. Thus there was no colour about her, save what
-shone in her perfect complexion, and in the light and expression of her
-shrewd, and dangerous, and yet grave and demure blue eyes.
-
-"And really and frankly," said she, as they left the house together, "I
-am not sorry to have a chance of a quiet talk with you; for I want to
-tell you about my nephew; I am sure you are almost as much interested in
-him as I am; and you would be as sorry as I could be if anything were to
-happen to him. And I am afraid something is going to happen to him.
-His letters to me have entirely changed of late. You know how proud Vin
-is by nature--and scornful, too, when you don't act up to his lofty
-standard; and when I ventured to hint that he might keep his eyes open
-in dealing with that old mountebank and his pretty granddaughter, oh!
-the tempestuous indignation of my young gentleman! He seemed to think
-that a creature such as I--filled with such base suspicions--was not fit
-to live. Well, I did not quarrel with my handsome boy; in fact, I
-rather admired his rage and disdain of me; it was part of the singleness
-of his nature; for he believes everybody to be as straightforward and
-sincere as himself; and he has a very fine notion of loyalty towards his
-friends. And vindictive, too, the young villain was; I can tell you I
-was made to feel the enormity of my transgression; I was left to wallow
-in that quagmire of unworthy doubt in which I had voluntarily plunged
-myself. So matters went on; and I could only hope for one of two
-things--either that he might find out something about those people that
-would sever his connection with them, or that his passing fancy for the
-girl would gradually fade away. I made sure he would tire of that
-oracular old humbug; or else he would discover there was nothing at all
-behind the mysterious eyes and the tragic solemnity of that artful young
-madam. Oh, mind you," she continued, as they walked along under the
-over-branching maples, amid a rustle of withered October leaves, "mind
-you, I don't suspect her quite as much as I suspect the venerable Druid;
-and I don't recall anything that I said about her. I admit that she
-beglamoured me with her singing of a French Canadian song; but what is
-that?--what can you tell of any one's moral or mental nature from a
-trick of singing--the thrill of a note--some peculiar quality of voice?
-Why, the greatest wretch of a man I ever knew had the most beautiful,
-innocent, honest brown eyes--they could make you believe anything--all
-the women said he was so good, and so different from other men--well, I
-will tell you that story some other time--I found out what the honesty
-of the clear brown eyes was worth."
-
-Here she was interrupted by his having to open an iron gate for her.
-When they passed through, they came in sight of a solitary little bay of
-cream-white sand, touched here and there with russet weed, and ending in
-a series of projecting rocky knolls covered with golden bracken; while
-before them lay the wide plain of the sea, ruffled into the intensest
-blue by a brisk breeze from the north. Still further away rose the great
-mountains of Mull, and the long stretch of the Morven hills, all of a
-faint, ethereal crimson-brown in the sunlight, with every glen and
-water-course traced in lines of purest ultramarine. They had all this
-shining world to themselves; and there was an absolute silence save for
-the continuous whisper of the ripples that broke along the rocks; whilst
-the indescribable murmur--the strange inarticulate voices--of the
-greater deep beyond seemed to fill all the listening air.
-
-"And I might have known I was mistaken in Vin's case," she went on,
-absently. "He was never the one to be caught by a pretty face, and be
-charmed with it for a time, and pass on and forget. He always kept aloof
-from that kind of thing--perhaps with a touch of impatient scorn. No; I
-might have known it was something more serious: so serious, indeed, is
-it, that he has at last condescended to appeal to me--fancy that!--fancy
-Vin coming down from his high horse, and appealing to me to be
-reasonable, to be considerate, and to stand his friend. And the pages
-he writes to persuade me! Really, if you were to believe him, you would
-think this old man one of the most striking and interesting figures the
-world has ever seen--so fearless in his pride, so patient in his
-poverty, so stout-hearted in his old age. Then his splendid enthusiasm
-about fine things in literature; his magnanimity over the wrongs he has
-suffered; his pathetic affection for his granddaughter and his tender
-care of her--why, you would take him to be one of the grandest human
-creatures that ever breathed the breath of life! Then about the girl:
-don't I remember _La Claire Fontaine_? Oh, yes, I remember _La Claire
-Fontaine_--and little else! You see, that is just where the trouble
-comes in as regards my nephew. Hard-headed as he is, and brusque of
-speech--sometimes, not always--he is just stuffed full of Quixotism; and
-I daresay it is precisely because this girl is shy and reserved, and has
-rather appealing eyes, that he imagines all kinds of wonderful things
-about her, and has made a saint of her, to be worshipped. A merry lass,
-with a saucy look and a clever tongue, would have no chance with Vin; he
-would stare at her--perhaps only half-disguising his contempt; and then,
-if you asked him what he thought of her he would probably say, with a
-curl of the lip, 'Impertinent tomboy!' But when he comes to speak of
-this one, why, you would think that all womanhood had undergone some
-process of deification in her solitary self. Come here, and by this
-divine lamp you shall read and understand whatever has been great and
-noble and pure and beautiful in all the song and story of the world! And
-yet perhaps it is not altogether absurd," the pretty Mrs. Ellison
-continued, with a bit of a sigh. "It is pathetic, rather. I wish there
-were a few more such men as that; the world could get on very well with
-a few more of them. But they don't seem to exist nowadays."
-
-"Ah, if you only knew! Perhaps your experience has been unfortunate,"
-her companion said, wistfully: whereupon the young widow, without
-turning her head towards him, perceptibly sniggered.
-
-"Oh, _you_!" she exclaimed, in derision. "You! You needn't pretend to
-come into that exalted category--no, indeed----"
-
-"I suppose people have been saying things about me to you," said he,
-with a certain affectation of being hurt. "But you needn't have
-believed them all the same."
-
-"People!" she said. "People! Why, everybody knows what you are! A
-professional breaker of poor young innocent girls' hearts. Haven't we
-all heard of you? Haven't we all heard how you went on in America? No
-such stories came home about Vin, I can assure you. Oh, we all know
-what you are!"
-
-"You may have heard one story," said he, somewhat stiffly; "but if you
-knew what it really was, you would see that it was nothing to joke
-about. Some time I will tell you. Some other time when you are in a
-more friendly, a more believing and sympathetic, mood."
-
-"Oh, yes," she said, laughing. "A very heart-rending story, no doubt!
-And you were deeply injured, of course, being so extremely innocent! You
-forget that I have seen you in a good many houses; you forget that I
-have been watching your goings-on with Louie Drexel, in this very place.
-Do you think I can't recognise the old hand--the expert--the artist?
-Lord Musselburgh, you can't deceive me."
-
-"Probably not," said he, sharply. "If all tales be true you have
-acquired some experience yourself."
-
-"Oh, who said that about me!" she demanded, with indignation (but her
-eyes were not indignant, they were rather darkly amused, if only he had
-made bold to look at them.) "Who dared to say such a thing? And of
-course you listened without a word of protest: probably you assented!
-What it is to have friends! But perhaps some day I, also, may have a
-little story to tell you; and then you may understand me a little
-better."
-
-Here there was another farm-gate for him to open, so that their talk was
-again interrupted. Then they passed under a series of lofty grey crags
-hung with birch, and hazel, and rowan, all in their gorgeous autumnal
-tints; until they came in sight of another secluded little bay, with
-silver ripples breaking along the sand, and with small outlying islands
-covered with orange seaweed where they were not white with gulls. And
-here was a further stretch of that wind-swept, dark blue, striated sea,
-with the lonely hills of Morven and Kingairloch, sun-dappled and
-cloud-dappled, rising into the fair turquoise sky. There was a scent of
-dew-wet grass mingling with the stronger odour of the seaweed the breeze
-was blowing freshly in. And always there came to them the long,
-unceasing, multitudinous murmur of those moving waters, that must have
-sounded to them so great and vast a thing beside the small trivialities
-of their human speech.
-
-"Have you read Vin's article in the _Imperial Review_?" said Mrs.
-Ellison, flicking at a thistle with her sun-shade.
-
-"Not yet. But I saw it announced. About American State Legislatures,
-isn't it, or something of that kind?"
-
-"It seemed to me very ably and clearly written," she said. "But that is
-not the point. I gather that Vin has been contemplating all kinds of
-contingencies; and that he is now trying to qualify for the post of
-leader-writer on one of the daily newspapers. What does that mean?--it
-means that he is determined to marry this girl, and that he thinks it
-probable there may be a break between himself and his father in
-consequence. There may be?--there will be, I give you my word! My
-amiable brother-in-law's theories of Socialism and Fraternity and
-Universal Equality are very pretty toys to play with--and they have even
-gained him a sort of reputation through his letters to the _Times_; but
-he doesn't bring them into the sphere of actual life. Of course, Vin
-has his own little money; and I, for one, why, I shouldn't see him
-starve in any case; but I take it that he is already making provision
-for the future and its responsibilities. Now isn't that dreadful? I
-declare to you, Lord Musselburgh, that when I come down in the morning
-and find a letter from him lying on the hall-table, my heart sinks--just
-as if I heard the men on the stair bringing down a coffin. Because I
-know if he is captured by those penniless adventurers, it will be all
-over with my poor lad; he will be bound to them; he will have to support
-them; he will have to sacrifice friends and fortune, and a future surely
-such as never yet lay before any young man. Just think of it! Who ever
-had such possibilities before him? Who ever had so many friends, all
-expecting great things of him? Who ever was so petted and caressed and
-admired by those whose slightest regard is considered by the world at
-large an honour; and--I will say this for my boy---who ever deserved it
-more, or remained all through it so unspoiled, and simple, and manly?
-Oh, you don't know what he has been to me--what I have hoped for him--as
-if he were my only brother, and one to be proud of! His father is well
-known, no doubt; he has got a sort of academic reputation; but he is not
-liked; people don't talk about him as if--as if they cared for him. But
-Vincent could win hearts as well as fame: ah, do you think I don't
-know?--trust a woman to know! There is a strange kind of charm and
-fascination about him: I would put the most accomplished lady-killer in
-England in a drawing-room, and I know where the girls' eyes would go the
-moment my Vin made his appearance: perhaps it is because he is so
-honestly indifferent to them all. And it isn't women only; it isn't
-merely his good looks; every one, young and old, man and woman, is taken
-with him; there is about him a sort of magic and glamour of
-youth--and--and bright promise--and straightforward intention--oh, I
-can't tell you what!--but--but--it's something that makes me love him!"
-
-"That is clear enough," said he; and indeed there was a ring of
-sincerity in her tone, sometimes even a tremor in her voice--perhaps of
-pride.
-
-"Well," she resumed, as they strolled along under the beetled crags that
-were all aflame with golden-yellow birch and blood-red rowan, "I am not
-going to stand aside and see all that fair promise lost. I own I am a
-selfish woman; and hitherto I have kept aloof, as I did not want to get
-myself into trouble. I am going to hold aloof no longer. The more I
-hear the more I am convinced that Vin has fallen into the hands of an
-unscrupulous sharper--perhaps a pair of them; and I mean to have his
-eyes opened. Here is this new revelation about that American book,
-which simply means that you were swindled out of L50----"
-
-"One moment," her companion said hastily, and there was a curious look
-of mortification on his face. "I had no right to tell you that story. I
-broke confidence: I am ashamed of myself. And I assure you I was not
-swindled out of any L50. When the old man came to me, with his Scotch
-accent, and his Scotch patriotism, and his Scotch plaid thrown over his
-shoulder--well, 'my heart warmed to the tartan'; and I was glad of the
-excuse for helping him. I did not want any book; and I certainly did
-not want the money back. But when Vin came to me, and made
-explanations, and finally handed me a cheque for L50, there was
-something in his manner that told me I dared not refuse. It was
-something like 'Refuse this money, and you doubt the honour of the woman
-I am going to marry.' But seeing that I did take it, I have now nothing
-to say. My mouth is shut--ought to have been shut, rather, only you and
-I have had some very confidential chats since we came up here."
-
-"All the same, it was a downright swindle," said she, doggedly; "and the
-fact that Vin paid you back the money makes it none the less a swindle.
-Now I will tell you what I am about to do. I must be cruel to be kind.
-I am going to enlist the services of George Morris----"
-
-"Sir George?" he asked.
-
-"No, no; George Morris, the solicitor--his wife and I are very great
-friends--and I know he would do a great deal for me. Very well; he must
-get to know simply everything about this old man--his whole history--and
-if it turns out to be what I imagine, then some of us will have to go to
-Vin and tell him the truth. It won't be a pleasant duty; but duty never
-is pleasant. I know I shall be called a traitor for my share in it.
-Here is Vin appealing to me to be his friend--as if I were not his
-friend!--begging me to come and take this solitary and friendless girl
-by the hand, and all the rest of it; and instead of that I go behind his
-back and try to find out what will destroy his youthful romance for
-ever. But it's got to be done," said the young widow, with a sigh. "It
-will be a wrench at first; then six months' despair; and a life-time of
-thankfulness thereafter. And of course I must give George Morris all
-the help I can. He must make enquiries, for one thing, at the office of
-the _Edinburgh Chronicle_: I remember at Henley the old gentleman spoke
-of the proprietor as a friend of his. Then the man you know in New York,
-who gave Mr. Bethune a letter of introduction to you: what is his name
-and address?"
-
-"Oh, no," said Lord Musselburgh, shrinking back, as it were. "No; I
-don't want to take part in it. Of course, you may be acting quite
-rightly; no doubt you are acting entirely in Vin's interests; but--but I
-would rather have nothing to do with it."
-
-"And yet you call yourself Vin's friend! Come, tell me!" she said,
-coaxingly.
-
-Again he refused.
-
-"Mind you, I believe I could find out for myself," she went on. "I know
-that he is the editor of a newspaper in New York--a Scotch newspaper:
-come, Lord Musselburgh, give me his name, or the name of the newspaper!"
-
-He shook his head.
-
-"No--not fair," he said.
-
-Then she stopped, and faced him, and regarded him with arch eyes.
-
-"And yet it was on this very pathway, only yesterday morning, that you
-swore that there was nothing in the world that you wouldn't do for me!"
-
-"That was different," said he, with some hesitation. "I meant as regards
-myself. This concerns some one else."
-
-"Oh, very well," said she, and she walked on proudly. "I dare say I can
-find out."
-
-He touched her arm to detain her.
-
-"Have you a note-book?" he asked.
-
-She took from her pocket a combined purse and note-book; and without a
-word--or a smile--she pulled out the pencil.
-
-"'Hugh Anstruther, _Western Scotsman_ Office, New York,'" said he,
-rather shamefacedly.
-
-"There, that is all right!" she said, blithely, and she put the
-note-book in her pocket again. "That is as far as we can go in that
-matter at present; and now we can talk of something else. What is the
-name of this little bay?"
-
-"Little Ganovan, I believe."
-
-"And the other one we passed?"
-
-"Port Ban."
-
-"What is the legend attached to the robber's cave up there in the
-rocks?"
-
-"The legend? Oh, some one told me the gardener keeps his tools in that
-cave."
-
-"What kind of a legend is that!" she said, impatiently; and then she
-went on with her questions. "Why doesn't anybody ever come round this
-way?"
-
-"I suppose because they know we want the place to ourselves."
-
-"And why should we want the place to ourselves?"
-
-This was unexpected. He paused.
-
-"Ah," said he, "what is the use of my telling you? All your interest is
-centred on Vin. I suppose a woman can only be interested in one man at
-any one time."
-
-"Well, I should hope so!" the young widow said, cheerfully. "Shall we
-go round by the rocks or through the trees?"
-
-For they were now come to a little wood of birch and larch and pine; and
-without more ado he led the way, pushing through the outlying tall
-bracken and getting in underneath the branches.
-
-"I suppose," said he, in a rather rueful tone, "that you don't know what
-is the greatest proof of affection that a man can show to a woman? No,
-of course you don't!"
-
-"What is it, then?" she demanded, as she followed him stooping.
-
-"Why, it's going first through a wood, and getting all the spider's-webs
-on his nose."
-
-But presently they had come to a clearer space, where they could walk
-together, their footfalls hushed by the carpet of withered fir-needles;
-while here and there a rabbit would scurry off, and again they would
-catch a glimpse of a hen-pheasant sedately walking down a glade between
-the trees. And now their talk had become much more intimate and
-confidential; it had even assumed a touch of more or less affected
-sadness.
-
-"It's very hard," he was saying, "that you should understand me so
-little. You think I am cold, and cynical, and callous. Well, perhaps I
-have reason to be. I have had my little experience of womankind--of one
-woman, rather. I sometimes wonder whether the rest are anything like
-her, or are capable of acting as she did."
-
-"Who was she?" his companion asked, timidly.
-
-And therewith, as they idly and slowly strolled through this little
-thicket, he told his tragic tale, which needs not to be set down here:
-it was all about the James river, Virginia, and a pair of southern eyes,
-and betrayal, and farewell, and black night. His companion listened in
-the deep silence of sympathy; and when he had finished she said, in a
-low voice, and with downcast eyes--
-
-"I am sorry--very sorry. But at least there was one thing spared you:
-you did not marry out of spite."
-
-He glanced at her quickly.
-
-"Oh, yes," she said, and she raised her head, and spoke with a proud and
-bitter air, "I have my story too! I do not tell it to everyone.
-Perhaps I have not told it to anyone. But the man I loved was separated
-from me by lies--by lies; and I was fool and idiot enough to believe
-them! And the one I told you about--the one with the beautiful, clear,
-brown eyes--so good and noble he was, as everyone declared!--it was he
-who came to me with those falsehoods; and I believed them--I believed
-them--like the fool I was! Oh, yes," she said, and she held her head
-high, for her breast was heaving with real emotion this time, "it is
-easy to say that every mistake meets with its own punishment; but I was
-punished too much--too much; a life-long punishment for believing what
-lying friends had said to me!" She furtively put the tips of her
-fingers to her eyes, to wipe away the tears that lay along the lashes.
-"And then I was mad; I was out of my senses; I would have married
-anybody to show that--that I cared nothing for--for the other one;
-and--and I suppose he was angry too--he would not speak--he stood aside,
-and knew that I was going to kill my life, and never a single word!
-That was his revenge--to say nothing--when he saw me about to kill my
-life! Cruel, do you call it? Oh, no!--what does it matter? A woman's
-heart broken--what is that? But now you know why I think so of
-men--and--and why I laugh at them----"
-
-Well, her laughing was strange: she suddenly burst into a violent fit of
-crying and sobbing, and turned away from him, and hid her face in her
-handkerchief. What could he do? This was all unlike the gay young
-widow who seemed so proud of her solitary estate and so well content.
-Feeble words of comfort were of small avail. And then, again, it hardly
-seemed the proper occasion for offering her more substantial
-sympathy--though that was in his mind all the while, and very nearly on
-the tip of his tongue. So perforce he had to wait until her weeping was
-over; and indeed it was she herself who ended the scene by exclaiming
-impatiently--
-
-"There--enough of that! I did not intend to bother you with my small
-troubles when I stayed behind for you this morning. Come, shall we go
-out on to the rocks, and round by the little bay? What do you call
-it--Ganovan?"
-
-"Yes; I think they call it Little Ganovan," he said, absently, as he and
-she together emerged from the twilight of larch and pine, and proceeded,
-leisurely and in silence, to cross the semicircular sweep of yellow
-sand.
-
-When they got to the edge of the rocks, they sat down there: apparently
-they had nothing to do on this idle morning but to contemplate that
-vast, far-murmuring, dark blue plain--touched here and there with a
-sharp glimmer of white--and the range upon range of the Kingairloch
-hills, deepening in purple gloom, or shining rose-grey and yellow-grey
-in the sun. In this solitude they were quite alone save for the
-sea-birds that had wheeled into the air, screaming and calling, at their
-approach; but the terns and curlews were soon at peace again; a cloud of
-gulls returned to one of the little islands just in front of them; while
-a slow-flapping heron winged its heavy flight away to the north. All
-once more was silence; and the world was to themselves.
-
-And yet what was he to say to this poor suffering soul whose tragic
-sorrows and experiences had been thus unexpectedly disclosed? He really
-wished to be sympathetic; and, if he dared, he would have reminded her
-that
-
- 'Whispering tongues can poison truth;
- And constancy lives in realms above;
- And life is thorny; and youth is vain;
- And to be wroth with one we love
- Doth work like madness in the brain.'
-
-only he knew how difficult it is to quote poetry without making one's
-self ridiculous; and also he knew that the pretty young widow's eyes had
-a dangerous trick of sudden laughter. However, it was she who first
-spoke.
-
-"I wonder what those who have gone to church will say when they discover
-that we have spent all the morning here?"
-
-"They may say what they like," he made answer, promptly. "There are
-things one cannot speak about in drawing-rooms, among a crowd. And how
-could I ever have imagined that you, with your high spirits and merry
-temperament, and perpetual good-humour, had come through such trials? I
-wonder that people never think of the mischief that is done by
-intermeddling----"
-
-"Intermeddling?" said she proudly. "It wasn't of intermeddling I had to
-complain: it was a downright conspiracy--it was false stories--I was
-deceived by those who professed to be my best friends. There is
-intermeddling and intermeddling. You might say I was intermeddling in
-the case of my nephew. But what harm can come of that? It is not lies,
-it is the truth, I want to have told him. And even if it causes him
-some pain, it will be for his good. Don't you think I am right?"
-
-He hesitated.
-
-"I hope so," he said. "But you know things wear such a different
-complexion according to the way you look at them----"
-
-"But facts, Lord Musselburgh, facts," she persisted. "Do you think a
-man like George Morris would be affected by any sentimental
-considerations one way or the other? Won't he find out just the truth?
-And that is all I honestly want Vin to know--the actual truth: then let
-him go on with his eyes open if he chooses. Facts, Lord Musselburgh:
-who can object to facts?" Then she said--as she gave him her hand that
-he might assist her to rise--
-
-"We must be thinking of getting back home now, for if we are late for
-lunch, those Drexel girls will be grinning at each other like a couple
-of fiends."
-
-Rather reluctantly he rose also, and accompanied her. They made their
-way across a series of rough, bracken-covered knolls projecting into the
-sea until they reached the little bay that is known as Port Ban; and
-here, either the beauty and solitude of the place tempted them, or they
-were determined to defy sarcasm, for instead of hastening home, they
-quietly strolled up and down the smooth cream-white beach, now and again
-picking up a piece of rose-red seaweed, or turning over a limpet-shell,
-or watching a sandpiper making his quick little runs alongside the
-clear, crisp-curling ripples. They did not speak; they were as silent
-as the transparent blue shadows that their figures cast on the
-soft-yielding surface on which they walked. And sometimes Lord
-Musselburgh seemed inclined to write something, with the point of his
-stick, on that flawless sand; and then again he desisted; and still they
-continued silent.
-
-She took up a piece of pink seaweed, and began pulling it to shreds. He
-was standing by, looking on.
-
-"Don't you think," said he at last, "that there should be a good deal of
-sympathy--a very unusual sympathy--between two people who have come
-through the same suffering?"
-
-"Oh, I suppose so," she said, with affected carelessness--her eyes still
-bent on the seaweed.
-
-"Do you know," said he, again, "that I haven't the least idea what your
-name is!"
-
-"My name? Oh, my name is Madge," she answered.
-
-"Madge?" said he. "I wonder if you make the capital M this way?" and
-therewith he traced on the sand an ornamental _M_ in the manner of the
-last century.
-
-"No, I don't," she said, "but it is very pretty. How do you write the
-rest?"
-
-Thus encouraged, he made bold to add the remaining letters, and seemed
-rather to admire his handiwork when it was done.
-
-"By the way," she said, "I don't know your Christian name either!"
-
-"Hubert."
-
-"Can you write that in the same fashion?" she suggested, with a simple
-ingenuousness.
-
-So, grown still bolder, he laboriously inscribed his name immediately
-underneath her own. But that was not all. When he had ended he drew a
-circle right round both names.
-
-"That is a ring to enclose them," said he: and he turned from the scored
-names to regard her downcast face. "But--but I know a much smaller ring
-that could bring them still closer together. Will you let me
-try--Madge?"
-
-He took her hand.
-
-"Yes," she said, in a low voice.
-
-And then--Oh, very well, then: then--but after a reasonable delay--then
-they left those creamy sands, and went up by the edge of the blue-green
-turnip-field to the pathway, and so to the iron gate; and as he opened
-the gate for her, she said--
-
-"Oh, I don't know what happened down there, and what I've pledged myself
-to; but at all events there will now be one more on my side, to help me
-about Vin, and get him out of all this sad trouble. You will help me,
-won't you--Hubert?"
-
-Of course he was eager to promise anything.
-
-"And you say he is sure to get in for Mendover? Why, just think of him
-now, with everything before him; and how nice it would be for all of us
-if he had a smart and clever wife, who would hold her own in society,
-and do him justice, and make us all as proud and fond of her as we are
-of him. And just fancy the four of us setting out on a winter-trip to
-Cairo or Jerusalem: wouldn't it be simply too delicious? The four of
-us--only the four of us--all by ourselves. Louie Drexel is rather
-young, to be sure; yet she knows her way about; she's sharp; she's
-clever; she will have some money; and she has cheek enough for anything.
-And by the way--Hubert--" said she (and always with a pretty little
-hesitation when she came to his Christian name) "I must really ask
-you--with regard to Louie Drexel--well--you know--you have been--just a
-little----"
-
-He murmured something about the devotion of a lifetime--the devotion
-which he had just promised to her--being a very different thing from
-trivial drawing-room dallyings; whereupon she observed--
-
-"Oh, yes, men say so by way of excuse----"
-
-"How many men have said so to you?" he demanded, flaring up.
-
-"I did not say they had said so to me," she answered sweetly. "Don't go
-and be absurdly jealous without any cause whatever. If any one has a
-right to be jealous, it is I, considering the way you have been going on
-with Louie Drexel. But of course if there's nothing in it, that's all
-well and done with; and I am of a forgiving disposition, when I'm taken
-the right way. Now about Vin: can you see anybody who would do better
-for him than Louie Drexel?"
-
-Be sure it was not of Vin Harris, much as he was interested in him, that
-Lord Musselburgh wished to talk at this moment; but, on the other hand,
-in the first flush of his pride and gratitude, any whim of hers was law
-to him; and perhaps it was a sufficient and novel gratification to be
-able to call her Madge.
-
-"I'm afraid," said he, "that Vin is not the kind of person to have his
-life arranged for him by other people. And besides you must remember,
-Madge, dear, that you are assuming a great deal. You are assuming that
-you can show Vin that this old man is an impostor----"
-
-"Oh, can there be any doubt of it!" she exclaimed. "Isn't the story you
-have told me yourself enough?"
-
-Lord Musselburgh looked rather uncomfortable; he was a good-natured kind
-of person, and liked to think the best of everybody.
-
-"I had no right to tell you that story," said he.
-
-"But now I have the right to know about that and everything else,
-haven't I--Hubert?" said she, with a pretty coyness.
-
-"And besides," he continued, "Vin has a perfect explanation of the whole
-affair. There is no doubt the old man was just full of this subject,
-and believed he could write about it better than anyone else, even
-supposing the idea had occurred to some other person; he was anxious
-above all things that his poetical countrymen over there in the States
-and Canada should be done justice to; and when he heard that the volume
-was actually published he immediately declared that he would do
-everything in his power to help it----"
-
-"But what about the L50--Hubert?"
-
-"Oh, well," her companion said, rather uneasily, "I have told you that
-that was a gift from me to him. I did not stipulate for the publication
-of any book."
-
-She considered for a moment: then she said, with some emphasis----
-
-"And you think it no shame--you think it no monstrous thing--that our
-Vin should marry a girl who has been in the habit of going about with
-her grandfather while he begged money, and accepted money, from
-strangers? Is that the fate you wish for your friend?"
-
-"No, I don't wish anything of the kind," said he, "if--if matters were
-so. But Vin and you look at these things in a very different light; and
-I can hardly believe that he has been so completely imposed on. I
-confess I liked the old man: I liked his splendid enthusiasm, his
-magnificent self-reliance, yes, and his Scotch plaid; and I thought the
-girl was remarkably beautiful--and more than that--refined and
-distinguished-looking--something unusual about her somehow----"
-
-"Oh, yes, you are far too generous, Hubert," his companion said. "You
-accept Vin's representations without a word. But I see more clearly.
-And that little transaction about the book and the L50 gives me a key to
-the whole situation. You may depend on it, George Morris will find out
-what kind of person your grandiloquent old Scotchman is like. And then,
-when Vin's eyes are opened----"
-
-"Yes, when Vin's eyes are opened?" her companion repeated.
-
-"Then he will see into what a terrible pit he was nearly falling."
-
-"Are you so sure of that?" Musselburgh said. "I know Vin a little. It
-isn't merely a pretty face that has taken his fancy, as you yourself
-admit. If he has faith in that girl, it may not be easy to shake it."
-
-"I should not attempt to shake it," she made answer at once, "if the
-girl was everything she ought to be, and of proper upbringing and
-surroundings. But even if it turned out that she was everything she
-should be, wouldn't it be too awful to have Vin dragged down into an
-alliance with that old--that old--oh, I don't know what to call
-him!----"
-
-"Madge, dear," said he, "don't call him anything, until you learn more
-about him. And in the meantime," he continued, rather plaintively,
-"don't you think we might talk a little about ourselves, considering
-what has just happened?"
-
-"There is such a long time before us to talk about ourselves," said she.
-"And you know--Hubert--you've come into our family, as it were; and you
-must take a share in our troubles."
-
-They were nearing the house: five minutes more would bring them in sight
-of the open lawn.
-
-"Wait a minute, Madge, dear," said he, and he halted by the side of a
-little bit of plantation. "Don't be in such a hurry. I wish to speak to
-you about----"
-
-"About what?" she asked, with a smile.
-
-"Oh, a whole heap of things! For example, do you want the Somervilles
-to know?"
-
-"I don't particularly want them to know," she answered him, "but I fear
-they will soon find out."
-
-"I should like you to tell Mrs. Somerville, anyway."
-
-"Very well."
-
-"Indeed, I don't care if all the people in the house knew!" said he,
-boldly.
-
-"Hubert, what are you saying!" she exclaimed, with a fine simulation of
-horror. "My life would be made a burden to me! Fancy those Drexel
-girls: they would shriek with joy at the chance of torturing me! I
-should have to fly from the place. I should take the first train for
-the South to-morrow morning!"
-
-"Really!" said he, with considerable coolness. "For I have been thinking
-that those names we printed on the sands----"
-
-"That you printed, you mean!"
-
-"----were above high-water mark. Consequently they will remain there
-for some little time. Now it is highly probable that some of our friends
-may be walking along to Port Ban this afternoon; and if they were to
-catch sight of those hieroglyphics----"
-
-"Hubert," said she, with decision. "You must go along immediately after
-luncheon and score them out. I would not for the world have those
-Drexel girls suspect what has happened!"
-
-"Won't you come with me, Madge, after luncheon?"
