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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68277 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68277)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The blood of the vampire, by Florence
-Marryat
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The blood of the vampire
-
-Author: Florence Marryat
-
-Release Date: June 10, 2022 [eBook #68277]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Emmanuel Ackerman and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from
- scanned images of public domain material from the Google
- Books project.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLOOD OF THE
-VAMPIRE ***
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:
-
- Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
- Bold text is denoted by =equal signs=.
-
- Text in Small Caps has been converted to ALL CAPS.
-
- The Table of Contents was created by the Transcriber
- and is placed in the public domain.
-
- A number of typographical errors have been corrected.
- A detailed list of the corrections and changes that were
- made to the text can be found at the end of the ebook.
-
-
-
-
- EACH VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY.
-
-
- COLLECTION
- OF
- BRITISH AUTHORS
-
- TAUCHNITZ EDITION.
-
- VOL. 3245.
-
- THE BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE.
-
- BY
- FLORENCE MARRYAT.
-
- IN ONE VOLUME.
-
- LEIPZIG: BERNHARD TAUCHNITZ.
-
- PARIS: LIBRAIRIE C. REINWALD, 15, RUE DES SAINTS-PÈRES.
-
- PARIS: THE GALIGNANI LIBRARY, 224, RUE DE RIVOLI,
- AND AT NICE, 48, QUAI ST. JEAN BAPTISTE.
-
- _This Collection
- is published with copyright for Continental circulation, but
- all purchasers are earnestly requested not to introduce the
- volumes into England, or into any British Colony._
-
-
-
-
- COLLECTION
-
- OF
-
- BRITISH AUTHORS
-
- TAUCHNITZ EDITION.
-
- VOL. 3245.
-
- THE BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE.
-
- BY
- FLORENCE MARRYAT.
-
- IN ONE VOLUME.
-
-
-
-
-TAUCHNITZ EDITION.
-
-By the same Author,
-
-
- LOVE’S CONFLICT 2 v.
- FOR EVER AND EVER 2 v.
- THE CONFESSIONS OF GERALD ESTCOURT 2 v.
- NELLY BROOKE 2 v.
- VÉRONIQUE 2 v.
- PETRONEL 2 v.
- HER LORD AND MASTER 2 v.
- THE PREY OF THE GODS 1 v.
- LIFE OF CAPTAIN MARRYAT 1 v.
- MAD DUMARESQ 2 v.
- NO INTENTIONS 2 v.
- FIGHTING THE AIR 2 v.
- A STAR AND A HEART 1 v.
- THE POISON OF ASPS 1 v.
- A LUCKY DISAPPOINTMENT 1 v.
- “MY OWN CHILD” 2 v.
- HER FATHER’S NAME 2 v.
- A HARVEST OF WILD OATS 2 v.
- A LITTLE STEPSON 1 v.
- WRITTEN IN FIRE 2 v.
- HER WORLD AGAINST A LIE 2 v.
- A BROKEN BLOSSOM 2 v.
- THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL 2 v.
- THE FAIR-HAIRED ALDA 2 v.
- WITH CUPID’S EYES 2 v.
- MY SISTER THE ACTRESS 2 v.
- PHYLLIDA. 2 v.
- HOW THEY LOVED HIM 2 v.
- FACING THE FOOTLIGHTS (WITH PORTRAIT) 2 v.
- A MOMENT OF MADNESS, ETC. 1 v.
- THE GHOST OF CHARLOTTE CRAY, ETC. 1 v.
- PEERESS AND PLAYER 2 v.
- UNDER THE LILIES AND ROSES 2 v.
- THE HEART OF JANE WARNER 2 v.
- THE HEIR PRESUMPTIVE 2 v.
- THE MASTER PASSION 2 v.
- SPIDERS OF SOCIETY 2 v.
- DRIVEN TO BAY 2 v.
- A DAUGHTER OF THE TROPICS 2 v.
- GENTLEMAN AND COURTIER 2 v.
- ON CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE 2 v.
- MOUNT EDEN. 2 v.
- BLINDFOLD 2 v.
- A SCARLET SIN 1 v.
- A BANKRUPT HEART 2 v.
- THE SPIRIT WORLD 1 v.
- THE BEAUTIFUL SOUL 1 v.
- AT HEART A RAKE 2 v.
- HANNAH STUBBS 1 v.
- THE DREAM THAT STAYED 2 v.
- A PASSING MADNESS 1 v.
-
-
-
-
- THE BLOOD
- OF THE VAMPIRE
-
- BY
-
- FLORENCE MARRYAT,
-
- AUTHOR OF
- “LOVE’S CONFLICT,” “A PASSING MADNESS,” ETC.
-
- _COPYRIGHT EDITION._
-
- LEIPZIG
-
- BERNHARD TAUCHNITZ
-
- 1897.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- page
- CHAPTER I 5
- CHAPTER II 21
- CHAPTER III 36
- CHAPTER IV 52
- CHAPTER V 65
- CHAPTER VI 87
- CHAPTER VII 106
- CHAPTER VIII 123
- CHAPTER IX 137
- CHAPTER X 156
- CHAPTER XI 178
- CHAPTER XII 196
- CHAPTER XIII 212
- CHAPTER XIV 230
- CHAPTER XV 248
- CHAPTER XVI 269
- CHAPTER XVII 285
- CHAPTER XVIII 304
-
-
-
-
-THE BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-It was the magic hour of dining. The long Digue of Heyst was almost
-deserted; so was the strip of loose, yellow sand which skirted its
-base, and all the _tables d’hôtes_ were filling fast. Henri, the
-youngest waiter of the Hôtel Lion d’Or, was standing on the steps
-between the two great gilded lions, which stood rampant on either side
-the portals, vigorously ringing a loud and discordant bell to summons
-the stragglers, whilst the ladies, who were waiting the commencement of
-dinner in the little salon to the side, stopped their ears to dull its
-clamour. Philippe and Jules were busy, laying white cloths and glasses,
-etc., on the marble tables in the open balcony, outside the _salle
-à manger_, where strangers to the Hotel might dine _à la carte_, if
-they chose. Inside, the long, narrow tables, were decorated with dusty
-geraniums and fuchsias, whilst each cruet stand had a small bunch of
-dirty artificial flowers tied to its handle. But the visitors to the
-Lion d’Or, who were mostly English, were too eager for their evening
-meal, to cavil at their surroundings. The Baroness Gobelli, with her
-husband on one side, and her son on the other, was the first to seat
-herself at table. The Baroness always appeared with the soup, for she
-had observed that the first comers received a more generous helping
-than those who came in last. No such anxiety occupied the minds of Mrs.
-Pullen and her friend Miss Leyton, who sat opposite to the Baroness
-and her family. They did not care sufficiently for the _potage aux
-croutons_, which usually formed the beginning of the _table d’hôte_
-dinner. The long tables were soon filled with a motley crew of English,
-Germans, and Belgians, all chattering, especially the foreigners, as
-fast as their tongues could travel. Amongst them was a sprinkling of
-children, mostly unruly and ill-behaved, who had to be called to order
-every now and then, which made Miss Leyton’s lip curl with disgust.
-Just opposite to her, and next to Mr. Bobby Bates, the Baroness’s son
-by her first marriage, and whom she always treated as if he had been a
-boy of ten years old, was an unoccupied chair, turned up against the
-table to signify that it was engaged.
-
-“I wonder if that is for the German Princess of whom Madame Lamont is
-so fond of talking,” whispered Elinor Leyton to Mrs. Pullen, “she said
-this morning that she expected her this afternoon.”
-
-“O! surely not!” replied her friend, “I do not know much about
-royalties, but I should think a Princess would hardly dine at a public
-_table d’hôte_.”
-
-“O! a German Princess! what is that?” said Miss Leyton, with a curled
-lip again, for she was a daughter of Lord Walthamstowe, and thought
-very little of any aristocracy, except that of her own country.
-
-As she spoke, however, the chair opposite was sharply pulled into
-place, and a young lady seated herself on it, and looked boldly (though
-not brazenly) up and down the tables, and at her neighbours on each
-side of her. She was a remarkable-looking girl--more remarkable,
-perhaps, than beautiful, for her beauty did not strike one at first
-sight. Her figure was tall but slight and lissom. It looked almost
-boneless as she swayed easily from side to side of her chair. Her skin
-was colourless but clear. Her eyes were long-shaped, dark, and narrow,
-with heavy lids and thick black lashes which lay upon her cheeks. Her
-brows were arched and delicately pencilled, and her nose was straight
-and small. Not so her mouth however, which was large, with lips of a
-deep blood colour, displaying small white teeth. To crown all, her
-head was covered with a mass of soft, dull, blue-black hair, which was
-twisted in careless masses about the nape of her neck, and looked as if
-it was unaccustomed to comb or hairpin. She was dressed very simply in
-a white cambric frock, but there was not a woman present, who had not
-discovered in five minutes, that the lace with which it was profusely
-trimmed, was costly Valenciennes, and that it was clasped at her throat
-with brilliants. The new-comer did not seem in the least abashed by
-the numbers of eyes which were turned upon her, but bore the scrutiny
-very calmly, smiling in a sort of furtive way at everybody, until the
-_entrées_ were handed round, when she rivetted all her attention upon
-the contents of her plate. Miss Leyton thought she had never seen any
-young person devour her food with so much avidity and enjoyment. She
-could not help watching her. The Baroness Gobelli, who was a very
-coarse feeder, scattering her food over her plate and not infrequently
-over the table cloth as well, was nothing compared to the young
-stranger. It was not so much that she ate rapidly and with evident
-appetite, but that she kept her eyes fixed upon her food, as if she
-feared someone might deprive her of it. As soon as her plate was empty,
-she called sharply to the waiter in French, and ordered him to get her
-some more.
-
-“That’s right, my dear!” exclaimed the Baroness, nodding her huge head,
-and smiling broadly at the new-comer; “make ’em bring you more! It’s an
-excellent dish, that! I’ll ’ave some more myself!”
-
-As Philippe deposited the last helping of the _entrée_ on the young
-lady’s plate, the Baroness thrust hers beneath his nose.
-
-“’Ere!” she said, “bring three more ’elpings for the Baron and Bobby
-and me!”
-
-The man shook his head to intimate that the dish was finished, but the
-Baroness was not to be put off with a flimsy excuse. She commenced to
-make a row. Few meals passed without a squabble of some sort, between
-the Hotel servants and this terrible woman.
-
-“Now we are in for it again!” murmured Miss Leyton into Mrs. Pullen’s
-ear. The waiter brought a different _entrée_, but the Baroness insisted
-upon having a second helping of _tête de veau aux champignons_.
-
-“_Il n’y a plus, Madame!_” asseverated Philippe, with a gesture of
-deprecation.
-
-“What does ’e say?” demanded the Baroness, who was not good at French.
-
-“There is no more, mein tear!” replied her husband, with a strong
-German accent.
-
-“Confound their impudence!” exclaimed his wife with a heated
-countenance, “’ere, send Monsieur ’ere at once! I’ll soon see if we’re
-not to ’ave enough to eat in ’is beastly Hotel!”
-
-All the ladies who understood what she said, looked horrified at
-such language, but that was of no consequence to Madame Gobelli, who
-continued to call out at intervals for “Monsieur” until she found
-the dinner was coming to an end without her, and thought it would be
-more politic to attend to business and postpone her feud till a more
-convenient occasion. The Baroness Gobelli was a mystery to most people
-in the Hotel. She was an enormous woman of the elephant build, with a
-large, flat face and clumsy hands and feet. Her skin was coarse, so
-was her hair, so were her features. The only things which redeemed
-an otherwise repulsive face, were a pair of good-humoured, though
-cunning blue eyes and a set of firm, white teeth. Who the Baroness
-had originally been, no one could quite make out. It was evident that
-she must have sprung from some low origin from her lack of education
-and breeding, yet she spoke familiarly of aristocratic names, even
-of Royal ones, and appeared to be acquainted with their families and
-homes. There was a floating rumour that she had been old Mr. Bates’s
-cook before he married her, and when he left her a widow with an only
-child and a considerable fortune, the little German Baron had thought
-that her money was a fair equivalent for her personality. She was
-exceedingly vulgar, and when roused, exceedingly vituperative, but
-she possessed a rough good humour when pleased, and a large amount of
-natural shrewdness, which stood her instead of cleverness. But she was
-an unscrupulous liar, and rather boasted of the fact than otherwise.
-Having plenty of money at her command, she was used to take violent
-fancies to people--taking them up suddenly, loading them with presents
-and favours for as long as it pleased her, and then dropping them as
-suddenly, without why or wherefore--even insulting them if she could
-not shake them off without doing so. The Baron was completely under her
-thumb; more than that, he was servile in her presence, which astonished
-those people, who did not know that amongst her other arrogant
-insistences, the Baroness laid claim to holding intercourse with
-certain supernatural and invisible beings, who had the power to wreak
-vengeance on all those who offended her. This fear it was, combined
-with the fact that she had all the money and kept the strings of the
-bag pretty close where he was concerned, that made the Baron wait upon
-his wife’s wishes as if he were her slave. Perhaps the softest spot in
-the Baroness’s heart was kept for her sickly and uninteresting son,
-Bobby Bates, whom she treated, nevertheless, with the roughness of a
-tigress for her cub. She kept him still more under her surveillance
-than she did her husband, and Bobby, though he had attained his
-nineteenth year, dared not say Boo! to a goose, in presence of his
-Mamma. As the cheese was handed round, Elinor Leyton rose from her seat
-with an impatient gesture.
-
-“Do let us get out of this atmosphere, Margaret!” she said in a low
-tone. “I really cannot stand it any longer!”
-
-The two ladies left the table, and went out beyond the balcony, to
-where a number of painted iron chairs and tables were placed on the
-Digue, for the accommodation of passing wayfarers, who might wish to
-rest awhile and quench their thirst with _limonade_ or lager beer.
-
-“I wonder who that girl is!” remarked Mrs. Pullen as soon as they were
-out of hearing. “I don’t know whether I like her or not, but there is
-something rather distinguished-looking about her!”
-
-“Do you think so?” said Miss Leyton, “I thought she only distinguished
-herself by eating like a cormorant! I never saw anyone in society
-gobble her food in such a manner! She made me positively sick!”
-
-“Was it as bad as that?” replied the more quiet Mrs. Pullen, in
-an indifferent manner. Her eyes were attracted just then by the
-perambulator which contained her baby, and she rose to meet it.
-
-“How is she, Nurse?” she asked as anxiously as if she had not parted
-from the infant an hour before. “Has she been awake all the time?”
-
-“Yes, Ma’am, and looking about her like anything! But she seems
-inclined to sleep now! I thought it was about time to take her in!”
-
-“O! no! not on such a warm, lovely evening! If she does go to sleep in
-the open air, it will do her no harm. Leave her with me! I want you to
-go indoors, and find out the name of the young lady who sat opposite to
-me at dinner to-day, Philippe understands English. He will tell you!”
-
-“Why on earth do you want to know?” demanded Miss Leyton, as the
-servant disappeared.
-
-“O! I don’t know! I feel a little curious, that is all! She seems so
-young to be by herself!”
-
-Elinor Leyton answered nothing, but walked across the Digue and stood,
-looking out over the sea. She was anticipating the arrival of her
-_fiancé_, Captain Ralph Pullen of the Limerick Rangers, but he had
-delayed his coming to join them, and she began to find Heyst rather
-dull.
-
-The visitors of the Lion d’Or had finished their meal by this time,
-and were beginning to reassemble on the Digue, preparatory to taking a
-stroll before they turned into one of the many _cafés-chantants_, which
-were situated at stated intervals in front of the sea. Amongst them
-came the Baroness Gobelli, leaning heavily on a thick stick with one
-hand, and her husband’s shoulder with the other. The couple presented
-an extraordinary appearance, as they perambulated slowly up and down
-the Digue.
-
-She--with her great height and bulk, towering a head above her
-companion, whilst he--with a full-sized torso, and short legs--a large
-hat crammed down upon his forehead, and no neck to speak of, so that
-the brim appeared to rest upon his shoulders--was a ludicrous figure,
-as he walked beside his wife, bending under the weight of her support.
-But yet, she was actually proud of him. Notwithstanding his ill-shaped
-figure, the Baron possessed one of those mild German faces, with pale
-watery blue eyes, a long nose, and hair and beard of a reddish-golden
-colour, which entitled him, in the estimation of some people, to be
-called a handsome man, and the Baroness was never tired of informing
-the public that his head and face had once been drawn for that of some
-celebrated saint.
-
-Her own appearance was really comical, for though she had plenty of
-means, her want of taste, or indifference to dress, made everyone stare
-at her as she passed. On the present occasion, she wore a silk gown
-which had cost seventeen shillings a yard, with a costly velvet cloak,
-a bonnet which might have been rescued from the dustbin, and cotton
-gloves with all her fingers out. She shook her thick walking-stick in
-Miss Leyton’s face as she passed by her, and called out loud enough for
-everyone to hear: “And when is the handsome Captain coming to join you,
-Miss Leyton, eh? Take care he ain’t running after some other gal! ‘When
-pensive I thought on my L.O.V.E.’ Ha! ha! ha!”
-
-Elinor flushed a delicate pink but did not turn her head, nor take any
-notice of her tormentor. She detested the Baroness with a perfectly
-bitter hatred, and her proud cold nature revolted from her coarseness
-and familiarity.
-
-“Tied to your brat again!” cried the Baroness, as she passed Margaret
-Pullen who was moving the perambulator gently to and fro by the handle,
-so as to keep her infant asleep; “why didn’t you put it in the tub as
-soon as it was born? It would ’ave saved you a heap of trouble! I often
-wish I had done so by that devil Bobby! ’Ere, where are you, Bobby?”
-
-“I’m close behind you, Mamma!” replied the simple-looking youth.
-
-“Well! don’t you get running away from your father and me, and winking
-at the gals! There’s time enough for that, ain’t there, Gustave?” she
-concluded, addressing the Baron.
-
-“Come along, Robert, and mind what your mother tells you!” said the
-Herr Baron with his guttural German accent, as the extraordinary trio
-pursued their way down the Digue, the Baroness making audible remarks
-on everybody she met, as they went.
-
-Margaret Pullen sat where they had left her, moving about the
-perambulator, whilst her eyes, like Elinor’s, were fixed upon the
-tranquil water. The August sun had now quite disappeared, and the
-indescribably faint and unpleasant odour, which is associated with the
-dunes of Heyst, had begun to make itself apparent. A still languor had
-crept over everything, and there were indications of a thunderstorm
-in the air. She was thinking of her husband, Colonel Arthur Pullen,
-the elder brother of Miss Leyton’s _fiancé_, who was toiling out in
-India for baby and herself. It had been a terrible blow to Margaret,
-to let him go out alone after only one year of happy wedded life, but
-the expected advent of her little daughter at the time, had prohibited
-her undertaking so long a journey and she had been compelled to remain
-behind. And now baby was six months old, and Colonel Pullen hoped to be
-home by Christmas, so had advised her to wait for his return. But her
-thoughts were sad sometimes, notwithstanding.
-
-Events happen so unexpectedly in this world--who could say for certain
-that she and her husband would ever meet again--that Arthur would
-ever see his little girl, or that she should live to place her in her
-father’s arms? But such a state of feeling was morbid, she knew, and
-she generally made an effort to shake it off. The nurse, returning
-with the information she had sent her to acquire, roused her from her
-reverie.
-
-“If you please, Ma’am, the young lady’s name is Brandt, and Philippe
-says she came from London!”
-
-“English! I should never have guessed it!” observed Mrs. Pullen, “She
-speaks French so well.”
-
-“Shall I take the baby now, Ma’am?”
-
-“Yes! Wheel her along the Digue. I shall come and meet you by and by!”
-
-As the servant obeyed her orders, she called to Miss Leyton.
-
-“Elinor! come here!”
-
-“What is it?” asked Miss Leyton, seating herself beside her.
-
-“The new girl’s name is Brandt and she comes from England! Would you
-have believed it?”
-
-“I did not take sufficient interest in her to make any speculations on
-the subject. I only observed that she had a mouth from ear to ear, and
-ate like a pig! What does it concern us, where she comes from?”
-
-At that moment, a Mrs. Montague, who, with her husband, was conveying
-a family of nine children over to Brussels, under the mistaken
-impression, that they would be able to live cheaper there than in
-England, came down the Hotel steps with half a dozen of them, clinging
-to her skirts, and went straight up to Margaret Pullen.
-
-“O! Mrs. Pullen! What is that young lady’s name, who sat opposite to
-you at dinner? Everybody is asking! I hear she is enormously rich, and
-travelling alone. Did you see the lace on her dress? Real Valenciennes,
-and the diamond rings she wore! Frederick says they must be worth a lot
-of money. She must be someone of consequence I should imagine!”
-
-“On the contrary, my nurse tells me she is English and her name is
-Brandt. Has she no friends here?”
-
-“Madame Lamont says she arrived in company with another girl, but they
-are located at different parts of the Hotel. It seems very strange,
-does it not?”
-
-“And it sounds very improper!” interposed Elinor Leyton, “I should
-say the less we have to say to her, the better! You never know what
-acquaintances you may make in a place like this! When I look up and
-down the _table d’hôte_ menagerie sometimes, it makes me quite ill!”
-
-“Does it?” rejoined Mrs. Montague, “I think it’s so amusing! That
-Baroness Gobelli, for instance----”
-
-“Don’t mention her before me!” cried Miss Leyton, in a tone of disgust,
-“the woman is not fit for civilised society!”
-
-“She is rather common, certainly, and strange in her behaviour,” said
-Mrs. Montague, “but she is very good-natured. She gave my little Edward
-a louis yesterday. I felt quite ashamed to let him take it!”
-
-“That just proves her vulgarity,” exclaimed Elinor Leyton, who had not
-a sixpence to give away, herself, “it shows that she thinks her money
-will atone for all her other shortcomings! She gave that Miss Taylor
-who left last week, a valuable brooch off her own throat. And poor
-payment too, for all the dirty things she made her do and the ridicule
-she poured upon her. I daresay this _nouveau riche_ will try to curry
-favour with us by the same means.”
-
-At that moment, the girl under discussion, Miss Brandt, appeared on the
-balcony, which was only raised a few feet above where they sat. She
-wore the same dress she had at dinner, with the addition of a little
-fleecy shawl about her shoulders. She stood smiling, and looking at
-the ladies (who had naturally dropped all discussion about her) for
-a few moments, and then she ventured to descend the steps between
-the rampant gilded lions, and almost timidly, as it seemed, took
-up a position near them. Mrs. Pullen felt that she could not be so
-discourteous as to take no notice whatever of the new-comer, and so,
-greatly to Miss Leyton’s disgust, she uttered quietly, “Good evening!”
-
-It was quite enough for Miss Brandt. She drew nearer with smiles
-mantling over her face.
-
-“Good evening! Isn’t it lovely here?--so soft and warm, something like
-the Island, but so much fresher!”
-
-She looked up and down the Digue, now crowded with a multitude of
-visitors, and drew in her breath with a long sigh of content.
-
-“How gay and happy they all seem, and how happy I am too! Do you know,
-if I had my will, what I should like to do?” she said, addressing Mrs.
-Pullen.
-
-“No! indeed!”
-
-“I should like to tear up and down this road as hard as ever I could,
-throwing my arms over my head and screaming aloud!”
-
-The ladies exchanged glances of astonishment, but Margaret Pullen could
-not forbear smiling as she asked their new acquaintance the reason why.
-
-“O! because I am free--free at last, after ten long years of
-imprisonment! I am telling you the truth, I am indeed, and you would
-feel just the same if you had been shut up in a horrid Convent ever
-since you were eleven years old!”
-
-At the word “convent”, the national Protestant horror immediately
-spread itself over the faces of the three other ladies; Mrs. Montague
-gathered her flock about her and took them out of the way of possible
-contamination, though she would have much preferred to hear the rest of
-Miss Brandt’s story, and Elinor Leyton moved her chair further away.
-But Margaret Pullen was interested and encouraged the girl to proceed.
-
-“In a convent! I suppose then you are a Roman Catholic!”
-
-Harriet Brandt suddenly opened her slumbrous eyes.
-
-“I don’t think so! I’m not quite sure what I am! Of course I’ve had any
-amount of religion crammed down my throat in the Convent, and I had to
-follow their prayers, whilst there, but I don’t believe my parents were
-Catholics! But it does not signify, I am my own mistress now. I can be
-what I like!”
-
-“You have been so unfortunate then as to lose your parents!”
-
-“O! yes! years ago, that is why my guardian, Mr. Trawler, placed me
-in the Convent for my education. And I’ve been there for ten years!
-Is it not a shame? I’m twenty-one now! That’s why I’m free! You see,”
-the girl went on confidentially, “my parents left me everything, and
-as soon as I came of age I entered into possession of it. My guardian,
-Mr. Trawler, who lives in Jamaica,--did I tell you that I’ve come from
-Jamaica?--thought I should live with him and his wife, when I left the
-Convent, and pay them for my keep, but I refused. They had kept me
-too tight! I wanted to see the world and life--it was what I had been
-looking forward to--so as soon as my affairs were settled, I left the
-West Indies and came over here!”
-
-“They said you came from England in the Hotel!”
-
-“So I did! The steamer came to London and I stayed there a week before
-I came on here!”
-
-“But you are too young to travel about by yourself, Miss Brandt!
-English young ladies never do so!” said Mrs. Pullen.
-
-“I’m not by myself, exactly! Olga Brimont, who was in the Convent with
-me, came too. But she is ill, so she’s upstairs. She has come to her
-brother who is in Brussels, and we travelled together. We had the same
-cabin on board the steamer, and Olga was very ill. One night the doctor
-thought she was going to die! I stayed with her all the time. I used to
-sit up with her at night, but it did her no good. We stopped in London
-because we wanted to buy some dresses and things, but she was not able
-to go out, and I had to go alone. Her brother is away from Brussels at
-present so he wrote her to stay in Heyst till he could fetch her, and
-as I had nowhere particular to go, I came with her! And she is better
-already! She has been fast asleep all the afternoon!”
-
-“And what will you do when your friend leaves you?” asked Mrs. Pullen.
-
-“O! I don’t know! Travel about, I suppose! I shall go wherever it may
-please me!”
-
-“Are you not going to take a walk this evening?” demanded Elinor Leyton
-in a low voice of her friend, wishing to put a stop to the conversation.
-
-“Certainly! I told nurse I would join her and baby by-and-by!”
-
-“Shall I fetch your hat then?” enquired Miss Leyton, as she rose to go
-up to their apartments.
-
-“Yes! if you will, dear, please, and my velvet cape, in case it should
-turn chilly!”
-
-“I will fetch mine too!” cried Miss Brandt, jumping up with alacrity.
-“I may go with you, mayn’t I? I’ll just tell Olga that I’m going out
-and be down again in five minutes!” and without waiting for an answer,
-she was gone.
-
-“See what you have brought upon us!” remarked Elinor in a vexed tone.
-
-“Well! it was not my fault,” replied Margaret, “and after all,
-what does it signify? It is only a little act of courtesy to an
-unprotected girl. I don’t dislike her, Elinor! She is very familiar and
-communicative, but fancy what it must be like to find herself her own
-mistress, and with money at her command, after ten years’ seclusion
-within the four walls of a convent! It is enough to turn the head of
-any girl. I think it would be very churlish to refuse to be friendly
-with her!”
-
-“Well! I hope it may turn out all right! But you must remember how
-Ralph cautioned us against making any acquaintances in a foreign hotel.”
-
-“But I am not under Ralph’s orders, though you may be, and I should not
-care to go entirely by the advice of so very fastidious and exclusive
-a gentleman as he is! My Arthur would never find fault with me, I am
-sure, for being friendly with a young unmarried girl.”
-
-“Anyway, Margaret, let me entreat you not to discuss my private affairs
-with this new _protégée_ of yours. I don’t want to see her saucer eyes
-goggling over the news of my engagement to your brother-in-law!”
-
-“Certainly I will not, since you ask it! But you hardly expect to keep
-it a secret when Ralph comes down here, do you?”
-
-“Why not? Why need anyone know more than that he is your husband’s
-brother?”
-
-“I expect they know a good deal more now,” said Margaret, laughing.
-“The news that you are the Honourable Elinor Leyton and that your
-father is Baron Walthamstowe, was known all over Heyst the second
-day we were here. And I have no doubt it has been succeeded by the
-interesting intelligence that you are engaged to marry Captain Pullen.
-You cannot keep servants’ tongues from wagging, you know!”
-
-“I suppose not!” replied Elinor, with a _moue_ of contempt. “However,
-they will learn no more through me or Ralph. We are not ‘’Arry and
-’Arriet’ to sit on the Digue with our arms round each other’s waists.”
-
-“Still--there are signs and symptoms,” said Margaret, laughing.
-
-“There will be none with us!” rejoined Miss Leyton, indignantly, as
-Harriet Brandt, with a black lace hat on, trimmed with yellow roses,
-and a little fichu tied carelessly across her bosom, ran lightly down
-the steps to join them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-The Digue was crowded by that time. All Heyst had turned out to enjoy
-the evening air and to partake in the gaiety of the place. A band was
-playing on the movable orchestra, which was towed by three skinny
-little donkeys, day after day, from one end of the Digue to the other.
-To-night, it was its turn to be in the middle, where a large company
-of people was sitting on green painted chairs that cost ten centimes
-for hire each, whilst children danced, or ran madly round and round
-its base. Everyone had changed his, or her, seaside garb for more
-fashionable array--even the children were robed in white frocks and
-gala hats--and the whole scene was gay and festive. Harriet Brandt
-ran from one side to the other of the Digue, as though she also had
-been a child. Everything she saw seemed to astonish and delight her.
-First, she was gazing out over the calm and placid water--and next,
-she was exclaiming at the bits of rubbish in the shape of embroidered
-baskets, or painted shells, exhibited in the shop windows, which were
-side by side with the private houses and hotels, forming a long line of
-buildings fronting the water.
-
-She kept on declaring that she wanted to buy that or this, and
-lamenting she had not brought more money with her.
-
-“You will have plenty of opportunities to select and purchase what you
-want to-morrow,” said Mrs. Pullen, “and you will be better able to
-judge what they are like. They look better under the gas than they do
-by daylight, I can assure you, Miss Brandt!”
-
-“O! but they are lovely--delightful!” replied the girl,
-enthusiastically, “I never saw anything so pretty before! Do look at
-that little doll in a bathing costume, with her cap in one hand, her
-sponge in the other! She is charming--unique! _Tout ce qu’il y a de
-plus beau!_”
-
-She spoke French perfectly, and when she spoke English, it was with a
-slightly foreign accent, that greatly enhanced its charm. It made Mrs.
-Pullen observe:
-
-“You are more used to speaking French than English, Miss Brandt!”
-
-“Yes! We always spoke French in the Convent, and it is in general use
-in the Island. But I thought--I hoped--that I spoke English like an
-Englishwoman! I _am_ an Englishwoman, you know!”
-
-“Are you? I was not quite sure! Brandt sounds rather German!”
-
-“No! my father was English, his name was Henry Brandt, and my mother
-was a Miss Carey--daughter of one of the Justices of Barbadoes!”
-
-“O! indeed!” replied Mrs. Pullen. She did not know what else to say.
-The subject was of no interest to her! At that moment they encountered
-the nurse and perambulator, and she naturally stopped to speak to her
-baby.
-
-The sight of the infant seemed to drive Miss Brandt wild.
-
-“O! is that your baby, Mrs. Pullen, is that really your baby?” she
-exclaimed excitedly, “you never told me you had one. O! the darling!
-the sweet dear little angel! I love little white babies! I adore them.
-They are so sweet and fresh and clean--so different from the little
-niggers who smell so nasty, you can’t touch them! We never saw a baby
-in the Convent, and so few English children live to grow up in Jamaica!
-O! let me hold her! let me carry her! I _must_!”
-
-She was about to seize the infant in her arms, when the mother
-interposed.
-
-“No, Miss Brandt, please, not this evening! She is but half awake, and
-has arrived at that age when she is frightened of strangers. Another
-time perhaps, when she has become used to you, but not now!”
-
-“But I will be so careful of her, pretty dear!” persisted the girl, “I
-will nurse her so gently, that she will fall to sleep again in my arms.
-Come! my little love, come!” she continued to the baby, who pouted her
-lips and looked as if she were going to cry.
-
-“Leave her alone!” exclaimed Elinor Leyton in a sharp voice. “Do you
-not hear what Mrs. Pullen says--that you are not to touch her!”
-
-She spoke so acridly, that gentle Margaret Pullen felt grieved for the
-look of dismay that darted into Harriet Brandt’s face on hearing it.
-
-“O! I am sorry--I didn’t mean--” she stammered, with a side glance at
-Margaret.
-
-“Of course you did not mean anything but what was kind,” said Mrs.
-Pullen, “Miss Leyton perfectly understands that, and when baby is used
-to you, I daresay she will be very grateful for your attentions. But
-to-night she is sleepy and tired, and, perhaps, a little cross. Take
-her home, Nurse,” she went on, “and put her to bed! Good-night, my
-sweet!” and the perambulator passed them and was gone.
-
-An awkward silence ensued between the three women after this little
-incident. Elinor Leyton walked somewhat apart from her companions, as
-if she wished to avoid all further controversy, whilst Margaret Pullen
-sought some way by which to atone for her friend’s rudeness to the
-young stranger. Presently they came across one of the _cafés chantants_
-which are attached to the seaside hotels, and which was brilliantly
-lighted up. A large awning was spread outside, to shelter some dozens
-of chairs and tables, most of which were already occupied. The windows
-of the hotel salon had been thrown wide open, to accommodate some
-singers and musicians, who advanced in turn and stood on the threshold
-to amuse the audience. As they approached the scene, a tenor in evening
-dress was singing a love song, whilst the musicians accompanied his
-voice from the salon, and the occupants of the chairs were listening
-with rapt attention.
-
-“How charming! how delightful!” cried Harriet Brandt, as they reached
-the spot, “I never saw anything like this in the Island!”
-
-“You appear never to have seen anything!” remarked Miss Leyton, with a
-sneer. Miss Brandt glanced apologetically at Mrs. Pullen.
-
-“How could I see anything, when I was in the Convent?” she said,
-“I know there are places of entertainment in the Island, but I was
-never allowed to go to any. And in London, there was no one for me
-to go with! I should so much like to go in there,” indicating the
-_café_. “Will you come with me, both of you I mean, and I will pay for
-everything! I have plenty of money, you know!”
-
-“There is nothing to pay, my dear, unless you call for refreshment,”
-was Margaret’s reply. “Yes, I will go with you certainly, if you so
-much wish it! Elinor, you won’t mind, will you?”
-
-But Miss Leyton was engaged talking to a Monsieur and Mademoiselle
-Vieuxtemps--an old brother and sister, resident in the Lion d’Or--who
-had stopped to wish her Good-evening! They were dear, good old people,
-but rather monotonous and dull, and Elinor had more than once
-ridiculed their manner of talking and voted them the most terrible
-bores. Mrs. Pullen concluded therefore, that she would get rid of
-them as soon as courtesy permitted her to do so, and follow her. With
-a smile and a bow therefore, to the Vieuxtemps, she pushed her way
-through the crowd with Harriet Brandt, to where she perceived that
-three seats were vacant, and took possession of them. They were not
-good seats for hearing or seeing, being to one side of the salon, and
-quite in the shadow, but the place was so full that she saw no chance
-of getting any others. As soon as they were seated, the waiter came
-round for orders, and it was with difficulty that Mrs. Pullen prevented
-her companion purchasing sufficient liqueurs and cakes to serve double
-the number of their company.
-
-“You must allow me to pay for myself, Miss Brandt,” she said gravely,
-“or I will never accompany you anywhere again!”
-
-“But I have lots of money,” pleaded the girl, “much more than I know
-what to do with--it would be a pleasure to me, it would indeed!”
-
-But Mrs. Pullen was resolute, and three _limonades_ only were placed
-upon their table. Elinor Leyton had not yet made her appearance, and
-Mrs. Pullen kept craning her neck over the other seats to see where she
-might be, without success.
-
-“She cannot have missed us!” she observed, “I wonder if she can have
-continued her walk with the Vieuxtemps!”
-
-“O! what does it signify?” said Harriet, drawing her chair closer to
-that of Mrs. Pullen, “we can do very well without her. I don’t think
-she’s very nice, do you?”
-
-“You must not speak of Miss Leyton like that to me, Miss Brandt,”
-remonstrated Margaret, gently, “because--she is a great friend of our
-family.”
-
-She had been going to say, “Because she will be my sister-in-law before
-long,” but remembered Elinor’s request in time, and substituted the
-other sentence.
-
-“I don’t think she’s very kind, though,” persisted the other.
-
-“It is only her manner, Miss Brandt! She does not mean anything by it!”
-
-“But you are so different,” said the girl as she crept still closer,
-“I could see it when you smiled at me at dinner. I knew I should like
-you at once. And I want you to like me too--so much! It has been the
-dream of my life to have some friends. That is why I would not stay in
-Jamaica. I don’t like the people there! I want friends--real friends!”
-
-“But you must have had plenty of friends of your own age in the
-Convent.”
-
-“That shows you don’t know anything about a convent! It’s the very last
-place where they will let you make a friend--they’re afraid lest you
-should tell each other too much! The convent I was in was an Ursuline
-order, and even the nuns were obliged to walk three and three, never
-two, together, lest they should have secrets between them. As for us
-girls, we were never left alone for a single minute! There was always
-a sister with us, even at night, walking up and down between the rows
-of beds, pretending to read her prayers, but with her eyes on us the
-whole time and her ears open to catch what we said. I suppose they were
-afraid we should talk about lovers. I think girls do talk about them
-when they can, more in convents than in other places, though they have
-never had any. It would be so dreadful to be like the poor nuns, and
-never have a lover to the end of one’s days, wouldn’t it?”
-
-“You would not fancy being a nun then, Miss Brandt!”
-
-“_I_--Oh! dear no! I would rather be dead, twenty times over! But they
-didn’t like my coming out at all. They did try so hard to persuade
-me to remain with them for ever! One of them, Sister Féodore, told
-me I must never talk even with gentlemen, if I could avoid it--that
-they were all wicked and nothing they said was true, and if I trusted
-them, they would only laugh at me afterwards for my pains. But I don’t
-believe that, do you?”
-
-“Certainly not!” replied Margaret warmly. “The sister who told you so
-knew nothing about men. My dear husband is more like an angel than a
-man, and there are many like him. You mustn’t believe such nonsense,
-Miss Brandt! I am sure you never heard your parents say such a silly
-thing!”
-
-“O! my father and mother! I never remember hearing them say anything!”
-replied Miss Brandt. She had crept closer and closer to Mrs. Pullen as
-she spoke, and now encircled her waist with her arm, and leaned her
-head upon her shoulder. It was not a position that Margaret liked, nor
-one she would have expected from a woman on so short an acquaintance,
-but she did not wish to appear unkind by telling Miss Brandt to move
-further away. The poor girl was evidently quite unused to the ways
-and customs of Society, she seemed moreover very friendless and
-dependent--so Margaret laid her solecism down to ignorance and let her
-head rest where she had placed it, resolving inwardly meanwhile that
-she would not subject herself to be treated in so familiar a manner
-again.
-
-“Don’t you remember your parents then?” she asked her presently.
-
-“Hardly! I saw so little of them,” said Miss Brandt, “my father was a
-great doctor and scientist, I believe, and I am not quite sure if he
-knew that he had a daughter!”
-
-“O! my dear, what nonsense!”
-
-“But it is true, Mrs. Pullen! He was always shut up in his laboratory,
-and I was not allowed to go near that part of the house. I suppose he
-was very clever and all that--but he was too much engaged in making
-experiments to take any notice of me, and I am sure I never wanted to
-see him!”
-
-“How very sad! But you had your mother to turn to for consolation and
-company, whilst she lived, surely?”
-
-“O! my mother!” echoed Harriet, carelessly. “Yes! my mother! Well!
-I don’t think I knew much more of her either. The ladies in Jamaica
-get very lazy, you know, and keep a good deal to their own rooms. The
-person there I loved best of all, was old Pete, the overseer!”
-
-“The overseer!”
-
-“Of the estate and niggers, you know! We had plenty of niggers on the
-coffee plantation, regular African fellows, with woolly heads and
-blubber lips, and yellow whites to their eyes. When I was a little
-thing of four years old, Pete used to let me whip the little niggers
-for a treat, when they had done anything wrong. It used to make me
-laugh to see them wriggle their legs under the whip and cry!”
-
-“O! don’t, Miss Brandt!” exclaimed Margaret Pullen, in a voice of pain.
-
-“It’s true, but they deserved it, you know, the little wretches, always
-thieving or lying or something! I’ve seen a woman whipped to death,
-because she wouldn’t work. We think nothing of that sort of thing,
-over there. Still--you can’t wonder that I was glad to get out of the
-Island. But I loved old Pete, and if he had been alive when I left,
-I would have brought him to England with me. He used to carry me for
-miles through the jungle on his back,--out in the fresh mornings and
-the cool, dewy eves. I had a pony to ride, but I never went anywhere,
-without his hand upon my bridle rein. He was always so afraid lest I
-should come to any harm. I don’t think anybody else cared. Pete was
-the only creature who ever loved me, and when I think of Jamaica, I
-remember my old nigger servant as the one friend I had there!”
-
-“It is very, very sad!” was all that Mrs. Pullen could say.
-
-She had become fainter and fainter, as the girl leaned against her
-with her head upon her breast. Some sensation which she could not
-define, nor account for--some feeling which she had never experienced
-before--had come over her and made her head reel. She felt as if
-something or someone, were drawing all her life away. She tried to
-disengage herself from the girl’s clasp, but Harriet Brandt seemed
-to come after her, like a coiling snake, till she could stand it no
-longer, and faintly exclaiming:
-
-“Miss Brandt! let go of me, please! I feel ill!” she rose and tried
-to make her way between the crowded tables, towards the open air. As
-she stumbled along, she came against (to her great relief) her friend,
-Elinor Leyton.
-
-“O! Elinor!” she gasped, “I don’t know what is the matter with me! I
-feel so strange, so light-headed! Do take me home!”
-
-Miss Leyton dragged her through the audience, and made her sit down on
-a bench, facing the sea.
-
-“Why! what’s the matter?” demanded Harriet Brandt, who had made her way
-after them, “is Mrs. Pullen ill?”
-
-“So it appears,” replied Miss Leyton, coldly, “but how it happened, you
-should know better than myself! I suppose it is very warm in there!”
-
-“No! no! I do not think so,” said Margaret, with a bewildered air, “we
-had chairs close to the side. And Miss Brandt was telling me of her
-life in Jamaica, when such an extraordinary sensation came over me! I
-can’t describe it! it was just as if I had been scooped hollow!”
-
-At this description, Harriet Brandt burst into a loud laugh, but Elinor
-frowned her down.
-
-“It may seem a laughing matter to you, Miss Brandt,” she said, in the
-same cold tone, “but it is none to me. Mrs. Pullen is far from strong,
-and her health is not to be trifled with. However, I shall not let her
-out of my sight again.”
-
-“Don’t make a fuss about it, Elinor,” pleaded her friend, “it was my
-own fault, if anyone’s. I think there must be a thunderstorm in the
-air, I have felt so oppressed all the evening. Or is the smell from
-the dunes worse than usual? Perhaps I ate something at dinner that
-disagreed with me!”
-
-“I cannot understand it at all,” replied Miss Leyton, “you are not
-used to fainting, or being suddenly attacked in any way. However, if
-you feel able to walk, let us go back to the Hotel. Miss Brandt will
-doubtless find someone to finish the evening with!”
-
-Harriet was just about to reply that she knew no one but themselves,
-and to offer to take Mrs. Pullen’s arm on the other side, when Elinor
-Leyton cut her short.
-
-“No! thank you, Miss Brandt! Mrs. Pullen would, I am sure, prefer to
-return to the Hotel alone with me! You can easily join the Vieuxtemps
-or any other of the visitors to the Lion d’Or. There is not much
-ceremony observed amongst the English at these foreign places. It would
-be better perhaps if there were a little more! Come, Margaret, take
-my arm, and we will walk as slowly as you like! But I shall not be
-comfortable until I see you safe in your own room!”
-
-So the two ladies moved off together, leaving Harriet Brandt standing
-disconsolately on the Digue, watching their departure. Mrs. Pullen had
-uttered a faint Good-night to her, but had made no suggestion that
-she should walk back with them, and it seemed to the girl as if they
-both, in some measure, blamed her for the illness of her companion.
-What had she done, she asked herself, as she reviewed what had passed
-between them, that could in any way account for Mrs. Pullen’s illness?
-She liked her so much--so very much--she had so hoped she was going to
-be her friend--she would have done anything and given anything sooner
-than put her to inconvenience in any way. As the two ladies moved
-slowly out of sight, Harriet turned sadly and walked the other way. She
-felt lonely and disappointed. She knew no one to speak to, and there
-was a cold empty feeling in her breast, as though, in losing her hold
-on Margaret Pullen, she had lost something on which she had depended.
-Something of her feeling must have communicated itself to Margaret
-Pullen, for after a minute or two she stopped and said,
-
-“I don’t half like leaving Miss Brandt by herself, Elinor! She is very
-young to be wandering about a town by night and alone!”
-
-“Nonsense!” returned Miss Leyton, shortly, “a young lady who can make
-the voyage from Jamaica to Heyst on her own account, knocking about in
-London for a week on the way, is surely competent to walk back to the
-Hotel without your assistance. I should say that Miss Brandt was a very
-independent young woman!”
-
-“Perhaps, by nature, but she has been shut up in a convent for the best
-part of her life, and that is not considered to be a good preparation
-for fighting one’s way through the world!”
-
-“She’ll be able to fight her own battles, never fear!” was Elinor’s
-reply.
-
-Just then they encountered Bobby Bates, who lifted his cap as he
-hurried past them.
-
-“Where are you going so fast, Mr. Bates?” said Elinor Leyton.
-
-“I am going back to the Hotel to fetch Mamma’s fur boa!” he answered.
-
-They were passing a lighted lamp at the time, and she noticed that the
-lad’s eyes were red, and his features bore traces of distress.
-
-“Are you ill?” she enquired quickly, “or in any trouble?”
-
-He halted for a minute in his stride.
-
-“No! no! not exactly,” he said in a low voice, and then, as if the
-words came from him against his will, he went on, “But O! I do wish
-someone would speak to Mamma about the way she treats me. It’s
-cruel--to strike me with her stick before all those people, as if I
-were a baby, and to call me such names! Even the servant William laughs
-at me! Do all mothers do the same, Miss Leyton? Ought a man to stand it
-quietly?”
-
-“Decidedly not!” cried Elinor, without hesitation.
-
-“O! Elinor! remember, she is his mother,” remonstrated Margaret, “don’t
-say anything to set him against her!”
-
-“But I was nineteen last birthday,” continued the lad, “and sometimes
-she treats me in such a manner, that I can’t bear it! The Baron dare
-not say a word to her! She swears at him so. Sometimes, I think I will
-run away and go to sea!”
-
-“No! no! you mustn’t do that!” called Miss Leyton after him, as he
-quickened his footsteps in the direction of the Lion d’Or.
-
-“What an awful woman!” sighed Mrs. Pullen. “Fancy! striking her own son
-in public, and with that thick stick too. I believe he had been crying!”
-
-“I am _sure_ he had,” replied her friend, “you can see the poor fellow
-is half-witted, and very weakly into the bargain. I suppose she has
-beaten his brains to a pap. What a terrible misfortune to have such a
-mother! You should hear some of the stories Madame Lamont has to tell
-of her!”
-
-“But how does she hear them?”
-
-“Through the Baron’s servant William, I suppose. He says the Baroness
-has often taken her stick to him and the other servants, and thinks no
-more of swearing at them than a trooper! They all hate her. One day,
-she took up a kitchen cleaver and advanced upon her coachman with it,
-but he seized her by both arms and sat her down upon the fire, whence
-she was only rescued after being somewhat severely burned!”
-
-“It served her right!” exclaimed Margaret, laughing at the ludicrous
-idea, “but what a picture she must have presented, seated on the
-kitchen range! Where can the woman have been raised? What sort of a
-person can she be?”
-
-“Not what she pretends, Margaret, you may be sure of that! All her fine
-talk of lords and ladies is so much bunkum. But I pity the poor little
-Baron, who is, at all events, inoffensive. How can he put up with such
-a wife! He must feel very much ashamed of her sometimes!”
-
-“And yet he seems devoted to her! He never leaves her side for a
-moment. He is her walking stick, her fetcher and carrier, and her
-scribe. I don’t believe she can write a letter!”
-
-“And yet she was talking at the _table d’hôte_ yesterday of the Duke of
-This and the Earl of That, and hinting at her having stayed at Osborne
-and Windsor. Of course they are falsehoods! She has never seen the
-inside of a palace unless it was in the capacity of a char-woman! Have
-you observed her hair? It is as coarse as a horse-tail! And her hands!
-Bobby informed me the other day that his Mamma took nines in gloves!
-She’s not a woman, my dear! She’s a female elephant!”
-
-Margaret was laughing still, when they reached the steps of the Lion
-d’Or.
-
-“You are very naughty and very scandalous, Elinor,” she said, “but you
-have done me a world of good. My unpleasant feelings have quite gone. I
-am quite capable of continuing our walk if you would like to do so.”
-
-“No such thing, Madam,” replied Miss Leyton. “I am responsible for your
-well-doing in Arthur’s absence. Upstairs and into bed you go, unless
-you would like a cup of coffee and a chasse first. That is the only
-indulgence I can grant you.”
-
-But Mrs. Pullen declined the proffered refreshment, and the two ladies
-sought their rooms in company.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-The next morning dawned upon a perfect August day. The sun streamed
-brightly over every part of Heyst, turning the loose dry yellow sand
-(from end to end of which not a stone or boulder was to be seen),
-into a veritable cloth of gold. The patient asses, carrying their
-white-covered saddles, and tied to stakes, were waiting in a row for
-hire, whilst some dozen Rosinantes, called by courtesy, horses, were
-also of the company. The sands were already strewn with children, their
-short petticoats crammed into a pair of bathing-drawers, and their
-heads protected by linen hats or bonnets, digging away at the dry sand
-as if their lives depended on their efforts. The bathing-machines,
-painted in gay stripes of green, red, blue, or orange, were hauled
-down, ready for action, and the wooden tents, which can be hired for
-the season at any foreign watering place, were being swept out and
-arranged for the day’s use.
-
-Some of the more pretentious ones, belonging to private families,
-were surmounted by a gilt coronet, the proud possession of the Comte
-Darblaye, or the Herr Baron Grumplestein--sported flags moreover of
-France or Germany, and were screened from the eyes of the vulgar, by
-lace or muslin curtains, tied up with blue ribbons. On the balcony of
-the Lion d’Or, where the visitors always took their breakfast, were
-arranged tables, piled with dishes of crevettes, fresh from the sea,
-pistolets, and beautiful butter as white and tasteless as cream. It
-was a delight to breakfast on the open balcony, with the sea breeze
-blowing in one’s face, and in the intervals of eating prawns and bread
-and butter, or perusing the morning papers, to watch the cheerful scene
-below.
-
-The Baroness was there, early of course. She, and her husband, and the
-ill-used Bobby, occupied a table to themselves, whence she addressed
-her remarks to whomever she chose, whether they wished to listen, or
-not, and the Baron shelled her crevettes and buttered her pistolets
-for her. Margaret and Elinor were rather later than usual, for Mrs.
-Pullen had not passed a good night, and Miss Leyton would not have her
-disturbed.
-
-Harriet Brandt was there as they appeared, and beside her, a pale,
-unhealthy-looking young woman, whom she introduced as her friend, and
-travelling companion, Olga Brimont.
-
-“Olga did not wish to come down. She thought she would lie another day
-in bed, but I made her get up and dress, and I was right, wasn’t I,
-Mrs. Pullen?”
-
-“I think the fresh air will do Mademoiselle Brimont more good than the
-close bedroom, if she is strong enough to stand it!” replied Margaret,
-with a smile. “I am afraid you are still feeling weak,” she continued,
-to the new-comer.
-
-“I feel better than I did on board the steamer, or in London,” said
-Mademoiselle Brimont. She was an under-sized girl with plain features,
-and did not shew off to advantage beside her travelling companion.
-
-“Did you suffer so much from sea-sickness? I can sympathise with you,
-as I am a very bad sailor myself!”
-
-“O! no! Madame, it was not the _mal de mer_. I can hardly tell you
-what it was. Miss Brandt and I occupied a small cabin together, and
-perhaps, it was because it was so small, but I did not feel as if I
-could breathe there--such a terrible oppression as though some one
-were sitting on my chest--and such a general feeling of emptiness. It
-was the same in London, though Miss Brandt did all she could for me,
-indeed she sat up with me all night, till I feared she would be ill
-herself--but I feel better now! Last night I slept for the first time
-since leaving Jamaica!”
-
-“That is right! You will soon get well in this lovely air!”
-
-They all sat down at the same table, and commenced to discuss their
-rolls and coffee. Margaret Pullen, glancing up once, was struck by
-the look with which Harriet Brandt was regarding her--it was so full
-of yearning affection--almost of longing to approach her nearer, to
-hear her speak, to touch her hand! It amused her to observe it! She
-had heard of cases, in which young unsophisticated girls had taken
-unaccountable affections for members of their own sex, and trusted
-she was not going to form the subject for some such experience on
-Miss Brandt’s part. The idea made her address her conversation more to
-Mademoiselle Brimont, than to her companion of the evening before.
-
-“I suppose you and Miss Brandt were great friends in the Convent,” she
-said.
-
-“O! no, Madame, we hardly ever saw each other whilst there, except in
-chapel. There is so much difference in our ages, I am only seventeen,
-and was in the lower school, whilst Miss Brandt did hardly any lessons
-during the two last years she spent there. But I was very glad to have
-her company across to England. My brother would have sent for me last
-year, if he could have heard of a lady to travel with me!”
-
-“Are you going on to join your brother soon?”
-
-“He says he will fetch me, Madame, as soon as he can be spared from his
-business. He is my only relation. My parents died, like Miss Brandt’s,
-in the West Indies.”
-
-“Well! you must be sure and get your looks back before he arrives!”
-said Margaret, kindly.
-
-The head waiter now appeared with the letters from England, amongst
-which was one for Miss Leyton in a firm, manly handwriting, with a
-regimental crest in blue and gold upon the envelope. Her face did not
-change in the least as she broke the seal, although it came from her
-_fiancé_, Captain Ralph Pullen. Elinor Leyton’s was an exceptionally
-cold face, and it matched her disposition. She had attractive
-features;--a delicate nose, carved as if in ivory--brown eyes, a fair
-rose-tinted complexion, and a small mouth with thin, firmly closed
-lips. Her hair was bronze-coloured, and it was always dressed to
-perfection. She had a good figure too, with small hands and feet--and
-she was robed in excellent taste. She was pre-eminently a woman for
-a man to be proud of as the mistress of his house, and the head of
-his table. She might be trusted never to say or do an unladylike
-thing--before all, she was cognisant of the obligations which devolved
-upon her as the daughter of Lord Walthamstowe and a member of the
-British aristocracy. But in disposition she was undoubtedly cold,
-and her _fiancé_ had already begun to find it out. Their engagement
-had come about neither of them quite knew how, but he liked the idea
-of being connected with an aristocratic family, and she was proud of
-having won a man, for whom many caps had been pulled in vain. He was
-considered to be one of the handsomest men of his generation, and she
-was what people called an unexceptional match for him. She was fond of
-him in her way, but her way was a strange one. She called the attitude
-she assumed towards him, a proper and ladylike reserve, but impartial
-spectators, with stronger feelings, would have deemed it indifference.
-
-However, like the proverbial dog in the manger, whether she valued
-her rights in Captain Pullen or not, Miss Leyton had no intention of
-permitting them to be interfered with. She would have died sooner than
-admit that he was necessary to her happiness,--at the same time she
-considered it due to her dignity as a woman, never to give in to his
-wishes, when they opposed her own, and often when they did not.
-
-She displayed no particular enthusiasm when they met, nor distress when
-they parted--neither was she ever troubled by any qualms lest during
-their frequent separations, he should meet some woman whom he might
-perchance prefer to herself. They were engaged, and when the proper
-time came they would marry--meanwhile their private affairs concerned
-no one but themselves. In short, Elinor Leyton was not what is termed
-“a man’s woman”--all her friends (if she had any) were of her own sex.
-
-Having perused her letter, she refolded and replaced it in its envelope
-without a glance in the direction of Mrs. Pullen. Margaret thought she
-had a right to be informed of her brother-in-law’s movements. She had
-invited Miss Leyton to accompany her to Heyst at his request, and any
-preparations which might be requisite before he joined them, would have
-to be made by herself.
-
-“Is that from Ralph? What does he say?” she enquired in a low voice.
-
-“Nothing in particular!”
-
-“But when may we expect him at Heyst?”
-
-“Next week, he says, in time for the _Bataille des Fleurs_!”
-
-“Are you not pleased?”
-
-“Of course I am!” replied Elinor, but without a sparkle or blush.
-
-“O! if it were only my Arthur that were coming!” exclaimed Margaret,
-fervently, “I should go mad with joy!”
-
-“Then it is just as well perhaps that it is _not_ your Arthur!”
-rejoined her companion, as she put the letter into her pocket.
-
-“Now, Bobby,” announced the strident tones of the Baroness Gobelli from
-the other side of the balcony, “leave off picking the shrimps! You’ve
-’ad more than enough! Ain’t bread and butter good enough for you?
-What’ll you want next?”
-
-“But, Mamma,” pleaded the youth, “I’ve only had a few! I’ve been
-shelling Papa’s all this time!”
-
-“Put ’em down at once, I say!” reiterated the Baroness, “’ere William,
-take Bobby’s plate away! He’s ’ad plenty for this morning!”
-
-“But I haven’t begun yet. I’m hungry!” remonstrated Bobby.
-
-“Take ’is plate away!” roared the Baroness. “’Ang it all! Can’t you
-’ear what I say?”
-
-“Mein tear! mein tear!” ejaculated the Herr Baron in a subdued voice.
-
-“Leave me alone, Gustave! Do you suppose I can’t manage my own son? He
-ain’t yours! ’E’d make ’imself ill if I didn’t look after him. Take ’is
-plate away, at once!”
-
-The man-servant William lifted the plate of peeled shrimps and bread
-and butter from the table, whilst Bobby with a very red face rose from
-his seat and rushed down the steps to the beach.
-
-“He! he! he!” cackled the Baroness, “that’ll teach ’im not to fiddle
-with ’is food another time! Bobby don’t care for an empty belly!”
-
-“What a shame!” murmured Margaret, who was nothing if she was not a
-mother, “now the poor boy will go without his breakfast.”
-
-Presently, William was to be seen sneaking past the Hotel with a parcel
-in his hands. The Baroness pounced upon him like a cat upon a mouse.
-
-“William!” she cried from the balcony, “what ’ave you got in your
-’and?”
-
-“Summat of my own, my lady!”
-
-“Bring it ’ere!”
-
-The man mounted the steps and stood before his mistress. He held a
-parcel in his hands, wrapped up in a table napkin.
-
-“Open that parcel!” said the Baroness.
-
-“Indeed, my lady, it’s only the shrimps as Master Robert left behind
-him and I thought they would make me a little relish on the sands, my
-lady!”
-
-“Open that parcel!”
-
-William obeyed, and disclosed the rolls and butter and peeled shrimps
-just as Bobby had left them.
-
-“You were going to take ’em down to Bobby on the beach!”
-
-“No, indeed, my lady!”
-
-“Confound you, Sir, don’t you lie to me!” exclaimed the Baroness,
-shaking her stick in his face, “I’ve ways and means of finding out
-things that you know nothing of! Throw that stuff into the road!”
-
-“But, my lady----”
-
-“Throw it into the road at once, or you may take your month’s warning!
-’Ang it all! are you the mistress, or am I?”
-
-The servant threw a glance of enquiry in the direction of the Herr
-Baron but the Herr Baron kept his face well down in his plate, so after
-a pause, he walked to the side, and shook the contents of the napkin
-upon the Digue.
-
-“And now don’t you try any more of your tricks upon me or I’ll thrash
-you till your own mother won’t know you! You leave Bobby alone for the
-future, or it’ll be the worst day’s work you ever did! Remember that!”
-
-“Very good, my lady!” replied William, but as he left the balcony he
-gave a look at the other occupants, which well conveyed his feelings on
-the subject.
-
-“I should not be surprised to hear that that woman had been murdered by
-her servants some day!” said Margaret to Elinor Leyton.
-
-“No! and I should not be sorry! I feel rather like murdering her
-myself. But let us go down to the sands, Margaret, and try to find the
-disconsolate Bobby! I’m not afraid of his mother if William is, and if
-he wants something to eat, I shall give it him!”
-
-They fetched their hats and parasols, and having left the Hotel by a
-side entrance, found their way down to the sands. It was a pretty sight
-there, and in some cases, a comical one. The bathing-machines were
-placed some sixty or more feet from the water, according to the tide,
-and their occupants, clad in bathing-costumes, had to run the gauntlet
-of all the eyes upon the beach, as they traversed that distance in
-order to reach the sea. To some visitors, especially the English ones,
-this ordeal was rather trying. To watch them open a crevice of the
-machine door, and regard the expectant crowd with horror;--then after
-some hesitation, goaded on by the cries of the bathing women that
-the time was passing, to see them emerge with reluctant feet, sadly
-conscious of their unclothed condition, and of the unsightly corns and
-bunions which disfigured their feet--to say nothing of the red and
-blue tint which their skin had suddenly assumed--was to find it almost
-impossible to refrain from laughter. The very skinny and knuckle-kneed
-ones; the very fat and bulging ones; the little fair men who looked
-like Bobby’s peeled shrimps, and the muscular black and hairy ones
-who looked like bears escaped from a menagerie,--these types and many
-others, our ladies could not help being amused at, though they told
-each other it was very improper all the time. But everybody had to
-pass through the same ordeal and everybody submitted to it, and tried
-to laugh off their own humiliation by ridiculing the appearance of
-their neighbours. Margaret and Elinor were never tired of watching the
-antics of the Belgians and Germans whilst they were (what they called)
-bathing. The fuss they made over entering two feet of water--the way
-in which they gasped and puffed as they caught it up in their hands
-and rubbed their backs and chests with it--the reluctance with which
-the ladies were dragged by their masculine partners into the briny,
-as if they expected to be overwhelmed and drowned by the tiny waves
-which rippled over their toes, and made them catch their breath. And
-lastly, when they were convinced there was no danger, to see them, men
-and women, fat and thin, take hands and dance round in a ring as if
-they were playing at “Mulberry Bush” was too delightful. But if one
-bather, generally an Englishman, more daring than his fellows, went in
-for a good swim, the coast-guardsmen ran along the breakwater, shouting
-“Gare, gare!” until he came out again.
-
-“They are funnier than ever to-day,” remarked Margaret, after a while,
-“I wonder what they will say when they see Ralph swimming out next
-week. They will be frightened to death. All the Pullens are wonderful
-swimmers. I have seen Anthony Pennell perform feats in the water that
-made my blood run cold! And Ralph is famous for his diving!”
-
-The topic did not appear to interest Elinor. She reverted to the
-subject of Anthony.
-
-“Is that the literary man--the cousin?”
-
-“Yes! Have you not met him?”
-
-“Never!”
-
-“I am sure you would like him! He is such a fine fellow! Not such a
-‘beauty man’ as Ralph, perhaps, but quite as tall and stalwart! His
-last book was a tremendous success!”
-
-“Ralph has never mentioned him to me, though I knew he had a cousin of
-that name!”
-
-“Well!--if you won’t be offended at my saying so--Ralph has always been
-a little jealous of Anthony, at least so Arthur says. He outstripped
-him at school and college, and the feeling had its foundation there.
-And anyone might be jealous of him now! He has shewn himself to be a
-genius!”
-
-“I don’t like geniuses as a rule,” replied Elinor, “they are so
-conceited. I believe that is Bobby Bates sitting out there on the
-breakwater! I will go and see if he is still hungry!”
-
-“Give the poor boy a couple of francs to get himself a breakfast in
-one of the restaurants,” said Margaret, “he will enjoy having a little
-secret from his terrible Mamma!”
-
-She had not been alone long before the nurse came up to her, with the
-perambulator, piled up with toys, but no baby. Margaret’s fears were
-excited at once.
-
-“Nurse! nurse, what is the matter? Where is the baby?” she exclaimed in
-tones of alarm.
-
-“Nothing’s the matter, Ma’am! pray don’t frighten yourself!” replied
-the servant, “it’s only that the young ladies have got baby, and
-they’ve bought her all these toys, and sent me on to tell you that they
-would be here directly!”
-
-The perambulator was filled with expensive playthings useless for an
-infant of six months’ old. Dolls, woolly sheep, fur cats, and gaily
-coloured balls with a huge box of chocolates and caramels, were piled
-one on the top of the other. But Mrs. Pullen’s face expressed nothing
-but annoyance.
-
-“You had no right to let them take her, Nurse--you had no right to let
-the child out of your sight! Go back at once and bring her here to me!
-I am exceedingly annoyed about it!”
-
-“Here are the young ladies, Ma’am, and you had better lay your orders
-on them, yourself, for they wouldn’t mind me,” said the nurse, somewhat
-sullenly.
-
-In another minute Harriet Brandt, and Olga Brimont had reached her
-side, the former panting under the weight of the heavy infant, but with
-her face scarlet with the excitement of having captured her.
-
-“O! Miss Brandt!” cried Margaret, “you have given me such a fright! You
-must never take baby away from her nurse again, please! As I told you
-last night, she is afraid of strangers, and generally cries when they
-try to take her! Come to me, my little one!” she continued, holding out
-her arms to the child, “come to mother and tell her all about it!”
-
-But the baby seemed to take no notice of the fond appeal. It had
-its big eyes fixed upon Miss Brandt’s face with a half-awed,
-half-interested expression.
-
-“O! no! don’t take her away!” said Harriet, eagerly, “she is so good
-with me! I assure you she is not frightened in the least bit, are you,
-my little love?” she added, addressing the infant. “And nurse tells me
-her name is Ethel, so I have ordered them to make her a little gold
-bangle with ‘Ethel’ on it, and she must wear it for my sake, darling
-little creature!”
-
-“But, Miss Brandt, you must not buy such expensive things for her,
-indeed. She is too young to appreciate them, besides I do not like you
-to spend so much money on her!”
-
-“But why shouldn’t I? What am I to do with my money, if I may not spend
-it on others?”
-
-“But, such a quantity of toys! Surely, you have not bought all these
-for my baby!”
-
-“Of course I have! I would have bought the whole shop if it would have
-pleased her! She likes the colours! Little darling! look how earnestly
-she gazes at me with her lovely grey eyes, as if she knew what a little
-beauty I think her! O! you pretty dear! you sweet pink and white baby!”
-
-Mrs. Pullen felt somewhat annoyed as she saw the dolls and furry
-animals which were strewn upon the sands, at the same time she was
-flattered by the admiration exhibited of her little daughter, and the
-endearments lavished upon her. She considered them all well deserved
-(as what mother would not?)--and it struck her that Harriet Brandt must
-be a kindhearted, as well as a generous girl to spend so much money on
-a stranger’s child.
-
-“She certainly does seem wonderfully good with you,” she observed
-presently, “I never knew her so quiet with anybody but her nurse or
-me, before. Isn’t it marvellous, Nurse?”
-
-“It is, Ma’am! Baby do seem to take surprisingly to the young lady!
-And perhaps I might go into the town, as she is so quiet, and get the
-darning-wool for your stockings!”
-
-“O! no! no! We must not let Miss Brandt get tired of holding her. She
-is too heavy to be nursed for long!”
-
-“Indeed, indeed she is not!” cried Harriet, “do let me keep her, Mrs.
-Pullen, whilst nurse goes on her errand. It is the greatest pleasure to
-me to hold her. I should like never to give her up again!”
-
-Margaret smiled.
-
-“Very well, Nurse, since Miss Brandt is so kind, you can go!”
-
-As the servant disappeared, she said to Harriet,
-
-“Mind! you give her to me directly she makes your arm ache! I am more
-used to the little torment than you are.”
-
-“How can you call her by such a name, even in fun? What would I not
-give to have a baby of my very own to do what I liked with? I would
-never part with it, night nor day, I would teach it to love me so much,
-that it should never be happy out of my sight!”
-
-“But that would be cruel, my dear! Your baby might have to part with
-you, as you have had to part with your mother!”
-
-At the mention of her mother, something came into Miss Brandt’s eyes,
-which Margaret could not define. It was not anger, nor sorrow, nor
-remorse. It was a kind of sullen contempt. It was something that made
-Mrs. Pullen resolve not to allude to the subject again. The incident
-made her examine Harriet’s eyes more closely than she had done before.
-They were beautiful in shape and colour, but they did not look like
-the eyes of a young girl. They were deeply, impenetrably black--with
-large pellucid pupils, but there was no sparkle nor brightness in them,
-though they were underlaid by smouldering fires which might burst forth
-into flame at any moment, and which seemed to stir and kindle and then
-go out again, when she spoke of anything that interested her. There was
-an attraction about the girl, which Mrs. Pullen acknowledged, without
-wishing to give in to. She could not keep her eyes off her! She seemed
-to hypnotise her as the snake is said to hypnotise the bird, but it was
-an unpleasant feeling, as if the next moment the smouldering fire would
-burst forth into flame and overwhelm her. But watching her play with,
-and hearing her talk to, her baby, Margaret put the idea away from
-her, and only thought how kindly natured she must be, to take so much
-trouble for another woman’s child. It was not long before Miss Leyton
-found her way back to them, and as her glance fell upon Harriet Brandt
-and the baby, she elevated her eyebrows.
-
-“Where is the nurse?” she demanded curtly.
-
-“She has gone to the shops to see if she can get some darning-wool,
-and Miss Brandt was kind enough to offer to keep baby for her till she
-returns. And O! Elinor, look what beautiful toys Miss Brandt has bought
-her! Isn’t she too kind?”
-
-“Altogether too kind!” responded Elinor. “By the way, Margaret, I found
-our friend and transacted the little business we spoke of! But he says
-his Mamma has ordered him to remain here, till she comes down to see
-him bathe, and dry him, I suppose, with her own hands! And do I not
-descry her fairy feet indenting the sands at this very moment, and
-bearing down in our direction?”
-
-“You could hardly mistake her for anything else!” replied Mrs. Pullen.
-
-In another minute the Baroness was upon them.
-
-“Hullo,” she called out, “you’re just in time to see Gustave bathe!
-He looks lovely in his bathing costume! His legs are as white as your
-baby’s, Mrs. Pullen, and twice as well worth looking at!”
-
-“Mein tear! mein tear!” remonstrated the Baron.
-
-“Don’t be a fool, Gustave! You know it’s the truth! And the loveliest
-feet, Miss Leyton! Smaller than yours, I bet. Where’s that devil,
-Bobby? I’m going to give ’im a dousing for his villainy this morning, I
-can tell you! Once I get ’is ’ead under water, it won’t come up again
-in a hurry! I expect ’e’s pretty ’ungry by this time! But ’e don’t
-get a centime out of me for cakes to-day. I’ll teach ’im not to stuff
-’imself like a pig again. Come, Gustave! ’ere’s a machine for you! Get
-me a chair that I may sit outside it! Now, we’ll ’ave some fun,” she
-added, with a wink at Mrs. Pullen.
-
-“Let us move on to the breakwater!” said Margaret to Elinor Leyton, and
-the whole party got up and walked some little distance off.
-
-“Ah! you don’t hoodwink me!” screamed the Baroness after them. “You’ve
-got glasses with you, and you’re going to ’ave a good squint at
-Gustave’s legs through ’em, I know! You’d better ’ave stayed ’ere, like
-honest women, and said you enjoyed the sight!”
-
-“O! Margaret!” said Miss Leyton, with a look of horror, “if it had
-not been for the _Bataille de Fleurs_ and ... the other thing ... I
-should have said, for goodness’ sake, let us move on to Ostende or
-Blankenburghe, with the least possible delay. That woman will be the
-death of me yet! I’m sure she will!”
-
-Notwithstanding which, they could not help laughing in concert, a
-little later on, to see the unwilling Bobby dragged down by William to
-bathe, and as he emerged from his machine, helpless and half naked, to
-watch his elephantine mother chase him with her stout stick in hand,
-and failing to catch him in time, slip on the wet sand and flounder in
-the waves herself, from which plight, it looked very much as though her
-servant instead of rescuing her, did his best to push her further in,
-before he dragged her, drenched and disordered, on dry land again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-The Baroness Gobelli’s temperament was as inconsistent as her dress.
-Under the garb of jocose good-humour, which often degenerated to
-horse-play, she concealed a jealous and vindictive disposition, which
-would go any lengths, when offended, to revenge itself. She was wont
-to say that she never forgot, nor forgave an injury, and that when she
-had her knife (as she termed it) in a man, she knew how to bide her
-time, but that when the time came, she turned it. These bloodthirsty
-sentiments, coupled with an asseveration which was constantly on her
-lips, that when she willed the death of anyone, he died, and that she
-had powers at her command of which no one was aware but herself,
-frightened many timid and ignorant people into trying to propitiate so
-apparently potent a mortal, and generally kow-towing before her. To
-such votaries, so long as they pleased her, Madame Gobelli was used
-to shew her favour by various gifts of dresses, jewelry, or money,
-according to their circumstances, for in some cases she was lavishly
-generous, but she soon tired of her acquaintances and replaced them by
-fresh favourites.
-
-The hints that she gave forth, regarding herself and her antecedents,
-were too extraordinary to gain credence except from the most ignorant
-of her auditors, but the Baroness always spoke in parables, and left
-no proof of what she meant, to be brought up against her. This proved
-that if she were clever, she was still more cunning. The hints she
-occasionally gave of being descended from Royal blood, though on the
-wrong side of the blanket, and of the connection being acknowledged
-privately, if not publicly, by the existing members of the reigning
-family, were received with open mouths by people of her own class,
-but rejected with scorn by such as were acquainted with those whom
-she affected to know. It was remarkable also, and only another proof
-that, whatever her real birth and antecedents, the Baroness Gobelli
-was unique, that, notwithstanding her desire to be considered noble
-by birth if not by law, she never shirked the fact that the Baron was
-in trade--on the contrary she rather made a boast of it, and used to
-relate stories bringing it into ridicule with the greatest gusto. The
-fact being that Baron Gobelli was the head of a large firm of export
-bootmakers, trading in London under the name of Fantaisie et Cie,
-the boots and shoes of which, though professedly French, were all
-manufactured in Germany, where the firm maintained an enormous factory.
-The Baroness could seldom be in the company of anyone for more than
-five minutes without asking them where they bought their boots and
-shoes, and recommending them to Fantaisie et Cie as the best makers
-in London. She wanted to be first in everything--in popularity, in
-notice, and in conversation--if she could not attract attention by her
-personality, she startled people by her vulgarity--if she could not
-reign supreme by reason of her supposed birth, she would do so by boots
-and shoes, if nothing else--and if anybody slighted her or appeared to
-discredit her statements, he or she was immediately marked down for
-retaliation.
-
-Harriet Brandt had not been many days in Heyst before the Baroness had
-become jealous of the attention which she paid Mrs. Pullen and her
-child. She saw that the girl was attractive, she heard that she was
-rich, and she liked to have pretty and pleasant young people about her
-when at home--they drew men to the house and reflected a sort of credit
-upon herself--and she determined to get Harriet away from Margaret
-Pullen and chain her to her own side instead. The Baroness hated Miss
-Leyton quite as much as Elinor hated her. She was quick of hearing
-and very intuitive--she had caught more than one of the young lady’s
-uncomplimentary remarks upon herself, and had divined still more than
-she had heard. She had observed her sympathy with Bobby also, and that
-she encouraged him in his boyish rebellion. For all these reasons, she
-“had her knife” into Miss Leyton, and was waiting her opportunity to
-turn it. And she foresaw--with the assistance perhaps of the Powers of
-Darkness, of whose acquaintance she was so proud--that she would be
-enabled to take her revenge on Elinor Leyton through Harriet Brandt.
-
-But her first advances to the latter were suavity itself. She was not
-going to frighten the girl by shewing her claws, until she had stroked
-her down the right way with her _pattes de velours_.
-
-She came upon her one morning, as she sat upon the sands, with little
-Ethel in her arms. The nurse was within speaking distance, busy with
-her needlework, and the infant seemed so quiet with Miss Brandt and she
-took such evident pleasure in nursing it, that Mrs. Pullen no longer
-minded leaving them together, and had gone for a stroll with Miss
-Leyton along the Digue. So the Baroness found Harriet, comparatively
-speaking, alone.
-
-“So you’re playing at nursemaid again!” she commenced in her abrupt
-manner. “You seem to have taken a wonderful fancy to that child!”
-
-“She is such a good little creature,” replied Harriet, “she is no
-trouble whatever. She sleeps half the day!”
-
-Miss Brandt had a large box of chocolates beside her, into which she
-continually dipped her hand. Her mouth, too, was stained with the
-delicate sweetmeat--she was always eating, either fruit or bonbons. She
-handed the box now, with a timid air, to the Baroness.
-
-“Do you care for chocolate, Madame?” she asked.
-
-The Baroness did not like to be called “Madame” according to the French
-fashion. She thought it derogated from her dignity. She wished everyone
-to address her as “my lady,” and considered she was cheated out of her
-rights when it was omitted. But she liked chocolate almost as well as
-Harriet did.
-
-“Thank you! I’ll ’ave a few!” she said, grabbing about a dozen in
-her huge hand at the first venture. “What a liking for candies the
-Amurricans seem to ’ave introduced into England! I can remember the
-time when you never saw such a thing as sweets in the palace--I
-don’t think they were allowed--and now they’re all over the place. I
-shouldn’t wonder if Her Majesty hasn’t a box or two in her private
-apartments, and as for the Princesses, well!--”
-
-“The Palace!--Her Majesty!”--echoed Miss Brandt, opening her dark eyes
-very wide.
-
-“As I tell ’em,” continued the Baroness, “they won’t ’ave a tooth left
-amongst the lot of ’em soon! What are you staring at?”
-
-“But--but--do you go to the Queen’s palace?” demanded Harriet,
-incredulously, as well she might.
-
-“Not unless I’m sent for, you may take your oath! I ain’t fond enough
-of ’em for all that; besides, Windsor’s ’orribly damp and don’t suit me
-at all. But you mustn’t go and repeat what I tell you, in the Hotel. It
-might give offence in high places if I was known to talk of it. You see
-there’s some of ’em has never seen me since I married the Baron! Being
-in trade, they thought ’e wasn’t good enough for me! I’ve ’eard that
-when Lady Morton--the dowager Countess, you know--was asked if she ’ad
-seen me lately, she called out loud enough for the whole room to ’ear,
-‘Do you mean the woman that married the boot man? No! I ’aven’t seen
-’er, and I don’t mean to either!’ Ha! ha! ha! But I can afford to laugh
-at all that, my dear!”
-
-“But--I don’t quite understand!” said Harriet Brandt, with a bewildered
-look.
-
-“Why! the Baron deals in shoe-leather! ’Aven’t you ’eard it? I suppose
-we’ve got the largest manufactory in Germany! Covers four acres of
-ground, I give you my word!”
-
-“Shoe-leather!” again ejaculated Harriet Brandt, not knowing what to
-say.
-
-“Why, yes! of course all the aristocracy go in for trade now-a-days!
-It’s the fashion! There’s the Viscountess Gormsby keeps a bonnet-shop,
-and Lord Charles Snowe ’as a bakery, and Lady Harrison ’as an old
-curiosity-shop, and stands about it, dusting tables and chairs, all
-day! But how can you know anything about it, just coming from the West
-Indies, and all those ’orrid blacks! Ain’t you glad to find yourself
-amongst Christians again?”
-
-“This is the first time I ever left Jamaica,” said Miss Brandt, “I was
-born there.”
-
-“But you won’t die there, or I’m much mistaken! You’re too good to be
-wasted on Jamaica! When are you going back to England?”
-
-“Oh! I don’t know! I’ve hardly thought about it yet! Not while Mrs.
-Pullen stays here, though!”
-
-“Why! you’re not tied to ’er apron-string, surely! What’s she to you?”
-
-“She is very kind, and I have no friends!” replied Miss Brandt.
-
-The Baroness burst into a coarse laugh.
-
-“You won’t want for friends, once you shew your face in England, I
-can tell you. I’d like to ’ave you at our ’ouse, the Red ’Ouse, we
-call it. Princess--but there, I mustn’t tell you ’er name or it’ll go
-through the Hotel, and she says things to me that she never means to
-go further--but she said the other day that she preferred the Red ’Ouse
-to Windsor! And for comfort, and cheerfulness, so she may!”
-
-“I suppose it is very beautiful then!” observed Harriet.
-
-“You must judge for yourself,” replied the Baroness, with a broad
-smile, “when you come to London. You’ll be your own mistress there, I
-suppose, and not so tied as you are here! I call it a shame to keep you
-dancing attendance on that brat, when there’s a nurse whose business it
-is to look after ’er!”
-
-“O! but indeed it is my own wish!” said the girl, as she cuddled the
-sleeping baby to her bosom, and laid her lips in a long kiss upon
-its little mouth. “I asked leave to nurse her! She loves me and even
-Nurse cannot get her off to sleep as I can! And it is so beautiful to
-have something to love you, Madame Gobelli! In the Convent I felt so
-cold--so lonely! If ever I took a liking to a girl, we were placed in
-separate rooms! It is what I have longed for--to come out into the
-world and find someone to be a friend, and to love me, only me, and all
-for myself!”
-
-Madame Gobelli laughed again.
-
-“Well! you’ve only got to shew those eyes of yours, to get plenty of
-people to love you, and let you love them in return--that is, if the
-men count in your estimation of what’s beautiful!”
-
-Harriet raised her eyes and looked at the woman who addressed her!
-
-There was the innocence of Ignorance in them as yet, but the slumbering
-fire in their depths proved of what her nature would be capable, when
-it was given the opportunity to shew itself. Hers was a passionate
-temperament, yearning to express itself--panting for the love which it
-had never known--and ready to burst forth like a tree into blossom,
-directly the sun of Desire and Reciprocity shone upon it. The elder
-woman, who had not been without her little experiences in her day,
-recognised the feeling at once, and thought that she would not give a
-fig for the virtue of any man who was subjected to its influence.
-
-“I don’t think that you’ll confine your attentions to babies long!”
-quoth the Baroness, as she encountered that glance.
-
-“How do you know?” said her young companion.
-
-“Ah! it’s enough that I _do_ know, my dear! I ’ave ways and means of
-knowing things that I keep to myself! I ’ave friends about me too, who
-can tell me everything--who can ’elp me, if I choose, to give Life and
-Fortune to one person, and Trouble and Death to another--and woe to
-them that offend me, that’s all!”
-
-But if the Baroness expected to impress Miss Brandt with her hints of
-terror, she was mistaken. Harriet did not seem in the least astonished.
-She had been brought up by old Pete and the servants on her father’s
-plantation to believe in witches, and the evil eye, and “Obeah” and the
-whole cult of Devil worship.
-
-“I know all about that,” she remarked presently, “but you can’t do me
-either good or harm. I want nothing from you and I never shall!”
-
-“Don’t you be too sure of that!” replied Madame Gobelli, nodding her
-head. “I’ve brought young women more luck than enough with their lovers
-before now--yes! and married women into the bargain! If it ’adn’t been
-for me, Lady--there! it nearly slipped out, didn’t it?--but there’s a
-certain Countess who would never ’ave been a widow and married for the
-second time to the man of ’er ’eart, if I ’adn’t ’elped ’er, and she
-knows it too! By the way, ’ow do you like Miss Leyton?”
-
-“Not at all,” replied Harriet, quickly, “she is not a bit like Mrs.
-Pullen--so cold and stiff and disagreeable! She hardly ever speaks to
-me! Is it true that she’s the daughter of a lord, as Madame Lamont
-says, and is it that makes her so proud?”
-
-“She’s the daughter of Lord Walthamstowe, but that’s nothing. They’ve
-got no money. ’Er people live down in the country, quite in a beggarly
-manner. A gal with a fortune of ’er own, would rank ’eads and ’eads
-above ’er in Society. There’s not much thought of beside money,
-nowadays, I can tell you!”
-
-“Why does she stay with Mrs. Pullen then? Are they any relation to each
-other?” demanded Harriet.
-
-“Relation, no! I expect she’s just brought ’er ’ere out of charity, and
-because she couldn’t afford to go to the seaside by ’erself!”
-
-She had been about to announce the projected relationship between
-the two ladies, when a sudden thought struck her. Captain Ralph
-Pullen was expected to arrive in Heyst in a few days--thus much she
-had ascertained through the landlady of the Lion d’Or. She knew by
-repute that he was considered to be one of the handsomest and most
-conceited men in the Limerick Rangers, a corps which was noted for its
-good-looking officers. It might be better for the furtherance of her
-plans against the peace of Miss Leyton’s mind, she thought, to keep her
-engagement to Captain Pullen a secret--at all events, no one could say
-it was her business to make it public. She looked in Harriet Brandt’s
-yearning, passionate eyes, and decided that it would be strange if
-any impressionable young man could be thrown within their influence,
-without having his fidelity a little shaken, especially if affianced to
-such a cold, uninteresting “bit of goods” as Elinor Leyton. Like the
-parrot in the story, though she said nothing, she “thought a deal” and
-inwardly rumbled with half-suppressed laughter, as she pictured the
-discomfiture of the latter young lady, if by any chance she should find
-her _fiancé’s_ attentions transferred from herself to the little West
-Indian.
-
-“You seem amused, Madame!” said Harriet presently.
-
-“I was thinking of you, and all the young men who are doomed to be
-slaughtered by those eyes of yours,” said the Baroness. “You’d make
-mischief enough amongst _my_ friends, I bet, if I ’ad you at the Red
-’Ouse!”
-
-Harriet felt flattered and consciously pleased. She had never received
-a compliment in the Convent--no one had ever hinted that she was
-pretty, and she had had no opportunity of hearing it since.
-
-“Do you think I am handsome then?” she enquired with a heightened
-colour.
-
-“I think you’re a deal worse! I think you’re dangerous!” replied her
-new friend, “and I wouldn’t trust you with the Baron any further than I
-could see you!”
-
-“O! how can you say so?” exclaimed the girl, though she was pleased all
-the same to hear it said.
-
-“I wouldn’t, and that’s the truth! Gustave’s an awful fellow after the
-gals. I ’ave to keep a tight ’old on ’im, I can tell you, and the more
-you keep out of ’is way, the better I shall be pleased! You’ll make a
-grand match some day, if you’re only sharp and keep your eyes open.”
-
-“What do you call a grand match?” asked Harriet, as she let the nurse
-take the sleeping child from her arms without remonstrance.
-
-“Why! a Lord or an Honourable at the very least! since you ’ave
-money of your own. It’s money they’re all after in these times, you
-know--why! we ’ave dooks and markisses marrying all sorts of gals from
-Amurrica--gals whose fathers made their money in oil, or medicine,
-or electricity, or any other dodge, so long as they made it! And why
-shouldn’t you do the same as the Amurrican gals? You have money, I
-know--and a goodish lot, I fancy--” added the Baroness, with her
-cunning eyes fixed upon the girl as if to read her thoughts.
-
-“O! yes!” replied Harriet, “Mr. Trawler, my trustee, said it was too
-much for a young woman to have under her own control, but I don’t know
-anything about the value of money, never having had it to spend before.
-I am to have fifteen hundred pounds every year. Is that a good deal?”
-
-“Quite enough to settle you in life, my dear!” exclaimed the Baroness,
-who immediately thought what a good thing it would be if Miss Brandt
-could be persuaded to sink her capital in the boot trade, “and all
-under your own control too! You are a lucky young woman! I know
-’alf-a-dozen lords,--not to say Princes--who would jump at you!”
-
-“Princes!” cried Harriet, unable to believe her ears.
-
-“Certainly! Not English ones of course, but German, which are quite
-as good after all, for a Prince is a Prince any day! There’s Prince
-Adalbert of Waxsquiemer, and Prince Harold of Muddlesheim, and Prince
-Loris of Taxelmein, and ever so many more, and they’re in and out of
-the Red ’Ouse, twenty times a day! But don’t you be in an ’urry! Don’t
-take the first that offers, Miss Brandt! Pick and choose! Flirt with
-whom you like and ’ave your fun, but wait and look about you a bit
-before you decide!”
-
-The prospect was too dazzling! Harriet Brandt’s magnificent eyes
-were opened to their widest extent--her cheeks flushed with
-expectation--both life and light had flashed into her countenance. Her
-soul was expanding, her nature was awakening--it shone through every
-feature--the Baroness had had no idea she was so beautiful! And the
-hungry, yearning look was more accentuated than before--it seemed as if
-she were on the alert, watching for something, like a panther awaiting
-the advent of its prey. It was a look that women would have shrunk
-from, and men welcomed and eagerly responded to.
-
-“I should like to go and see you when I go to England--very much!” she
-articulated slowly.
-
-“And so you shall, my dear! The Baron and me will be very glad to ’ave
-you on a visit. And you mustn’t let that capital of yours lie idle,
-you know! If it’s in your own ’ands, you must make it yield double to
-what it does now! You consult Gustave! ’E’s a regular business man and
-knows ’ow many beans make five! ’E’ll tell you what’s best to be done
-with it--’e’ll be a good friend to you, and you can trust ’im with
-everything!”
-
-“Thank you!” replied the girl, but she still seemed to be lost in
-a kind of reverie. Her gaze was fixed--her full crimson lips were
-slightly parted--her slender hands kept nervously clasping and
-unclasping each other.
-
-“Well, you are ’andsome and no mistake!” exclaimed the Baroness. “You
-remind me a little of the Duchess of Bewlay before she was married!
-The first wife, I mean--the second is a poor, pale-faced, sandy-’aired
-creature. (’Ow the Dook can stomach ’er after the other, I can’t make
-out!) The first Duchess’s mother was a great flame of my grandfather,
-the Dook of--however, I mustn’t tell you that! It’s a State secret, and
-I might get into trouble at Court! You’d better not say I mentioned it.”
-
-But Harriet Brandt was not in a condition to remember or repeat
-anything. She was lost in a dream of the possibilities of the Future.
-
-The bell for _déjeuner_ roused them at last, and brought them to their
-feet. They resembled each other in one particular ... they were equally
-fond of the pleasures of the table.
-
-The little Baron appeared dutifully to afford his clumsy spouse the
-benefit of his support in climbing the hillocks of shifting sand, which
-lay between them and the hotel, and Miss Brandt sped swiftly on her way
-alone.
-
-“I’ve been ’aving a talk with that gal Brandt,” chuckled the Baroness
-to her husband, “she’s a regular green-’orn and swallows everything
-you tell ’er. I’ve been stuffing ’er up, that she ought to marry a
-Prince, with ’er looks and money, and she quite believes it. But she
-ain’t bad-looking when she colours up, and I expect she’s rather a warm
-customer, and if she takes a fancy to a man, ’e won’t well know ’ow to
-get out of it! And if he tries to, she’ll make the fur fly. Ha! ha! ha!”
-
-“Better leave it alone, better leave it alone!” said the stolid German,
-who had had more than one battle to fight already, on account of his
-wife’s match-making propensities, and considered her quite too clumsy
-an artificer to engage in so delicate a game.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-There was a marked difference observable in the manner of Harriet
-Brandt after her conversation with the Baroness. Hitherto she had been
-shy and somewhat diffident--the seclusion of her conventual life and
-its religious teachings had cast a veil, as it were, between her and
-the outer world, and she had not known how to behave, nor how much she
-might venture to do, on being first cast upon it. But Madame Gobelli’s
-revelations concerning her beauty and her prospects, had torn the veil
-aside, and placed a talisman in her hands, against her secret fear.
-
-She was beautiful and dangerous--she might become a Princess if she
-played her cards well--the knowledge changed the whole face of Nature
-for her. She became assured, confident, and anticipatory. She began
-to frequent the company of the Baroness, and without neglecting her
-first acquaintances, Mrs. Pullen and her baby, spent more time in the
-Gobelli’s private sitting-room than in the balcony, or public salon, a
-fact for which Margaret did not hesitate to declare herself grateful.
-
-“I do not know how it is,” she confided to Elinor Leyton, “I rather
-like the girl, and I would not be unkind to her for all the world, but
-there is something about her that oppresses me. I seem never to have
-quite lost the sensation she gave me the first evening that she came
-here. Her company enervates me--I get neuralgia whenever we have been a
-short time together--and she leaves me in low spirits and more disposed
-to cry than laugh!”
-
-“And no wonder,” said her friend, “considering that she has that
-detestable school-girl habit of hanging upon one’s arm and dragging one
-down almost to the earth! How you have stood it so long, beats me! Such
-a delicate woman as you are too. It proves how selfish Miss Brandt must
-be, not to have seen that she was distressing you!”
-
-“Well! it will take a large amount of expended force to drag Madame
-Gobelli to the ground,” said Margaret, laughing, “so I hope Miss Brandt
-will direct that portion of her attention to her, and leave me only the
-residue. Poor girl! she seems to have had so few people to love, or to
-love her, during her lifetime, that she is glad to practise on anyone
-who will reciprocate her affection. Did you see the Baroness kissing
-her this morning?”
-
-“I saw the Baroness scrubbing her beard against Miss Brandt’s cheek, if
-you call that ‘kissing’?” replied Elinor. “The Baroness never kisses! I
-have noticed her salute poor Bobby in the morning exactly in the same
-manner. I have a curiosity to know if it hurts.”
-
-“Why don’t you try it?” said Margaret.
-
-“No, thank you! I am not so curious as all that! But the Gobellis and
-Miss Brandt have evidently struck up a great friendship. She will be
-the recipient of the Baroness’s cast-off trinkets and laces next!”
-
-“She is too well off for that, Elinor! Madame Lamont told me she has a
-fortune in her own right, of fifteen hundred a year!”
-
-“She will want it all to gild herself with!” said Elinor.
-
-Margaret Pullen looked at Miss Leyton thoughtfully. Did she really mean
-what she said, or did her jealousy of the West Indian heiress render
-her capable of uttering untruths? Surely, she must see that Harriet
-Brandt was handsome--growing handsomer indeed, every day, with the pure
-sea air tinting her cheeks with a delicate flush like the inside of a
-shell--and that her beauty, joined to her money, would render her a
-tempting morsel for the men, and a formidable rival for the women.
-
-“I do not think you would find many people to agree with your opinion,
-Elinor!” she said after a pause, in answer to Miss Leyton’s last remark.
-
-“Well! I think she’s altogether odious,” replied her friend with a toss
-of her head, “I thought it the first time I saw her, and I shall think
-it to the last!”
-
-It was the day that Captain Ralph Pullen was expected to arrive in
-Heyst and the two ladies were preparing to go to the station to meet
-him.
-
-“The Baroness has at all events done you one good turn,” continued Miss
-Leyton, “she has delivered you for a few hours from your ‘Old Man of
-the Sea.’ What have you been doing with yourself all the morning! I
-expected you to meet me on the sands, after I had done bathing!”
-
-“I have not stirred out, Elinor. I am uneasy about baby! She does not
-seem at all well. I have been waiting your return to ask you whether I
-had not better send for a doctor to see her. But I am not sure if there
-is such a thing in Heyst!”
-
-“Sure to be, but don’t send unless it is absolutely necessary. What is
-the matter with her?”
-
-The nurse was sitting by the open window with little Ethel on her lap.
-The infant looked much the same as usual--a little paler perhaps, but
-in a sound sleep and apparently enjoying it.
-
-“She does not seem ill to me,” continued Elinor, “is she in any pain?”
-
-“Not at all, Miss,” said the nurse, “and begging the mistress’s pardon,
-I am sure she is frightening herself without cause. Baby is cutting two
-more teeth, and she feels the heat. That’s all!”
-
-“Why are you frightened, Margaret?” asked Miss Leyton.
-
-“Because her sleep is unnatural, I am sure of it,” replied Mrs. Pullen,
-“she slept all yesterday, and has hardly opened her eyes to-day. It is
-more like torpor than sleep. We can hardly rouse her to take her bottle
-and you know what a lively, restless little creature she has always
-been.”
-
-“But her teeth,” argued Elinor Leyton, “surely her teeth account for
-everything! I know my sister, Lady Armisdale, says that nothing varies
-so quickly as teething children--that they’re at the point of death one
-hour and quite well the next, and she has five, so she ought to know!”
-
-“That’s quite right, Miss,” interposed the nurse, respectfully, “and
-you can hardly expect the dear child to be lively when she’s in pain.
-She has a little fever on her too! If she were awake, she would only be
-fretful! I am sure that the best medicine for her is sleep!”
-
-“You hear what Nurse says, Margaret, but if you are nervous, why
-not send for a doctor to see her! We can ask Madame Lamont as we go
-downstairs who is the best here, and call on him as we go to the
-station, or we can telegraph to Bruges for one, if you think it would
-be better!”
-
-“O! no! no! I will not be foolish! I will try and believe that you
-and Nurse know better than myself. I will wait at all events until
-to-morrow.”
-
-“Where has baby been this morning?”
-
-“She was with Miss Brandt on the sands, Miss!” replied the nurse.
-
-“Since you are so anxious about Ethel, Margaret, I really wonder that
-you should trust her with a stranger like Miss Brandt! Perhaps she let
-the sun beat on her head.”
-
-“O! no, Elinor, Nurse was with them all the time. I would not let Miss
-Brandt or anyone take baby away alone. But she is so good-natured and
-so anxious to have her, that I don’t quite know how to refuse.”
-
-“Perhaps she has been stuffing the child with some of her horrid
-chocolates or caramels. She is gorging them all day long herself!”
-
-“I know my duty too well for that, Miss!” said the nurse resentfully,
-“I wouldn’t have allowed it! The dear baby did not have anything to eat
-at all.”
-
-“Well! you’re both on _her_ side evidently, so I will say no more,”
-concluded Miss Leyton, “At the same time if _I_ had a child, I’d
-sooner trust it to a wild beast than the tender mercies of Miss Brandt.
-But it’s past four o’clock, Margaret! If we are to reach the _entrepôt_
-in time we must be going!”
-
-Mrs. Pullen hastily assumed her hat and mantle, and prepared to
-accompany her friend. They had opened the door, and were about to leave
-the room when a flood of melody suddenly poured into the apartment. It
-proceeded from a room at the other end of the corridor and was produced
-by a mandoline most skilfully played. The silvery notes in rills and
-trills and chords, such as might have been evolved from a fairy harp,
-arrested the attention of both Miss Leyton and Mrs. Pullen. They had
-scarcely expressed their wonder and admiration to each other, at the
-skilful manipulation of the instrument (which evinced such art as
-they had never heard before except in public) when the strings of the
-mandoline were accompanied by a young, fresh contralto voice.
-
-“O! hush! hush!” cried Elinor, with her finger on her lip, as the rich
-mellow strains floated through the corridor, “I don’t think I ever
-heard such a lovely voice before. Whose on earth can it be?”
-
-The words of the song were in Spanish, and the only one they could
-recognise was the refrain of, “Seralie! Seralie!” But the melody was
-wild, pathetic, and passionate, and the singer’s voice was touching
-beyond description.
-
-“Some professional must have arrived at the Hotel,” said Margaret, “I
-am sure that is not the singing of an amateur. But I hope she will not
-practise at night, and keep baby awake!”
-
-Elinor laughed.
-
-“O! you mother!” she said, “I thought you were lamenting just now that
-your ewe lamb slept too much! For my part, I should like to be lulled
-to sleep each night by just such strains as those. Listen, Margaret!
-She has commenced another song. Ah! Gounod’s delicious ‘Ave Maria.’ How
-beautiful!”
-
-“I don’t profess to know much about music,” said Margaret, “but it
-strikes me that the charm of that singing lies more in the voice than
-the actual delivery. Whoever it is, must be very young!”
-
-“Whoever it proceeds from, it is charming,” repeated Elinor. “How Ralph
-would revel in it! Nothing affects him like music. It is the only
-thing which makes me regret my inability to play or sing. But I am
-most curious to learn who the new arrival is. Ah! here is Mademoiselle
-Brimont!” she continued, as she caught sight of Olga Brimont, slowly
-mounting the steep staircase, “Mademoiselle, do you happen to know
-who it is who owns that lovely voice? Mrs. Pullen and I are perfectly
-enchanted with it!”
-
-Olga Brimont coloured a little. She had never got over her shyness of
-the English ladies, particularly of the one who spoke so sharply. But
-she answered at once,
-
-“It is Harriet Brandt! Didn’t you know that she sang?”
-
-Miss Leyton took a step backward. Her face expressed the intensest
-surprise--not to say incredulity.
-
-“Harriet Brandt! Impossible!” she ejaculated.
-
-“Indeed it is she,” repeated Olga, “she always sang the solos in the
-Convent choir. They used to say she had the finest voice in the Island.
-O! yes, it is Harriet, really.”
-
-And she passed on to her own apartment.
-
-“Do _you_ believe it?” said Elinor Leyton, turning almost fiercely upon
-Mrs. Pullen.
-
-“How can I do otherwise,” replied Margaret, “in the face of
-Mademoiselle Brimont’s assertion? But it is strange that we have heard
-nothing of Miss Brandt’s talent before!”
-
-“Has she ever mentioned the fact to you, that she could sing?”
-
-“Never! but there has been no opportunity. There is no instrument here,
-and we have never talked of such a thing! Only fancy her possessing so
-magnificent a voice! What a gift! She might make her fortune by it if
-she needed to do so.”
-
-“Well! she ought to be able to sing with that mouth of hers,” remarked
-Miss Leyton almost bitterly, as she walked into the corridor. She was
-unwilling to accord Harriet Brandt the possession of a single good
-attribute. As the ladies traversed the corridor, they perceived that
-others had been attracted by the singing as well as themselves, and
-most of the bedroom doors were open. Mrs. Montague caught Margaret by
-the sleeve as she passed.
-
-“O! Mrs. Pullen, what a heavenly voice! Whose is it? Fred is just mad
-to know!”
-
-“It’s only that girl Brandt!” replied Elinor roughly, as she tried to
-escape further questioning.
-
-“Miss Brandt! what, the little West Indian! Mrs. Pullen, is Miss Leyton
-jesting?”
-
-“No, indeed, Mrs. Montague! Mademoiselle Brimont was our informant,”
-said Margaret.
-
-But at that moment their attention was diverted by the appearance of
-Harriet Brandt herself. She looked brilliant. In one hand she carried
-her mandoline, a lovely little instrument, of sandal-wood inlaid with
-mother-of-pearl,--her face was flushed with the exertion she had gone
-through, and her abundant hair was somewhat in disorder. Mrs. Montague
-pounced on her at once.
-
-“O! Miss Brandt! you are a sly puss! We have all been
-delighted--enchanted! What do you mean by hiding your light under a
-bushel in this way? Do come in here for a minute and sing us another
-song! Major Montague is in ecstasies over your voice!”
-
-“I can’t stop, I can’t indeed!” replied Miss Brandt, evidently pleased
-with the effect she had produced, “because I am on my way down to dear
-Madame Gobelli. I promised to sing for her this afternoon. I was only
-trying my voice to see if it was fit for anything!”
-
-She smiled at Mrs. Pullen as she spoke and added,
-
-“I hope I have not disturbed the darling baby! I thought she would be
-out this lovely afternoon!”
-
-“O! no! you did not disturb her. We have all been much pleased, and
-surprised to think that you have never told us that you could sing!”
-
-“How could I tell that anyone would care about it?” replied Harriet,
-indifferently, with a shrug of her shoulders. “But the Baron is very
-musical! He has a charming tenor voice. I have promised to accompany
-him! I mustn’t delay any longer! Good afternoon!”
-
-And she flew down the stairs with her mandoline.
-
-“It is all the dear Baroness and the dear Baron now, you perceive,”
-remarked Elinor to Mrs. Pullen, as they walked together to the
-railway-station, “you and the baby are at a discount. Miss Brandt is
-the sort of young lady, I fancy, who will follow her own interests
-wherever they may lead her!”
-
-“You should be the last to complain of her for that, Elinor, since you
-have tried to get rid of her at any cost,” replied her friend.
-
-Captain Ralph Pullen arrived punctually by the train which he had
-appointed, and greeted his sister-in-law and _fiancée_ with marked
-cordiality.
-
-He was certainly a man to be proud of, as far as outward appearance
-went. He was acknowledged, by general consent, to be one of the
-handsomest men in the British Army, and he was fully aware of the
-fact. He was tall and well built, with good features, almost golden
-hair; womanish blue eyes, and a long drooping moustache, which he was
-always caressing with his left hand. He regarded all women with the
-same languishing, tired-to-death glance, as if the attentions shewn
-him by the _beau sexe_ had been altogether too much for him, and the
-most he could do now was to regard them with an indolent, worn-out
-favour, which had had all the excitement, and freshness, and flavour
-taken out of it long before. Most women would have considered his
-method of treatment as savouring little short of insult, but Elinor
-Leyton’s nature did not make extravagant demands upon her lover, and
-so long as he dressed and looked well and paid her the courtesies due
-from a gentleman to a gentlewoman, she was quite satisfied. Margaret,
-on the other hand, had seen through her brother-in-law’s affectations
-from the first, and despised him for them. She thought him foolish,
-vain, and uncompanionable, but she bore with him for Arthur’s sake. She
-would have welcomed his cousin Anthony Pennell, though, with twice the
-fervour.
-
-Ralph was looking remarkably well. His light grey suit of tweed was
-fresh and youthful looking, and the yellow rose in his buttonhole was
-as dainty as if he had just walked out of his Piccadilly club. He was
-quite animated (for him) at the idea of spending a short time in Heyst,
-and actually went the length of informing Elinor that she looked “very
-fit”, and that if it was not so public a place he should kiss her. Miss
-Leyton coloured faintly at the remark, but she turned her head away and
-would not let him see that she was sorry the place was so public.
-
-“Heyst seems to have done you both a lot of good,” Captain Pullen went
-on presently, “I am sure you are fatter, Margaret, than when you were
-in Town. And, by the way, how is the daughter?”
-
-“Not very well, I am sorry to say, Ralph! She is cutting more teeth.
-Elinor and I were consulting whether we should send for a doctor to see
-her, only this afternoon.”
-
-“By the way, I have good news for you, or you will consider it so. Old
-Phillips is coming over to join us next week.”
-
-“Doctor Phillips, my dear old godfather!” exclaimed Margaret, “O! I
-_am_ glad to hear it! He will set baby to rights at once. But who told
-you so, Ralph?”
-
-“The old gentleman himself! I met him coming out of his club the other
-day and told him I was coming over here, and he said he should follow
-suit as soon as ever he could get away, and I was to tell you to get a
-room for him by next Monday!”
-
-“I shall feel quite happy about my baby now,” said Mrs. Pullen, “I
-have not much faith in Belgian doctors. Their pharmacopœia is quite
-different from ours, but Doctor Phillips will see if there is anything
-wrong with her at once!”
-
-“I hope you will not be disappointed with the Hotel visitors, Ralph,”
-said Elinor, “but they are a terrible set of riff-raff. It is
-impossible to make friends with any one of them. They are such dreadful
-people!”
-
-“O! you mustn’t class them all together, Elinor,” interposed Margaret,
-“I am sure the Montagues and the Vieuxtemps are nice enough! And _du
-reste_, there is no occasion for Ralph even to speak to them.”
-
-“Of course not,” said Captain Pullen, “I have come over for the sake
-of your company and Margaret’s, and have no intention of making the
-acquaintance of any strangers. When is the _Bataille de Fleurs_? Next
-week? that’s jolly! Old Phillips will be here by that time, and he and
-Margaret can flirt together, whilst you and I are billing and cooing,
-eh, Elinor?”
-
-“Don’t be vulgar, Ralph,” she answered, “you know how I dislike that
-sort of thing! And we have had so much of it here!”
-
-“What, billing and cooing?” he questioned. But Elinor disdained to make
-any further remark on the subject.
-
-The appearance of Ralph Pullen at the _table d’hôte_ dinner naturally
-excited a good deal of speculation. The English knew that Mrs. Pullen
-expected her brother-in-law to stay with her, but the foreigners
-were all curious to ascertain who the handsome, well-groomed,
-military-looking stranger might be, who was so familiar with Mrs.
-Pullen and her friend. The Baroness was not behind the rest in
-curiosity and admiration. She was much before them in her determination
-to gratify her curiosity and make the acquaintance of the new-comer,
-whose name she guessed, though no introduction had passed between them.
-She waited through two courses to see if Margaret Pullen would take
-the initiative, but finding that she addressed all her conversation to
-Captain Pullen, keeping her face, meanwhile, pertinaciously turned from
-the party sitting opposite to her, she determined to force her hand.
-
-“Mrs. Pullen!” she cried, in her coarse voice, “when are you going to
-introduce me to your handsome friend?”
-
-Margaret coloured uneasily and murmured,
-
-“My brother-in-law, Captain Pullen--Madame Gobelli.”
-
-“Very glad to see you, Captain,” said the Baroness, as Ralph bowed to
-her in his most approved fashion, “your sister thought she’d keep you
-all to ’erself, I suppose! But the young ladies of Heyst would soon
-make mincemeat of Mrs. Pullen if she tried that little game on them. We
-’aven’t got too many good-looking young men ’ereabouts, I can tell you.
-Are you going to stay long?”
-
-Captain Pullen murmured something about “uncertain” and “not being
-quite sure”, whilst the Baroness regarded him full in the face with a
-broad smile on her own. She always had a keen eye for a handsome young
-man!
-
-“Ah! you’ll stay as long as it suits your purpose, won’t you? I expect
-you ’ave your own little game to play, same as most of us! And it’s a
-pretty little game, too, isn’t it, especially when a fellow’s young
-and good-looking and ’as the chink-a-chink, eh?”
-
-“I fancy I know some of your brother officers, Mr. Naggett, and Lord
-Menzies, they belong to the Rangers, don’t they?” continued Madame
-Gobelli, “Prince Adalbert of Waxsquiemer used to bring ’em to the
-Red ’Ouse! By the way I ’aven’t introduced you to my ’usband, Baron
-Gobelli! Gustave, this is Captain Ralph Pullen, the Colonel’s brother,
-you know. You must ’ave a talk with ’im after dinner! You two would
-’it it off first-rate together! Gustave’s in the boot trade, you know,
-Captain Pullen! We trade under the name of Fantaisie et Cie! The best
-boots and shoes in London, and the largest manufactory, I give you my
-word! You should get your boots from us. I know you dandy officers are
-awfully particular about your tootsies. If you’ll come and see me in
-London, I’ll take you over the manufactory, and give you a pair. You’ll
-never buy any others, once you’ve tried ’em!”
-
-Ralph Pullen bowed again, and said he felt certain that Madame was
-right and he looked forward to the fulfilment of her promise with the
-keenest anticipation.
-
-Harriet Brandt meanwhile, sitting almost opposite to the stranger,
-was regarding him from under the thick lashes of her slumbrous eyes,
-like a lynx watching its prey. She had never seen so good-looking and
-aristocratic a young man before. His crisp golden hair and drooping
-moustaches, his fair complexion, blue eyes and chiselled features,
-were a revelation to her. Would the Princes whom Madame Gobelli had
-promised she should meet at her house, be anything like him, she
-wondered--_could_ they be as handsome, as perfectly dressed, as
-fashionable, as completely at their ease, as the man before her? Every
-other moment, she was stealing a veiled glance at him--and Captain
-Pullen was quite aware of the fact. What young man, or woman, is not
-aware when they are being furtively admired? Ralph Pullen was one of
-the most conceited of his sex, which is not saying a little--he was
-_accomblé_ with female attentions wherever he went, yet he was not
-_blasé_ with them, so long as he was not called upon to reciprocate
-in kind. Each time that Harriet’s magnetic gaze sought his face, his
-eyes by some mystical chance were lifted to meet it, and though all
-four lids were modestly dropped again, their owners did not forget the
-effect their encounter had left behind it.