-
-"Oh, we can't be haunting those sands all day like a couple of
-sea-gulls!"
-
-"But I think you might come!" he pleaded.
-
-"Very well," said she, "I suppose I must begin with obedience."
-
-And yet they seemed in no hurry to get on to the house. A robin perched
-himself on the wire fence not four yards away, and jerked his head, and
-watched them with his small, black, lustrous eye. A weasel came trotting
-down the road, stopped, looked, and glided noiselessly into the
-plantation. Two wood-pigeons went swiftly across an opening in the
-trees; a large hawk soared far overhead. On this still Sunday morning
-there seemed to be no one abroad; and then these two had much to say
-about a ring, and a locket, and similar weighty matters. Moreover,
-there was the assignation about the afternoon to be arranged.
-
-But at length they managed to tear themselves away from this secluded
-place; they went round by the front of the big grey building; and in so
-doing had to pass the dining-room window.
-
-"Oh my gracious goodness!" Mrs. Ellison exclaimed--and in no stimulated
-horror this time. "They're all in at lunch, every one of them, and I
-don't know how long they mayn't have been in! What shall I do!"
-
-And then a sudden thought seemed to strike her.
-
-"Hubert, my headache has come back! I'm going up to my room. Will you
-give my excuses to Mrs. Somerville? I'd a hundred times rather starve
-than--than be found out."
-
-"Oh, that is all nonsense!" said he--but in an undertone, for they were
-now in the spacious stone-paved hall. "Go to your room, if you like;
-and I'll tell Mrs. Somerville, and she'll send you up something. You
-mustn't starve, for you're going round with me to Port Ban in the
-afternoon."
-
-And, of course, the gentle hostess was grieved to hear that her friend
-had not yet got rid of her headache; and she herself went forthwith to
-Mrs. Ellison's room, to see what would most readily tempt the appetite
-of the poor invalid. The poor invalid was at her dressing-table, taking
-off her bonnet. She wheeled round.
-
-"I am so sorry, dear, about your headache--" her hostess was beginning,
-when the young widow went instantly to the door and shut it. Then she
-came back; and there was a most curious look--of laughter, perhaps--in
-her extremely pretty eyes.
-
-"Never mind about the headache!" she said to her astonished friend, who
-saw no cause for this amused embarrassment, nor yet for the exceedingly
-affectionate way in which both her hands had been seized. "The headache
-is gone. I've--I've something else to tell you--oh, you'd never guess
-it in the world! My dear, my dear," she cried in a whisper, and her
-tell-tale eyes were full of confusion as well as laughter. "You'd never
-guess--but--but I've gone and made a fool of myself for the second
-time!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- "HOLY PALMER'S KISS."
-
-
-This was a bright and cheerful afternoon in November; and old George
-Bethune and his granddaughter were walking down Regent-street. A
-brilliant afternoon, indeed; and the scene around them was quite gay and
-animated; for the wintry sunlight was shining on the big shop-fronts,
-and on the busy pavements, and on the open carriages that rolled by with
-their occupants gorgeous in velvet and silk and fur. Nor was George
-Bethune moved to any spirit of envy by all this display of luxury and
-wealth; no more than he was oppressed by any sense of solitariness amid
-this slow-moving, murmuring crowd. He walked with head erect; he paid
-but little heed to the passers-by; he was singing aloud, and that in a
-careless and florid fashion--
-
- "The boat rocks at the pier o' Leith,
- Fu' loud the wind blaws frae the ferry,
- The ship rides by the Berwick Law,
- And I maun leave my bonnie Mary."
-
-
-But suddenly he stopped: his attention had been caught by a window, or
-rather a series of windows, containing all sorts of Scotch articles and
-stuffs.
-
-"Maisrie," said he, as his eye ran over these varied wares and fabrics,
-"couldn't you--couldn't you buy some little bit of a thing?"
-
-"Why, grandfather?" she asked.
-
-"Oh, well," he answered, with an air of lofty indifference, "it is but a
-trifle--but a trifle; only I may have told you that my friend Carmichael
-is a good Scot--good friend and good Scot are synonymous terms, to my
-thinking--and--and as you are going to call on him for the first time,
-you might show him you are not ashamed of your country. Isn't there
-something there, Maisrie?" he continued, still regarding the articles in
-the window. "Some little bit of tartan ribbon--something you could put
-round your neck--whatever you like--merely to show that you fly your
-country's colours, and are not ashamed of them--"
-
-"But why should I pretend to be Scotch, grandfather, when I am not
-Scotch?" she said.
-
-He was not angry: he was amused.
-
-"You--not Scotch? You, of all people in the world, not Scotch? What
-are you, then? A Bethune of Balloray--ay, and if justice were done, the
-owner and mistress of Balloray, Ballingean, and Cadzow--and yet you are
-not Scotch? Where got you your name? What is your lineage--your
-blood--your right and title to the lands of Balloray and Ballingean?
-And I may see you there yet, Maisrie; I may see you there yet. Stranger
-things have happened. But come away now--we need not quarrel about a
-bit of ribbon--and I know Mr. Carmichael will receive you as his
-countrywoman even if you have not a shred of tartan about you."
-
-Indeed he had taken no offence: once more he was marching along, with
-fearless eye and undaunted front, while he had resumed his gallant
-singing--
-
- "But it's not the roar o' sea or shore
- Wad mak' me langer wish to tarry,
- Nor shouts o' war that's heard afar--
- It's leaving thee, my bonnie Mary!"
-
-
-They went down to one of the big hotels in Northumberland Avenue; asked
-at the office for Mr. Carmichael; and after an immeasurable length of
-waiting were conducted to his room. Here Maisrie was introduced to a
-tall, fresh-coloured, angular-boned man, who had shrewd grey eyes that
-were also good-humoured. Much too good-humoured they were in Maisrie's
-estimation, when they chanced to regard her grandfather: they seemed to
-convey a sort of easy patronage, almost a kind of good-natured pity,
-that she was quick to resent. But how could she interfere? These were
-business matters that were being talked of; and she sate somewhat apart,
-forced to listen, but not taking any share in the conversation.
-
-Presently, however, she heard something that startled her out of this
-apathetic concurrence, and set all her pulses flying. The tall,
-raw-boned, newspaper proprietor, eyeing this proud-featured old man with
-a not unkindly scrutiny, was referring to the volume on the Scottish
-Poets in America which George Bethune had failed to bring out in time;
-and his speech was considerate.
-
-"It is not the first case of forestalling I have known," said he; "and
-it must just be looked on as a bit of bad luck. Better fortune next
-time. By the way, there is another little circumstance connected with
-that book--perhaps I should not mention it--but I will be discreet. No
-names; and yet you may like to hear that you have got another friend
-somewhere--somewhere in the background--"
-
-It was at this point that Maisrie began to listen, rather breathlessly.
-
-"Oh, yes, your friend--your unknown friend--wanted to be generous
-enough," Mr. Carmichael continued. "He wrote to me saying he understood
-that I had advanced a certain sum towards the publication of the work;
-and he went on to explain that as certain things had happened to prevent
-your bringing it out, he wished to be allowed to refund the money. Oh,
-yes, a very generous offer; for all was to be done in the profoundest
-secrecy; you were not to know anything about it, lest you should be
-offended. And yet it seemed to me you should be glad to learn that
-there was someone interesting himself in your affairs."
-
-The two men were not looking at the girl: they could not see the pride
-and gratitude that were in her eyes. "And Vincent never told me a
-word," she was saying to herself, with her heart beating warm and fast.
-But that was not the mood in which old George Bethune took this matter.
-A dark frown was on his shaggy eyebrows.
-
-"I do not see what right anyone has to intermeddle," said, he, in tones
-that fell cruelly on Maisrie's ear, "still less to pay money for me on
-the assumption that I had forgotten, or was unwilling to discharge, a
-just debt----"
-
-"Come, come, come, Mr. Bethune," said the newspaper proprietor, with a
-sort of condescending good-nature, "you must not take it that way. To
-begin with, he did not pay any money at all. I did not allow him. I
-said 'Thank you; but this is a private arrangement between Mr. Bethune
-and myself; and if he considers there is any indebtedness, then he can
-wipe that off by contributions to the _Chronicle_.' So you see you have
-only to thank him for the intention--"
-
-"Oh, very well," said the old man, changing his tone at once. "No harm
-in that. No harm whatever. Misplaced intention--but--but creditable.
-And now," he continued, in a still lighter strain, "since you mention
-the _Chronicle_, Mr. Carmichael, I must tell you of a scheme I have had
-for some time in mind. It is a series of papers on the old ballads of
-Scotland--or rather the chief of them--taking one for each weekly
-article, giving the different versions, with historical and philological
-notes. What do you think of that, now? Look at the material--the
-finest in the world!--the elemental passions, the tragic situations that
-are far removed from any literary form or fashion, that go straight to
-the heart and the imagination. Each of them a splendid text!" he
-proceeded, with an ever-increasing enthusiasm. "Think of Edom o'
-Gordon, and the Wife of Usher's Well, and the Baron o' Brackla; Annie of
-Lochryan, Hynde Etin, the piteous cry of 'Helen of Kirkconnell,' and the
-Rose of Yarrow seeking her slain lover by bank and brae. And what could
-be more interesting than the collation of the various versions of those
-old ballads, showing how they have been altered here and there as they
-were said or sung, and how even important passages may have been dropped
-out in course of time and transmission. Look, for example, at 'Barbara
-Allan.' The version in Percy's Reliques is as bad and stupid as it can
-be; but it is worse than that: it is incomprehensible. Who can believe
-that the maiden came to the bedside of her dying lover only to flout and
-jeer, and that for no reason whatever? And when she sees his corpse
-
- 'With scornful eye she looked downe,
- Her cheek with laughter swellin''--
-
-"Well, I say that is not true," he went on vehemently; "it never was
-true: it contradicts human nature; it is false, and bad, and impossible.
-But turn to our Scottish version! When Sir John Graeme o' the West
-Countrie, lying sore sick, sends for his sweetheart, she makes no
-concealment of the cause of the feud that has been between them--of the
-wrong that is rankling at her heart:
-
- 'O dinna ye mind, young man,' said she,
- 'When the red wine ye were filling,
- That ye made the healths gae round and round,
- And slighted Barbara Allan?'
-
-And proud and indignant she turns away. There is no sham laughter here;
-no impossible cruelty; but a quarrel between two fond lovers that
-becomes suddenly tragic, when death steps in to prevent the possibility
-of any reconciliation.
-
- He turned his face unto the wa',
- And death was with him dealing:
- 'Adieu, adieu, my dear friends a',
- Be kind to Barbara Allan!'
-
-Can anything be more simple, and natural, and inexpressibly sad as well?
-It is the story of a tragic quarrel between two true lovers: it is not
-the impossible and preposterous story of a giggling hoyden grinning at a
-corpse!"
-
-And here it was probable that old George Bethune, having warmed to his
-subject, and being as usual wildly enamoured of his latest scheme, would
-have gone on to give further instances of the value of collation and
-comparison, but that Mr. Carmichael was forced to interrupt. The
-proprietor of the _Edinburgh Chronicle_ was a busy man during his brief
-visits to town.
-
-"Very well, Mr. Bethune," said he. "I think your idea a very good
-one--an excellent one, in fact, for the weekly edition of a Scotch
-paper; and I will give you _carte blanche_ as to the number of articles.
-Who knows," he added, with a condescending smile, "but that they may
-grow to a book--to take the place of the one that was snatched out of
-your hands?"
-
-And again, as his visitors were leaving, he said in the same
-good-humoured way--
-
-"I presume it is not necessary for us to discuss the question of terms,
-especially before a young lady. If you have been satisfied with us so
-far--"
-
-"I am quite content to leave that with you: quite," interposed the old
-man, with some little dignity.
-
-"I was only going to say," Mr. Carmichael resumed, "that a series of
-articles such as you suggest may require a good deal of research and
-trouble: so that, when the reckoning comes, I will see you are put on
-the most favoured nation scale. And not a word more about the American
-book: we were disappointed--that is all."
-
-This latter admonition was wholly unnecessary. When George Bethune got
-out into the street again, with Maisrie as his sole companion and
-confidante, it was not of that lost opportunity he was talking, it was
-all of this new project that had seized his imagination. They had to
-make one or two calls, in the now gathering dusk; but ever, as they came
-out again into the crowded thoroughfares, he returned to the old ballads
-and the opportunities they presented for a series of discursive papers.
-And Maisrie was about as eager in anticipation as himself.
-
-"Oh, yes, grandfather," she said, "you could not have thought of a
-happier subject. And you will begin at once, grandfather, won't you?
-Do you think I shall be able to help you in the very least way?--it
-would please me so much if I could search out things for you, or copy,
-or help you in the smallest way. And I know it will be a labour of love
-for you; it will be a constant delight; and all the more that the days
-are getting short now, and we shall have to be more indoors. And then
-you heard what Mr. Carmichael said, grandfather; and if he is going to
-pay you well for these articles, you will soon be able to give him back
-the money he advanced to you about that unfortunate book--"
-
-"Oh, don't you bother about such things!" he said, with an impatient
-frown. "When I am planning out an important work, I don't want to be
-reminded that it will result in merely so many guineas. That is not the
-spirit in which I enter upon such an undertaking. When I write, it is
-not with an eye to the kitchen. Unless some nobler impulse propels,
-then be sure the result will be despicable. However, I suppose women
-are like that; when you are thinking of the literature of your native
-land--of perhaps adding some little tributary wreath--they are looking
-towards grocers' bills. The kitchen--the kitchen is before them--not
-the dales and vales of Scotland, where lovers loved, and were
-broken-hearted. The kitchen--"
-
-But Maisrie was not disconcerted by this rebuke.
-
-"And you will begin at once, grandfather," she said, cheerfully. "Oh, I
-know it will be so delightful an occupation for you. And I don't wonder
-that Mr. Carmichael was glad to have such a chance. Then it won't
-involve any expense of travelling, like the other book you thought of,
-about the Scotland of Scotch songs. The winter evenings won't be so
-dull, grandfather, when you have this to occupy you; you will forget it
-is winter altogether, when you are busy with those beautiful scenes and
-stories. And will you tell Vincent this evening, grandfather? he will
-be so interested: it will be something to talk of at dinner."
-
-But Vincent was to hear of this great undertaking before then. When
-Maisrie and her grandfather reached the door of their lodgings, he said
-to her--
-
-"You can go in now, Maisrie, and have the gas lit. I must walk along to
-the library, and see what books they have; but I'm afraid I shall have
-to get Motherwell, and Pinkerton, and Allan Cunningham, and the rest of
-them from Scotland. Aytoun they are sure to have, I suppose."
-
-So they parted for the moment; and Maisrie went upstairs and lit the gas
-in the little parlour. Then, without taking off her bonnet, she sate
-down and fell into a reverie--not a very sad one, as it seemed. She was
-sitting thus absorbed in silent fancies, when a familiar sound outside
-startled her into attention; she sprang to her feet; the next instant
-the door was opened; the next again she was advancing to the tall and
-handsome young stranger who stood somewhat diffidently there, and both
-her hands were outstretched, and a light of joy and gratitude was
-shining in her eyes.
-
-"Oh, Vincent, I am so glad you have come over!" she said, in a way that
-was far from usual with her, and she held both his hands for more than a
-second or two, and her grateful eyes were fixed on his without any
-thought of embarrassment. "I was thinking of you. You have been so
-kind--so generous! I wanted to thank you, and I am so glad to have the
-chance--"
-
-"But what is it, Maisrie?--I'm sure there is nothing you have to thank
-me for!" said he, as he shut the door behind him, and came forward, and
-took a seat not very far away from her. He was a little bewildered. In
-her sudden access of gratitude, when she took both his hands in hers,
-she had come quite close to him; and the scent of a sandal-wood necklace
-that she wore seemed to touch him as with a touch of herself. He knew
-those fragrant beads; more than once he had perceived the slight and
-subtle odour, as she passed him, or as he helped her on with her cloak;
-and he had come to associate it with her, as if it were part of her,
-some breathing thing, that could touch, and thrill. And this time it
-had come so near--
-
-But that bewilderment of the senses lasted only for a moment. Maisrie
-Bethune was not near to him at all: she was worlds and worlds away. It
-was not a mere whiff of perfume that could bring her near to him.
-Always to him she appeared to be strangely unapproachable and remote.
-Perhaps it was the loneliness of her position, perhaps it was the
-uncertainty of her future, and those vague possibilities of which her
-grandfather had spoken, or perhaps it was the reverence of undivided and
-unselfish love on his part; but at all events she seemed to live in a
-sort of sacred and mysterious isolation--to be surrounded by a spell
-which he dared not seek to break by any rude contact. And yet surely
-her eyes were regarding his with sufficient frankness and friendliness,
-and even more than friendliness, now as she spoke.
-
-"This afternoon we called on Mr. Carmichael," said Maisrie, "Mr.
-Carmichael of the _Edinburgh Chronicle_. He told us someone had offered
-to repay the money he had advanced to my grandfather on account of that
-American book: and though he did not mention any name, do you think I
-did not know who it was, Vincent? Be sure I knew--in a moment! And you
-never said a word about it! I might never have known but for this
-accident--I might never have had the chance of thanking you--as--as I
-should like to do now--only--only it isn't quite easy to say everything
-one feels--"
-
-"Oh, but that is nothing at all, Maisrie!" said he, coming quickly to
-her rescue. "You have nothing to thank me for--nothing! It is true I
-made the offer; but it was not accepted; and why should I say anything
-about it to you?"
-
-"Ah, but the intention is enough," said she (for she knew nothing about
-his having paid Lord Musselburgh the L50). "And you cannot prevent my
-being very, very grateful to you for such thoughtfulness and kindness.
-To save my grandfather's self-respect--to prevent him being
-misunderstood by--by strangers--because--because he is so forgetful: do
-you think, Vincent, I cannot see your motive, and be very, very
-grateful? And never saying a word, too! You should have told me,
-Vincent! But I suppose that was still further kindness--you thought I
-might be embarrassed--and not able to thank you--which is just the
-case--"
-
-"Oh, Maisrie, don't make a fuss about nothing!" he protested.
-
-"I know whether it is nothing or not," said she, proudly. "And--and
-perhaps if you had lived as we have lived--wandering from place to
-place--you would set more store by an act of friendship. Friends are
-little to you--you have too many of them--"
-
-"Oh, Maisrie, don't talk like that!" he said. "You make me ashamed.
-What have I done?--nothing! I wish there was some real thing I could do
-to prove my friendship for your grandfather and yourself--then you might
-see--"
-
-"Haven't you proved it every day, every hour almost, since ever we have
-known you?" she said, in rather a low voice.
-
-"Ah, well, perhaps there may come a chance--" said he; and then he
-stopped short; for here was old George Bethune, with half-a-dozen
-volumes under his arm, and himself all eagerness and garrulity about his
-new undertaking.
-
-At the little dinner that evening in the restaurant, there was quite an
-unusual animation, and that not solely because this was the ninth of
-November, and they were proposing to go out later on and look at the
-illuminations in the principal thoroughfares. Vincent thought he had
-never seen Maisrie Bethune appear so light-hearted and happy; and she
-was particularly kind to him; when she regarded him, there still seemed
-to be a mild gratitude shining in the clear and eloquent deeps of her
-eyes. Gratitude for what!--he asked himself, with a touch of scorn. It
-was but an ordinary act of acquaintanceship: why should this beautiful,
-sensitive, proud-spirited creature have to debase herself to thank him
-for such a trifle? He felt ashamed of himself. It was earning
-gratitude by false pretences. The very kindness shining there in her
-eyes was a sort of reproach: what had he done to deserve it? Ah, if she
-only knew what he was ready to do--when occasion offered!
-
-And never before had he seen Maisrie so bravely confident about any of
-her grandfather's literary projects.
-
-"You see, Vincent," she said, as if he needed any convincing, when she
-was satisfied! "in the end it will make a far more interesting book than
-the Scotch-American one; and in the meantime there will be the series of
-articles appearing from week to week, to attract attention to the
-subject. And then, although grandfather says I take a low and mercenary
-view of literature, all the same I am glad he is to be well-paid for the
-articles; and there are to be as many as he likes; and when they are
-completed, then comes the publication of the book, which should be as
-interesting to Mr. Carmichael, or Lord Musselburgh, or anyone, as the
-Scotch-American volume. And grandfather is going to begin at once; and
-I am asking him whether I cannot be of any use to him, in the humblest
-way. A glossary, grandfather; you must have a glossary of the Scotch
-words: couldn't I compile that for you?"
-
-"I have been wondering," the old man said, absently, and without
-answering her question, "since I came into this room, whether it would
-be possible to classify them into ballads of action and ballads of the
-supernatural. I imagine the former belong more to the south country;
-and that most of the latter had their origin in the north. And yet even
-in the Battle of Otterburn, the Douglas says
-
- 'But I hae dreamed a dreary dream,
- Ayont the Isle o' Skye,--
- I saw a deid man win a fight,
- And I think that man was I.'
-
-Well, that may have been an interpolation; at all events, it is a
-Highland touch; the strong, brisk, matter-of-fact Border ballad has
-seldom anything of that kind in it. The bold Buccleuch and Kinmont
-Willie were too much in the saddle to have time for wraiths. You
-remember, Maisrie, when they brought word to 'the bauld Keeper' that
-Kinmont Willie was a captive in Carlisle Castle?--
-
- He has ta'en the table wi' his hand,
- He garred the red wine spring on hie--
- 'Now a curse upon my head,' he cried,
- 'But avenged on Lord Scroop I'll be!
-
- O is my basnet a widow's curch,
- Or my lance a wand of the willow-tree,
- Or my arm a lady's lily hand,
- That an English lord should lichtly me?'
-
-That is more like the ballad of the south: sharp and vivid, full of
-action and spirit, and the audacious delight of life: when you want
-mystery and imagination and supernatural terrors you must turn to the
-brooding and darkened regions of the north. The Demon Lover is clearly
-of northern origin; its hell is the Scandinavian hell; not the fiery
-furnace of the eastern mind, but a desolation of cold and wet.
-
- 'O what'n a mountain's yon,' she said,
- 'Sae dreary wi' frost and snow?'
- 'O yon is the mountain o' hell,' he cried,
- 'Where you and I maun go!'"
-
-
-"The Demon Lover?" said Maisrie, inquiringly; and Vincent could not but
-notice how skilfully and sedulously she fanned the old man's interest in
-this new scheme by herself pretending to be deeply interested.
-
-"Don't you know it, Maisrie?" said he. "It is the story of two lovers
-who were parted; and he returns after seven years to claim the
-fulfilment of her vows; and finds that in his absence she has taken
-someone else for her husband. It is a dangerous position--if he wishes
-her to go away with him; for a woman never forgets her first lover; what
-is more, she attributes all the natural and inevitable disillusionment
-of marriage to her husband, whilst the romance attaching to her first
-love remains undimmed. Therefore, I say let Auld Robin Gray
-beware!--the wife is not always so loyal to the disillusioniser as was
-the Jeannie of the modern song. Well, in this case, she who has been a
-false sweetheart, proves a false wife--
-
- 'If I was to leave my husband dear,
- And my twa babes also,
- O where is it you would tak' me to,
- If I with thee should go?'
-
-And the lover becomes the avenger; together they sail away on a strange
-ship, until they descry the mountains of hell; and the lover turned
-demon warns her of her doom.
-
- And aye when she turned her round about,
- Aye taller he seemed for to be,
- Until that the tops o' that gallant ship
- Nae taller were than he.
-
- He struck the topmast wi' his hand,
- The foremast wi' his knee;
- And he brak that gallant ship in twain,
- And sank her in the sea."
-
-
-"Will there be illustrations, sir?" asked Vincent (in humble imitation
-of Maisrie). "And an _edition de luxe_? For that, I imagine, is where
-my co-operation might come in. Maisrie seems so anxious to help; and I
-should like to take my part too."
-
-"It is a far cry to the completion of such an undertaking as that," said
-the old man, rather wistfully.
-
-But Maisrie would not have him lapse into any despondent mood.
-
-"You must not look so far ahead, grandfather," she said, cheerfully.
-"You must think of your own pride and satisfaction in beginning it; and
-I know you will be delighted; for who can do it as well as you? And if
-I am so very mercenary, I can't help it; only I shall be all the better
-pleased to remember that you are being properly paid for your work.
-Supposing the kitchen is my department?--Oh, very well!--somebody must
-look to that. It will be a labour of love for you, grandfather, all the
-way through; and then, when the book is nearing completion, just think
-of the pride you will have in choosing someone, some distinguished
-person, for the dedication. It will be far more your own work than
-merely giving specimens of the Scottish-American poets; indeed it will
-be all your own; for the ballads are only to be texts, as you say. And
-I think we should go home now, and you will look over some of the books.
-I don't care about the illuminations--not I. What is the Lord Mayor's
-Day to Vincent or me--when you might be telling us about Katherine
-Janfarie and May Collean?"
-
-"No, no, Maisrie," said he, as he rose from the table. "Give me a
-little time for preparation. We promised to show you the streets lit
-up. And mind you wrap yourself well, Maisrie, for the evenings are
-getting cold now."
-
-But little did Vincent Harris, as he helped her on with her cloak, and
-made ready to go out into the dusky and glaring thoroughfares, foresee
-what was going to befall him that night.
-
-When they issued forth into Regent-street, there was as yet no very
-dense crowd, though here and there the front of a tall building flamed
-in yellow fire; but nevertheless Maisrie said--
-
-"We must not get separated, grandfather. Let me go between you two; and
-I will take your arm on the one side and Vincent's on the other; and if
-we have occasionally to go sideways, we can always keep together."
-
-"Oh, I shan't let you be dragged away, Maisrie," the younger man said.
-"And if you don't mind, I think this will be a better way of holding on
-to you--" and therewith he made bold to pass his hand underneath the
-hanging sleeve of her cloak, and there he took hold of her arm from the
-inside--rather timidly, perhaps, but then his grasp could be tightened,
-if needs were.
-
-"Yes," said she, placidly, and she made a little movement as though she
-would draw both her companions closer to her. "This is very
-comfortable. Which way, grandfather?"
-
-And so the little group of friends, knit together by many intimate
-interests and much association, adventured out into the great world of
-London that was all astir now with a vague and half-subdued excitement.
-There was no need for them to talk; they had but to look at the blazing
-stars, and feathers, and initial letters, and to make their way through
-the murmuring throng. There was no jostling; the crowd was entirely
-good-natured; and if these three could not always go abreast, they then
-went diagonally for a second or so, and were not separated. Of course,
-Vincent had to hold Maisrie a little more firmly now; his arm was
-parallel with hers, and his hand had hold of her wrist; and there was an
-intoxicating sense of warmth as well as of close companionship in this
-mutual clinging. Thus they slowly and idly passed away down
-Regent-street, well content with their own silence and the brilliant
-sights around them. Then a little incident occurred. A vehicle was
-coming along one of the smaller thoroughfares they had to cross; there
-was a brief bit of a scrimmage; and Maisrie, the better to keep hold of
-her companion, slipped her hand from the muff that was slung round her
-neck, and seized his hand, that was ready enough, be sure, to respond.
-They got over without further trouble; they mixed once more in this
-vast, slow-moving assemblage--only he retained the hand she had given
-him, and that with no uncertain grasp.
-
-It was a wonderful, mysterious, secret thing to be happening in the
-midst of all this great, careless, dusky crowd. Her hand, that was
-ungloved, was soft and warm after coming out of its cosy resting-place;
-and it was not likely to get cold, when it was held so tight, under the
-concealment of the hanging sleeve. And then--well, probably the girl
-did not know what she was doing; she was affected by all this excitement
-around her; it was "Look, grandfather, look!" from time to time; most
-likely she thought no more of her hand being held than if she were
-crossing a meadow in the spring-time with some careless
-girl-companion--but however that may be, what must she do but open her
-fingers, so that his should interclasp with hers! Nay, she opened them
-again, and shut them again, the better to adjust that gentle clasp; and
-every touch thrilled through him, so that he walked as one in a dream.
-He dared hardly breathe, he durst not speak, lest some stray word of his
-might startle her into consciousness, and shatter this miracle. She did
-not seem to be in the least aware: it was "Which way, grandfather?" or
-"Take care, grandfather!" and her eyes were turned to the brilliant and
-parti-coloured devices in front of the Pall Mall clubs, and not at all
-to the handsome lad who walked so close to her that now and again he
-could detect some faint trace of the odour of sandal-wood that seemed to
-hover around her neck and her hair. What did he see or hear of the
-crowd now, or of the garish lights along the houses? He walked in an
-enchanted land: there were only two people in it: and they were bound
-together, in subtle intercommunion, by this magic grasp. There was
-wonder as well as joy in his mind; the sensation was so new and strange.
-Did he remember that "palm to palm" was "holy palmer's kiss"? No, he
-remembered nothing; he only knew that he held Maisrie's hand interlocked
-with his, in this secret fashion; and that all the wild phantasmagoria
-around them was something unreal and visionary with which neither he nor
-she had any concern.
-
-And even now his cup of bliss and bewilderment was not yet full, on this
-marvellous night. When at last they drew away from the crowded streets
-and found themselves in quieter thoroughfares on their way home, the old
-man drew a breath of relief.
-
-"This is better, Maisrie," he said. "It seems as if we had been out on
-a roaring sea, and had at length drifted into stillness and peace."
-
-"And we were not separated once, grandfather," said she, cheerfully.
-"Not once all the time."
-
-And then it was Vincent who spoke.
-
-"I don't see why we should ever separate," said he. "Friends are few
-enough in this world."
-
-"Yes, indeed, good friends are few," Maisrie said; and therewithal--ere
-he could tell what was happening--she had taken his hand that she held
-in hers and raised it, and for one brief moment pressed it against her
-heart. The little impulsive movement--of gratitude perhaps; perhaps of
-affection; perhaps of both combined--could not have been perceived by
-any passer-by; and yet the young man seemed to be struck by a sudden
-shock of fear; he could not speak; his own heart was beating so that
-speech was impossible. For it appeared to him in that swift second as
-if the scales had fallen from his eyes. To him she was no longer an
-elusive phantom--a mirage--a vision--pensive, and mysterious, and
-remote; now he saw her a beautiful young creature of flesh and blood,
-whose hands and heart were warm, who could cling for help and
-companionship and sympathy, who was not afraid to speak and act, when
-love or gratitude prompted her. No longer the strangely isolated
-maiden: the unapproachable had all at once come near; so near that the
-scent of sandalwood touched him from time to time; so near that her soft
-fingers were interclasped with his, pulsating there, nestling there, not
-relaxing their hold, nor inclined to do that. This was no piece of
-statuary, to be worshipped from afar: this was Maisrie Bethune, whose
-arm lay close and caressing against his, under the friendly shelter of
-that hanging sleeve, whose step went with his step as they walked
-together, whose breathing he could almost overhear, in the silence of
-this gracious night. And what had she not confessed, in that artless
-way?