-
-“’Ave you been round Heyst yet, Captain Pullen,” vociferated Madame
-Gobelli, “and met the Procession? I never saw such rubbish in my life.
-I laughed fit to burst myself! A lot of children rigged out in blue and
-white, carrying a doll on a stick, and a crowd of fools following and
-singing ’ymns. Call that Religion? It’s all tommy rot. Don’t you agree
-with me, Mrs. Pullen?”
-
-“I cannot say that I do, Madame! I have been taught to respect every
-religion that is followed with sincerity, whether I agree with its
-doctrine or not. Besides, I thought the procession you allude to a very
-pretty sight. Some of the children with their fair hair and wreaths of
-flowers looked like little angels!”
-
-“O! you’re an ’umbug!” exclaimed the Baroness, “you say that just to
-please these Papists. Not that I wouldn’t just as soon be a Papist as
-a Protestant, but I ’ate cant. I wouldn’t ’ave Bobby ’ere, brought up
-in any religion. Let ’im choose for ’imself when ’e’s a man, I said,
-but no cant, no ’umbug! I ’ad a governess for ’im once, a dirty little
-sneak, who thought she’d get the better of me, so she made the boy
-kneel down each night and say, ‘God bless father and mother and all
-kind friends, and God bless my enemies.’ I came on ’em one evening and
-I ’ad ’im up on his legs in a moment. I won’t ’ave it, Bobby, I said,
-I won’t ’ave you telling lies for anyone, and I made ’im repeat after
-me, ‘God bless father and mother and all kind friends, and d--n my
-enemies.’ The governess was so angry with me, that she gave warning,
-he! he! he! But I ’ad my way, and Bobby ’asn’t said a prayer since,
-’ave you, Bobby?”
-
-“Sometimes, Mamma!” replied the lad in a low voice. Margaret Pullen’s
-kind eyes sought his at once with an encouraging smile.
-
-“Well! you’d better not let me ’ear you, or I’ll give you ‘what for’. I
-’ate ’umbug, don’t you, Captain Pullen?”
-
-“Unreservedly, Madame!” replied Ralph in a stifled voice and with an
-inflamed countenance. He had been trying to conceal his amusement for
-some time past, greatly to the disgust of Miss Leyton, who would have
-had him pass by his opposite neighbour’s remarks in silent contempt,
-and the effort had been rather trying. As he spoke, his eyes sought
-those of Harriet Brandt again, and discovered the sympathy with
-his distress, lurking in them, coupled with a very evident look of
-admiration for himself. He looked at her back again--only one look, but
-it spoke volumes! Captain Pullen had never given such a glance at his
-_fiancée_, nor received one from her! It is problematical if Elinor
-Leyton _could_ make a telegraph of her calm brown eyes--if her soul (if
-indeed she had in that sense a soul at all) ever pierced the bounds
-of its dwelling-place to look through its windows. As the dessert
-appeared, Margaret whispered to her brother-in-law,
-
-“If we do not make our escape now, we may not get rid of her all the
-evening,” at which hint he rose from table, and the trio left the
-_salle à manger_ together. As Margaret descended again, equipped for
-their evening stroll, she perceived Harriet Brandt in the corridor also
-ready, and waiting apparently for her. She took her aside at once.
-
-“I cannot ask you to join us in our walk this evening, Miss Brandt,”
-she said, “because, as it is the first day of my brother’s arrival, we
-shall naturally have many family topics to discuss together!”
-
-For the first time since their acquaintance, she observed a sullen look
-creep over Harriet Brandt’s features.
-
-“I am going to walk with the Baron and Baroness, thank you all the
-same!” she replied to Margaret’s remark, and turning on her heel,
-she re-entered her room. Margaret did not believe her statement, but
-she was glad she had had the courage to warn her--she knew it would
-have greatly annoyed Elinor if the girl she detested had accompanied
-them on that first evening. The walk proved after all to be a very
-ordinary one. They paraded up and down the Digue, until they were tired
-and then they sat down on green chairs and listened to the orchestra
-whilst Ralph smoked his cigarettes. Elinor was looking her best. She
-was pleased and mildly excited--her costume became her--and she was
-presumably enjoying herself, but as far as her joy in Captain Pullen
-went, she might have been walking with her father or her brother. The
-conscious looks that had passed between him and Harriet Brandt were
-utterly wanting.
-
-They began by talking of home, of Elinor’s family, and the last news
-that Margaret had received from Arthur--and then went on to discuss
-the visitors to the Hotel. Miss Leyton waxed loud in her denunciation
-of the Baroness and her familiar vulgarity--she deplored the ill fate
-that had placed them in such close proximity at the _table d’hôte_, and
-hoped that Ralph would not hesitate to change his seat if the annoyance
-became too great. She had warned him, she said, of what he might expect
-by joining them at Heyst.
-
-“My dear girl,” he replied, “pray don’t distress yourself! In the first
-place I know a great deal more about foreign hotels than you do, and
-knew exactly what I might expect to encounter, and in the second, I
-don’t mind it in the least--in fact, I like it, it amuses me, I think
-the Baroness is quite a character, and look forward to cultivating her
-acquaintance with the keenest anticipations.”
-
-“O! _don’t_, Ralph, pray don’t!” exclaimed Miss Leyton, fastidiously,
-“the woman is beneath contempt! I should be exceedingly annoyed if you
-permitted her to get at all intimate with you.”
-
-“Why not, if it amuses him?” demanded Margaret, laughing, “for my part,
-I agree with Ralph, that her very vulgarity makes her most amusing as a
-change, and it is not as if we were likely to be thrown in her way when
-we return to England!”
-
-“She is a _rara avis_,” cried Captain Pullen enthusiastically, “she
-certainly must know some good people if men like Naggett and Menzies
-have been at her house, and yet the way she advertises her boots and
-shoes is too delicious! O! dear yes! I cannot consent to cut the
-Baroness Gobelli! I am half in love with her already!”
-
-Elinor Leyton made a gesture of disgust.
-
-“And you--who are considered to be one of the most select and
-fastidious men in Town,” she said, “I wonder at you!”
-
-Then he made a bad matter worse, by saying,
-
-“By the way, Margaret, who was that beautiful girl who sat on the
-opposite side of the table?”
-
-“The _what_,” exclaimed Elinor Leyton, ungrammatically, as she turned
-round upon the Digue and confronted him.
-
-“He means Miss Brandt!” interposed Margaret, hastily, “many people
-think that she is handsome!”
-
-“No one could think otherwise,” responded Ralph. “Is she Spanish?”
-
-“O! no; her parents were English. She comes from Jamaica!”
-
-“Ah! a drop of Creole blood in her then, I daresay! You never see such
-eyes in an English face!”
-
-“What’s the matter with her eyes?” asked Elinor sharply.
-
-“They’re very large and dark, you know, Elinor!” said Mrs. Pullen,
-observing the cloud which was settling down upon the girl’s face, “but
-it is not everybody who admires dark eyes, or you and I would come off
-badly!”
-
-“Well, with all due deference to you, my fair sister-in-law,” replied
-Ralph, with the stupidity of a selfish man who never knows when he is
-wounding his hearers, “most people give the preference to dark eyes
-in women. Anyway Miss Brandt (if that is her name) is a beauty and no
-mistake!”
-
-“I can’t say that I admire your taste,” said Elinor, “and I sincerely
-hope that Miss Brandt will not force her company upon us whilst you
-are here. Margaret and I have suffered more than enough already in
-that respect! She is only half educated and knows nothing of the
-world, and is altogether a most uninteresting companion. I dislike her
-exceedingly!”
-
-“Ah! don’t forget her singing!” cried Margaret, unwittingly.
-
-“Does she sing?” demanded the Captain.
-
-“Yes! and wonderfully well for an amateur! She plays the mandoline
-also. I think Elinor is a little hard on her! Of course she is very
-young and unformed, but she has only just come out of a convent where
-she has been educated for the last ten years. What can you expect of
-a girl who has never been out in Society? I know that she is very
-good-natured, and has waited on baby as if she had been her servant!”
-
-“Don’t you think we have had about enough of Miss Harriet Brandt?” said
-Elinor, “I want to hear what Ralph thinks of Heyst, or if he advises
-our going on to Ostende. I believe Ostende is much gayer and brighter
-than Heyst!”
-
-“But we must wait now till Doctor Phillips joins us,” interposed
-Margaret.
-
-“He could come after us, if Ralph preferred Ostende or Blankenburghe,”
-said Elinor eagerly.
-
-“My dear ladies,” exclaimed Captain Pullen, “allow me to form an
-opinion of Heyst first, and then we will talk about other places. This
-seems pleasant enough in all conscience to me now!”
-
-“O! you two are bound to think any place pleasant,” laughed Margaret,
-“but I think I must go in to my baby! I do not feel easy to be away
-from her too long, now that she is ailing. But there is no need for you
-to come in, Elinor! It is only just nine o’clock!”
-
-“I would rather accompany you,” replied Miss Leyton, primly.
-
-“No! no! Elinor, stay with me! If you are tired we can sit in the
-balcony. I have seen nothing of you yet!” remonstrated her lover.
-
-She consented to sit in the balcony with him for a few minutes, but she
-would not permit his chair to be placed too close to hers.
-
-“The waiters pass backward and forward,” she said, “and what would they
-think?”
-
-“The deuce take what they think,” replied Captain Pullen, “I haven’t
-seen you for two months, and you keep me at arms’ length as if I should
-poison you! What do you suppose a man is made of?”
-
-“My dear Ralph, you know it is nothing of the kind, but it is quite
-impossible that we can sit side by side like a pair of turtle doves in
-a public Hotel like this!”
-
-“Let us go up to your room then?”
-
-“To my bedroom?” she ejaculated with horror.
-
-“To Margaret’s room then! she won’t be so prudish, I’m sure! Anywhere
-where I can speak to you alone!”
-
-“The nurse will be in Margaret’s room, with little Ethel!”
-
-“Hang it all, then, come for another walk! Let us go away from the
-town, out on those sand hills. I’m sure no one will see us there!”
-
-“Dear Ralph, you must be reasonable! If I were seen walking about Heyst
-alone with you at night, it would be all over the town to-morrow.”
-
-“Let it be! Where’s the harm?”
-
-“But I have kept our engagement most scrupulously secret! No one knows
-anything, but that you are Margaret’s brother-in-law! You don’t know
-how they gossip and chatter in a place like this. I could never consent
-to appear at the public _table d’hôte_ again, if I thought that all
-those vulgarians had been discussing my most private affairs!”
-
-“O! well! just as you choose!” replied Ralph Pullen discontentedly,
-“but I suppose you will not object to _my_ taking another turn along
-the Digue before I go to bed! Here, garçon, bring me a chasse!
-Good-night, then, if you will not stay!”
-
-“It is not that I _will_ not--it is that I _cannot_, Ralph!” said Miss
-Leyton, as she gave him her hand. “Good-night! I hope you will find
-your room comfortable, and if it is fine to-morrow, we will have a nice
-walk in whichever direction you prefer!”
-
-“And much good that will be!” grumbled the young man, as he lighted his
-cigarette and strolled out again upon the Digue.
-
-As he stood for a moment looking out upon the sea, which was one
-mass of silvery ripples, he heard himself called by name. He looked
-up. The Gobellis had a private sitting-room facing the Digue on the
-ground floor, and the Baroness was leaning out of the open window, and
-beckoning to him.
-
-“Won’t you come in and ’ave a whiskey and soda?” she asked. “The Baron
-’as ’is own whiskey ’ere, real Scotch, none of your nasty Belgian
-stuff, ’alf spirits of wine and ’alf varnish! Come along! We’ve got a
-jolly little parlour, and my little friend ’Arriet Brandt shall sing to
-you! Unless you’re off on some lark of your own, eh?”
-
-“No! indeed,” replied Ralph, “I was only wondering what I should do
-with myself for the next hour. Thank you so much! I’ll come with
-pleasure.”
-
-And in another minute he was seated in the company of the Baron and
-Baroness and Harriet Brandt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-The day had heralded in the _Bataille de Fleurs_ and all Heyst was _en
-fête_. The little furnished villas, hired for the season, were all
-built alike, with a balcony, on the ground floor, which was transformed
-into a veritable bower for the occasion. Villa Imperatrice vied with
-Villa Mentone and Villa Sebastien, as to which decoration should be the
-most beautiful and effective, and the result was a long line of arbours
-garlanded with every sort of blossom. From early morning, the occupants
-were busy, entwining their pillars with evergreens, interspersed with
-flags and knots of ribbon, whilst the balustrades were laden with
-growing flowers and the tables inside bore vases of severed blooms.
-One balcony was decorated with corn, poppies and _bluets_, whilst
-the next would display pink roses mixed with the delicate blue of
-the sea-nettle, and the third would be all yellow silk and white
-marguerites. The procession of _charrettes_, and the _Bataille_ itself
-was not to commence till the afternoon, so the visitors crowded the
-sands as usual in the morning, leaving the temporary owners of the
-various villas, to toil for their gratification, during their absence.
-Margaret Pullen felt sad as she sat in the hotel balcony, watching
-the proceedings on each side of her. She had intended her baby’s
-perambulator to take part in the procession of _charrettes_, and had
-ordered a quantity of white field-lilies with which to decorate it.
-It was to be a veritable triumph--so she and Miss Leyton had decided
-between themselves--and she had fondly pictured how lovely little Ethel
-would look with her fluffy yellow hair, lying amongst the blossoms, but
-now baby was too languid and ill to be taken out of doors, and Margaret
-had given all the flowers to the little Montagues, who were trimming
-their mail-cart with them, in their own fashion. As she sat there, with
-a pensive, thoughtful look upon her face, Harriet Brandt, dressed in a
-costume of grass-cloth, with a broad-brimmed hat, nodding with poppies
-and green leaves, that wonderfully became her, on her head, entered the
-balcony with an eager, excited appearance.
-
-“O! Mrs. Pullen! have you seen the Baroness?” she exclaimed. “We are
-going to bathe this morning. Aren’t you coming down to the sands?”
-
-“No! Miss Brandt, not to-day. I am unhappy about my dear baby! I
-am sure you will be sorry to hear that she has been quite ill all
-night--so restless and feverish!”
-
-“O! she’ll be all right directly her teeth come through!” replied
-Harriet indifferently, as her eyes scanned the scene before them.
-“There’s the Baroness! She’s beckoning to me! Good-bye!” and without a
-word of sympathy or comfort, she rushed away to join her friends.
-
-“Like the way of the world!” thought Margaret, as she watched the girl
-skimming over the sands, “but somehow--I didn’t think she would be so
-heartless!”
-
-Miss Leyton and her _fiancé_ had strolled off after breakfast to take a
-walk, and Mrs. Pullen went back to her own room, and sat down quietly
-to needlework. She was becoming very anxious for Doctor Phillips’
-arrival; had even written to England to ask him to hurry it if
-possible--for her infant, though not positively ill, rejected her food
-so often that she was palpably thinner and weaker.
-
-After she had sat there for some time, she took up her field glasses,
-to survey the bathers on the beach. She had often done so before,
-when confined to the hotel--it afforded her amusement to watch their
-faces and antics. On the present occasion, she had no difficulty in
-distinguishing the form of the Baroness Gobelli, looking enormous
-as, clad in a most conspicuous bathing costume, she waddled from her
-machine into the water, loudly calling attention to her appearance,
-from all assembled on the sands, as she went. The Baron, looking little
-less comical, advanced to conduct his spouse down to the water, whilst
-after them flew a slight boyish figure in yellow, with a mane of dark
-hair hanging down her back, which Margaret immediately recognised as
-that of Harriet Brandt.
-
-She was dancing about in the shallow water, shrieking whenever she made
-a false step, and clinging hold of the Baron’s hand, when Margaret
-saw another gentleman come up to them, and join in the ring. She
-turned the glasses upon him and saw to her amazement that it was
-her brother-in-law. Her first feeling was that of annoyance. There
-was nothing extraordinary or improper, in his joining the Baroness’s
-party--men and women bathed promiscuously in Heyst, and no one thought
-anything of it. But that Ralph should voluntarily mix himself up with
-the Gobellis, after Elinor’s particular request that he should keep
-aloof from them, was a much more serious matter. And by the way,
-that reminded her, where was Elinor the while? Margaret could not
-discern her anywhere upon the sands, and wondered if she had also been
-persuaded to bathe. She watched Captain Pullen, evidently trying to
-induce Miss Brandt to venture further into the water, holding out both
-hands for her protection,--she also saw her yield to his persuasion,
-and leaving go of her hold on the Herr Baron, trust herself entirely to
-the stranger’s care. Mrs. Pullen turned from the window with a sigh.
-She hoped there were not going to be any “ructions” between Ralph and
-Elinor--but she would not have liked her to see him at that moment.
-She bestowed a silent benediction, “not loud but deep” on the foreign
-fashion of promiscuous bathing, and walked across the corridor to
-her friend’s room, to see if she had returned to the Hotel. To her
-surprise, she found Miss Leyton dismantled of her walking attire,
-soberly seated at her table, writing letters.
-
-“Why! Elinor,” she said, “I thought you were out with Ralph!”
-
-The young lady was quite composed.
-
-“So I was,” she answered, “until half an hour ago! But as he then
-expressed his determination to bathe, I left him to his own devices
-and came back to write my letters.”
-
-“Would he not have preferred your waiting on the sands till he could
-join you again?”
-
-“I did not ask him! I should think he would hardly care for me to watch
-him whilst bathing, and I am sure I should not consent to do so!”
-
-“But everybody does it here, Elinor, and if you did not care to go down
-to the beach, you might have waited for him on the Digue.”
-
-“My dear Margaret, I am not in the habit of dancing attendance upon
-men. It is their business to come after me! If Ralph is eager for
-another walk after his dip, he can easily call for me here!”
-
-“True! and he can as easily go for his walk with any stray acquaintance
-he may pick up on the sands!”
-
-“O! if he should prefer it, he is welcome to do so,” replied Elinor,
-resuming her scribbling.
-
-“My dear Elinor, I don’t think you quite understand Ralph! He has
-been terribly spoilt, you know, and when men have been accustomed to
-attention they will take it wherever they can get it! He has come over
-here expressly to be with you, so I think you should give him every
-minute of your time. Men are fickle creatures, my dear! It will take
-some time yet to despoil them of the idea that women were made for
-their convenience.”
-
-“I am afraid the man is not born yet for whose convenience I was made!”
-
-“Well! you know the old saying: ‘Most women can catch a man, but it
-takes a clever woman to keep him.’ I don’t mean to insinuate that
-you are in any danger of losing Ralph, but I think he’s quite worth
-keeping, and, I believe, you think so too!”
-
-“And I mean to keep him!” replied Miss Leyton, as she went on writing.
-
-Margaret did not venture to give her any further hints, but returned to
-her own room, and took another look through her spyglass.
-
-The bathers in whom she was interested had returned to their machines
-by this time, and presently emerged, “clothed and in their right
-minds,” Miss Brandt looking more attractive than before, with her long
-hair hanging down her back to dry. And then, that occurred which she
-had been anticipating. Captain Pullen, having taken a survey of the
-beach, and seeing none of his own party there, climbed with Harriet
-Brandt to where they were high and dry above the tide, and threw
-himself down on the hot, loose sand by her side, whilst the Baron and
-Baroness with a laughing injunction to the two young people, to take
-care of themselves, toiled up to the Digue and walked off in another
-direction.
-
-When they all met at _déjeuner_, she attacked her brother-in-law on the
-subject.
-
-“Have you been bathing all this while?” she said to him, “you must have
-stayed very long in the water!”
-
-“O! dear no!” he replied, “I wasn’t in above a quarter of an hour!”
-
-“And what have you been doing since?”
-
-“Strolling about, looking for you and Elinor!” said Captain Pullen.
-“Why the dickens didn’t you come out this lovely morning?”
-
-“I could not leave baby!” cried Margaret shortly.
-
-“And I was writing,” chimed in Elinor.
-
-“Very well, ladies, if you prefer your own company to mine, of course I
-have nothing to say against it! But I suppose you are not going to shut
-yourselves up this afternoon!”
-
-“O! no. It is a public duty to attend the _Bataille de Fleurs_. Have
-you bought any confetti, Ralph?”
-
-“I have! Miss Brandt was good enough to show me where to get them, and
-we are well provided. There is to be a race between lady jockeys at the
-end of the Digue too, I perceive!”
-
-“What, with horses?”
-
-“I conclude so. I see they have railed in a portion of ground for the
-purpose,” replied Captain Pullen.
-
-“’Ow could they race without ’orses?” called out the Baroness.
-
-Harriet Brandt did not join in the conversation, but she was gazing
-all the while at Ralph Pullen--not furtively as she had done the day
-before, but openly, and unabashedly, as though she held a proprietary
-right in him. Margaret noticed her manner at once and interpreted it
-aright, but Miss Leyton, true to her principles, never raised her eyes
-in her direction and ignored everything that came from that side of the
-table.
-
-Mrs. Pullen was annoyed; she knew how angry Elinor would be if she
-intercepted any telegraphic communication between her lover and Miss
-Brandt; and she rose from the table as soon as possible, in order to
-avert such a catastrophe. She had never considered her brother-in-law
-a very warm wooer, and she fancied that his manner towards Miss Leyton
-was more indifferent than usual. She took one turn with them along
-the Digue to admire the flower-bedecked villas, which were in full
-beauty, and then returned to her nursery, glad of an excuse to leave
-them together, and give Elinor a chance of becoming more cordial and
-affectionate to Ralph, than she had yet appeared to be. The lovers had
-not been alone long, however, before they were waylaid, to the intense
-disgust of Elinor, by Harriet Brandt and her friend, Olga Brimont.
-
-Still further to her annoyance, Captain Pullen seemed almost to welcome
-the impertinent interference of the two girls, who could scarcely have
-had the audacity to join their company, unless he had invited them to
-do so.
-
-“The _charrettes_ are just about to start!” exclaimed Harriet. “O!
-they are lovely, and such dear little children! I am so glad that the
-_Bataille de Fleurs_ takes place to-day, because my friend’s brother,
-Alfred Brimont, is coming to take her to Brussels the day after
-to-morrow!”
-
-“Brussels is a jolly place. Mademoiselle Brimont will enjoy
-herself there,” said Ralph. “There are theatres, and balls and
-picture-galleries, and every pleasure that a young lady’s heart can
-desire!”
-
-“Have you been to Brussels?” asked Harriet.
-
-“Yes! when I was a nasty little boy in jacket and trousers. I was
-placed at Mr. Jackson’s English school there, in order that I might
-learn French, but I’m afraid that was the last thing I acquired. The
-Jackson boys were known all over the town for the greatest nuisances in
-it!”
-
-“What did you do?”
-
-“What did we _not_ do? We tore up and down the rue Montagne de la
-Cour at all hours of the day, shouting and screaming and getting into
-scrapes. We ran up bills at the shops which we had no money to pay--we
-appeared at every place of amusement--and we made love to all the
-school-girls, till we had become a terror to the school-mistresses.”
-
-“What naughty boys!” remarked Miss Brandt, with a side glance at Miss
-Leyton. She did not like to say all she thought before this very stiff
-and proper young English lady. “But Captain Pullen,” she continued,
-“where are the confetti? Have you forgotten them? Shall I go and buy
-some more?”
-
-“No! no! my pockets are stuffed with them,” he said, producing two
-bags, of which he handed Harriet one. Her thanks were conveyed by
-throwing a large handful of tiny pieces of blue and white and pink
-paper (which do duty for the more dangerous chalk sugar-plums) at
-him and which covered his tweed suit and sprinkled his fair hair and
-moustaches. He returned the compliment by flying after her retreating
-figure, and liberally showering confetti upon her.
-
-“O! Ralph! I do hope you are not going to engage in this horse-play,”
-exclaimed Elinor Leyton, “because if so I would rather return to the
-Hotel. Surely, we may leave such vulgarities to the common people,
-and--Miss Harriet Brandt!”
-
-“What nonsense!” he replied. “It’s evident you’ve never been in Rome
-during the Carnival! Why, everyone does it! It’s the national custom.
-If you imagine I’m going to stand by, like a British tourist and stare
-at everything, without joining in the fun, you’re very much mistaken!”
-
-“But is it fun?” questioned Miss Leyton.
-
-“To me it is! Here goes!” he cried, as he threw a handful of paper
-into the face of a passing stranger, who gave him as good as she had
-got, in return.
-
-“I call it low--positively vulgar,” said Miss Leyton, “to behave so
-familiarly with people one has never seen before--of whose antecedents
-one knows nothing! I should be very much surprised if the mob behaved
-in such a manner towards me. Oh!”
-
-The exclamation was induced by the action of some young _épicier_, or
-hotel _garçon_, who threw a mass of confetti into her face with such
-violence as almost for the moment to blind her.
-
-“Ha! ha! ha!” roared Ralph Pullen with his healthy British lungs, as he
-saw her outraged feelings depicted in her countenance.
-
-“I thought you’d get it before long!” he said, as she attempted to
-brush the offending paper off her mantle.
-
-“It has not altered my opinion of the indecency of the custom!” she
-replied.
-
-“Never mind!” he returned soothingly. “Here come the _charrettes_.”
-
-They were really a charming sight. On one cart was drawn a boat,
-with little children dressed as fishermen and fisherwomen--another
-represented a harvest-field, with the tiny haymakers and
-reapers--whilst a third was piled with wool to represent snow, on the
-top of which were seated three little girls attired as Esquimaux. The
-mail-carts, and perambulators belonging to the visitors to Heyst were
-also well represented, and beautifully trimmed with flowers. The first
-prize was embowered in lilies and white roses, whilst its tiny inmate
-was seated in state as the Goddess Flora, with a wreath twined in her
-golden curls. The second was taken by a gallant Neapolitan fisherman
-of about four years old, who wheeled a mail cart of pink roses, in
-which sat his little sisters, dressed as angels with large white wings.
-The third was a wheel-barrow hidden in moss and narcissi, on which
-reposed a Sleeping Beauty robed in white tissue, with a coronal of
-forget-me-nots.
-
-Harriet Brandt fell into ecstasies over everything she saw. When
-pleased and surprised, she expressed herself more like a child than a
-young woman, and became extravagant and ungovernable. She tried to kiss
-each baby that took part in the procession, and thrust coins into their
-chubby hands to buy bonbons and confetti with. Captain Pullen thought
-her conduct most natural and unaffected; but Miss Leyton insisted that
-it was all put on for effect. Olga Brimont tried to put in a good word
-for her friend.
-
-“Harriet is very fond of children,” she said, “but she has never seen
-any--there were no children at the Convent under ten years of age, so
-she does not know how to make enough of them when she meets them. She
-wants to kiss every one. Sometimes, I tell her, I think she would like
-to eat them. But she only means to be kind!”
-
-“I am sure of that!” said Captain Pullen.
-
-“But she should be told,” interposed Elinor, “that it is not the custom
-in civilised countries for strangers to kiss every child they meet, any
-more than it is to speak before being introduced, or to bestow their
-company where it is not desired. Miss Brandt has a great deal to learn
-in that respect before she can enter English Society!”
-
-As is often the case when a woman becomes unjust in abusing another,
-Miss Leyton made Captain Pullen say more to cover her discourtesy,
-than, in other circumstances, he would have done.
-
-“Miss Brandt,” he said slowly, “is so beautiful, that she will have
-a great deal forgiven her, that would not be overlooked in a plainer
-woman.”
-
-“That may be _your_ opinion, but it is not mine,” replied Miss Leyton.
-
-Her tone was so acid, that it sent him flying from her side, to battle
-with his confetti against the tribe of Montagues, who fortunately for
-the peace of all parties, joined their forces to theirs, and after some
-time spent on the Digue, they returned, a large party, to the Hotel.
-
-It was not until they had sat down to dinner, that they remembered they
-had never been to see the lady jockey race.
-
-“He! he! he!” laughed Madame Gobelli, “but _I_ did, and you lost
-something, I can tell you! We ’ad great difficulty to get seats, but
-when we did, it was worth it, wasn’t it, Gustave?”
-
-“_You_ said so, mein tear!” replied the Baron, gravely.
-
-“And you _thought_ so, you old rascal! don’t you tell me! _I_ saw
-your wicked eyes glozing at the gals in their breeches and boots!
-There weren’t any ’orses, after all, Captain Pullen, but sixteen gals
-with different-coloured jackets on and top boots and tight white
-breeches--such a sight you never saw! Gustave ’ere did ’ave a treat!
-As for Bobby, when I found we couldn’t get out again, because of the
-crowd, I tied my ’andkerchief over ’is eyes, and made him put ’is ’ead
-in my lap!”
-
-“Dear! dear!” cried Ralph, laughing, “was it as bad as that, Madame?”
-
-“Bad! my dear boy! It was as bad as it could be! It’s a mercy you
-weren’t there, or we shouldn’t ’ave seen you ’ome again so soon! There
-were the sixteen gals, with their tight breeches and their short racing
-jackets, and a fat fellow dressed like a huntsman whipping ’em round
-and round the ring, as if they were so much cattle! You should ’ave
-seen them ’op, when he touched ’em up with the lash of ’is whip. I
-expect they’ve never ’ad such a tingling since the time their mothers
-smacked ’em! There was a little fat one, there! I wish you could ’ave
-seen ’er, when ’e whipped ’er to make ’er ’urry! It was comical! She
-’opped like a kangaroo!”
-
-“And what was the upshot of it all? Who won?” asked Ralph.
-
-“O! I don’t know! I got Gustave out as soon as I could! I wasn’t going
-to let ’im spend the whole afternoon, watching those gals ’opping.
-There were ’is eyes goggling out of ’is ’ead, and his lips licking each
-other, as if ’e was sucking a sugar-stick--”
-
-“Mein tear! mein tear!” interposed the unfortunate Baron.
-
-“You go on with your dinner, Gustave, and leave me alone! _I_ saw you!
-And no more lady jockey races do you attend, whilst we’re in this
-Popish country. They ain’t good for you.”
-
-“I’m very thankful that I have been saved such a dangerous experiment,”
-said Captain Pullen, “though if I thought that you would tie your
-handkerchief over my eyes, and put my head in your lap, Madame, I
-should feel tempted to try it as soon as dinner is over!”
-
-“Go along with you, you bad boy!” chuckled the Baroness, “there’s
-something else to see this evening! They are going to ’ave a procession
-of lanterns as soon as it’s dark!”
-
-“And it is to stop in front of every hotel,” added Harriet, “and the
-landlords are going to distribute bonbons and gâteaux amongst the
-lantern-bearers.”
-
-“O! we must not miss that on any account!” replied Captain Pullen,
-addressing himself to her in reply.
-
-Margaret and Elinor thought, when the time came, that they should be
-able to see the procession of lanterns just as well from the balcony
-as when mingled with the crowd, so they brought their work and books
-down there, and sat with Ralph, drinking coffee and conversing of all
-that had occurred. The Baroness had disappeared, and Harriet Brandt had
-apparently gone with her--a fact for which both ladies were inwardly
-thankful.
-
-Presently, as the dusk fell, the procession of lanterns could be seen
-wending its way from the further end of the Digue. It was a very pretty
-and fantastical sight. The bearers were not only children--many grown
-men and women took part in it, and the devices into which the Chinese
-lanterns had been formed were quaint and clever. Some held a ring
-around them, as milkmaids carry their pails--others held crosses and
-banners designed in tiny lanterns, far above their heads. One, which
-could be seen topping all the rest, was poised like a skipping-rope
-over the bearer’s shoulders, whilst the coloured lanterns swung inside
-it, like a row of bells. The members of the procession shouted, or
-sang, or danced, or walked steadily, as suited their temperaments, and
-came along, a merry crowd, up and down the Digue, stopping at the
-various hotels for largesse in the shape of cakes and sugar-plums.
-
-Ralph Pullen found his eyes wandering more than once in the direction
-of the Baroness’s sitting-room, to see if he could catch a glimpse of
-her or her _protégée_ (as Harriet Brandt seemed to be now universally
-acknowledged to be), but he heard no sound, nor caught a glimpse of
-them, and concluded in consequence that they had left the hotel again.
-
-“Whoever is carrying that skipping-rope of lanterns seems to be in a
-merry mood,” observed Margaret after a while, “for it is jumping up and
-down in the most extravagant manner! She must be dancing! Do look,
-Elinor!”
-
-“I see! I suppose this sort of childish performance amuses a childish
-people, but for my own part, I think once of it is quite enough, and am
-thankful that we are not called upon to admire it in England!”
-
-“O! I think it is rather interesting,” remarked Margaret, “I only wish
-my dear baby had been well enough to enjoy it! How she would have
-screamed and cooed at those bright-coloured lanterns! But when I tried
-to attract her attention to them just now, she only whined to be put
-into her cot again. How thankful I shall be to see dear Doctor Phillips
-to-morrow!”
-
-The procession had reached the front of the Hotel by this time, and
-halted there for refreshment. The waiters, Jules and Phillippe and
-Henri, appeared with plates of dessert and cakes and threw them
-indiscriminately amongst the people. One of the foremost to jump and
-scramble to catch the falling sweetmeats was the girl who carried the
-lantern-skipping rope above her head, and in whom Ralph Pullen, to his
-astonishment, recognised Harriet Brandt. There she was, fantastically
-dressed in a white frock, and a broad yellow sash, with her magnificent
-hair loose and wreathed with scarlet flowers. She looked amazingly
-handsome, like a Bacchante, and her appearance and air of abandon, sent
-the young man’s blood into his face and up to the roots of his fair
-hair.
-
-“Surely!” exclaimed Margaret, “that is never Miss Brandt!”
-
-“Yes! it is,” cried Harriet, “I’m having the most awful fun! Why don’t
-you come too? I’ve danced the whole way up the Digue, and it is so
-warm! I wish the waiters would give us something to drink! I’ve eaten
-so many bonbons I feel quite sick!”
-
-“What will you take, Miss Brandt?” asked Captain Pullen eagerly,
-“_limonade_ or soda water?”
-
-“A _limonade_, please! You _are_ good!” she replied, as he handed her
-the tumbler over the balcony balustrades. “Come along and dance with
-me!”
-
-“I cannot! I am with my sister and Miss Leyton!” he replied.
-
-“O! pray do not let _us_ prevent you,” said Elinor in her coldest
-voice; “Margaret was just going upstairs and I am quite ready to
-accompany her!”
-
-“No, no, Elinor,” whispered Mrs. Pullen with a shake of her head, “stay
-here, and keep Ralph company!”
-
-“But it is nearly ten o’clock,” replied Miss Leyton, consulting her
-watch, “and I have been on my feet all day! and feel quite ready for
-bed. Good-night, Ralph!” she continued, offering him her hand.
-
-“Well! if you two are really going to bed, I shall go too,” said
-Captain Pullen, rising, “for there will be nothing for me to do here
-after you’re gone!”
-
-“Not even to follow the procession?” suggested Miss Leyton, with a
-smile.
-
-“Don’t talk nonsense!” he rejoined crossly. “Am I the sort of man to go
-bobbing up and down the Digue amongst a parcel of children?”
-
-He shook hands with them both, and walked away rather sulkily to his
-own quarter of the hotel. But he did not go to bed. He waited until
-some fifteen minutes had elapsed, and then telling himself that it
-was impossible to sleep at that hour, and that if Elinor chose to
-behave like a bear, it was not his fault, he came downstairs again and
-sauntered out on the sea front.
-
-It was very lonely there at that moment. The procession had turned and
-gone down to the other end again, where its lights and banners could be
-seen, waving about in the still summer air.
-
-“Why shouldn’t the girl jump about and enjoy herself if she chooses,”
-thought Ralph Pullen. “Elinor makes no allowances for condition or age,
-but would have everyone as prim and old-maidish as herself. I declare
-she gets worse each time I see her! A nice sort of wife she will make
-if this kind of thing goes on! But by Jingo! if we are ever married,
-I’ll take her prudery out of her, and make her--what? The woman who
-commences by pursing her mouth up at everything, ends by opening it
-wider than anybody else! There’s twice as much harm in a prude as in
-one of these frank open-hearted girls, whose eyes tell you what they’re
-thinking of, the first time you see them!”
-
-He had been strolling down the Digue as he pondered thus, and now
-found himself meeting the procession again.
-
-“Come and dance with me,” cried Harriet Brandt, who, apparently as
-fresh as ever, was still waving her branch of lanterns to the measure
-of her steps. He took her hand and tried to stop her.
-
-“Haven’t you had about enough of this?” he said, “I’m sure you must be
-tired. Here’s a little boy without a lantern! Give him yours to hold,
-and come for a little walk with me!”
-
-The touch of his cool hand upon her heated palm, seemed to rouse all
-the animal in Harriet Brandt’s blood. Her hand, very slight and lissom,
-clung to his with a force of which he had not thought it capable, and
-he felt it trembling in his clasp.
-
-“Come!” he repeated coaxingly, “you mustn’t dance any more or you will
-overtire yourself! Come with me and get cool and rest!”
-
-She threw her branch of lanterns to the boy beside her impetuously.
-
-“Here!” she cried, “take them! I don’t want them any more! And take me
-away,” she continued to Ralph, but without letting go of his hand. “You
-are right! I want--I want--rest!”
-
-Her slight figure swayed towards him as he led her out of the crowd,
-and across a narrow street, to where the road ran behind all the houses
-and hotels, and was dark and empty and void. The din of the voices, and
-the trampling of feet, and the echo of the songs still reached them,
-but they could see nothing--the world was on the Digue, and they were
-in the dusk and quietude together--and alone.
-
-Ralph felt the slight form beside him lean upon his shoulder till their
-faces almost touched. He threw his arm about her waist. Her hot breath
-fanned his cheek.
-
-“Kiss me!” she murmured in a dreamy voice.
-
-Captain Pullen was not slow to accept the invitation so confidingly
-extended. What Englishman would be? He turned his face to Harriet
-Brandt’s, and her full red lips met his own, in a long-drawn kiss,
-that seemed to sap his vitality. As he raised his head again, he felt
-faint and sick, but quickly recovering himself, he gave her a second
-kiss more passionate, if possible, than the first. Then the following
-whispered conversation ensued between them.
-
-“Do you know,” he commenced, with his head close to hers, “that you are
-the very jolliest little girl that I have ever met!”
-
-“And you--you are the man I have dreamt of, but never seen till now!”
-
-“How is that? Am I so different from the rest of my sex?”
-
-“Very--very different! So strong and brave and beautiful!”
-
-“Dear little girl! And so you really like me?”
-
-“I love you,” said Harriet feverishly, “I loved you the first minute we
-met.”
-
-“And I love you! You’re awfully sweet and pretty, you know!”
-
-“Do you really think so? What would Mrs. Pullen say if she heard you?”
-
-“Mrs. Pullen is not the keeper of my conscience. But she must not hear
-it.”
-
-“O! no! nor Miss Leyton either!”
-
-“Most certainly not Miss Leyton. She is a terrible prude! She would be
-awfully shocked!”
-
-“It must be a secret,--just between you and me!” murmured the girl.
-
-“Just so! A sweet little secret, all our own, and nobody else’s!”
-
-And then the fair head and the dark one came again in juxtaposition,
-and the rest was lost in--Silence!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-
-Doctor Phillips had not been in the Hôtel Lion d’Or five minutes before
-Margaret Pullen took him upstairs to see her baby. She was becoming
-terribly anxious about her. They encountered Captain Ralph Pullen on
-the staircase.
-
-“Hullo! young man, and what have _you_ been doing to yourself?”
-exclaimed the doctor.
-
-He was certainly looking ill. His face was chalky white, and his eyes
-seemed to have lost their brightness and colour.
-
-“Been up racketing late at night?” continued Doctor Phillips. “What is
-Miss Leyton about, not to look after you better?”
-
-“No, indeed, Doctor,” replied the young man with a smile, “I am sure my
-sister-in-law will testify to the good hours I have kept since here.
-But I have a headache this morning--a rather bad one,” he added, with
-his hand to the nape of his neck.
-
-“Perhaps this place doesn’t agree with you--it was always rather famous
-for its smells, if I remember aright! However, I am going to see Miss
-Ethel Pullen now, and when I have finished with her, I will look after
-you!”
-
-“No, thank you, Doctor,” said Ralph laughing, as he descended the
-stairs. “None of your nostrums for me! Keep them for the baby!”
-
-“He is not looking well,” observed Doctor Phillips to Margaret, as they
-walked on together.
-
-“I don’t think he is, now you point it out to me, but I have not
-noticed it before,” replied Margaret. “I am sure he has been living
-quietly enough whilst here!”
-
-The infant was lying as she had now done for several days past--quite
-tranquil and free from pain, but inert and half asleep. The doctor
-raised her eyelids and examined her eyeballs--felt her pulse and
-listened to her heart--but he did not seem to be satisfied.
-
-“What has this child been having?” he asked abruptly.
-
-“Having, Doctor? Why! nothing, of course, but her milk, and I have
-always that from the same cow!”
-
-“No opium--no soothing syrup, nor quackeries of any kind?”
-
-“Certainly not! You know how often you have warned me against anything
-of the sort!”
-
-“And no one has had the charge of her, except you and the nurse here?
-You can both swear she has never been tampered with?”
-
-“O! I think so, certainly, yes! Baby has never been from under the eye
-of one or the other of us. A young lady resident in the hotel--a Miss
-Brandt--has often nursed her and played with her, but one of us has
-always been there at the time.”
-
-“A Miss--what did you say?” demanded the doctor, sharply.
-
-“A Miss Brandt--a very good-natured girl, who is fond of children!”
-
-“Very well then! I will go at once to the pharmacien’s, and get a
-prescription made up for your baby, and I hope that your anxiety may
-soon be relieved!”
-
-“O! thank you, Doctor, so much!” exclaimed Margaret “I knew you would
-do her good, as soon as you saw her!”
-
-But the doctor was not so sure of himself. He turned the case over and
-over in his mind as he walked to the chemist’s shop, wondering how such
-a state of exhaustion and collapse could have been brought about.
-
-The baby had her first dose and the doctor had just time to wash and
-change his travelling suit before they all met at the dinner-table.
-
-Here they found the party opposite augmented by the arrival of Monsieur
-Alfred Brimont, a young Brussels tradesman, who had come over to Heyst
-to conduct his sister home. He was trying to persuade Harriet Brandt to
-accompany Olga and stay a few days with them, but the girl--with a long
-look in the direction of Captain Pullen--shook her head determinedly.
-
-“O! you might come, Harriet, just for a few days,” argued Olga, “now
-that the _Bataille de Fleurs_ is over, there is nothing left to stay
-for in Heyst, and Alfred says that Brussels is such a beautiful place.”
-
-“There are the theatres, and the Parc, and the Quinçonce, and
-Wauxhall!” said young Brimont, persuasively. “Mademoiselle would enjoy
-herself, I have no doubt!”
-
-But Harriet still negatived the proposal.
-
-“Why shouldn’t we make up a party and all go together,” suggested the
-Baroness, “me and the Baron and Bobby and ’Arriet? You would like it
-then, my dear, wouldn’t you?” she said to the girl, “and you really
-should see Brussels before we go ’ome! What do you say, Gustave? We’d
-go to the Hôtel de Saxe, and see everything! It wouldn’t take us more
-than a week or ten days.”
-
-“Do as you like, mein tear,” acquiesced the Baron.
-
-“And why shouldn’t you come with us, Captain?” continued Madame Gobelli
-to Ralph. “You don’t look quite the thing to me! A little change would
-do you good. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy! ’Ave you been
-to Brussels?”
-
-“I lived there for years, Madame, and know every part of it!” he
-replied.
-
-“Come and renew your acquaintance then, and take me and ’Arriet about!!
-The Baron isn’t much good when it comes to sight-seeing, are you,
-Gustave? ’E likes ’is pipe and ’is slippers too well! But you’re young
-and spry! Well! is it a bargain?”
-
-“I really could not decide in such a hurry,” said Ralph, with a glance
-at Margaret and Elinor, “but we might all go on to Brussels perhaps, a
-little later on.”
-
-“I don’t think you must buoy up the hopes of the Baroness and Miss
-Brandt with that idea,” remarked Miss Leyton, coldly, “because I am
-sure that Mrs. Pullen has no intention of doing anything of the sort.
-If you wish to accompany Madame Gobelli’s party, you had better make
-your arrangements without any reference to us!”
-
-“All right! If you prefer it, I will,” he answered in the same
-indifferent tone.
-
-“_Who_ is that young lady sitting opposite, with the dark eyes?”
-demanded Doctor Phillips of Mrs. Pullen.
-
-“The same I spoke to you of, upstairs, as having been kind to
-baby--Miss Harriet Brandt!”
-
-“I knew a Brandt once,” he answered. “Has she anything to do with the
-West Indies?”
-
-“O! yes! she comes from Jamaica! She is an orphan, the daughter of
-Doctor Henry Brandt, and has been educated in the Ursuline Convent
-there! She is a young lady with an independent fortune, and considered
-to be quite a catch in Heyst!”
-
-“And you and Miss Leyton are intimate with her?”
-
-“She has attached herself very much to us since coming here. She has
-few friends, poor girl!”
-
-“Will you introduce me?”
-
-“Miss Brandt, my friend, Doctor Phillips, wishes for an introduction to
-you.”
-
-The usual courtesies passed between them, and then the doctor said,
-
-“I fancy I knew your father, Miss Brandt, when I was quartered in
-Jamaica with the Thirteenth Lances. Did he not live on the top of the
-Hill, on a plantation called Helvetia?”
-
-“That was the name of our place,” replied Harriet, “but I left it when
-I was only eleven. My trustee, Mr. Trawler, lives there now!”
-
-“Ah! Trawler the attorney! I have no doubt he made as much out of the
-property as he could squeeze.”
-
-“Do you mean that he cheated me?” asked Harriet, naïvely.
-
-“God forbid! my dear young lady. But he was a great crony of your
-father’s, and a d--d sharp lawyer, and those sort of gentry generally
-feather their own nest pretty well, in payment of their friendship.”
-
-“He can’t do me any harm now,” said Harriet, “for I have my property in
-my own hands!”
-
-“Quite right! quite right! that is, if you’re a business woman,”
-rejoined the doctor. “And are you travelling all by yourself?”
-
-Harriet was about to answer in the affirmative, when the Baroness took
-the words out of her mouth.
-
-“No, Sir, she ain’t! She came over with her friend, Mademoiselle
-Brimont, and now she’s under my chaperonage. She’s a deal too ’andsome,
-ain’t she? to be travelling about the world alone, with her money-bags
-under her arm. My name’s the Baroness Gobelli,--this is my ’usband,
-Baron Gustave Gobelli, and this is my little boy, Bobby Bates--by my
-first ’usband, you’ll understand--and when you return to London, if you
-like to come and see Miss Brandt at our ’ouse--the Red ’Ouse, ’Olloway,
-we shall be very pleased to see you!”
-
-“I am sure, Madame, you are infinitely kind,” replied Doctor Phillips
-gravely.
-
-“Not at all! You’ll meet no end of swells there, Prince Loris of
-Taxelmein, and Prince Adalbert of Waxsquiemer, and ’eaps of others. But
-all the same we’re in trade, the Baron and I--and we’re not ashamed of
-it either. We make boots and shoes! Our firm is Fantaisie et Cie, of
-Oxford Street, and though I say it, you won’t find better boots and
-shoes in all London than ours. No brown paper soles, and rotten uppers!
-Not a bit of it! It’s all genuine stuff with us. You can take any boot
-out of the shop and rip it to pieces, and prove what I say! The best
-materials, and the best workmen, that’s our principle, and it answers.
-We can’t make ’em fast enough!”
-
-“I have no doubt of it,” again gravely responded the old doctor.
-
-“Ah! you might send some of your patients to us, Doctor, and we’ll pay
-back by recommending you to our friends. Are you a Gout man? Prince
-Adalbert ’as the gout awfully! I’ve rubbed ’is feet with Elliman’s
-Embrocation, by the hour together, but nothing gives ’im relief! Now
-if you could cure ’im your fortune would be made! ’E says it’s all the
-English climate, but _I_ say it’s over-eating, and ’e’d attend more to
-a medical man, if ’e told ’im to diet, than ’e will to me!”
-
-“Doubtless, doubtless!” said the Doctor, in a dreamy manner. He seemed
-to be lost in a reverie, and Margaret had to touch his arm to remind
-him that the meal was concluded.
-
-She wanted him to join the others in a promenade and see the beauties
-of Heyst, but he was strangely eager in declining it.
-
-“No! no! let the youngsters go and enjoy themselves, but I want to
-speak to you, _alone_.”
-
-“My dear doctor, you frighten me! Nothing about baby, I hope!”
-
-“Not at all! Don’t be foolish! But I want to talk to you where we
-cannot be overheard.”
-
-“I think we had better wait till the rest have dispersed then, and go
-down upon the sands. It is almost impossible to be private in a hotel
-like this!”
-
-“All right! Get your hat and we will stroll off together.”
-
-As soon as they were out of earshot, he commenced abruptly,
-
-“It is about that Miss Brandt! You seem pretty intimate with her! You
-must stop it at once. You must have nothing more to do with her.”
-
-Margaret’s eyes opened wide with distress.
-
-“But, Doctor Phillips, for what reason? I don’t see how we could give
-her up now, unless we leave the place.”
-
-“Then leave the place! You mustn’t know her, neither must Miss
-Leyton. She comes of a terrible parentage. No good can ever ensue of
-association with her.”
-
-“You must tell me more than this, Doctor, if you wish me to follow your
-advice!”
-
-“I will tell you all I know myself! Some twelve or thirteen years ago I
-was quartered in medical charge of the Thirteenth Lances, and stationed
-in Jamaica, where I knew of, rather than knew, the father of this girl,
-Henry Brandt. You called him a doctor--he was not worthy of the name.
-He was a scientist perhaps--a murderer certainly!”
-
-“How horrible! Do you really mean it?”
-
-“Listen to me! This man Brandt matriculated in the Swiss hospitals,
-whence he was expelled for having caused the death of more than one
-patient by trying his scientific experiments upon them. The Swiss
-laboratories are renowned for being the foremost in Vivisection and
-other branches of science that gratify the curiosity and harden the
-heart of man more than they confer any lasting benefit on humanity.
-Even there, Henry Brandt’s barbarity was considered to render him
-unfit for association with civilised practitioners, and he was expelled
-with ignominy. Having a private fortune he settled in Jamaica, and set
-up his laboratory there, and I would not shock your ears by detailing
-one hundredth part of the atrocities that were said to take place under
-his supervision, and in company of this man Trawler, whom the girl
-calls her trustee, and who is one of the greatest brutes unhung.”
-
-“Are you not a little prejudiced, dear Doctor?”
-
-“Not at all! If when you have heard all, you still say so, you are not
-the woman I have taken you for. Brandt did not confine his scientific
-investigations to the poor dumb creation. He was known to have decoyed
-natives into his Pandemonium, who were never heard of again, which
-raised, at last, the public feeling so much against him, that I am
-glad to say that his negroes revolted, and after having murdered him
-with appropriate atrocity, set fire to his house and burned it and all
-his property to the ground. Don’t look so shocked! I repeat that I am
-_glad_ to say it, for he richly deserved his fate, and no torture could
-be too severe for one who spent his worthless life in torturing God’s
-helpless animals!”
-
-“And his wife--” commenced Margaret.
-
-“He had no wife! He was never married!”
-
-“Never married! But this girl Harriet Brandt--”
-
-“Has no more right to the name than you have! Henry Brandt was not
-the man to regard the laws, either of God or man. There was no reason
-why he should not have married--for that very cause, I suppose, he
-preferred to live in concubinage.”
-
-“Poor Harriet! Poor child! And her mother, did you know her?”
-
-“Don’t speak to me of her mother. She was not a woman, she was a fiend,
-a fitting match for Henry Brandt! To my mind she was a revolting
-creature. A fat, flabby half-caste, who hardly ever moved out of her
-chair but sat eating all day long, until the power to move had almost
-left her! I can see her now, with her sensual mouth, her greedy eyes,
-her low forehead and half-formed brain, and her lust for blood. It
-was said that the only thing which made her laugh, was to watch the
-dying agonies of the poor creatures her brutal protector slaughtered.
-But she thirsted for blood, she loved the sight and smell of it, she
-would taste it on the tip of her finger when it came in her way. Her
-servants had some story amongst themselves to account for this lust.
-They declared that when her slave mother was pregnant with her, she was
-bitten by a Vampire bat, which are formidable creatures in the West
-Indies, and are said to fan their victims to sleep with their enormous
-wings, whilst they suck their blood. Anyway the slave woman did not
-survive her delivery, and her fellows prophecied that the child would
-grow up to be a murderess. Which doubtless she was in heart, if not in
-deed!”
-
-“What an awful description! And what became of her?”
-
-“She was killed at the same time as Brandt, indeed the natives would
-have killed her in preference to him, had they been obliged to choose,
-for they attributed all the atrocities that went on in the laboratory
-to her influence. They said she was ‘Obeah’ which means diabolical
-witchcraft in their language. And doubtless their unfortunate
-child would have been slaughtered also, had not the overseer of the
-plantation carried her off to his cabin, and afterwards, when the
-disturbance was quelled, to the Convent, where, you say, she has been
-educated.”
-
-“But terrible as all this is, dear Doctor, it is not the poor girl’s
-fault. Why should we give up her acquaintance for that?”
-
-“My dear Margaret, are you so ignorant as not to see that a child
-born under such conditions cannot turn out well? The bastard of a
-man like Henry Brandt, cruel, dastardly, Godless, and a woman like
-her terrible mother, a sensual, self-loving, crafty and bloodthirsty
-half-caste--what do you expect their daughter to become? She may seem
-harmless enough at present, so does the tiger cub as it suckles its
-dam, but that which is bred in her will come out sooner or later, and
-curse those with whom she may be associated. I beg and pray of you,
-Margaret, not to let that girl come near you, or your child, any more.
-There is a curse upon her, and it will affect all within her influence!”
-
-“You have made me feel very uncomfortable, Doctor,” replied Mrs.
-Pullen. “Of course if I had known all this previously, I would not have
-cultivated Miss Brandt’s acquaintance, and now I shall take your advice
-and drop her as soon as possible! There will be no difficulty with Miss
-Leyton, for she has had a strange dislike to the girl ever since we
-met, but she has certainly been very kind to my baby--”
-
-“For Heaven’s sake don’t let her come near your baby any more!” cried
-Doctor Phillips, quickly.
-
-“Certainly I will not, and perhaps it would be as well if we moved on
-to Ostende or Blankenburghe, as we have sometimes talked of doing. It
-would sever the acquaintance in the most effectual way!”
-
-“By all means do so, particularly if the young lady does not go to
-Brussels, as that stout party was proposing at dinner time. What an
-extraordinary person she appears to be! Quite a character!”
-
-“That is just what she is! But, Doctor, there is another thing I should
-like to speak to you about, concerning Miss Brandt, and I am sure I may
-trust you to receive it in the strictest confidence. It is regarding
-my brother-in-law, Ralph Pullen. I am rather afraid, from one or two
-things I have observed, that he likes Miss Brandt--O! I don’t mean
-anything particular, for (as you know) he is engaged to be married to
-Elinor Leyton and I don’t suspect him of wronging her, only--young men
-are rather headstrong you know and fond of their own way, and perhaps
-if you were to speak to Ralph--”
-
-“Tell me plainly, has he been carrying on with this girl?”
-
-“Not in the sense you would take it, Doctor, but he affects her company
-and that of the Gobellis a good deal. Miss Brandt sings beautifully,
-and Ralph loves music, but his action annoys Elinor, I can see that,
-and since you think we should break off the intimacy----”
-
-“I consider it most imperatively necessary, for many reasons, and
-especially in the case of a susceptible young man like Captain Pullen.
-She has money, you say--”
-
-“Fifteen hundred a year, so I am told!”
-
-“And Miss Leyton has nothing, and Ralph only his pay! O! yes! you are
-quite right, such an acquaintanceship is dangerous for him. The sense
-of honour is not so strong now, as it was when I was a boy, and gold
-is a powerful bait with the rising generation. I will take an early
-opportunity of talking to Captain Pullen on the subject.”
-
-“You will not wound his feelings, Doctor, nor betray me?”
-
-“Trust me for doing neither! I shall speak from my own experience, as I
-have done to you. If he will not take my advice, you must get someone
-with more influence to caution him about it. I hardly know how to make
-my meaning clear to you, Margaret, but Miss Brandt is a _dangerous_
-acquaintance, for all of you. We medical men know the consequences
-of heredity, better than outsiders can do. A woman born in such
-circumstances--bred of sensuality, cruelty, and heartlessness--cannot
-in the order of things, be modest, kind, or sympathetic. And
-she probably carries unknown dangers in her train. Whatever her
-fascinations or her position may be, I beg of you to drop her at once
-and for ever!”
-
-“Of course I will, but it seems hard upon her! She has seemed to crave
-so for affection and companionship.”
-
-“As her mother craved for food and blood; as her father craved for
-inflicting needless agony on innocent creatures, and sneered meanwhile
-at their sufferings! I am afraid I should have little faith in Miss
-Brandt craving for anything, except the gratification of her own
-senses!”
-
-They were seated on the lower step of the wooden flight that led from
-the Digue to the sands, so that whilst they could see what went on
-above them, they were concealed from view themselves.
-
-Just then, Harriet Brandt’s beautiful voice, accompanied by the silvery
-strains of the mandoline, was heard to warble Gounod’s “Marguerite”
-from the open window of the Baroness’s sitting-room. Margaret glanced
-up. The apartment was brilliantly lighted--on the table were bottles
-of wine and spirits, with cakes and fruit, and Madame Gobelli’s bulky
-form might be seen leaning over the dishes. She had assembled quite
-a little party there that night. The two Brimonts were present,
-and Captain Pullen’s tall figure was distinctly visible under the
-lamplight. Harriet was seated on the sofa, and her full voice filled
-the atmosphere with melody.
-
-“There’s something like a voice!” remarked the old doctor.
-
-“That is the very girl we have been talking of!” replied Mrs. Pullen.
-“I told you she had a lovely voice, and was an accomplished musician.”
-
-“Is that so?” said Doctor Phillips, “then she is still more dangerous
-than I imagined her to be! Those tones would be enough to drag any man
-down to perdition, especially if accompanied by such a nature as I
-cannot but believe she must have inherited from her progenitors!”
-
-“And see, Doctor, there is Ralph,” continued Margaret, pointing out
-her brother-in-law! “I left him with Miss Leyton. He must have got
-rid of her by some means and crept up to the Gobellis. He cannot go
-for _them_. He is so refined, so fastidious with regard to people in
-general, that a woman like the Baroness must grate upon his feelings
-every time she opens her mouth, and the Baron never opens his at all.
-He can only frequent their company for the sake of Harriet Brandt! I
-have seen it for some time past and it has made me very uneasy.”
-
-“He shall know everything about her to-morrow, and then if he will not
-hear reason--” Doctor Phillips shrugged his shoulders and said no more.
-
-“But surely,” said his companion, “you do not think for a moment that
-Ralph could ever seriously contemplate breaking his engagement with
-Elinor Leyton for the sake of this girl! O! how angry Arthur would be
-if he suspected his brother could be guilty of such a thing--_he_, who
-considers that a man’s word should be his bond!”
-
-“It is impossible to say, Margaret--I should not like to give an
-opinion on the subject. When young men are led away by their passions,
-they lose sight of everything else--and if this girl is anything like
-her mother, she must be an epitome of lust!”
-
-“O! you will speak to Ralph as soon as ever you can,” cried Margaret,
-in a tone of distress. “You will put the matter as strongly before him
-as possible, will you not?”
-
-“You may depend on my doing all I can, Margaret, but as there seems no
-likelihood of my being able to interview the young gentleman to-night,
-suppose you and I go to bed! I feel rather tired after my passage over,
-and you must want to go back to your baby!”
-
-“Doctor,” said Margaret, in a timid voice, as they ascended the hotel
-staircase together, “you don’t think baby _very_ ill, do you?”
-
-“I think she requires a great deal of care, Margaret!”
-
-“But she has always had that!”
-
-“I don’t doubt it, but I can’t deny that there are symptoms about her
-case that I do not understand. She seems to have had all her strength
-drawn out of her. She is in the condition of a child who has been
-exercised and excited and hurried from place to place, far beyond what
-she is able to bear. But it may arise from internal causes. I shall be
-better able to judge to-morrow when my medicine has had its effect.
-Good-night, my dear, and don’t worry. Please God, we will have the
-little one all right again in a couple of days.”
-
-But he only said the words out of compassion. In his own opinion, the
-infant was dying.
-
-Meanwhile, Harriet having finished her songs, was leaning out of the
-window with Ralph Pullen by her side. She wore an open sleeve and as he
-placed his hand upon her bare arm, the girl thrilled from head to foot.
-
-“And so you are determined _not_ to go to Brussels,” he whispered in
-her ear.
-
-“Why should I go? You will not be there! The Baroness wants to stay for
-a week! What would become of me all that time, moping after you?”
-
-“Are you sure that you _would_ mope? Monsieur Brimont is a nice young
-man, and seems quite ready to throw himself at your feet! Would he not
-do as well, _pro tem_?”
-
-Harriet’s only answer was to cast her large eyes upwards to meet his
-own.
-
-“Does that mean, ‘No’?” continued Captain Pullen. “Then how would it
-do, if _I_ joined you there, after a couple of days? Would the Baroness
-be complaisant, do you think, and a little short-sighted, and let us
-go about together, and show each other the sights of the town?”
-
-“O! I’m sure she would!” cried Harriet, all the blood in her body
-flying into her face, “she is so very kind to me! Madame Gobelli!” she
-continued, turning from the window to the light, “Captain Pullen says
-that if you will allow him to show us the lions of Brussels, he will
-come and join us there in a couple of days--”
-
-“If I find I can manage it!” interposed Ralph, cautiously.
-
-“Manage it! Why, of course you can manage it,” said the Baroness.
-“What’s to ’inder a young man like you doing as ’e chooses? You’re not
-tied to your sister’s apron-string, are you? Now mind! we shall ’old
-you to it, for I believe it’s the only thing that will make ’Arriet
-come, and I think a week in Brussels will do us all good! You’re not
-looking well yourself, you know, Captain Pullen! You’re as white as
-ashes this evening, and if I didn’t know you were such a good boy, I
-should say you’d been dissipating a bit lately! He! he! he!”
-
-“The only dissipating I have indulged in, is basking in the sunshine of
-your eyes, Madame!” replied Ralph gallantly.
-
-“That’s a good ’un!” retorted the Baroness, “it is more likely you’ve
-been looking too much in the eyes of my little friend ’ere. You’re a
-couple of foxes, that’s what you are, and I expect it would take all my
-time to be looking after you both! And so I suppose it’s settled, Miss
-’Arriet, and you’ll come with us to Brussels after all!”
-
-“Yes, Madame, if you’ll take charge of me!” said Miss Brandt.
-
-“We’ll do that for a couple of days, and then we’ll give over charge.
-Are we to engage a room for you, Captain, at the Hôtel de Saxe?”
-
-“I had better see after that myself, Madame, as the date of my coming
-is uncertain,” replied Ralph.
-
-“But you _will_ come!” whispered Harriet.
-
-“Need you ask? Would I not run over the whole world, only to find
-myself by your side? Haven’t you taken the taste out of everything else
-for me, Harriet?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
-Doctor Phillips was a man of sixty, and a bachelor. He had never
-made any home ties for himself, and was therefore more interested in
-Margaret Pullen (whose father had been one of his dearest friends) than
-he might otherwise have been. He feared that a heavy trial lay before
-her and he was unwilling to see it aggravated by any misconduct on the
-part of her brother-in-law. He could see that the young man was (to
-say the least of it) not behaving fairly towards his _fiancée_, Elinor
-Leyton, and he was determined to open his eyes to the true state of
-affairs with regard to Harriet Brandt. He spent a sleepless night,
-his last visit to Margaret’s suffering child having strengthened his
-opinion as to her hopeless condition, and he lay awake wondering how
-he should break the news to the poor young mother. He rose with the
-intention of speaking to Ralph without delay, but he found it more
-difficult to get a word with him than he had anticipated. The Gobelli
-party had decided to start with the Brimonts that afternoon, and
-Captain Pullen stuck to them the entire morning, ostensibly to assist
-the Baroness in her preparations for departure, but in reality, as
-anyone could see, to linger by the side of Miss Brandt. Miss Leyton
-perceived her lover’s defalcation as plainly as the rest, but she was
-too proud to make a hint upon the subject, even to Margaret Pullen. She
-sat alone in the balcony, reading a book, and gave no sign of annoyance
-or discomfiture. But a close observer might have seen the trembling of
-her lip when she attempted to speak, and the fixed, white look upon her
-face, which betrayed her inward anxiety. It made Margaret’s kind heart
-ache to see her, and Dr. Phillips more indignant with Ralph Pullen than
-before.
-
-The party for Brussels had arranged to travel by the three o’clock
-train, and at the appointed time the doctor was ready in the balcony
-to accompany them to the _entrepôt_. There were no cabs in Heyst, the
-station being in the town. Luggage was conveyed backwards and forwards
-in hand carts drawn by the porters, and travellers invariably walked
-to their destination. The Baroness appeared dressed for her journey,
-in an amazing gown of blue velvet, trimmed with rare Maltese lace,
-with a heavy mantle over it, and a small hat on her head, which made
-her round, flat, unmeaning face, look coarser than before. She used
-the Herr Baron as a walking-stick as usual, whilst Harriet Brandt, in
-a white frock and large hat shading her glowing eyes under a scarlet
-parasol, looked like a tropical bird skimming by her side, with Captain
-Pullen in close attendance, carrying a flimsy wrap in case she
-should require it before she reached her journey’s end. The Brimonts,
-following in the rear, were of no account beside their more brilliant
-and important friends.
-
-Ralph Pullen did not look pleased when he saw Doctor Phillips join the
-party.
-
-“Are you also going to the _entrepôt_?” he exclaimed, “what can you
-find to interest you there?--a dirty little smutty place! I am going
-just to help the ladies over the line, as there is no bridge for
-crossing.”
-
-“Perhaps I am bent on the same errand,” replied the doctor, “do you
-give me credit for less gallantry than yourself, Pullen?”
-
-“That’s right, Doctor,” said the Baroness, “and I’ve no doubt you’ll be
-very useful! My Bobby ain’t any manner of good, and the Baron ’as so
-many traps to carry that ’e ’asn’t got an arm to spare. I only wish you
-were coming with us! Why don’t you make up your mind to come over with
-Captain Pullen the day after to-morrow, and ’ave a little ’oliday?”
-
-“I was not aware that Captain Pullen _was_ going to Brussels, madame! I
-fancy he will have to get Miss Leyton’s consent first!”
-
-At the mention of Miss Leyton’s name in connection with himself, Ralph
-Pullen flushed uneasily, and Harriet Brandt turned a look of startled
-enquiry upon the speaker.
-
-“O! ’ang Miss Leyton!” retorted the Baroness, graphically, “she surely
-wouldn’t stop Captain Pullen’s fun, just because ’e’s staying with ’is
-sister-in-law! I should call that very ’ard. You can’t always tie a
-young man to ’is relations’ apron-strings, Doctor!”
-
-“Not always, madame!” he replied, and dropped the subject.
-
-“You wouldn’t let Miss Leyton or Mrs. Pullen keep you from me!”
-whispered Harriet, to her cavalier.
-
-“Never!” he answered emphatically.
-
-They had reached the little station by this time, and the porters
-were calling out vociferously that the train was about to start
-for Brussels, so that in the hurry of procuring their tickets, and
-conveying the ladies and the luggage across the cinder-besprinkled
-line, to where the train stood puffing to be off, there was no more
-time to exchange sentimentalities, or excite suspicion. The party
-being safely stowed away in their carriage, Ralph Pullen and Doctor
-Phillips stood on the wooden platform with their hats off, bowing their
-farewells.
-
-“Mind you don’t put off your coming after Thursday!” screamed the
-Baroness to Ralph, as she filled up the entire window with her bulky
-person, “we shall expect you by dinner-time! And I shall bespeak a
-room for you, whether you will or no! ’Arriet ’ere will break ’er
-’eart if you don’t turn up, and I don’t want the responsibility of ’er
-committing suicide on my ’ands!”
-
-“All right! all right!” responded Ralph, pretending to turn it off as a
-joke, “None of you shall do that on my account, I promise you!”
-
-“O! well! I ’ope you’re going to keep your word, or we shall come back
-to ’Eyst in double quick time. Good-bye! Good-bye!” and kissing her fat
-hand to the two gentlemen, the Baroness was whisked out of Heyst.
-
-Ralph looked longingly after the departing line of carriages for a
-minute, and then crossed the line again to the road beyond.
-
-Doctor Phillips did not say a word till they were well clear of the
-station, and then he commenced,
-
-“Of course you’re not in earnest about following these people to
-Brussels.”
-
-“Why should I not be? I knew Brussels well as a lad, and I should enjoy
-renewing my acquaintance with the old town.”
-
-“In proper company perhaps, but you can hardly call that party a fit
-one for you to associate with!”
-
-“You’re alluding to the Baron and Baroness being in trade. Well! as
-a rule I confess that I do not care to associate intimately with
-bootmakers and their friends, but one does things abroad that one
-would not dream of doing in England. And for all her vulgarity, Madame
-Gobelli is very good-natured and generous, and I really don’t see that
-I lower my dignity by being on friendly terms with her whilst here!”
-
-“I was not alluding to Madame Gobelli, though I do not think that
-either she or the Brimonts are fit companions for a man who belongs
-to the Limerick Rangers, or is engaged to marry the daughter of Lord
-Walthamstowe. Neither do I admire the spirit which would induce you
-to hobnob with them in Heyst, when you would cut them in Bond Street.
-But as far as I know the Baron and his wife are harmless. It is Miss
-Harriet Brandt that I would caution you against!”
-
-A quick resentment appeared on Ralph Pullen’s features. His eyes
-darkened, and an ominous wrinkle stood out on his brow.
-
-“And what may you have to say of Miss Brandt?” he demanded, coldly.
-
-“A great deal more than you know, or can possibly imagine! She is not a
-fit person for Elinor Leyton to associate with, and consequently, one
-whom it is your duty to avoid, instead of cultivating.”
-
-“I think you exceed _your_ duty, Doctor, in speaking to me thus!”
-
-“I am sorry you should think so, Pullen, but your anger will not deter
-me from telling you what is in my mind. You must not forget how old a
-friend I am of both sides of your family. Your brother Arthur is one
-of my greatest chums, and his wife’s father was, without exception,
-my dearest friend--added to this, I am on intimate terms with the
-Walthamstowes. Knowing what I do, therefore, I should hold myself
-criminal if I left you in ignorance of the truth concerning this young
-woman.”
-
-“Are you alluding, may I ask, to Miss Brandt?”
-
-“I am alluding to the girl who calls herself by that name, but who is
-in reality only the bastard daughter of Henry Brandt, one of the most
-infamous men whom God ever permitted to desecrate this earth, and his
-half-caste mistress.”
-
-“Be careful what you say, Doctor Phillips!” said Ralph Pullen, with
-ill-suppressed wrath gleaming in his blue eyes.
-
-“There is no need to be, my dear fellow, I can verify everything I
-say, and I fear no man’s resentment. I was stationed in Jamaica with
-my regiment, some fifteen years ago, when this girl was a child of six
-years old, running half naked about her father’s plantation, uncared
-for by either parent, and associating solely with the negro servants.
-Brandt was a brute--the perpetrator of such atrocities in vivisection
-and other scientific experiments, that he was finally slaughtered on
-his own plantation by his servants, and everyone said it served him
-right. The mother was the most awful woman I have ever seen, and my
-experience of the sex in back slums and alleys has not been small.
-She was the daughter of a certain Judge Carey of Barbadoes by one of
-his slave girls, and Brandt took her as his mistress before she was
-fourteen. At thirty, when I saw her, she was a revolting spectacle.
-Gluttonous and obese--her large eyes rolling and her sensual lips
-protruding as if she were always licking them in anticipation of her
-prey. She was said to be ‘Obeah’ too by the natives and they ascribed
-all the deaths and diseases that took place on the plantation, to her
-malign influence. Consequently, when they got her in their clutches,
-I have heard that they did not spare her, but killed her in the most
-torturing fashion they could devise.”
-
-“And did the British Government take no notice of the massacre?”
-
-“There was an enquiry, of course, but the actual perpetrator of the
-murders could not be traced, and so the matter died out. The hatred
-and suspicion in which Brandt had been held for some time, had a great
-effect upon the verdict, for in addition to his terrible experiments
-upon animals--experiments which he performed simply for his own
-gratification and for no use that he made of them in treating his
-fellow creatures--he had been known to decoy diseased and old natives
-into his laboratory, after which they were never seen again, and it was
-the digging up of human bones on the plantation, which finally roused
-the negroes to such a pitch of indignation that they rose _en masse_,
-and after murdering both Brandt and his abominable mistress, they set
-fire to the house and burned it to the ground. There is no doubt but
-that, if the overseer of the plantation, an African negro named Pete,
-had not carried off the little girl, she would have shared the fate of
-her parents. And who can say if it would not have been as well if she
-had!”
-
-“I really cannot see what right you have to give vent to such a
-sentiment!” exclaimed Captain Pullen. “What has this terrible story got
-to do with Miss Brandt?”
-
-“Everything! ‘When the cat is black, the kitten is black too!’ It’s the
-law of Nature!”
-
-“I don’t believe it! Miss Brandt bears no trace in feature or character
-of the parentage you ascribe to her!”
-
-“Does she not? Your assertion only proves your ignorance of character,
-or characteristics. The girl is a quadroon, and she shews it distinctly
-in her long-shaped eyes with their blue whites and her wide mouth and
-blood-red lips! Also in her supple figure and apparently boneless
-hands and feet. Of her personal character, I have naturally had no
-opportunity of judging, but I can tell you by the way she eats her
-food, and the way in which she uses her eyes, that she has inherited
-her half-caste mother’s greedy and sensual disposition. And in ten
-years’ time she will in all probability have no figure at all! She will
-run to fat. I could tell that also at a glance!”
-
-“And have you any more compliments to pay the young lady?” enquired
-Captain Pullen, sarcastically.
-
-“I have this still to say, Pullen--that she is a woman whom you
-must never introduce to your wife, and that it is your bounden duty
-to separate her, as soon as possible, from your _fiancée_ and your
-sister-in-law!”
-
-“And what if I refuse to interfere in a matter which, as far as I can
-see, concerns no one but Miss Brandt herself?”
-
-“In that case, I regret to say that I shall feel it _my_ duty, to
-inform your brother Colonel Pullen and your future father-in-law, Lord
-Walthamstowe of what I have told you! Come, my dear boy, be reasonable!
-This girl has attracted you, I suppose! We are all subject to a woman’s
-influence at times, but you must not let it go further. You must break
-it off, and this is an excellent opportunity to do so! Your sister’s
-infant is, I fear, seriously ill. Take your party on to Ostende, and
-send the Baroness a polite note to say that you are prevented from
-going to Brussels, and all will be right! You will take my advice--will
-you not?”
-
-“No! I’ll be hanged if I will,” exclaimed the young man, “I am not a
-boy to be ordered here and there, as if I were not fit to take care
-of myself. I’ve pledged my word to go to Brussels and to Brussels I
-shall go. If Miss Leyton doesn’t like it, she must do the other thing!
-She does not shew me such a superfluity of affection as to prevent the
-necessity of my seeking for sympathy and friendship elsewhere.”
-
-“I am sorry to hear you speak like that, Pullen. It does not augur well
-for the happiness of your married life!”
-
-“I have thought more than once lately, that I shall not be married at
-all--that is to Miss Leyton!”
-
-“No! no! don’t say so. It is only a passing infidelity, engendered by
-the attraction of this other girl. Consider what your brother would
-say, and what Lord Walthamstowe would think, if you committed the
-great mistake at this late hour, of breaking off your engagement!”
-
-“I cannot see why my brother’s opinion, or Lord Walthamstowe’s
-thoughts, should interfere with the happiness of my whole life,”
-rejoined Ralph, sullenly. “However, let that pass! The question on the
-_tapis_ is, my acquaintance with Miss Brandt, which you consider should
-be put a stop to. For what reason? If what you bring against her is
-true, it appears to me that she has all the more need of the protection
-and loyalty of her friends. It would be cowardly to desert a girl, just
-because her father and mother happened to be brutes. It is not _her_
-fault!”
-
-“I quite allow that! Neither is it the fault of a madman that his
-progenitors had lunacy in their blood, nor of a consumptive, that his
-were strumous. All the same the facts affect their lives and the lives
-of those with whom they come in contact. It is the curse of heredity!”
-
-“Well! and if so, how can it concern anyone but the poor child herself?”
-
-“O! yes, it can and it will! And if I am not greatly mistaken, Harriet
-Brandt carries a worse curse with her even than that! She possesses
-the fatal attributes of the Vampire that affected her mother’s
-birth--that endued her with the thirst for blood, which characterised
-her life--that will make Harriet draw upon the health and strength of
-all with whom she may be intimately associated--that may render her
-love fatal to such as she may cling to! I must tell you, Pullen, that
-I fear we have already proofs of this in the illness of your little
-niece, whom, her mother tells me, was at one time scarcely ever out of
-Miss Brandt’s arms. I have no other means of accounting for her sudden
-failure of strength and vitality. You need not stare at me, as if you
-thought I do not know what I am talking about! There are many cases
-like it in the world. Cases of persons who actually feed upon the lives
-of others, as the deadly upas tree sucks the life of its victim, by
-lulling him into a sleep from which he never wakens!”
-
-“Phillips, you must be mad! Do you know that you are accusing Miss
-Brandt of murder--of killing the child to whom she never shewed
-anything but the greatest kindness. Why! I have known her carry little
-Ethel about the sands for a whole afternoon.”
-
-“All the worse for poor little Ethel! I do not say she does harm
-intentionally or even consciously, but that the deadly attributes of
-her bloodthirsty parents have descended on her in this respect, I have
-not a shadow of doubt! If you watch that young woman’s career through
-life, you will see that those she apparently cares for most, and clings
-to most, will soonest fade out of existence, whilst she continues to
-live all the stronger that her victims die!”
-
-“Rubbish! I don’t believe it!” replied Ralph sturdily. “You medical
-men generally have some crotchet in your brains, but this is the most
-wonderful bee that ever buzzed in a bonnet! And all I can say is, that
-I should be quite willing to try the experiment!”
-
-“You _have_ tried it, Pullen, in a mild form, and it has had its effect
-on you! You are not the same fellow who came over to Heyst, though by
-all rules, you should be looking better and stronger for the change.
-And Margaret has already complained to me of the strange effect this
-girl has had upon her! But you must not breathe a suspicion to her
-concerning the child’s illness, or I verily believe she would murder
-Miss Brandt!”
-
-“Putting all this nonsense aside,” said Ralph, “do you consider
-Margaret’s baby to be seriously ill?”
-
-“Very seriously. My medicines have not had the slightest effect upon
-her condition, which is inexplicable. Her little life is being slowly
-sapped. She may cease to breathe at any moment. But I have not yet had
-the courage to tell your sister the truth!”
-
-“How disappointed poor Arthur will be!”
-
-“Yes! but his grief will be nothing to the mother’s. She is quite
-devoted to her child!”
-
-By mutual consent, they had dropped the subject of Harriet Brandt, and
-now spoke only of family affairs. Ralph was a kind-hearted fellow under
-all his conceit, and felt very grave at the prospect held out in regard
-to his baby niece.
-
-The fulfilment of the prophecy came sooner than even Doctor
-Phillips had anticipated. As they were all sitting at dinner that
-evening, Madame Lamont, her eyes over-brimming with tears, rushed
-unceremoniously into the _salle à manger_, calling to Margaret.
-
-“Madame! Madame! please come up to your room at once! The dear baby is
-worse!”
-
-Margaret threw one agonised glance at Doctor Phillips and rushed from
-the room, followed by himself and Elinor Leyton. The high staircase
-seemed interminable--more than once Margaret’s legs failed under her
-and she thought she should never reach the top. But she did so all too
-soon. On the bed was laid the infant form, limp and lifeless, and
-Martin the nurse met them at the door, bathed in tears.
-
-“Oh! Ma’am!” she cried, “it happened all of a minute! She was lying on
-my lap, pretty dear, just as usual, when she went off in a convulsion
-and died.”
-
-“Died, died!” echoed Margaret in a bewildered voice, “Doctor Phillips!
-_who_ is it that has died?”
-
-“The baby, Ma’am, the dear baby! She went off like a lamb, without a
-struggle! O! dear mistress, do try to bear it!”
-
-“Is my baby--_dead_?” said Margaret in the same dazed voice, turning to
-the doctor who had already satisfied himself that the tiny heart and
-pulse had ceased to beat.
-
-“No! my dear child, she is not dead--she is living--with God! Try to
-think of her as quite happy and free from this world’s ill.”
-
-“O! but I _wanted_ her so--I _wanted_ her,” exclaimed the bereaved
-mother, as she clasped the senseless form in her arms, “O! baby! baby!
-why did you go, before you had seen your father?”
-
-And then she slid, rather than sank, from the bedside, in a tumbled
-heap upon the floor.
-
-“It is better so--it will help her through it,” said Doctor Phillips,
-as he directed the nurse to carry the dead child into Elinor Leyton’s
-room, and placed Margaret on her own bed. “You will not object, Miss
-Leyton, I am sure, and you must not leave Mrs. Pullen to-night!”
-
-“Of course I shall not,” replied Elinor; “I have been afraid for days
-past that this would happen, but poor Margaret would not take any
-hints.”
-
-She spoke sympathetically, but there were no tears in her eyes, and she
-did not caress, nor attempt to console her friend. She did all that was
-required of her, but there was no spontaneous suggestion on her part,
-with regard either to the mother, or the dead child, and as Doctor
-Phillips noted her coolness, he did not wonder so much at Ralph’s being
-attracted by the fervour and warmth of Harriet Brandt.
-
-As soon as poor Margaret had revived and had her cry out, he
-administered a sleeping draught to her, and leaving her in charge of
-Elinor Leyton, he went downstairs again to consult Captain Pullen as to
-what would be the best thing for them to do.
-
-Ralph was very much shocked to hear of the baby’s sudden death, and
-eager to do all in his power for his brother’s wife. There was no
-Protestant cemetery in Heyst, and Doctor Phillips proposed that they
-should at once order a little shell, and convey the child’s body either
-to Ostende or England, as Margaret might desire, for burial. The sooner
-she left the place where she had lost her child, he said, the better,
-and his idea was that she would wish the body to be taken to Devonshire
-and buried in the quiet country churchyard, where her husband’s father
-and mother were laid to sleep. He left Ralph to telegraph to his
-brother in India and to anyone the news might concern in England--also
-to settle all hotel claims and give notice to the Lamonts that they
-would leave on the morrow.
-
-“But supposing Margaret should object,” suggested Ralph.
-
-“She will not object!” replied the Doctor, “she might if we were not
-taking the child’s body with us, but as it is, she will be grateful to
-be thought, and acted, for. She is a true woman, God bless her! I only
-wish He had not seen fit to bring this heavy trial on her head!”
-
-Not a word was exchanged between the two men about Harriet Brandt.
-Ralph, remembering the hint the doctor had thrown out respecting her
-being the ultimate cause of the baby’s illness, did not like to bring
-up her name again--felt rather guilty with respect to it, indeed--and
-Doctor Phillips was only too glad to see the young man bestirring
-himself to be useful, and losing sight of his own worry in the trouble
-of his sister-in-law. Of course he could not have refused, or even
-demurred, at accompanying his party to England on so mournful an
-errand--and to do him justice, he did not wish it to be otherwise.
-Brussels, and its anticipated pleasures, had been driven clean out
-of his head by the little tragedy that had occurred in Heyst, and
-his attitude towards Margaret when they met again, was so quietly
-affectionate and brotherly that he was of infinite comfort to her. She
-quite acquiesced in Doctor Phillips’ decision that her child should be
-buried with her father’s family, and the mournful group with the little
-coffin in their midst, set out without delay for Devonshire.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-
-Harriet Brandt set off for Brussels in the best of spirits. Captain
-Pullen had pledged himself to follow her in a couple of days, and had
-sketched with a free hand the pleasure they would mutually enjoy in
-each other’s company, without the fear of Mrs. Pullen, or Miss Leyton,
-popping on them round the corner. Madame Gobelli also much flattered
-her vanity by speaking of Ralph as if he were her confessed lover, and
-prospective _fiancé_, so that, what with the new scenes she was passing
-through, and her anticipated good fortune, Harriet was half delirious
-with delight, and looked as “handsome as paint” in consequence.
-
-Olga Brimont, on the contrary, although quietly happy in the prospect
-of keeping house for her brother, did not share in the transports
-of her Convent companion. Alfred Brimont, observed, more than once,
-that she seemed to visibly shrink from Miss Brandt, and took an early
-opportunity of asking her the reason why. But all her answer was
-conveyed in a shrug of the shoulders, and a request that he would not
-leave her at the Hotel de Saxe with the rest of the party, but take her
-home at once to the rooms over which she was to preside for him. In
-consequence, the two Brimonts said good-bye to the Gobellis and Harriet
-Brandt at the Brussels station, and drove to their apartments in the
-rue de Vienne, after which the others saw no more of them. The Baroness
-declared they were “a good riddance of bad rubbish,” and that she had
-never liked that pasty-faced Mademoiselle Brimont, and believed that
-she was jealous of the brilliancy and beauty of her dear ’Arriet. The
-Baroness had conceived one of her violent, and generally short-lived,
-fancies for the girl, and nothing, for the time being, was too good
-for her. She praised her looks and her talents in the most extravagant
-manner, and told everyone at the Hotel that the Baron and she had known
-her from infancy--that she was their ward--and that they regarded her
-as the daughter of the house, with various other falsehoods that made
-Harriet open her dark eyes with amazement, whilst she felt that she
-could not afford to put a sudden end to her friendship with Madame
-Gobelli, by denying them. Brussels is a very pretty town, full of
-modern and ancient interest, and there was plenty for them to see and
-hear during their first days there. But Harriet was resolved to defer
-visiting the best sights until Captain Pullen had joined them.
-
-She went to the concerts at the Quinçonce and Wauxhall, and visited
-the Zoological Gardens, but she would not go to the Musée nor the
-Académie des Beaux Arts, nor the Cathedral of Sainte Gudule, whilst
-Ralph remained in Heyst. Madame Gobelli laughed at her for her
-reticence--called her a sly cat--said she supposed they must make up
-their minds to see nothing of her when the handsome Captain came to
-Brussels--finally sending her off in company of Bobby to walk in the
-Parc, or visit the Wiertz Museum. The Baroness was not equal to much
-walking at the best of times, and had been suffering from rheumatism
-lately, so that she and the Baron did most of their sight-seeing in
-a carriage, and left the young people to amuse themselves. Bobby was
-very proud to be elected Miss Brandt’s cavalier, and get out of the way
-of his formidable Mamma, who made his _table-d’hôte_ life a terror to
-him. He was a well-grown lad and not bad-looking. In his blue eyes and
-white teeth, he took after his mother, but his hair was fair, and his
-complexion delicate. He was an anæmic young fellow and very delicate,
-being never without a husky cough, which, however, the Baroness seemed
-to consider of no consequence. He hardly ever opened his mouth in
-the presence of his parents, unless it were to remonstrate against
-the Baroness’s strictures on his appearance, or his conduct, but
-Harriet Brandt found he could be communicative enough, when he was
-alone with her. He gave her lengthy descriptions of the Red House,
-and the treasures which it contained--of his Mamma’s barouche lined
-with satin--of the large garden which they had at Holloway, with its
-greenhouses and hot-houses, and the numbers of people who came to visit
-them there.
-
-“O! yes!” rejoined Harriet, “the Baroness has told me about them,
-Prince Adalbert and Prince Loris and others! She said they often came
-to the Red House! I should like to know them very much!”
-
-The youth looked at her in a mysterious manner.
-
-“Yes! they do come, very often, and plenty of other people with them;
-the Earl of Watherhouse and Lord Drinkwater, and Lady Mountacue, and
-more than I know the names of. But--but--did Mamma tell you _why_ they
-come?”
-
-“No! not exactly! To see her and the Baron, I suppose!”
-
-“Well! yes! for that too perhaps,” stammered Bobby. “But there is
-another reason. Mamma is very wonderful, you know! She can tell people
-things they never knew before. And she has a room where--but I had
-better not say any more. You might repeat it to her and then she would
-be so angry.” The two were on their way to the Wiertz Museum at the
-time, and Harriet’s curiosity was excited.
-
-“I will not, I promise you, Bobby,” she said, “what has the Baroness in
-that room?”
-
-Bobby drew near enough to whisper, as he replied,
-
-“O! I don’t know, I daren’t say, but horrible things go on there! Mamma
-has threatened sometimes to make me go in with her, but I wouldn’t for
-all the world. Our servants will never stay with us long. One girl told
-me before she left that Mamma was a witch, and could raise up the dead.
-Do you think it can be true--that it is possible?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Harriet, “and I don’t want to know! There are
-no dead that _I_ want to see back again, unless indeed it were dear
-old Pete, our overseer. He was the best friend I ever had. One night
-our house was burned to the ground and lots of the things in it, and
-old Pete wrapped me up in a blanket and carried me to his cabin in
-the jungle, and kept me safe until my friends were able to send me to
-the Convent. I shall never forget that. I should like to see old Pete
-again, but I don’t believe the Baroness could bring him back. It wants
-‘Obeah’ to do that!”
-
-“What is ‘Obeah,’ Miss Brandt?”
-
-“Witchcraft, Bobby!”
-
-“Is it wicked?”
-
-“I don’t know. I know nothing about it! But let us talk of something
-else. I don’t believe your Mamma can do anything more than other
-people, and she only says it to frighten you. But you mustn’t tell her
-I said so. Is this the Wiertz Museum? I thought it would be a much
-grander place!”
-
-“I heard father say that it is the house Wiertz lived in, and he left
-it with all his pictures to the Belgian Government on condition they
-kept it just as it was.”
-
-They entered the gallery, and Harriet Brandt, although not a great
-lover of painting in general, stood enwrapt before most of the
-pictures. She passed over the “Bouton de Rose” and the sacred paintings
-with a cursory glance, but the representation of Napoleon in Hell,
-being fed with the blood and bones of his victims--of the mother in
-a time of famine devouring her child--and of the Suicide between his
-good and evil angels, appeared to absorb all her senses. Her eyes
-fixed themselves upon the canvasses, she stood before them, entranced,
-enraptured, and when Bobby touched her arm as a hint to come and look
-at something else, she drew a long breath as though she had been
-suddenly aroused from sleep. Again and again she returned to the same
-spot, the pictures holding her with a strange fascination, which she
-could not shake off, and when she returned to the Hotel, she declared
-the first thing she should do on the following morning, would be to
-go back to the Wiertz Museum and gaze once more upon those inimitable
-figures.
-
-“But such ’orrid subjects, my dear,” said the Baroness, “Bobby says
-they were all blood and bones!”
-
-“But I like them--I _like_ them!” replied Harriet, moving her tongue
-slowly over her lips, “they interest me! They are so life-like!”
-
-“Well! to-morrow will be Thursday, you know, so I expect you will have
-somebody’s else’s wishes to consult! You will ’ave a letter by the
-early post, you may depend upon it, to say that the Captain will be
-with us by dinner-time!”
-
-Harriet Brandt flushed a deep rose. It was when the colour came into
-her usually pale cheeks, and her eyes awakened from their slumbers and
-sparkled, that she looked beautiful. On the present occasion as she
-glanced up to see Bobby Bates regarding her with steadfast surprise and
-curiosity, she blushed still more.
-
-“You’ll be ’aving a fine time of it together, you two, I expect,”
-continued the Baroness facetiously, “and Bobby, ’ere, will ’ave to
-content ’imself with me and his Papa! But we’ll all go to the theatre
-together to-morrow night. I’ve taken five seats for the Alcazar, which
-the Captain said was the house he liked best in Brussels.”
-
-“How good you are to me!” exclaimed Harriet, as she wound her slight
-arms about the uncouth form of the Baroness.
-
-“Good! Nonsense! Why! Gustave and I look upon you as our daughter, and
-you’re welcome to share everything that is ours. You can come and live
-altogether at the Red ’Ouse, if you like! But I don’t expect we shall
-keep you long, though I must say I should be vexed to see you throw
-yourself away upon an army Captain before you have seen the world a
-bit!”
-
-“O! don’t talk of such a thing, pray don’t!” said the girl, hiding
-her face in the Baroness’s ample bosom, “you know there is nothing as
-yet--only a pleasant friendship.”
-
-“He! he! he!” chuckled Madame Gobelli, “so that’s what you call a
-pleasant friendship, eh? I wonder what Captain Pullen calls it! I
-expect we shall ’ear in a few days. But what ’e thinks is of no
-consequence, so long as _you_ don’t commit yourself, till you’ve looked
-about you a little. I do want you to meet Prince Adalbert! ’Is ’air’s
-like flax--such a nice contrast to yours. And you speaking French so
-well! You would get on first-rate together!”
-
-Bobby did not appear to like this conversation at all.
-
-“I call Prince Adalbert hideous,” he interposed. “Why! his face is as
-red as a tomato, and he drinks too much. I’ve heard Papa say so! I am
-sure Miss Brandt wouldn’t like him.”
-
-“’Old your tongue,” exclaimed the Baroness, angrily, “’Ow dare you
-interrupt when I’m speaking to Miss Brandt? A child like you! What
-next, I wonder! Just mind your own business, Bobby, or I’ll send you
-out of the room. Go away now, do, and amuse yourself! We don’t want any
-boys ’ere!”
-
-“Miss Brandt is going into the Parc with me,” said Bobby sturdily.
-
-“Ah! well, if she is going to be so good, I ’ope you won’t worry ’er,
-that’s all! But if you would prefer to come out in the carriage with
-the Baron and me, my dear, we’ll take a drive to the Bois de Cambres.”
-
-“All right, if Bobby can come too,” acquiesced Harriet.
-
-“Lor! whatever do you want that boy to come with us for? ’E’ll only
-take up all the room with ’is long legs.”
-
-“But we mustn’t leave him alone,” said the girl, kindly, “I shouldn’t
-enjoy my drive if we were to do so!”
-
-The lad gave her a grateful glance through eyes that were already moist
-with the prospect of disappointment.
-
-“Very well then,” said Madame Gobelli, “if you will ’ave your own way,
-’e may come, but you must take all the trouble of ’im, ’Arriet, mind
-that!”
-
-Bobby was only too happy to accompany the party, even in these
-humiliating circumstances, and they all set out together for the Bois
-de Cambres. The next day was looked forward to by Harriet Brandt as
-one of certain happiness, but the morning post arrived without bringing
-the anticipated notice from Ralph Pullen that he should join them as
-arranged in the afternoon. The piteous eyes that she lifted to the
-Baroness’s face as she discovered the defalcation, were enough to
-excite the compassion of anyone.
-
-“It’s all right!” said her friend, across the breakfast table, “’E said
-’e would come, so there’s no need of writing. Besides, it was much
-safer not! ’E couldn’t stir, I daresay, without one of those two cats,
-Mrs. Pullen or Miss Leyton, at ’is elbow, so ’e thought they might find
-out what ’e was after, and prevent ’is starting. Say they wanted to
-leave ’Eyst or something, just to keep ’im at their side! You mark my
-words, I’ve means of finding out things that you know nothing of, and
-I’ve just seen it written over your ’ead that ’e’ll be ’ere by dinner
-time, so you can go out for your morning’s jaunt in perfect comfort!”
-
-Harriet brightened up at this prophecy, and Bobby had never had a
-merrier time with her than he had that morning.
-
-But the prophecy was not fulfilled. Ralph Pullen was by that time
-in England with his bereaved sister-in-law, and the night arrived
-without the people in Brussels hearing anything of him. He had not
-even written a line to account for his failure to keep his engagement
-with them. The fact is that Captain Pullen, although as a rule most
-punctilious in all matters of courtesy, felt so ashamed of himself
-and the folly into which he had been led, that he felt that silence
-would be the best explanation that he had decided to break off the
-acquaintanceship. He had no real feeling for Harriet Brandt or anybody
-(except himself)--with him “out of sight” was “out of mind”--and the
-sad occurrence which had forced him to return to England seemed an
-excellent opportunity to rid himself of an undesirable entanglement.
-But Harriet became frantic at the nonfulfilment of his promise. Her
-strong feelings could not brook delay. She wanted to rush back to Heyst
-to demand the reason of his defalcation--and in default of that, to
-write, or wire to him at once and ascertain what he intended to do. But
-the Baroness prevented her doing either.
-
-“Look ’ere, ’Arriet!” she said to the girl, who was working herself up
-into a fever, “it’s no use going on like this! ’E’ll come or ’e won’t
-come! Most likely you’ll see ’im to-morrow or next day, and if not,
-it’ll be because ’is sister won’t let ’im leave ’er, and the poor young
-man doesn’t know what excuse to make! Couldn’t you see ’ow that Doctor
-Phillips was set against the Captain joining us? ’E went most likely
-and told Mrs. Pullen, and she ’as dissuaded her brother from coming
-to Brussels. It’s ’ard for a man to go against ’is own relations, you
-know!”
-
-“But he should have written,” pleaded Harriet, “it makes me look a
-fool!”
-
-“Not a bit of it! Captain Pullen thinks you no fool. ’E’s more likely
-to be thinking ’imself one. And, after all, you know, we shall be going
-back to ’Eyst in a couple more days, and then you can ’ave ’im all to
-yourself in the evenings and scold ’im to your ’eart’s content!”
-
-But the girl was not made of the stuff that is amenable to reason. She
-pouted and raved and denounced Ralph Pullen like a fury, declaring she
-would not speak to him when they met again,--yet lay awake at night all
-the same, wondering what had detained him from her side, and longing
-with the fierceness of a tigress for blood, to feel his lips against
-her own and to hear him say that he adored her. Bobby Bates stood by
-during this tempestuous time, very sorrowful and rather perplexed. He
-was not admitted to the confidence of his mother and her young friend,
-so that he did not quite understand why Harriet Brandt should have so
-suddenly changed from gay to grave, just because Captain Pullen was
-unable to keep his promise to join them at Brussels. He had so enjoyed
-her company hitherto and she had seemed to enjoy his, but now she bore
-the gloomiest face possible, and it was no pleasure to go out with her
-at all. He wondered if all girls were so--as capricious and changeable!
-Bobby had not seen much of women. He had been kept in the schoolroom
-for the better part of his life, and his Mamma had not impressed him
-with a great admiration for the sex. So, naturally, he thought Harriet
-Brandt to be the most charming and beautiful creature he had ever seen,
-though he was too shy to whisper the truth, even to himself. He tried
-to bring back the smiles to her face in his boyish way, and the gift of
-an abnormally large and long _sucre de pomme_ really did achieve that
-object better than anything else. But the defalcation of Captain Pullen
-made them all lose their interest in Brussels, and they returned to
-Heyst a day sooner than they had intended.
-
-As the train neared the station, Harriet’s forgotten smiles began to
-dimple her face again, and she peered eagerly from the windows of the
-carriage, as if she expected Ralph Pullen to be on the platform to
-meet them. But from end to end, she saw only cinders, Flemish country
-women with huge baskets of fish or poultry on their arms, priests in
-their _soutanes_ and broad-brimmed hats, and Belgians chattering and
-screaming to each other and their children, as they crossed the line.
-Still, she alighted with her party, expectant and happy, and traversed
-the little distance between the _entrepôt_ and the Hotel, far quicker
-than the Baroness and her husband could keep up with her. She rushed
-into the balcony and almost fell into the arms of the _proprietaire_,
-Madame Lamont.
-
-“Ah! Mademoiselle!” she cried, “welcome back to Heyst, but have you
-heard the desolating news?”
-
-“What news?” exclaimed Harriet with staring eyes and a blanched cheek.
-
-“Why! that the English lady, _cette Madame, si tranquille, si
-charmante_, lost her dear _bébé_ the very day that Mademoiselle and
-Madame la Baronne left the Hotel!”
-
-“Lost,” repeated Harriet, “do you mean that the child is _dead_?”
-
-“Ah! yes, I do indeed,” replied Madame Lamont, “the dear _bébé_ was
-taken with a fit whilst they were all at dinner, and never recovered
-again. _C’était une perte irréparable!_ Madame was like a creature
-distracted whilst she remained here!”
-
-“Where is she then? Where has she gone?” cried Harriet, excitedly.
-
-“Ah! that I cannot tell Mademoiselle. The dear _bébé_ was taken
-away to England to be buried. Madame Pullen and Mademoiselle Leyton
-and Monsieur Phillippe and _le beau Capitaine_ all left Heyst on the
-following day, that is Wednesday, and went to Ostende to take the boat
-for Dover. I know no more!”
-
-“Captain Pullen has gone away--he is not here?” exclaimed Miss Brandt,
-betraying herself in her disappointment. “Oh! I don’t believe it!
-It cannot be true! He has gone to Ostende to see them on board the
-steamer, but he will return--I am sure he will?”
-
-Madame Lamont shrugged her shoulders.
-
-“Monsieur paid everything before he went and gave _douceurs_ to all the
-servants--I do not think he has any intention of returning!”
-
-At that juncture the Baron and Baroness reached the hotel. Harriet flew
-to her friend for consolation.
-
-“I cannot believe what Madame Lamont says,” she exclaimed; “she
-declares that they are all gone for good, Mrs. Pullen and Miss Leyton
-and Captain Pullen and the doctor! They have returned to England. But
-he is sure to come back, isn’t he? after all his promises to meet us in
-Brussels! He couldn’t be so mean as to run off to England, without a
-word, or a line, unless he intended to come back.”
-
-She clung to Madame Gobelli with her eyes wide open and her large mouth
-trembling with agitation, until even the coarse fibre of the Baroness’s
-propriety made her feel ashamed of the exhibition.
-
-“’Ould up, ’Arriet!” she said, “you don’t want the ’ole ’ouse to
-’ear what you’re thinking of, surely! Let me speak to Madame Lamont!
-What is all the row about, Madame?” she continued, turning to the
-_proprietaire_.
-
-“There is no ‘row’ at all, Madame,” was the reply, “I was only telling
-Mademoiselle Brandt of the sad event that has taken place here during
-your absence--that that _chère_ Madame Pullen had the great misfortune
-to lose her sweet _bébé_, the very day you left Heyst, and that the
-whole party have quitted in consequence and crossed to England. I
-thought since Mademoiselle seemed so intimate with Madame Pullen and
-so fond of the dear child, that she would be _désolée_ to hear the sad
-news, but she appears to have forgotten all about it, in her grief at
-hearing that the _beau Capitaine_ accompanied his family to England
-where they go to bury the _petite_.”
-
-And with rather a contemptuous smile upon her face, Madame Lamont
-re-entered the _salle à manger_.
-
-“Now, ’Arriet, don’t make a fool of yourself!” said the Baroness. “You
-’eard what that woman said--she’s laughing at you and your Captain, and
-the story will be all over the Hotel in half an hour. Don’t make any
-more fuss about it! If ’e’s gone, crying won’t bring ’im back. It’s
-much ’arder for Mrs. Pullen, losing her baby so suddenly! I’m sorry for
-’er, poor woman, but as for the other, there’s as good fish in the sea
-as ever came out of it!”
-
-But Harriet Brandt only answered her appeal by rushing away down the
-corridor and up the staircase to her bedroom like a whirlwind. The girl
-had not the slightest control over her passions. She would listen to
-no persuasion, and argument only drove her mad. She tumbled headlong
-up the stairs, and dashing into her room, which had been reserved for
-her, threw herself tumultuously upon the bed. How lonely and horrible
-the corridor, on which her apartment opened, seemed. Olga Brimont, Mrs.
-Pullen, Miss Leyton, and Ralph, all gone! No one to talk to--no one
-to walk with--except the Baroness and her stupid husband! Of course
-this interpreted simply, meant that Captain Pullen had left the place
-without leaving a word behind him, to say the why or wherefore, or hold
-out any prospect of their meeting again. Of course it was impossible
-but that they must meet again--they _should_ meet again, Harriet
-Brandt said to herself between her closed teeth--but meanwhile, what
-a wilderness, what a barren, dreary place this detestable Heyst would
-seem without him!
-
-The girl put her head down on the pillow, and taking the corner of
-the linen case between her strong, white teeth, shook it and bit it,
-as a terrier worries a rat! But that did not relieve her feelings
-sufficiently, and she took to a violent fit of sobbing, hot, angry
-tears coursing each other down her cheeks, until they were blurred and
-stained, and she lay back upon the pillow utterly exhausted.
-
-The first dinner bell rang without her taking any notice of it, and
-the second was just about to sound, when there came a low tap at her
-bedroom door. At first she did not reply, but when it was repeated,
-though rather timidly, she called out,
-
-“Who is it? I am ill. I don’t want any dinner! I cannot come down!”
-
-A low voice answered.
-
-“It is _I_, dear Miss Brandt, Bobby! May I come in? Mamma has sent me
-to you with a message!”
-
-“Very well! You can enter, but I have a terrible headache!” said
-Harriet.
-
-The door opened softly, and the tall lanky form of Bobby Bates crept
-silently into the room. He held a small bunch of pink roses in his
-hand, and he advanced to the bedside and laid them without a word on
-the pillow beside her hot, inflamed cheek. They felt deliciously cool
-and refreshing. Harriet turned her face towards them, and in doing so,
-met the anxious, perturbed eyes of Bobby.
-
-“Well!” she said smiling faintly, “and what is your Mamma’s message?”
-
-“She wishes to know if you are coming down to dinner. It is nearly
-ready!”
-
-“No! no! I cannot! I am not hungry, and my eyes are painful,” replied
-Harriet, turning her face slightly away.
-
-The lad rose and drew down the blind of her window, through which the
-setting sun was casting a stream of light, and then captured a _flacon_
-of eau de Cologne from her toilet-table, and brought it to her in his
-hand.
-
-“May I sit beside you a little while in case you need anything?” he
-asked.
-
-“No! no! Bobby! You will want your dinner, and your Mamma will want
-you. You had better go down again at once, and tell her that if my head
-is better, I will meet her on the Digue this evening!”
-
-“I don’t want any dinner, I could not eat it whilst you lie here sick
-and unhappy. I want to stay, to see if I can help you, or do you any
-good. I wish--I _wish_ I could!” murmured the lad.
-
-“Your roses have done me good already,” replied Harriet, more brightly.
-“It was sweet of you to bring them to me, Bobby.”
-
-“I wish I had ten thousand pounds a year,” said Bobby feverishly, “that
-I might bring you roses, and everything that you like best!”
-
-He laid his blonde head on the pillow by the side of hers and Harriet
-turned her face to his and kissed him.
-
-The blood rushed into his face, and he trembled. It was the first time
-that any woman had kissed him. And all the feelings of his manhood
-rushed forth in a body to greet the creature who had awakened them.
-
-As for Harriet Brandt, the boy’s evident admiration flattered and
-pleased her. The tigress deprived of blood, will sometimes condescend
-to milder food. And the feelings with which she regarded Captain Pullen
-were such as could be easily replaced by anyone who evinced the same
-reciprocity. Bobby Bates was not a _beau sabreur_, but he was a male
-creature whom she had vanquished by her charms, and it interested her
-to watch his rising passion, and to know that he could never possibly
-expect it to be requited. She kissed and fondled him as he sat beside
-her with his head on the pillow--calling him every nice name she could
-think of, and caressing him as if he had been what the Baroness chose
-to consider him--a child of ten years old.
-
-His sympathy and entreaties that she would make an effort to join them
-on the Digue, added to his lovelorn eyes, the clear childish blue of
-which was already becoming blurred with the heat of passion, convinced
-her that all was not lost, although Ralph Pullen _had_ been ungrateful
-and impolite enough to leave Heyst without sending her notice, and
-presently she persuaded the lad to go down to his dinner, and inform
-the Baroness that she had ordered a cup of tea to be sent up to her
-bedroom, and would try to rise after she had taken it, and join them
-on the Digue.
-
-“But you will keep a look-out for me, Bobby, won’t you?” she said in
-parting. “You will not let me miss your party, or I shall feel so
-lonely that I shall come straight back to bed!”
-
-“Miss you! as if I would!” exclaimed the boy fervently, “why, I shall
-not stir from the balcony until you appear! O! Miss Brandt! I love you
-so. You cannot tell--you will never know--but you seem like part of my
-life!”
-
-“Silly boy!” replied Harriet, reproachfully, as she gave him another
-kiss. “There, run away at once, and don’t tell your mother what we’ve
-been about, or she will never let me speak to you again.”
-
-Bobby’s eyes answered for him, that he would be torn to pieces before
-he let their precious secret out of his grasp, as he took his unwilling
-way down to the _table d’hôte_.
-
-“Well! you _’ave_ made a little fool of yourself, and no mistake,”
-was the Baroness’s greeting, as Harriet joined her in the balcony an
-hour later, “and a nice lot of lies I’ve ’ad to tell about you to Mrs.
-Montague and the rest. But luckily, they’re all so full of the poor
-child’s death, and the coffin of white cloth studded with silver nails
-that was brought from Bruges to carry the body to England in, that
-they ’ad no time to spare for your tantrums. Lor! that poor young man
-must ’ave ’ad enough to do, I can tell you, from all accounts, without
-writing to you! Everything was on ’is ’ands, for Mrs. Pullen wouldn’t
-let the doctor out of ’er sight! ’E ’ad to fly off to Bruges to get the
-coffin and to wire half over the world, besides ’aving the two women
-to tow about, so you mustn’t be ’ard on ’im. ’E’ll write soon, and
-explain everything, you may make sure of that, and if ’e don’t, why, we
-shall be after ’im before long! Aldershot, where the Limerick Rangers
-are quartered, is within a stone’s throw of London, and Lord Menzies
-and Mr. Nalgett often run over to the Red ’Ouse, and so can Captain
-Pullen, if he chooses! So you just make yourself ’appy, and it will be
-all right before long.”
-
-“O! I’m all right!” cried Harriet, gaily, “I was only a little startled
-at the news, so would anyone have been. Come along, Bobby! Let us walk
-over the dunes to the next town. This cool air will do my head good.
-Good-bye, Baroness! You needn’t expect us till you see us! Bobby and I
-are going for a good long walk!”
-
-And tucking the lad’s arm under her own, she walked off at a tremendous
-pace, and the pair were soon lost to view.
-
-“I wish that Bobby was a few years older,” remarked the Baroness
-thoughtfully to her husband, as they were left alone, “she wouldn’t
-’ave made a bad match for him, for she ’as a tidy little fortune, and
-it’s all in Consols. But perhaps it’s just as well there’s no chance
-of it! She ain’t got much ’eart--I couldn’t ’ave believed that she’d
-receive the news of that poor baby’s death, without a tear or so much
-as a word of regret, when at one time she ’ad it always in ’er arms.
-She quite forgot all about it, thinking of the man. Drat the men!
-They’re more trouble than they’re worth, but ’e’s pretty sure to come
-after ’er as soon as ’e ’ears she’s at the Red ’Ouse!”
-
-“But to what good, mein tear,” demanded the Baron, “when you know he is
-betrothed to Miss Leyton?”
-
-“Yes! and ’e’ll marry Miss Leyton, too. ’E’s not the sort of man to
-let the main chance go! And ’Arriet will console ’erself with a better
-beau. I can read all that without your telling me, Gustave. But Miss
-Leyton won’t get off without a scratch or two, all the same, and that’s
-what I’m aiming at. I’ll teach ’er not to call me a female elephant!
-I’ve got my knife into that young woman, and I mean to turn it!
-Confound ’er impudence! What next?”