-
-And then amid his bewilderment and breathless exultation a horrid fancy
-shot across his brain. Perhaps that was no confession at all; but a
-quite simple, unpremeditated, even unconscious, act of mere friendliness
-and sympathy? Did she know that she had done it? Would she repeat it?
-Would she give him further assurance? Might she not herself wish to be
-certain that he had understood--that he had received a message that was
-to change all his life?
-
-Well, he had hold of her hand. Gently and with trembling and eager
-touch he tried to raise it--he would have her replace his own hand where
-that had been for one delirious moment: perhaps to ask if her heart had
-still, and for ever and always, the same message to send. Alas! she did
-not yield to the mute invitation. Perhaps she did not comprehend it.
-For here they were at the corner of the little street in which they
-lived; and she unclasped her fingers, so that his also might be released
-from their too happy imprisonment; and she was talking to her
-grandfather when the door of the house was reached. Nor did her eyes
-say anything as he bade her good-bye for the night. Perhaps it was all a
-mistake, then?--some little involuntary act of kindness, and nothing
-more?
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- INTERPOSITION.
-
-
-Yes, she had come near--so near that she seemed to absorb his very life.
-He could think of nothing but her. As he walked away down through the
-dark streets, he imagined her to be still by his side; he tried to fancy
-he could detect some faint perfume of sandal-wood in the surrounding
-air; his right hand tingled yet with the touch of her warm,
-interclasping fingers. And if at one moment his heart beat high with
-the assurance that she had confessed her love and given herself to him,
-the next he tortured himself with vague alarms, and wondered how the
-long night was to be got through, before he could go up to her in the
-morning, and challenge her to speak. All the future was filled with
-her; and there again he saw himself by her side, her strong and
-confident protector. And yet if he had mistaken that mute declaration
-of hers? What if, after all, it were merely a timid expression,
-involuntary and unpremeditated, of her friendship, her kindness, her
-gratitude?
-
-Well, he knew he could get no confirmation of either his audacious hopes
-or his depressing fears until the next day; and as the alternation
-between the two moods was altogether a maddening thing, he resolved to
-seek relief and distraction. As soon as he got to his own room down in
-Grosvenor Place he took out a foolscap sheet of paper which had certain
-pencillings on it. These formed, in fact, an outline sketch of a
-lecture which he had undertaken to deliver before the Mendover Free
-Library Association; and it was high time he was getting on with it, for
-the meeting was to be held in the following week. But strange things
-happened with this sheet of paper. Apparently the pencilled heading was
-"_The Unscrupulousness of Wealth_;" but the longer he looked at the
-title, the more clearly did it spell out "_Maisrie Bethune_." The
-sub-headings, too, began to reveal hidden mysteries. Here was one which
-on the face of it read "_Circumstances in which the capitalist may
-become a tyrant in spite of himself_." But behold! that scrawl slowly
-disappeared, and in its place a picture grew into existence. He seemed
-to recognise the big grey building--was it not the mansion-house of
-Balloray?--and well he knew the figure of the tall young girl with the
-long-flowing hair who, in riding-habit, came out on to the terrace,
-above the wide stone steps. Is that her grandfather, proud-featured,
-lion-hearted, with the same undaunted demeanour as of old, come to wave
-her good-bye? The splendour of the morning is all around her; there is
-a white road outside the grounds, and an avenue of beech trees dappled
-with sun and shade: when she vanishes into that wonderland of foliage,
-she seems to take the light of the day away with her. And again, what
-further miracle is this? Another vision interposes, and at length
-becomes dominant; and this one is very different; this one is of a
-street in Toronto. And here also is a young girl; but now she is all in
-black; and she is alone--she knows not one of those passers-by. Pale
-and pensive she walks on; her eyes are downcast; perhaps she is thinking
-of wide intervening seas, and of her loneliness, and of one who used to
-be her friend. Tears?--but of what avail are these, here in this
-strange city?--they are only a confession of helplessness--perhaps of
-despair...
-
-Vincent Harris got up and walked about the room: at this rate the
-members of the Mendover Free Library Association were not likely to
-receive much instruction. And indeed he did not return to that sheet of
-foolscap; his brain could conjure up quite sufficient visions of the
-future without having recourse to any palimpsest discoveries; while as
-for his hand--well, perhaps the hand that Maisrie had held over her
-heart for one wild, startling moment, was a little too unsteady to use a
-pencil. If only the hours would go by! He tried to read--and could not.
-He got hold of a map of Scotland, and traced out the line of travel he
-should like to follow if Maisrie and her grandfather and himself should
-ever start on their long-projected tour. He turned to a map of the
-United States, and sought out Omaha: Maisrie's birthplace was not
-distinguished by any difference of type, and yet he regarded those five
-letters with a curious interest and fascination. He recalled his having
-stood on the heights of Council Bluffs, and looked across the yellow
-Missouri; and now he marvelled that he could have contemplated the wide,
-straggling city with comparative indifference. Perhaps, by diligent
-seeking on the morrow--for the capital of Nebraska is an important
-place--he might even in London discover a photograph or two to put on
-his mantel-shelf; and then he could stand opposite them and say, "Why,
-Maisrie must have passed that railway station many a time!" or "Maisrie
-must often have looked up to the spire of the High School, there on the
-hill." To think that he had been twice in Omaha--without
-caring--without knowing! And so his eyes rested on this little word in
-the middle of the big map; but his imagination was far away.
-
-Well, the longest night must have an end; and yet the new dawn brought
-no surcease to his anxieties; for how was he to have an opportunity of
-speaking with Maisrie alone? He was up in the little Mayfair street
-betimes; and made some pretence of beginning work; but that was soon
-abandoned. He could not keep his eyes on any book or paper when there
-were those two windows over the way. When would she appear there to
-water the chrysanthemums in the little balcony? If she accidentally
-caught sight of him, might not some tell-tale flush reveal all he wanted
-to know? Or she might be coming out on some errand--so that he could
-quickly follow her? Or perhaps her grandfather might be going to the
-library, leaving her at home by herself? The door of the house opposite
-grew to be as fascinating as the windows; unknown possibilities might be
-sprung upon him at any moment.
-
-It was quite a cheerful morning--for London in November. If pale mists
-hung about the thoroughfares, at least some trace of blue was
-discernible overhead; and on the panes of the higher windows the
-sunlight shone here and there a dull gleaming gold. The butcher's boy
-whistled loudly as he marched by; the cabman flicked at his horse out of
-mere good humour; the ostlers in the adjacent mews made merry with
-bandied jests. It seemed too fine a morning for the collation of Scotch
-ballads; and so indeed it proved to be; for about eleven o'clock the
-door across the way was opened, and out came Mr. Bethune and his
-granddaughter into the wintry sunlight. Maisrie did not look up. The
-two were talking together as they went along the little thoroughfare and
-turned into Park Street. The next moment Vincent had snatched up his hat
-and gloves, and was off in pursuit.
-
-But he did not seek to overtake them. On the contrary, he kept as wide
-a space between them and him as he had done before he had ever dared to
-address them; and yet the distance was not so great but that he could
-observe Maisrie's every gesture and the graceful motion of every step.
-She wore those hanging sleeves, too, that had hidden his arm on the
-preceding night--those hanging sleeves that had allowed her to say
-something in secret to him, even amid the noise and movement of a great
-crowd. And now that he saw her actual self instead of the vague phantom
-of his reveries, he plucked up courage. Yes, she must have known what
-she was doing. Those were flesh and blood fingers that had taken hold
-of his; when she raised his hand to her heart, it could not have been
-altogether through inadvertence. Once or twice a wild fancy got into
-his head that here and now he would hasten forward, and seize her arm,
-as if by right, and say 'Maisrie, there is no need of words between us:
-I am here at your side, and mean to remain here. Whatever that message
-meant, I claim you as mine.' And then again he drew back. What if
-there were some mistake? Hyde Park did not seem a fitting place for
-explanations. And then, her grandfather might be more than astonished.
-
-Yet hour after hour of this terrible day went by, and brought him no
-nearer to the discovery he longed for. When Maisrie and her grandfather
-returned from their stroll through the Park, the young man went back to
-the sheet of foolscap on which he meant to shadow forth the outlines of
-his lecture. The effort was absurd. He might keep his eyes
-mechanically fixed on the paper; but his brain refused to act.
-Industry--capital--the proposed resumption by the workers of the world
-of the mines, factories, docks, ships, canals, railways which their
-labour had constructed--the impracticability of land
-nationalisation--and so forth: what were these but mere lifeless
-phrases, when his heart was listening for the smallest sound on the
-other side of the street? And ill-luck pursued him. She did not come
-once to the window. The chrysanthemums in the little balcony were quite
-neglected. The afternoon passed, and neither she nor her grandfather
-came out alone. Then, when he went over as usual about half-past six,
-there was no chance of his speaking to her by herself; in fact, both she
-and her grandfather were seated at the one table, with a heap of books
-and papers before them.
-
-"Enough, Maisrie, enough," Mr. Bethune said blithely, and he rose at
-once. "You have had your wish--though I don't see why you should
-undertake any such drudgery--"
-
-She also rose to receive the visitor; and as she gave him her hand for a
-moment, and regarded him with very friendly eyes, there was not the
-least trace of self-consciousness in her manner.
-
-"Yes," said she, with a bright and frank smile, "grandfather has
-conferred a new dignity on me. I am become his amanuensis. Not that I
-am the slightest real use to him, I suppose; it is only done to please
-me; still, I take it seriously, and pretend to be doing my share. Time
-to go, is it?--very well, I shall be ready in a minute."
-
-He was amazed and mortified beyond measure by this perfect
-self-possession. Had nothing whatever happened the night before, then?
-There was no secret between them at all? She had made no
-confession--given him no message? And then wounded pride stepped in and
-spoke--with its usual violence and cruel injustice. Perhaps there were
-people who dispensed their caresses so freely that they thought nothing
-of them? What had startled him, a man, might be only a matter of course
-to her, a girl? Nay,--for what will not a lover say in a passion of
-jealous anger and disappointment?--perhaps he was not the first nor the
-only one who had been similarly bewildered?
-
-He had no word for Maisrie on her return to the room. When the three of
-them went out into the street, he forsook his usual post by her side,
-and walked with her grandfather, to whom he talked exclusively. And of
-course, as his questions were all about the projected compilation of
-ballads, and as old George Bethune was always keenly enthusiastic about
-any new undertaking, there was no stint to their conversation. Maisrie
-walked on in silence and unheeded. When they reached the restaurant,
-and as they were taking their seats at the little table, she glanced at
-the young man; but his eyes did not happen to meet hers. And there was
-no place for her in their talk.
-
-"No," old George Bethune was saying--and with considerable animation,
-for he appeared to have been looking over some of the ballads during the
-day, and his mind was still fired by the recollection of them, "I think
-they are beyond the reach of illustration, even if there should be an
-_edition de luxe_. I have considered your suggestion more than once;
-but I fear the drawing would in almost every instance be an anticlimax
-to the power and simplicity and pathos of the printed page. No picture
-could be as vivid and clear and striking as the verses themselves: why,
-just think of such lines as these--
-
- ''Tis not the frost that freezes fell,
- Nor blowing snaw's inclemencie;
- 'Tis not sic cauld that makes me cry,
- But my love's heart grown cauld to me.
- When we came in by Glasgow town,
- We were a comely sight to see;
- My love was clad i' the black velvet,
- And I myself in cramoisie.'
-
-What picture could better that? What picture could do anything but
-weaken it? You remember in 'Edom o' Gordon' how the young maiden is
-lowered from the burning tower only to be slain by Edom o' Gordon's
-spear--
-
- 'They row'd her in a pair o' sheets,
- And tow'd her owre the wa';
- But on the point o' Gordon's spear
- She gat a deadly fa'.
-
- O bonnie, bonnie was her mouth,
- And cherry were her cheeks,
- And clear, clear was her yellow hair,
- Whereon the red blood dreeps.
-
- Then wi' his spear he turned her owre;
- O but her face was wan!
- He said, "Ye are the first that e'er
- I wish'd alive again."
-
- He turned her owre and owre again,
- O but her skin was white!
- "I might hae spared that bonnie face
- To hae been some man's delight.
-
- "Busk and boun, my merry men a',
- For ill dooms I do guess;--
- I cannot look on that bonnie face
- As it lies on the grass,"'--
-
-What illustration could improve on that?--why, it burns clear as flame!
-Then, again, take the girl who was drowned by her sister in 'the bonnie
-mill-dams o' Balloray'----"
-
-At this point the silent and neglected Maisrie suddenly looked
-up--glancing from her grandfather to the young man in a curiously
-appealing way. She seemed to say 'Grandfather, you forget: it is not
-Balloray, it is Binnorie;' and again 'Vincent, he has forgotten: that is
-all.' But neither of them took any notice of her; nay, the younger man,
-in his insensate indignation and disappointment, would not look her way
-at all; while old George Bethune, with his mind fixed on those imaginary
-pictures, went on in a rapt fashion to repeat certain of the verses--
-
- "Ye couldna see her yellow hair,
- Balloray, O Balloray,
- For gowd and pearls that were sae rare,
- By the bonnie mill-dams o' Balloray.
-
- Ye couldna see her middle sma',
- Balloray, O Balloray,
- Her gowden girdle was sae braw,
- By the bonnie mill-dams o' Balloray.
-
- Ye couldna see her lily feet,
- Balloray, O Balloray,
- Her gowden fringes were sae deep,
- By the bonnie mill-dams o' Balloray.
-
- 'Sair will they be, whae'er they be,
- Balloray, O Balloray,
- The hearts that live to weep for thee!'
- By the bonnie mill-dams o' Balloray!"
-
-
-"It is like a picture by one of the pre-Raphaelites," Vincent said; and
-then the old man proceeded to talk of paper and type and binding, as if
-the new work were just ready for press.
-
-But silence was not to reign for ever between those two. On their way
-home Mr. Bethune was talking of "The Demon Lover," of its alleged
-Italian origin, and of a suggestion he had seen somewhere that it was no
-forsaken sweetheart who had come to tempt the wedded wife, but a fiend
-adopting that disguise. When they reached the little parlour he began
-to search about for the volume in which "The Demon Lover" was thus
-treated; but could not find it; whereupon he went off upstairs, to see
-if it was not among his books and papers there. As soon as he had gone,
-Maisrie rose and came over to where the young man was standing by the
-fireplace.
-
-"What have I done, Vincent?" she said.
-
-"Oh, nothing," he made answer, avoiding her eyes.
-
-"I have a right to know," she said, proudly.
-
-"It is nothing," said he. "I--I made a mistake; that is all."
-
-She looked at him in mute reproach: then she turned away, and went back
-to her seat. There was a paper-knife on the table beside her; she took
-that into her hands, and began to finger it; her eyes were downcast; he
-was free to go now, when he chose.
-
-But he did not go. On the contrary, after a second or two of
-vacillation, he followed her.
-
-"Maisrie," said he, in a very different tone, "perhaps it's all a
-mistake on my part. If so, I am sorry. I don't want to vex you--
-
-"I don't want to vex you, Vincent," said she, in a somewhat low voice.
-"Tell me what it is."
-
-"Well," said he, "I came here this afternoon thinking--hoping--there
-might be some more definite understanding between you and me: yes, I was
-hoping for much--and then--and then I found you quite careless and
-thoughtless, just as if nothing at all had happened last night----"
-
-"Last night?" she repeated.
-
-"Yes," said he, rather reproachfully. "Don't you remember what happened
-last night? Don't you know that you pressed my hand to your heart? But
-perhaps that was nothing--perhaps that meant nothing at all----"
-
-"It meant a very great deal, Vincent," said she, warmly, looking up at
-him with honest eyes. "We were talking of the value of true
-friends--and I could not say much--yet I wished to tell you what I
-thought of all your goodness and kindness. Indeed, indeed it meant a
-great deal, Vincent--and I hoped you would understand----"
-
-"I have understood too much," said he, and he was silent for a second.
-Then he went on. "I thought you had something more than that to say to
-me, Maisrie. For why need I tell you what you must have guessed
-already? You know I love you; you must have seen it all this time;
-there was no need for me to speak. And when the future has but the one
-hope for me, that some day or other you should be my wife, then perhaps
-I was too eager to believe it had all come true--that you were giving me
-a promise in that quiet way--and no need of a spoken word between us.
-But I was mistaken, I see. You only meant friendship. You only wanted
-to say 'Thank you!' to a friend----"
-
-But by this time she had risen from her chair; and there was in her eyes
-the strangest look of pride, and joy, and perhaps, too, of sadness.
-
-"Do you know what you are saying, Vincent?" she said, quite gently.
-"You--of all people in the world--"
-
-She hesitated: she regarded, with admiring, and grateful, and
-affectionate eyes, this handsome lad on whom fortune had shed all good
-things--and perhaps she could not quite confess all she thought.
-
-"You--of all people in the world--every one making much of you--every
-one hoping such great things of you--and you come seeking a wife here."
-She glanced round at the shabby little apartment. Then she turned her
-eyes towards him again; and there was a smile in them, of an unstable
-kind; and tears were gathering in the lashes. "Well," she said, "it
-will be something for me to think of. It will be something for me to be
-proud of. There can be no harm in that. I shall be able to say to
-myself 'Vincent thought so well of you that he once asked you to be his
-wife'----"
-
-"But I don't know what you mean, Maisrie!" he exclaimed, and in spite of
-her he seized her hand and held it tight between his two. "What do you
-mean? You are going to be my wife! Oh, I don't want you to make rash
-promises; I don't want to frighten you; no, I want you to be of good
-heart, and you will see things will turn out all right in the end. And
-if you don't know your own mind yet--if you are afraid to say
-anything--won't you let me guess? Surely we have not been all this time
-together, and seeing so much of each other, without getting to know each
-other pretty intimately? And if I did make a mistake last night--well,
-that is a trifling matter--and I was too presumptuous----"
-
-She managed to release her hand.
-
-"Sit down, Vincent, and let me talk to you," she said. "Perhaps I may
-not have another chance; and I do not wish you ever to look back and say
-I was ungrateful, or unreasonable, or cold-hearted. Cold-hearted?--not
-that--not that--towards you!" And then she went on in rather a sad way,
-"I think the time has about come that we should part. It has been a
-pleasant companionship: I am not likely ever to forget it. But your
-future is so important, and ours so uncertain, that I am sure the sooner
-we go separate ways the better. And I am anxious to make a change now.
-I think if my grandfather and I went away somewhere where we could live
-more cheaply--where there would be fewer temptations towards the
-spending of money--I could do something to support him, and leave him
-the luxury of his books. I am a woman now--I want to work----"
-
-"You work? Not while I can!" he said, hotly.
-
-She went on without heeding him.
-
-"That is why I have been glad to see him so eager about this book of
-ballads. If he could only get rid of all indebtedness, to friends and
-others, through this book, then we should start clear; and I should ask
-him not to fret any more about his literary schemes. He is an old man.
-He has done everything for me: why should I not do something for him
-now? And I have no pride. The story about those Scotch estates was
-always a kind of fairy tale to me; I never had any real belief in the
-possibility of their coming to us; I was never a fine lady even in
-imagination. So that it matters little to me what I turn my hand to; if
-what little education I have had is useless, I would take to something
-else; I would work about a farm-house as soon as anything--for I am a
-great deal stronger than you may imagine----"
-
-"Oh, what are you talking about, Maisrie!" he said, with simulated
-anger. "If you think I am going to allow any such folly, you are
-mistaken. There are plenty of dairymaids in the world without you. And
-I have the right to say something--I claim the right: I am going to
-interfere, whether you like it or not. When you speak of your duty
-towards your grandfather, that I understand. He has been everything to
-you: who would ask you to forsake him? But, as you say, he is an old
-man. If anything were to happen to him, think of your own position.
-You have hardly a friend in the world--a few acquaintances in Canada,
-perhaps--but what is that? You will want some one to protect you: give
-me that right! If I let you go from me now, how am I to find you
-again?--how am I to know what may happen? Maisrie, have courage!--be
-frank!--tell me that the little message of last night meant something
-more!"
-
-The eloquence was not in the words, but in the vibrating tones of his
-voice; and there were tears in her eyes as she answered--
-
-"Vincent, I cannot--I dare not! You don't know how grandfather and I
-are situated: you are so generous, so open-minded, that--that you see
-everything in so favourable a light; but then other people might step
-in----
-
-"Between you and me? Who?" he demanded, with set lips.
-
-"Ah," she said, with a sigh, "who can tell? And besides--besides--do
-you not think I am as proud of you as any one?--do you not think I am
-looking forward to all that is expected of you?--and when I hear of you
-as this or that, I will say to myself 'I knew what Vincent was going to
-do; and now he is glad that he did not hamper himself out of--out of
-pity--for a friendless girl'----"
-
-But here she broke down altogether, and covered her face with her hands,
-and sobbed without possibility of concealment. He was by her side in a
-moment; he laid his hand on the down-bent head--on the soft hair.
-
-"Maisrie," he said, with the utmost gentleness, "don't make me angry.
-If you have anything to say why you cannot, or will not, be my wife,
-tell me; but do not be unreasonable and foolish. You speak of my
-future: it is nothing to me without you. You talk of the expectations of
-my friends: I tell you that my life is my own. And why should you be
-any drag or hamper--you! I wish you would think of yourself a little:
-not of me. Surely there is something better in the world than ambition,
-and figuring before the public in newspapers." Then he stopped for a
-second or two; and resumed in a lower and different tone. "Of course,
-if you refuse me your love, that is different. That I can understand. I
-have done nothing to deserve it: I have come to you as a beggar. If you
-refuse me that, there is nothing more to be said. I do not blame you.
-If I have made a mistake, so much the worse for me----"
-
-She rose.
-
-"Vincent," she said, between her half-stifled sobs, "you are not very
-kind. But it is better so--much better. Now I must go and help
-grandfather to find that book. And as this is to be the last
-word--well, then--dear friend--don't be so ungenerous to me when in
-after years you look back----"
-
-But he was not likely to let her go like that. He interposed between her
-and the door; nay, he drew her towards him, and took her head between
-his hands, and pushed back the hair from her brow, as though he would
-read down to the very depths of those beautiful, tear-dimmed eyes.
-
-"You have not refused me your love, Maisrie--because you dare not!" he
-said. "And what do I care whether you say it or not--when I know?" And
-therewith he kissed her on the mouth--and again--and again. "Now you
-are mine. You dare not deny your love--and I claim you as my wife----"
-
-She struggled backward to be free from him, and said almost wildly--
-
-"No, no--Vincent, you do not understand--I have not been frank with
-you--I cannot ever be your wife!--some day I will tell you----"
-
-There was no chance for any further entreaty or explanation, for at this
-moment there was the sound of a footstep outside, the door was opened,
-and old George Bethune appeared, carrying in his hands some half-dozen
-books. When he saw those two standing opposite to each other, the young
-man pale and agitated, the girl also pale and with her eyes streaming
-over with tears, he glanced from the one to the other in silence. Then
-he walked deliberately forward to the table, and laid down the books.
-Maisrie escaped from the room. Vincent returned to the fireplace, too
-bewildered by her last words to care much what construction might be
-placed upon this scene by her grandfather. But he had to recall
-himself: for the old man, just as if he had observed nothing, just as if
-nothing had happened, but yet with a certain measured precision in his
-tones, resumed his discussion of "The Demon Lover," and proceeded to
-give his reasons for thinking that the story had migrated from the far
-north to the south.
-
-But presently Mr. Bethune had turned from those books, and was staring
-into the fire, as he said with a certain slow and significant emphasis--
-
-"It will be an interesting subject; and yet I must guard against being
-wholly absorbed by it. And that for my granddaughter's sake. I imagine
-we have been living a much too monotonous life for some time back; and
-that is not well for anyone, especially for a young girl. A limitation
-of interests; that is not wholesome. The mind becomes morbid; and
-exaggerates trifles. And in the case of Maisrie, she has been used to
-change and travel; I should think the unvarying routine of our life of
-late, both as regards our employments and amusements, extremely
-prejudicial to her health and spirits----"
-
-"Why, she seems very well!" Vincent said, anxiously--for he knew not
-what all this might mean.
-
-"A change will do her good--will do all of us good, perhaps," said the
-old man. "Everyone knows that it is not wise for people to see too much
-of each other; it puts too heavy a strain on friendship. Companionship
-should be a volunteered thing--should be a reward, indeed, for previous
-isolation and work----"
-
-Vincent's forehead flushed; and the natural man within him was crying
-out 'Oh, very well, then; I don't press any further acquaintance on
-you!' But for Maisrie's sake he curbed his pride. He said, as quickly
-as might be--
-
-"In our case I thought that was precisely how our companionship stood--a
-little relaxation after the labours of the day. However, if you think
-there has been too much of that----"
-
-"I was speaking of general principles," Mr. Bethune said, with
-equanimity. "At the same time I confess that, as regards Maisrie, I
-think that some alteration in our mode of existence might be beneficial.
-Her life of late has been much too monotonous."
-
-"Again and again she has told me that she delights in the quietude of
-it!" the young man protested--for it suddenly occurred to him that
-Maisrie was to be dragged away from England altogether. "Surely she has
-had enough of travel?"
-
-"Travel? That is not what I have in mind," old George Bethune said.
-"We have neither the time nor the means. I should merely propose to
-pack up a few books and things, and take Maisrie down to some sea-side
-place--Brighton, perhaps, as being the most convenient."
-
-The young man's face flashed instant relief; Brighton--that was
-something different from what he had been dreading. Brighton--Brighton
-was not Toronto nor Montreal; there was going to be no wide Atlantic
-between him and her; a trivial matter of an hour's railway journey or
-something of the kind!
-
-"Oh, Brighton?" said he, quite gladly. "Yes, that will be very pleasant
-for her. Brighton is brisk and lively enough at this time of the year;
-and if there is any sunlight going, you are sure to get it there. I am
-afraid you will find the hotels full----"
-
-"We shall not trouble the hotels," Mr. Bethune said, with grave dignity.
-"Some very humble lodgings will suffice. And perhaps we might get rooms
-in a house on the hill at the back of the town; that would give me
-seclusion and quiet for my work. Yes, I think the change will be
-wholesome; and the sooner we set about it the better."
-
-Well, to Vincent it did not seem that this proposal involved any great
-alteration in their mode of life, except that he himself was obviously
-and unmistakeably excluded; nevertheless, he was so glad to find that
-the separation from Maisrie was of a mild and temporary nature that he
-affected to give a quite cordial approval. He even offered to engage
-the services of his aunt, Mrs. Ellison, in securing them apartments; but
-Mr. Bethune answered that Maisrie and he were old travellers, and would
-be able to shift for themselves. And when did they propose to go?
-Well, to-morrow, if his granddaughter were content.
-
-While they were yet talking, Maisrie made her appearance. She had
-bathed her eyes in water, and there was not much trace of her recent
-agitation, though she was still somewhat pale. And Vincent--to show her
-that he refused to be alarmed by her parting words--to show her that he
-was quite confident as to the future--preserved his placid, not to say
-gay, demeanour.
-
-"Do you know what your grandfather is going to do with you, Maisrie?"
-said he. "He is going to take you down to Brighton for a time. Yes,
-and at once--to-morrow, if you care to go."
-
-She glanced quickly from one to the other, as if fearing some conspiracy
-between them.
-
-"And you, Vincent?" she asked, turning to him.
-
-He did not meet her look.
-
-"I? Oh, I must keep to work; I can't afford to go away down and idle
-among those fashionable folk. My Mendover lecture isn't half sketched
-out yet. And then, again, you remember the article I told you
-about?--before beginning it I ought really to run down to Scotland, or
-at least to Yorkshire, and see one of those Municipal Lodging-houses in
-actual operation. They seem to me marvellous institutions," continued
-this consummate hypocrite (as if the chief thought in his mind at this
-moment was the housing of the industrious poor!), "and of the greatest
-importance to the country at large; worked at a profit, too, that is the
-amazing thing! Fancy at Huddersfield; threepence a day includes use of
-cooking and table utensils, a smoking-room, reading-room, and
-conversation-room, and then a bed at night--all for threepence!
-Belonging to the rate-payers, themselves--under the management of the
-Corporation--and paying a profit so that you can go on improving and
-extending. Why, every big town in the kingdom ought to have a Municipal
-Lodginghouse, or half a dozen of them; and it only needs to be shown how
-they are worked for the example to be copied everywhere----"
-
-"And when do you go, Vincent?" she asked, with downcast eyes.
-
-"Oh, I am not sure yet," he made answer cheerfully. "Of course, I ought
-in duty to go; but it will cost me half what I shall get for the
-article. However, that is neither here nor there. But if this is to be
-our last night together for a little while, Maisrie," he went on, to
-keep up his complacent acquiescence in this temporary separation, "you
-might give us a little music--won't you?--you haven't had the violin out
-of its case for a long time."
-
-She was very obedient. She went and got the violin--though she was in
-no playing or singing mood.
-
-"What, then, grandfather?" she said when she was ready.
-
-"Whatever you please."
-
-Then she began, and very slowly and tenderly she played the air of a
-Scotch song--"Annie's Tryst." It is a simple air, and yet pathetic in
-its way; and indeed so sensitive and skilful was her touch that the
-violin seemed to speak; any one familiar with the song might have
-imagined he could hear the words interpenetrating those vibrant notes--
-
- "Your hand is cauld as snaw, Annie,
- Your cheek is wan and white;
- What gars ye tremble sae, Annie,
- What maks your e'e sae bright?
- The snaw is on the ground, Willie,
- The frost is cauld and keen,
- But there's a burnin' fire, Willie,
- That sears my heart within.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Oh, will ye tryst wi' me, Annie,
- Oh, will ye tryst me then?
- I'll meet ye by the burn, Annie,
- That wimples down the glen.
- I daurna tryst wi' you, Willie,
- I daurna tryst ye here,
- But we'll hold our tryst in heaven, Willie,
- In the springtime o' the year."
-
-
-"That is too sad, Maisrie," her grandfather said, fretfully. "Why don't
-you sing something?"
-
-She turned to Vincent: there was a mute question in her eyes.
-
-"Will you sing the _Claire Fontaine_, Maisrie?" said he.
-
-She seemed a little surprised: it was a strange song to ask for on a
-night of farewell; but she did as she was bidden. She went and got the
-book and placed it open before her on the table: then she drew her bow
-across the strings.
-
-But hardly had she began to sing the little ballad than it became
-evident that there was something added to the pure, clear tones of her
-voice--some quality of an indefinable nature--some alien influence that
-might at any moment prove too strong for her self-control.