-
-And having delivered herself of her feelings, the Baroness rose and
-proceeded to take her evening promenade along the Digue.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-
-The Red House at Holloway was, like its owner, a contradiction and
-an anomaly. It had lain for many years in Chancery, neglected and
-uncared-for, and the Baroness had purchased it for a song. She was
-very fond of driving bargains, and sometimes she was horribly taken
-in. She had been known to buy a house for two thousand pounds for a
-mere caprice, and exchange it, six months afterwards, for a dinner
-service. But as a rule she was too shrewd to be cheated, for her income
-was not a tenth part of what she represented. When she had concluded
-her bargain for the Red House, which she did after a single survey
-of the premises, and entered on possession, she found it would take
-double the sum she had paid to put it into proper repair. It was a
-very old house of the Georgian era standing in its own grounds of
-about a couple of acres, and containing thirty rooms, full of dust,
-damp, rats, and decay. The Baroness, however, having sent for a couple
-of workmen from the firm, to put the tangled wilderness which called
-itself a garden, into something like order, sent in all her household
-gods, and settled down there, with William and two rough maid servants,
-as lady of the Manor. The inside of the Red House presented an
-incongruous appearance. This extraordinary woman, who could not sound
-her aspirates and could hardly write her own name, had a wonderful
-taste for old china and pictures, and knew a good thing from a bad
-one. Her drawing-room was heaped with valuables, many of them piled on
-rickety tables which threatened every minute to overturn them upon the
-ground. The entrance hall was dingy, bare, and ill-lighted, and the
-breakfast-room to the side was furnished with the merest necessities.
-Yet the dressing-table in the Baroness’s sleeping apartment was draped
-in ruby velvet, and trimmed with a flounce of the most costly Brussels
-lace, which a Princess might not have been ashamed to wear. The bed was
-covered with a _duvet_ of the thickest satin, richly embroidered by
-her own hand, whilst the washing-stand held a set of the commonest and
-cheapest crockery. Everything about the house was on the same scale;
-it looked as though it belonged to people who had fallen from the
-utmost affluence to the depths of poverty. Harriet Brandt was terribly
-disappointed when she entered it, Bobby’s accounts of the magnificence
-of his home having led her to expect nothing short of a palace.
-
-The Baroness had insisted on her accompanying them to England. She
-had taken one of her violent fancies to the girl, and nothing would
-satisfy her but that Harriet should go back with her husband and
-herself to the Red House, and stay there as long as she chose.
-
-“Now look ’ere,” she said in her rough way, “you must make the Red
-’Ouse your ’ome. Liberty ’All, as I call it! Get up and go to bed; go
-out and come in, just when you see fit--do what you like, see what you
-like, and invite your friends, as if the ’ouse was your own. The Baron
-and I are often ’alf the day at the boot shop, but that need make no
-difference to you. I daresay you’ll find some way to amuse yourself.
-You’re the daughter of the ’ouse, remember, and free to do as you
-choose!”
-
-Harriet gladly accepted the offer. She had no friends of her own to
-go to, and the prospect of living by herself, in an unknown city, was
-rather lonely. She was full of anticipation also that by means of the
-Red House and the Baroness’s influence, she would soon hear of, or see,
-Captain Pullen again--full of hope that Madame Gobelli would write
-to the young man and force him to fulfil the promises he had made to
-her. She did not want to know Prince Adalbert or Prince Loris--at the
-present moment, it was Ralph and Ralph only, and none other would fill
-the void she felt at losing him. She was sure there must be some great
-mistake at the bottom of his strange silence, and that they had but to
-meet, to see it rectified. She was only too glad then, when the day for
-their departure from Heyst arrived. Most of the English party had left
-the Lion d’Or by that time. The death of Mrs. Pullen’s child seemed
-to have frightened them away. Some became nervous lest little Ethel
-had inhaled poisonous vapours from the drainage--others thought that
-the atmosphere was unhealthy, or that it was getting too late in the
-year for the seaside, and so the visitors dwindled, until the Baroness
-Gobelli found they were left alone with foreigners, and elected to
-return to England in consequence.
-
-Harriet had wished to write to Captain Pullen and ask for an
-explanation of his conduct, but the Baroness conjured her not to do so,
-even threatened to withdraw her friendship, if the girl went against
-her advice. The probabilities were, she said, that the young man was
-staying with his sister-in-law wherever she might be, and that the
-letter would be forwarded to him from the Camp, and fall into the hands
-of Mrs. Pullen, or Miss Leyton. She assured Harriet that it would be
-safer to wait until she had ascertained his address, and was sure that
-any communication would reach him at first hand.
-
-“A man’s never the worse for being let alone, ’Arriet,” she said.
-“Don’t let ’im think ’e’s of too much consequence and ’e’ll value you
-all the more! Our fellows don’t care for the bird that walks up to the
-gun. A little ’olesome indifference will do my gentleman all the good
-in the world!”
-
-“O! but how _can_ I be indifferent, when I am burning to see him
-again, and to hear why he never wrote to say that he could not come
-to Brussels,” exclaimed Harriet, excitedly. “Do you think it was all
-falsehoods, Madame Gobelli? Do you think that he does not want to see
-me any more?”
-
-Her eyes were flashing like diamonds--her cheeks and hands were burning
-hot. The Baroness chuckled over her ardour and anxiety.
-
-“He! he! he! you little fool, no, I don’t! Anyone could see with ’alf
-an eye, that he took a fancy for you! You’re the sort of stuff to stir
-up a man and make ’im forget everything but yourself. Now don’t you
-worry. ’E’ll be at the Red ’Ouse like a shot, as soon as ’e ’ears we’re
-back in London. Mark my words! it won’t be long before we ’ave the ’ole
-lot of ’em down on us, like bees ’umming round a flower pot.”
-
-After this flattering tale, it was disheartening to arrive in town on
-a chilly September day, under a pouring rain, and to see the desolate
-appearance presented by the Red House.
-
-It was seven in the evening before they reached Holloway, and drove up
-the dark carriage drive, clumped by laurels, to the hall door.
-
-After the grand description given by Bobby of his Mamma’s barouche
-lined with olive green satin, Harriet was rather astonished that they
-should have to charter cabs from the Victoria Station to Holloway,
-instead of being met by the Baroness’s private carriage. But she
-discovered afterwards that though there was a barouche standing in
-the coach-house, which had been purchased in a moment of reckless
-extravagance by Madame Gobelli, there were no horses to draw it, and
-the only vehicle kept by the Baroness was a very much patched, not to
-say disreputable looking Victoria, with a spavined cob attached to it,
-in which William drove the mistress when she visited the boot premises.
-
-The chain having been taken down, the hall door was opened to them
-by a slight, timid looking person, whom Harriet mistook for an upper
-housemaid.
-
-“Well, Miss Wynward,” exclaimed the Baroness, as she stumped into the
-hall, “’ere we are, you see!”
-
-“Yes! my lady,” said the person she addressed, “but I thought, from not
-hearing again, that you would travel by the night boat! Your rooms are
-ready,” she hastened to add, “only--dinner, you see! I had no orders
-about it!”
-
-“That doesn’t signify,” interrupted the Baroness, “send out for a steak
-and give us some supper instead! ’Ere William, where are you? Take my
-bag and Miss Brandt’s up to our rooms, and, Gustave, you can carry the
-wraps! Where’s that devil Bobby? Come ’ere at once and make yourself
-useful! What are you standing there, staring at ’Arriet for? Don’t you
-see Miss Wynward? Go and say ‘’ow d’ye do’ to ’er?”
-
-Bobby started, and crossing to where Miss Wynward stood, held out his
-hand. She shook it warmly.
-
-“How are you, Bobby?” she said. “You don’t look much stronger for your
-trip. I expected to see you come back with a colour!”
-
-“Nonsense!” commenced the Baroness testily, “what rubbish you old maids
-do talk! What should you know about boys? ’Ow many ’ave _you_ got?
-’Ere, why don’t you kiss ’im? You’ve smacked ’im often enough, _I_
-know!”
-
-Miss Wynward tried to pass the coarse rejoinder off as a joke, but it
-was with a very plaintive smile that she replied,
-
-“I think Bobby is growing rather too tall to be kissed, and he thinks
-so too, don’t you, Bobby?”
-
-Bobby was about to make some silly reply, when his Mamma interrupted
-him,
-
-“Oh! does he? ’E’ll be wanting to kiss the gals soon, so ’e may as
-well practise on you first! Come! Bobby, do you ’ear what I say? Kiss
-’er!”
-
-But Miss Wynward drew up her spare figure with dignity.
-
-“No! my lady!” she said quietly, “I do not wish it!”
-
-“He! he! he!” giggled the Baroness, as she commenced to mount the
-stairs, “’e ain’t old enough for you, that’s what’s the matter! Come
-along, ’Arriet, my dear! I’m dog-tired and I daresay you’re much the
-same! Let us ’ave some ’ot water to our rooms, Miss Wynward!”
-
-Harriet Brandt was now ushered by her hostess into a bedroom on the
-same floor as her own, and left to unpack her bundles and boxes as
-she best might. It was not a badly furnished room, but there was too
-much pomp and too little comfort in it. The mantelshelf was ornamented
-with some rare old Chelsea figures, and a Venetian glass hung above
-them, but the carpet was threadbare, and the dressing-table was
-inconveniently small and of painted deal. But as though to atone for
-these discrepancies, the hangings to the bed were of satin, and the
-blind that shaded the window was edged with Neapolitan lace. Harriet
-had not been used to luxuries in the Convent, but her rooms in the Lion
-d’Or had been amply provided with all she could need, and she was a
-creature of sensual and indolent temperament, who felt any rebuff, in
-the way of her comfort, terribly.
-
-There was an un-homelike feeling in the Red House and its furniture,
-and a coldness in their reception, which made the passionate, excited
-creature feel inclined to sit down and burst into tears. She was on
-the very brink of doing so, when a tap sounded on the door, and Miss
-Wynward entered with a zinc can of hot water, which she placed on the
-washing-stand. Then she stood for a moment regarding the girl as though
-she guessed what was in her mind, before she said,
-
-“Miss Brandt, I believe! I am so sorry that the Baroness never wrote
-me with any certainty regarding her arrival, or things would have been
-more comfortable. I hope you had a good dinner on board!”
-
-“No!” said Harriet, shaking her head, “I felt too ill to eat. But it
-does not signify, thank you!”
-
-“But you are looking quite upset! Supper cannot be ready for another
-hour. I will go and make you a cup of tea!”
-
-She hurried from the room again, and presently returned with a small
-tray on which was set a Sèvres cup and saucer and Apostle teaspoon,
-with an earthenware teapot that may possibly have cost sixpence. But
-Harriet was too grateful for the tea to cavil whence it came, and
-drinking it refreshed her more than anything else could have done.
-
-“Thank you, thank you so much,” she said to Miss Wynward, “I think the
-long journey and the boat had been too much for me. I feel much better
-now!”
-
-“It is such a melancholy house to come to when one is out of sorts,”
-observed her companion, “I have felt that myself! It will not give you
-a good impression of your first visit to London. Her ladyship wrote me
-you had just come from the West Indies,” she added, timidly.
-
-“Yes! I have not long arrived in Europe,” replied Harriet. “But I
-thought--I fancied--the Baroness gave me the idea that the Red House
-was particularly gay and cheerful, and that so many people visited her
-here!”
-
-“That is true! A great many people visit here! But--not such people,
-perhaps, as a young lady would care for!”
-
-“O! I care for every sort,” said Harriet, more gaily, “and you,--don’t
-you care for company, Miss Wynward?”
-
-“I have nothing to do with it, Miss Brandt, beyond seeing that the
-proper preparations are made for receiving it. I am Bobby’s governess,
-and housekeeper to the Baroness!”
-
-“Bobby is getting rather tall for a governess!” laughed Harriet.
-
-“He is, poor boy, but his education is very deficient. He ought to have
-been sent to school long ago, but her ladyship would not hear of it.
-But I never teach him now. He is supposed to be finished!”
-
-“Why don’t you find another situation then?” demanded Harriet, who was
-becoming interested in the ex-governess.
-
-She was a fragile, melancholy looking woman of perhaps five-and-thirty,
-who had evidently been good-looking in her day and would have been so
-then but for her attenuation, and shabby dress. But she was evidently a
-gentlewoman, and far above the menial offices she appeared to fill in
-the Red House. She gazed at Harriet for a minute in silence after she
-had put the last question to her, and then answered slowly:
-
-“There are reasons which render it unadvisable. But you, Miss Brandt,
-have you known the Baroness before?”
-
-“I never saw her till we met at Heyst and she invited me here,” replied
-the girl.
-
-“O! why did you come? Why did you come?” exclaimed Miss Wynward, as she
-left the room.
-
-Harriet stood gazing at the door as it closed behind her. _Why had
-she come?_ What an extraordinary question to ask her! For the same
-reason that other people accepted invitations to them by their
-friends--because she expected to enjoy herself, and have the protection
-of the Baroness on first entering English society! But why should this
-governess--her dependant, almost her servant--put so strange a question
-to her? Why had she come? She could not get it out of her mind. She was
-roused from her train of speculation by hearing the Baroness thumping
-on the outside panels of her door with her stick.
-
-“Come along,” she cried, “never mind dressing! The supper’s ready at
-last and I’m as ’ungry as an ’unter.”
-
-Hastily completing her toilet, Harriet joined her hostess, who
-conducted her down to a large dining-room, wrapt in gloom. The two
-dozen morocco chairs ranged against the wall, looked sepulchral by
-the light of a single lamp, placed in the centre of a long mahogany
-table, which was graced by a fried steak, a huge piece of cheese,
-bread and butter, and lettuces from the garden. Harriet regarded the
-preparations for supper with secret dismay. She was greedy by nature,
-but it was the love of good feeding, rather than a superfluity of food,
-that induced her to be so. However, when the Baron produced a couple
-of bottles of the very best Champagne to add to the meal, she felt her
-appetite somewhat revive, and played almost as good a knife and fork
-as the Baroness. Bobby and Miss Wynward, who as it appeared, took her
-meals with the family, were the only ones who did not do justice to the
-supper.
-
-The lad looked worn-out and very pale, but when Miss Wynward suggested
-that a glass of champagne might do him good, and dispel the exhaustion
-under which he was evidently labouring, his mother vehemently opposed
-the idea.
-
-“Champagne for a child like ’im,” she cried, “I never ’eard of such
-a thing. Do you want to make ’im a drunkard, Miss Wynward? No! thank
-you, there ’ave been no ’ard drinkers in _our_ family, and ’e shan’t
-begin it! ’Is father was one of the soberest men alive! ’E never took
-anything stronger than toast and water all the time I knew ’im.”
-
-“Of course not, your ladyship,” stammered Miss Wynward, who seemed in
-abject fear of her employer, “I only thought as Bobby seems so very
-tired, that a little stimulant----”
-
-“Then let ’im go to bed,” replied Madame Gobelli. “Bed is the proper
-place for boys when they’re tired! Come, Sir, off to bed with you,
-at once, and don’t let me ’ear anything more of you till to-morrow
-morning!”
-
-“But mayn’t I have some supper?” pleaded Bobby.
-
-“Not a bit of it!” reiterated the Baroness, “if you’re so done up that
-you require champagne, your stomach can’t be in a fit state to digest
-beef and bread! Be off at once, I say, or you’ll get a taste of my
-stick.”
-
-“But, my lady--” said Miss Wynward, entreatingly.
-
-“It’s not a bit of good, Miss Wynward, I know more about boys’ insides
-than you do. Sleep’s the thing for Bobby. Now, no more nonsense, I
-say--”
-
-But Bobby, after one long look at Harriet Brandt, had already quitted
-the room. This episode had the effect of destroying Miss Wynward’s
-appetite. She sat gazing at her plate for a few minutes, and then with
-some murmured excuse of its being late, she rose and disappeared. The
-Baroness was some time over her meal, and Harriet had an opportunity
-to examine the apartment they sat in, as well as the dim light allowed
-her to do. The walls were covered with oil paintings and good ones,
-as she could see at a glance, whilst at the further end, where narrow
-shelves were fixed from the floor to the ceiling, was displayed the
-famous dinner service of Sèvres, for which the Baroness was said to
-have bartered the two thousand lease of her house.
-
-Harriet glanced from the pictures and the china upon the walls to
-the steak and bread and cheese upon the table, and marvelled at the
-incongruity of the whole establishment. Madame Gobelli who, whilst at
-the Lion d’Or, had appeared to think nothing good enough for her, was
-now devouring fried steak and onions, as if they had been the daintiest
-of fare. But the champagne made amends, on that night at least, for the
-solids which accompanied it, and the girl was quite ready to believe
-that the poverty of the table was only due to the fact that they had
-arrived at the Red House unexpectedly. As they reached the upper
-corridor, her host and hostess parted with her, with much effusion,
-and passing into their own room, shut the door and locked it noisily.
-As Harriet gained hers, she saw the door opposite partly unclose to
-display poor Bobby standing there to see her once again.
-
-He was clothed only in his long night-shirt, and looked like a lanky
-ghost, but he was too childish in mind to think for one moment that his
-garb was not a suitable one for a lover to accost his mistress in. She
-heard him whisper her name as she turned the handle of her own door.
-
-“Why, Bobby,” she exclaimed, “not in bed yet?”
-
-“Hush! hush!” he said in a low voice, “or Mamma will hear you! I
-couldn’t sleep till I had seen you again and wished you good-night!”
-
-“Poor dear boy! Are you not very hungry?”
-
-“No, thanks. Miss Wynward is very kind to me. She has seen after that.
-But to leave without a word to you. That was the hard part of it!”
-
-“Poor Bobby!” ejaculated Harriet again, drawing nearer to him. “But you
-must not stay out of bed. You will catch your death of cold!”
-
-“Kiss me then and I will go!”
-
-He advanced his face to the opening of the door, and she put her lips
-to his, and drew his breath away with her own.
-
-“Good-night! good-night!” murmured Bobby with a long sigh. “God bless
-you! good-night!” and then he disappeared, and Harriet entered her own
-room, and her eyes gleamed, as she recognised the fact that Bobby also
-was going to make a fool of himself for her sake.
-
-The next morning she was surprised on going downstairs at about nine
-o’clock, to find a cloth laid over only part of the dining table, and
-breakfast evidently prepared for one person. She was still gazing at it
-in astonishment, and wondering what it meant, when Miss Wynward entered
-the room, to express a hope that Miss Brandt had slept well and had
-everything that she required.
-
-“O! certainly yes! but where are we going to have breakfast?”
-
-“Here, Miss Brandt, if it pleases you. I was just about to ask what you
-would like for your breakfast.”
-
-“But the Baron and Baroness--”
-
-“O! they started for the manufactory two hours ago. Her ladyship is a
-very early riser when at home, and they have some four miles to drive.”
-
-“The manufactory!” echoed Harriet, “do you mean where they make the
-boots and shoes?”
-
-“Yes! There is a manufactory in Germany, and another in England, where
-the boots and shoes are finished off. And then there is the shop in
-Oxford Street, where they are sold. The Baron’s business is a very
-extensive one!”
-
-“So I have understood, but what good can Madame Gobelli do there? What
-can a woman know about such things?”
-
-Miss Wynward shrugged her shoulders.
-
-“She looks after the young women who are employed, I believe, and keeps
-them up to their work. The Baroness is a very clever woman. She knows
-something about most things--and a good deal that were better left
-unknown,” she added, with a sigh.
-
-“And does she go there every morning?”
-
-“Not always, but as a rule she does. She likes to have a finger in the
-pie, and fancies that nothing can go on properly without her. And she
-is right so far that she has a much better head for business than the
-Baron, who would like to be out of it all if he could!”
-
-“But why can’t he give it up then, since they are so very rich?”
-demanded Harriet.
-
-Miss Wynward regarded her for a moment, as if she wondered who had
-given her the information, and then said quietly,
-
-“But all this time we are forgetting your breakfast, Miss Brandt! What
-will you take? An egg, or a piece of bacon?”
-
-“O! I don’t care,” replied Harriet, yawning, “I never can eat when I am
-alone! Where is Bobby? Won’t he take his breakfast with me?”
-
-“O! he had his long ago with his Mamma, but I daresay he would not mind
-a second edition, poor boy!”
-
-She walked to the French windows which opened from a rustic porch to
-the lawn, and called “Bobby! Bobby!”
-
-“Yes, Miss Wynward,” replied the lad in a more cheerful tone than
-Harriet remembered to have ever heard him use before, “what is it?”
-
-“Come in, my dear, and keep Miss Brandt company, whilst she takes her
-breakfast!”
-
-“Won’t I!” cried Bobby, as he came running from the further end of the
-disorderly garden, with a bunch of flowers.
-
-“They are for you!” he exclaimed, as he put them into Harriet’s hand,
-“I gathered them on purpose!”
-
-“Thank you, Bobby,” she replied. “It _was_ kind of you!”
-
-She felt cheered by the simple attention. For her hostess to have
-left her on the very first morning, without a word of explanation,
-had struck her as looking very much (notwithstanding all the effusive
-flattery and protestations of attachment with which she had been laden)
-as if she were not wanted at the Red House.
-
-But when her morning meal was over, and she had been introduced to
-every part of the establishment under the chaperonage of Bobby--to the
-tangled, overgrown garden, the empty stables, Papa’s library, which
-was filled with French and German books, and Mamma’s drawing-room,
-which was so full of valuable china that one scarcely dared move freely
-about it--the burning thirst to see, or hear something of Ralph Pullen
-returned with full force upon Harriet, and she enquired eagerly of Miss
-Wynward when her hostess might be expected to return.
-
-Miss Wynward looked rather blank as she replied,
-
-“Not till dinner time, I am afraid! I fancy she will find too much to
-enquire about and to do, after so long an absence from home. I am so
-sorry, Miss Brandt,” she continued, noting the look of disappointment
-on the girl’s face, “that her ladyship did not make this plain to you
-last night. Her injunctions to me were to see that you had everything
-you required, and to spare no trouble or expense on your account. But
-that is not like having her here, of course! Have you been into the
-library? There are some nice English works there, and there is a piano
-in the drawing-room which you might like to use. I am afraid it is not
-in tune, on account of the rain we have had, and that I have not opened
-it myself during the Baroness’s absence, and indeed it is never used,
-except to teach Bobby his music lessons on, but it may amuse you in
-default of anything else.”
-
-“O! I daresay I shall find something to amuse myself with,” replied
-Harriet rather sullenly, “I have my own instrument with me, and my
-books, thank you! But is no one likely to call this afternoon, do you
-think?”
-
-“This afternoon,” echoed Miss Wynward, “are you expecting any of your
-own friends to see you?”
-
-“O! no! I have no friends in England,--none at least that know I have
-returned from Heyst. But the Baroness told me--she said the Red House
-was always full of guests--Prince Adalbert and Prince Loris, and a lot
-of others--do you think they may come to-day to see her?”
-
-“O! not in September,” replied her companion, “it is not the season
-now, Miss Brandt, and all the fashionable people are out of town, at
-the foreign watering-places, or shooting in the country. Her ladyship
-could never have intended you to understand that the people you have
-mentioned would come here at any time except between May and July! They
-_do_ come here then--sometimes--but not I expect, as _you_ think--not
-as friends, I mean!”
-
-“Not as _friends_! What as, then?” demanded Harriet.
-
-“Well!” returned Miss Wynward, dubiously, “many of them have business
-with her ladyship, and they come to see her upon it! I generally
-conduct them to her presence, and leave them alone with her, but that
-is all I see of them! They have never come here to a party, or dinner,
-to my knowledge!”
-
-“How very extraordinary!” cried Harriet. “What do they come for then?”
-
-“The Baroness must tell you that!” replied the other, gravely, “I am
-not in her confidence, and if I were, I should not feel justified in
-revealing it.”
-
-This conversation drove Harriet to her room to indite a letter to
-Captain Pullen. If she were to be deprived of the society of dukes
-and princes, she would at least secure the company of one person
-who could make the time pass pleasantly to her. As she wrote to him,
-rapidly, unadvisedly, passionately, her head burned and her heart was
-fluttering. She felt as if she had been deceived--cheated--decoyed
-to the Red House under false pretences, and she was in as much of a
-rage as her indolent nature would permit her to be. The revelations of
-Miss Wynward had sunk down into her very soul. No parties, no dinners,
-with princes handing her into the dining-room and whispering soft
-nothings into her ears all the time! Why had Madame Gobelli so often
-promised to console her for the loss of Captain Pullen by this very
-means, and it was a dream, a chimera, they only came to the Red House
-on business--business, horrid unromantic word--and were shut up with
-the Baroness. _What_ business, she wondered! Could it be about boots
-and shoes, and if so, why did they not go to the shop, which surely
-was the proper place from which to procure them! The idea that she had
-been deceived in this particular, made her write far more warmly and
-pleadingly perhaps, than she would otherwise have done. A bird in the
-hand was worth two in the bush--Harriet was not conversant with the
-proverb, but she fully endorsed the sentiment. When her letter was
-written and addressed to the Camp at Aldershot, and she had walked out
-with Bobby to post it in the pillar box, she felt happier and less
-resentful. At all events she was her own mistress and could leave the
-Red House when she chose, and take up her abode elsewhere. A hot sun
-had dried the garden paths and grass, and she spent the rest of the
-afternoon wandering about the unshaven lawn with Bobby, and lingering
-on the rotten wooden benches under the trees, with the boy’s arm round
-her waist, and his head drooping on her shoulder.
-
-Bobby was blissfully happy, and she was content. If we cannot get
-caviare, it is wise to content ourselves with cod’s roe. They spent
-hours together that afternoon, until the dusk had fallen and the hour
-of dining had drawn nigh. They talked of Heyst and the pleasures they
-had left behind them, and Harriet was astonished to hear how manly were
-some of Bobby’s ideas and sentiments, when out of sight of his Mamma.
-
-At last, the strident tones of the Baroness’s voice were heard echoing
-through the grounds. Harriet and Bobby leaped to their feet in a moment.
-
-“’Ere, ’Arriet! Bobby! where are you? You’re a nice son and daughter to
-’ide away from me, when I’ve been toiling for your benefit all the day.”
-
-She came towards them as she spoke, and when Harriet saw how fatigued
-she looked, she almost forgave her for leaving her in the lurch as she
-had done.
-
-“I suppose you thought we were both dead, didn’t you?” she continued.
-“Well, we are, almost. Never ’ad such a day’s work in my life! Found
-everything wrong, of course! You can’t turn your back for five minutes
-but these confounded workmen play old ’Arry with your business! I sent
-off ten fellows before I’d been in the factory ten minutes, and fined
-as many girls, and ’ave been running all over London since to replace
-’em. It’s ’ard work, I can tell you!”
-
-She plumped down upon the rotten seat, nearly bringing it to the
-ground, as she spoke, and burst out laughing.
-
-“You should ’ave seen one man, you would ’ave died of laughing! ‘Get
-out,’ I said to ’im, ‘not another day’s work do you do ’ere!’ ‘Get out
-of the factory where I’ve worked for twenty years?’ ’e said, ‘Well,
-then, I shan’t, not for you! If the governor ’ad said so, it might be
-a different thing, but a woman ’as no right to come interfering in
-business as she knows nothing about!’ ‘That’s the way the wind lies,’
-I replied, ‘and you want a man to turn you out! We’ll soon see if a
-woman can’t do it!’ and I took my stick and laid it on his back till
-he holload again. He was out of the place before you could say Jack
-Robinson! ‘’Ow will that do?’ I said to the others, ‘who else wants a
-taste of my stick before ’e’ll go!’ But they all cleared out before I
-’ad done speaking! I laughed till I was ill! But come along, children!
-It’s time for dinner!” As they returned to the house, she accosted
-Harriet,
-
-“I ’ope you’ve amused yourself to-day! You’ll ’ave to look after
-yourself whenever I’m at the factory! But a ’andsome gal like you won’t
-want long for amusement. We’ll ’ave plenty of company ’ere, soon! Miss
-Wynward,” she continued, as they entered the dining-room, “Mr. Milliken
-is coming to-morrow! See that ’is room is ready for ’im!”
-
-“Very good, my lady!” replied Miss Wynward, but Harriet fancied she did
-not like the idea of Mr. Milliken staying with them.
-
-The dinner proceeded merrily. It was more sumptuous than the day
-before, consisting of several courses, and the champagne flowed freely.
-Harriet, sitting at her ease and thoroughly enjoying the repast,
-thought that it atoned for all the previous inconvenience. But a
-strange incident occurred before the meal was over. The Baron, who
-was carver, asked Bobby twice if he would take some roast beef, and
-received no answer, which immediately aroused the indignation of the
-Baroness.
-
-“Do you ’ear what your father is saying to you, Bobby?” she cried,
-shrilly. “Answer ’im at once or I’ll send you out of the room! Will you
-’ave some beef?”
-
-But still there was no reply.
-
-“My lady! I think that he is ill,” said Miss Wynward in alarm.
-
-“Ill! Rubbish!” exclaimed the Baroness. Being so coarse-fibred and
-robust a woman herself, she never had any sympathy with delicacy or
-illness, and generally declared all invalids to be humbugs, shamming in
-order to attract the more attention. She now jumped up from her seat,
-and going round to her son’s chair, shook him violently by the shoulder.
-
-“’Ere, wake up! what are you about?” she exclaimed, “if you don’t sit
-up at once and answer your father’s question, I’ll lay my stick about
-your back!”
-
-She was going to put her argument into effect, when Harriet prevented
-her.
-
-“Stop! stop! Madame Gobelli!” she exclaimed; “can’t you see, he has
-fainted!”
-
-It was really true! Bobby had fainted dead away in his chair, where he
-lay white as a sheet, with closed eyes, and limp body. Miss Wynward
-flew to her pupil’s assistance.
-
-“Poor dear boy! I was sure he was not well directly he entered the
-house,” she said.
-
-“Not well!” replied the Baroness, “nonsense! what should ail ’im? ’Is
-father was one of the strongest men on God’s earth! He never ’ad a
-day’s illness in ’is life. ’Ow should the boy, a great ’ulking fellow
-like ’im, ’ave got ill?”
-
-She spoke roughly, but there was a tremor in her voice as she uttered
-the words, and she looked at Bobby as though she were afraid of him.
-
-But as he gradually revived under Miss Wynward’s treatment, she
-approached nearer, and said with some tenderness in her tones,
-
-“Well! Bobby, lad, and ’ow do you feel now?”
-
-“Better, Mamma, thank you! only my head keeps going round!”
-
-“Had I not better help him up to his bed, my lady?” asked Miss Wynward.
-
-“O! yes! but I ’ope ’e isn’t going to make a fool of ’imself like this
-again, for I don’t ’old with boys fainting like hysterical gals!”
-
-“I couldn’t help it, Mamma!” said Bobby faintly.
-
-“O! yes! you could, if you ’ad any pluck! You never saw _me_ faint. Nor
-Gustave either! It’s all ’abit! Trundle ’im off to bed, Miss Wynward.
-The sooner ’e’s there, the better!”
-
-“And I may give him a little stimulant,” suggested Miss Wynward
-timidly, recalling the scene of the evening before, “a little champagne
-or brandy and water--I think he requires it, my lady!”
-
-“O! yes! Coddle ’im to your ’eart’s content, only don’t let me ’ear of
-it! I ’ate a fuss! Good-night, Bobby! Mind you’re well by to-morrow
-morning!”
-
-And she brushed the lad’s cheek with her bristly chin.
-
-“Good-night!” replied Bobby, “good-night to all!” as he was supported
-from the room on the arm of Miss Wynward.
-
-The Baroness did not make any further remarks concerning her son, but
-Harriet noticed that her appetite disappeared with him, and declaring
-that she had tired herself too much to eat, she sat unoccupied and
-almost silent for the remainder of the meal.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-
-Mr. Alexander Milliken arrived punctually upon the morrow.
-
-He was a tall, gaunt, weak-kneed man, with a prominent nose and eyes
-that required the constant use of glasses. Harriet Brandt could not at
-first determine his relationship to the Baroness, who received him with
-one of the rough kisses she was wont to bestow on Bobby and herself.
-
-He established himself in the Red House as if he had been a member
-of the family, and Harriet frequently surprised him engaged in
-confidential talk with their hostess, which was immediately stopped on
-her arrival. She perceived that Miss Wynward had an evident dislike for
-the new-comer, and never addressed him but in the most formal manner
-and when it was strictly necessary. The Baroness did not go so often to
-the manufactory after Mr. Milliken’s arrival, but often shut herself
-up with him in a room with locked doors, after which Mr. Milliken
-would be much occupied with secretarial work, writing letters with his
-short-sighted eyes held close to the paper. He was a source of much
-curiosity to Harriet Brandt, but he need not have been. He was only
-that very common and unclean animal--the jackal to Madame Gobelli’s
-lion.
-
-He was poor and she was rich, so he did all the dirty work which
-she was unable, or afraid, to do for herself. Mr. Milliken called
-himself an author and an actor, but he was neither. On account of his
-accidental likeness to a popular actor, he had once been engaged to
-play the part of his double at a West-end theatre, but with the waning
-of the piece, Mr. Milliken’s fame evaporated, and he had never obtained
-an engagement since. His assumed authorship was built on the same
-scale. He had occasionally penned anonymous articles for newspapers,
-which had been inserted without pay, but no one in the literary or
-any other world knew him by name or by fame. Of late he had attached
-himself to Madame Gobelli, writing her letters for her (of doing which
-she was almost incapable), and occasionally dabbling in dirtier work,
-which she was too cunning to do for herself. Miss Wynward could have
-told tales of abusive epistles which had been sent through his hand to
-people, whom the Baroness considered had offended her--of anonymous
-letters also, which if traced would have landed them both in the County
-Court. But Mr. Milliken was out at elbows. He found it very convenient
-to hang about the Red House for weeks together, to the saving of his
-pocket--receiving douceurs sometimes in actual coin of the realm at
-the hands of his benefactress, and making himself useful to her in any
-way in return. Lately, notwithstanding her grand promises to Harriet
-Brandt of introductions to lords, and princes, the Baroness had thought
-it would be a very good thing for her favourite jackal if the young
-heiress took a fancy for him, and gave him full leave in consequence
-to go in and conquer if he could. She would praise his appearance and
-his qualities to the girl, before his very face--calling attention
-to the fact of what a clever creature he was, and what a fine figure
-he possessed, and how well he was connected, and advising her in her
-coarse fashion to cultivate his acquaintance better. She even descended
-to having visions in the broad daylight, and prophesying the future,
-for them both.
-
-“’Arriet!” she would suddenly exclaim, “I see a man standing be’ind
-you!”
-
-“O! gracious!” the girl would reply, jumping in her seat, “I wish you
-would not say such things, Madame!”
-
-“Rubbish! Why shouldn’t I say ’em, if they’re there? Stop a bit! Let me
-see ’im plainly! ’E’s got dark ’air, slightly sprinkled with grey--a
-fine nose--deep-set eyes, with bushy eyebrows--no ’air on ’is face--a
-tall figure, and long ’ands and feet! ’E’s living in this world too! Do
-you know anybody that answers to the description?”
-
-“No!” replied the girl, though she recognised it at once as being meant
-for Mr. Milliken.
-
-“Well! if you don’t know ’im now, you will before long, but it’s my
-belief you’ve met. And mark my words! you and ’e will be closely
-connected in life! I shouldn’t wonder if ’e turns out to be your future
-’usband!”
-
-“O! nonsense!” exclaimed Harriet, trying to speak lightly, “I’m not
-going to marry anybody, thank you, Madame Gobelli, unless it’s one of
-the princes you promised to introduce me to.”
-
-“O! princes are all rubbish!” replied the Baroness, forgetting her
-former assertions, “they’ve none of them got any money, and yours
-wouldn’t go far enough for ’em. _They_ want a gal with something like
-five thousand a year at ’er back. I’d rather ’ave an Englishman any
-day, than a dirty little German prince!”
-
-But Harriet Brandt was not the sort of woman to be forced into an
-intimacy against her will. Born under an hereditary curse, as she
-undoubtedly had been, and gifted with the fatal propensity of injuring,
-rather than benefiting those whom she took a fancy for, she was an
-epicure in her taste for her fellow creatures, and would not have
-permitted Mr. Alexander Milliken to take a liberty with her, had he
-been the last man left upon the earth. She avoided his society as much
-as it was possible to do, without being rude to her hostess, but as
-the Baroness was continually calling her to her side, it was difficult
-to do so. Meanwhile the days went on very differently from what she
-had anticipated when coming to the Red House. Bobby was languid and
-indifferent to everything but hanging about the place where she might
-have located herself--sitting on the sofa beside her, with his heavy
-head on her shoulder, and his weak arm wound about her waist. Miss
-Wynward feared he must have contracted some species of malaria at
-the seaside, and Harriet could see for herself that the lad was much
-altered from the time when they first met--the Baroness alone, either
-from ignorance or obstinacy, declaring that nothing ailed him but
-laziness, and she would give him the stick if he didn’t exert himself
-more. Sometimes Harriet took him out with her--for a drive into the
-country, or to a concert or _matinée_ in London, but what was that
-compared to the entertainment of Royalty and Aristocracy, which she
-had been promised. And she had not heard a word from Captain Pullen,
-though her first letter of appeal had been succeeded by two or three
-more. Such a rebuff would have driven another girl to despondency
-or tears, but that was not the effect it had on Harriet Brandt. If
-you throw a bone to a tigress and then try to take it away, she does
-not weep--she fights for her prey. Harriet Brandt, deprived of the
-flatteries and attentions of Captain Pullen, did not weep either, but
-set her pretty teeth together, and determined in her own mind that
-if she were to give him up she would know the reason why. She was
-reckless--she did not care what she did to obtain it, but she would
-learn the truth of his defalcation if she travelled down to Aldershot
-for the purpose. She was in this mood one day, when the maidservant who
-answered the door came to tell her that a lady was in the drawing-room,
-and desired to see her. The Baroness had gone out that afternoon and
-taken Mr. Milliken with her, so that Harriet was alone. She eagerly
-demanded the name of her visitor.
-
-“The lady didn’t give me her name,” replied the servant, “but she asked
-if Miss Brandt was at home, plain enough!”
-
-“Go back and say that I will be with her in a minute!” said Harriet.
-
-She had decided in her own mind that the stranger must be Margaret
-Pullen, bringing her, doubtless, some news of her brother-in-law. She
-only stayed to smoothe her hair, which was rather disordered from Bobby
-laying his head on her shoulder, before, with a heightened colour, she
-entered the drawing-room. What was her surprise to encounter, instead
-of Mrs. Pullen, Miss Leyton--Miss Leyton, who had been so reserved and
-proud with her at Heyst, and who even though she had sought her out at
-the Red House, looked as reserved and proud as before. Harriet advanced
-with an extended hand, but Elinor Leyton did not appear to see the
-action, as she coldly bowed and sank into her chair again.
-
-Harriet was rather taken aback, but managed to stammer out,
-
-“I am very glad to see you, Miss Leyton! I thought you and Mrs. Pullen
-had forgotten all about me since leaving Heyst.”
-
-“We had not forgotten, Miss Brandt,” replied Elinor, “but we had a
-great deal of trouble to encounter in the death of Mrs. Pullen’s
-baby, and that put everything else for a while out of our minds.
-But--but--lately, we have had reason to remember your existence more
-forcibly than before!”
-
-She spoke slowly and with an evident effort. She was as agitated as it
-was in her nature to be the while, but she did not show it outwardly.
-Elinor Leyton had at all times the most perfect command over herself.
-She was dressed on the present occasion with the utmost neatness and
-propriety, though she had left her home labouring under a discovery
-which had pierced her to the very soul. She was a woman who would have
-died upon the scaffold, without evincing the least fear.
-
-“Reason to remember my existence!” echoed Harriet, “I do not understand
-you.”
-
-“I think you soon will!” said Elinor, as she took three letters from
-her hand-bag and laid them on the table, “I do not think you can fail
-to recognise that handwriting, Miss Brandt!”
-
-Harriet stooped down and read the address upon the envelopes. They were
-her own letters to Captain Pullen.
-
-“How did you get these?” she demanded angrily, as she seized them in
-her hand. “Is thieving one of your proclivities, Miss Leyton?”
-
-“No, Miss Brandt, thieving, as you elegantly put it, is not one of my
-proclivities! But Captain Pullen has been staying in the house of my
-father, Lord Walthamstowe, at Richmond, and left those letters behind
-him--thrown in the empty grate just as they are, a proof of how much he
-valued them! One of the housemaids, whilst setting his room in order
-after his departure, found them and brought them to me. So I determined
-that I would return them to your hands myself!”
-
-“And have you read them?” demanded Harriet.
-
-“I have read them! I considered it my duty!”
-
-“Your duty!” replied the other, scornfully, “what duty is there in a
-mean, dishonourable action like that? What right had you to interfere
-with things that don’t belong to you? These letters concern myself and
-Captain Pullen alone!”
-
-“I deny that, Miss Brandt! They concern me quite as much, if not
-more--Captain Pullen is my affianced husband! We are to be married in
-the spring!”
-
-“I don’t believe it!” cried Harriet, starting to her feet. “A woman who
-would read letters not addressed to her, would say anything! You are
-_not_ engaged to be married to Captain Pullen!”
-
-“Indeed! And on what grounds do you refuse to believe my statement?”
-
-“Because he made love to me all the time he was in Heyst! Because he
-used to kiss me and tell me again and again that I was the only woman
-who had ever touched his heart! Because he had arranged to follow the
-Baroness’s party to Brussels, only to be near me, and he would have
-done so, had _you_ not prevented him!”
-
-Her great eyes were blazing with indignation and mortified vanity--her
-slender hands were clenched--she looked as if she were about to spring
-upon her rival and tear her to pieces--whilst Miss Leyton sat there,
-calm and collected--and smiled at her ravings.
-
-“You are quite mistaken,” she said after a pause, “I have never
-mentioned your name to Captain Pullen--I had no idea, until those
-letters fell into my hands, that he had so far forgotten what
-he owes to me, as to address you in any terms but those of mere
-acquaintanceship. But now that I _do_ know, it must of course be put a
-stop to at once and for ever! It was to tell you so, that I came here
-this afternoon.”
-
-“Put a stop to! Do you imagine that I am going to give up Captain
-Pullen at your request? You are vastly mistaken!”
-
-“But you must--you _shall_!” exclaimed Elinor, getting (for her) quite
-excited. “He is engaged to marry me, and I will not allow him to keep
-up any communication with you! My decision is final, and you will be
-good enough to respect it!”
-
-“Your decision is _final_!” cried Harriet in mocking tones. “Oh!
-indeed, is it? And what about Ralph’s decision? Does that count for
-nothing? What if Ralph refuses to give me up?”
-
-Elinor rose to her feet, trembling with indignation at the other’s
-boldness.
-
-“You shall not call him ‘Ralph’,” she exclaimed. “How dare you speak of
-a man who is nothing to you, in such familiar terms?”
-
-“But _is_ he nothing to me?” retorted Harriet, “and am I nothing to
-him? We must have that question answered first. Ralph told me to call
-him by his name, and he calls me Hally. How can you prevent our doing
-so? He loves me--he has told me so--and I shall write to him as often
-as I choose--yes! and I will take him from you, if I choose, and keep
-him into the bargain! What do you say to that?”
-
-“I say that you are a bold, brazen girl, not fit for me to associate
-with, and that I refuse to be contaminated by your presence any longer!
-Let me go!”
-
-She made an effort to gain the door, as she spoke, but Harriet barred
-her exit.
-
-“No, no, Miss Leyton,” she said, “you don’t come here to insult me, and
-then leave before you have heard all I have to say to you! In the first
-place your assurance to-day is the first I ever heard of your being
-engaged to marry Captain Pullen. _He_ didn’t take the trouble to make
-it public. He never mentioned you except to say what a cold, reserved,
-unpleasant nature you had, and how impossible it would be for a man
-with any human feeling to get on with you! That is what _he_ thought!
-And he said it too, when he had his arm round my waist, and his face
-close to mine. And now he has come to England, I suppose he is afraid
-to carry on with me any more, for fear that you should hear of it! But
-I don’t mean to let him off so easily, I can tell you! He shall answer
-those letters, which you _say_ he threw away in the grate, but which
-you are just as likely to have pilfered from his desk, before he is
-many days older!”
-
-“You cannot _make_ him answer them,” said Elinor, proudly, “whatever
-you may affirm!”
-
-“Not on paper perhaps, but by word of mouth! I will take them back to
-him at Aldershot, and see whether he can deny what I have told when he
-is face to face with me!”
-
-“Surely!--surely!--you would never proceed to so unmaidenly an
-extremity,” exclaimed Elinor, losing sight for a moment of her
-indignation in her horror at the idea. “You must not think of such a
-thing! You would create a scandal in the Camp! You would be despised
-for it ever after!”
-
-“I can take care of myself!” replied Harriet, boldly, “you need not
-fear for me! And if even you _do_ get your own way about this matter,
-you will have the satisfaction all your married life of knowing that
-your husband was a coward and a traitor to you, even during your
-engagement, and that you will never be able to trust him further than
-you can see him, to the end! If you can care for such a husband, take
-him, for I’m sure I wouldn’t. But he shall answer to me for all that!”
-
-“Oh! Miss Brandt, let me go, pray let me go!” said Elinor in a tone of
-such unmistakeable pain, that the other involuntarily drew back, and
-let her push her way past her to the door.
-
-As Miss Leyton disappeared, Harriet Brandt commenced to pace up and
-down the length of the drawing-room. It was not the swaying walk of
-disappointment and despair; it was determined and masterful, born of
-anger and a longing for revenge. All the Creole in her, came to the
-surface--like her cruel mother, she would have given over Ralph Pullen
-to the vivisecting laboratory, if she could. Her dark eyes rolled in
-her passion; her slight hands were clenched upon each other; and her
-crimson lips quivered with the inability to express all she felt.
-Bobby, glancing in upon her from the French windows which opened on
-the garden, crept to her side and tried to capture her clenched hands,
-and to keep her restless body still. But she threw him off, almost
-brutally. At that moment she _was_ brutal.
-
-“Leave me alone,” she exclaimed impatiently, “don’t touch me! Go away!”
-
-“O! Hally,” the boy replied, sympathetically, “what is the matter? Has
-anyone offended you? Let me know! Let me try to comfort you! Or tell me
-what I shall do to help you.”
-
-“_Do!_” cried the girl, contemptuously, “what could you do?--a baby
-tied to your mother’s apron-string! Leave me to myself, I say! I
-don’t want you, or anyone! I want to be alone! Boys are of no use! It
-requires a _man_ to revenge a woman’s wrong!”
-
-The lad, after one long look of bitter disappointment, walked quietly
-away from the spot, and hid his grief in some sequestered part of the
-garden. Hally despised him--she, who had kissed him and let him lay his
-head upon her shoulder and tell her all his little troubles--said he
-was of no use, when she stood in need of help and comfort! When, if she
-only knew it, he was ready to stand up in her defence against twenty
-men, if need be, and felt strong enough to defeat them all! But she had
-called him a baby, tied to his mother’s apron-strings. The iron entered
-into his very soul.
-
-Meanwhile, Elinor Leyton, having blindly found her way out of the Red
-House, hailed a passing hansom, and gave the driver directions to take
-her to a certain number in Harley Street, where Margaret Pullen was
-staying with her godfather, Doctor Phillips. She knew no one else to
-whom she could go in this great trouble, which made her feel as if her
-life had suddenly been cut in two. Yet she made no outward moan. Most
-young women having kept a bold front, as she had done, towards the
-enemy, would have broken down, as soon as they found themselves alone.
-But Elinor Leyton was not in the habit of breaking down. As soon as
-she had started for her destination, she leaned her head upon the back
-of the cab, closed her eyes and set her teeth fast together. Her face
-grew deadly pale, and an observer would have noted the trembling of her
-lips, and the ball which rose and fell in her throat. But she uttered
-no sound, not even a sigh--her misery was too deep for words.
-
-Since she had returned to London, Margaret Pullen had stayed with
-Doctor Phillips, for he had insisted that it should be so. The
-telegram which had conveyed to Colonel Pullen the news of his little
-daughter’s death, had been answered by one to say that he had applied
-for immediate leave, and should join his wife as soon as he received
-it. And Margaret was now expecting his arrival, every day--almost
-every hour. She looked very sad in her deep mourning dress, as she
-came forward to greet Elinor, but as soon as she caught sight of her
-visitor’s face, she forgot her own trouble in her womanly sympathy for
-her friend.
-
-“My dear Elinor!” she exclaimed, “what has brought you to town? You
-have bad news for me--I can read it in your eyes. Nothing wrong with
-Ralph, I hope!”
-
-She kissed the girl affectionately, and held her hand, but Elinor did
-not answer. She turned her white face towards her friend, and bit her
-lips hard, but the words would not come.
-
-“You are suffering, my poor dear,” went on Margaret, tenderly, as she
-made her sit down, and removed her hat and cloak. “Can’t you trust me
-with your trouble? Haven’t I had enough of my own? Ah! cry, that’s
-better. God sends us tears, in order that our hearts may not break! And
-now, what is it? Is anyone ill at home?”
-
-Elinor shook her head. The tears were rolling slowly one by one, down
-her marble cheeks, but she jerked them away as they came, as though it
-were a shame to weep.
-
-After a long pause, she swallowed something in her throat and commenced
-in a husky voice:
-
-“It concerns Ralph, Margaret! He has been untrue to me! All is over
-between us!”
-
-“Oh! surely not!” said Margaret, “have you had a full explanation with
-him? Who told you he had been untrue? Has Ralph asked for a release
-from his engagement?”
-
-“No! but he shall have it!”
-
-She then went on to tell the story of the finding of Harriet Brandt’s
-letters in Captain Pullen’s grate--and of the interview she had had
-with the girl that afternoon.
-
-“She did not attempt to deny it,” continued Elinor. “On the contrary
-she declared that he had made love to her all the time he was at
-Heyst--that he had said she was the only woman who had ever touched his
-heart, and that no man with human feelings could be happy with such a
-cold, reserved nature as mine! And if you could see her letters to him,
-Margaret--I wish I had not given them to her, but she snatched them
-from my hand--they were _too_ dreadful! I never read such letters from
-a woman to a man. I did not know they could be written.”
-
-“But, Elinor, it strikes me that all this time, you have only heard one
-side of the question. What does it signify what Miss Brandt may say?
-The only thing of importance to you is, what Ralph will say.”
-
-“But there were her letters--they told their own story! They were full
-of nothing but ‘dearests’ and ‘darlings,’ and reminders of how he had
-embraced her in one place, and what he had said to her in another--such
-letters as I could not write to a man, if it were to save my life!”
-
-“I can quite understand that! Miss Brandt and you possess two totally
-different natures. And cannot you understand that a girl like that,
-half educated, wholly ignorant of the usages of society, with a
-passionate undeveloped nature and a bold spirit, might write as you
-have described her doing, against the wishes of the recipient of her
-letters? You say that Ralph threw her epistles in the grate just as
-they were. Does that look as if he valued them, or felt himself to be
-guilty concerning their reception?”
-
-“But, Margaret, you know he _did_ make himself conspicuous with the
-Gobellis and Miss Brandt at Heyst! I think everyone noticed their
-intimacy!”
-
-“I noticed it also, and I was very sorry for it, but, Elinor, my dear,
-it was partly your own fault! You were so much opposed to the idea of
-your engagement to Ralph being made public, that I feared it might
-lead to some _contretemps_. And then,” she continued gently, “don’t be
-offended if I say that your reserve with him, and your objection to
-anything like love-making on his part is in itself calculated to drive
-a young man to society he cares less for!”
-
-“But--but--still--I love him!” said poor Elinor, with a tremendous
-effort.
-
-“I know you do,” replied Margaret, kissing her again, “and better and
-more faithfully, perhaps, than half the women who show their love so
-openly--yet, men are but men, Elinor, and as a rule they do not believe
-in the affection which is never expressed by caresses and fond words.”
-
-“Well! whether I have been right or wrong, it is over now,” said Miss
-Leyton, “and Ralph can go to Miss Brandt or anyone else he chooses
-for amusement. I shall never stand in his way, but I cannot brook an
-affront, so I shall write and release him from his promise to me at
-once!”
-
-“No, no, Elinor, you must not do anything so rash! I beg--I implore
-you, to do nothing, until Ralph has had an opportunity of denying the
-charges brought against him by this girl. They may be utterly untrue!
-She may be simply persecuting him. Depend upon it, you have only to
-ask him for an explanation of those letters, and everything will be
-satisfactorily cleared up.”
-
-“You have more belief in him than I have, Margaret. Miss Brandt has
-great confidence in her cause. She told me that she had not only taken
-him from me, but she meant to keep him, and expressed her intention of
-going down to Aldershot and confronting Ralph with the letters she had
-written him!”
-
-At this intelligence, Margaret grew alarmed for her friend’s peace of
-mind.
-
-“No! no! that must never be,” she exclaimed, “that girl must not be
-permitted to make a scandal in the Camp, and get your name perhaps
-mixed up with it! It must be prevented.”
-
-“I fancy you will find that a difficult task,” said Elinor; “she seems
-the most determined young woman I have ever come across. She became so
-vehement at last, that she frightened me, and I was only too glad to
-get out of the house.”
-
-“Elinor,” said Mrs. Pullen suddenly, “will you leave this matter in my
-hands to settle in my own way?”
-
-“What do you intend to do? See Miss Brandt yourself? I advise you not!
-She will only insult you, as she did me.”
-
-“No! I shall not see her myself, I promise you that, but I will send a
-proper ambassador to interview Miss Brandt and the Baroness. This sort
-of thing must not be allowed to go on, and unless Ralph comes forward
-to second the girl’s assertions (which I am sure he will never do),
-she and her friend Madame Gobelli must be made to understand that if
-they don’t behave themselves, the law will be called into requisition
-to enforce obedience. I should not be at all surprised if the Baroness
-were not at the bottom of all this.”
-
-“At anyrate, it has ruined my life!” said Elinor, mournfully.
-
-“Nonsense! my dear girl, no such thing! It is only an unpleasant
-episode which will soon be forgotten. But let it make you a little
-more careful for the future, Elinor. Ralph is a very conceited man. He
-has been spoilt by the women all his life, ‘_pour l’amour de ses beaux
-yeux_.’ He has been used to flattery and attention, and when he doesn’t
-get it he misses it, and goes where it is to be found. It is rather a
-contemptible weakness, but he shares it in common with most of his sex,
-and you have promised, remember, to take him for better or worse!”
-
-“Not yet, thank goodness!” retorted Elinor, with something of her
-usual spirit. “He and father got talking together about the marriage,
-the other day, when he was down at Richmond, and fixed it, I believe,
-for the spring, but they will have to unfix it again now, if I am not
-mistaken.”
-
-“No such thing,” replied Margaret, “and now you have consented--have
-you not?--to leave the settlement of this other affair in my hands.”
-
-“If you wish it, Margaret! But, remember, no compromise! If Ralph has
-really promised this girl what she says, let him keep his promises, for
-I will have none of him. And now I must go home or they will wonder
-what has become of me!”
-
-Margaret was not sorry to see her depart, for she was most anxious to
-summon Anthony Pennell, her husband’s cousin, to her aid, and ask his
-advice as to what was best to be done in the circumstances.
-
-She had great faith in Anthony Pennell, not only in his genius, which
-was an accepted thing, but in his good sense, which is not usually
-found associated with the higher quality. He was a man of about thirty,
-with a grand intellect--a sound understanding--a liberal mind, and
-a sympathetic disposition. He had been originally intended for the
-Bar, but having “taken silk,” and made a most promising debut, he had
-suddenly blossomed into an author, and his first novel had taken London
-by storm.
-
-He had accomplished the rare feat of being lifted up at once on the
-waves of public opinion and carried over the heads of all his fellows.
-
-Since his first success, he had continued writing--had given up the law
-in consequence--and was now making a large and steady income.
-
-But Anthony Pennell’s great charm lay in his unassuming manner
-and modest judgment of his own work. His triumphs were much more
-astonishing to him than to his friends. In person, he was less handsome
-than his cousin Ralph Pullen, but much more manly looking, having been
-a distinguished athlete in his College days, and still finding his
-best recreation on the cricket field and the golf ground. He was very
-fair, with a white skin, embrowned here and there by sun and outdoor
-exercise--short, curly hair--a fine figure, standing six foot high, and
-the bluest of blue eyes. He was smoking in his own chambers late that
-afternoon, when he received a telegram from Margaret Pullen, “Can you
-come over this evening?” and as soon as he had changed his lounging
-coat, he obeyed her summons.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-
-Anthony Pennell was a very fresh, pleasant, and good-looking
-presentment of a young English gentleman, as he entered the room where
-Margaret was sitting with Doctor Phillips that evening. It had been
-arranged between them beforehand, that as little as need be should
-be confided to him of Harriet Brandt’s former history. All that was
-necessary for him to know, was the danger that threatened to blast the
-future happiness of Ralph Pullen and Elinor Leyton.
-
-“Well! Mrs. Pullen,” he said, as he shook hands cordially with Margaret
-and the doctor, “and what important business is it, that you want to
-consult me upon? I thought, at the very least, that I should meet my
-cousin Arthur here!”
-
-“If I had had Arthur, perhaps I should not have needed you,” replied
-Margaret, with a faint smile. “But really, Mr. Pennell, I am in want of
-advice sorely, and the Doctor agreed with me that you would be the best
-person to whom I could apply!”
-
-“I am at your service, Madam!” said the young man, gaily, as he seated
-himself.
-
-Then she told him the story of Harriet Brandt--how Ralph had met her at
-the Lion d’Or, and devoted his time to her--and how she was persecuting
-him with letters, and had threatened to follow him to the Camp and
-interview him there.
-
-“And it must be put a stop to, you know, Mr. Pennell,” she concluded,
-“not only for Ralph’s sake and Elinor’s, but for the sake of the
-Walthamstowes and my husband. I am sure that Arthur would be
-exceedingly annoyed at any scandal of that sort, and especially as Lord
-Walthamstowe is so old a friend of his family!”
-
-Anthony Pennell had looked very grave during her recital. After a pause
-he said,
-
-“Are you sure that Ralph has not given this young lady good cause to
-run after him?”
-
-“I think not--I hope not! There was very little amusement in Heyst, and
-this girl, and the people with whom she is now staying--a Baron and
-Baroness Gobelli, they call themselves--were amongst the visitors to
-the Lion d’Or. Miss Leyton is rather a stickler for the proprieties,
-and used to refuse to walk out with Ralph alone in the evenings, and
-I was too much occupied with my poor darling baby to accompany them,”
-said Margaret, in a faltering voice, “so Ralph took to going to the
-Baroness’s private rooms instead, and became intimate with Miss Brandt!”
-
-“You acknowledge then, that he _was_ intimate with her!”
-
-“I think he must have been--because it appears that he had agreed to
-join their party at Brussels, when--when--my great trouble obliged him
-to return to England with us instead.”
-
-“Did you know this young lady, Mrs. Pullen?”
-
-“I did, and at one time I was rather intimate with her, that is, before
-the Baroness took her up, when she passed almost all her time with
-them.”
-
-“She is, I suppose, very attractive in person?”
-
-“O! dear no, not at all!” cried Margaret, with a woman’s dull
-appreciation of the charms of one of her own sex, “she has fine eyes,
-and what men would, I suppose, call a good figure, but no complexion
-and an enormous mouth. Not at all pretty, but nice-looking at
-times,--that is all!”
-
-“Clever?” said Pennell, interrogatively.
-
-“I do not think so! She had just come out of a Convent school and was
-utterly unused to society. But she has a very good voice and plays well
-on the mandoline!”
-
-“Ladies are not always the best judges of their own sex,” remarked
-Anthony, turning to Doctor Phillips, “what do _you_ say, Doctor?
-Had you an opportunity of appraising Miss Brandt’s beauties and
-accomplishments for yourself?”
-
-“I would rather say nothing, Mr. Pennell,” replied the Doctor. “The
-fact is, I knew her parents in the West Indies, and could never believe
-in anything good coming from such a stock. Whatever the girl may be,
-she inherits terrible proclivities, added to black blood. She is in
-point of fact a quadroon, and not fit to marry into any decent English
-family!”
-
-“O! dear!” exclaimed Mr. Pennell laconically.
-
-“And how do you expect me to help you?” he enquired, after a pause.
-
-“I want you to see the Baroness, or Miss Brandt, and tell them that
-this girl must cease all communication with Captain Pullen,” said
-Margaret, “tell them that he is engaged to marry Miss Leyton--that the
-marriage is fixed to take place next spring, and that the Walthamstowe
-family will be excessively annoyed if any scandal of this sort occurs
-to break it off.”
-
-“Do they not know that such an engagement exists?”
-
-“No! that is the unfortunate part of it! Elinor Leyton is so absurdly
-scrupulous that she will not have the fact made public, and forbade
-me to tell Miss Brandt about it! Elinor went to the Red House where
-Miss Brandt is staying this morning and had a most stormy interview
-with her. She came here afterwards in a most distressed state of mind.
-Harriet Brandt had told her that she had secured Ralph Pullen and meant
-to keep him--that he had told her he loved her--and that Miss Leyton
-was too cold and prudish a nature for any man to be happy with! Of
-course Elinor was terribly upset. She seldom shows her feelings, but it
-was quite impossible for her to disguise them to-day. I begged her to
-leave the matter in my hands, and she consented to do so. That is why I
-telegraphed for you.”
-
-“It is rather an awkward predicament!” said Anthony Pennell,
-thoughtfully, “you will forgive me for saying, Mrs. Pullen, that Ralph
-is so very likely to have done this sort of thing, that I feel one
-might be treading on very delicate ground--in fact, putting one’s foot
-in it--by interfering. You know what Ralph is--selfish and indolent and
-full of vanity. He considers it far too much trouble to make love (as
-it is called) to a woman, but he will accept any amount of love that is
-offered him, so long as it gives him no trouble. If this Miss Brandt
-is all that you and the doctor here say of her, she may possibly have
-drawn Ralph on, and taken his languid satisfaction as proof that he
-agreed to all she said and did. But it will make the _dénouement_ just
-as unpleasant. Besides, how will Ralph himself take my interference in
-the matter? He may have some designs on this girl--some ideas in the
-future connected with her--and will ask what business I had to come
-between them.”
-
-“O! no! Did I not tell you that he had left her letters in his grate!”
-
-“That might be part of his indolent carelessness, or they may have been
-left there by design, as a means of breaking the ice between himself
-and Miss Leyton. Is not he, after all, the most proper person to appeal
-to? Why not wait till your husband returns, and let him speak to his
-brother?”
-
-“I am so afraid in that case, that Ralph might consider that he had
-gone too far with Miss Brandt, and honour demanded that he should marry
-her! And, Mr. Pennell, Doctor Phillips could tell you things, if he
-chose, to prove to you that Harriet Brandt is not a fit wife for any
-decent man.”
-
-Anthony Pennell thought again for a few minutes--sitting silent with
-his hand caressing his smooth chin. Then he said:
-
-“If you are very much bent on my doing what I can in this matter, I see
-only one way to accomplish it. I must enter the Red House under a flag
-of truce. Did you know this Baroness Gobelli? Can you tell me what sort
-of woman she is? I never heard the name before!”
-
-“She is quite a character,” replied Margaret; “I believe her husband
-_is_ a German Baron, but she was a Mrs. Bates, and is an extraordinary
-Baroness. A strange mixture also, of vulgarity and refined tastes. She
-drops all her aspirates, yet talks familiarly of aristocratic and royal
-titles, she dresses like a cook out on Sundays, and yet has a passion
-for good paintings and old china.”
-
-At the last words, Anthony Pennell pricked up his ears.
-
-“A passion for old china!” he exclaimed, “then there must be some good
-in her! Cannot you give me an introduction to the Red House on the plea
-that I am a connoisseur and am desirous of seeing her collection?”
-
-“Of course I can, but how can you approach these people in amity, with
-a censure of Miss Brandt’s conduct in your hand? Madame Gobelli is
-infatuated with Harriet Brandt! I was telling poor Elinor only this
-afternoon, that I should not be at all surprised if she were at the
-bottom of all this unpleasantness.”
-
-“She could not be at the bottom of anything unless Ralph had given
-her cause,” replied Mr. Pennell, who had never had a good opinion of
-his cousin’s straightforward dealing, “and however it may turn out,
-I should think he would have a heavy reckoning to settle with Miss
-Leyton! This is not the first time, remember! You have not forgotten
-the trouble Arthur had to get him out of that scrape with the
-laundress’s girl at Aldershot, the year before last!”
-
-“Yes! Arthur told me about it,” replied Margaret. “But you are going to
-help us, this time, Mr. Pennell, are you not?”
-
-“In so far as procuring an introduction to the Baroness, and taking
-my opportunity to let her know the true state of affairs with Miss
-Leyton, yes,” said Mr. Pennell, “but there, my responsibility must
-cease. Should Ralph have committed himself in writing, or anything of
-that sort, you must promise to let them fight it out their own way. I
-daresay there will be no trouble about the matter. I can see how it
-has occurred at a glance. Ralph has been merely amusing himself with
-the girl, and she has taken his philandering in earnest. But I wish he
-would leave that sort of thing off. It will ruin his married life if
-he does not!”
-
-“Yes! indeed, and Elinor Leyton really loves him, more, I am sure, than
-he imagines. She declared this afternoon, that if it were not put a
-complete stop to, she should break off her engagement. And I think she
-would be right!”
-
-“So do I,” acquiesced Anthony Pennell. “Well! if these people are
-ordinarily decent, they will, as soon as they hear the truth, prevent
-their young friend interfering with another woman’s rights. Write me
-the introduction, Mrs. Pullen, and I will pay the Red House a visit
-as soon as its owner gives me leave. And now let us talk of something
-pleasanter. How soon do you expect Arthur to arrive?”
-
-“Any day,” replied Margaret, “and I am longing so for him to come!”
-
-“Of course you are! Will he remain long in England?”
-
-“Only a few weeks! He has taken three months’ leave. Then, I shall
-return with him to Hosur.”
-
-“And you like the idea of India?”
-
-“O! anything--anything--to find myself with him again,” she answered
-feverishly.
-
-The conversation turned upon more indifferent subjects, and armed with
-the note of introduction to the Baroness, Anthony Pennell presently
-took his leave. He did not like the task imposed upon him, and he
-hardly knew how he should set about it, but on consideration he
-thought he could do no harm by having a look at the young lady, who
-had taken the fancy of his fickle-minded cousin Ralph, and leaving his
-future action to be decided by the interview. He sat down therefore
-before turning into bed, and wrote a note to the Baroness, enclosing
-the introduction from Mrs. Pullen, and asking permission to call and
-inspect her rare collection of china, of which he had heard so much.
-
-His letter reached the Red House on the following morning, at an
-unfortunate moment, when Madame Gobelli was giving full display to the
-worst side of her eccentric character.
-
-The Baroness was not a lover of animals, either dogs or horses. She was
-merciless to the latter and the former she kicked whenever they came in
-her way. It was considered necessary, however, for the safety of the
-Red House, that it should be guarded by a watch-dog, and a miserable
-retriever, which answered to that name, lived in a rotten cask in
-the stable yard. This unhappy animal, which had neither sufficient
-food, exercise, nor straw to lie on, was in the habit of keeping up
-a continuous baying at night, in remonstrance at the cruelty of its
-treatment, which was a cause of annoyance to the neighbours, who had
-often written to the Baroness about it in vain.
-
-On the morning in question, a Captain Hill, who lived on one side of
-the Red House, with his parents, sent in his card to Madame Gobelli and
-asked for an interview. She admitted him at once. She liked men of all
-sorts, and particularly if they were young and she could kiss them with
-impunity, under the pretence that she was old enough to be their mother.
-
-She therefore welcomed Captain Hill quite amiably. She came in from the
-garden to receive him, attired in a Genoa velvet dress that trailed
-half a yard on the damp ground behind, and a coarse Zulu hat perched
-on her large bullet head. She was attended by Harriet Brandt, who had
-been making a tour of the premises with her, and was always eager to
-see anybody who might call at the Red House. Miss Wynward also, who was
-dusting the china with a feather brush as the visitor was announced,
-continued her occupation, and without apologising for doing so, or
-asking leave.
-
-Harriet had not yet been able to determine the exact place which this
-lady held in the Baroness’s household, for she was treated as one of
-the family, and yet degraded at times to the position of a servant.
-
-The Baroness expected her to cook, or dust rooms, or darn stockings,
-or do anything required of her, whilst she introduced her to all her
-friends as if on a perfect equality with themselves. As she entered
-the drawing-room through one of the French windows, she shook hands
-familiarly with Captain Hill, and introduced him to both her companions.
-
-“Well!” she went on, “and so you’ve come to see us at last! I thought
-you were going to live and die in that tumble-down old place of yours,
-without so much as a shake of the ’and! I ’ope you’re all well at ’ome!”
-
-The stranger did not seem to know how to receive these civilities. He
-had not seated himself, but stood in the centre of the room with his
-hat in his hand, as though he found a difficulty in stating his errand
-at the Red House.
-
-“Take a chair,” said Madame Gobelli in her rough way, “there’s enough
-and to spare, and my young friend ’ere won’t eat you!”
-
-Still Captain Hill deliberated about accepting her offer.
-
-“Thank you,” he commenced, “but I shall not detain you above a few
-moments. I came to speak to you about your dog, Madame Gobelli. My
-parents are both very old, and my mother especially delicate--indeed, I
-fear that she may never rise from her bed again!”
-
-Here his voice faltered a little, but quickly recovering himself he
-went on,
-
-“She sleeps very little, and that little has now become impossible to
-her on account of the incessant barking of your yard dog. I am here
-to-day by the wish of my mother’s medical attendant, Doctor Parker, to
-tell you that the noise is seriously affecting her health, and to beg
-that you will adopt some measures to have the annoyance stopped.”
-
-As the Baroness understood the reason for which her neighbour had
-called upon her, her countenance palpably changed. The broad smile
-faded from her face and was replaced by an ominous frown. If there was
-one thing which she resented above another, it was being called to
-task for any disturbance in her household. Without taking any notice
-apparently of Captain Hill’s complaint, she turned to Miss Wynward and
-said,
-
-“Miss Wynward, come ’ere! Does that dog bark at night?”
-
-“Sometimes, my lady,” replied the governess dubiously.
-
-“I don’t believe it! You’re lying! ’Arriet, does Nelson ever bark so as
-to disturb anyone?”
-
-“He barks whenever there is a ring at the bell, or a stranger enters
-the grounds, Madame,” said Harriet, with politic evasion.
-
-“Oh! I assure you he does more than that!” interposed the visitor,
-“the poor animal howls without ceasing. Either he is ill, or the
-servants do not give him sufficient food!”
-
-But at this censure cast upon her domestics whom she bullied from
-morning till night, the Baroness’s uncontrolled temper burst forth.
-
-“’Ow dare you come ’ere,” she exclaimed loudly, “and bring false
-accusations against my servants? No one in this ’ouse is kept short of
-food. What do you mean--a rubbishing fellow like you--by coming ’ere,
-and accusing the Baron of starving ’is animals? There’s more money
-spent upon our animals, I bet, than goes in your poverty-stricken
-’ouse-’old in a year!”
-
-Captain Hill was now offended, as he well might be.
-
-“I do not know what knowledge you may possess of the exigencies of my
-parents’ household, Madam,” he replied, “but what I came here to tell
-you is this--that from whatever cause it may arise, the howling and
-whining of your dog is a public nuisance and it must be stopped!”
-
-“Must, must!” exclaimed Madame Gobelli, shaking her stick at him, “and
-pray ’oo’s to make me stop it?”
-
-“_I_ will,” said Captain Hill, “the noise is endangering the life of my
-mother, and I shall insist upon the animal being destroyed, or taken
-elsewhere. If you cannot take a friendly hint--if you have so callous
-a nature that the sufferings of an aged and invalid lady cannot excite
-your sympathy, the law shall teach you that, whatever you may fail to
-feel, you cannot annoy your neighbours with impunity!”
-
-“Fine neighbours indeed!” cried the Baroness, her whole face trembling
-and contorted with passion. “A beggarly lot of half-pay officers and
-retired parsons! I’ll soon see if you’ll be allowed to come riding the
-’igh ’orse over me! Confound your impudence! Do you know ’oo I am?”
-
-“A Billingsgate fishwoman, I should imagine, from your language!
-Certainly not a gentlewoman!” said Captain Hill, his eyes blazing with
-his wrath.
-
-“’Ang you! I’ll soon teach you ’ow to insult a lady that’s connected
-with Royalty!”
-
-At that, the stranger burst into a derisive laugh.
-
-“Down the back stairs!” he muttered to himself, but Madame Gobelli
-caught the words.
-
-“Get out of my ’ouse,” she cried. “’Ere, Miss Wynward, see this fellow
-out at the front door, and never you let ’im in again, or I’ll give you
-a month’s warning! Down the back stairs indeed! Confound you! If you
-don’t clear out this very minute, I’ll lay my stick across your back!
-You’ll make me destroy my dog, will you, and just because your trumpery
-mother don’t like ’is barking! Go ’ome and tell ’er to ’old ’er own
-row! And you accuse my servants of not giving ’im enough to eat. You’d
-be glad enough to see ’is dinner on your own table once or twice a
-week. Out with you, I say--out with you at once, and don’t let me see
-your ugly mug and your carroty ’ead in ’ere again, or I’ll set the dog
-you don’t like upon you.”
-
-Captain Hill had turned white as a sheet with anger.
-
-“You’ll hear more of this, Madam, and from my solicitor next time,” he
-said. “Heartless, unfeeling woman! How can you call yourself a mother,
-when you have no pity for a son’s grief at his mother’s illness? Pray
-God you may not have occasion to remember this morning, when you have
-to part from your own son!”
-
-He rushed from the room as he spoke, and they heard the hall door slam
-after him. For a minute after he left, there was a dead pause between
-the three women. His last words seemed to have struck the Baroness as
-with a two-edged sword. She stood silent, staring into vacancy, and
-breathing hard, whilst Harriet Brandt and Miss Wynward regarded each
-other with furtive dismay. The silence was broken by Madame Gobelli
-bursting into a harsh laugh.
-
-“I don’t fancy ’e will show ’is face in my ’ouse again, in an ’urry,”
-she exclaimed. “It was as good as a play to watch ’im, trying to brave
-it out! Confound ’is old mother! Why don’t she die and ’ave done
-with it! I’ve no patience with old people ’anging on in that way,
-and worrying the ’ole world with their fads! Well! what is it?” she
-continued to a maid who brought her a letter.
-
-“By the post, my lady!”
-
-The Baroness broke the seal. There was such a look of scare upon her
-features, that some people might have thought she was glad to have
-anything to do that should hide it from her companions. The letter was
-from Anthony Pennell, whose name was familiar to her, as to all the
-world.
-
-As she finished its perusal, her manner entirely altered. The broad
-smile broke out on her countenance--her eyes sparkled--one would have
-thought she could never be in anything but a beaming good temper.
-
-“’Olloa! ’Arriet!” she exclaimed, “’ere’s news for you! ’Oo do you
-think this letter’s from?”
-
-“How can I guess?” replied the girl, though her thoughts had flown at
-once to Ralph Pullen.
-
-“From Mr. Anthony Pennell, the great author, you know, and own cousin
-to that rapscallion, Captain Pullen! Now we shall ’ear all about the
-’andsome Captain! Mr. Pennell says ’e wants to come ’ere and see my
-china, but I know better! ’E’s bringing you a message from ’is cousin,
-mark my words! I can see it written up be’ind you!”
-
-Harriet’s delicate face flushed with pleasure at the news.
-
-“But why shouldn’t Captain Pullen have come himself?” she asked,
-anxiously.
-
-“I can’t tell you that! Perhaps ’e is coming, be’ind the other, and
-this is only a feeler! There’s wheels within wheels in these big
-families, sometimes, you know, and the Pullens are connected with a
-lot of big-wigs! But we’ll ’ave some news, anyway! You just sit down,
-my dear, and write Mr. Pennell a pretty note in my name--you write a
-prettier ’and than I do--and say we shall be very pleased to see ’im
-to-morrow afternoon, if convenient, and I ’ope ’e will stay to dinner
-afterwards and be introduced to the Baron--will you?”
-
-“O! yes, of course, Madame, if you wish it!” replied the girl, smiles
-dimpling her face at the thought of her triumph over Elinor Leyton.
-
-“Now, Miss Wynward, we must ’ave a first-rate dinner to-morrow for Mr.
-Pennell, and you and Bobby ’ad better dine at one o’clock, or you’ll
-spoil the table. Let me see! We’ll ’ave----”
-
-But turning to enforce her orders, the Baroness discovered that Miss
-Wynward had quitted the room.
-
-“Why! where ’as the woman gone? Did you see ’er leave the room,
-’Arriet?”
-
-“I did not! I was too much occupied listening to you,” replied the girl
-from the table, where she was inditing the answer to Anthony Pennell’s
-note.
-
-“’Ere, Miss Wynward! Miss Wynward!” screamed the Baroness from the open
-door, but no reply came to her call.
-
-“I must go and see after ’er!” she said, as she stumped from the room,
-as intent upon procuring a good dinner for one young man, as she had
-been in insulting the other, and turning him from her doors.
-
-Meanwhile Captain Hill, hot and angry, was striding away in the
-direction of his own home, when he heard a soft voice calling his name
-in the rear. He turned to encounter the spare, humiliated form of Miss
-Wynward.
-
-“Captain Hill,” she ejaculated, “I beg your pardon, but may I speak to
-you for a moment?”
-
-Recognising her as having been in the room, when the Baroness had so
-grossly insulted him, he waited rather coldly for her to come up with
-him.
-
-“Don’t think me impertinent or interfering,” faltered Miss Wynward,
-“but I was so shocked--so distressed--I could not let you go without
-saying how grieved and sorry I am!”
-
-“I do not quite understand you,” replied Captain Hill.
-
-“O! yes, surely, did you not see me in the room just now! I felt as if
-I should die of shame! But if you knew what it is to be dependent--to
-be unable to speak or to expostulate--you would guess perhaps----”
-
-“Yes! Yes! I think I can understand. But pray don’t distress yourself
-about it! It was my own fault! I should have addressed her first
-through my solicitor. But I thought she was a gentlewoman!”
-
-“It is her temper that gets the better of her,” said Miss Wynward in an
-apologetic tone, “she is not always so bad as she was this morning!”
-
-“That is fortunate for the world at large,” replied Captain
-Hill, gravely. “I could have forgiven her vulgarity, but not her
-heartlessness. I can only think that she is a most terrible woman.”
-
-“That is what everybody says,” answered his companion, “but she will
-admit of no remonstrance. She _will_ have her own way, and the Baron
-is as powerless to refrain her, as you, or I. But that she should
-so insult a gentleman like yourself, even descending to oaths and
-personalities--O! I cannot tell you how much I felt it--how ashamed I
-was, and how anxious that you should not confound me with anything the
-Baroness said, or did!”
-
-“Indeed,” said Captain Hill, holding out his hand, “you need have no
-fear on that score. I hope I know a gentlewoman when I see her! But
-tell me, since your eyes are open to all this, how is it that a lady
-like yourself can stay under the roof of so terrible a person? There
-are plenty of other situations to be had! Why do you not leave her, and
-go elsewhere?”
-
-He was struck by the look of mingled anxiety and fear with which she
-regarded him.
-
-“O! Captain Hill, there are reasons that are difficult to explain--that
-I could not tell to anyone on so short an acquaintance. But the
-Baroness possesses great power--she could ruin me, I believe she could
-_kill_ if she chose!”
-
-“She threatens you then!”
-
-“Yes!” came from Miss Wynward’s lips, but in almost a whisper.
-
-“Well! this is hardly the time and place to discuss such a question,”
-said Captain Hill, “but I should much like to see more of you, Miss
-Wynward! If you have any time at your disposal, will you come over and
-see my old mother? She is quite confined to her room, but I know it
-would please her to have a quiet talk with you!”
-
-A light glistened in Miss Wynward’s washed-out eyes, and a smile stole
-over her countenance.
-
-“Do you really mean it, Captain Hill?”
-
-“I never say anything that I do not mean,” he answered, “I am sure both
-my parents would be glad to give you their advice, and my dear father,
-who is a clergyman, though past an active ministry, may be able to be
-of use to you in a more practical way. At anyrate, you will come and
-see us. That is a bargain!” and he held out his hand to her again in
-farewell.
-
-“O! I will--I will, indeed,” exclaimed Miss Wynward, gratefully, “and
-thank you so very much for the permission. You have put a little hope
-into my life!”
-
-She seized the hand he proffered her, and kissed it, as an inferior
-might have done, and then hurried back to the Red House, before he had
-had time to remonstrate with her on the proceeding.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-
-When Anthony Pennell received the Baroness’s invitation, penned in the
-delicate foreign handwriting of Harriet Brandt, he accepted it at once.
-Being out of the season, he had no engagement for that evening, but
-he would have broken twenty engagements, sooner than miss the chance,
-so unexpectedly offered him, of meeting in an intimate family circle,
-the girl who appeared to have led his cousin Ralph’s fancy astray. He
-pictured her to himself as a whitey-brown young woman with thick lips
-and rolling eyes, and how Ralph, who was so daintily particular where
-the _beau sexe_ was concerned, could have been attracted by such a
-specimen, puzzled Anthony altogether. The knowledge that she had money
-struck him unpleasantly, for he could think of no other motive for
-Captain Pullen having philandered with her, as he evidently had done.
-At anyrate, the idea that there was the least chance of allying herself
-with their family, must be put out of her head, at once and for ever.
-
-Mr. Pennell amused himself with thinking of the scare he should create
-at the dinner table, by “springing” the news of Ralph’s intended
-marriage upon them, all at once. Would the young lady have hysterics,
-he wondered, or faint away, or burst into a passion of tears? He
-laughed inwardly at the probability! He felt very cruel over it! He had
-no pity for the poor quadroon, as Doctor Phillips had called her. It
-was better that she should suffer, than that Elinor Leyton should have
-to break off her engagement. And, by Margaret Pullen’s account, Miss
-Brandt had been both defiant and insulting to Miss Leyton. She must be
-a brazen, unfeeling sort of girl--it was meet that she paid the penalty
-of her foolhardiness.
-
-It was in such a mood that Anthony Pennell arrived at the Red House at
-five o’clock in the afternoon, that he might have the opportunity to
-inspect the collection of china that had gained him an entrance there.
-
-The Baroness had promised to be home in time to receive him, but he
-was punctual and she was not. Harriet Brandt was loitering about the
-garden, which was still pleasant enough on fine days in the middle of
-September, when the news that Mr. Pennell was in the drawing-room was
-brought to her by Miss Wynward. Harriet had been very eager to meet
-Anthony Pennell--not because she was pining after his cousin, but
-because her feminine curiosity was strong to discover _why_ Ralph had
-deserted her, and if he had been subjected to undue influence to force
-him to do so. But now that the time had come, she felt shy and nervous.
-Suppose he, Mr. Pennell, had seen Miss Leyton meanwhile, and heard all
-that had taken place between them, when she visited the Red House. And
-suppose he should take Miss Leyton’s part! Harriet’s mind was full of
-“supposes” as she turned to Miss Wynward and said,
-
-“O! I can’t go and receive him, Miss Wynward! Mr. Pennell has come to
-see the Baroness, not me! Cannot you entertain him until she comes
-home? She will not be long now!”
-
-“Her ladyship’s last words to me, Miss Brandt, were, that if she had
-not returned from the factory by the time Mr. Pennell arrived, you were
-to receive him and give him afternoon tea in her stead! I hope you will
-do as her ladyship desired!”
-
-“Well! I suppose I must then,” replied Harriet, screwing up her mouth,
-with a gesture of dissatisfaction, “but do send in the tea, quickly,
-please!”
-
-“It shall be up, Miss Brandt, as soon as I can get back to make it!
-Mr. Pennell seems a very pleasant gentleman! I wouldn’t mind if I were
-you!”
-
-Miss Wynward hurried back to the house, as she spoke, and Harriet
-walked slowly over the lawn towards the drawing-room windows.
-
-Anthony Pennell, who had been bending over some rare specimens of old
-Chelsea, looked up suddenly as she approached, and was struck dumb with
-admiration. She had improved wonderfully in looks since she had been in
-Europe, though the women who lived with her continually, were slow to
-perceive it. Her delicate complexion had acquired a colour like that of
-a blush rose, which was heightened by contrast with her dark, glowing
-eyes, whilst her hair, by exposure to the rays of the sun, had caught
-some of its fire and showed ruddily, here and there, in streaks of
-auburn. Her figure, without having lost its lissom grace, was somewhat
-fuller, and her manner was altogether more intelligent, and less
-_gauche_ than it had been. But the dark eyes were still looking for
-their prey, and the restless lips were incessantly twitching and moving
-one over the other. She was beautifully dressed that evening--she had
-not been in London for a month, without finding a way to spend her
-money--and Anthony Pennell, like most artistic natures, was very open
-to the influence of dress upon a woman. Harriet wore a frock of the
-palest lemon colour, cut quite plain, but perfect in every line and
-pleat and fold, and finished off at the throat with some rare lace,
-caught up here and there with tiny diamond pins.
-
-“By Jove! what a beautiful girl!” was Mr. Pennell’s inward ejaculation
-as he saw her drawing nearer the spot where he stood. It was strange
-that his first judgment of Harriet Brandt should have been the same
-as that of his cousin, Ralph Pullen, but it only proves from what
-a different standpoint men and women judge of beauty. As Harriet
-walked over the grass, Anthony Pennell noted each line of her swaying
-figure--each tint of her refined face--with the pretty little hands
-hanging by her side, and the slumbrous depths of her magnificent eyes.
-He did not, for one moment, associate her with the idea which he had
-formed of the West Indian heiress who was bent on capturing his cousin
-Ralph. He concluded she was another young friend who might be partaking
-of the Baroness’s hospitality. He bowed low as she entered through the
-open French window looking as a Georgian or Cashmerian houri might have
-looked, he thought, if clad in the robes of civilisation. Harriet bowed
-in return, and said timidly,
-
-“I am so sorry that Madame Gobelli is not here to receive you, but
-she will not keep you waiting more than a few minutes, I am sure. She
-particularly said that she would not be later than five o’clock.”
-
-“She has left a very charming substitute in her place,” replied
-Pennell, with another bow.
-
-“I believe you have come to see the china,” continued Harriet, “I do
-not know much about it myself, but Miss Wynward will be here in a
-minute, and she knows the name of every piece, and where it came from!”
-
-“That will be eminently satisfactory,” rejoined Anthony Pennell, “but
-I happen to be a connoisseur in such things myself. I have one or two
-charming bits of old Sèvres and Majolica in my chambers, which I think
-the Baroness would like to see if she will honour me with a visit
-to my little place. A lonely bachelor like myself must take up some
-hobby, you know, to fill his life, and mine happens to be china. Madame
-Gobelli appears to have some lovely Chelsea there. I would like to
-steal one or two of those groups on the cabinet. Will you hold the door
-open for me, whilst I run away with them?”
-
-At this sally, Harriet laughed, and Mr. Pennell thought she looked even
-handsomer when she laughed than when she was pensive.
-
-“Here is the tea!” she cried nervously, as Miss Wynward appeared with
-the tray. “O! Miss Wynward, surely Madame cannot be much longer now!
-Have you looked down the road to see if she is coming?”
-
-“The carriage has just turned into the stable yard,” replied Miss
-Wynward, and in another minute, the doorway was filled with the ample
-proportions of the Baroness.
-
-“’Olloa! Mr. Pennell, and so you’ve stolen a march upon me!” was her
-first greeting, “’ow are you?” extending her enormous hand, “’ave you
-been looking at the china? Wait till I’ve ’ad my tea; I’ll show you one
-or two bits that’ll make your mouth water! It’s my ’obby! I used to
-save my pocket money when I was a little gal to buy china. I remember
-my grandfather, the Dook of--but there, I ’aven’t known you long enough
-to let you into family secrets. Let’s ’ave our tea and talk afterwards!
-I ’ope ’Arriet ’as entertained you well!”
-
-“This young lady--” commenced Anthony Pennell, interrogatively.
-
-“To be sure, Miss ’Arriet Brandt! ’Asn’t she introduced ’erself to you?
-She’s like a daughter of the ’ouse to us! We look upon ’er as one of
-our own, Gustave and me! Miss Brandt from Jamaica! And she knew your
-cousin, Captain Pullen, too, at Heyst, we all did, and we’re dying to
-’ear what ’as become of ’im, for ’e’s never shown ’is face at the Red
-’Ouse!”
-
-The murder was out now, and Harriet waited tremblingly for the result!
-What did Mr. Pennell know? What would he say?
-
-But Mr. Pennell said nothing--he was too much startled to speak.
-_This_, Harriet Brandt--this lovely girl, the quadroon of whom both
-Doctor Phillips and Mrs. Pullen had spoken so disparagingly?--of whom
-they had said that she was not fit to be the wife of any decent man?
-Oh! they must be fools and blind--or he was dreaming! The Baroness was
-not slow to see the look upon his face and to interpret it rightly.
-
-“Are you surprised? You needn’t look so incredulous! I give you my word
-that this is ’Arriet Brandt--the same young lady that knew Mrs. Pullen
-and her brother-in-law and Miss Leyton over at Heyst. What sort of a
-character ’ave they been giving ’er be’ind ’er back?”
-
-“Indeed, I assure you, Madame--” commenced Mr. Pennell, deprecatingly.
-
-“You needn’t take the trouble to tell any tarradiddles about it! I can
-see it in your face! I didn’t think much of that cousin of yours from
-the beginning; ’e’s got a shifty sort of look, and as for that cold
-bit of goods, Miss Leyton, well, all I say is, God ’elp the man that
-marries ’er, for she’s enough to freeze the sun himself! But I liked
-Mrs. Pullen well enough, and I was sorry to ’ear that she ’ad lost ’er
-baby, for she was quite wrapt up in it! But I daresay she’ll soon ’ave
-another!”
-
-Without feeling it incumbent on him to enter into an argument as to the
-probability of the Baroness’s last suggestion, Anthony Pennell was glad
-of the digression, as it gave him an opportunity of slurring over the
-dangerous subject of Ralph Pullen’s character.
-
-“The loss of her child was a very great blow to my poor cousin,” he
-replied, “and she is still suffering from it, bitterly. Else, I have no
-doubt that you would have seen something of her--and the others,” he
-added in a lower tone. After a slight interval, he ventured to raise
-his eyes and see how the girl opposite to him had taken what was said,
-but it did not appear to have made much impression on her--she was, on
-the contrary, gazing at him with that magnetic glance of hers as though
-she wanted to read into his very soul.
-
-“Don’t go and say that I want to see ’em,” said the Baroness as, having
-devoured enough cake and bread and butter to feed an ordinary person
-for a day, she rose and led the way into another room. “I don’t want to
-see anybody at the Red ’Ouse that doesn’t want to come, and I ’aven’t
-expected the ladies. But as for Captain Pullen, ’oo made an engagement
-to follow our party to Brussels, and then never took the trouble to
-write a line to excuse ’imself for breaking ’is word, why, I say ’e’s a
-jerry sneak, and you may tell ’im so if you like! _We_ didn’t want ’im.
-’E proposed to come ’imself, and I engaged ’is room and everything, and
-then ’e skedaddled without a word, and I call it beastly be’aviour.
-You mustn’t mind my plain speaking, Mr. Pennell. I always say what I
-think! And I would like to break my stick over Captain Pullen’s back
-and that’s the truth.”
-
-They were walking along the passage now, on their way to the Baron’s
-library--the Baroness in front with her hand leaning heavily on
-Pennell’s shoulder, and Harriet lingering a little behind. Anthony
-Pennell pondered awhile before he replied. Was this the time to
-announce Ralph’s intended marriage. How would the girl behind them take
-it?
-
-He turned slightly and looked at her face as the thought passed through
-his mind. Somehow the eyes that met his reassured him. He began to
-think it must be a mistake--that she did not care for Ralph as much as
-Mrs. Pullen had supposed--that she was only offended perhaps (as her
-hostess evidently was) by the curt and uncivil manner in which he had
-treated them both. So he replied,
-
-“I have not the slightest excuse to make for my cousin’s conduct,
-Madame Gobelli. It appears to me that he has treated you with very
-scant civility, and he ought to be ashamed of himself. But as you know,
-his little niece’s death was very sudden and unexpected, and the least
-he could do was to escort his sister-in-law and Miss Leyton back to
-England, and since then----”
-
-“Well! and what since then?” demanded the Baroness, sharply.
-
-“Lord Walthamstowe and he have come to an arrangement,” said Pennell,
-speaking very slowly, “that his marriage with Miss Elinor Leyton shall
-take place sooner than was at first intended. The Limerick Rangers
-are under orders for foreign service, and Captain Pullen naturally
-wishes to take his wife out with him, and though, of course, all this
-is no excuse for his omitting to write you a letter, the necessary
-preparations and the consequent excitement _may_ have put his duty out
-of his head. Of course,” he continued, “you know that Ralph is engaged
-to marry Miss Leyton?”
-
-“I ’eard something of it,” replied the Baroness reluctantly, “but one
-never knows what is true and what is not. Anyway, Captain Pullen didn’t
-give out the news ’imself! ’E seemed ’appy enough without Miss Leyton,
-didn’t ’e, ’Arriet?”
-
-But turning round to emphasise her words, she found that Harriet had
-not followed them into the library. Whereupon she became confidential.
-
-“To tell you the truth, Mr. Pennell,” she continued, “’e just be’aved
-like a scoundrel to our little ’Arriet there. ’E ran after the gal all
-day, and spent all ’is evenings in our private sitting-room, gazing
-at ’er as if ’e would eat ’er, whilst she sang and played to ’im. ’E
-never said a word about marrying Miss Leyton. It was all ‘’Ally, ’Ally,
-’Ally’ with ’im. And if the gal ’adn’t been a deal too clever for ’im,
-and wise enough to see what a vain zany ’e is, she might ’ave broken
-’er ’eart over it. The conceited jackanapes!”
-
-“But she has not fretted,” said Anthony Pennell eagerly.
-
-“Not she! I wouldn’t let ’er! She’s meat for Captain Pullen’s master!
-A gal with fifteen ’undred a year in ’er own ’ands, and with a pair of
-eyes like that! Oh! no! ’Arriet can pick up a ’usband worth two of your
-cousin any day!”
-
-“I should think so indeed,” replied Mr. Pennell fervently, “I have
-heard Mrs. Pullen mention Miss Brandt, but she did not prepare me for
-meeting so beautiful a girl. But I can hardly wonder at my cousin
-running away from her, Madame Gobelli. Knowing himself to be already
-engaged, Miss Brandt must have proved a most dangerous companion.
-Perhaps he found his heart was no longer under his own control, and
-thought discretion the better part of valour. You must try and look
-upon his conduct in the best light you can!”
-
-“Oh! well! it don’t signify much anyway, for ’e’s no miss at the Red
-’Ouse, I can tell you, and ’Arriet could marry to-morrow if she chose,
-and to a man worthy of ’er. But now you must look at my Spode.”
-
-She walked up to a tall cabinet at one end of the room, which was piled
-with china, and took up a fragile piece in her hands.
-
-“Do you see that?” she said, turning up the plate and showing the
-mark upon the bottom, “there it is, you see! There’s the M. These
-five pieces are said to be the oldest in existence. And here’s a cup
-of Limoges. And that’s Majolica. Do you know the marks of Majolica?
-They’re some of the rarest known! A cross on a shield. The first real
-bit of china I ever possessed was a Strasbourg. Have you ever seen any
-Dutch Pottery--marked with an A.P.? I picked that up at an old Jew’s
-shop in the market in Naples. And this Capo di Monte, strange to say,
-in a back alley in Brighton. There’s nothing I like better than to grub
-about back slums and look for something good. Some of my best pieces
-’ave come out of pawnbrokers’ shops. That plate you’re looking at is
-old Flemish--more than two ’undred years, I believe! It came out of the
-rag market at Bruges. There used to be first-rate pickings to be ’ad at
-Bruges and Ghent and in Antwerp some years ago, but the English ’ave
-pretty well cleared ’em out.”
-
-“I never saw a better private collection, Madame Gobelli,” said Anthony
-Pennell, as he gloated over the delicate morsels of Sèvres and Limoges
-and Strasbourg. “The Baron should have had an old curiosity and
-bric-a-brac establishment, instead of anything so prosaic as boots and
-shoes.”
-
-“O! I couldn’t ’ave ’ad it!” exclaimed the Baroness, “it would ’ave
-gone to my ’eart to sell a good bargain when I ’ad made it! My cups
-and saucers and plates and teapots are like children to me, and if I
-thought my Bobby would sell ’em when I was gone, I believe I should
-rise from my grave and whack ’im.”
-
-The woman became almost womanly as her eyes rested lovingly on her
-art treasures. It seemed incongruous to Pennell, to watch her huge
-coarse hands, with their thick stumpy fingers and broad chestnut nails,
-fingering the delicate fabric with apparent carelessness. Cup after cup
-and vase and plate she almost tossed over each other, as she pushed
-some away to make room for others, and piled them up on the top of one
-another, until he trembled lest they should all come toppling down
-together.
-
-“You are more used to handle these treasures than I am,” he remarked
-presently, “I should be too much afraid of smashing something, to move
-them so quickly as you do.”
-
-“I never broke a bit of china in my life,” returned the Baroness
-energetically. “I’ve broken a stick over a man’s back, more than once,
-but never ’ad an accident with my plates and dishes. ’Ow do you account
-for that?”
-
-“You must have a flow of good luck!” said Mr. Pennell, “I am so
-fearful for mine that I keep all the best under glass!”
-
-“I ’ave more friends to ’elp me than perhaps you know of,” said the
-Baroness, mysteriously, “but it ain’t only that! I never let a servant
-dust it! Miss Wynward does it, but she’s too much afraid to do more
-than touch ’em with the tip of her feather brush. They come to me
-sometimes and complain that the china is dirty. ‘Let it be dirty,’ I
-say, ‘_that_ won’t break it, but if you clean it, you will!’ Ha! ha!
-ha!”
-
-At that moment Harriet Brandt entered the room, moving sinuously across
-the carpet as a snake might glide to its lair. Anthony Pennell could
-not take his eyes off that gliding walk of hers. It seemed to him the
-very essence of grace. It distracted all his attention from the china.
-
-“The Baron has just come in,” observed Harriet to her hostess.
-
-“Oh! well! come along and leave the rest of the china till after
-dinner,” said Madame Gobelli. “Gustave likes to ’ave ’is dinner as soon
-as ’e comes ’ome.”
-
-She thrust her arm through that of Anthony Pennell, and conducted
-him to the dining-room, where the Baron (without having observed the
-ceremony of changing his coat or boots) was already seated just as he
-had come in, at the table. He gave a curt nod to the visitor as Mr.
-Pennell’s name was mentioned to him, and followed it up immediately
-by a query whether he would take fish. Mr. Pennell sat out the meal
-with increasing amazement at every course. He, who was accustomed, in
-consequence of his popularity, to sit at the tables of some of the
-highest in the land, could liken this one to nothing but a farmhouse
-dinner. Course succeeded course, in rapid succession, and there was
-no particular fault to find with anything, but the utter want of
-ceremony--the mingling of well-known and aristocratic names with the
-boot and shoe trade--and the way in which the Baron and Baroness ate
-and drank, filled him with surprise. The climax was reached when Mr.
-Milliken, who was late for dinner, entered the room, and his hostess,
-before introducing him to the stranger, saluted him with a resounding
-smack on either cheek.
-
-Pennell thought it might be his turn next, and shuddered. But the wine
-flowed freely, and the Baroness, being in an undoubted good humour,
-the hospitality was unlimited. After dinner, the Baron having settled
-to sleep in an armchair, Madame Gobelli proposed that the party should
-amuse themselves with a game of “Hunt the slippers.”
-
-She was robed in an expensive satin dress, but she threw herself down
-on the ground with a resounding thump, and thrusting two enormous feet
-into view, offered her slipper as an inducement to commence the game.
-
-Pennell stood aloof, battling to restrain his laughter at the comical
-sight before him. The Baroness’s foot, from which she had taken the
-shoe, was garbed in a black woollen stocking full of holes, which
-displayed a set of bare toes. But, apparently quite unaware of the
-ludicrous object she presented, she kept on calling out for Harriet
-Brandt and Miss Wynward to come and complete the circle at which only
-Mr. Milliken and herself were seated. But Harriet shrank backwards and
-refused to play.
-
-“No! indeed, Madame, I cannot. I do not know your English games!” she
-pleaded.
-
-“Come on, we’ll teach you!” screamed Madame Gobelli, “’ere’s Milliken,
-’e knows all about it, don’t you, Milliken? ’E knows ’ow to look for
-the slipper under the gal’s petticoats. You come ’ere, ’Arriet, and sit
-next me, and Mr. Pennell shall be the first to ’unt. Come on!”
-
-But Miss Brandt would not “come on”. She remained seated, and declared
-that she was too tired to play and did not care for _les jeux
-innocents_, and she had a headache, and anything and everything, before
-she would comply with the outrageous request preferred to her.
-
-Madame Gobelli grumbled at her idleness and called her disobliging, but
-Anthony admired the girl for her steadfast refusal. He did not like to
-see her in the familiar society of such a woman as the Baroness--he
-would have liked still less to see her engaged in such a boisterous and
-unseemly game as “Hunt the slipper.”
-
-He took the opportunity of saying,
-
-“Since you are disinclined for such an energetic game, Miss Brandt,
-perhaps you would oblige me by singing a song! I should so much like to
-hear the mandoline. Mrs. Pullen has spoken to me of your efficiency on
-it.”
-
-“If Madame Gobelli wishes it, I have no objection,” replied Harriet.
-
-“Oh! well! if you are all going to be so disagreeable as not to play a
-good game,” said the Baroness, as Mr. Milliken pulled her on her feet
-again, “’Arriet may as well sing to us! But a good romp first wouldn’t
-’ave done us any ’arm!”
-
-She adjourned rather sulkily to a distant sofa with Mr. Milliken,
-where they entertained each other whilst Harriet tuned her mandoline
-and presently let her rich voice burst forth in the strains of “Oh!
-ma Charmante.” Anthony Pennell was enchanted. He had a passion for
-music, and it appealed more powerfully to him than anything else. He
-sat in rapt attention until Harriet’s voice had died away, and then he
-implored her to sing another song.
-
-“You cannot tell what it is for me, who cares more for music than for
-anything else in this world, to hear a voice like yours. Why! you will
-create a perfect _furore_ when you go into society. You could make your
-fortune on the stage, but I know you have no need of that!”
-
-“Oh! one never knows what one may have need of,” said Harriet gaily, as
-she commenced “Dormez, ma belle”, and sang it to perfection.
-
-“You must have had a very talented singing-master,” observed Pennell
-when the second song was finished.
-
-“Indeed no! My only instructress was a nun in the Ursuline Convent
-in Jamaica. But I always loved it,” said the girl, as she ran over
-the strings of her mandoline in a merry little tarantelle, which made
-everyone in the room feel as if they had been bitten by the spider from
-which it took its name, and wanted above all other things to dance.
-
-How Pennell revelled in the music and the performer! How he longed to
-hear from her own lips that Ralph’s treatment had left no ill effects
-behind it.
-
-When she had ceased playing, he drew nearer to her, and under the
-cover of the Baroness’s conversation with Mr. Milliken and the Baron’s
-snores, they managed to exchange a few words.
-
-“How can I ever thank you enough for the treat you have given me!” he
-began.
-
-“I am very glad that you liked it!”
-
-“I was not prepared to hear such rare talent! My experience of young
-ladies’ playing and singing has not hitherto been happy. But you have
-great genius. Did you ever sing to Mrs. Pullen whilst in Heyst?”
-
-“Once or twice.”
-
-“And to my cousin, Ralph Pullen?”
-
-“Yes!”
-
-“I cannot understand his having treated the Baroness with such scant
-courtesy. And you also, who had been kind enough to allow him to enjoy
-your society. You would not have found me so ungrateful. But you have
-heard doubtless that he is going to be married shortly!”
-
-“Yes! I have heard it!”
-
-“And that has, I suppose, put everything else out of his head! Perhaps
-it may be as well, especially for his future wife. There are some
-things which are dangerous for men to remember--such as your lovely
-voice, for example!”
-
-“Do you think so?” Harriet fixed her dark eyes on him, as she put the
-question.
-
-“I am sure it will be dangerous for me, unless you will give me leave
-to come and hear it again. I shall not be able to sleep for thinking
-of it. Do you think the Baroness will be so good as to enrol me as a
-visitor to the house?”
-
-“You had better ask her!”
-
-“And if she consents, will you sing to me sometimes?”
-
-“I am always singing or playing! There is nothing else to do here. The
-Baron and Baroness are almost always out, and I have no company but
-that of Bobby and Miss Wynward. It is terribly dull, I can tell you. I
-am longing to get away, but I do not know where to go.”
-
-“Have you no friends in England?”
-
-“Not one, except Mr. Tarver, who is my solicitor!”
-
-“That sounds very grim. If you will let me count myself amongst your
-friends, I shall be so grateful.”
-
-“I should like it very much! I am not so ignorant as not to have heard
-your name and to know that you are a celebrated man. But I am afraid I
-shall prove a very stupid friend for you.”
-
-“I have no such fear, and if I may come and see you sometimes, I shall
-count myself a very happy man.”
-
-“I am generally alone in the afternoon,” replied Miss Brandt,
-sophistically.
-
-In another minute Mr. Pennell was saying good-night to his hostess and
-asking her permission to repeat his visit at some future time.
-
-“And if you and Miss Brandt would so far honour me, Madame Gobelli, as
-to come and have a little lunch at my chambers in Piccadilly, I shall
-feel myself only too much indebted to you. Perhaps we might arrange a
-_matinée_ or a concert for the same afternoon, if it would please you?
-Will you let me know? And pray fix as early a date as possible. And I
-may really avail myself of your kind permission to come and see you
-again. You may be sure that I shall not forget to do so. Good-night!
-Good-night, Baron! Good-night, Miss Brandt!” and with a nod to Mr.
-Milliken he was gone.
-
-“Ain’t ’e a nice fellow? Worth two of that conceited jackanapes, ’is
-cousin,” remarked the Baroness as he disappeared, “what do you think of
-’im, ’Arriet?”
-
-“Oh! he is well enough,” replied Miss Brandt with a yawn, as she
-prepared also to take her departure, “he is taller and broader and
-stronger looking than Captain Pullen--and he must be very clever into
-the bargain.”
-
-“And ’e never said a word about ’is books,” exclaimed Madame Gobelli,
-“only fancy!”
-
-“No! he never said a word about his books,” echoed Harriet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-
-Anthony Pennell had promised to let Margaret Pullen hear the result
-of his visit to the Red House, and as he entered her presence on the
-following evening, she saluted him with the queries,
-
-“Well! have you been there? Have you seen her?”
-
-To which he answered soberly,
-
-“Yes! I have been there and I have seen her!”
-
-“And what do you think of her? What did she say? I hope she was not
-rude to you!”
-
-“My dear Mrs. Pullen,” said Pennell, as he seated himself, and prepared
-for a long talk, “you must let me say in the first place, that I should
-never have recognised Miss Brandt from your description of her! You led
-me to expect a _gauche_ schoolgirl, a half-tamed savage, or a juvenile
-virago. And I am bound to say that she struck me as belonging to none
-of the species. I sent your note of introduction to Madame Gobelli,
-and received a very polite invitation in return, in accordance with
-which I dined at the Red House yesterday.”
-
-“You _dined_ there!” exclaimed Margaret with renewed interest. “Oh! do
-tell me all about it, from the very beginning. What do you think of
-that dreadful woman, the Baroness, and her little humpty Baron, and did
-you tell Miss Brandt of Ralph’s impending marriage?”
-
-“My dear lady, one question at a time, if you please. In the first
-place I arrived there rather sooner than I was expected, and Madame
-Gobelli had not returned from her afternoon drive, but Miss Harriet
-Brandt did the honours of the tea-table in a very efficient manner, and
-with as much composure and dignity as if she had been a duchess. We had
-a very pleasant time together until the Baroness burst in upon us!”
-
-“Are you chaffing me?” asked Margaret, incredulously. “What do you
-really think of her?”
-
-“I think she is, without exception, the most perfectly beautiful woman
-I have ever seen!”
-
-“_What!_” exclaimed his companion.
-
-She had thrown herself back in her armchair, and was regarding him
-as if he were perpetrating some mysterious joke, which she did not
-understand.
-
-“How extraordinary; how very extraordinary!” she exclaimed at length,
-“that is the very thing that Ralph said of her when they first met.”
-
-“But why extraordinary? There are few men who would not endorse the
-opinion. Miss Brandt possesses the kind of beauty that appeals to the
-senses of animal creatures like ourselves. She has a far more dangerous
-quality than that of mere regularity of feature. She attracts without
-knowing it. She is a mass of magnetism.”
-
-“O! do go on, Mr. Pennell! Tell me how she received the news you went
-to break to her!”
-
-“I never broke it at all. There was no need to do so. Miss Brandt
-alluded to the magnificent Captain Pullen’s marriage with the greatest
-nonchalance. She evidently estimates him at his true value, and does
-not consider him worth troubling her head about!”
-
-“You astonish me! But how are we to account then for the attitude
-she assumed towards Miss Leyton, and the boast she made of Ralph’s
-attentions to her?”
-
-“Bravado, most likely! Miss Leyton goes to the Red House all aflame,
-like an angry turkey cock, and accuses Miss Brandt of having robbed her
-of her lover, and what would you have the girl do? Not cry Peccavi,
-surely, and lower her womanhood? She had but one course--to brave it
-out. Besides, you have heard only one side of the question, remember! I
-can imagine Miss Leyton being very ‘nasty’ if she liked!”
-
-“You forget the letters which Miss Brandt wrote to Ralph and which were
-found in his empty grate at Richmond!”
-
-“I do not! I remember them as only another proof of how unworthy he is
-of the confidence of any woman.”
-
-“Really, Mr. Pennell, you seem to be all on Miss Brandt’s side!”
-
-“I am, and for this reason. If your ideas concerning her are
-correct, she displayed a large amount of fortitude whilst speaking
-of your brother-in-law yesterday. But my own belief is, that you are
-mistaken--that Miss Brandt is too clever for Ralph, or any of you--and
-that she cares no more for him in that way than you do. She considers
-doubtless that he has behaved in a most ungentlemanly manner towards
-them all, and so do I. I did not know what excuse to make for Ralph! I
-was ashamed to own him as a relation.”
-
-“Harriet Brandt _did_ then confide her supposed wrongs to you!”
-
-“Not at all! When she mentioned Ralph’s name, it was like that of any
-other acquaintance. But when she was out of the room, the Baroness
-told me that he had behaved like a scoundrel to the girl--that he had
-never confided the fact of his engagement to her, but run after her
-on every occasion, and then after having promised to join their party
-in Brussels, and asked Madame Gobelli to engage his room for him, he
-left for England without even sending her a line of apology, nor has he
-taken the least notice of them since!”
-
-“Ah! but you know the reason of his sudden departure!” cried Margaret,
-her soft eyes welling over with tears.
-
-“My dear Mrs. Pullen,” said Anthony Pennell, sympathetically, “even
-at that sad moment, Ralph might have sent a telegram, or scratched a
-line of apology. We have to attend to such little courtesies, you know,
-even if our hearts are breaking! And how can you excuse his not having
-called on them, or written since? No wonder the Baroness is angry. She
-did not restrain her tongue in speaking of him yesterday. She said she
-never wished to see his face again.”
-
-“Does she know that Elinor went to the Red House?”
-
-“I think not! There was no mention of her name!”
-
-“Then I suppose we may at all events consider the affair _une chose
-finie_?”
-
-“I hope so, sincerely! I should not advise Master Ralph to show his
-face at the Red House again. The Baroness said she longed to lay her
-stick across his back, and I believe she is quite capable of doing so!”
-
-“Oh! indeed she is,” replied Margaret, smiling, “we heard a great many
-stories of her valour in that respect from Madame Lamont, the landlady
-of the Lion d’Or. Has Miss Brandt taken up her residence altogether
-with Madame Gobelli?”
-
-“I think not! She told me her life there was very dull, and she should
-like to change it.”