-
- _Sur la plus haute tranche--_
-
-this was the point at which she began--
-
- _Le rossignol chantait;_
- _Chante, rossignol, chante,_
- _Toi qui as le coeur gai--_
-
-And so far all was well; but at the refrain
-
- _Lui ya longtemps que je t'aime,_
- _Jamais je ne t'oublierai_
-
-her voice shook a little, and her lips were tremulous. Vincent cursed
-his folly a hundred times over: why had he asked her to sing the _Claire
-Fontaine_? But still she held bravely on:
-
- _Chante, rossignol, chante,_
- _Toi qui as le coeur gai;_
- _Tu as le coeur a rire,_
- _Moi je l' ai-t-a pleurer--_
-
-And here she could go no further for those choking tears in her voice;
-she stood for a moment all uncertain, trying to master herself; then she
-laid the violin on the table, and with a broken "Good-night,
-Vincent--and good-bye!" she turned and left the room, her hands hiding
-her face, her frame shaken by the violence of her sobbing.
-
-There was an instant of silence.
-
-"Yes, it is time she was taken away," old George Bethune said, with a
-deep frown on his shaggy eyebrows. "Her nerves are all wrong. Why
-should she make such a to-do about leaving London for a fortnight?"
-
-But Vincent Harris knew better than that. It was not this unexpected
-departure that was in Maisrie's mind: it was the words that he had
-spoken to her, and she to him, earlier in the evening. It was of no
-fortnight's absence she was thinking, but of a far wider and longer
-farewell.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- THE GNAWING FOX.
-
-
-But he was not disheartened by those ominous words of hers, not even on
-the following morning, when he found the little thoroughfare so
-strangely silent and empty, and the two windows over the way become
-vacant and devoid of charm. He had the high courage and impetuous will
-of youth; seeing no difficulties or dangers ahead, he refused to believe
-in any; Maisrie had not denied him her love, therefore she must be his
-wife; and all the future shone fair. And so he set to work on his
-Mendover lecture; and made good progress, even if his thoughts went
-sometimes flying away down to Brighton. As for the lecture
-itself--well, perhaps certain of its contentions and illustrations would
-have surprised and even shocked that Communist-capitalist, his father;
-but the young man was accustomed to think for himself.
-
-Yes, this little street was terribly empty, and those windows
-indescribably blank. And the room was lonely, work or no work. But as
-he was standing looking out, cigarette in hand, after his frugal
-luncheon, a happy inspiration sprung into his head; for here was Hobson,
-the husband of the landlady across the way, coming along the pavement;
-and would it not be a comforting thing to have him in to talk about the
-two lodgers who had just left? Vincent opened the window a bit, and
-said into the street (there was no need to call)--
-
-"Hobson!"
-
-The man looked up.
-
-"Yes, sir?"
-
-"I want you for a moment."
-
-Then Vincent went himself downstairs and opened the door; and here was
-the shabby-genteel ex-butler, obsequiously waiting, with an excess of
-imbecile amiability in his weak, prominent, nervous eyes.
-
-"Come in and have a smoke, Hobson," the young man said. "You must be
-lonely over there now. Makes a difference, doesn't it?"
-
-"Wonderful, sir, wonderful;" and the docile Hobson obediently followed
-up the stairs, and accepted a big cigar, and was prevailed on to draw in
-a chair to the fire. Vincent took a seat opposite him, and lit another
-cigarette--in a quite friendly fashion.
-
-"You've seen a good deal of Mr. Bethune since he came to live in your
-house?" the young man began, in a sort of tentative and encouraging way.
-And Hobson responded with instant enthusiasm----
-
-"Ah, yes, indeed, sir, and proud of the same. A great man, sir--oh, a
-very great man--and how he came to be where he is, sir, well, that beats
-me, sir. And that haffable, sir!--if he ave somethink on the table,
-he'll say, 'Hobson, bring two tumblers'--yes, sir--'Hobson, bring two
-tumblers'--and I must take a seat, just as kind and condescending as you
-are, sir. 'Fill your glass, Hobson,' he says, just that haffable
-like--"
-
-"Oh, I beg your pardon," said Vincent, looking guiltily towards his
-vacant sideboard. "The fact is, I haven't anything of the kind in these
-rooms; but I can send out. Which would you like, gin or whiskey?"
-
-"Whichever you please," said Hobson, complacently, "being so kind as to
-think of it, sir."
-
-The necessary fluid was soon procured; and Hobson was liberally helped.
-And when at length he began to expatiate on the character and the
-wonderful attainments and abilities of Maisrie's grandfather, there may
-have been a little exaggeration (for gin tends towards exaggeration) in
-his speech; but his aim and admiration were genuine enough at the core.
-He grovelled in the dust before that impressive old man. He spoke in
-almost a breathless way of his haffability. Why, that a great personage
-in literature should condescend to read his, Hobson's, poor little
-verses was extraordinary; but that he should give advice, too, and
-encouragement, that was overwhelming. And as for the young lady--but
-here Hobson's language failed him. With tears in his eyes he declared
-that she was a hangel of sweetness--which did not convey much to
-Vincent's eager-listening ears. But when he went on to tell about all
-sorts of little acts of kindness and consideration--when he spoke of her
-patience with the old gentleman's temper, of her cheerfulness over small
-disappointments happening to herself, of her gentleness, and sunniness,
-and invariable good humour--here he was on more intelligible ground; and
-his delighted and grateful audience was not slow to press on him another
-cigar, which was not refused. Indeed, what with so much courtesy shown
-him, and what with the stimulating influence of the gin and water,
-Hobson grew valiant; and began to broach wild and iconoclastic theories
-about filthy lucre, and to describe in dark colours the character of any
-one--presumably his own wife--who could be so base as to take every
-farthing of her rent, fortnight after fortnight, from a grand and noble
-old gentleman and a beautiful young lady both of whom seemed to have
-known better days.
-
-"Do you know how long they are to be away?" Vincent asked.
-
-"Well, sir, the old gentleman, sir, he says perhaps two weeks and
-perhaps three."
-
-"I see you've put up a notice that the rooms are to be let."
-
-"Yes, sir; but that ain't much use, not for so short a time, sir."
-
-And here another sudden fancy struck the young man.
-
-"But I know how you can get them let," said he.
-
-"How, sir?"
-
-"You can let them to me."
-
-"Law, sir!"
-
-There was a doubtful look about Hobson's big, vacuous eyes: being of a
-poetic and sensitive nature he did not like jokes, and was suspicious.
-However, the young gentleman, to judge by his manner, seemed fair and
-honest and above-board.
-
-"I will take them," said Vincent, "until Mr. Bethune and his
-granddaughter come back. Not to occupy them myself, you understand; but
-I don't want any stranger to be going into these rooms, you see--that is
-all."
-
-"How kind, sir--how thoughtful!" Hobson said, in a pathetic way. "That
-it is to have good, kind friends!"
-
-"And as the rooms are now mine, I suppose I might go over and look at
-them--if you will finish up your tumbler?"
-
-"Certainly, sir, certainly," Hobson said, jumping to his feet with
-alacrity, and hastily draining his glass. "They're all tidied up, sir,
-against the chance of a lodger. And won't the missus be surprised!--for
-the women, sir, the women, you see, sir, they likes to haggle and
-bargain, but with men, sir, begging your pardon, sir, it's a word and
-done!"
-
-Indeed he seemed quite proud of the promptitude with which he had
-conducted and concluded this negotiation; and it was with an unusual air
-of authority and importance that he led the way upstairs and showed
-Vincent into the little parlour, with which he was already abundantly
-familiar. There were few alterations. The old man's books, Maisrie's
-music, and similar personal belongings, had disappeared; and a hideous
-purple vase stood for ornament in the middle of the table. The pallid
-lithographs were still on the walls; Maisrie's chrysanthemums were out
-there in the little iron balcony.
-
-"Would you like to see the rooms upstairs, sir?"
-
-The young man hesitated for a second.
-
-"Oh, very well."
-
-Hobson led the way up to the next landing; and there the first door he
-came to he flung wide open.
-
-"The young lady's room, sir."
-
-But Vincent did not accept the implied invitation. He hung shamefacedly
-back.
-
-"Oh, yes, that's all right," said he. "I--I only wished to--to have it
-kept for her."
-
-And yet he lingered for another second at the door of this chamber--that
-seemed so sacred--that seemed to shut him out. He could see the
-dressing-table, the chest of drawers, the neatly folded bed, the rather
-dingy window.
-
-"Look here, Hobson," said he, "if I were to get a few things to make the
-room a little more cheerful, I suppose that could be done without
-letting Miss Bethune know who sent them? The looking-glass there--you
-know, that is not the right kind of thing at all; there should be a
-pretty mirror on the dressing-table, with some lace round the top of
-it----"
-
-Here he ventured in half a step or so, and rather timidly looked round.
-
-"That one gas-jet can't be half enough, when Miss Bethune is dressing to
-go out in the evening," he said, complainingly--perhaps to conceal his
-incomprehensible diffidence and shyness. "She must have candles--one on
-each side of the mirror, for example. And that screen across the
-window, why, it is so common!--it ought to be a piece of pale silk--to
-let the light through."
-
-He ventured a few inches further, and again looked round.
-
-"What do you call that thing?--the coverlet--the counterpane--isn't it?
-Well, it shouldn't be white, and cold, and cheerless like that; it
-should be a deep crimson satin--and there should be pretty things at the
-head of the bed--loops and bows of ribbon--my goodness, what is Mrs.
-Hobson about!--a young lady's room shouldn't be like a cell in a
-prison!"
-
-"Law, sir, I'm very sorry," Hobson said, in a bewildered way: a crimson
-satin coverlet sounded a grand thing; but it also meant a heap of money.
-
-"But come away out and I will talk to you," Vincent said, just as if
-they were in a mysteriously sacred shrine, where the discussion of
-business affairs was a sort of profanation. Or perhaps he resented the
-intrusion of the amiable but gin-odorous Hobson? At all events, he did
-not resume the conversation until they were both downstairs again in the
-parlour.
-
-"You understand, then," he said, and there was no more timidity about
-his speech now, "I am willing to get a number of things for the room,
-and to make you and Mrs. Hobson a present of them, on the distinct
-condition that Miss Bethune is kept in absolute ignorance how they came
-there. One word to her--and out they come again, every rag and stick.
-Why, you can easily invent excuses! You can tell them you took the
-opportunity of their absence to brighten up the place a bit. It is in
-your own interest to keep the rooms smart: it doesn't imply any favour
-conferred on your lodgers. Don't you see?"
-
-"Yes, sir. Very kind of you, sir, indeed," said Hobson, who seemed a
-little confused. "And what did you want me to do?"
-
-"Do? I want you to do nothing: and I want you to say nothing. Don't
-you understand? I am going to send in a few things to smarten up that
-room; and they are yours so long as not any one of you hints to Miss
-Bethune where they came from. Isn't that simple enough?"
-
-But far less simple was his own part in this transaction, as he was
-speedily to discover. For when he went outside again, and made away
-towards Regent-street, thinking he would go to a famous shop there, and
-buy all sorts of pretty things, it gradually dawned on him that he had
-undertaken a task entirely beyond his knowledge. For example, he could
-purchase any quantity of crimson satin; but how or where was he going to
-get it made up into a coverlet, or counterpane, or quilt, or whatever
-the thing was called? Then supposing he had the mirror and the lace,
-who was going to put the lace round the top of the mirror?--he could not
-do that for himself. A little set of ornamental book-shelves he could
-buy, certainly; but how was he going to ask for the bows of ribbon, or
-the silk drapery, or whatever it was that ought to adorn the brass rods
-at the head of the bed? The more he considered the matter the more
-clearly he saw that he must consult a woman, and the only woman he could
-consult in confidence was his aunt, Mrs. Ellison, who had now returned
-to Brighton. And perhaps he strove to conceal from himself what it was
-that so easily and naturally drew his thoughts to Brighton; perhaps he
-was hardly himself aware how this secret hunger of the soul was minute
-by minute and hour by hour increasing in its demands. Maisrie had not
-been so long away; but already he felt that one brief glimpse of her, no
-matter at what distance, would be a priceless thing. And then again it
-would not be breaking any compact. He would not seek to go near her, if
-there was this understanding that these two were for the present
-separated the one from the other. She would not even know he was in the
-town. And surely it would be a new and wonderful experience to look at
-Maisrie from afar off, as if she were a stranger.
-
-So instead of going to Regent-street, he went to the nearest post-office
-and telegraphed to Mrs. Ellison, asking if she could take him in for a
-day or two. Then he walked on home; and by the time he had reached
-Grosvenor Place, the answer was there awaiting him; he was to go down at
-once. He put a few things in his bag; jumped into a hansom and drove to
-Victoria-station; caught the four-thirty train; and eventually arrived
-at Brunswick Terrace about six. He guessed that his aunt's afternoon
-visitors would be gone; and he would have ample opportunity of a long
-talk with her before dinner.
-
-His anticipations proved correct. When he was shown into the big
-drawing-room--which looked very snug and warm amid its magnificence--he
-found the tall and bright-eyed young widow in sole possession; and she
-came forward to welcome him with great complaisance.
-
-"Very sensible of you, Vin. You know I can always make room for you, no
-matter who is in the house."
-
-"If I had gone to a hotel, aunt, you would have made an awful row; and I
-don't want to quarrel with you just at present: the fact is, I have come
-to you for advice and help," said he. "But first--my congratulations!
-I was hardly surprised when I got your letter; and I am sure no one can
-wish you more happiness than I do----"
-
-"Oh, be quiet," she said; and she took a seat at a little distance from
-the fire, by the side of a small table, and put a fan between her eyes
-and the crimson-shaded lamp. "Congratulations? Well, I suppose there
-are no fools like old fools. But if grown-up people will play at being
-children, and amuse themselves by writing things in the sand--did I tell
-you how it all happened?--they must take the consequences. And I, who
-used to be so content! Haven't I often told you? Perhaps I boasted too
-much----"
-
-"Oh, yes, pretend you regret it!" said he. "And you talk of your being
-so old--you!--why, what girl of all your acquaintance has half your life
-and spirit, or half your good looks, either----"
-
-"Vincent Harris," said she, and she turned round and faced him, "what do
-you want?"
-
-He laughed.
-
-"It is a very simple matter, aunt."
-
-And then he began to tell her of the little predicament in which he was
-placed; and to beseech her help. Would she come and choose the things
-for him? There were plenty of bric-a-brac shops in Brighton: she would
-know what was most appropriate: her own house was evidence of her taste.
-But his ingenuous flattery was of no avail. Mrs. Ellison's face grew
-more and more serious, until at length she exclaimed--
-
-"Why, Vin, this is the very madness of infatuation! And I had been
-hoping for far other things. I had imagined from the tone of your last
-letter that perhaps there might be a change--that your eyes had been
-opened at last. So this is going on just the same as ever?"
-
-"It is going on, as you call it, aunt; and is likely to go on--so long
-as I live."
-
-"Then I, for one, wish to have nothing to do with it," she said,
-sharply. "And this last proposal is really too audacious. What
-business have you with that girl's room?--what right have you to go into
-it?"
-
-He was rather taken aback--for a moment.
-
-"Business?--oh, none of course. None whatever--that is to say--oh, yes,
-I have, though!--I have a perfect right to go into it. The room is not
-hers. It is mine. I have paid for it. When she comes back it will be
-hers; and where is the harm of her finding it a little prettier?--that
-is all."
-
-"I must say, Vin," she continued, in a very reserved fashion, "that the
-infatuation of a young man may excuse a good deal; but this is a
-little--a little too much. Do you consider it quite nice--quite
-becoming? A satin counterpane! I wonder what the girl would think
-herself--if she has any refinement of feeling--if she has any
-delicacy--"
-
-His face grew very pale.
-
-"'If she has any refinement of feeling--if she has any delicacy,'" he
-repeated.
-
-Then he rose.
-
-"It is useless to say anything further, aunt; there is an end this
-time."
-
-But she had risen too. He tried to pass her--and failed; nay, she went
-to the door, and stood with her back against it, and faced him.
-
-"No, you shall not go," she said. "Why should there be any dissension?
-You are my own dear boy; I would do anything for you--except in this one
-direction----"
-
-"Except in this one direction!" he repeated, scornfully.
-
-"Why cannot we remain friends," she said, with appealing eyes, "good and
-true friends--and agree to leave this one subject alone?"
-
-"This one subject--that is my life!" he said, vehemently. "What folly
-you talk! You wish to cut away the very thing I live for; the very
-thing that is my life; and to continue your friendship with what
-remains--a senseless stick or stone! And why? Because of your insensate
-prejudice, your cruel and baseless suspicions. Why do you talk to me as
-if I were a boy? I have seen twice as much of the world as you have; I
-have had better opportunities of learning how to judge strangers. But
-you--you live in a narrow groove--you have your maid to talk to--your
-acquaintances to call in the afternoon--your friends to dinner--and what
-besides? That is your world. What do you know of the human beings
-outside it? Must they all be dishonest--because they have not been
-heard of by your handful of a set? Must they all be thieves and
-swindlers--because they are not in the Court Directory? But it is
-little matter. If this subject is debarred, then all is debarred, as
-between you and me. You can go your own way, and I mine. I did expect,
-now that you have your own happiness secured, you might show some little
-generosity, some little sympathy; but I see it is different; and I will
-not allow one who is dearer to me than all the world to be treated with
-such enmity, while I am supposed to stand by and accept it as a natural
-condition of affairs. I do not; I have had enough; and so here is an
-end, as between you and me; and I hope you will have more happiness than
-you seem to wish for other people."
-
-Well, Mrs. Ellison was not used to giving way; but she was very fond of
-this proud and handsome boy; and she gave just one sob, and tears
-gathered in her eyes.
-
-"You are not very kind, Vin," she said.
-
-And what marvellous thing was this that instantaneously smote his heart?
-Why, Maisrie had made use of this very expression on the preceding
-afternoon! And all of a sudden he seemed to recognise that his
-adversary here was a woman; she was akin to his beloved--and therefore
-to be treated gently; Maisrie's voice and eyes seemed to be pleading for
-her: surely that was enough? He hesitated for a moment: then he said--
-
-"Very well; let it be as you wish. We shall see how we get on, with the
-one thing that is of more importance to me than anything else shut out
-from mention. But I must say this to you, aunt: I do not see I am doing
-anything that the most fastidious person can object to if I put a few
-pretty things into the room of the girl who is to be my wife."
-
-"How do you know that she is to be your wife, Vin?" she said, rather
-sadly.
-
-"I know," he made answer.
-
-"My poor boy!" she said; and then she took him by the hand and led him
-back to the little table at which they had been sitting; and there they
-had some further conversation about more or less indifferent things,
-with the one all-important subject carefully avoided. And then it was
-time for them to go away and dress for dinner.
-
-Lord Musselburgh dined with them that evening, and remained some time
-after the other guests had gone. To Vincent it seemed a puzzling thing
-that two betrothed people should make so merry. They appeared so well
-content with their present estate; they were so assured as to the
-future; no anxieties; no conflicting hopes and fears; they were in the
-happiest mood. Next morning, too, Lord Musselburgh again made his
-appearance; and the three of them went out for a stroll along the
-promenade. All the world was shining fair and clear; Mrs. Ellison was
-looking her best, and seemed to know it; her fiance was in a gay humour.
-Why, they were almost like the 'lover and his lass' of whom Thomas
-Morley sang nigh three hundred years ago--those 'pretty country folks'
-who lived in a perpetual spring-time, with birds singing
-hey-ding-a-ding-a-ding to them through all the jocund hours. The tall
-and elegant young widow blushed and laughed like a maid; her eyes were
-sarcastic, playful, amused, according to her varying mood; the sunlight
-touched her pretty brown hair. There was, indeed, a sort of audacity of
-comeliness about her, that set Vincent thinking of a very different kind
-of beauty--the beauty that seems to be dowered with a divine and angelic
-sadness. He was walking with these two; but he did not take part in
-their frolic talk; nor did he pay much attention to the crowd of people,
-the butterflies of fashion, who had come out into the pleasant sunshine.
-He seemed to see before him a face that, with all its youth, and its
-touch of colour, and its grace of outline, was strangely pensive and
-wistful. And again he asked himself, as many a time he had asked
-himself, what that expression meant: whether it had been brought there
-by experience of the many vicissitudes of life, or by loneliness, or
-whether it was not something more tragic still--the shadow of an
-impending fate. There was more than that he could not understand: her
-curious resignation, her hopelessness as to the future, her wish to get
-away. And what was it she had concealed from him? And why had she
-declared she could not ever be his wife?
-
-"You are very silent, Vin," his fair neighbour said, turning her merry
-eyes towards him at last. "Here is Lord Musselburgh declaring that if he
-were a Jew he would turn dentist, to have it out with the Christians for
-what they did in the Middle Ages. A horrid revenge, wouldn't it
-be?--and so mean--under pretence of affording relief. Oh, look at that
-girl over there--I do believe the ruff is coming back--we shall all be
-Elizabethans by-and-by."
-
-"But what business had women ever with ruffs?" Lord Musselburgh
-interposed. "Why, when the dandies and bucks of Henry VIII.'s time
-began to make themselves splendid by puffing themselves out round the
-neck, of course it was in imitation of the stag--as the stag becomes
-when he is supposed to captivate the fancy of the hinds; but you don't
-find the hinds with any similar adornments. Such things are proper to
-males: why should women try to look magnificent round the back of the
-neck? Why should a hen covet a cockscomb? It's all wrong--it's against
-natural laws."
-
-"Natural laws in a milliner's shop!" she said. "Oh, do look at those two
-Italian girls; what English peasant-girl could choose colour like that?
-I _should_ like to speak to them--for a moment."
-
-Lord Musselburgh did not seem inclined to interfere.
-
-"I dare say they may have been long enough in England," said he, "to
-have picked up a little of the Italian that English ladies speak. You
-may try them."
-
-But she refrained; for at this moment one of the girls began to play a
-few bars of _Funiculi-funicula_ evidently as an introduction to the
-singing of her companion; whereupon Lord Musselburgh proposed that Mrs.
-Ellison should cross over to look at the windows of one or two
-jewellers' shops--in which both of them happened to be much interested
-just at this time.
-
-The morning went by, and Vincent had caught no glimpse of Maisrie
-Bethune or her grandfather; but indeed he had not expected that; the old
-man would be busy with his books, and it was not likely that Maisrie
-would come wandering by herself through this fashionable throng. When
-at last the three friends got back to Brunswick Terrace, it was close on
-luncheon-time; though here Mrs. Ellison was much surprised to learn that
-Lord Musselburgh had engaged Vincent to lunch with him at the Bedford
-Hotel.
-
-"What's the matter?" said she. "Business or billiards?"
-
-"Neither," her fiance made answer, "I only wanted to give you a little
-holiday, for an hour or two."
-
-"Not longer, then," she said. "For I am going out driving at three, and
-I shall expect you both."
-
-Soon the two young men were seated at a little window-table in the
-spacious and cheerful coffee-room; and again Vincent was struck by the
-eminently practical manner in which his companion spoke of his
-forthcoming marriage. It was going to be, he frankly intimated, a very
-useful arrangement for both Mrs. Ellison and himself; and their combined
-fortunes would enable them to do what hitherto had been impossible for
-either of them. Mrs. Ellison was fond of society; he had always looked
-forward to the formation of a political salon when once he got married;
-and now he thought he could afford to have a much bigger house, which
-would be necessary for that purpose, than his present one in Piccadilly.
-Then there were speculations as to whether he, Musselburgh, ought to
-accept office--some subsidiary office, of course, as befitting his
-years--when his party came into power again: you see, Vin Harris was
-being consulted now as if he were a friend of the family. But as for
-Vincent's own affairs--not a word: Lord Musselburgh had received a hint;
-and he was discretion itself.
-
-And yet if ever in his life the younger of those two friends had need of
-a confidant, it was that afternoon; for something then happened that
-seemed to strike at the very roots of his being. When it was about time
-for them to go along to keep their appointment with Mrs. Ellison,
-Vincent was standing in the hall of the hotel, waiting for Lord
-Musselburgh, who had momentarily gone upstairs; and he was idly looking
-out upon the passing crowd. Idly and absently; there was no one there to
-interest him; very different it would be (he was saying to himself)
-towards six or seven o'clock, when perhaps Maisrie and her grandfather
-would come out for a stroll before going to dine at one of the
-restaurants. At present he had no sort of concern with all those people
-who went driving and walking past, in the dull wintry sunshine. It was
-a pretty show; and that was all.
-
-But of a sudden his heart stood still; and his startled vision beheld
-what seemed incredible, and yet was there, and actual, and beyond any
-doubt. Ere he was aware, a vehicle had driven by--a tall dog-cart, with
-two figures in front and one behind; but another glance revealed to him
-that the one behind was old George Bethune: who could mistake at any
-distance the powerful and striking head, the shaggy eyebrows, the
-flowing white hair? And the two in front?--one was a young man, to
-Vincent unknown: the other--a terrible misgiving told him that was
-Maisrie, though they were now some way off. What did it all mean? He
-had never heard of their knowing anyone in Brighton. They had come down
-for seclusion, for work; yet here they were in the midst of the
-fashionable crowd; and a young man--a stranger--was making ostentatious
-display of his acquaintance with them. A thousand wild surmises, the
-offspring of a very madness of jealousy, sprang into his brain. Why had
-the old man so clearly intimated to him that he was not wanted--that
-they wished to go to Brighton by themselves? And who was this person
-who was making such open parade of his intimacy with them? Alas! there
-was no answer to these burning and bewildering questions; and he stood
-there breathless, alarmed, yet not daring to ask the cause of his alarm.
-
-Lord Musselburgh came along the hall.
-
-"Sorry to have kept you waiting, Vin----"
-
-"Oh, don't mind that," the young man said, striving to conceal his
-agitation. "The fact is--I--I don't think I will go driving this
-afternoon: will you make my excuses to my aunt----?"
-
-"What's the matter?" said Musselburgh, regarding him. "You look as if
-you had seen a ghost or a creditor: what is it, man?"
-
-"Never mind--never mind--it is nothing," Vin said, hastily. "I will see
-you later on. Will you make my excuses--thanks!"
-
-The hall porter swung the door open; and before his astonished companion
-could remonstrate, he had passed out and down the stone steps. He
-crossed over, to lose himself in the throng on the opposite promenade.
-The dog-cart would be coming by again: he would see who this new friend
-was. Could he not hide somewhere?----he felt like a spy, like a traitor,
-with all those dire imaginings surging through his brain. And sudden
-wrath, too: he would demand to know by what right any stranger was
-allowed to make Maisrie Bethune so conspicuous. Why, it was too
-public!--it was a boast; and hardly decent, either; ought not respect
-for age and white hair to have placed the old man in front, instead of
-inviting all the world to witness the flattering of a young girl? And
-as for Maisrie--well, even in his wildest and blackest surmises he could
-think no serious harm of Maisrie; but she was too yielding; she was too
-generous with her favours; she ought to make distinctions; she ought not
-to permit this great, idle crowd to draw false conclusions. It was ill
-done of her--behind his back: had she so soon forgotten that he had
-pledged his life to her not so very many hours ago?
-
-By-and-bye he knew rather than saw that they were returning. He was on
-the seaward side of the road; there were a good many people passing to
-and fro; moreover, he was partly concealed by an open fly that stood
-close to the railings. The tall dog-cart came swiftly along: an
-unprejudiced spectator would have said that the young man who was
-driving was rather a good-looking young fellow, of the pink and white
-type, with a small yellow moustache carefully waxed at the ends, and
-clear grey eyes. He wore a buff-coloured coat, with a velvet collar of
-similar hue; he had a flower in his button-hole. Then, again, his
-turn-out was faultless--a neatly-appointed cart--a beautiful,
-high-stepping roan. All this was visible at a glance.
-
-But it was on Maisrie Bethune that Vincent's gaze was bent; and as she
-drew near, his heart was smitten at once with remorse and with
-gratitude. Had he expected, then, that she would be smirking and smiling
-and coquetting with this new acquaintance? On the contrary, Maisrie sate
-there grave and silent and reserved; her eyes were neither observant nor
-conscious: once or twice they were turned towards the sea. To Vincent
-she seemed so distinguished-looking, so refined, and noble, and
-self-possessed, as contrasted with that fresh-complexioned country clown
-who had the monstrous audacity to claim her as his companion! Then, as
-the dog-cart went by, he caught sight of George Bethune. He was sitting
-rather side-ways, to permit of his addressing an occasional remark to
-the young gentleman who was driving: no doubt that was why Maisrie was
-allowed to remain silent. Perhaps she was thinking--of someone whom she
-thought to be far away----?
-
-Strangely enough, as soon as they had disappeared from view, his doubts
-and imaginings grew black again. For a moment, that vision of Maisrie's
-sweet face had charmed him out of himself; but now these hideous
-questions rushed back upon him, demanding an answer where there was no
-answer. He did not attempt to reason himself out of this paroxysm of
-jealousy; that would have been useless; he could but submit to this
-gnawing torture of anxiety and suspense, while walking up and down, and
-waiting, and fearing to find them coming within sight once more.
-
-They did not return. Shortly after four the dusk began to fall; by
-half-past five black night had enveloped sky and sea, and the town was
-all ablaze with golden stars. There were hardly any carriages now; the
-people had betaken themselves to the other side of the road, to look in
-at the glaring shop-windows on their way home. Vincent found himself
-more alone than ever; and knew not what to do or which way to turn. In
-his present frame of mind he dared not go near the house in Brunswick
-Terrace; he could not submit to cross-examining eyes. It would drive
-him mad to talk, while those rankling conjectures were busy at his
-heart. He wanted to see Maisrie again; and yet dreaded to see her, lest
-he should find her once more in the society of that man.
-
-But about half-past six his aimless perambulation of the streets became
-circumscribed. He drew nearer to the neighbourhood of the restaurants.
-If old George Bethune had brought his London habits down with him, as
-many people did, would not he soon make his appearance, along with his
-granddaughter? Here in East-street, for example, were _cafes_, both
-French and Italian, where they could have a foreign dinner if they
-chose. Would he venture to address them? Would he confess he had seen
-them driving--in the hope they might volunteer information for which he
-dared not ask? He could not tell; his brain was in a bewilderment of
-anxiety and unreasoning misery; and this grew worse, indeed, as the slow
-minutes went by, and there was no sign of the two figures for whom he
-was so eagerly watching.
-
-And then a sickening thought occurred to him. What if those two had been
-invited to dine at a hotel by the country clod--by the young man from
-the plough--by the rustic dandy with the velvet collar? At the Old
-Ship, most likely--a private room--a profusion of flowers--plenty of
-champagne--Hodge Junior gay and festive--cigarettes between the
-courses--Arry having learnt so much from the cheap society journals; and
-will not Miss Bethune be persuaded to join? Ah, well, perhaps after
-dinner, when the liqueurs come to be handed round? There is a piano in
-the room: will Miss Bethune oblige with an accompaniment?--here is a
-smart little thing--"Kiss me on the sly, Johnnie!"--the latest draw at
-the music halls....