-
-“She is in a most unfortunate position for a young girl,” remarked
-Margaret, “left parentless, with money at her command, and in a strange
-country! And with the strange stigma attached to her birth--”
-
-“I don’t believe in stigmas being attached to one’s birth,” returned
-Pennell hastily, “the only stigmas worth thinking about, are those we
-bring upon ourselves by our misconduct--such a one, for instance, as my
-cousin Ralph has done with regard to Miss Brandt! I would rather be in
-her shoes than his. Ralph thinks, perhaps, that being a stranger and
-friendless she is fair game--”
-
-“Who is that, taking my name in vain?” interrupted a languid voice at
-the open door, as Captain Pullen advanced into the room.
-
-Margaret Pullen started and grew very red at being detected in
-discussing her brother-in-law’s actions, but Anthony Pennell, who was
-always ruffled by his cousin’s affected walk and drawl, blurted the
-truth right out.
-
-“_I_ was,” he replied, hardly touching the hand which Captain Pullen
-extended to him, “I was just telling Mrs. Pullen of the high estimation
-in which your name is held at the Red House!”
-
-It was now Ralph’s turn to grow red. His fair face flushed from chin to
-brow, as he repeated,
-
-“The Red House! what Red House?”
-
-“Did they not mention the name to you? I mean the residence of Madame
-Gobelli. I was dining there yesterday.”
-
-“Dining there, were you? By Jove! I didn’t know you were acquainted
-with the woman. Isn’t she a queer old party? Baroness Boots, eh? Fancy
-your knowing them! I thought you were a cut above that, Anthony!”
-
-“If the Gobellis were good enough for you to be intimate with in Heyst,
-I suppose they are good enough for me to dine with in London, Ralph! I
-did not know until last evening, however, that you had left them to pay
-for your rooms in Brussels, or I would have taken the money over with
-me to defray the debt.”
-
-Ralph had seated himself by this time, but he looked very uneasy and as
-if he wished he had not come.
-
-“Did the old girl engage rooms for me?” he stammered. “Well! you know
-the reason I could not go to Brussels, but of course if I had known
-that she had gone to any expense for me, I would have repaid her. Did
-she tell you of it herself?” he added, rather anxiously.
-
-“Yes! and a good many more things besides. As you have happened to come
-in whilst we are on the question, I had better make a clean breast of
-it. Perhaps you have heard that Miss Leyton has been to the Red House
-and had an interview with Miss Brandt!”
-
-“Yes! I’ve just come from Richmond, where we’ve had a jolly row over
-it,” grumbled Ralph, pulling his moustaches.
-
-“Your family all felt that sort of thing could not go on--that it
-must end one way or the other--and therefore I went to the Red House,
-ostensibly to view Madame Gobelli’s collection of china, but in reality
-to ascertain what view of the matter she and Miss Brandt took--and to
-undeceive them as to your being in a position to pursue your intimacy
-with the young lady any further.”
-
-“And what the devil business have you to meddle in my private affairs?”
-demanded Captain Pullen rousing himself.
-
-“Because, unfortunately, your mother happened to be my father’s
-sister,” replied Pennell sternly, “and the scrapes you get in harm me
-more than they do yourself! One officer more or less, who gets into a
-scrape with women, goes pretty well unnoticed, but I have attained a
-position in which I cannot afford to have my relations’ names bandied
-about as having behaved in a manner unbecoming gentlemen.”
-
-“Who dares to say that of me?” cried Ralph angrily.
-
-“Everybody who knows of the attention you paid Miss Brandt in Heyst,”
-replied Anthony Pennell, boldly, “and without telling her that you were
-already engaged to be married. I do not wonder at Miss Leyton being
-angry about it! I only wonder she consents to have any more to do with
-you in the circumstances.”
-
-“O! we’ve settled all that!” said Ralph, testily, “we had the whole
-matter out at Richmond this afternoon, and I’ve promised to be a good
-boy for the future, and never speak to a pretty woman again! You need
-not wonder any more about Elinor! She is only glad enough to get me
-back at any price!”
-
-“Yes? And what about Miss Brandt?” enquired Pennell.
-
-“Is she worrying about this affair?” asked Captain Pullen, quickly.
-
-“Not a bit! I think she estimates your attentions at their true value.
-I was alluding to the opinion she and her friends must have formed of
-your character as an officer and a gentleman.”
-
-“O! I’ll soon set all that right! I’ll run over to the Red House and
-see the old girl, if you two will promise not to tell Elinor!”
-
-“I should not advise you to do that! I am afraid you might get a warm
-reception. I think Madame Gobelli is quite capable of having you soused
-in the horse-pond. You would think the same if you had heard the names
-she called you yesterday.”
-
-“What did she call me?”
-
-“Everything she could think of. She considers you have behaved not only
-in a most ungentlemanly manner towards her, but in a most dishonourable
-one to Miss Brandt. She particularly told me to tell you that she never
-wished to see your face again.”
-
-“Damn her!” exclaimed Captain Pullen, wrathfully, “and all her boots
-and shoes into the bargain. A vulgar, coarse old tradesman’s wife! How
-dare she----”
-
-“Stop a minute, Ralph! The Baroness’s status in society makes no
-difference in this matter. You know perfectly well that you did wrong.
-Let us have no more discussion of the subject.”
-
-Captain Pullen leaned back sulkily in his chair.
-
-“Well! if I _did_ flirt a little bit more than was prudent with an
-uncommonly distracting little girl,” he muttered presently, “I am sure
-I have had to pay for it! Lord Walthamstowe insists that if I do not
-marry Elinor before the Rangers start for Malta the engagement shall be
-broken off, so I suppose I must do it! But it is a doosid nuisance to
-be tied up at five-and-twenty, before one has half seen life! What the
-dickens I am to do with her when I’ve got her, I’m sure I don’t know!”
-
-“O! you will find married life very charming when you’re used to it!”
-said Pennell consolingly, “and Miss Leyton is everything a fellow could
-wish for in a wife! Only you must give up flirting, my boy, or if I
-mistake not, you’ll find you’ve caught a tartar!”
-
-“I expect to have to give up everything,” said the other with a sour
-mouth.
-
-As soon as he perceived a favourable opportunity, Anthony Pennell rose
-to take his leave. He did not wish to quarrel with Ralph Pullen about
-a girl whom he had only seen once, at the same time he feared for his
-own self-control, if his cousin continued to mention the matter in so
-nonchalant a manner. Pennell had always despised Captain Pullen for his
-easy conceit with regard to women, and it seemed to him to have grown
-more detestably contemptible than before. He was anxious therefore to
-quit the scene of action. But, to his annoyance, when he bade Margaret
-good-evening, Ralph also rose and expressed his wish to walk with him
-in the direction of his chambers.
-
-“I suppose you couldn’t put me up for the night, old chappie!” he said
-with his most languid air.
-
-“Decidedly not!” replied Pennell. “I have only my own bedroom, and I’ve
-no intention of your sharing it. Why do you not go back to Richmond, or
-put up at an hotel?”
-
-“Doosid inhospitable!” remarked Captain Pullen, with a faded smile.
-
-“Sorry you think so, but a man cannot give what he does not possess.
-You had better stay and keep your sister-in-law company for a little
-while. I have work to do and am going straight home!”
-
-“All right! I’ll walk with you a little way,” persisted Ralph, and the
-two young men left the house together.
-
-As soon as they found themselves in the street, Captain Pullen attacked
-his cousin, eagerly.
-
-“I say, Pennell, what is the exact direction of the Red House?”
-
-“Why do you want to know?” enquired his companion.
-
-“Because I feel that I owe the Baroness a visit. I acknowledge that I
-was wrong not to write and make my apologies, but you must know what it
-is--with a deuce of a lot of women to look after, and the whole gang
-crying their eyes out, and everything thrown on my shoulders, coffin,
-funeral, taking them over from Heyst to England, and all--it was enough
-to drive everything else out of a man’s head. You must acknowledge
-that.”
-
-“You owe no excuses to me, Pullen, neither do I quite believe in them.
-You have had plenty of time since to remedy your negligence, even if
-you did forget to be courteous at the moment!”
-
-“I know that, and you’re quite right about the other thing. I had more
-reasons than one for letting the matter drop. You are a man and I can
-tell you with impunity what would set the women tearing my eyes out.
-I _did_ flirt a bit with Harriet Brandt, perhaps more than was quite
-prudent in the circumstances--”
-
-“You mean the circumstance of your engagement to Miss Leyton?”
-
-“Yes and No! If I had been free, it would have been all the
-same--perhaps worse, for I should not have had a loophole of escape.
-For you see Miss Brandt is not the sort of girl that any man could
-marry.”
-
-“Why not?” demanded Pennell with some asperity.
-
-“Oh! because--well! you should hear old Phillips talk of her and her
-parents. They were the most awful people, and she has black blood in
-her, her mother was a half-caste, so you see it would be impossible
-for any man in my position to think of marrying her! One might get a
-piebald son and heir! Ha! ha! ha! But putting all that aside, she is
-one of the demndest fascinating little women I ever came across--you
-would say so too, if you had seen as much of her as I did--I can’t tell
-you what it is exactly, but she has a drawing way about her, that pulls
-a fellow into the net before he knows what he is about. And her voice,
-by Jove!--have you heard her sing?”
-
-“I have, but that has nothing to do that I can see with the subject
-under discussion. You, an engaged man, who had no more right to
-philander with a girl, than if you had been married, appear to me to
-have followed this young lady about and paid her attentions, which
-were, to say the least of them, compromising, never announcing the
-fact, meanwhile, that you were bound to Miss Leyton. After which, you
-left her, without a word of explanation, to think what she chose of
-your conduct. And now you wish to see her again, in order to apologise.
-Am I right?”
-
-“Pretty well, only you make such a serious matter out of a little fun!”
-
-“Well, then, I repeat that if you are wise, you will save yourself the
-trouble, Ralph! Miss Brandt is happily too sensible to have been taken
-in by your pretence of making love to her. She estimates you at your
-true value. She knows that you are engaged to Elinor Leyton--that you
-were engaged all the time she knew you--and, I think, she rather pities
-Miss Leyton for being engaged to you!”
-
-But this point of view had never presented itself before to the
-inflated vanity of Ralph Pullen.
-
-“_Pities_ her!” he exclaimed, “the devil!”
-
-“I daresay it seems incomprehensible to you that any woman should not
-be thankful to accept at your hands the crumbs that may fall from
-another’s table, but with regard to Miss Brandt, I assure you it is
-true! And even were it otherwise, I am certain Madame Gobelli would not
-admit you to her house. You know the sort of person she is! She can be
-very violent if she chooses, and the names she called you yesterday,
-were not pretty ones. I had much trouble, as your relative, to stand
-by and listen to them quietly. Yet I could not say that they were
-undeserved!”
-
-“O well! I daresay!” returned Ralph, impatiently. “Let us allow, for
-the sake of argument, that you are right, and that I behaved like a
-brute! The matter lies only between Hally Brandt and myself. The old
-woman has nothing to do with it! She never met the girl till she went
-to Heyst. What I want to do is to see Hally again and make my peace
-with her! You know how easily women are won over. A pretty present--a
-few kisses and excuses,--a few tears--and the thing is done. I
-shouldn’t like to leave England without making my peace with the little
-girl. Couldn’t you get her to come to your chambers, and let me meet
-her there? Then the Baroness need know nothing about it!”
-
-“I thought you told us just now, that you had had a reconciliation with
-Miss Leyton on condition that you were to be a good boy for the future.
-Does that not include a surreptitious meeting with Miss Brandt?”
-
-“I suppose it does, but we have to make all sorts of promises
-where women are concerned. A nice kind of life a man would lead,
-if he consented to be tied to his wife’s apron-strings, and never
-go anywhere, nor see anyone, of whom she did not approve. I swore
-to everything she and old Walthamstowe asked me, just for peace’s
-sake,--but if they imagine I’m going to be hampered like that, they
-must be greater fools than I take them for!”
-
-“You must do as you think right, Pullen, but I am not going to help you
-to break your word!”
-
-“Tell me where the Red House is! Tell me whereabouts Hally takes her
-daily walks!” urged Captain Pullen.
-
-“I shall tell you nothing--you must find out for yourself!”
-
-“Well! you are damned particular!” exclaimed his cousin, “one would
-think this little half-caste was a princess of the Blood Royal. What is
-she, when all’s said and done? The daughter of a mulatto and a man who
-made himself so detested that he was murdered by his own servants--the
-bastard of a----”
-
-“Stop!” cried Pennell, so vehemently that the passers-by turned their
-heads to look at him, “I don’t believe it, and if it is true, I do not
-wish to hear it! Miss Brandt may be all that you say--I am not in a
-position to contradict your assertions--but to me she represents only a
-friendless and unprotected woman, who has a right to our sympathy and
-respect.”
-
-“A friendless woman!” sneered Captain Pullen, “yes! and a doosid
-good-looking one into the bargain, eh, my dear fellow, and much of your
-sympathy and respect she would command if she were ugly and humpbacked.
-O! I know you, Pennell! It’s no use your coming the benevolent
-Samaritan over me! You have an eye for a jimper waist and a trim ancle
-as well as most men. But I fancy your interest is rather thrown away in
-this quarter. Miss Brandt has a thorny path before her. She is a young
-lady who will have her own way, and with the glorious example of the
-Baroness the way is not likely to be too carefully chosen. To tell the
-truth, old boy, I ran away because I was afraid of falling into the
-trap. The girl wishes intensely to be married, and she is not a girl
-whom men will marry, and so--we need go no further. Only, I should not
-be surprised if, notwithstanding her fortune and her beauty, we should
-find Miss Harriet Brandt figuring before long, amongst the free lances
-of London.”
-
-“And you would have done your best to send her there!” replied Anthony
-Pennell indignantly, as he stopped on the doorstep of his Piccadilly
-chambers. “But I am glad to say that your folly has been frustrated
-this time, and Miss Brandt sees you as you are! Good-night!” and
-without further discussion, he turned on his heel and walked upstairs.
-
-“By Jove!” thought Ralph, as he too went on his way, “I believe old
-Anthony is smitten with the girl himself, though he has only seen her
-once! That was the most remarkable thing about her--the ease with
-which she seemed to attract, looking so innocent all the while, and
-the deadly strength with which she resisted one’s efforts to get free
-again. Perhaps it is as well after all that I should not meet her. I
-don’t believe I could trust myself, only speaking of her seems to have
-revived the old sensation of being drawn against my will--hypnotised, I
-suppose the scientists would call it--to be near her, to touch her, to
-embrace her, until all power of resistance is gone. But I do hope old
-Anthony is not going to be hypnotised. He’s too good for that.”
-
-Meanwhile Pennell, having reached his rooms, lighted the gas, threw
-himself into an armchair, and rested his head upon his hands.
-
-“Poor little girl!” he murmured to himself. “Poor little girl!”
-
-Anthony Pennell was a Socialist in the best and truest sense of the
-world. He loved his fellow creatures, both high and low, better than
-he loved himself. He wanted all to share alike--to be equally happy,
-equally comfortable--to help and be helped, to rest and depend upon
-one another. He knew that the dream was only a dream--that it would
-never be fulfilled in his time, nor any other; that some men would
-be rich and some poor as long as the world lasts, and that what one
-man can do to alleviate the misery and privation and suffering with
-which we are surrounded, is very little. What little Pennell could
-do, however, to prove that his theories were not mere talk, he did.
-He made a large income by his popular writings and the greater part
-of it went to relieve the want of his humbler friends, not through
-governors and secretaries and the heads of charitable Societies, but
-from his own hand to theirs. But his Socialism went further and higher
-than this. Money was not the only thing which his fellow creatures
-required--they wanted love, sympathy, kindness, and consideration--and
-these he gave also, wherever he found that there was need. He set
-his face pertinaciously against all scandal and back-biting, and
-waged a perpetual warfare against the tyranny of men over women; the
-ill-treatment of children; and the barbarities practised upon dumb
-animals and all living things. He was a liberal-minded man, with a
-heart large enough and tender enough to belong to a woman--with a
-horror of cruelty and a great compassion for everything that was
-incapable of defending itself. He was always writing in defence of
-the People, calling the attention of those in authority to their
-misfortunes; their evil chances; their lack of opportunity; and their
-patience under tribulation. For this purpose and in order to know them
-thoroughly, he had gone and lived amongst them; shared their filthy
-dens in Whitechapel, partaken of their unappetising food in Stratford;
-and watched them at their labour in Homerton. His figure and his kindly
-face were well-known in some of the worst and most degraded parts of
-London, and he could pass anywhere, without fear of a hand being lifted
-up against him, or an oath called after him in salutation. Anthony
-Pennell was, in fact, a general lover--a lover of Mankind.
-
-And that is why he leant his head upon his hand as he ejaculated with
-reference to Harriet Brandt, “Poor little girl.”
-
-It seemed so terrible in his eyes that just because she was friendless,
-and an orphan, just because her parents had been, perhaps, unworthy,
-just because she had a dark stream mingling with her blood, just
-because she needed the more sympathy and kindness, the more protection
-and courtesy, she should be considered fit prey for the sensualist--a
-fit subject to wipe men’s feet upon!
-
-What difference did it make to Harriet Brandt herself, that she was
-marked with an hereditary taint? Did it render her less beautiful,
-less attractive, less graceful and accomplished? Were the sins of the
-fathers ever to be visited upon the children?--was no sympathetic
-fellow-creature to be found to say, “If it is so, let us forget it! It
-is not your fault nor mine! Our duty is to make each other’s lives as
-happy as possible and trust the rest to God.”
-
-He hoped as he sat there, that before long, Harriet Brandt would find a
-friend for life, who would never remind her of anything outside her own
-loveliness and loveable qualities.
-
-Presently he rose, with a sigh, and going to his bookcase drew thence
-an uncut copy of his last work, “God and the People.” It had been a
-tremendous success, having already reached the tenth edition. It dealt
-largely, as its title indicated, with his favourite theory, but it was
-light and amusing also, full of strong nervous language, and bristling
-every here and there, with wit--not strained epigrams, such as no
-Society conversationalists ever tossed backward and forward to each
-other--but honest, mirth-provoking humour, arising from the humorous
-side of Pennell’s own character, which ever had a good-humoured jest
-for the oddities and comicalities of everyday life.
-
-He regarded the volume for a moment as though he were considering if it
-were an offering worthy of its destination, and then he took up a pen
-and transcribed upon the fly leaf the name of Harriet Brandt--only her
-name, nothing more.
-
-“She seems intelligent,” he thought, “and she may like to read it. Who
-knows, if there is any fear of the sad destiny which Ralph prophesies
-for her, whether I may not be happy enough to turn her ideas into a
-worthier and more wholesome direction. With an independent fortune, how
-much good might she not accomplish, amongst those less happily situated
-than herself! But the other idea--No, I will not entertain it for a
-moment! She is too good, too pure, too beautiful, for so horrible a
-fate! Poor little girl! Poor, poor little girl!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-
-The holiday season being now over, and the less fashionable people
-returned to town, Harriet Brandt’s curiosity was much excited by the
-number of visitors who called at the Red House, but were never shewn
-into the drawing-room. As many as a dozen might arrive in the course of
-an afternoon and were taken by Miss Wynward straight upstairs to the
-room where Madame Gobelli and Mr. Milliken so often shut themselves
-up together. These mysterious visitors were not objects of charity
-either, but well-dressed men and women, some of whom came in their
-own carriages, and all of whom appeared to be of the higher class of
-society. The Baroness had left off going to the factory, also, and
-stayed at home every day, apparently with the sole reason of being at
-hand to receive her visitors.
-
-Harriet could not understand it at all, and after having watched two
-fashionably attired ladies accompanied by a gentleman, ascend the
-staircase, to Madame Gobelli’s room, one afternoon, she ventured to
-sound Miss Wynward on the subject.
-
-“Who were the ladies who went upstairs just now?” she asked.
-
-“Friends of the Baroness, Miss Brandt!” was the curt reply.
-
-“But why do they not come down to the drawing-room then? What does
-Madame Gobelli do with them in that little room upstairs? I was passing
-one day just after someone had entered, and I heard the key turned in
-the lock. What is all the secrecy about?”
-
-“There is no secrecy on my part, Miss Brandt. You know the position I
-hold here. When I have shewn the visitors upstairs, according to my
-Lady’s directions, my duty is done!”
-
-“But you must know why they come to see her!”
-
-“I know nothing. If you are curious on the subject, you must ask the
-Baroness.”
-
-But Harriet did not like to do that. The Baroness had become less
-affectionate to her of late--her fancy was already on the wane--she
-no longer called the attention of strangers to her young friend as
-the “daughter of the house”--and Harriet felt the change, though she
-could scarcely have defined where it exactly lay. She had begun to feel
-less at home in her hostess’s presence, and her high spirit chafed at
-the alteration in her manner. She realised, as many had done before
-her, that she had out-stayed her welcome. But her curiosity respecting
-the people who visited Madame Gobelli upstairs was none the less. She
-confided it to Bobby--poor Bobby who grew whiter and more languid ever
-day--but her playful threat to invade the sacred precincts and find
-out what the Baroness and her friends were engaged upon, was received
-by the youth with horror. He trembled as he begged her not to think of
-such a thing.
-
-“Hally, you mustn’t, indeed you mustn’t! You don’t know--you have no
-idea--what might not happen to you, if you offended Mamma by breaking
-in upon her privacy. O! don’t, pray don’t! She can be so terrible at
-times--I do not know what she might not do or say!”
-
-“My dear Bobby, I was only in fun! I have not the least idea of doing
-anything so rude. Only, if you think that I am frightened of your Mamma
-or any other woman, you are very much mistaken. It’s all nonsense! No
-one person can harm another in this world!”
-
-“O! yes, they can--if they have _help_,” replied the boy, shaking his
-head.
-
-“Help! what help? The help of Mr. Milliken, I suppose! I would rather
-fight him than the Baroness any day--but I fear neither of them.”
-
-“O! Hally, you are wrong,” said the lad, “you must be careful, indeed
-you must--for my sake!”
-
-“Why! you silly Bobby, you are actually trembling! However, I promise
-you I will do nothing rash! And I shall not be here much longer now!
-Your Mamma is getting tired of me, I can see that plainly enough! She
-has hardly spoken a word to me for the last two days. I am going to ask
-Mr. Pennell, to advise me where to find another home!”
-
-“No! no!” cried the lad, clinging to her, “you shall not leave us! Mr.
-Pennell shall not take you away! I will kill him first!”
-
-He was getting terribly jealous of Anthony Pennell, but Harriet laughed
-at his complaints and reproaches as the emanations of a love-sick
-schoolboy. She was flattered by his feverish longing for her society,
-and his outspoken admiration of her beauty, but she did not suppose
-for one moment that Bobby was capable of a lasting, or dangerous,
-sentiment.
-
-Mr. Pennell had become a familiar figure at the Red House by this time.
-His first visit had been speedily succeeded by another, at which he
-had presented Harriet Brandt with the copy of his book--an attention,
-which had he known it, flattered her vanity more than any praises of
-her beauty could have done. A plain woman likes to be told that she
-is good-looking, a handsome one that she is clever. Harriet Brandt
-was not unintelligent, on the contrary she had inherited a very fair
-amount of brains from her scientific father--but no one ever seemed
-to have found it out, until Anthony Pennell came her way. She was a
-little tired of being told that she had lovely eyes, and the most
-fascinating smile, she knew all that by heart, and craved for something
-new. Mr. Pennell had supplied the novelty by talking to her as if
-her intellect were on a level with his own--as if she were perfectly
-able to understand and sympathise with his quixotic plans for the
-alleviation of the woes of all mankind--with his Arcadian dreams of
-Liberty, Equality and Fraternity,--and might help them also, if she
-chose, not with money only, but by raising her own voice in the Cause
-of the People. Harriet had never been treated so by anyone before, and
-her ardent, impetuous, passionate nature, which had a large amount of
-gratitude in its composition, fixed itself upon her new friend with a
-vehemence which neither of them would find it easy to overcome--or to
-disentangle themselves from. Her love (eager to repair the void left
-by the desertion of Captain Pullen) had poured itself, by means of
-looks and sighs and little timid, tender touches upon Anthony Pennell
-like a mountain torrent that had burst its bounds, and he had been
-responsive--he had opened his arms to receive the flood, actuated
-not only by the admiration which he had conceived for her from the
-first, but by the intense, yearning pity which her loneliness and
-friendlessness had evoked in his generous, compassionate nature. In
-fact they were desperately in love with each other, and Harriet was
-expecting each time he came, to hear Anthony Pennell say that he
-could no longer live without her. And Bobby looked on from a little
-distance--and suffered. The next time that Mr. Pennell came to see her,
-Harriet confided to him the mystery of the upstairs room, and asked his
-opinion as to what it could possibly mean.
-
-“Perhaps they are people connected with the boot trade,” suggested
-Anthony jestingly, “does Madame keep a stock of boots and shoes up
-there, do you think?”
-
-“O! no! Mr. Pennell, you must not joke about it! This is something
-serious! Poor Bobby grew as white as a sheet when I proposed to make a
-raid upon the room some day and discover the mystery, and said that his
-mother was a terrible woman, and able to do me great harm if I offended
-her!”
-
-“I quite agree with Bobby in his estimate of his Mamma being a terrible
-woman,” replied Mr. Pennell, “but it is all nonsense about her being
-able to harm you! _I_ should soon see about that!”
-
-“What would you do?” asked Harriet, with downcast eyes.
-
-“What would I _not_ do to save you from anything disagreeable, let
-alone anything dangerous. But the Baroness is too fond of you, surely,
-to do you any harm!”
-
-Harriet pursed up her lips.
-
-“I am not so sure about her being fond of me, Mr. Pennell! She used to
-profess to be, I know, but lately her manner has very much altered. She
-will pass half a day without speaking a word to me, and they have cut
-off wine and champagne and everything nice from the dinner table. I
-declare the meals here are sometimes not fit to eat. And I believe they
-grudge me the little I consider worthy my attention.”
-
-“But why do you stay here, if you fancy you are not welcome?” asked
-Pennell, earnestly, “you are not dependent on these people or their
-hospitality.”
-
-“But where am I to go?” said the girl, “I know no one in London, and
-Miss Wynward says that I am too young to live at an hotel by myself!”
-
-“Miss Wynward is quite right! You are far too young and too beautiful.
-You don’t know what wicked men and women there are in the world, who
-would delight in fleecing an innocent lamb like you. But I can soon
-find you a home where you could stay in respectability and comfort,
-until--until----”
-
-“Until _what_,” asked Harriet, with apparent ingenuousness, for she
-knew well enough what was coming.
-
-They were seated on one of those little couches made expressly for
-conversation, where a couple can sit back to back, with their faces
-turned to one another. Harriet half raised her slumbrous black eyes as
-she put the question, and met the fire in his own. He stretched out his
-arms and caught her round the waist.
-
-“Hally! Hally! you know--there is no need for me to tell you! Will you
-come home to me, dearest? Don’t ever say that you are friendless again!
-Here is your friend and your lover and your devoted slave for ever! My
-darling--my beautiful Hally, say you will be my wife--and make me the
-very happiest man in all the world!”
-
-She did not shrink from his warm wooing--that was not her nature! Her
-eyes waked up and flashed fire, responsive to his own; she let her head
-rest on his shoulder, and turned her lips upwards eagerly to meet his
-kiss, she cooed her love into his ear, and clasped him tightly round
-the neck as if she would never let him go.
-
-“I love you--I love you,” she kept on murmuring, “I have loved you from
-the very first!”
-
-“O! Hally, how happy it makes me to hear you say so,” he replied, “how
-few women have the honesty and courage to avow their love as you do. My
-sweet child of the sun! The women in this cold country have no idea of
-the joy that a mutual love like ours has the power to bestow. We will
-love each other for ever and ever, my Hally, and when our bodies are
-withered by age, our spirits shall still go loving on.”
-
-He--the man whose whole thoughts hitherto had been so devoted to the
-task of ameliorating the condition of his fellow-creatures, that he had
-had no time to think of dalliance, succumbed as fully to its pleasures
-now, as the girl whose life had simply been a ripening process
-for the seed which had burst forth into flower. They were equally
-passionate--equally loving--equally unreserved--and they were soon
-absorbed in their own feelings, and noticed nothing that was taking
-place around them.
-
-But they were not as entirely alone as they imagined. A pale face full
-of misery was watching them through one of the panes in the French
-windows, gazing at what seemed like his death doom, too horribly
-fascinated to tear himself away. Bobby stood there and saw Hally--_his_
-Hally, as he had often fondly called her, without knowing the meaning
-of the word--clasped in the arms of this stranger, pressing her lips
-to his, and being released with tumbled hair and a flushed face, only
-to seek the source of her delight again. At last Bobby could stand
-the bitter sight no longer, and with a low moan, he fled to his own
-apartment and flung himself, face downward on the bed. And Anthony
-Pennell and Harriet Brandt continued to make love to each other, until
-the shadows lengthened, and six o’clock was near at hand.
-
-“I must go now, my darling,” he said at last, “though it is hard to
-tear myself away. But I am so happy, Hally, so very, very happy, that I
-dare not complain.”
-
-“Why cannot you stay the evening?” she urged.
-
-“I had better not! I have not been asked in the first instance, and if
-what you say about the Baroness’s altered demeanour towards yourself be
-true, I am afraid I should find it difficult to keep my temper. But we
-part for a very short time, my darling! The first thing to-morrow, I
-shall see about another home for you, where I can visit you as freely
-as I like! And as soon as it can ever be, Hally, we will be married--is
-that a promise?”
-
-“A promise, yes! a thousand times over, Anthony! I long for the time
-when I shall be your wife!”
-
-“God bless you, my sweet! You have made my future life look all
-sunshine! I will write to you as soon as ever I have news and then you
-will lose no time in leaving your present home, will you?”
-
-“Not an instant that I can help,” replied Harriet, eagerly; “I am
-longing to get away. I feel that I have lost my footing here!”
-
-And with another long embrace, the lovers parted. As soon as Anthony
-had left her, Harriet ran up to her room, to cool her feverish face and
-change her dress for dinner. She was really and truly fond of the man
-she had just promised to marry, and if anything could have the power
-to transform her into a thinking and responsible woman, it would be
-marriage with Anthony Pennell. She was immensely proud that so clever
-and popular a writer should have chosen her from out the world of women
-to be his wife, and she loved him for the excellent qualities he had
-displayed towards his fellow men, as well as for the passionate warmth
-he had shewn for herself. She was a happier girl than she had ever
-been in all her life before, as she stood, flushed and triumphant, in
-front of her mirror and saw the beautiful light in her dark eyes, and
-the luxuriant growth of her dusky hair, and the carmine of her lips,
-and loved every charm she possessed for Anthony’s sake. She felt less
-vexed even with the Baroness than she had done, and determined that she
-would not break the news of her intended departure from the Red House,
-that evening, but try to leave as pleasant an impression behind her as
-she could! And she put on the lemon-coloured frock, though Anthony was
-not there to see it, from a feeling that since he approved of her, she
-must be careful of her appearance for the future, to do justice to his
-opinion.
-
-Madame Gobelli appeared to be in a worse temper than usual that
-evening. She stumped in to the dining-room and took her seat at table
-without vouchsafing a word to Harriet, although she had not seen
-her since luncheon time. She found fault with everything that Miss
-Wynward did, and telling her that she grew stupider and stupider each
-day, ordered her to attend her upstairs after dinner, as she had some
-friends coming and needed her assistance. The ex-governess did not
-answer at first, and the Baroness sharply demanded if she had heard her
-speak.
-
-“Yes! my lady,” she replied, slowly, “but I trust that you will excuse
-my attendance, as I have made an engagement for this evening!”
-
-Madame Gobelli boiled over with rage.
-
-“Engagement! What do you mean by making an engagement without asking my
-leave first? You can’t keep it! I want you to ’elp me in something and
-you’ll ’ave to come!”
-
-“You must forgive me,” repeated Miss Wynward, firmly, “but I cannot do
-as you wish!”
-
-Harriet opened her eyes in amazement. Miss Wynward refusing a request
-from Madame Gobelli. What would happen next?
-
-The Baroness grew scarlet in the face. She positively trembled with
-rage.
-
-“’Old your tongue!” she screamed. “You’ll do as I say, or you leave my
-’ouse.”
-
-“Then I will leave your house!” replied Miss Wynward.
-
-Madame Gobelli was thunderstruck! Where was this insolent menial, who
-had actually dared to defy her, going? What friends had she? What
-home to go to? She had received no salary from her for years past, but
-had accepted board and lodging and cast-off clothes in return for her
-services. How could she face the world without money?
-
-“You go at your peril,” she exclaimed, hoarse with rage, “you know what
-will ’appen to you if you try to resist me! I ’ave those that will ’elp
-me to be revenged on my enemies! You know that those I ’ate, _die_! And
-when I ’ave my knife in a body, I turn it! You ’ad better be careful,
-and think twice about what you’re going to do.”
-
-“Your ladyship cannot frighten me any longer,” replied Miss Wynward,
-calmly, “I thank God and my friends that I have got over that! Nor do I
-believe any more in your boasted powers of revenge! If they are really
-yours, you should be ashamed to use them.”
-
-“Gustave!” shrieked the Baroness, “get up and put this woman from the
-door. She don’t stop in the Red ’Ouse another hour! Let ’er pack up ’er
-trumpery and go! Do you ’ear me, Gustave? Turn ’er out of the room!”
-
-“Mein tear! mein tear! a little patience! Miss Wynward will go quietly!
-But the law, mein tear, the law! We must be careful!”
-
-“Damn the law!” exclaimed the Baroness. “’Ere, where’s that devil
-Bobby? Why ain’t ’e at dinner? What’s the good of my ’aving a ’usband
-and a son if neither of ’em will do my bidding!”
-
-Then everyone looked round and discovered that Bobby was not at the
-table.
-
-“Where’s Bobby?” demanded the Baroness of the servant in waiting.
-
-“Don’t know, I’m sure,” replied the domestic, who like most of Madame
-Gobelli’s dependents, talked as familiarly with her as though they had
-been on an equality. “The last time I saw ’im was at luncheon.”
-
-“I will go and look for him,” said Miss Wynward quietly, as she rose
-from table.
-
-“No! you don’t!” exclaimed the Baroness insolently, “you don’t touch my
-child nor my ’usband again whilst you remain under this roof. I won’t
-’ave them polluted by your fingers. ’Ere, Sarah, you go upstairs and
-see if Bobby’s in ’is room. It’ll be the worse for ’im if ’e isn’t.”
-
-Sarah took her way upstairs, in obedience to her employer’s behest, and
-the next minute a couple of shrieks, loud and terrified, proceeded from
-the upper story. They were in Sarah’s voice, and they startled everyone
-at the dinner table.
-
-“Oh! what is that?” exclaimed Harriet, as her face grew white with fear.
-
-“Something is wrong!” said Miss Wynward, as she hastily left the room.
-
-The Baroness said nothing, until Miss Wynward’s voice was heard calling
-out over the banisters,
-
-“Baron! will you come here, please, at once!”
-
-Then she said,
-
-“Gustave! ’elp me up,” and steadying herself by means of her stick, she
-proceeded to the upper story, accompanied by her husband and Harriet
-Brandt. They were met on the landing by Miss Wynward, who addressed
-herself exclusively to the Baron.
-
-“Will you send for a doctor at once,” she said eagerly, “Bobby is very
-ill, very ill indeed!”
-
-“What is the matter?” enquired the stolid German.
-
-“It’s all rubbish!” exclaimed Madame Gobelli, forcing her way past the
-ex-governess, “’ow can ’e be ill when ’e was running about all the
-morning? ’Ere, Bobby,” she continued, addressing the prostrate figure
-of her son which was lying face downward on the bed, “get up at once
-and don’t let’s ’ave any of your nonsense, or I’ll give you such a
-taste of my stick as you’ve never ’ad before! Get up, I say, at once
-now!”
-
-She had laid hold of her son’s arm, and was about to drag him down upon
-the floor, when Miss Wynward interposed with a face of horror.
-
-“Leave him alone!” she cried, indignantly. “Woman! cannot you see what
-is the matter? Your son has left you! He is _dead_!”
-
-The Baroness was about to retort that it was a lie and she didn’t
-believe it, when a sudden trembling overtook her, which she was
-powerless to resist. Her whole face shook as if every muscle had lost
-control, and her cumbersome frame followed suit. She did not cry,
-nor call out, but stood where the news had reached her, immovable,
-except for that awful shaking, which made her sway from head to foot.
-The Baron on hearing the intelligence turned round to go downstairs
-and dispatch William, who was employed in the stables, in search of
-a medical man. Miss Wynward took the lifeless body in her arms and
-tenderly turned it over, kissing the pallid face as she did so--when
-Harriet Brandt, full of mournful curiosity, advanced to have a look
-at her dead playmate. Her appearance, till then unnoticed, seemed to
-wake the paralysed energies of the Baroness into life. She pushed the
-girl from the bed with a violence that sent her reeling against the
-mantelshelf, whilst she exclaimed furiously,
-
-“Out of my sight! Don’t you dare to touch ’im! This is all _your_
-doing, you poisonous, wicked creature!”
-
-Harriet stared at her hostess in amazement! Had she suddenly gone mad
-with grief?
-
-“What do you mean, Madame?” she cried.
-
-“What I say! I ought to ’ave known better than to let you enter an
-’ouse of mine! I was a fool not to ’ave left you be’ind me at Heyst, to
-practise your devilish arts on your army captains and foreign grocers,
-instead of letting you come within touch of my innocent child!”
-
-“You are mad!” cried Harriet. “What have I done? Do you mean to
-insinuate that Bobby’s death has anything to do with me?”
-
-“It is _you_ ’oo ’ave killed ’im,” screamed the Baroness, shaking her
-stick, “it’s your poisonous breath that ’as sapped ’is! I should ’ave
-seen it from the beginning. Do you suppose I don’t know your ’istory?
-Do you think I ’aven’t ’eard all about your parents and their vile
-doings--that I don’t know that you’re a common bastard, and that your
-mother was a devilish negress, and your father a murderer? Why didn’t I
-listen to my friends and forbid you the ’ouse?”
-
-“Miss Wynward!” said Harriet, who had turned deadly white at this
-unexpected attack, “what can I say? What can I do?”
-
-“Leave the room, my dear, leave the room! Her ladyship is not herself!
-She does not know what she is saying!”
-
-“Don’t I?” screamed Madame Gobelli, barring the way to the door, “I
-am telling ’er nothing but the truth, and she doesn’t go till she ’as
-’eard it! She has the vampire’s blood in ’er and she poisons everybody
-with whom she comes in contact. Wasn’t Mrs. Pullen and Mademoiselle
-Brimont both taken ill from being too intimate with ’er, and didn’t the
-baby die because she carried it about and breathed upon it? And now she
-’as killed my Bobby in the same way--curse ’er!”
-
-Even when reiterating the terrible truth in which she evidently
-believed, Madame Gobelli showed no signs of breaking down, but stood
-firm, leaning heavily on her stick and trembling in every limb.
-
-Harriet Brandt’s features had assumed a scared expression.
-
-“Miss Wynward!” she stammered piteously, “Oh! Miss Wynward! this cannot
-be true!”
-
-“Of course not! Of course not!” replied the other, soothingly, “her
-ladyship will regret that she has spoken so hastily to you to-morrow.”
-
-“I shan’t regret it!” said the Baroness sturdily, “for it is the truth!
-Her father and her mother were murderers who were killed by their own
-servants in revenge for their atrocities, and they left their curse
-upon this girl--the curse of black blood and of the vampire’s blood
-which kills everything which it caresses. Look back over your past
-life,” she continued to Harriet, “and you’ll see that it’s the case!
-And if you don’t believe me, go and ask your friend Dr. Phillips, for
-’e knew your infamous parents and the curse that lies upon you!”
-
-“Madame! Madame!” cried Miss Wynward, “is this a moment for such
-recrimination? If all this were true, it is no fault of Miss Brandt’s!
-Think of what lies here, and that he loved her, and the thought will
-soften your feelings!”
-
-“But it don’t!” exclaimed the Baroness, “when I look at my dead son, I
-could kill ’er, because she has killed ’im.”
-
-And in effect, she advanced upon Harriet with so vengeful a look that
-the girl with a slight cry, darted from the room, and rushed into her
-own.
-
-“For shame!” said Miss Wynward, whose previous fear of the Baroness
-seemed to have entirely evaporated, “how dare you intimidate an
-innocent woman in the very presence of Death?”
-
-“Don’t you try to browbeat me!” replied the Baroness.
-
-“I will tell you what I think,” said Miss Wynward boldly, “and that
-is, that you should blush to give way to your evil temper in the face
-of God’s warning to yourself! You accuse that poor girl of unholy
-dealings--what can you say of your own? You, who for years past
-have made money by deceiving your fellow creatures in the grossest
-manner--who have professed to hold communication with the spiritual
-world for their satisfaction when, if any spirits have come to you,
-they must have been those of devils akin to your own! And because I
-refused to help you to deceive--to take the place of that miserable
-cur Milliken and play cheating tricks with cards, and dress up stuffed
-figures to further your money-getting ends, you threatened me with loss
-of home and character and friends, until, God forgive me, I consented
-to further the fraud, from fear of starving. But now, thank Heaven, I
-have no more fear of you! Yes! you may shake your stick at me, and
-threaten to take my life, but it is useless! _This_,” pointing to the
-dead boy upon the bed, “was the only tie I had to the Red House, and as
-soon as he is dressed for his grave, I shall leave you for ever!”
-
-“And where would you go?” enquired the Baroness. The voice did not
-sound like her own; it was the cracked dry voice of a very old woman.
-
-“That is no concern of yours, my lady,” replied Miss Wynward, as
-she prepared to quit the room. “Be good enough to let me pass! The
-inexcusable manner in which you have insulted that poor young lady,
-Miss Brandt, makes me feel that my first duty is to her!”
-
-“I forbid you--” commenced Madame Gobelli in her old tone, but the
-ex-governess simply looked her in the face and passed on. She made the
-woman feel that her power was gone.
-
-Miss Wynward found Harriet in her own room, tossing all her possessions
-into her travelling trunks. There was no doubt of her intention. She
-was going to leave the Red House.
-
-“Not at this time of night, my dear,” said Miss Wynward, kindly, “it is
-nearly nine o’clock.”
-
-“I would go if I had to walk the street all night!” replied Harriet,
-feverishly.
-
-Her eyes were inflamed with crying, and she shook like an aspen leaf.
-
-“Oh! Miss Wynward, such awful things to say! What could she mean? What
-have I done to be so cruelly insulted? And when I am so sorry for poor
-Bobby too!”
-
-She began to cry afresh as she threw dresses, mantles, stockings, and
-shoes one on the top of the other, in her endeavour to pack as quickly
-as possible.
-
-“Let me help you, dear Miss Brandt! It is cruel that you should be
-driven from the house in this way! But I am going too, as soon as the
-doctor has been and dear Bobby’s body may be prepared for burial. It is
-a great grief to me, Miss Brandt; I have had the care of him since he
-was five years old, and I loved him like my own. But I am glad he is
-dead! I am glad he has escaped from it all, for this is a wicked house,
-a godless, deceiving and slanderous house, and this trouble has fallen
-on it as a Nemesis. I will not stay here a moment longer now he has
-gone! I shall join my friends to-morrow.”
-
-“I am glad you have friends,” said Harriet, “for I can see you are not
-happy here! Do they live far off? Have you sufficient money for your
-journey? Forgive my asking!”
-
-Miss Wynward stooped down and kissed the girl’s brow.
-
-“Thank you so much for your kind thought, but it is unnecessary. You
-will be surprised perhaps,” continued Miss Wynward, blushing, “but I am
-going to be married.”
-
-“And so am I,” was on Harriet’s lips, when she laid her head down on
-the lid of her trunk and began to cry anew. “Oh! Miss Wynward, what did
-she mean? Can there be any truth in it? Is there something poisonous in
-my nature that harms those with whom I come in contact? How can it be?
-_How_ can it be?”
-
-“No! no! of course not!” replied her friend, “Cannot you see that it
-was the Baroness’s temper that made her speak so cruelly to you? But
-you are right to go! Only, where are you going?”
-
-“I do not know! I am so ignorant of London. Can you advise me?”
-
-“You will communicate with your friends to-morrow?” asked Miss Wynward
-anxiously.
-
-“Oh! yes! as soon as I can!”
-
-“Then I should go to the Langham Hotel in Portland Place for to-night
-at all events! There you will be safe till your friends advise you
-further. What can I do to help you?”
-
-“Ask Sarah or William to fetch a cab! And to have my boxes placed on
-it! There is a _douceur_ for them,” said Harriet, placing a handsome
-sum in Miss Wynward’s hand.
-
-“And you will not see the Baroness again?” asked her companion.
-
-“No! no! for God’s sake, no. I could not trust myself! I can never look
-upon her face again!”
-
-In a few minutes the hired vehicle rolled away from the door, bearing
-Harriet Brandt and her possessions to the Langham Hotel, and Miss
-Wynward returned to the room where Bobby lay. Madame Gobelli stood
-exactly where she had left her, gazing at the corpse. There were no
-tears in her eyes--only the continuous shaking of her huge limbs.
-
-“Come!” said Miss Wynward, not unkindly, “you had better sit down, and
-let me bring you a glass of wine! This terrible shock has been too much
-for you.”
-
-But the Baroness only pushed her hand away, impatiently.
-
-“Who was that driving away just now?” she enquired.
-
-“Miss Brandt! You have driven her from the house with your cruel and
-unnecessary accusations. No one liked Bobby better than she did!”
-
-“Has the doctor arrived?”
-
-“I expect so! I hear the Baron’s voice in the hall now!”
-
-Almost as she spoke, the Baron and the doctor entered the room. The
-medical man did what was required of him. He felt the heart and pulse
-of the corpse--turned back the eyelids--sighed professionally, and
-asked how long it was since it had happened.
-
-He was told that it was about an hour since they had found him.
-
-“Ah! he has been dead longer than that! Three hours at the least, maybe
-four! I am afraid there must be an inquest, and it would be advisable
-in the interests of science to have a post mortem. A great pity, a
-fine grown lad--nineteen years old, you say--shall probably detect
-hidden mischief in the heart and lungs. I will make all the necessary
-arrangements with the Baron. Good evening!”
-
-And the doctor bowed himself out of sight again.
-
-“It is quite true then,” articulated the Baroness thickly. “He is gone!”
-
-“Oh! yes, my lady, he is gone, poor dear boy! I felt sure of that!”
-
-“It is quite certain?”
-
-“Quite certain! The body is already stiffening!”
-
-The Baroness did not utter a sound, but Miss Wynward glancing at her,
-saw her body sway slowly backwards and forwards once or twice, before
-it fell heavily to the ground, stricken with paralysis.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-
-Doctor Phillips was a great favourite with the _beau sexe_. He was so
-mild and courteous, so benevolent and sympathetic, that they felt sure
-he might be trusted with their little secrets. Women, both old and
-young, invaded his premises daily, and therefore it was no matter of
-surprise to him, when, whilst he was still occupied with his breakfast
-on the morning following Harriet Brandt’s flight from the Red House,
-his confidential servant Charles announced that a young lady was
-waiting to see him in his consulting room.
-
-“No name, Charles?” demanded the doctor.
-
-“No name, Sir!” replied the discreet Charles without the ghost of a
-smile.
-
-“Say that I will be with her in a minute!”
-
-Doctor Phillips finished his cutlet and his coffee before he rose from
-table. He knew what ladies’ confidences were like and that he should
-not have much chance of returning to finish an interrupted meal.
-
-But as he entered his consulting room, his air of indifference changed
-to one of surprise. Pacing restlessly up and down the carpet, was
-Harriet Brandt, but so altered that he should hardly have recognised
-her. Her face was puffy and swollen, as though she had wept all night,
-her eyelids red and inflamed, her whole demeanour wild and anxious.
-
-“My dear young lady--is it possible that I see Miss Brandt?” the doctor
-began.
-
-She turned towards him and coming up close to his side, grasped his
-arm. “I must speak to you!” she exclaimed, without further preliminary,
-“you are the only person who can set my doubts at rest.”
-
-“Well! well! well!” he said, soothingly, for the girl looked and spoke
-as though her mind were disordered. “You may rely that I will do all I
-can for you! But let us sit down first!”
-
-“No! no!” cried Harriet, “there is no time, I cannot rest; you must
-satisfy my mind at once, or I shall go mad! I have not closed my eyes
-all night--the time was interminable, but how could I sleep! I seemed
-to be torn in pieces by ten thousand devils!”
-
-“My dear child,” said Doctor Phillips, as he laid his hand on hers and
-looked her steadily in the face, “you are over-excited. You must try to
-restrain yourself.”
-
-He went up to a side table and, pouring out some cordial, made her
-drink it. Harriet gulped it down, and sank back exhausted in a chair.
-She was weak and worn-out with the excitement she had passed through.
-
-“Come! that is better,” said the doctor, as he saw the tears stealing
-from beneath her closed eyelids, “now, don’t hurry yourself! Keep quiet
-till you feel strong enough to speak, and then tell me what it is that
-brings you here!”
-
-The allusion appeared to stir up all her misery again. She sat upright
-and grasped the doctor by the arm as she had done at first.
-
-“You must tell me,” she said breathlessly, “you must tell me all I want
-to know. They say you knew my father and mother in Jamaica! Is that
-true?”
-
-The old doctor began to feel uncomfortable. It is one thing to warn
-those in whom you are interested against a certain person, or persons,
-and another to be confronted with the individual you have spoken of,
-and forced to repeat your words. Yet Doctor Phillips was innocent of
-having misjudged, or slandered anyone.
-
-“I _did_ know your father and mother--for a short time!” he answered
-cautiously.
-
-“And were they married to each other?”
-
-“My dear young lady, what is the use of dragging up such questions
-now? Your parents are both gone to their account--why not let all that
-concerned them rest also?”
-
-“No! no! you forget that I live--to suffer the effects of their
-wrong-doing! I _must_ know the truth--I will not leave the house until
-you tell me! Were they married? Am I a--a--bastard?”
-
-“If you insist upon knowing, I believe they were not married--at least
-it was the general opinion in the Island. But would not Mr. Tarver be
-the proper person to inform you of anything which you may wish to know?”
-
-Harriet seized his hand and carried it to her forehead--it was burning
-hot.
-
-“Feel that!” she exclaimed, “and you would have me wait for weeks
-before I could get any satisfaction from Mr. Tarver, and not then
-perhaps! Do you think I could live through the agony of suspense. I
-should kill myself before the answer to my letter came. No! you are the
-only person that can give me any satisfaction. Madame Gobelli told me
-to ask you for the truth, if I did not believe her!”
-
-“Madame Gobelli,” reiterated the doctor in surprise.
-
-“Yes! I was staying with her at the Red House until last night, and
-then she was so cruel to me that I left. Her son Bobby is dead, and she
-accused me of having killed him. She said that my father was a murderer
-and my mother a negress--that they were both so wicked that their own
-servants killed them, and that I have inherited all their vices. She
-said that it was _I_ who killed Mrs. Pullen’s baby and that I had
-vampire blood in me, and should poison everyone I came in contact with.
-What does she mean? Tell me the truth, for God’s sake, for more depends
-upon it than you have any idea of.”
-
-“Madame Gobelli was extremely wrong to speak in such a manner, and I
-do not know on what authority she did so. What can she know of your
-parents or their antecedents?”
-
-“But you--you--” cried Harriet feverishly, “what do _you_ say?”
-
-Doctor Phillips was silent. He did not know what to say. He was not
-a man who could tell a lie glibly and appear as if he were speaking
-the truth. Patients always guessed when he had no hope to give them,
-however soothing and carefully chosen his words might be. He regarded
-the distracted girl before him for some moments in compassionate
-silence, and then he answered:
-
-“I have said already that if a daughter cannot hear any good of her
-parents, she had better hear nothing at all!”
-
-“Then it is true--my father and mother were people so wicked and so
-cruel that their names are only fit for execration. If you could have
-said a good word for them, you would! I can read that in your eyes!”
-
-“The purity and charity of your own life can do much to wipe out the
-stain upon theirs,” said the doctor. “You have youth and money, and the
-opportunity of doing good. You may be as beloved, as they were----”
-
-“Hated,” interposed the girl, “I understand you perfectly! But what
-about my possessing the fatal power of injuring those I come in
-contact with! What truth is there in that? Answer me, for God’s sake!
-Have I inherited the vampire’s blood? Who bequeathed to me that fatal
-heritage?”
-
-“My dear Miss Brandt, you must not talk of such a thing! You are
-alluding only to a superstition!”
-
-“But have I got it, whatever it may be?” persisted Harriet. “Had I
-anything to do with the baby’s death, or with that of Bobby Bates? I
-loved them both! Was it my love that killed them? Shall I always kill
-everybody I love? I _must_ know--I _will_!”
-
-“Miss Brandt, you have now touched upon a subject that is little
-thought of or discussed amongst medical men, but that is undoubtedly
-true. The natures of persons differ very widely. There are some born
-into this world who nourish those with whom they are associated; they
-_give out_ their magnetic power, and their families, their husbands or
-wives, children and friends, feel the better for it. There are those,
-on the other hand, who _draw_ from their neighbours, sometimes making
-large demands upon their vitality--sapping their physical strength, and
-feeding upon them, as it were, until they are perfectly exhausted and
-unable to resist disease. This proclivity has been likened to that of
-the vampire bat who is said to suck the breath of its victims. And it
-was doubtless to this fable that Madame Gobelli alluded when speaking
-to you.”
-
-“But have I got it? Have I got it?” the girl demanded, eagerly.
-
-The doctor looked at her lustrous glowing eyes, at her parted feverish
-lips; at the working hands clasped together; the general appearance of
-excited sensuality, and thought it was his duty to warn her, at least
-a little, against the dangers of indulging such a temperament as she
-unfortunately possessed. But like all medical men, he temporised.
-
-“I should certainly say that your temperament was more of the _drawing_
-than the _yielding_ order, Miss Brandt, but that is not your fault,
-you know. It is a natural organism. But I think it is my duty to warn
-you that you are not likely to make those with whom you intimately
-associate, stronger either in mind or body. You will always exert a
-weakening and debilitating effect upon them, so that after a while,
-having sapped their brains, and lowered the tone of their bodies, you
-will find their affection, or friendship for you visibly decrease. You
-will have, in fact, _sucked them dry_. So, if I may venture to advise
-you I would say, if there is any one person in the world whom you most
-desire to benefit and retain the affection of, let that be the very
-person from whom you separate, as often as possible. You must never
-hope to keep anyone near you for long, without injuring them. Make it
-your rule through life never to cleave to any one person altogether, or
-you will see that person’s interest in you wax and wane, until it is
-destroyed!”
-
-“And what if I--marry?” asked Harriet, in a strained voice.
-
-“If you insist upon my answering that question, I should advise you
-seriously _not_ to marry! I do not think yours is a temperament fitted
-for married life, nor likely to be happy in it! You will not be
-offended by my plain speaking, I hope. Remember, you have forced it
-from me!”
-
-“And that is the truth, medically and scientifically--that I must not
-marry?” she repeated, dully.
-
-“I think it would be unadvisable, but everyone must judge for himself
-in such matters. But marriage is not, after all, the ultimatum of
-earthly bliss, Miss Brandt! Many married couples would tell you it
-is just the reverse. And with a fortune at your command, you have
-many pleasures and interests quite apart from that very over-rated
-institution of matrimony. But don’t think I am presuming to do more
-than advise you. There is no real reason--medical or legal--why you
-should not choose for yourself in the matter!”
-
-“Only--only--that those I cling to most nearly, will suffer from the
-contact,” said Harriet in the same strained tones.
-
-“Just so!” responded the doctor, gaily, “and an old man’s advice to you
-is, to keep out of it as he has done! And now--if there is anything
-more--” he continued, “that I can do for you----”
-
-“Nothing more, thank you,” replied the girl rising, “I understand it
-all now!”
-
-“Will you not see your old friend, Mrs. Pullen, before you go?” asked
-the doctor. “She and her husband are staying with me!”
-
-“Oh! no, no,” cried Harriet, shrinking from the idea, “I _could_ not
-see her, I would rather go back at once!”