-
-Seven by the big clock over the stationer's shop; and still no sign of
-them. Clearly they were not coming to any restaurant hereabouts. So at
-length he left East Street, and went down to the King's-road, and
-wandered slowly along, glancing furtively into this or that
-hotel--especially where some coffee-room window happened to have been
-left with the blind up. It was a vain quest, and he was aware of it;
-but something, he knew not what, drew him on. And meanwhile his mind
-was busy with pictures--of a private room, and flowers, and three
-figures seated at table. _Ach weh! mein Liebchen war die Braut!_
-
-At a quarter to eight, Lord Musselburgh was shown into Mrs. Ellison's
-drawing-room.
-
-"Haven't you seen anything of Vin?" she said, with astonished eyes.
-
-"No--nor you?"
-
-"Nothing at all--and now he won't have time to dress for dinner."
-
-"I shouldn't wonder if he did not turn up for dinner," Musselburgh said.
-"Something very peculiar happened to him to-day--I could not precisely
-gather what--but he was obviously upset."
-
-"Yes," said Mrs. Ellison, and her face was graver than its wont.
-"Something has indeed happened to him to-day--though he himself is not
-aware of it as yet."
-
-She went to a little cabinet, and took from it two letters.
-
-"I thought you ought to see both of these," said she. "One is from my
-brother-in-law; I got it just a minute or two after you left. The other
-is my answer; I will have it posted as soon as you have read it."
-
-He took the first letter, which was from Vincent's father, and read it
-carefully through, without a word of comment. Then he took the other,
-which ran as follows:--
-
-
-"DEAR HARLAND,
-
-"It is very terrible; but I half suspected as much; and terrible as it
-is there is nothing to be done but to tell Vin the whole truth, and at
-once. Telegraph for him to-morrow morning--on business of importance;
-if he wants to come down again, I shall be ready with such consolation
-as I can think of. I fancy from one or two things that those people are
-here in Brighton just now: all the more reason why you should summon him
-home at once. Poor boy, it will be a sad awakening. But he is young;
-he will get over it; and perhaps be none the worse in the end for this
-cruel experience of the deceit and wickedness of the world. Let me know
-how he takes it.
-
-"Yours affectionately,
- "MADGE."
-
-
-No, Vincent did not come in to dinner that evening. He was still
-walking up and down the King's-road, glancing now and again, but with a
-sort of hopelessness, at any little group of people that might appear at
-the hall-door of this or that hotel; and all the while there was a fire
-eating at his heart.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- PUT TO THE PROOF.
-
-
-To say that Vin Harris's jealousy was unreasoning, ungovernable, and the
-cause of cruel and incessant torture to himself, is merely to say that
-it was jealousy; but by an unhappy coincidence this was the very moment
-chosen by his father to make a disclosure which, for a startled second
-or so, seemed to recall and confirm the young man's wildest suspicions.
-When Vincent, in obedience to the telegraphic summons, arrived at the
-house in Grosvenor Place, he found his father in the library, standing
-with his back to the fire. On this occasion the great
-capital-denouncing capitalist did not wear the suit of hodden grey
-which, at dinner in his own house, was designed to show his contempt for
-conventionality; no; when this interview was over, he meant to lunch at
-the Athenaeum Club, and with a view to that solemn rite he had donned a
-black frock-coat which was tightly buttoned over his substantial form.
-A stiff upstanding collar and a satin tie added to the rigidity of his
-appearance; while his manner was, as usual, pompous and cold. With a
-roll of paper in his hand, he would have looked as if he were going to
-deliver an afternoon lecture at some public institution.
-
-"I have sent for you, Vin," he began, "because I have something of
-importance to say to you, and the sooner it is said the better. You are
-aware that I have never sought to interfere with your way of life.
-Indeed I have seen no cause to do so. Your line of study I approve;
-your ambitions I would encourage; and as for the amusements and
-pleasures natural to your years, I can trust you to remember your own
-self-respect. But in one direction I confess I am disappointed. My
-chief aim in your education has been that you should see and know the
-world; that you should understand men; and by contact learn to cope with
-them, and hold your own. Yes, I confess I am disappointed; for if I am
-not misinformed--and I have taken the greatest trouble not to be
-misinformed--here are you, after all your travel and experience of the
-world, become the dupe of two common begging-letter impostors."
-
-The young man looked up quickly; but he held his peace. Now this
-somewhat disconcerted Harland Harris, for he had expected an instant and
-indignant protest, which would have justified a little judicious warmth
-on his side in production of proofs. But Vincent sate calm and
-collected, listening with apparent respect.
-
-"Yes, deeply disappointed," his father continued, with a little more
-animation, "for this old charlatan who seems to have got hold of you is
-altogether too bare-faced and preposterous. Did you ever ask yourself
-how he lived; what was his business or profession; where he got the
-money to go from one country to another? Well, if you have not, I have;
-I have made enquiries; I have had him traced; I can tell you his story,
-and a very pretty story it is. Would you like to hear it?"
-
-"I don't know that it concerns me much," said Vincent, with composure.
-
-"Oh, it does not?" said the gentleman with the pompous professional air,
-upon whom this indifference seemed to have a somewhat irritating effect.
-"Well, there's nothing very grand about it--except the magnificent and
-wholesale lying! And perhaps also the incredible simplicity of the
-people who allowed themselves to be imposed on. Why, in Canada he
-called himself Lord Bethune!--was there no second-hand copy of Burke
-anywhere about to show them there was no such peerage in existence?
-Lord Bethune haunting newspaper-offices, and borrowing money right and
-left, because of his Scotch name, and his bogus literary schemes! His
-sham estates--his sham lineage--his sham coat of arms: did nobody think
-of turning up a book? 'Stand Fast, Craig-Royston!' Craig-Royston!----"
-
-He crossed the room and took down a volume from one of the shelves.
-
-"There," he said, putting the book on the table, "there is Black's Guide
-to Scotland. Can you find out where Craig-Royston is? Turn up the
-index."
-
-Mechanically and carelessly Vincent did as he was bid.
-
-"No, I don't see it there," he said.
-
-"I should think not! Nor Balloray either: can you find Balloray? An
-easy thing to claim estates that don't exist; and wear armorial bearings
-of your own invention! Cadzow--oh, yes, Cadzow you will find--Cadzow
-undoubtedly exists; but most people thought that Cadzow belonged to the
-Duke of Hamilton. Or does Lord Bethune claim to be Marquis of Douglas
-and Earl of Angus as well?"
-
-He paused; so Vincent was bound to answer.
-
-"I don't know that it concerns me much," the young man said, repeating
-his former phrase. "Even if all you say is true, what then? You sent me
-out to see the world, and take people as I found them. Well, I found a
-good many liars; and one more or less doesn't matter much, does it?"
-
-But Harland Harris was no fool; he instantly divined wherein lay the
-secret of Vincent's real or assumed indifference.
-
-"Ah, I understand," said he. "I understand. You don't care so much
-about him. You are willing to let him go. You think you can dissociate
-him from his granddaughter. He may be a swindler--but you fancy she
-manages to keep aloof--"
-
-The young man grew somewhat pale.
-
-"Take care," said he, and he held up his hand as if he would enjoin
-silence. "Words that are said cannot be unsaid."
-
-His father regarded him for a second, and then he endeavoured to bring a
-little more friendliness and consideration into his manner.
-
-"I have heard of this infatuation," he said. "And if you had been like
-other young men, Vin, I should have said nothing. I should have left
-you to find out for yourself. But, you see, you have the misfortune to
-imagine other people to be as straightforward and honourable as
-yourself; you do not suspect; and you are inclined to trust your own
-judgment. But even if this girl were all you think she is, what madness
-it would be for you to contemplate marrying her! Look at her
-position--and at yours: look at her upbringing and present
-surroundings--and at yours; think of what is expected of you; what
-chances you have; what an alliance with a great family might do for you
-in public life. What good ever comes of overleaping social barriers--of
-Quixotism--of self-sacrifice for sentiment's sake? What does a marriage
-between two people in different spheres mean?--what is the inevitable
-result?--it is not the one that is raised--it is the other that is
-dragged down."
-
-"These are strange doctrines for a socialist and a communist," Vincent
-observed.
-
-"They are the doctrines of common sense," his father retorted, sharply.
-"However, it is unnecessary to say anything further on that score. You
-will abandon all this nonsense when you understand who and what this
-girl is; and you will thank God you have had your eyes opened in time.
-And indeed, if all that I am told is true--if I guess aright--if I piece
-the story properly together--I should say she was by far the more
-dangerous of the two accomplices--"
-
-Vincent's lips curled: he did not put his disdain into words.
-
-"A painful revelation?" his father continued, in more oracular fashion.
-"Oh, yes, no doubt. But occasionally the truth is bitter and wholesome
-at the same time. What you believe about the girl is one thing; what I
-know about her is another: indeed I can gather that it was only through
-her artifice that the old man's impostures were accepted, or tolerated,
-at all. What is he?--a farceur--a poseur--who would at once have been
-sent to the right about but for the ingenue by his side, with her
-innocent eyes and her sad look. When the writer of the begging-letter
-calls, his story might be inquired into: but no!--for here is this
-interesting young lady--and the hardest heart declines to cross-examine
-while she is standing there. And of course she must go to the
-newspaper-offices, to beguile the editor with her silent distress, while
-her grandfather is wheedling him out of a loan; or she accompanies him
-to the wine merchant, or the bookseller, or the tailor, so that nothing
-can be said about unpaid accounts while she is by; and of course there
-is a renewal of credit. A very simple and effective trick: even where
-the people know the old man to be a rogue, they are sorry for the girl;
-and they have a pleasing sense of virtue in allowing themselves to be
-further mulcted: they little suspect that she is by far the more
-accomplished swindler of the two----"
-
-Here Vincent laughed, in open scorn; but the laugh was a forced one; and
-his eyes were lowering.
-
-"I am glad you consider it a laughing matter," said Mr. Harris--who
-found it less easy to combat this contemptuous unbelief than if he had
-been met with indignation and wrath. "Perhaps, after all, the story is
-no revelation? Perhaps your complaisance goes further than merely
-tolerating the old man's lies? Perhaps the glamour the girl has thrown
-over you would lead you to accept her just as she is, her hypocrisy, her
-craft, and all? Or perhaps you have planned out for yourself a still
-more brilliant future than any that had occurred to your friends?
-Perhaps you aim at being the old man's successor? It is an easy way of
-getting through life, having a woman like that by your side, to earn
-your living for you. The lover of Manon Lescaut----"
-
-Vincent leapt to his feet, his eyes aflame.
-
-"You go too far," he said, breathing hard. "You go too far. I have been
-trying to remember you are my father: don't make it too difficult. What
-do I care about this farrago of nonsense that some one has put into your
-head--this trash--this venomous guessing? It is nothing to me. It is
-idle air. I know otherwise. But when it comes to insult--well, it is
-all an insult; but something must be forgiven to ignorance: the people
-who have supplied you with this guess-work rubbish are probably as
-ignorant as yourself about those two. Only--no more insults, if you
-please! I am your son; but--but there are limits to what you ask me to
-hear in patience. You talk of my madness and infatuation; it is your
-madness, your infatuation! What can you say of your own knowledge of
-that old man and his granddaughter? Why, nothing. You have never spoken
-to them; never seen them. And yet, without an atom of inquiry, without
-an atom of proof, you go and accept all this tissue of guess-work--this
-rubbish--this trash--as if it were gospel; and you expect me to give it
-a patient hearing? It is too contemptible!"
-
-"Yes, but unfortunately," said Mr. Harris, with great calmness--for now
-he felt he had the advantage on his side, "you are mistaken in supposing
-that I have made no inquiry, and have received no proof. The inquiry
-has been made for me with great skill and patience, during the past
-month; and the proofs seem to me sufficient. Proofs?--you yourself shall
-furnish one."
-
-This was a kind of challenge; and the young man accepted it. His eyes
-were fixed on his adversary.
-
-"What, then?"
-
-"When you find," said his father, with deliberation, "two people
-wandering from town to town, without any visible means of subsistence,
-you naturally wonder how they manage to live. Very well. But now, if
-you discover they have a pretty knack of falling in with this or that
-rich young gentleman, and allowing him to pay for them on all occasions,
-isn't the mystery partly solved? I am informed that these two people
-and yourself have been in the habit for a considerable time back of
-dining together in the evening--indeed, I have the name of the
-restaurant. Now I wish to ask you this question point-blank: is it not
-the fact that in every case you have paid?"
-
-Vincent did not answer; he was not thinking of himself at all; nor yet
-of the direct question that had been put to him. A terrible wave of
-bewilderment had passed over him; his heart seemed to have within it but
-one sudden cry--'Maisrie--Maisrie--why were you driving--with that
-stranger?'--and all the world grew black with a horror of doubt and
-despair. He thought of the young man driving along the King's Road in
-Brighton: was there another paying for those two now?--had they another
-friend now to accompany them every evening? And Maisrie? But all this
-wild agony lasted only a moment. He cast this palsy of the brain behind
-him. His better self rose confident and triumphant--though there was
-still a strange look left in his eyes.
-
-"Paid?" he said, with a kind of scornful impatience. "Who paid? Oh, I
-did--mostly. What about that? That is nothing--a few shillings--I found
-it pleasanter not to have to settle bills before a young lady; and of
-course she did not know who paid; I made an arrangement----"
-
-"An arrangement by which you gave those people their dinner for nothing
-for months and months!"
-
-"And what then?"
-
-For Vincent had entirely recovered his self-command: he affected to
-regard this story that had been told him as quite unworthy of serious
-attention. It was his father who was growing exasperated.
-
-"Have you taken leave of your senses?" Mr. Harris demanded. "Is it
-nothing that you yourself have shown this old man to be a pauper,
-getting his dinner on charity every evening? And what better was the
-girl? She must have known! Do you imagine she was not aware of his
-receiving money for bogus books that he never meant to publish; and of
-his inveigling soft-headed Scotchmen--I suppose there must be one here
-and there--into giving him a loan because of his sham patriotism? And
-these are the people you have chosen to consort with all this time; and
-this is the girl you would bring into your family--you would introduce
-to your friends as your wife! But you cannot be so mad! You may
-pretend indifference: you cannot be indifferent. You may consider it
-fine and heroic to disbelieve the clearest evidence: the world, on the
-other hand, is apt to say that it is only a fool and an idiot who keeps
-his eyes shut and walks into a trap blindfolded. And--and I do think,
-when you begin to reflect, that your own common-sense will come to your
-aid."
-
-He turned to the mantel-piece, and took from it some papers.
-
-"I have given you," he continued, "the sum and substance of the
-enquiries I have made, in this country and in America. I can show you
-here still further details; but before allowing you to examine these
-communications, I must exact a promise that they shall be treated as in
-strictest confidence."
-
-"Thank you," said Vincent, "I will not trouble you. I can guess at the
-kind of creature who would accept such a task, and at his interpretation
-of any facts that might come across him."
-
-Then he rose.
-
-"And is this the important business on which you sent for me?" he asked,
-but quite civilly.
-
-"You do not think it is important?" the other demanded. "But at least
-you have been warned. You have been advised to keep your eyes open. You
-have been shown what kind of people they are who have got hold of you:
-it is for you yourself to say whether you will be any longer their
-dupe."
-
-"Very well," said the young man; and he rose and took up his hat and
-cane. "Oh, by the way, I presume you have come to an end of your
-enquiries? Because, if not, I would advise your spy--your detective, or
-whatever he is--not to come prowling to any restaurant or keyhole when I
-am along with my friends, or he might find things become very unpleasant
-for him. Good-morning!"
-
-So this was the end of the interview; and Harland Harris shortly
-thereafter made off for the Athenaeum Club, well satisfied that his
-narrative had produced a far deeper impression than the young man would
-acknowledge. And in truth it had. When Vincent left the house, and
-walked away to the solitary little rooms in Mayfair, his face was no
-longer scornful; it was serious and troubled; for there was much for him
-to ponder over. Not about Maisrie. He put Maisrie aside. For one
-thing, he was a little vexed and angry with her at the moment--quite
-unreasonably, as he strove to convince himself; nevertheless, he would
-rather not think about her just then; and, indeed, there was no
-occasion, for the idea that she could be the participator in any fraud
-or series of frauds was simply not a thinkable thing. He knew better
-than that; and was content. Maisrie driving with a stranger--perhaps
-that was not so well done of her; but Maisrie as a skilful and
-accomplished professional swindler?--then you might expect to see the
-stars fall from their places in the midnight sky.
-
-But as regards the old man, that was very different; and he could not
-deny that there were certain points in the story just told him which
-were corroborated by his own knowledge. He knew, for example, that
-George Bethune had got money for one book which, as circumstances would
-have it, was not produced and published; he knew that those dinners at
-the Restaurant were paid for by himself; he knew that he had heard Mr.
-Bethune speak of Cadzow as belonging to his family; and he had to
-confess that he could not find Craig-Royston in the index of his
-father's guide-book. And yet he could not give up this magnificent,
-this heroic old man all at once. He could not believe him to be a mean
-and crafty trickster. Surely his love for Scotland was sincere. Surely
-his passionate admiration of the old Scotch ballads was genuine enough.
-Surely it was not to impose on any one that old George Bethune sang
-aloud the songs of his youth as he walked through the crowded streets of
-London. There was a grandeur in his very presence, a dignity in his
-demeanour, that was far from the artful complaisance of a schemer. Then
-his undaunted courage--his proud spirit--and above all, the tender and
-affectionate guardianship he bestowed on his granddaughter: Vincent
-could not forget all these things. No, nor could he forget how he had
-enjoyed George Bethune's society on these many and pleasant evenings;
-and how he had learned more and more to respect him, his unflinching
-fortitude, his generous enthusiasms, and even, at times, his innocent
-vanity. He had had a hard life, this old man, and yet he bore no
-enmity. He had had many trials and misfortunes, many hopes
-disappointed; yet his temper was not soured. But the conclusive proof,
-after all, was the character of Maisrie herself--her noble sweetness,
-her refinement, her sympathy, her quick gratitude for the smallest of
-kindnesses: could such a beautiful human flower have grown up under the
-fostering care of an unscrupulous vagabond and knave?
-
-When he got to his rooms, the first thing he did--but with no very
-definite purpose----was to take up his copy of Black's Guide to
-Scotland. It was a recent edition; he had got it so that he might trace
-out that long wandering of which old George Bethune and Maisrie had
-spoken so often. And mechanically he turned to the index--with which he
-had been confronted in his father's library; and mechanically he glanced
-at the successive columns. But what was this?--why here was
-Craig-Royston! His eyes were not deceiving him; for he at once referred
-to the page indicated, and found Craig-Royston described as a district
-in the neighbourhood of Loch Lomond--though, to be sure, he could
-discover no trace of it on the map. So he had jumped to conclusions all
-too prematurely? He had allowed that unknown enemy of his--that dark
-and malignant creature in the background--too facile a triumph? He
-began to be ashamed of himself. 'Stand fast, Craig-Royston!' had not
-been his motto, as it was that of the proud old man whom he had injured
-by listening to those childish tales.
-
-He returned to the index, and sought for Balloray. Well, there was no
-Balloray; but then Balloray was a private house; and private houses,
-unless of historical interest, are seldom mentioned in guide-books. And
-then again he bethought him: why, the old ballad!--the 'bonnie mill-dams
-o' Balloray': surely that was sufficient evidence of there being such a
-place? He could almost hear George Bethune's voice as he recalled the
-opening lines--
-
- 'There were twa sisters lived in a bower;
- Balloray, O Balloray;
- The youngest o' them, O she was a flower!
- By the bonnie mill-dams o' Balloray.
-
- There came a squire frae out the west,
- Balloray, O Balloray;
- He lo'ed them baith, but the youngest best,
- By the bonnie mill-dams o' Balloray.'
-
-"Why, what a fool he had been, to be disconcerted by an index--and that
-the index of some old and obsolete edition! He prosecuted his
-researches. He turned to Cadzow. Yes, here was Cadzow: Cadzow Castle
-and Cadzow Forest; and undoubtedly these were the property of the Duke
-of Hamilton. But might there not be some other property of the same
-name, as a sort of appanage of Balloray? It was no unusual thing, in
-Scotland or anywhere else, for two places to have the same name; and in
-this instance it was the more important one, the ducal one, that would
-naturally figure in the guide-book. He seemed to see old George Bethune
-regarding him, with something of a haughty look on his face, as though
-he would say 'Of what next will you accuse me?'"
-
-Well, all this was very fine and brave; it was a manful struggling with
-certain phantoms; and he was trying to cheat himself into an elation of
-confidence. But ever and anon there came to him a consciousness of
-something behind; something inexplicable; and his thoughts would wander
-away back to Brighton. Fugitive lines of that terrible poem of Heine's
-would come into his brain--_Zu Tafel sassen froh die Gaest' ... und wie
-ich nacht dem Brautpaar schaut' ... O weh! mein Liebchen war die Braut_.
-He began to imagine for himself what those three had been doing this
-morning. The weather being so fine, no doubt Mr. Bethune had laid aside
-his books for the time being; and he and Maisrie would be ready to go
-out by half-past ten or eleven. Would their new friend call for them,
-or would there be some place of appointment down in the King's-road? He
-could see them walk out the West Pier. The old man with the firm-set
-figure and the flowing white locks would probably be thinking but little
-of what was going on around him; as likely as not he would be singing
-gaily to himself about the Pier o' Leith and Berwick Law, and 'leaving
-thee, my bonnie Mary.' Yes, and so far those two others would be left
-to themselves; they could talk as they chose--eyes meeting eyes. And
-what had the bumpkin squire to say? Oh, horses and hounds--the county
-balls--the famous bin of port to be opened at Christmas. Christmas was
-coming near now; might there not be an invitation to the two
-world-wanderers--to come and be hospitably entertained at the big
-country-house and introduced to friends? And Maisrie--would she think
-twice?--would she refuse? The old man would consent to anything that
-promised him present comfort; he accepted favours with a sort of royal
-complacency; it would matter little to him so long as the fire was
-bright, the wine good, the company cheerful, and himself allowed a fine
-latitude of oration. But Maisrie----?
-
-It was nearly four o'clock now. That previous afternoon at Brighton had
-been a time of misery; and long into the night he had been kept awake by
-dull and brooding speculation, varied by bitter self-reproach. All the
-same he felt himself irresistibly drawn thither again; whatever was
-happening down there by the sea-side, he wanted to know; his imaginings
-were a more cruel torture than anything his eyes could tell him. And
-perhaps--he added to himself, with an ominous darkening of the
-brows--perhaps there might be a chance of his meeting this rival of his
-face to face, the better to measure him, and learn what both of them had
-to expect.
-
-He caught the four-thirty express at Victoria, and got whirled away
-down. But he did not go to Mrs. Ellison's house, nor yet to the Bedford
-Hotel, at which his friend Musselburgh was staying; he went to the
-Bristol, so as to keep himself a little out of observation. He was
-lucky enough to get a bedroom; and that was all he required; he did not
-even wait to look at it; he left the hotel and went wandering down the
-Marine Parade, which was now a mass of darkness lit up by innumerable
-points of yellow fire.
-
-Whither away then? If only he knew the street in which they had taken
-lodgings he could soon find out their daily habits, himself remaining
-unseen; but he had nothing beyond a vague recollection that they had
-spoken of some hill behind the town. However, Brighton, though now
-grown a big place, has a few leading thoroughfares in which everybody
-who is a visitor is pretty sure to be encountered sooner or later; and
-in this particular instance it was a good deal sooner than he could have
-dreamed of.
-
-He was walking along the seaward side of the Parade, with but a casual
-glance now and again at this or that passer-by, when suddenly, on the
-other side, at the corner of German Place, three figures came under the
-glare of a gas-lamp, and these he instantly recognised. Occasionally as
-they went on they became indistinguishable in the dusk; then again a
-gas-lamp would bring them into vivid relief--the tall and slim young
-girl, the square-set old man with the picturesque white hair, the young
-gentleman with the yellow cover-coat. They were talking together, and
-walking quickly, for the night was cold.
-
-"Yes," said Vincent to himself, in the bitterness of his heart, "I am
-displaced and superseded now. Without much difficulty, either. Quickly
-done. And no doubt he is taking them along to some restaurant. He will
-hear about the rocks and dales of Scotland--about the ballads and
-songs--perhaps he has subscribed for the new book. Then they will ask
-him to go home with them again; and Maisrie will take out her violin;
-and perhaps--perhaps she will sing '_C'etait une fregate, mon joli coeur
-de rose_--perhaps she will sing that for him, or any other of the
-Canadian songs, except the one. But surely, surely, Maisrie will not
-sing '_La Claire Fontaine_'?"
-
-And then again he said to himself, with his eyes fixed on those three,
-but most of all on the young girl who walked with so light and joyous a
-step--
-
-"Ah, I have suffered to-day, you do not know how much, in repelling
-insinuations brought against you, and in silencing my own doubts; but
-what do you care? One restaurant is as good as another; one friend as
-good as another; let the absent expect to be forgotten, when it is a
-woman who is asked to remember. _La Claire Fontaine_?--why not _La
-Claire Fontaine_, for him as well as anyone else? All that past
-companionship has gone by; here is a new friend to be welcomed with
-smiles and graces. And as for the old man--what does it matter to him so
-long as there is someone to settle up the tavern score?"
-
-Nay, his madness of jealousy overmastered him altogether. When they got
-down to East-street, they did not at once go into the restaurant, for it
-was yet somewhat early; they began to examine the windows of one or two
-of the shops, and the trinkets displayed there. And again and again
-Vincent was on the point of going up to his enemy, and saying "Well, why
-don't you buy her something? If you haven't got money, I will lend it
-to you!" Surely this would suffice to provoke a quarrel?--to be settled
-next morning, out on the downs, and not by any pistol accident or trick
-of foil, but by a fair stand-up trial of strength, those two facing each
-other, with clenched fists and set mouth. The young man in the
-cover-coat was looking at some Austrian garnets: little did he know what
-wild beast was within springing distance of him.
-
-At length they left the shops, and leisurely strolled along to the
-Italian restaurant, and entered. Vincent gave them time to get settled,
-and then followed. He did not wish to interfere with them; he merely
-wished to see. And when he went upstairs to the room on the first
-floor, it was with no abashment; he did not slink, he walked resolutely,
-to a small unoccupied table at the further end; but he was some way from
-them; perchance he might be able to observe without being noticed. The
-waiter came to him. "Anything!" was his order: gall and wormwood there
-were likely to be in any dish that might be brought. Wine?--oh yes, a
-flask of Chianti--why not a flask of Chianti?--one might fill a glass,
-and send a message to a faithless friend--a message to recall her to
-herself for a moment. You who are sitting there, will you not drink to
-the health of all false lovers--you who are sitting there in such joyful
-company--_toi qui as le coeur gai_!
-
-He could see them well enough. There was champagne on the table: that
-was not of George Bethune's ordering: the booby from the swedes and
-mangold was clearly playing the part of host. And what was she saying
-to him in return? What form did her thanks take? _Je ne puis rien
-donner--qu' mon coeur en mariage_: that was easily said; and might mean
-no more than it meant in the bygone days. Women could so readily pour
-out, to any chance new comer, their _petit vin blanc_ of gratitude.
-
-But suddenly he became aware of some movement at the table along there;
-and quickly he lowered his look. Then he knew--he did not see--that
-someone was coming down the long room. He breathed hard, with a sort of
-fear--and it was not the fear of any man; he wished he had not come into
-this place; could he not even now escape?
-
-"Vincent!"
-
-The voice thrilled through him; he looked up; and here was Maisrie
-Bethune regarding him--regarding him with those eyes so beautiful, so
-shining, so tender, and reproachful!
-
-"Did you not see us? Why should you avoid us?"
-
-The tone in which she spoke pierced his very heart; but still--but
-still--there was that stranger at the table yonder.
-
-"I thought you were otherwise engaged," said he. "I did not wish to
-intrude."
-
-"You are unkind."
-
-Then she stood for a moment uncertain. It was a brave thing for this
-girl to walk down a long room to address a young man, knowing that more
-than one pair of eyes would be turned towards her; and here she was
-standing without any visible aim or errand.
-
-"Won't you come to our table, Vincent?" she asked hesitatingly.
-
-And then he noticed her embarrassment; and he felt he would be a craven
-hound not to come to her rescue, whatever the quarrel between them.
-
-"Oh, yes, certainly, if I may," but with no sort of gladness in his
-consent; and then he bade the waiter fetch the things along.
-
-She led the way. When he reached the table he shook hands with George
-Bethune, who appeared more surprised than pleased. Then Maisrie made a
-faint little kind of introduction as between the young men: Vincent--who
-had not caught the other's name--bowed stiffly, and took the seat that
-had been brought for him. And then, seeing that it was on Maisrie that
-all the responsibility of this new arrangement had fallen, he forced
-himself to talk--making apologies for disturbing them, explaining how it
-was he came to be in Brighton, and begging Maisrie not to take any
-trouble about him: it was only too kind of her to allow him to join
-them.
-
-And yet it was very awkward, despite Maisrie's assiduous little
-attentions, and her timid efforts to propitiate everybody. The
-fresh-complexioned young gentleman stared at the intruder; grew sullen
-when he observed Maisrie's small kindnesses; and eventually turned to
-resume his conversation with Mr. Bethune, which had been interrupted.
-Vincent, who had been ready, on the smallest provocation, to break forth
-in flame and fury, became contemptuous; he would take no heed of this
-person; nay, he would make use of the opportunity to show to anyone who
-might choose to listen on what terms he was with Maisrie.
-
-"Where are you living, Maisrie?" said he, and yet still with a certain
-stiffness.
-
-She gave him the number in German Place.
-
-"Then we are neighbours, or something near it," he said. "I am at the
-Bristol--the Bristol Hotel."
-
-"Oh, really," she made answer. "I thought you had an aunt living in
-Brighton--the lady who came to see us at Henley."
-
-"Oh, can you remember things as long ago as Henley?" said he. "I did
-not think a woman's memory could go so far back as that. A week--a
-day--I thought that was about as much as she could remember."
-
-For a moment she was silent, and wounded; but she was too proud to
-betray anything to those other two; and she resumed her conversation
-with Vincent, though with a trifle more of dignity and reserve. As for
-him, he knew not what to do or say. He could perceive, he could not but
-perceive, that Maisrie was trying to be kind to him; and he felt himself
-a sort of renegade; but all the same there was that other sitting at the
-table--there was an alien presence--and all things were somehow awry.
-And yet why should he despise that stranger? In the bucolic dandy he
-could see himself, as he himself was seen by certain of his friends.
-This other dupe, his successor, had a countrified complexion and a
-steely blue eye, he wore a horse-shoe pin in diamonds, and had a bit of
-stephanotis in his button-hole; but these points of difference were not
-of much account. And the old man--the old man with the grand air and
-the oracular speech: no wonder he thought himself entitled to call
-himself Lord Bethune; but why had he chosen to abate his rank and style?
-Oh, yes, a striking presence enough--a magnificent presence--with which
-to cozen shopkeepers!
-
-For indeed this young man's mind was all unhinged. He had had a hard
-fight of it that day; and perhaps if Maisrie had known she would have
-made allowances. What she did clearly see was that her well-meant
-invitation had been a mistake. She strove her best to remove this
-embarrassment; she tried to make the conversation general; and in some
-slight measure she succeeded; but always there was an obvious restraint;
-there were dark silences and difficult pauses; and, on the part of the
-young men, a sullen and dangerous antagonism that might at any moment
-leap forth with a sudden tongue of flame--a retort--an insult.
-
-This hapless entertainment came to an end at last; and, as Vincent had
-expected, while Maisrie was putting on her cloak, their new friend
-stepped aside and paid the bill--the bill for three, that is. And the
-next step? An invitation that the generous host of the evening should
-go along to the rooms in German Place? There would be tobacco, and
-Scotch whiskey, and reminiscences of travel, and dissertations on
-literary and philosophical subjects--and perhaps Maisrie would play for
-him 'The Flowers o' the Forest' or sing for him 'Isabeau s'y promene.'
-Perhaps the bucolic soul was penetrable by fine melody? There would be
-whiskey-and-soda, at any rate, and a blazing fire.
-
-And as a matter of fact, when the four of them paused for a second at
-the door of the restaurant, the new acquaintance did receive that
-invitation--from George Bethune himself. But he declined.
-
-"Thanks, awfully," said he, "but I can't to-night. Fact is, there's a
-big billiard match on this evening, and I've backed my man for L20, and
-I may want to hedge a bit if he isn't in his best form. Some other
-evening, if you'll allow me. But to-morrow morning--what are you going
-to do to-morrow morning? You can't stay indoors while the weather is so
-fine; you must leave your work until the wet comes. So I dare say I
-shall find you somewhere along the front about eleven to-morrow; and if
-I don't, why, then, I'll come along to German Place, and drag you out.
-For who ever knew such a glorious December?--quite warm in the
-sun--primroses and violets all a-growing and a-blowing--in the baskets.
-Good-night to you!--good-night, Miss Bethune!--mind you bring your
-grandfather along to-morrow morning; or I'll have to come and drag you
-both out; good-night--good-night!"--and then with a brief nod to
-Vincent, which was frigidly returned, he departed.
-
-"You are going our way, Vincent?" Maisrie said, timidly.
-
-"Oh, yes," he made answer, as they set out together.
-
-For a few seconds they walked in silence. But when they had crossed the
-Old Steine, and got into the Marine Parade, the moon came into view,
-away over there in the east; it was at the full, but rather dusky, for
-the north wind had blown the smoke of the town down on the sea-front.
-
-"Bid you notice how clear the moon was last night?" she said, to break
-this embarrassing silence.
-
-"Yes, I did," he said. "I was walking about a good deal last night.
-The moonlight was beautiful on the water."
-
-"Oh, were you down in Brighton last night?" she asked, rather anxiously.
-
-"Yes."
-
-That was all. She did not dare to ask what had brought him down; and he
-did not choose to invent an excuse. Again they walked on for a little
-while in silence, until they reached the corner of German Place.
-
-"Well, good-night!" said George Bethune, holding out his hand. "Quite a
-surprise to meet you--quite a surprise. Hope we shall see you again
-before you go back."
-
-And now it was Maisrie's turn.
-
-"Good-night, Vincent!" she said, with her eyes seeking his in mute
-appeal.
-
-"Good-night," said he; and he did not respond to that look: so these two
-parted.
-
-And soon, as he walked aimlessly onward, he was away from the town
-altogether. To him it was a hateful place--with its contrarieties, its
-disappointments, its distracting problems in human nature. When he
-turned to look at it, it was like some vast and dusky pit, with a dull,
-red glow shining over it from its innumerable fires. But here, as he
-went on again, all was peace. The silver moonlight shimmered on the
-water. There was not a whisper or murmur along these lofty and solitary
-cliffs. A cold wind blew from the north, coming over the bare uplands;
-but it brought no sound of any bird or beast. His shadow was his sole
-companion--vague and indefinite on the grass, but sharper and blacker on
-the grey and frosted road. He was alone, and he wished to be alone; and
-if certain phrases from the _Claire Fontaine_ would come following and
-haunting him--_jai perdu ma maitresse--sans l' avoir merite--pour un
-bouquet de roses--que je lui refusai_--he strove to repel them; he would
-have none of them; nor any remembrance of what was past and gone. The
-world was sweet to him here, because he was alone with the sea, and the
-shore, and the mystic splendour of those shining heavens; and because he
-seemed to have shaken himself free from the enmities and the treacheries
-and ingratitudes that lay festering in yonder town.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- RENEWING IS OF LOVE.
-
-
-Next morning broke bright and clear, for the north wind had blown
-freshly all the night, and swept the smoke of the town right out to sea,
-where it lay along the horizon as a soft saffron-reddish cloud.
-Accordingly the sky overhead was of a summer-like blue; and the sea was
-of a shining green, save where it grew opaque and brown as it neared the
-shore; while the welcome sunlight was everywhere abroad, giving promise
-of a cheerful day, even now in December. And Vin Harris was standing at
-a window of the hotel, looking absently out on the wide and empty
-thoroughfares.
-
-A waiter brought him a note. He glanced at the handwriting with
-startled eyes, then tore the envelope open. This was what he read--
-
-
-"Dear Vincent, I wish to speak with you for a moment if you are not
-engaged. I am going down to the breakwater, and will wait there for a
-little while.
-
-"MAISRIE."
-
-
-He called to the waiter.
-
-"When did this come?"
-
-"I found it lying on the hall table, sir--just this minute, sir."
-
-He did not waste time on further questions. In a couple of seconds he
-was outside and had crossed the road; and there, sure enough--far below
-him--out on the breakwater--was a solitary figure that he instantly
-recognised. He went quickly down the steps; he did not stay to ask what
-this might mean, or to prepare himself in any way; as he approached her,
-all his anxiety was to know if her eyes were kind--or hostile. Well,
-they were neither; but there was a certain pride in her tone as she
-spoke.
-
-"Vincent, you were angry with me last night. Why?"
-
-"Maisrie," said he, "why don't you put up that furred collar round your
-neck? It is so cold this morning. See, let me put it up for you."
-
-She retreated an inch, declining: she waited for him to answer her
-question.
-
-"Angry with you?" he said, with obvious constraint. "No, but I was
-vexed. I was vexed with a lot of things--that I can hardly explain. Not
-with you personally--at least--well, at any rate I did not mean to
-offend you. If I have offended you I ask your pardon----"
-
-Here he paused: these stammering sentences were so insufficient. And
-then all at once he said----
-
-"Maisrie, who was that young man?"
-
-She looked surprised.
-
-"Do you mean Mr. Glover?"
-
-"Glover?--oh, that is his name. But who is he?--what is he?--how did
-you come to know him so intimately?----"
-
-Perhaps she began to see a little.
-
-"I don't know him at all, Vincent. He is a friend of my
-grandfather's--or rather he is the son of a friend of my
-grandfather's--a wine-merchant in London. We met him on the day we came
-here----"
-
-"And he lost no time in showing off his acquaintance with you," said
-Vincent, bitterly, "--driving you up and down the King's Road, before
-all Brighton!"
-
-At this she lowered her head a little.
-
-"I did not wish to go, Vincent. Grandfather pressed me. I did not like
-to refuse."
-
-"Oh," said he, "I have no right to object. It is not for me to object.
-If new friends are to be treated as old friends--what does it matter?"
-
-She regarded him reproachfully.
-
-"You know very well, Vincent, that if I had thought it would vex you, I
-would not have gone--no--nothing in the world would have induced
-me--nothing! And how cruel it is of you to speak of new friends--and to
-say that old friends are so quickly forgotten! Is that all you believe
-of what I have told you many a time? But--but if I have pained you, I
-am sorry," she continued, still with downcast lashes. "Tell me what you
-wish me to do. I will not speak to him again, if you would rather I
-should not. If he comes to the house, I will stay in my own room until
-he is gone--anything, anything rather than that you should be vexed.
-For you have been so kind to me!"
-
-"No, no," said he, hastily. "No, I have been altogether wrong. Do just
-as you please yourself, Maisrie: that will be the right thing. I have
-been an ass and a fool to doubt you. But--but it made me mad to think
-of any man coming between you and me----"
-
-"Vincent!"
-
-She raised her head; and for one ineffable moment her maiden eyes were
-unveiled and fixed upon him--with such a tenderness and pride and trust
-as altogether bewildered him and entranced him beyond the powers of
-speech. For here was confession at last!--her soul had declared itself:
-no matter what might happen now, he knew she was his own! And yet, when
-she spoke, it was as if she had divined his thoughts, and would
-dissipate that too wonderful dream.
-
-"No," she said, rather wistfully, and her eyes were averted again, "that
-is the last thing you need think about, Vincent; no man will ever come
-between you and me. No man will ever take your place in my
-regard--and--and esteem----"
-
-"Is that all, Maisrie?" he said, gently; but in truth that sudden
-revelation had left him all trembling and overjoyed. He was almost
-afraid to speak to her, lest she should withdraw that unspoken avowal.
-
-"And--and affection: why should not I say it?--I may not have another
-chance," she went on. "You need not fear, Vincent. No man will ever
-come between you and me; but a woman will--and welcome! You will
-marry--you will be happy--and no one will be better pleased to hear of
-it all than I shall. And why," she continued, with a kind of
-cheerfulness, "why, even in that case, should we speak of any one coming
-between us? We shall have the same affection, the same kind thoughts,
-even then, I hope----"
-
-"Maisrie, why do you talk like that!" he protested. "You know quite
-well that you will be my wife--or no one."
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"If you do not see for yourself that it is impossible--if you do not
-understand, Vincent--then some day I must tell you----"
-
-"Ah, but you have told me something far more important, and only a
-minute or two ago," said he. "You have told me all I want to know, this
-very morning! You are not aware of the confession you have made, since
-you came out on this breakwater? I have seen in your eyes what I never
-saw before; and everything else is to me as nothing. Difficulties?--I
-don't believe in them. I see our way as clear as daylight; and there's
-neither man nor woman coming between us. Oh, yes, I have discovered
-something this morning--that makes our way clear enough! Maisrie, do
-you know what wonderful eyes you have?--they can say so many
-things--perhaps even more than you intend. So much the better--so much
-the better--for I know they speak true."
-
-She did not seem to share his joyous confidence.
-
-"I must be going now, Vincent," she said. "Grandfather will wonder why I
-am so long in getting his newspapers. And I am glad to know you are no
-longer vexed with me. I could not bear that. And I will take care you
-shall have no further cause--indeed I will, Vincent."
-
-She was for bidding him good-bye, but he detained her: a wild wish had
-come into his head.
-
-"Maisrie," said he, with a little hesitation, "couldn't you--couldn't
-you give me some little thing to keep as a souvenir of this happy
-morning? Ah, you don't know all you have told me, perhaps! Only some
-little thing: could you give me a sandal-wood bead, Maisrie--could you
-cut one off your necklace?--and I will get a small gold case made for
-it, and wear it always and always, and when I open it, the perfume will
-remind me of you and of our walks together, and the evenings in that
-little parlour----"
-
-But instantly she had pulled off her gloves, and with busy fingers
-unclasped the necklace; then she touched it with her lips, and placed
-the whole of the warm and scented treasure in his hand.
-
-"I only wanted one of the beads, Maisrie," said he, with something of
-shamefacedness.
-
-"Take it, Vincent--I have not many things to give," she said, simply.
-
-"Then--then would you wear something if I gave it to you?" he asked.
-
-"Oh, yes, if you would like that," she answered at once.
-
-"Oh, well, I must try to get something nice--something appropriate,"
-said he. "I wonder if a Brighton jeweller could make me a small white
-dove in ivory or mother-of-pearl, that you could wear just as if it had
-alighted on your breast--a pin, you know, for your neck--and the pin
-could be made of a row of rubies or sapphires--while the dove itself
-would be white."
-
-"But, Vincent," she said, doubtingly, "if I were to wear that?"
-
-"What would it mean? Is that what you ask? Shall I tell you, Maisrie?
-It would mean a betrothal!"
-
-She shrank back.
-
-"No--no," she said. "No--I could not wear that!"
-
-"Oh, are you frightened by a word?" said he, cheerfully. "Very
-well--very well--it shan't mean anything of the kind! It will only
-serve to remind you of a morning on which you and I went for a little
-stroll down a breakwater at Brighton, when the Brighton people were so
-kind as to leave it all to ourselves. Nothing more than that,
-Maisrie!--if you wish it. Only you must wear the little white dove--as
-an emblem of peace and goodwill--and a messenger bringing you good
-news--and a lot of things like that, that I'm too stupid to put into
-words. For this is a morning not to be forgotten by either of us, all
-our lives long, I hope. You think you have not said anything?--then you
-shouldn't have such tell-tale eyes, Maisrie! And I believe them. I
-don't believe you when you talk about vague impossibilities. Well, I
-suppose I must let you go; and I suppose we cannot say good-bye--out
-here in the open----"
-
-"But you are coming, too, Vincent--a little way?"
-
-"As far as ever you will allow me," said he. "Till the end of life, if
-you like--and as I hope."
-
-But that was looking too far ahead in the present circumstances.
-
-"What are you going to do to-day, Maisrie?" he asked, as they were
-leaving the breakwater and making up for the Marine Parade. "Oh, I
-forgot: you are going out walking at eleven."
-
-She blushed slightly.
-
-"No, Vincent; I think I shall remain at home."
-
-"On a morning like this?--impossible! Why, you must go out in the
-sunlight. Sunlight is rare in December."
-
-Then she said, with some little embarrassment, "I do not wish to vex you
-any more, Vincent. If I went out with grandfather, we should meet Mr.
-Glover----"
-
-"Mr. Glover?" he said, interrupting her. "Dearest Maisrie, I don't mind
-if you were to go walking with twenty Mr. Glovers!--I don't mind that
-now. It is the sunlight that is of importance; it is getting you into
-the sunlight that is everything. And if Mr. Glover asks you to go
-driving with him in the afternoon, of course you must go!--it will
-interest you to see the crowd and the carriages, and it will keep you in
-the fresh air. Oh, yes, if I'm along in the King's Road this afternoon,
-I shall look out for you; and if you should happen to see me, then just
-remember that you have given me your sandal-wood necklace, and that I am
-the proudest and happiest person in the whole town of Brighton. Why, of
-course you must go out, both morning and afternoon," he continued, in
-this gay and generous fashion, as they were mounting the steps towards
-the upper thoroughfare. "Sunlight is just all the world, for flowers,
-and pretty young ladies, and similar things; and now you're away from
-the London fogs, you must make the best of it. It is very wise of your
-grandfather to lay aside his work while the fine weather lasts. Now be a
-good, sensible girl, and go out at eleven o'clock."
-
-"Vincent," she said, "if I do go with grandfather this morning, will you
-come down the town, and join us?"
-
-"Oh, well," said he, rather hesitating, "I--I do not wish to inflict
-myself on anybody. But don't mistake, Maisrie: I shall be quite happy,
-even if I see you walking up and down with the purveyor of bad sherry.
-It won't vex me in the least: something you told me this morning has
-made me proof against all that. The important thing is that you should
-keep in the sunlight!"
-
-"I ask you to come, Vincent."
-
-"Oh, very well, certainly," said he--not knowing what dark design was in
-her mind.
-
-He was soon to discover. When he left her in St. James's Street,
-whither she had gone to get the morning newspapers for her grandfather,
-he went back to the hotel, and to his own room, to take out this
-priceless treasure of a necklace she had bestowed on him, and to wonder
-how best he could make of it a cunning talisman that he could have near
-his heart night and day. And also he set to work to sketch out designs
-for the little breast-pin he meant to have made, with its transverse row
-of rubies or sapphires, with its white dove in the centre. An
-inscription? That was hardly needed: there was a sufficient
-understanding between him and her. And surely this was a betrothal,
-despite her timid shrinking back? The avowal of that morning had been
-more to him than words; during that brief moment it seemed as if Heaven
-shone in her eyes; and as if he could see there, as in a vision, all the
-years to come--all the years that he and she were to be
-together--shining with a soft celestial radiance. And would not this
-small white dove convey its message of peace?--when it lay on her bosom,
-"so light, so light."
-
-Then all of a sudden it occurred to him--why, he had been talking and
-walking with an adventuress, a begging-letter impostor, a common
-swindler, and had quite forgotten to be on his guard! All the solemn
-warnings he had received had entirely vanished from his mind when he was
-out there on the breakwater with Maisrie Bethune. He had looked into
-her eyes--and never thought of any swindling! Had this sandal-wood
-necklace--that was sweet with a fragrance more than its own--that seemed
-to have still some lingering warmth in it, borrowed from its recent and
-secret resting-place--been given him as a lure? The white
-dove--significant of all innocence, and purity, and peace--was that to
-rest on the heart of a traitress? Well, perhaps; but it did not appear
-to concern him much, as he got his hat and cane, and pulled on a fresh
-pair of gloves, and went out into the open air.
-
-Nay, he was in a magnanimous mood towards all mankind. He would not
-even seek to interfere with Sherry, as he mentally and meanly styled his
-rival. If it pleased the young gentleman in the cover-coat to walk up
-and down the King's Road with Maisrie Bethune--very well. If he took
-her for a drive after luncheon, that would amuse her, and also was well.
-The time for jealous dread, for angry suspicions, for reproachful
-accusations, was over and gone. A glance from Maisrie's eyes had
-banished all that. Sherry might parade his acquaintanceship as much as
-he chose, so long as Maisrie was kept in the open air and the sunlight:
-that was the all-important point.
-
-By-and-bye he went away down to the King's Road, and very speedily
-espied the three figures he expected to find there, though as yet they
-were at some distance. They were coming towards him: in a few minutes
-he would be face to face with them. And he had made up his mind what he
-meant to do. Maisrie should see that he was actuated no longer by
-jealous rage; that he had confidence in her; that he feared no rival
-now. And so it was that when they came near, he merely gave them a
-general and pleasant "Good-morning!" and raised his hat to Maisrie, and
-was for passing on. But he had reckoned without his host--or hostess
-rather.
-
-"Vincent!" said Maisrie, in expostulation.
-
-Then he stopped.
-
-"Aren't you coming with us? We are going along to the Chain Pier, to
-get out of the crowd. Won't you come?"
-
-"Oh, yes, if I may!" said he, gladly enough--and he knew that the other
-young man was staring, not to say scowling, at this unwelcome intrusion.
-
-Now Maisrie had been walking between her grandfather and young Glover;
-but the moment that Vincent joined the little party, she fell behind.
-
-"Four abreast are too many," said she. "We must go two and two;
-grandfather, will you lead the way with Mr. Glover?"
-
-It was done, and dexterously done, in a moment; and if the selection of
-the new comer as her companion was almost too open and marked, perhaps
-that was her intention. At all events, when the two others had moved
-forward, Vincent said in an undertone--
-
-"This is very kind of you, Maisrie."
-
-And she replied, rather proudly--
-
-"I wished to show you that I could distinguish between old and new
-friends."
-
-Then he grew humble.
-
-"Maisrie," said he, "don't you treasure up things against me! It was
-only a phrase. And just remember how I was situated. I came away down
-to Brighton merely to catch a glimpse of you; and about the first thing
-I saw was this young fellow, whom I had never heard of, driving you up
-and down among the fashionable crowd. You see, Maisrie, you hadn't
-given me the sandal-wood necklace then; and what is of far more
-consequence, you hadn't allowed your eyes to tell me what they told me
-this morning. So what was I to think? No harm of you, of course; but I
-was miserable;--and--and I thought you could easily forget; and all the
-afternoon I looked out for you; and all the evening I wandered about the
-streets, wondering whether you would be in one of the restaurants or the
-hotels. If I could only have spoken a word with you! But then, you
-know, I had been in a kind of way shut off from you; and--and there was
-this new acquaintance--"
-
-"I am very sorry, Vincent," she said also in a low voice. "It seems
-such a pity that one should vex one's friends unintentionally; because
-in looking back, you like to think of their always being pleased with
-you; and then again there may be no chance of making up--and you are
-sorry when it is too late----"
-
-"Come, come, Maisrie," he said with greater freedom--for some people had
-intervened, and the other two were now a little way ahead, "I am not
-going to let you talk in that way. You always speak as if you and I
-were to be separated----"
-
-"Wouldn't it be better, Vincent?" she said, simply.
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Why?" she repeated, in an absent kind of way. "Well, you know nothing
-about us, Vincent."
-
-"I have been told a good deal of late, then!" he said, in careless
-scorn.
-
-And the next instant he wished he had bitten his tongue out ere making
-that haphazard speech. The girl looked up at him with a curious quick
-scrutiny--as if she were afraid.
-
-"What have you been told, Vincent?" she demanded, in quite an altered
-tone.
-
-"Oh, nothing!" he said, with disdain. "A lot of rubbish! Every one has
-good-natured friends, I suppose, who won't be satisfied with minding
-their own business. And although you may laugh at the moment, at the
-mere ridiculousness of the thing, still, if it should happen that just
-at the same time you should see some one you are very fond of--in--in a
-position that you can't explain to yourself--well, then---- But what is
-the use of talking, Maisrie! I confess that I was jealous out of all
-reason, jealous to the verge of madness; but then I paid the penalty, in
-hours and hours of misery; and now you come along and heap coals of fire
-on my head, until I am so ashamed of myself that I don't think I am fit
-to live. And that's all about it; and my only excuse is that you had
-not told me then what your eyes told me this morning."
-
-She remained silent and thoughtful for a little while; but as she made
-no further reference to his inadvertent admission that he had heard
-certain things of herself and her grandfather, he inwardly hoped that
-that unlucky speech had gone from her memory. Moreover, they were come
-to the Chain Pier; and as those two in front waited for them, so that
-they should go through the turnstile one after the other, there was just
-then no opportunity for further confidential talking. But once on the
-Pier, old George Bethune, who was eagerly discoursing on some subject or
-another (with magnificent emphasis of arm and stick) drew ahead again,
-taking his companion with him. And Vin Harris, regarding the
-picturesque figure of the old man, and his fine enthusiastic manner,
-which at all events seemed so sincere, began to wonder whether there
-could be any grains of truth in the story that had been told him, or
-whether it was a complete and malevolent fabrication. His appearance
-and demeanour, certainly, were not those of a professional impostor: it
-was hard to understand how a man of his proud and blunt self-assertion
-could manage to wheedle wine merchants and tailors. Had he really
-called himself Lord Bethune; or was it not far more likely that some
-ignorant colonial folk, impressed by his talk of high lineage and by his
-personal dignity, had bestowed on him that title? The young
-man--guessing and wondering--began to recall the various counts of that
-sinister indictment; and at last he said to his companion, in a musing
-kind of way----
-
-"Maisrie, you know that motto your grandfather is so proud of: 'Stand
-Fast, Craig-Royston!' Have you any idea where Craig-Royston is?"
-
-"I? No, not at all," she said simply.
-
-"You have never been there?"
-
-"Vincent!" she said. "You know I have never been in Scotland."
-
-"Because there is such an odd thing in connection with it," he
-continued. "In one edition of Black's Guide to Scotland, Craig-Royston
-is not mentioned anywhere; and in another it is mentioned, but only in a
-footnote. And I can't find it in the map. You don't know if there are
-any people of your name living there now?"
-
-"I am sure I cannot say," she made answer. "Grandfather could tell you;
-he is always interested in such things."
-
-"And Balloray," he went on, "I could find no mention of Balloray; but of
-course there must be such a place?"
-
-"I wish there was not," she said, sadly. "It is the one bitter thing in
-my grandfather's life. I wish there never had been any such place. But
-I have noticed a change in him of late. He does not complain now as he
-used to complain; he is more resigned; indeed, he seldom talks of it.
-And when I say complain, that is hardly the word. Don't you think he
-bears his lot with great fortitude? I am sure it is more on my account
-than his own that he ever thinks of the estate that was lost. And I am
-sure he is happier with his books than with all the land and money that
-could be given to him. He seems to fancy that those old songs and
-ballads belong to him; they are his property; he is happier with them
-than with a big estate and riches."
-
-"I could not find Balloray in the index to the Guide," Vincent resumed,
-"but of course there must be such a place--there is the ballad your
-grandfather is so fond of--'The bonnie mill-dams o' Balloray.'"
-
-She looked up suddenly, with some distress in her face.
-
-"Vincent, don't you understand? Don't you understand that grandfather
-is easily taken with a name--with the sound of it--and sometimes he
-confuses one with another? That ballad is not about Balloray; it is
-about Binnorie; it is 'The bonnie mill-dams o' Binnorie.' Grandfather
-forgets at times; and he is used to Balloray; and that has got into his
-head in connection with the ballad. I thought perhaps you knew."
-
-"Oh, no," said he, lightly, for he did not attach any great importance
-to this chance confusion. "The two words are not unlike; I quite see how
-one might take the place of the other. Of course you will make sure
-that he puts in the right name when he comes to publish the volume."
-
-And so they walked up and down the almost deserted pier, in the bright
-sunlight, looking out on the lapping green waters, or up to the terraced
-yellow houses above the tall cliffs. Sometimes, of course, the four of
-them came together; and more than once the horsey-looking young
-gentleman insidiously tried to detach Maisrie from her chosen
-companion--and tried in vain. At last, when it became about time for
-them to be going their several ways home, he made a bold stroke.
-
-"Come, Mr. Bethune," said he, as they were successively passing through
-the turnstile, "I want you and Miss Bethune to take pity on a poor
-solitary bachelor, and come along and have a bit of lunch with me at the
-Old Ship. It will be a little change for you, won't it?--and we can
-have a private room if you prefer that."
-
-The old gentleman seemed inclined to close with this offer; but he
-glanced towards Maisrie for her acquiescence first.
-
-"Oh, thank you, Mr. Glover," said she, promptly; "but I have everything
-arranged at our lodgings; and we must not disappoint our landlady. Some
-other time, perhaps, thank you! Good morning!"
-
-Then the moment he was gone, she turned to her companion.
-
-"Vincent, have you any engagement? No? Then, will you be very
-courageous and come with us and take your chance? I can promise you a
-biscuit at least."
-
-"And I'm sure I don't want anything more," said he, most gratefully; for
-surely she was trying her best to show him that she distinguished
-between old and new friends.
-
-And then again, when they reached the rooms, and when the three of them
-were seated at table, she waited upon him with a gentle care and
-assiduity that were almost embarrassing. He wished the wretched things
-at the bottom of the sea: why should commonplace food and drink
-interfere with his answering Maisrie's eyes, or thinking of her
-overwhelming kindness? As for old George Bethune, the sharp air and the
-sunlight had given him an admirable appetite; and he allowed the young
-people to amuse themselves with little courtesies, and attentions, and
-protests just as they pleased. Cheese and celery were solid and
-substantial things: he had no concern about a drooping eyelash, or some
-pretty, persuasive turn of speech.
-
-And yet he was not unfriendly towards the young man.
-
-"Wouldn't you like to go to the theatre this evening, Maisrie?" Vincent
-asked. "It is the _Squires Daughter_. I know you've seen it already;
-but I could go a dozen times--twenty times--the music is so delightful.
-And the travelling company is said to be quite as good as the London
-one: Miss Kate Burgoyne has changed into it, you know, and I shouldn't
-wonder if she sung all the better because of the L3000 damages that Sir
-Percival Miles has had to pay her. Shall I go along and see if I can
-get a box?"
-
-"What do you say, grandfather?" the girl asked.
-
-"Oh, yes--very well, very well," said he, in his lofty way. "A little
-idleness more or less is not of much account. But we must begin to work
-soon, Maisrie; fresh air and sunlight are all very well; but we must
-begin to work--while the day is with us, though luckily one has not to
-say to you as yet--_jam te premet nox, falulaeque Manes, et domus exilis
-Plutonia_."
-
-"Then if we go to the theatre," said Maisrie, "Vincent must come in here
-for a little while on his way home; and you and he will have a smoke
-together; and it will be quite like old times."--And Vincent looked at
-her, as much as to say, 'Maisrie, don't make me too ashamed: haven't you
-forgiven me yet for that foolish phrase?'
-
-The afternoon passed quickly enough: to Vincent every moment was golden.
-Then in the evening they went to the theatre; and the young people at
-least were abundantly charmed with the gay costumes, the pretty music,
-and the fun and merriment of the bright little operetta. George Bethune
-seemed less interested. He sate well back in the box, his face in
-shadow; and although his eyes, from under those shaggy eyebrows, were
-fixed on the stage, it was in an absent fashion, as if he were thinking
-of other things. And indeed he was thinking of far other things; for
-when, after the piece was over, those three set out to walk home through
-the dark streets, Maisrie and Vincent could hear the old man, who walked
-somewhat apart from them, reciting to himself, and that in a proud and
-sustained voice. It was not the frivolity of comic opera that he had in
-his mind; it was something of finer and sterner stuff; as they crossed
-by the Old Steine, where there was a space of silence, they could make
-out clearly what this was--
-
- 'Thy faith and troth thou sall na get,
- And our true love sall never twin,
- Until ye tell what comes of women,
- I wot, who die in strong travailing?'
-
- 'Their beds are made in the heavens high,
- Down at the foot of our good Lord's knee,
- Weel set about wi' gillyflowers,
- I wot sweet company for to see.
-
- 'O cocks are crowing a merry midnight,
- I wot the wild-fowl are boding day;
- The psalms of heaven will soon be sung,
- And I, ere now, will be missed away.'
-
-
-There was a curiously solemn effect about this solitary voice, here in
-the dark. The old man did not seem to care whether he was overheard or
-not; it was entirely to himself that he was repeating the lines of the
-old ballad. And thereafter he walked on in silence, while the two
-lovers, busy with their own little world, were murmuring nothings to
-each other.
-
-But Maisrie, for one, was soon to be recalled to the actualities, and
-even grim incongruities, of every day life. When they reached their
-lodgings the servant girl, who opened the door to them, paused for a
-second and looked up and down the street.
-
-"Yes, sir, there he is," said she.
-
-"Who?" George Bethune demanded.
-
-"A man who has been asking for you, sir--and said he would wait."
-
-At the same moment there came out of the gloom a rather shabby-looking
-person.
-
-"Mr. George Bethune?" he said.
-
-"Yes, that is my name," the old man answered, impatiently: probably he
-suspected.
-
-"Something for you, sir," said the stranger, handing a folded piece of
-paper--and therewith he left.
-
-It was all the work of a second; and the next instant they were indoors,
-and in the little parlour; but in that brief space of time a great
-change had taken place. Indeed, Maisrie's mortification was a piteous
-thing to see; it seemed so hard she should have had to endure this
-humiliation under the very eyes of her lover; she would not look his way
-at all; she busied herself with putting things on the table; her
-downcast face was overwhelmed with confusion and shame. For surely
-Vincent would know what that paper was? The appearance of the man--his
-hanging about--her grandfather's angry frown--all pointed plainly
-enough. And that it should happen at the end of this long and happy
-day--this day of reconciliation--when she had tried so assiduously to be
-kind to him--when he had spoken so confidently of the future that lay
-before them! It was as if some cruel fate had interposed to say to him:
-'Now you see the surroundings in which this girl has lived: and do you
-still dream of making her your wife?'
-
-And perhaps old George Bethune noticed this shame and vexation on the
-part of his granddaughter, and may have wished to divert attention from
-it; at all events, when he had brewed his toddy, and lit his pipe, and
-drawn his chair in towards the fire, he set off upon one of his
-monologues, quite in the old garrulous vein; and he was as friendly
-towards Vincent as though this visit had been quite anticipated.
-Maisrie sat silent and abashed; and Vincent, listening vaguely, thought
-it was all very fine to have a sanguine and happy-go-lucky temperament,
-but that he--that is, the younger man--would be glad to have this
-beautiful and pensive creature of a girl removed into altogether
-different circumstances. He knew why she was ashamed and
-downcast--though, to be sure, he said to himself that the serving of a
-writ was no tremendous cataclysm. Such little incidents must
-necessarily occur in the career of any one who had such an arrogant
-disdain of pounds and pence as her grandfather professed. But that
-Maisrie should have to suffer humiliation: that was what touched him to
-the quick. He looked at her--at her beautiful and wistful eyes, and the
-sensitive lines of her profile and under-lip; and his heart bled for
-her. And all this following upon her outspoken avowal of that morning
-seemed to demand some more definite and immediate action on his
-part--when once the quiet of the night had enabled him to consider his
-position.
-
-When he rose to leave, he asked them what they meant to do the next day.
-But Maisrie would hardly say anything; she seemed rather to wish him to
-go, so distressed and disheartened she was. And go he did, presently;
-but he bore away with him no hurt feeling on account of his tacit
-dismissal. He understood all that; and he understood her. And as he
-went away home through the dark, he began to recall the first occasions
-on which he had seen Maisrie Bethune walking in Hyde Park with her
-grandfather; and the curious fancies that were then formed in his own
-mind--that here apparently was a beautiful, and sensitive, and suffering
-soul that ought to be rescued and cheered and comforted, were one found
-worthy to be her champion and her friend. Her friend?--she had
-confessed he was something more than that on this very morning. Her
-lover, then?--well, her lover ought to be her champion too, if only the
-hours of the night would lend him counsel.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- ON THE BRINK.
-
-
-Nay, he could see but the one clear and resolute way out of all these
-perplexities, which was that he should forthwith and without further
-preamble marry Maisrie Bethune: thereafter his relatives might do or say
-whatever it most pleased them to do or say. This would be his answer to
-the vague but persistent suspicions of Mrs. Ellison, and to the more
-precise but none the less preposterous accusations of his father. Then
-as regards Maisrie herself, would not this conclusive act banish all
-those dim presentiments and alarms with which she seemed to regard the
-future? And if her present circumstances involved her in humiliation,
-lie would take her out of these. As for old George Bethune, ought he
-not to welcome this guardianship that would succeed his own? The
-happiness of his granddaughter seemed to be his first care; and here was
-a stay and bulwark for her, a protection for her when his own should be
-withdrawn in the natural course of things.
-
-This solution of the difficulty seemed reasonable and simple, though
-sometimes his arguments would suddenly get lost in a flood of wild
-wonder and joy; and entrancing visions of that pretty canary-cage he
-meant to secure--down by Chelsea way, perhaps, or up about Campden Hill,
-or it might be out among some suburban gardens--would interfere with the
-cool and accurate representations he was preparing to lay before his
-friends. For after all, simple as the solution appeared, there were
-ways and means to be considered. Vincent was now about to
-discover--nay, he already perceived--that for a young man to be brought
-up without any definite calling meant a decided crippling of his
-independence. The canary-cage, charming and idyllic as it might be,
-would cost something, even if he went as far as Shepherd's Bush or
-Hammersmith; and the little fortune that had been left him did not
-produce much of an annual income. Then again his father: would not the
-great socialist (on paper) instantly withdraw the handsome allowance he
-had hitherto made, on hearing that his son contemplated marrying that
-dangerous person, that low-born adventuress, that creature of the slums?
-For Vincent Harris was not given to disguising things from himself. He
-knew that these were the phrases which his father would doubtless apply
-to Maisrie Bethune. Not that they or any other phrases were of much
-import: the capitalist-communist was welcome to invent and use as many
-as he chose. But his opposition to this marriage, which was almost to
-be counted on, might become a very serious affair for everybody
-concerned.
-
-Next morning Vincent was up betimes; and at an early hour he went along
-to the Bedford Hotel. He was told that Lord Musselburgh was in the
-coffee-room; and thither he accordingly proceeded.
-
-"Oh, yes, I'll have some breakfast, thank you," said he, as he took a
-seat at the small table. "Anything--anything. The fact is, Musselburgh,
-I want to speak to you, if you can give me a little time. Something of
-importance, too--to me at least----"
-
-"Let me tell you this, Vin, first of all," said the elder of the two
-young men, with a smile. "You'll have to make your peace with Mrs.
-Ellison. She is mortally offended at the notion of your coming to
-Brighton, and going to a hotel. I suppose you imagined she didn't know
-you had come down? We saw you yesterday."
-
-"Where?" said Vincent, quickly.
-
-"In the Marine Parade. We followed you some little way--if you had
-turned round you would have seen us."
-
-"What time?"
-
-"Why, about one, I should think."
-
-"Then--then you saw--"
-
-"Yes, we saw--" said the other.
-
-There was a moment's silence; Vin's eyes were fixed on his companion
-with a curious expectancy and prayer; had this friend of his, if he were
-a friend at all, no approving word to say about Maisrie?
-
-Well, Lord Musselburgh was an exceedingly good-natured young man; and on
-this occasion he did not allow a selfish discretion to get the better of
-him.
-
-"I don't know that I intended to tell you," said he. "Fact is, Mrs.
-Ellison hinted that I'd better follow her example; and have nothing to
-say on a certain subject; but really, Vin, really--I had no
-idea--really----"
-
-"Yes?--what?" said Vincent, rather breathlessly.
-
-"Well, to be candid with you, I never was so surprised in my life! Why,
-you remember that afternoon in Piccadilly, when I first saw
-them--perhaps I did not pay much attention to the girl--she seemed a
-slip of a thing--pretty, oh, yes, pretty enough; but yesterday--when I
-saw her yesterday--by George, she's grown to be one of the most
-beautiful creatures I ever beheld! And so distinguished-looking--and
-apparently so unconscious of it too! Again and again I noticed people
-half-turn their heads to get another glimpse of her as she went by--and
-no wonder--why, really, such a carriage--such an air of distinction and
-quiet self-possession, for all she looked so young--I never was so
-surprised in all my life! Oh, a most beautiful creature!--and that I
-must say in common honesty, whatever comes of it."
-
-Nay, the very incoherence of his praise was proof of its sincerity; and
-Vincent's face burned with pleasure and pride. How could sweeter words
-have been poured into a lover's ears?
-
-"Did you chance to notice her hair?--did you?" said he, eagerly. "Did
-you chance to see the sunlight on it? And--and you were behind her--you
-must have seen how she walked--the lightness and grace of her step.
-Mind you, Mussel burgh," he went on--and his breakfast received but
-scant attention, now that he had found someone to whom he could talk on
-this enchanting and all-engrossing theme. "A light and graceful step
-means far more than mere youth and health--it means a perfect and supple
-figure as well. Did you think she was rather pale?" he asked--but only
-to answer his own question. "Yes, I dare say you might think she was
-rather pale. But that is not because she is delicate--oh, dear,
-no!--not in the least: it is the natural fineness of her complexion; and
-when brisk walking, or a cold wind blowing, brings colour into her
-cheeks, then that is all the rarer and more beautiful. Of course you
-couldn't see her eyes at all?--she doesn't stare at people in the
-streets; she seems to find the sea more interesting when we are walking
-up and clown; but they are the clearest, the most expressive, eyes you
-could imagine! She hardly has to speak--she has only to look! I do
-think blue-grey is by far the prettiest colour of eyes; they vary so
-much; I've seen Maisrie Bethune's eyes quite distinctly blue--that is
-when she is very strong and well, and out in the open air. I don't
-suppose it possible that any reflection from the sky or sea can affect
-the colour of the eyes; it must be simply that she is in the fresh air,
-and stimulated with exercise and happy----" He paused for a second.
-"Is there anything so very amusing?"
-
-"To tell you the truth, Vin," his companion admitted, "I was thinking
-that when you came in you announced you had something of importance to
-say----"
-
-"Instead of which I have been talking about Miss Bethune," Vincent said,
-without taking any offence. "But who began? I thought it was you who
-introduced the subject--and you seemed interested in her appearance----"
-
-"Oh, yes, of course, of course," the young nobleman said, goodnaturedly.
-"I beg your pardon. And I understand how the subject may be of
-importance to you----"
-
-"Well, yes, it is," said Vincent, calmly. "For I propose to marry Miss
-Bethune, and at once, if she will consent."
-
-Lord Musselburgh looked up quickly, and his face was grave enough now.
-
-"You don't mean that, Vin?"
-
-"That is precisely what I do mean," the young man said.
-
-"I thought--I had fancied--that certain things had been found out," his
-friend stammered, and then stopped; for it was a hazardous topic.
-
-"Oh, you have been told too?" Vincent said, with a careless disdain.
-"Well, when I heard those charges brought against Miss Bethune's
-grandfather, I did not choose to answer them; but speaking about him to
-you is another thing; and I may say to you, once for all, that more
-preposterous trash was never invented. I won't deny," he continued,
-with a perfectly simple frankness, "that there are one or two things
-about Mr. Bethune that I cannot quite explain--that I rather shut my
-eyes to; and perhaps there are one or two things that one might wish
-altered--for who is perfect? But the idea that this old man, with his
-almost obtrusively rugged individuality, his independence, his self-will
-and pride, should be a scheming impostor and swindler--it is too absurd!
-To my mind--and I think I know him pretty intimately--he appears to be
-one of the finest and grandest characters it is possible to imagine; a
-personality you could never forget, once you had learned to know him
-even a little; and that this man, of all men, should be suspected of
-being a fawning and wheedling writer of begging-letters--it is too
-laughable! I admit that he has little or no money--if that is a crime.
-They live in straitened circumstances, no doubt. And of course there
-are many unpleasant things connected with poverty that one would rather
-hide from the eyes of a young lady, and that can't well be hidden:
-though I don't know that her nature, if she has a fine and noble nature,
-need suffer from that. For example, it isn't nice for her to see her
-grandfather served with a writ; but many excellent people have been
-served with writs; it doesn't follow that Mr. Bethune must be a thief
-because he has no money--or perhaps because he has been negligent about
-some debt or other. But even supposing that he was a questionable
-person--even supposing that he was in the habit of using doubtful means
-to supplement his precarious income; isn't that all the greater reason
-why such a girl should be taken away from such circumstances?"
-
-Lord Musselburgh did not reply to this question. He had heard from Mrs.
-Ellison that the granddaughter was suspected, or more than suspected, of
-being an accomplice; and although, of course, he could not in the least
-say whether there was any truth in this allegation, he deemed it wiser
-to hold his tongue.
-
-"Now you may put all that aside," Vincent went on. "That is all rubbish
-and trash--a pack of old wives' stories. And what I want of you,
-Musselburgh, is to give me your honest opinion on a certain point. I
-ask for your advice. I want you to tell me what you think would happen
-in a possible case. And the main question is this: assuming that I
-could persuade Miss Bethune to marry me at once, and assuming also that
-her grandfather approved--when the marriage had actually taken place,
-what would my relatives say? Or rather, that is not the question: the
-question is what they would do. I know what they would say. They would
-be wild enough. Their heads are full of these foolish fancies and
-suspicions; and beside that, I gather that they want me to marry some
-noble damsel whose family would have political influence. Yes, they
-would be wild enough, no doubt; but when they found the thing actually
-settled, what would they do? Would my father make a deadly quarrel of
-it and cut me off with a shilling, like something out of a play; or
-would he exercise a little common-sense, and make the best of it, seeing
-the thing was done?"
-
-"Really," said Musselburgh, who seemed more concerned than one might
-have expected from his half-cynical, half-careless temperament, "you ask
-me what I can't answer. And giving advice is a perilous business. All
-I can say is this, Vin--you seem to me to have got into a devilish
-awkward position, and I wish to goodness you were out of it."
-
-"You think I regret anything that has happened?" Vincent said. "Not I!
-I would not go back--not for all the world. But as for this monetary
-difficulty, there it is; and it has to be faced. You see, I have been
-brought up to do nothing; and consequently I am in a measure dependent
-on my father. My own little income doesn't amount to much. Then again,
-if I were to marry Maisrie Bethune, I should have to leave her
-grandfather whatever small fund they have--I don't quite understand
-about it--anyhow, I couldn't take that away, for I imagine the old
-gentleman's earnings from newspaper work are not very substantial or
-regular. Now what do you think my father would do?"
-
-"Wouldn't it be the simplest thing to go and ask him--to go and ask him
-now?" said Lord Musselburgh, who clearly did not wish to assume any
-responsibility in this serious matter.
-
-"I can tell myself what he would say now," Vincent made answer; "the
-question is what he would say then."
-
-"After the marriage?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-His companion across the little table hesitated for a second or two.
-
-"You see, Vin, it isn't only in plays that fathers get
-angry--unfortunately, it sometimes happens in real life; and
-occasionally they get very angry indeed. According to your own showing,
-if your father refused to acknowledge this marriage--if he declared he
-would have nothing further to do with you--you would find yourself in
-rather desperate straits. Why should you, with your eyes open, walk
-into any such straits? You know what may happen. And then--with a
-young wife--with next to no resources--what would you do? Let us come
-to one definite and immediate thing, that I hope is not far off now; who
-would pay your election expenses at Mendover?"
-
-"You yourself, Musselburgh, in the interests of the party!"
-
-"I am glad you can make a jest of the situation, Vin----"
-
-"No, really, I don't," Vincent said, more seriously. "But if I were to
-ask for my father's consent I should not get it--I know that quite well;
-and meanwhile this girl is supposed to be--oh, I need not name the
-things! You don't understand! She is my dearest in all the world; how
-can I stand by and allow these base accusations to be brought against
-her, without protest? And that would be my protest! That would show
-them what I thought of their mean suspicions and their preposterous
-charges."
-
-"And thereafter?" said Lord Musselburgh.
-
-"Thereafter? Well, as I say, my father might show some common sense and
-accept the thing, seeing it was done. I can tell you it isn't very
-pleasant to find myself so dependent on any other human being's
-reasonableness. I haven't been used to it. I dare say I have been
-spoiled--things made too easy for me. And now when I look round and
-wonder what I could turn to, I suppose I am simply in the position of a
-thousand others, who haven't had any special training. The few articles
-I have written have paid me well enough; but at present I don't see
-anything substantial and permanent in that direction. If you were in
-office I should ask you for a private secretaryship----"
-
-"Why not ask someone who is in office?"
-
-"I could not change my coat quite so quickly as that."
-
-"Ah, you haven't had much experience in practical politics," Lord
-Musselburgh observed. "Well, now, Vin, look here: it seems to me you
-are on the brink of a tremendous catastrophe. You have asked for my
-advice; I will give it you frankly. For goodness sake, don't marry that
-girl! She may be everything you say; her grandfather may be everything
-you say; but don't do anything rash--don't do anything irrevocable. And
-consider this: if your relations should look on such a marriage with
-disfavour, it is in your own interest; it is no selfish wish on their
-part that you should marry well--marry in your own sphere--marry some
-one who would do you credit and be a fit companion for you. Mind you, I
-say nothing against Miss Bethune--nothing; I would not even if I
-could--I am not such a fool--for I should simply anger you without
-convincing you; but just consider for a moment what her experiences must
-have been. You know what Mrs. Ellison so frequently talks about--the
-sentimental fallacy of supposing that there is anything intrinsically
-noble or beautiful about poverty. I'm afraid she's right. I am afraid
-that poverty is altogether a debasing and brutalising thing, destroying
-self-respect, stunting the mind as well as the body."
-
-"Yes," said Via Harris, rather scornfully, "I am quite aware that is the
-opinion of poverty held by the rich. They show it. They profess to
-believe what the Sermon on the Mount says about the Kingdom of Heaven
-being reserved for the poor; but catch any single man-jack of them
-putting aside his riches in order to secure that other inheritance! Not
-much! He prefers the Kingdom he has got--in consols."
-
-"I was only wondering," Musselburgh said, with a little hesitation,
-"what influence those--those associations might have had on Miss Bethune
-herself. Not the best training for a young girl, perhaps?"
-
-"If she had been brought up in a thieves' den," said Vincent, hotly,
-"she would have remained the pure and beautiful-souled creature that she
-is now. But I see there is no use talking. I have asked for your
-advice--for your opinion; and you have given it to me. I thank you, and
-there's an end."
-
-He rose. But his friend also rose at the same moment.
-
-"No, no, Vin, you're not going to quarrel with me. Come into the
-smoking-room, and we'll have a cigarette."
-
-Nor did he wish to quarrel. They left the coffee-room together. But as
-luck would have it, in crossing the hall, he chanced to look towards the
-front door; and behold! all the outer world was shining in clear
-sunlight. It suddenly occurred to this young man that he had been
-sitting plunged in gloom, listening to coward counsels, regarding the
-future as something dark; while there--out there--the golden pavements,
-and the far-shimmering sea, and the wide white skies spoke only of hope,
-and seemed to say that Maisrie would soon be coming along, proud and
-tall and sweet. Why, it was to her that he ought to have appealed--not
-to any timorous, vacillating temporiser; it was her hands he ought to
-have taken and held, that he might read the future in her true eyes.
-And so, with some brief words of apology and thanks, he left Lord
-Musselburgh, and made his way into the outer air: this was to breathe
-more freely--this was to have the natural courage of youth mounting into
-the brain.
-
-He walked away along the King's Road; and unconsciously to himself he
-held his head erect; as if in imitation of the stout-hearted old man
-who, despite his threescore years and ten, could still bear himself so
-bravely in face of all the world. Moreover, there were some lines in
-one of Maisrie's songs haunting him; but not in any sad way; nay, he
-found himself dwelling on the _r_'s, as if to recall her soft
-pronunciation:--
-
- Elle fit un' rencontre
- De trente matelots,
- De trente matelots
- Sur le bord de l' ile.
-
-He had thrust aside those pusillanimous counsels: out here was the
-sunlight and the fresh-blowing wind; his soul felt freer; he would gain
-new courage from Maisrie's eyes. This was the kind of morning to bring
-a touch of crimson to the transparent pallor of her cheek; her teeth
-would glisten when she laughed; her graceful step would be lighter, more
-buoyant, than ever. _Sursum corda_! Nay, he could have found it in his
-heart to adopt the proud-sounding 'Stand Fast, Craig-Royston!'--if only
-to fling it back in the face of those who had brought those monstrous
-accusations.
-
-His long and swinging stride soon carried him to the house in German
-Place, where he found George Bethune and his granddaughter just making
-ready to come out.
-
-"This will not do, Maisrie," said old George Bethune, in his gay,
-emphatic fashion. "Too much idleness. Too much idleness. Fresh air is
-all very well; but we must not become its slaves. Remember Horace's
-warning. '_Tu, nisi ventis debes ludibrium, cave_.'"
-
-"Why, who could keep at work on a morning like this!" Vincent protested.
-"A west wind and brilliant sunlight are not so common in December. It
-makes it hard for me that I've to go away to-morrow."
-
-"Are you going away to-morrow, Vincent?" said Maisrie, regarding him.
-
-"Yes," said he. "I have to go down to Mendover on Thursday, to deliver
-a sort of address--a lecture--and I've only got the heads and divisions
-sketched out as yet. I wish I could escape it altogether; but I dare
-not play any tricks at present; I'm on my best behaviour. And this time
-at least I don't mean to drag Lord Musselburgh down with me; I'm going
-alone."
-
-"And after that you return to London?" she asked.
-
-He hardly knew what to say. A single word of encouragement from either
-of them, and he would at once and gladly have promised to come back to
-Brighton at the earliest possible moment; but he had not forgotten the
-implied understanding on which Maisrie and her grandfather had come away
-from their lodgings in Mayfair.
-
-"Yes, to London," he replied vaguely. "But I have no definite plans at
-present. I dare say my aunt, Mrs. Ellison, will want me to come down
-here at Christmas."
-
-When they were outside, and had gone on to the Parade, he besought his
-two companions, instead of taking their accustomed stroll into the town,
-to come away out into the country. The Downs, he said, would be looking
-very cheerful on so pleasant a morning. And of course it mattered
-little to them whither they went. They acceded at once; and by-and-bye
-they had left the wide thoroughfare and the houses behind them, and were
-walking along the soft turf, alone with the cliffs, and the sea, and the
-smooth, faintly-coloured uplands. The spring-time was not yet; but
-there were hues of green and red in those far-stretching breadths of
-soil; and the sky was of a cloudless blue.
-
-And how strange it was that out here in the open, in the clear sunlight,
-those dark imaginings of the Private Inquiry Offices seemed to fall
-helplessly away from these two friends of his, and they themselves stood
-sharply defined just as he had always known them--the two solitary and
-striking figures that his fancy had invested with so pathetic an
-interest. Mentally he addressed Lord Musselburgh: 'Come and see them
-here--in the white light of day--and ask yourself whether you can
-believe in those midnight things you have heard of them. Look at this
-girl: you say yourself she is of extraordinary beauty; but is there not
-a still stranger fascination--is there not something that wins the heart
-to sympathy, and pity, and respect? Look at the pensive character of
-her mouth--look at the strange resignation in the beautiful eyes:
-perhaps her life has not been altogether too happy?--and is that to be
-brought as a charge against her? Then this old man--look at his proud
-bearing--look at the resolute set of his head--his straight glance--the
-courage of his firm mouth: has he the appearance, the demeanour, of a
-sharper, of a plausible and specious thief?' At this moment, at all
-events, it did not seem as if George Bethune's mind was set upon any
-swindling scheme. As he marched along, with head erect, and with eyes
-fixed absently on the far horizon, he was reciting to himself, in
-sonorous tones, the metrical version of the Hundredth Psalm--
-
- 'O enter then His gates with praise,
- Approach with joy his courts unto;
- Praise, laud, and bless His name always,
- For it is seemly so to do.
- For why? the Lord our God is good,
- His mercy is for ever sure;
- His truth at all times firmly stood,
- And shall from age to age endure.'
-
-No doubt it was some reminiscence of his youthful days--perhaps a
-Saturday night's task--that had lain dormant in his memory for sixty
-years or more.
-
-The two young folk were mostly silent; they had plenty to think
-about--especially in view of Vincent's departure on the morrow. As for
-him, his one consuming desire was to make sure of Maisrie, now that she
-had disclosed her heart to him; he wished for some closer bond, some
-securer tie, so that, whatever might happen, Maisrie should not be taken
-away from him. For he seemed to know as if by some inscrutable instinct
-that a crisis in his life was approaching. And it was not enough that
-her eyes had spoken; that she had given him the sandal-wood necklace;
-that she had striven with an almost pathetic humility to show her
-affection and esteem. He wished for some clearer assurance with regard
-to the future. Those people in the background who had pieced together
-that malignant story: were they not capable of further and more deadly
-mischief? He had affected to scorn them as mere idle and intermeddling
-fools; but they might become still more aggressive--enemies striking at
-him and at his heart's desire from the dim phantom-world that enshrouded
-them. Anyhow, he meant to act now, on his own discretion. Lord
-Musselburgh's advice was no doubt worldly-wise enough and safe; but it
-was valueless in these present circumstances. Vincent felt that his
-life was his own, and that the moment had come when he must shape it
-towards a certain end--for good or ill, as the years might show.
-
-After a pretty long walk along the cliffs, they returned to the town (on
-the Parade they met Sherry, who cheerfully informed them that he was on
-the point of starting for Monte Carlo, and hoped they would wish him
-good luck) and Vincent was easily persuaded by Maisrie to share their
-modest luncheon with them. Thereafter, when tobacco was produced, she
-begged to be excused for a little while, as she had some sewing to do in
-her own room; and thus it was that Vincent, quite suddenly and
-unexpectedly, found himself presented with an opportunity of approaching
-the old man on the all-important theme. But on this occasion he was
-much more precise and urgent in his prayer; for he had thought the whole
-matter clearly out, through many a sleepless hour; and his plans lay
-fixed and definite before him.
-
-"You yourself," he went on, "have often hinted that your future
-movements were uncertain--you might have to go away--and--and then I
-don't say that either Maisrie or I would forget--only I am afraid of
-absence. There appear to be certain people who don't wish you well;
-there might be more stories; who can tell what might not happen?
-Indeed," said he, regarding the old man a little anxiously, "I have been
-thinking that--that if Maisrie would consent--our getting married at
-once would be the safest and surest tie of all. I have not spoken of it
-to her--I thought I would put it before you first----"
-
-Here he paused, in something of anxious uncertainty.
-
-"Married at once?" George Bethune repeated, slowly. There was no
-expression of surprise or resentment; the old man waited calmly and
-courteously for further elucidation of these plans; his eyes were
-observant and attentive--but quite inscrutable.
-
-"And I want to show you how I am situated," Vincent went on (but not
-knowing what to make of that perfectly impassive demeanour). "I hope
-there is no need to conceal anything--indeed, I should think you were
-pretty well acquainted with my circumstances by this time. You know my
-father is a rich man. I am his only son; and I suppose I shall inherit
-his fortune. I have a little money of my own--not much of an annual
-income, to be sure; and I have some friends who would help me if the
-worst came to the worst, but I don't see how that necessity should
-arise. For myself, I have unfortunately been brought up to no
-profession; I was trained for public life--for polities--if for
-anything: it has never been considered necessary that I should learn
-some method of making my own living. That is a misfortune--I can see
-that now; but at least I have been trying to do something of late; and I
-have got some encouragement; if there were any need, I fancy I could
-earn a modest income by writing for the newspapers. You have seen one
-or two of those articles--and I have been offered introductions, as you
-know. Well, now----"
-
-And again he paused. All this had been more or less of plain sailing:
-now he was approaching a much more delicate matter.
-
-"Well--the fact is--there has been some envious tittle-tattle--wretched
-stuff--not worth mentioning --except for this: that if I went to my
-father and told him I wished to marry your granddaughter, he would be
-opposed to it. Yes, that is the truth. He does not know you; he has
-never even seen Maisrie; and of course he goes by what he
-hears--absolute folly as it is. However," Vincent continued, with some
-effort at cheerfulness (for he was glad to get away from that subject
-without being questioned), "the main point is this: if Maisrie and I
-were to get married, at once--as we have the right to do--we are surely
-of sufficient age--we know our own minds--I am quite certain my father
-would accept the whole affair good-naturedly and reasonably, and all
-would be well. Then see what it would be for Maisrie to have an assured
-position like that! She would be able to give up her share in the small
-income you once spoke of; that would be altogether yours; and surely you
-would be glad to know that her future was safe, whatever might happen.
-There would practically be no separation between you and her; it isn't
-as if she were moving into another sphere--among pretentious people; in
-fact, all the advantages are on her side; if we have plenty of money,
-she has birth and name and family; and then again, when Maisrie and I
-took up house for ourselves, there would be no more welcome guest than
-her grandfather. I think I can promise that."
-
-There was silence for a moment--an ominous silence.
-
-"Has Maisrie," said George Bethune, with slow and measured enunciation,
-and he regarded the young man from under his shaggy eyebrows, "has
-Maisrie intimated to you her wish for that--that arrangement?"
-
-"No," said Vincent, eagerly. "How could she? I thought I was bound to
-speak to you first; for of course she will do nothing without your
-approval. But don't you think she has had enough of a wandering
-life--enough of precarious circumstances; and then if her heart says yes
-too----?"
-
-Well, if this venerable impostor had at last succeeded in entrapping a
-rich man's son--in getting him to propose marriage to his
-granddaughter--he did not seem to be in a hurry to secure his prey.
-
-"Maisrie has said nothing?" George Bethune asked again, in that
-curiously impassive fashion.
-
-"No----"
-
-"Has expressed no wish?"
-
-"No--I have not spoken to her about this immediate proposal."
-
-"Then, until she has," said the old man, calmly, "I must refuse any
-consent of mine. I think you have described the whole situation very
-fairly--clearly and honestly, as I imagine; but I do not see any reason
-for departing from what I said to you before, that I would rather my
-granddaughter was not bound by any formal tie or pledge--much less by
-such a marriage as you propose. For one thing, she may have a future
-before her that she little dreams of. Of course, if her happiness were
-involved, if she came to me and said that only by such and such an
-arrangement could her peace of mind be secured, then I might alter my
-views: at present I see no cause to do so. You are both young: if you
-care for each other, you should be content to wait. Years are a
-valuable test. After all, according to your own showing, you are
-dependent on your father's caprice: some angry objection on his
-part--and where would the fortunes of the young married couple be?"
-
-But Vincent was too impetuous to be easily discouraged.
-
-"Even then I should not be quite helpless," he urged. "And is my
-willingness to work to count for nothing? However, that is not the
-immediate question. Supposing Maisrie's happiness _were_
-concerned?--supposing she were a little tired of the uncertainty of her
-life?--supposing she were willing to trust herself to me--what then?
-Why, if she came to you, and admitted as much, I know you would consent.
-Is not that so?--I know it is so!--you would consent--for Maisrie's
-sake!"
-
-The old man's eyes were turned away now--fixed on the slumbering coals
-in the grate.
-
-"I had dreamed of other things," he said, almost to himself.
-
-"Yes; but if Maisrie came to you?" Vincent said, with the same
-eagerness--almost, indeed, with some trace of joyous assurance--"She
-would not have long to plead, I think! And then again, at any moment,
-my circumstances might be so altered as to give you all the guarantee
-for the future which you seem to think necessary. A word from my father
-to-morrow might settle that: if I went to him, and could get him to
-understand what Maisrie really was. Or I might obtain some definite
-post: I have some good friends: I am going up to London to-morrow, and
-could begin to make inquiries. In the meantime," he added hastily--for
-he heard someone on the stair--"do you object to my telling Maisrie what
-you have said?"
-
-"What I have said? I dare say she knows," old George Bethune made
-answer, in an absent sort of way--and at this moment Maisrie entered the
-room, bringing her sewing with her, and further speech was impossible.
-
-It was on this same afternoon that Lord Musselburgh carried along to his
-fair fiancee a report of the interview he had had with Vincent in the
-morning. The young widow was dreadfully alarmed.
-
-"Oh, my goodness!" she exclaimed, and she began to pace up and down the
-room in her agitation. "Marry the girl at once? Why, it is
-destruction! Fancy what all our plans and interests, all our lives,
-would be--with Vin cut out! It cannot be--it shall not be--it must be
-prevented at any cost! He would be dead--worse than dead--we should be
-pitying him always, and knowing where he was, and not able to go near
-him. You don't mean to say he is definitely resolved?" she demanded in
-her desperation.
-
-"Indeed, there is no doubt about it--he spoke as plainly as you could
-wish," said Lord Musselburgh. "And he has argued the thing out; his head
-is clear enough, for all this wild infatuation of his. He sees that his
-father will not consent--beforehand; so he means to marry, and then hope
-for reconciliation when the whole affair is past praying for. That's the
-programme, you may depend on it."
-
-"Harland must know at once," said Mrs. Ellison, going instantly to her
-writing-desk. "This must and shall be prevented. I am not going to
-have my boy's life ruined by a pack of begging-letter swindlers and
-cheats!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- "AND HAST THOU PLAYED ME THIS!"
-
-
-And now in this time of urgency the appeal was to Maisrie herself; and
-how could he doubt what her answer would be, in spite of all those
-strange and inexplicable forebodings that seemed to haunt her mind?
-
-But when he got up next morning he found to his dismay that a sudden
-change in the weather was like to interfere in a very practical manner
-with his audacious plans. During the night the wind had backed to the
-south-west, accompanied by a sharp fall of the barometer; and now a
-stiff gale was blowing, and already a heavy sea was thundering in on the
-beach. There was as yet no rain, it is true; but along the southern
-horizon the louring heavens were even darker than the wind-driven
-waters; and an occasional shiver of white sunlight that swept across the
-waves spoke clearly enough of coming wet. Was it not altogether too
-wild and stormy a morning to hope that Maisrie would venture forth? And
-yet he was going away that day--with great uncertainty as to the time of
-his return; and how could he go without having some private speech with
-her? Nor was there any prospect of a lightening up of the weather
-outside; the gale seemed to be increasing in fury; and he ate his
-breakfast in silence, listening to the long, dull roar and reverberation
-of the heavy-breaking surf.
-
-Nevertheless here was a crisis; and something had to be done; so about
-half-past ten he went along to the lodging-house in German Place. The
-servant-maid greeted this handsome young man with an approving glance;
-and informed him that both Mr. and Miss Bethune were in the parlour
-upstairs.
-
-"No, thank you," said he, in answer to this implied invitation, "I won't
-go up. I want to see Miss Bethune by herself: would you ask her if she
-would be so kind as to come downstairs for just a moment--I won't detain
-her----"
-
-The girl divined the situation in an instant; and proved herself
-friendly. Without more ado she turned the handle of a door near her.
-
-"Won't you step in there, sir?--the gentleman 'as gone out."
-
-Vincent glanced into the little parlour. Here, indeed, was a refuge
-from the storm; but all the same he did not like to invade the privacy
-of a stranger's apartments.
-
-"Oh, no, thanks," he said. "I will wait here, if Miss Bethune will be
-so kind as to come down for a minute. Will you ask her, please?"
-
-The girl went upstairs; returned with the message that Miss Bethune
-would be down directly; then she disappeared, and Vincent was left alone
-in this little lobby. It was not a very picturesque place, to be sure,
-for an interview between two lovers: still, it would serve--especially
-if the friendly chambermaid were out of earshot, and if no prying
-landlady should come along. The gale outside was so violent that all
-the doors and windows of the house were shaking and rattling: he could
-not ask Maisrie to face such a storm.
-
-But in a second or so here was Maisrie herself, all ready
-apparelled--hat, muff, gloves, boa, and the furred collar of her jacket
-turned up.
-
-"Why, Maisrie," he said, "you don't mean you are going out on such a
-morning--it is far too wild and stormy!----"
-
-"That is of no consequence," she made answer, simply. "I have something
-to say to you, Vincent, before you go."
-
-"And I have something to say to you, Maisrie. Still," he continued, with
-some little hesitation (for he was accustomed to take charge of her and
-guard her from the smallest harms), "I don't want you to get wet and
-blown about--"
-
-"What does that matter?" she said: it was not of a shower of rain that
-she was thinking.
-
-"Oh, very well," said he at last. "I'll tell you what we'll do; we'll
-fight our way down to the sea-front, and then go out to the end of the
-Chain Pier. There are some places of shelter out there; and there won't
-be a living soul anywhere about on such a morning. For I am going to
-ask you to make a promise, Maisrie," he added in a lower voice, "and the
-sea and the sky will be quite sufficient witnesses."
-
-And truly this was fighting their way, as they discovered the moment
-they had left the house; for the gusts and squalls that came tearing
-along the street were like to choke them. She clung to his arm tightly;
-but her skirts were blown about her and impeded her; the two ends of her
-boa went flying away over her shoulders; while her hair was speedily in
-a most untoward state--though her companion thought it was always
-prettier that way than any other. Nevertheless they leant forward
-against the wind, and drove themselves through it, and eventually got
-down to the sea-front. Here, again, they were almost stunned by the
-terrific roar; for the tide was full up; and the huge, brown, concave,
-white-crested waves, thundering down on the shelving shingle, filled all
-the thick air with spray; while light balls of foam went sailing away
-inland, tossed hither and thither up into the purple-darkened sky. So
-far the driving squalls had brought no rain; but the atmosphere was
-surcharged with a salt moisture; more than once Vincent stopped for a
-second and took his handkerchief to dry Maisrie's lashes and eyebrows,
-and to push back from her forehead the fine wet threads of her
-glistening hair.
-
-But soon they had got away from this roar of water and grinding pebbles,
-and were out on the pier, that was swaying sinuously before these fierce
-trusts, and that trembled to its foundations under each successive shock
-of the heavy surge. And now they could get a better view of the wide
-and hurrying sea--a sea of a tawny-brownish hue melting into a vivid
-green some way further out, and always and everywhere showing swift
-flashes of white, that seemed to gleam all the more suddenly and sharply
-where the weight of the purple skies darkened down to the horizon.
-
-"What a shame it is," he said to her (perhaps with some affectation of
-cheerfulness, for she seemed curiously preoccupied), "What a shame it is
-to drag you out on such a morning!"
-
-"I do not mind it," she made answer. "It will be something to
-remember."
-
-When they reached the end of the pier, which was wholly deserted, he
-ensconced her snugly in a corner of one of the protected seats; and he
-was not far away from her when he sate down. Her lips had grown pale
-with the buffeting of the wind; the outside threads and plaits of her
-hair were damp and disordered; and her eyes were grave even to sadness;
-and yet never had the strange witchery of her youthful beauty so
-entirely entranced him. Perhaps it was the dim fear of losing her, that
-dwelt as a sort of shadow in his mind even when he was most buoyed up by
-the radiant confidence of four-and-twenty; perhaps it was the knowledge
-that, for a time at least, this was to be farewell; at all events he
-sate close to her, and held her hand tight, as though to make sure she
-should not be stolen away from him.
-
-"Maisrie," said he, "do you know that I spoke to your grandfather
-yesterday?"
-
-"Yes," she answered. "He told me."
-
-"And what did he say?"
-
-"At first," she said, with a bit of a sigh, "he talked of Balloray. I
-was sorry that came up again; he is happier when he does not think of
-it. And, indeed, I have noticed that of late he has almost given up
-speaking of the possibility of a great change in our condition. What
-chance is there of any such thing? We have no money to go to law, even
-if the law had not already decided against us. Then grandfather's idea
-that the estates might come to us through some accident, or series of
-accidents--what is that but a dream? I am sure he is far more content
-when he forgets what might have been; when he trusts entirely to his own
-courage and self-reliance; when he is thinking, not of lost estates, but
-of some ballad he means to write about in the _Edinburgh Chronicle_.
-Poor grandfather!--and yet, who can help admiring his spirit--the very
-gaiety of his nature--in spite of all his misfortunes?"
-
-"Yes, Maisrie--but--but what did he say about you?"
-
-"About me?" the girl repeated. "Well, it was his usual kindness. He
-said I was only to think of what would tend to my own happiness.
-Happiness?" she went on, rather sadly. "As if this world was made for
-happiness!"
-
-It was a strange speech for one so young--one who, so far as he could
-make out, had been so gently nurtured and cared for.
-
-"What do you mean, Maisrie?" said he in his astonishment. "Why should
-you not have happiness, as well as another? Who can deserve it more
-than you--you who are so generous and well-wishing to everyone--"
-
-"I would rather not speak of myself at all, Vincent," she said. "That
-is nothing. I want to speak of you. I want you to consider--what is
-best for you. And I understand your position--perhaps more clearly than
-you imagine. You have made me think, of late, about many things; and
-now that you are going away, I must speak frankly. It will be
-difficult. Perhaps--perhaps, if you were more considerate, Vincent--?"
-
-"Yes?" said he. That Maisrie should have to beg for consideration!
-
-"There might be no need of speaking," she went on, after that momentary
-pause. "If you were to go away now, and never see us any more, wouldn't
-that be the simplest thing? There would be no misunderstanding--no
-ill-feeling of any kind. You would think of the time we knew you in
-London--and I'm sure I should always think of it--as a pleasant time:
-perhaps something too good to last. I have told you before: you must
-remember what your prospects are--what all your friends expect of
-you--and you will see that no good could come of hampering yourself--of
-introducing someone to your family who would only bring difficulty and
-trouble--"
-
-"Yes, I understand!" he said--and he threw away her hand from him. "I
-understand now. But why not tell the truth at once--that you do not love
-me--as I had been fool enough to think you did!"
-
-"Yes, perhaps I do not love you," she said in a low voice. "And yet I
-was not thinking of myself. I was trying to think of what was best for
-you--"
-
-Her voice broke a little, and there were tears gathering on her
-eyelashes: seeing which made him instantly contrite. He caught her hand
-again.
-
-"Maisrie, forgive me! I don't know why you should talk like that! If I
-have your love I do not fear anything that may happen in the future.
-There is nothing to fear. When I spoke to your grandfather yesterday
-afternoon, I told him precisely how I was situated; and I showed him
-that, granting there were some few little difficulties, the best way to
-meet them would be for you and me to get married at once: then
-everything would come right of its own accord--for one must credit one's
-relatives with a little common sense. Now that is my solution of all
-this trouble--oh, yes, I confess there has been a little trouble; but
-here is my solution of it--if you have courage, Maisrie. Maisrie, will
-you give me your promise--will you be my wife?"
-
-She looked at him for a second; then lowered her eyes.
-
-"Vincent," she said slowly, "you don't know what you ask. And I have
-wished that you would understand, without my having to speak. I have
-wished that you would understand--and go away--and make our friendship a
-memory, something to think over in after years. For how can I tell you
-clearly without seeming cruel and ungrateful to one who has through my
-whole life been kindness and goodness to me?--no!--no!"
-
-She withdrew her hand; she turned away from him altogether.
-
-"Maisrie," said he, "I don't want you to say anything, except that you
-love me, and will be my wife."
-
-"Your wife, Vincent--your wife!" she exclaimed, in a piteous sort of
-way. "How can you ask any one to be your wife who has led the life that
-I have led? Can you not guess--Vincent--without my having to speak?"
-
-He was astounded--but not alarmed: never had his faith in her flinched
-for a single instant.
-
-"The life you have led?" said he, rather breathlessly; "Why--a--a
-beautiful life--an idyllic life--constant travel--and always treated
-with such kindness and care and affection--an ideal life--why, who would
-not envy you?"
-
-She was sobbing--with her head averted.
-
-"Don't, Vincent, don't! I cannot--I will not--tell you," she said, in a
-kind of despair. "What is the use? But it is you who have made me
-think--it is you who have shown me clearly what I have been. I--I was
-young--I was only a child; my grandfather was everything to me; whatever
-he did was right. And now I have become a woman since I knew you--I can
-see myself--and I know that never, never can I be your wife."
-
-"Maisrie!"
-
-But she paid no heed. She was strangely excited. She rose to her feet:
-and for a moment he thought he saw a look of her grandfather in her
-face.
-
-"And yet even in my degradation--my degradation," she said, repeating
-the words with cruel emphasis, "I have some pride. I know what your
-friends think of me: or I can guess. Perhaps they are right. Perhaps
-the stories you spoke of were all to be believed. That is neither here
-nor there now. But, at least, they need not be afraid that I am coming
-to them as a suppliant. I will not bring shame upon them; they have
-nothing to fear from me."
-
-He regarded her with astonishment, and with something of reproach also:
-these proud tones did not sound like Maisrie's voice. And all of a
-sudden she changed.
-
-"Why, Vincent, why," she said, "should you put yourself in opposition to
-your friends? Why give up all the splendid future that is before you?
-Why disappoint all the hopes that have been formed of you----?"
-
-"If need were, for the sake of your love, Maisrie," he said.
-
-"My love?" she said. "But you have that, Vincent--and--and you shall
-have that always!"
-
-And here she burst into a passionate fit of weeping; and in vain he
-tried to soothe her. Nay, she would not have him speak.
-
-"Let this be the last," she said, through her bitter sobs. "Only--only,
-Vincent, don't go away with any doubt about that in your mind. I love
-you!--I shall love you always!--I will give my life to thinking of
-you--when you are far too occupied--ever to think of me. Will you
-believe me, Vincent!--Will you believe, always, that I loved you--that I
-loved you too well to do what you ask--to become a drag on you--and a
-shame." The tears were running down her cheeks; but she kept her eyes
-fixed bravely and piteously on him, as she uttered her wild, incoherent
-sentences. "My dearest--my dearest in all the world--will you
-remember--will you believe that always? Will you say to yourself,
-'Wherever Maisrie is at this moment, she loves me--she is thinking of
-me.' Promise me, Vincent, that you will never doubt that! No--you need
-not put it into words: your heart tells you that it is true. And now,
-Vincent, kiss me!--kiss me, Vincent!--and then good-bye!"
-
-She held up her face. He kissed her lips, that were salt with the
-sea-foam. The tangles of her wind-blown hair touched his cheek--and
-thrilled him.
-
-He did not speak for a moment. He was over-awed. This pure confession
-of a maiden soul had something sacred about it: how could he reply with
-commonplace phrases about his friends and the future? And yet, here was
-Maisrie on the point of departure; she only waited for a word of
-good-bye; and her eyes, that were now filled with a strange sadness and
-hopelessness, no longer regarded him. The farewell had been spoken--on
-her side.
-
-"And you think I will let you go, after what you have just confessed?"
-he said to her--and his calm and restrained demeanour was a sort of
-answer to her trembling vehemence and her despair. "You give me the
-proudest possession a man may have on this earth: and I am to stand idly
-by, and let it be taken away from me. Is that a likely thing?"
-
-He took her hand, and put her back into the sheltered corner.
-
-"Sit down there, Maisrie, out of the wind. I want to talk to you. I
-was a fool when I mentioned those stories the other day: I could have
-cut my tongue out the next moment. And indeed I thought you took no
-notice. Why should you take any notice? Insensate trash! And who
-escapes such things?--and who is so childish as to heed them? Then
-again I remember your saying that I knew nothing about your grandfather
-or yourself. Do you think that is so? Do you think I have been all this
-time constantly in your society--watching you--studying you--yes, and
-studying you with the anxiety that goes with love--for, of course, you
-want the one you love to be perfect--do you imagine, after all this that
-I do not know you and understand you? Degradation!--very well, I accept
-that degradation: I welcome all the degradation that is likely to be
-associated with you. If I were to wash my hands in that sort of
-degradation, I think they would come out a little whiter! I know you to
-be as pure and noble as the purest and noblest woman alive; and what do
-I care about your--your circumstances?"
-
-"Don't, Vincent!--don't be kind to me, Vincent!" she said, piteously.
-"It will be all the harder to think of when--when we are separated--and
-far away from each other."
-
-"Yes, but we are not going to separate," said he briefly. "Your
-grandfather has left you to decide for yourself; and surely after what
-you have said to me this morning, surely I have the right to decide for
-you. I tell you, we are not going to separate, Maisrie--except for a
-few days. When I am up in London I mean to look round and see what
-dispositions can be made with regard to the future. Oh, I assure you I
-am going to be very prudent and circumspect; and I am ready to turn my
-hand to anything. Then, in another direction, Maisrie, you might give
-me a hint," he went on, with much cheerfulness, but watching her to see
-how she would take it. "What part of London do you think you would like
-best to live in? If we could get a small house with a garden up
-somewhere about Campden Hill--that would be pleasant; and of course
-there must be a library for your grandfather, for we should want the
-privacy of the morning-room for ourselves."
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"Dreams, Vincent, dreams!" she murmured.
-
-"But sometimes dreams come true," said he, for he was not to be daunted.
-"And you will see how much dream-work there will be about it when I get
-things put into trim in London. Now I'm not going to keep you here any
-longer, Maisrie; for I fancy there is some rain coming across; and you
-mustn't be caught. I will go in and say good-bye to your grandfather,
-if I may; and the next you will hear of me will be when I send you some
-news from town. In the meantime, hearts up, Maisrie!--surely the
-granddaughter of your grandfather should show courage!"
-
-When, that afternoon, Vincent arrived in London, he did not go to his
-temporary lodgings (what charm had the slummy little street in Mayfair
-for him now?) but to Grosvenor Place, where he shut himself up in his
-own room, and managed to get on somehow with that detested lecture. And
-next day he went down to Mendover: and next evening he made his
-appearance before the Mendover Liberal Association; and there were the
-customary votes of thanks to wind up the proceedings. There was nothing
-in all this worthy of note: what was of importance happened after, when
-the President of the Association, who had occupied the chair in the
-absence of Lord Musselburgh, accompanied Vincent home to the Red Lion.
-This Mr. Simmons was a solicitor, and a great political power in
-Mendover; so, when he hinted that the Red Lion had a certain bin of port
-that was famous all over the county--and, indeed, was powerful enough to
-draw many a hunt-dinner to this hostelry by its own influence alone--be
-sure that Master Vin was not long in having a decanter of the wine
-placed on the table of the private parlour he had engaged. Mr. Simmons,
-who was a sharp, shrewd-looking little man, with a pale face and
-intensely black hair and short-cropped whiskers, suggested a cigar, and
-took the largest he could find in his host's case. Then he proceeded to
-make himself important and happy--with his toes on the fender, and his
-shoulders softly cushioned in an easy chair.
-
-"Yes," said he, complacently, when the cigar was going well, "I think I
-can predict some good fortune for you, and that without having my hand
-crossed with a shilling. I hope I am breaking no confidence; we lawyers
-are supposed to be as mum as a priest after confessional; but of course
-what is said between gentlemen will go no further than the four walls of
-this room."
-
-"I think you may trust me for that," Vincent said.
-
-"Very well, then," continued Mr. Simmons, with an air of bland
-consequence. "I will say this at least--that in January you may fairly
-expect to be offered a very pretty New Year's present."
-
-"Oh, really," said Vincent, without being much impressed: he fancied the
-Liberal Association were perhaps going to pass a vote of
-thanks--possibly inscribed on vellum--with the names of all the
-officials writ large.
-
-"A very pretty present: the representation of Mendover."
-
-But at this he pricked up his ears; and Mr. Simmons smiled.
-
-"Mr. Richard Gosford is my client, as I think you know," the
-black-a-viced little lawyer went on, "but what I am telling you does not
-come direct from him to me. I need not particularise my sources of
-information. But from what I can gather I am almost certain that he
-means to resign at the end of the year--he did talk of waiting for the
-next General Election, as Lord Musselburgh may have told you; but his
-imaginary troubles have grown on him; and as far as I can see there will
-be nothing for you but to slip easily and quietly into his shoes next
-January. A very pretty New Year's present!"
-
-"But of course there will be a contest!" Vincent exclaimed.
-
-"Not a bit," Mr. Simmons made answer, regarding the blue curls of smoke
-from the cigar. "The snuggest little seat in England. Everybody knows
-you are Lord Musselburgh's nominee; and Lord Musselburgh has promised to
-do everything for our public park that Mr. Gosford ought to have done
-when he presented the ground. See? No bribery on your part. Simple as
-daylight. We'll run you in as if you were an infant on a wheelbarrow."
-
-"It's very kind of you, I'm sure," said Vincent. "Is there anything you
-would recommend me to do----?"
-
-"Yes; I would recommend you to go and call on old Gosford to-morrow,
-before you leave for town."
-
-"Wouldn't that look rather like undue haste in seizing a dead man's
-effects?" Vincent ventured to ask.
-
-"A dead man?" said Mr. Simmons, helping himself to another glass of
-port. "He is neither dead nor dying, any more than you or I. And
-that's what you've got to remember to-morrow, when you go to see him.
-For goodness' sake, don't tell him he's looking well--as you've got to
-say to most invalids. Tell him he's looking very poorly. Be seriously
-concerned. Then he'll be off to bed again--and delighted. For what he
-suffers from is simply incurable laziness--and nervous timidity; and so
-long as he can hide himself under the blankets, and read books, he's
-happy."
-
-"But what excuse am I to make for calling on him?" Vincent asked again.
-
-"Oh," said Mr. Simmons, carelessly, "one public character visiting
-another. You were here delivering a lecture; and of course you called
-on the sitting member. You won't want any excuse if you will tell him
-he should take extraordinary care of himself in this changeable
-weather."
-
-"And should I say anything about the seat?" Vincent asked further.
-
-"I must leave that to your own discretion. Rather ticklish. Perhaps
-better say nothing--unless he introduces the subject: then you can talk
-about the overcrowding of the House, and the late hours, and the nervous
-wear and tear of London. But you needn't suggest to him, in set terms,
-that as he is retiring from business he might as well leave you the
-goodwill: perhaps that would be a little too outspoken."
-
-As luck would have it, a day or two after Vin's return to town, Mr.
-Ogden came to dine at Grosvenor Place. It was a man's dinner--a dinner
-of political extremists and faddists; but so far from Master Vincent
-retiring to his own room and his books, as he sometimes did, he joined
-the party, and even stipulated for a place next the great electioneerer
-and wire-puller of the North. Further than that, he made himself most
-agreeable to Mr. Ogden: was most meek and humble and good-humoured (for
-to what deeps of hypocrisy will not a young man descend when he is madly
-in love?), and seemed to swallow wholesale the long-resounding list of
-Reforms--Reforms Administrative, Reforms Electoral, Reforms Fiscal,
-Reforms Social and Political. For all the while he was saying within
-himself: 'My dear sir, perhaps what you say is quite true: and we're all
-going headlong to the devil--with the caucus for drag. And I could wish
-you to have a few more A's: still, many excellent men have lived and
-died without them. The main point is this--if one might dare to ask--Is
-your Private Secretaryship still open; and, if so, what salary would you
-propose to give?' But, of course, he could not quite ask those
-questions at his own father's dinner-table; besides, he was in no hurry;
-he wanted a few more days to look round.
-
-The guests of this evening did not go up to the drawing-room; they
-remained in the dining-room, smoking, until it was time for them to
-leave: then Harland Harris and his son found themselves alone together.
-Now the relations between father and son had been very considerably
-strained since the morning on which the former had brought his
-allegations against old George Bethune and his granddaughter; but on
-this occasion Vincent was in a particularly amiable and generous mood.
-He was pleased with himself for having paid court to Mr. Ogden; he
-looked forward with some natural gratification to this early chance of
-getting into Parliament; and, again, what was the use of attaching any
-importance to those preposterous charges? So he lit another cigarette;
-stretched out his legs before the fire; and told his father--but with
-certain reservations, for on one or two points he was pledged to
-silence--what had happened down at Mendover.
-
-"I am heartily glad to hear it," said the communist-capitalist, with a
-certain cold severity of tone. "I am glad to hear that you begin to
-realise what are the serious interests of life. You are a very
-fortunate young man. If you are returned for Mendover, it will be by a
-concurrence of circumstances such as could not easily have been
-anticipated. At the same time I think it might be judicious if you went
-down again and hinted to Mr.----what did you say?--Simmons?--Mr. Simmons
-that in the event of everything turning out well, there would be no need
-to wait for Lord Musselburgh's contribution towards the completion of
-the public park. What Lord Musselburgh is going to gain by that passes
-my comprehension. I can hardly suppose that he made such a promise in
-order to secure your election: that, indeed, would be a wild freak of
-generosity--so wild as to be incredible. However," continued Mr.
-Harris, in his pedantic and sententious manner, "it is unnecessary to
-seek for motives. We do not need to be indebted to him. I consider
-that it is of the greatest importance that you should enter Parliament
-at an early age; and I am willing to pay. Mendover ought to be a secure
-seat, if it is kept warm. Promise them what you like--I will see to the
-rest. There are other things besides a park, if they prefer to keep Lord
-Musselburgh to his promise: a free library, for example--if they have
-one already, another one: a clubhouse for the football club--a pavilion
-for the cricketers--a refreshment tent for the tennis ground--a band to
-play on the summer evenings--a number of things of that kind that you
-could discover from your friend the solicitor."
-
-Vincent could have laughed, had he dared. Here he was invited to play
-the part of a great local magnate, plutocrat, and benefactor; and it was
-less than half-an-hour ago that he had been anxiously wondering whether
-L200 a year, or L250 a year, would be the probable salary of Mr. Ogden's
-private secretary. Harland Harris went on:
-
-"It is so rarely that such an opportunity occurs--in England at
-least--that one must not be niggardly in welcoming it. Simmons--did you
-say Simmons? is clearly of importance: if you make him your agent in
-these negotiations, that will be enough for him--he will look after
-himself. And he will keep you safe: the elected member may steal a
-horse, whereas as a candidate he daren't look over the hedge. And once
-you are embarked on a career of public usefulness----"
-
-"Bribery, do you mean?" said Vincent, meekly.
-
-"I refer to the House of Commons: once you have your career open to you,
-you will be able to show whether the training you have undergone has
-been the right one, or whether the ordinary scholastic routine--mixed up
-with monkish traditions--would have been preferable. At all events you
-have seen the world. You have seen men, and their interests, and
-occupations: not a parcel of grown-up schoolboys playing games." And
-therewithal he bade his son good-night.
-
-A day or two passed: Vincent was still making discreet inquiries as to
-how a young man, with some little knowledge of the world, and a trifle
-of capital at his back, but with no specific professional training,
-could best set to work to earn a moderate income for himself; and also
-he was sounding one or two editors for whom he had done some occasional
-work as to whether employment of a more permanent kind might be
-procurable. Moreover, he had ordered the little brooch for Maisrie--a
-tiny white dove this was, in mother-of-pearl, on a transverse narrow
-band of rubies; and besides that he had picked up a few things with
-which to make her room a little prettier, when she should return to
-town. Some of the latter, indeed, which were fit for immediate
-installation, he had already sent home; and one afternoon he thought he
-might as well go up and see what Mrs. Hobson had done with them.
-
-It was the landlady's husband who opened the door; and even as he
-ushered the young man up to the parlour, he had begun his story, which
-was so confused and disconnected and inclined to tears that Vincent
-instantly suspected gin.
-
-"Lor bless ye, sir, we ev bin in such a sad quandary, to be sure, and
-right glad I am to see you, sir, with them things a comin ome, and you
-was so particular about not a word to be said, and there was the missis,
-a angin of em up, and the beautiful counterpane, all spread out so neat
-and tidy, 'why,' says she, 'the Queen on the throne she aint got nothin
-more splendid, which he is the most generous young genelman, and jest as
-good as he's ansome'--beggin' your pardon, sir, for women will talk, and
-then in the middle of it hall, here comes the old genelman as we were
-not expecting of im, sir--ah, sir, a great man, a wonderful man, sir, in
-sorrowful sikkumstances--and the young lady, too, and hall to be settled
-up reglar--oh, heverythink, sir--like a genelman----"
-
-"What the mischief are you talking about?" said Vincent, in his
-bewilderment. "Do you mean to say that Mr. Bethune and Miss Bethune
-have been in London?"
-
-"Yesterday, sir, yesterday, more's the pity, sir, to give up their rooms
-for good and hall, for never again shall we 'ev sich lodgers in this
-poor ouse. A honour, sir, as was least knowed when it was most
-appreciated, as one might say, sir, a man like that, sir, a great man,
-sir, though awaitin his time, like many others, and oldin is ead igh
-against fate and fortune whatever the world might say. And the young
-lady--beautiful she was, as you know, sir--as you know, sir--and as good
-as gold--well, never again--in this poor ouse----"
-
-"Look here," said Vincent, impatiently--for this rigmarole threatened at
-any moment to dissolve in maudlin weeping, "will you answer me one
-question: am I to understand that Mr. Bethune and his granddaughter are
-not coming back here?"
-
-"Indeed, no, sir, more's the pity, sir, it was a honour to this pore
-ouse, and heverythink paid up like a genelman, though many's the time I
-was sayin to the missis as she needn't be so ard----"
-
-"Where have they gone, then?" the younger man demanded, peremptorily.
-
-"Lor bless ye, sir, it took me all of a suddent--they didn't say nothin
-about that, sir--and I was that upset, sir----"
-
-Vincent glanced at his watch: five minutes past four was the time.
-
-"Oh, I see," he said, with a fine carelessness (for there were wild and
-alarming suspicions darting through his brain). "They're going to
-remain in Brighton, I dare say. Well, good-bye, Hobson! About those
-bits of things I sent up--you keep them for yourself--tell Mrs. Hobson I
-make her a present of them--you needn't say anything about them to
-anybody."
-
-He left the house. He quickly crossed the street, and went up to his
-own rooms: the table there was a blank--he had almost expected as much.
-Then he went out again, hailed a hansom, drove down to Victoria-station,
-and caught the four-thirty train to Brighton. When he reached the
-lodging-house in German Place, he hardly dared knock: he seemed to know
-already what was meant by this hurried and stealthy departure. His
-worst fears were immediately confirmed. Mr. Bethune--Miss Bethune--had
-left the previous morning. And did no one know whither they had gone?
-No one. And there was no message--no letter--for any one who might
-call? There was no message--no letter.
-
-The young man turned away. It was raining: he did not seem to care.
-Out there in the dark was the solitary light at the end of the pier:
-why, how many days had gone by since she had said to him, with tears
-running down her cheeks--'Vincent, I love you!--I love you!--you are my
-dearest in all the world!--remember that always!' And what was this
-that she had done?--for that it was of her doing; he had no manner of
-doubt. Enough: his heart, that had many a time been moved to pity by
-her solitariness, her friendlessness, had no more pity now. Pride rose
-in its place--pride, and reproach, and scorn. There was but the one
-indignant cry ringing in his ears--"False love--false love--and
-traitress!"
-
-
-
-
- END OF VOL. II.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
- STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STAND FAST, CRAIG-ROYSTON!
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