-
-And she hurried from the consulting-room as she spoke.
-
-Doctor Phillips stood for a while musing, after her departure. Had
-he done right, he thought, in telling her, yet how in the face of
-persistent questioning, could he have done otherwise? His thoughts were
-all fixed upon Ralph Pullen and the scenes that had taken place lately
-with him, respecting this girl. He did not dream she had an interest
-in Anthony Pennell. He did not know that they had met more than once.
-He thought she might still be pursuing Ralph; still expecting that he
-might break his engagement with Miss Leyton in order to marry herself;
-and he believed he had done the wisest thing in trying to crush any
-hopes she might have left concerning him.
-
-“A most dangerous temperament,” he said to himself as he prepared to
-receive another patient, “one that is sufficient to mar a man’s life,
-if not to kill him entirely. I trust that she and Captain Pullen
-may never meet again. It was evident that my remarks on marriage
-disappointed the poor child! Ah! well, she will be much better without
-it!”
-
-And here the discreet Charles softly opened the door and ushered in
-another lady.
-
-An hour later, Anthony Pennell, who had projected a visit to the Red
-House that afternoon, received a note by a commissionaire instead,
-containing a few, hurried lines. “Come to me as soon as you can,” it
-said, “I have left Madame Gobelli. I am at the Langham Hotel, and very
-unhappy!” Needless to say that ten minutes after the reception of this
-news, her lover was rushing to her presence, as fast as hansom wheels
-could take him.
-
-He was very desperately and truly in love with Harriet Brandt. Like
-most men who use their brains in fiction, his work, whilst in course
-of progression, occupied his energies to such an extent that he had
-no time or thought for anything else. But the burden once lifted, the
-romance written, the strain and anxiety removed, the pendulum swung
-in the other direction, and Anthony Pennell devoted all his attention
-to pleasure and amusement. He had been set down by his colleagues as
-a reserved and cold-blooded man with regard to the other sex, but he
-was only self-contained and thoughtful. He was as warm by nature, as
-Harriet herself, and once sure of a response, could make love with
-the best, and as he flew to her assistance now, he resolved that if
-anything unpleasant had occurred to drive her from the Red House, and
-launch her friendless on the world, he would persuade her to marry him
-at once, and elect him her protector and defence.
-
-His fair face flushed with anticipation as he thought of the joy it
-would be to make her his wife, and take her far away from everything
-that could annoy or harass her.
-
-Having arrived at the Langham and flung a double fare to the
-cab-driver, he ran up the high staircase with the light step of a
-boy, and dashed into Harriet’s private room. The girl was sitting,
-much as she had done since returning from her interview with the
-doctor--silent, sullen, and alone, at war with Heaven and Destiny and
-all that had conduced to blight the brightest hopes she had ever had.
-
-“Hally, my darling, why is this?” exclaimed Pennell, as he essayed to
-fold her in his arms. But she pushed him off, not unkindly but with
-considerable determination.
-
-“Don’t touch me, Tony!--don’t come near me. You had better not! I might
-harm you!”
-
-“What is the matter? Are you ill? If so, you know me too well to
-imagine that I should fear infection.”
-
-“No! no! you do not understand!” replied Harriet, as she rose from her
-seat and edged further away from him, “but I am going to tell you all!
-It is for that I sent for you!”
-
-Then, waving him from her with her hand, she related the whole story
-to him--what the Baroness had accused her of, and what Doctor Phillips
-had said in confirmation of it, only that morning. Pennell had heard
-something of it before, through Margaret Pullen, but he had paid no
-attention to it, and now, when Harriet repeated it in detail, with
-swollen eyes and quivering lips, he laughed the idea to scorn.
-
-“Pooh! Nonsense! I don’t believe a word of it,” he exclaimed, “it is
-a parcel of old woman’s tales. Phillips should be ashamed of himself
-to place any credence in it, far more to repeat it to you! Hally, my
-darling! you are surely not going to make yourself unhappy because of
-such nonsense. If so, you are not the sensible girl I have taken you
-for!”
-
-“But, Tony,” said the girl, still backing from his advances, “listen to
-me! It is not all nonsense, indeed. I know for myself that it is true!
-Having been shut up for so many years in the Convent dulled my memory
-for what went before it, but it has all come back to me now! It seems
-as if what Madame Gobelli and Doctor Phillips have said, had lifted a
-veil from my eyes, and I can recall things that had quite escaped my
-memory before. I can remember now hearing old Pete say, that when I
-was born, I was given to a black wet nurse, and after a little while
-she was taken so ill, they had to send her away, and get me another,
-and the next one--_died_! Pete used to laugh and call me the puma’s
-cub, but I didn’t know the meaning of it, then. And--Oh! stop a moment,
-Tony, till I have done--there was a little white child, I can see her
-so plainly now. They called her little Caroline, I think she must have
-belonged to the planter who lived next to us, and I was very fond of
-her. I was quite unhappy when we did not meet, and I used to creep
-into her nursery door and lie down in the cot beside her. Poor little
-Caroline! I can see her now! So pale and thin and wan she was! And one
-night, I remember her mother came in and found me there and called
-to her husband to send the ‘Brandt bastard’ back to Helvetia. I had
-no idea what she meant, but I cried because she sent me home, and I
-asked Pete what a bastard was, but he would not tell me. And,” went on
-Harriet in a scared tone, “little Caroline _died_! Pete carried me on
-his shoulder to see the funeral, and I would not believe that Caroline
-could be in the narrow box, and I struck Pete on the face for saying
-so!”
-
-“Well! my darling! and if you did, are these childish reminiscences to
-come between our happiness? Why should they distress you, Hally? Madame
-Gobelli’s insolence must have been very hard to bear--I acknowledge
-that, and I wish I had been by to prevent it, but you must make excuses
-for her. I suppose the poor creature was so mad with grief that she did
-not know what she was saying! But you need never see her again, so you
-must try to forgive her!”
-
-“But, Anthony, you do not understand me! What the Baroness said was
-_true_! I see it now! _I killed Bobby!_”
-
-“My dearest, you are raving! _You killed Bobby!_ What utter, utter
-folly! How could you have killed Bobby?”
-
-Harriet passed her hand wearily across her brow, as if she found it too
-hard to make her meaning plain.
-
-“Oh! yes, I did! We were always together, in the garden or the house!
-And he used to sit with his head on my shoulder and his arm round my
-waist, I should not have allowed it! I should have driven him away! But
-he loved me, poor Bobby, and it will be the same, Doctor Phillips says,
-with everybody I love! I shall only do them harm!”
-
-“Hally! I shall begin to think in another moment that you are ill
-yourself--that you have a fever or something, and that it is affecting
-your brain!”
-
-“There was a sister at the Convent, Sister Theodosia, who was very
-good to me when I first went there,” continued the girl in a dreamy
-voice, as if she had not heard his words; “and she used to sit with
-me upon her lap for hours together, because I was sad. But she grew
-ill and they had to send her away up to the hill, where they had their
-sanatorium. That made the fourth in Jamaica!”
-
-“Now! I will not have you talk any more of this nonsense,” said
-Pennell, half annoyed by her perseverance, “and to prove to you what a
-little silly you are to imagine that everyone who falls ill, or dies,
-or who comes within the range of your acquaintance, owes it to your
-influence, tell me how it is that your father and mother, who must have
-lived nearer to you than anybody else, did not fall sick and die also.”
-
-“My parents saw less of me than anybody,” replied Harriet, sadly, “they
-were ashamed of their ‘bastard’, I suppose! But old Pete loved me, and
-took me with him everywhere, and he didn’t get sick,” she concluded,
-with a faint smile.
-
-“Of course not! See! what rubbish you have been talking--making
-yourself and me unhappy for nothing at all! So now let me take you in
-my arms and kiss the remembrance of it away!”
-
-He was about to put his suggestion into execution, but she still shrank
-from him.
-
-“No! no! indeed you must not! It is all true! I cannot forget Olga
-Brimont, and Mrs. Pullen, and the baby, and poor Bobby! It is true,
-indeed it is, and I have been accursed from my birth.”
-
-And she burst into a torrent of passionate tears.
-
-Pennell let her expend some of her emotion, before he continued,
-
-“Well! and what is to be the upshot of it all!”
-
-“I must part from you,” replied the girl, “Indeed, indeed I must! I
-cannot injure you as I have done others! Doctor Phillips said I was not
-fit for marriage--that I should always weaken and hurt those whom I
-loved most--and that I should draw from them, physically and mentally,
-until I had sapped all their strength--that I have the blood of the
-vampire in me, the vampire that sucks its victims’ breaths until they
-die!”
-
-“Doctor Phillips be damned!” exclaimed Pennell, “what right has he
-to promulgate his absurd and untenable theories, and to poison the
-happiness of a girl’s life, with his folly? He is an old fool, a
-dotard, a senseless ass, and I shall tell him so! Vampire be hanged!
-And if it were the truth, I for one could not wish for a sweeter death!
-Come along, Hally, and try your venom upon me! I am quite ready to run
-the risk!”
-
-He held out his arms to her again, as he spoke, and she sank on her
-knees beside him.
-
-“Oh! Tony! Tony! cannot you read the truth? I love you, dear, I love
-you! I never loved any creature in this world before I loved you. I did
-not know that it was given to mortals to love so much! And my love has
-opened my eyes! Sooner than injure you, whom I would die to save from
-harm, I will separate myself from you! I will give you up! I will live
-my lonely life without you, I _could_ do that, but I can never, never
-consent to sap your manhood and your brains, which do not belong to me
-but to the world, and see you wither, like a poisoned plant, the leaves
-of which lie discoloured and dead upon the garden path.”
-
-Never in the course of their acquaintanceship had Harriet Brandt seemed
-so sweet, so pathetic, so unselfish to Anthony Pennell as then. If he
-had resolved not to resign her from the first, he did so a thousand
-times more now. He threw his arms around her kneeling figure and
-lowered his head until it lay upon the crown of her dusky hair.
-
-“My darling! my darling! my own sweet girl!” he murmured, “our
-destinies are interwoven for ever! No one and nothing shall come
-between us! You cannot give me up unless you have my consent to doing
-so. I hold your sacred promise to become my wife, and I shall not
-release you from it!”
-
-“But if I harmed you?” she said fearfully.
-
-“I do not believe in the possibility of your harming me,” he replied,
-“but if I am to die, which is what I suppose you mean, I claim my right
-to die in your arms. But whenever it happens, you will have neither
-hastened, nor retarded it!”
-
-“Oh! if I could only think so!” she murmured.
-
-“You must! Why cannot you trust my judgment as much as that of Madame
-Gobelli or old Phillips--a couple of mischief-makers. And now, Hally,
-when shall it be?”
-
-“When shall ‘what’ be?” she whispered.
-
-“You know what I mean as well as I do! When shall we be married? We
-have no one to consult but ourselves! I am my own master and you are
-alone in the world! These things are very easily managed, you know. I
-have but to go to Doctors’ Commons for a special license to enable us
-to be married at a registrar’s office to-morrow. Shall it be to-morrow,
-love?”
-
-“Oh! no! no! I could not make up my mind so soon!”
-
-“But why not? Would you live in this dull hotel all by yourself, Hally?”
-
-“I do not know! I am so very unhappy! Leave me, Anthony, for God’s
-sake, leave me, whilst there is time! You do not know the risk you may
-be running by remaining by my side! How can I consent to let you, whom
-I love like my very life, run any risk for my sake! Oh! I love you--I
-love you!” cried the impassioned girl, as she clung tightly to him.
-“You are my lord and master and my king, and I will never, _never_ be
-so selfish as to harm you for the sake of my own gratification. You
-must go away--put the seas between us--never see me, never write or
-speak to me more--only save yourself, my beloved, save yourself!”
-
-He smiled compassionately, as he would have smiled at the ravings of
-a child, as he raised her from her lowly position and placed her in a
-chair.
-
-“Do you know what I am going to do, little woman?” he said cheerfully.
-“I am going to leave you all alone to think this matter over until
-to-morrow. By that time you will have been able to compare the opinions
-of two people who do not care a jot about you, with those of mine who
-love you so dearly. Think well over what they have said to you, and
-I have said to you, and you have said to me! Remember, that if you
-adhere to your present determination, you will make both yourself and
-me most unhappy, and do no one any good. As for myself, I venture to
-say that if I lose you my grief and disappointment will be so great,
-that, in all probability, I shall never do any good work again. But be
-a sensible girl--make up your mind to marry me, and give the lie to
-all this nonsense, and I’ll write a book that will astonish the world!
-Come, Hally, is it to be ruin or success for me?--Ruin to spend my life
-without the only woman I have ever cared for, or success to win my
-wife and a companion who will help me in my work and make my happiness
-complete?”
-
-He kissed her tear-stained face several times, and left her with a
-bright smile.
-
-“This time to-morrow, remember, and I shall come with the licence in my
-pocket.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-
-Doctor Phillips did not meet Margaret and her husband until luncheon
-time and then they were full of an encounter which they had had during
-their morning walk.
-
-“Only fancy, Doctor!” exclaimed Margaret, with more animation than
-she had displayed of late, “Arthur and I have been shopping in Regent
-Street, and whom do you think we met?”
-
-“I give it up, my dear,” replied the doctor, helping himself to cold
-beef. “I am not good at guessing riddles.”
-
-“Ralph and Elinor! They had just come from some exhibition of pictures
-in New Bond Street, and I never saw them so pleased with each other
-before. Ralph was looking actually ‘spooney’, and Elinor was positively
-radiant.”
-
-“_Souvent femme varie_,” quoted Doctor Phillips, shrugging his
-shoulders.
-
-“Oh! but, Doctor, it made Arthur and me so glad to see them. Elinor is
-very fond of Ralph, you know, although she has shewn it so little. And
-so I have no doubt is he of her, and there would never have been any
-unpleasantness between them, if it had not been for that horrid girl,
-Harriet Brandt.”
-
-“It is not like you, my dear Margaret, to condemn anyone without a
-hearing. Perhaps you have not heard the true case of Miss Harriet
-Brandt. Although I am glad that Ralph has disentangled himself from
-her, I still believe that he behaved very badly to both the young
-ladies, and whilst I am glad to hear that Miss Leyton smiles upon him
-again, I think it is more than he deserves!”
-
-“And I agree with you, Doctor,” interposed Colonel Pullen, “I have
-never seen this Miss Brandt, but I know what a fool my brother is with
-women, and can quite understand that he may have raised her hopes just
-to gratify his own vanity. I have no patience with him.”
-
-“Well! for Miss Leyton’s sake let us hope that this will be his last
-experience of dallying with forbidden pleasures. But what will you say
-when I tell you that one of my visitors this morning has been the young
-lady in question--Miss Brandt!”
-
-“Harriet Brandt!” exclaimed Margaret, “but why--is she ill?”
-
-“Oh! no! Her trouble is mental--not physical.”
-
-“She is not still hankering after Ralph, I hope.”
-
-“You are afraid he might not be able to resist the bait! So should I
-be. But she did not mention Captain Pullen. Her distress was all about
-herself!”
-
-“Oh! do tell me about it, Doctor, if it is not a secret! You know I
-have a kind of interest in Harriet Brandt!”
-
-“When she does not interfere with the prospects of your family,”
-observed the doctor, drily, “exactly so! Well, then, the poor girl is
-in great trouble, and I had very little consolation to give her! She
-has left Madame Gobelli’s house. It seems that the old woman insulted
-her terribly and almost turned her out.”
-
-“Oh! that awful Baroness!” cried Margaret; “it is only what might have
-been expected! We heard dreadful stories about her at Heyst. She has an
-uncontrollable temper and, when offended, a most vituperative tongue.
-Her ill-breeding is apparent at all times, but it must be overwhelming
-when she is angry. But how did she insult Miss Brandt?”
-
-“You remember what I told you of the girl’s antecedents! It appears
-that the Baroness must have got hold of the same story, for she cast it
-in her teeth, accusing her moreover of having caused the death of her
-son.”
-
-“Madame Gobelli’s son? What! Bobby--Oh! you do not mean to say that
-Bobby--is _dead_?”
-
-“Yes! There was but one son, I think! He died yesterday, as I
-understood Miss Brandt. And the mother in her rage and grief turned
-upon the poor girl and told her such bitter truths, that she rushed
-from the house at once. Her visit to me this morning was paid in
-order to ascertain if such things were true, as the Baroness, very
-unjustifiably I think, had referred her to me for confirmation.”
-
-“And what did you tell her?”
-
-“What could I tell her? At first I declined to give an opinion, but she
-put such pertinent questions to me, that unless I had lied, I saw no
-way of getting out of it. I glossed over matters as well as I could,
-but even so, they were bad enough. But I impressed it upon her that she
-must not think of marrying. I thought it the best way to put all idea
-of catching Captain Pullen out of her mind. Let him once get safely
-married, and she can decide for herself with regard to the next. But
-at all hazards, we must keep Ralph out of her way, for between you
-and me and the post, she is a young woman whom most men would find it
-difficult to resist.”
-
-“Oh! yes! she and Ralph must not meet again,” said Margaret,
-dreamingly. Her thoughts had wandered back to Bobby and Heyst, and all
-the trouble she had encountered whilst there. What despair had attacked
-her when she lost her only child, and now Madame Gobelli--the woman she
-so much disliked--had lost her only child also.
-
-“Poor Madame Gobelli!” she ejaculated, “I cannot help thinking of her!
-Fancy Bobby being--_dead_! And she used to make him so unhappy, and
-humiliate him before strangers! How she must be suffering for it now!
-How it must all come back upon her! Poor Bobby! Elinor will be sorry to
-hear that he is gone! She used to pity him so, and often gave him fruit
-and cakes. Fancy his being dead! I cannot believe it.”
-
-“It is true, nevertheless! But it is the common lot, Margaret! Perhaps,
-as his mother used to treat him so roughly, the poor lad is better off
-where he is.”
-
-“Oh! of course, I have no doubt of that! But he was all she had--like
-me!” said Margaret, with her eyes over-brimming. Her husband put his
-arms round her, and let her have her cry out on his shoulder.
-
-Then, as he wiped her tears away she whispered,
-
-“Arthur, I should like to go and see her--the Baroness, I mean! I can
-sympathise so truly with her, I might be able to say a few words of
-comfort!”
-
-“Do as you like, my darling,” replied Colonel Pullen, “that is, if you
-are sure that the woman won’t insult you, as she did Miss Brandt!”
-
-“Oh! no! no! I am not in the least afraid! Why should she? I shall only
-tell her how much I feel for her own our common loss----”
-
-She could not proceed, and the doctor whispered to the Colonel.
-
-“Let her do as she wishes! The best salve for our own wounds is to try
-and heal those of others.”
-
-Margaret rose and prepared to leave the room.
-
-“I shall go at once,” she said, “I suppose there is no chance of my
-meeting Harriet Brandt there!”
-
-“I think not! She told me she had left the Red House for good and all,
-but she did not say where she was staying! Though, after all, I think
-she is in most want of comfort of the two.”
-
-“Oh! no!” replied Margaret, faintly, “there is no grief like that
-of--of--” She did not finish her sentence, but left the room hastily in
-order to assume her walking things.
-
-“Will she ever get over the loss of her child?” demanded Colonel
-Pullen, gloomily. The doctor regarded him with a half-amused surprise.
-
-“My dear fellow, though it is useless to preach the doctrine to a
-bereaved mother, the loss of an innocent baby is perhaps the least
-trying in the category of human ills. To rear the child, as thousands
-do, to be unloving, or unsympathetic, or ungrateful, is a thousand
-times worse. But it is too soon for your dear wife to acknowledge it.
-Let her go to this other mother and let them cry together. It will do
-her all the good in the world!”
-
-And the doctor, having finished his luncheon, put on his top-coat and
-prepared to make a round of professional calls.
-
-Margaret came back ready for her visit.
-
-“I shall not offer to go with you, darling,” said the Colonel, “because
-my presence would only be inconvenient. But mind you keep the cab
-waiting, or you may find some difficulty in getting another in that
-district. What address shall I give the driver?”
-
-“First to our florist in Regent Street that I may get some white
-flowers.”
-
-In another minute she was off, and in about an hour afterwards, she
-found herself outside the Red House, which looked gloomier than ever,
-with all the blinds drawn down. Margaret rang the front door bell,
-which was answered by Miss Wynward.
-
-“Can I see Madame Gobelli?” commenced Margaret, “I have just heard the
-sad news, and came to condole with her!”
-
-Miss Wynward let her into the hall and ushered her into a side room.
-
-“You will excuse my asking if you are a friend of her ladyship’s,” she
-said.
-
-“I can hardly call myself a friend,” replied Margaret, “but I stayed
-with her in the same hotel at Heyst last summer, and I knew the dear
-boy who is dead. I was most grieved to hear of his death, and naturally
-anxious to enquire after the Baroness. But if she is too upset to see
-me, of course I would not think of forcing my presence upon her!”
-
-“I don’t think her ladyship would object to receiving any friend, but I
-am not sure if she would recognise you!”
-
-“Not recognise me? It is not three months since we parted.”
-
-“You do not understand me! Our dear boy’s death was so sudden--I have
-been with him since he was five years old, so you will forgive my
-mentioning him in such a fashion--that it has had a terrible effect
-upon his poor mother. In fact she is paralysed! The medical men think
-the paralysis is confined to the lower limbs, but at present they are
-unable to decide definitely, as the Baroness has not opened her lips
-since the event occurred.”
-
-“Oh! poor Madame Gobelli!” cried Margaret, tearfully, “I felt sure she
-loved him under all her apparent roughness and indifference!”
-
-“Yes! I have been with them so long, that I know her manner amounted at
-times to cruelty, but she did not mean it to be so! She thought to make
-him hardy and independent, instead of which it had just the opposite
-effect! But she is paying bitterly for it now! I really think his death
-will kill her, though the doctors laugh at my fears!”
-
-“I--I--too have lost my only child, my precious little baby,” replied
-Margaret, encouraged by the sympathetic tenderness in the other woman’s
-eyes, “and I thought also at first that I must die--that I could not
-live without her--but God is so good, and there is such comfort in
-the thought that whatever we may suffer, our darlings have missed all
-the bitterness and sin and disappointments of this world, that at
-last--that is, sometimes--one feels _almost_ thankful that they are
-safe with Him!”
-
-“Ah! Madame Gobelli has not your hope and trust, Madam!” said Miss
-Wynward, “if she had, she would be a better and happier woman. But I
-must tell you that she is in the same room as Bobby! She will not be
-moved from there, but lies on the couch where we placed her when she
-fell, stricken with the paralysis, gazing at the corpse!”
-
-“Poor dear woman!” exclaimed Margaret.
-
-“Perhaps you would hardly care to go into that room!”
-
-“Oh! I should like it! I want to see the dear boy again! I have brought
-some flowers to put over him!”
-
-“Then, what name shall I tell her ladyship?”
-
-“Mrs. Pullen, say Margaret Pullen whose little baby died at Heyst--then
-I think she will remember!”
-
-“Will you take a seat, Mrs. Pullen, whilst I go upstairs and see if I
-can persuade her to receive you?”
-
-Margaret sat down, and Miss Wynward went up to the chamber which had
-once been Bobby’s. On the bed was stretched the body of the dead boy,
-whilst opposite to it lay on a couch a woman with dry eyes, but palsied
-limbs, staring, staring without intermission at the silent figure which
-had once contained the spirit of her son. She did not turn her head as
-Miss Wynward entered the room.
-
-“My lady,” she said, going up to her, “Mrs. Pullen is downstairs and
-would like to see you! She told me to say that she is Margaret Pullen
-whose baby died in Heyst last summer, and she knew Bobby and has
-brought some flowers to strew over his bed. May she came up?”
-
-But she received no answer. Madame Gobelli’s features were working, but
-that was the only sign of life which she gave.
-
-“Mrs. Pullen is so very sorry for your loss,” Miss Wynward went on,
-“she cried when she spoke of it, and as she has suffered the same, I
-am sure she will sympathise with you. May I say that you will see her?”
-
-Still there was no response, and Miss Wynward went down again to
-Margaret.
-
-“I think you had better come up without waiting for her consent,” she
-said, “if seeing you roused her, even to anger, it would do her good.
-Do you mind making the attempt?”
-
-“No,” replied Margaret, “but if the Baroness gets very angry, you must
-let me run away again. I am quite unequal to standing anything like a
-scene!”
-
-“You will have but to quit the room. Whatever her ladyship may say
-she cannot move from her couch. She attacked poor Miss Brandt most
-unwarrantably last evening, but that was in the first frenzy of her
-grief. She is quite different now!”
-
-“Poor woman!” again ejaculated Margaret, as she followed Miss Wynward,
-not without some inward qualms, to the presence of Madame Gobelli. But
-when she caught sight of the immovable figure on the couch, all her
-fear and resentment left her, overcome by a mighty compassion. She
-went straight up to the Baroness and bending down tenderly kissed her
-twitching face.
-
-“Dear Madame,” she said, “I am--we all are--so truly sorry for your
-grievous loss. It reminds me of the bitter time, not so long ago, you
-may remember, when I lost my darling little Ethel, and thought for the
-while that my life was over! It is so hard, so unnatural, to us poor
-mothers, to see our children go before ourselves! I can weep with you
-tear for tear! But do remember--try to remember--that he is safe--that
-though you remain here with empty arms for a while, death can no more
-take your boy from you, than a veil over your face can take God’s light
-from you. He is there, dear Madame Gobelli--just in the next room with
-the door closed between you, and though I know full well how bitter
-it is to see the door closed, think of the time when it will open
-again--when you and I will spring through it and find, not only our
-dear Bobby and Ethel, but Christ our Lord, ready to give them back into
-our arms again!”
-
-The Baroness said nothing, but two tears gathered in her eyes and
-rolled down her flabby cheeks. Margaret turned from her for a minute
-and walking up to the bed, knelt down beside it in prayer.
-
-“Dear Christ!” she said, “Thou Who knowest what our mothers’ hearts are
-called upon to bear, have pity on us and give us Thy Peace! And open
-our eyes that we may gather strength to realise what our dear children
-have escaped by being taken home to Thee--the sin, the trouble, the
-anxiety, the disappointment--and make us thankful to bear them in their
-stead, and give us grace to look forward to our happy meeting and
-reunion in the Better Land.”
-
-Then she rose and bent over the dead boy.
-
-“Dear Bobby!” she murmured, as she kissed the cold brow, and placed the
-white blossoms in his hands and round his head. “Good-bye! I know how
-happy you must be now, in company with the spirits of all those whom we
-have loved and who have gone home before us--how grateful you must feel
-to the dear Redeemer Who has called you so early--but don’t forget your
-poor mother upon earth! Pray for her, Bobby,--never cease to ask our
-dear Lord to send her comfort and peace and joy in believing. For His
-own dear sake. Amen!”
-
-When she turned again, the Baroness’s cheeks were wet with tears and
-she was stretching forth her arms towards her.
-
-“Oh!” she gasped, as Margaret reached her side, “I am a godless
-woman--I am a godless woman!”
-
-“No! no! my dear friend, we are none of us godless,” replied Margaret,
-“we may think we are, but God knows better! We may forsake Him, but He
-never forsakes us! We should never be saved if we waited till we wanted
-to be so. It is _He_ Who wants _us_--that is our great safeguard! He
-wanted our two dear children--not to spite us, but to draw us after
-them. Try to look at it in that light, and then Bobby’s death will
-prove your greatest gain.”
-
-“I am a godless woman,” repeated the Baroness, “and this is my
-punishment!” pointing to the bed. “I loved him best of all! My ’eart is
-broken!”
-
-“So much the better, if it was a hard heart,” rejoined Margaret,
-smiling. “Who was it that said, ‘If your heart is broken, give the
-pieces to Christ and He will mend it again’? Never think of Bobby, dear
-Madame Gobelli, except as with Christ--walking with Him, talking with
-Him, learning of Him and growing in grace and the love of God daily!
-Never disassociate the two memories, and in a little while you would
-hate yourself if you could separate them again. God bless you! I must
-go back to my husband now!”
-
-“You will come again?” said the Baroness.
-
-“I am afraid I shall have no time! We sail for India on Saturday, but I
-shall not forget you. Good-bye, Bobby,” she repeated, with a last look
-at the corpse, “remember your mother and me in your prayers.”
-
-As Miss Wynward let her out of the Red House, she remarked,
-
-“I could never have believed that anyone could have had so much
-influence over her ladyship as you have, Mrs. Pullen. I hope you will
-come again.”
-
-“I shall not be able to do so. But Madame Gobelli will have you to talk
-to her! You live here altogether, do you not?”
-
-“I have lived here for many years, but I am on the point of leaving.
-Bobby was my only tie to the Red House, or I should have gone long ago.”
-
-“But now that the Baroness is so helpless surely you will delay your
-departure until she no longer needs you.”
-
-“I shall not leave her until she has secured a better woman in my
-stead. But to tell you the truth, I am going to be married, Mrs.
-Pullen, and I consider my first duty is towards my future husband and
-his parents who are very old!”
-
-“Oh! doubtless! May I ask his name?”
-
-“Captain Hill! He lives in the next house to this--Stevenage! You are
-surprised, perhaps, that a man who has been in the army should marry a
-poor governess like myself. That is his goodness. I know that I am worn
-and faded and no longer young--thirty-three on my last birthday--but
-he is good enough to care for me all the more for the troubles I have
-passed through. Mine has been a chequered life, Mrs. Pullen, but I have
-told Captain Hill everything, and he still wishes to make me his wife!
-I ought to be a happy woman for the future, ought I not?”
-
-“Indeed yes,” said Margaret, heartily, “and I sincerely hope that you
-may be so! But I can’t help thinking of poor Madame Gobelli! Is the
-Baron good to her?”
-
-“Pretty well!” answered Miss Wynward, “but he is very stolid and
-unsympathetic! It is strange to think that her heart must have been
-bound up in that boy, and yet at times she was positively cruel to him!”
-
-“It has all been permitted for some good purpose,” said Margaret, as
-she bade her farewell, “perhaps her remorse and self-accusation are the
-only things which would have brought her down upon her knees.”
-
-She returned home considerably saddened by what she had seen, but in
-three days she was to accompany her husband to India, and in the bustle
-of preparation, and the joy of knowing that she was not to be separated
-from him again, her heart was comforted and at peace. Never once during
-that time did she give one thought to Harriet Brandt. Miss Wynward had
-hardly mentioned her name, and no one seemed to know where she had
-gone. The girl had passed out of their lives altogether.
-
-Margaret only regretted one thing in leaving England--that she had not
-seen Anthony Pennell again. Colonel Pullen had called twice at his
-chambers, but had each time found him from home. Margaret wanted to put
-in a good word for the Baroness with him. She thought perhaps that he
-might see her, after a while, and speak a few words of comfort to her.
-But she was obliged to be content with writing her wishes in a farewell
-letter. She little knew how hardened Anthony Pennell felt, at that
-moment, against anyone who had treated the woman he loved in so harsh a
-manner.
-
-Harriet Brandt spent the time, after her lover had left her to think
-over and decide upon their mutual fate, in walking up and down the
-room. She was like a restless animal; she could not stay two moments
-in the same place. Even when night fell, and the inhabitants of the
-Langham Hotel had retired to rest, she still kept pacing up and down
-the room, without thinking of undressing herself or seeking repose,
-whilst her conscience wrestled in warfare with her inclinations. Her
-thoughts took her far, far back to the earliest remembrance of which
-her mind was capable. She thought of her hard, unfeeling, indifferent
-father--of her gross, flabby, sensual mother--and shuddered at the
-remembrance! What had _she_ done?--she said to herself--wherein had
-_she_ sinned, that she should have been cursed with such progenitors?
-How had they _dared_ to bring her into the world, an innocent yet
-hapless child of sin--the inheritor of their evil propensities--of
-their lust, their cruelty, their sensuality, their gluttony--and worst
-of all, the fatal heritage that made her a terror and a curse to her
-fellow-creatures? How dared they? _How dared they?_ Why had God’s
-vengeance not fallen upon them before they had completed their cruel
-work, or having accomplished it, why did He not let her perish with
-them--so that the awful power with which they had imbued her, might
-have been prevented from harming others?
-
-Harriet thought of little Caroline; of her two nurses; of Sister
-Theodosia--of Mrs. Pullen’s baby; of Bobby Bates; until she felt as
-though she should go mad. No! no! she would never bring that curse upon
-her Beloved; he must go far away, he must never see her again, or else
-she would destroy herself in order that he might escape!
-
-But if she persuaded Anthony to consent to her wishes--if she insisted
-upon a total separation between them, what would become of her? What
-should she do? She had no friends in England; Madame Gobelli had
-turned against her--she was all alone! She would live and die alone.
-How should she ever get to know people, or to obtain an entrance to
-Society. She would be a pariah to the end of her life! And if she
-did surmount all these obstacles, what would be the result, except
-a repetition of what had gone before? Strangers would come to know
-her--to like her--would grow more intimate, and she would respond to
-their kindness--with the same result. They would droop and fail, die
-perhaps, like Bobby and the baby--find out that she was the cause, and
-shun her ever after.
-
-“Oh! God!” cried Harriet in her perplexity and anguish, “I am accursed!
-My parents have made me not fit to live!”
-
-She passed that night through the agonies of Death--not the death
-that overtakes the believer in a God and a Future--but the darkness
-and uncertainty that enwraps the man who knows he is full of sin and
-yet has no knowledge that His Lord has paid his debt to the uttermost
-farthing--the doubt and anxiety that beset the unbeliever when he is
-called upon to enter the dark Valley. The poor child saw her destiny
-entangling her as in a net--she longed to break through it, but saw no
-means of escape--and she rebelled against the cruel lot that heredity
-had marked out for her.
-
-“Why am _I_ to suffer?” she exclaimed aloud; “I have youth and health
-and good looks, and money--everything, the world would say, calculated
-to make my life a pleasant one, and yet, I am tortured by this awful
-thought--that I must keep aloof from everybody, that I am a social
-leper, full of contagion and death! Doctor Phillips said that the more
-I loved a person, the more I must keep away from him! It is incredible!
-unheard-of! Could he have had any motive in saying such a thing?”
-
-The remembrance of her flirtation with Ralph Pullen recurred to her
-mind, and she seized it, as a drowning man clutches at a straw.
-
-“Was it a plant, after all? Did the old man want to put me off the
-track of Captain Pullen? Margaret Pullen is staying in the house--he
-said so--had she asked him to get rid of me if possible? After all,
-am I torturing myself by believing the story of my fatal power to be
-true, when it was only a ruse to get rid of me? The Baroness said
-the same thing, but she was mad about poor Bobby and would have said
-anything to annoy me--and, after all, what does it amount to? The
-baby died in teething--heaps of babies do--and Bobby was consumptive
-from the first--I have heard Miss Wynward say so, and would have died
-anyway, as he grew to be a man and had larger demands made upon his
-physical strength. And for the others--what happened to them, happens
-to all the world. It is _fortune de guerre_; people drop every day like
-rotten sheep;--everyone might accuse himself of causing the death of
-his neighbour. I have been frightening myself with a chimera. Anthony
-said so, and he must know better than I! And I can’t give up Tony--_I
-can’t, I can’t, I can’t!_ It is of no use thinking of it! Besides, he
-wouldn’t let me! He would never leave me alone, until I had consented
-to marry him, so I may as well do it at the first as at the last.”
-
-But the tide of triumphant feeling would be succeeded by a wave of
-despondency, which threatened to upset all her casuistry.
-
-“But if--_if_--it should be true, and Anthony should--should--Oh! God!
-Oh! God! I dare not think of it! I will kill myself before it shall
-occur.”
-
-When the morning dawned it found her quite undecided--lamenting her
-unfortunate fate one instant, and declaring that she could never give
-up her lover the next. She tore off her clothes and took a cold bath,
-and re-robed herself, but she was looking utterly ill and exhausted
-when Pennell burst in upon her at eleven o’clock.
-
-“Well, darling,” he exclaimed, “and have you made up your mind by this
-time? Which death am I to die?--suffocated in your dear embrace, or
-left to perish of cold and hunger outside?”
-
-“O! Tony,” she cried, throwing herself into his arms, “I don’t know
-what to say! I have not closed my eyes all night, trying to decide what
-will be for the best. And I am as far off as ever--only I can never,
-_never_ consent to do anything that shall work you harm!”
-
-“Then I shall decide for you,” exclaimed her lover, “and that is that
-you make me and yourself happy, and forget all the rubbish these people
-have been telling you! Depend upon it, whatever they may have said was
-for their own gratification, and not yours, and that they would be
-quick enough to accept the lot that lies before you, were it in their
-power!”
-
-“I have been so lonely and friendless all my life,” said Harriet,
-sobbing in his arms, “and I have longed for love and sympathy so much,
-and now that they have come to me, it is hard, Oh! _so_ hard, to have
-to give them up.”
-
-“So hard, Hally, for _me_, remember, as well as yourself, that we will
-not make the attempt. Now, I want you to place yourself in my hands,
-and start for Paris to-night!”
-
-“To-night?” she cried, lifting such a flushed, startled, happy face
-from his breast, that he had no alternative but to kiss it again.
-
-“Yes! to-night! What did I tell you yesterday--that I should come with
-the ring and the license in my pocket! I am as good as my word, and
-better--for I have given notice to the registrar of marriages in my
-district, that he is to be ready for us at twelve o’clock to-day. Am I
-not a good manager?”
-
-“Tony! Tony! but I have not made up my mind!”
-
-“I have made it up for you, and I will take no refusal! I have
-calculated it all to a nicety! Married at twelve--back here at one for
-lunch--a couple of hours to pack up, and off by the four o’clock train
-for Dover--sleep at the Castle Warden, and cross to-morrow to Paris!
-How will that do, Mrs. Pennell, eh?”
-
-“Oh! ought I to do it, ought I to do it?” exclaimed Harriet, with a
-look of despair.
-
-“If you don’t I’ll shoot myself. I swear it!”
-
-“No! no! darling, don’t say that! It is of you alone that I am
-thinking! God forgive me if I am doing wrong, but I feel that I cannot
-refuse you! Take me and do with me as you think best.”
-
-After which it came to pass, that Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Pennell started
-in very high spirits for Dover, by the four o’clock train that
-afternoon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-
-A fortnight afterwards, the married couple found themselves at Nice.
-Much as has been said and sung of the _lune de miel_, none ever
-surpassed, if it ever reached, this one in happiness. Harriet passed
-the time in a silent ecstasy of delight. Her cup of bliss was filled
-to overflowing; her satisfaction was too deep for words. To this girl,
-for whom the world had been seen as yet only through the barred windows
-of a convent--who had never enjoyed the society of an intellectual
-companion before; who had viewed no scenery but that of the Island;
-seen no records of the past; and visited no foreign capital--the first
-weeks of her married life were a panorama of novelties, her days one
-long astonishment and delight.
-
-She could not adore Anthony Pennell sufficiently for having afforded
-her the opportunity of seeing all this, and more especially of feeling
-it. The presents he lavished upon her were as nothing in her eyes,
-compared to the lover-like attentions he paid her; the bouquets of
-flowers he brought her every morning; the glass of lemonade or milk he
-had ready to supply her need when they were taking their excursions;
-the warm shawl or mantle he carried on his arm in the evenings, lest
-the air should become too chilly for her delicate frame after sunset.
-Money Harriet had no need of, but love--love she had thirsted for, as
-the hart thirsts for the water-streams, yet had never imagined it could
-be poured out at her feet, as her husband poured it now.
-
-And Pennell, on the other hand, though he had been much sought after
-and flattered by the fair sex for the sake of the fame he had acquired
-and the money he made, had never lost his heart to any woman as he had
-done to his little unknown wife. He had never met anyone like Hally
-before. She combined the intelligence of the Englishwoman with the
-_espièglerie_ of the French--the devotion of the Creole with the fiery
-passion of the Spanish or Italian. He could conceive her quite capable
-of dying silently and uncomplainingly for him, or anyone she loved;
-or on the other hand stabbing her lover without remorse if roused by
-jealousy or insult.
-
-He was hourly discovering new traits in her character which delighted
-him, because they were so utterly unlike any possessed by the women of
-the world, with whom he had hitherto associated. He felt as though he
-had captured some beautiful wild creature and was taming it for his own
-pleasure.
-
-Harriet would sit for hours at a time in profound silence,
-contemplating his features or watching his actions--crouched on the
-floor at his feet, until he was fain to lay down his book or writing,
-and take to fondling her instead. She was an ever-constant joy to him;
-he felt it would be impossible to do anything to displease her so long
-as he loved her--that like the patient Griselda she would submit to
-any injustice and meekly call it justice if from _his_ hand. And yet
-he knew all the while that the savage in her was _not_ tamed--that at
-any moment, like the domesticated lion or tiger, her nature might
-assert itself and become furious, wild and intractable. It was the
-very uncertainty that pleased him; men love the women of whom they are
-not quite certain, all the more. From Nice they wandered to Mentone,
-but the proximity of the Monte Carlo tables had no charm for Anthony
-Pennell. He was not a speculative man: his brain was filled with better
-things, and he only visited such places for the sake of reproduction.
-Although the autumn was now far advanced, the air of Mentone was too
-enervating to suit either of them, and Pennell proposed that they
-should move on to Italy.
-
-“I must show you Venice and Rome before we return home, Hally,” he
-said, “and when I come to think of it, why should we return to England
-at all just yet? Why not winter in Rome? Richards is always advising
-me to take a good, long holiday. He says I overwork my brain and it
-reacts upon my body--what better opportunity could we find to adopt his
-advice? Hitherto I have pooh-poohed the idea! Wandering over a foreign
-country in solitary grandeur held no charms for me, but with you, my
-darling, to double the pleasure of everything, any place assumes the
-appearance of Paradise! What do you say, little wife? Shall we set up
-our tent South until the spring?”
-
-“Don’t you feel well, Tony?” asked Harriet, anxiously.
-
-“Never better in my life, dear! I am afraid you will not make an
-interesting invalid out of me. I am as fit as a fiddle. But I fancy
-my next novel will deal with Italy, and I should like to make a few
-notes of the spots I may require to introduce. It is nothing to take me
-away from you, darling. We will inspect the old places together, and
-your quick eye and clear brain shall help me in my researches. Is it a
-settled thing, Hally?”
-
-“O! yes, darling!” she replied, “anywhere with you! The only place I
-shall ever object to, will be the one where I cannot go with you.”
-
-“That place does not exist on this earth, Hally,” said Pennell, “but
-if you are willing, we may as well start to-morrow, for if we leave it
-till too late, we shall find all the best winter quarters pre-engaged.”
-
-He left the room, as she thought rather hurriedly, but as he gained the
-hotel corridor he slightly staggered and leaned against the wall. He
-had told his wife that he was quite well, but he knew it was not the
-truth. He had felt weak and enervated ever since coming to Mentone, but
-he ascribed it to the soft mild atmosphere.
-
-“Confound this dizziness!” he said inwardly, as the corridor swam
-before his eyes, “I think my liver must be out of order, and yet I
-have been taking plenty of exercise. It must be this mild moist air.
-Heat never did agree with me. I shall be glad to get on. We shall find
-Florence cold by comparison.”
-
-He descended to the bureau and announced his intention of giving up his
-rooms on the morrow, and then ordered a carriage and returned to take
-Hally out for a drive.
-
-In Florence they procured rooms in a grand old palazzo, furnished
-with rococo chairs and tables, placed upon marble floors. Harriet was
-charmed and astonished by the ease with which they got everything _en
-route_, as though they possessed Aladin’s lamp, she told Pennell, and
-had but to wish to obtain.
-
-“Ah! Hally!” said her husband, “we have something better than the
-genie’s lamp--we have money! _That_ is the true magician in this
-century. I am very thankful that you have a fortune of your own, my
-dearest, because I know that whatever happens, my girl will be able to
-hold her own with the world!”
-
-Harriet grew pale.
-
-“What _could_ happen?” she stammered.
-
-“My silly little goose, are we immortal?” he replied, “I make a
-first-rate income, my dear, but have not laid by enough as yet to leave
-you more than comfortably off, but with your own money----”
-
-“Don’t speak of it, pray don’t speak of it!” she exclaimed, with ashen
-lips, and noting her distress, Pennell changed the subject.
-
-“You are a lucky little woman,” he continued, “I wonder what some
-people would give to possess your income--poor Margaret Pullen for
-instance.”
-
-“Why Mrs. Pullen in particular, Tony? Are they poor?”
-
-“Not whilst Colonel Pullen is on active service, but he has nothing
-but his pay to depend upon, and whilst he can work, he must. Which
-means a residence in India, and perhaps separation from his wife and
-children--if he should lose his health, a compulsory retirement; and
-if he keeps it, toiling out there till old age, and then coming home
-to spin out the remainder of his life on an inadequate pension. A man
-who accepts service in India should make up his mind to live and die in
-the country, but so many accidents may prevent it. And at the best, it
-means banishment from England and all one’s friends and relations. Poor
-Margaret feels that severely, I am sure!”
-
-“Has Mrs. Pullen many relations then?”
-
-“She has a mother still living, and several brothers and sisters,
-besides her husband’s family. What a sweet, gentle woman she is! She
-was kind to you, Hally, was she not, whilst you were abroad?”
-
-By mutual agreement they never spoke of Heyst, or the Red House, or
-anything which was associated with what Pennell called his wife’s
-infatuation regarding herself.
-
-“Yes! she was very kind--at first,” replied Harriet, “until--until--it
-all happened, and they went to England. Oh! do not let us talk of it!”
-she broke off suddenly.
-
-“No! we will not! Have you unpacked your mandoline yet, Hally? Fetch
-it, dear, and let me hear your lovely voice again! I shall get you to
-sing to me when I am in the vein for composing! You would bring me all
-sorts of beautiful ideas and phantasies!”
-
-“Should I? should I?” exclaimed the girl joyfully. “Oh! how lovely!
-I should do a part of your work then, shouldn’t I, Tony?--I should
-inspire you! Why, I would sing day and night for that!”
-
-“No! no! my bird, I would not let you tire yourself! A few notes now
-and then--they will help me more than enough. I must draw from you for
-my next heroine, Hally! I could not have a fairer model!”
-
-“Oh! Tony!”
-
-She rushed to him in the extremity of her delight and hid her face upon
-his breast.
-
-“I am not good enough, not pretty enough! Your heroines should be
-perfect!”
-
-“I don’t think so! I prefer them to be of flesh and blood, like you!”
-
-He stooped his head and kissed her passionately.
-
-“Hally! Hally!” he whispered, “you draw my very life away!”
-
-The girl got up suddenly, almost roughly, and walked into the next room
-to fetch her mandoline.
-
-“No! no!” she cried to herself with a cold fear, “not that, my God, not
-that!”
-
-But when she returned with the instrument, she did not revert to the
-subject, but played and sang as usual to her husband’s admiration and
-delight.
-
-They “did” Florence very thoroughly during the first week of their stay
-there, and were both completely tired.
-
-“I must really stay at home to-morrow,” cried Hally one afternoon on
-returning to dinner, “Tony, I am regularly fagged out! I feel as if I
-had a corn upon every toe!”
-
-“So do I,” replied her husband, “and I cannot have my darling knocked
-up by fatigue! We will be lazy to-morrow, Hally, and lie on two sofas
-and read our books all day! I have been thinking for the last few days
-that we have been going a little too fast! Let me see, child!--how long
-have we been married?”
-
-“Six weeks to-morrow,” she answered glibly.
-
-“Bless my soul! we are quite an old married couple, a species of Darby
-and Joan! And have you been happy, Hally?”
-
-The tears of excitement rushed into her dark eyes.
-
-“_Happy!_ That is no word for what I have been, Tony; I have been in
-Heaven--in Heaven all the while!”
-
-“And so have I,” rejoined her husband.
-
-“I met some nuns whilst I was out this morning,” continued Hally, “the
-sisters of the Annunciation, and they stopped and spoke to me, and
-were so pleased to hear that I had been brought up in a convent. ‘And
-have you no vocation, my child?’ asked one of them. ‘Yes! Sister,’ I
-replied, ‘I have--a big, strong, handsome vocation called my husband.’
-They looked quite shocked, poor dears, at first, but I gave them a
-subscription for their orphan schools--one hundred francs--and they
-were so pleased. They said if I was sick whilst in Florence, I must
-send for one of them, and she would come and nurse me! I gave it as a
-thanksgiving, Tony--a thanksgiving offering because I am so very happy.
-I am not a good woman like Margaret Pullen, I know that, but I love
-you--_I love you!_”
-
-“Who said that you were not a good woman?” asked Pennell, as he drew
-her fondly to his side, and kissed away the tears that hung on her dark
-lashes.
-
-“Oh! I know I am not. Besides, you once said that Margaret Pullen was
-the best woman you had ever known.”
-
-“I think she is very sweet and unselfish,” replied Pennell musingly,
-“she felt the loss of her infant terribly, Doctor Phillips told me, but
-the way in which she struggled to subdue her grief, in order not to
-distress others, was wonderful! Poor Margaret! how she mourns little
-Ethel to this day.”
-
-“Don’t! _don’t!_” cried Harriet in a stifled voice, “I cannot bear to
-think of it!”
-
-“My darling, it had nothing to do with you! I have told you so a
-thousand times!”
-
-“Yes! yes! I know you have--but I loved the little darling! It is
-dreadful to me to think that she is mouldering in the grave!”
-
-“Come, child, you will be hysterical if you indulge in any more
-reminiscences! Suppose we go for a stroll through the Ghetto or some
-other antiquated part of Florence. Or shall we take a drive into the
-country? I am at your commands, Madam!”
-
-“A drive, darling, then--a drive!” whispered his wife, as she left him
-to get ready for the excursion.
-
-It was three hours before they returned to their rooms in the old
-palazzo. Harriet was dull and somewhat silent, and Anthony confessed to
-a headache.
-
-“I am not quite sure now,” he said, as they were dining, “whether
-a trip to Australia or America would not do us both more good than
-lingering about these mild, warm places. I think our constitutions
-both require bracing rather than coddling. Australia is a grand young
-country! I have often contemplated paying her a visit. What would you
-say to it, Hally?”
-
-“I should enjoy it as much as yourself, Tony! You so often have a
-headache now! I think the drainage of these southern towns must be
-defective!”
-
-“Oh! shocking! They are famous for typhoid and malarial fevers. They
-are not drained at all!”
-
-“Don’t let us stay here long then! What should I do if you were to fall
-ill?”
-
-“You are far more liable to fall sick of the two, my darling,” returned
-her husband, “I do not think your beautiful little body has much
-strength to sustain it. And then what should _I_ do?”
-
-“Ah! neither of us could do without the other, Tony!”
-
-“Of course we couldn’t, and so we will provide against such a
-contingency by moving on before our systems get saturated with miasma
-and mistral. Will you sing to me to-night, Hally?”
-
-“Not unless you very much wish it! I am a little tired. I feel as if I
-couldn’t throw any expression into my songs to-night!”
-
-“Then come here and sit down on the sofa beside me, and let us talk!”
-
-She did as he desired, but Pennell was too sleepy to talk. In five
-minutes he had fallen fast asleep, and it was with difficulty she could
-persuade him to abandon the couch and drag his weary limbs up to bed,
-where he threw himself down in a profound slumber. Harriet was also
-tired. Her husband was breathing heavily as she slipped into her place
-beside him. His arm was thrown out over her pillow, as though he feared
-she might go to sleep without remembering to wish him good-night! She
-bent over him and kissed him passionately on the lips.
-
-“Good-night, my beloved,” she whispered, “sleep well, and wake in
-happiness!”
-
-She kissed the big hand too that lay upon her pillow and composed
-herself to sleep while it still encircled her.
-
-The dawn is early in Florence, but it had broken for some time before
-she roused herself again. The sun was streaming brightly into the
-long, narrow, uncurtained windows, and everything it lighted on was
-touched with a molten glory. Harriet started up in bed. Her husband’s
-arm was still beneath her body.
-
-“Oh! my poor darling!” she exclaimed, as though the fault were her own,
-“how cramped he must be! How soundly we must have slept not to have
-once moved through the night!”
-
-She raised Tony’s arm and commenced to chafe it. How strangely heavy
-and cold it felt. Why! he was cold all over! She drew up the bedclothes
-and tucked them in around his chin. Then, for the first time, she
-looked at his face. His eyes were open.
-
-“Tony, Tony!” she exclaimed, “are you making fun of me? Have you been
-awake all the time?”
-
-She bent over his face laughingly, and pressed a kiss upon his cheek.
-
-How stiff it felt! My God! what was the matter? Could he have fainted?
-She leapt from the bed, and running to her husband’s side, pulled down
-the bedclothes again and placed her hand upon his heart. The body was
-cold--cold and still all over! His eyes were glazed and dull. His
-mouth was slightly open. In one awful moment she knew the truth. Tony
-was--_dead_!
-
-She stood for some moments--some hours--some months--she could not
-have reckoned the time, silent and motionless, trying to realise what
-had occurred. Then--as it came upon her, like a resistless flood which
-she could not stem, nor escape, Harriet gave one fearful shriek which
-brought the servants hurrying upstairs to know what could be the
-matter.
-
-“I have killed my husband--I have killed him--it was I myself who did
-it!” was all that she would say.
-
-Of course they did not believe her. They accepted the unmeaning words
-as part of their mistress’s frenzy at her sudden and unexpected loss.
-They saw what had happened, and they ran breathlessly for a doctor, who
-confirmed their worst fears--the Signor was dead!
-
-The old palazzo became like a disturbed ant-hill. The servants ran
-hither and thither, unknowing how to act, whilst the mistress sat by
-the bedside with staring, tearless eyes, holding the hand of her dead
-husband. But there were a dozen things to be done--half a hundred
-orders to be issued. Death in Florence is quickly followed by burial.
-The law does not permit a mourner to lament his Dead for more than
-four-and-twenty hours.
-
-But the signora would give no orders for the funeral nor answer any
-questions put to her! She had no friends in Florence--for ought they
-knew, she had no money--what were they to do? At last one of them
-thought of the neighbouring Convent of the Annunciation and ran to
-implore one of the good sisters to come to their mistress in her
-extremity.
-
-Shortly afterwards, Sister Angelica entered the bedroom where Harriet
-sat murmuring at intervals, “It is _I_ who have killed him,” and
-attempted to administer comfort to the young mourner. But her words
-and prayers had no effect upon Harriet. Her brain could hold but one
-idea--she had killed Tony! Doctor Phillips was right--it was she who
-had killed Margaret Pullen’s baby and Bobby Bates, and to look further
-back, little Caroline, and now--now, her Tony! the light of her life,
-the passion of her being, the essence of all her joy--her hope for
-this world and the next. She had killed him--_she_, who worshipped
-him, whose pride was bound up in him, who was to have helped him and
-comforted him and waited on him all his life--she had killed him!
-
-Her dry lips refused to say the words distinctly, but they kept
-revolving in her brain until they dazed and wearied her. The little
-sister stood by her and held her hand, as the professional assistants
-entered the death chamber and arranged and straightened the body for
-the grave, finally placing it in a coffin and carrying it away to a
-mortuary where it would have to remain until buried on the morrow, but
-Harriet made no resistance to the ceremony and no sign. She did not
-even say “Good-bye” as Tony was carried from her sight for ever! Sister
-Angelica talked to her of the glorious Heaven where they must hope that
-her dear husband would be translated, of the peace and happiness he
-would enjoy, of the reunion which awaited them when her term of life
-was also past.
-
-She pressed her to make the Convent her refuge until the first agony
-of her loss was overcome--reminded her of the peace and rest she would
-encounter within the cloisters, and how the whole fraternity would
-unite in praying for the soul of her beloved that he might speedily
-obtain the remission of his sins and an entrance into the Beatific
-Presence.
-
-Harriet listened dully and at last in order to get rid of her
-well-intentioned but rather wearisome consoler, she promised to do all
-that she wished. Let the sister return to the Convent for the present,
-and on the morrow if she would come for her at the same time, she
-might take her back with her. She wanted rest and peace--she would be
-thankful for them, poor Harriet said--only to-night, this one night
-more, she wished to be alone. So the good little sister went away
-rejoicing that she had succeeded in her errand of mercy, and looking
-forward to bearing the poor young widow to the Convent on the morrow,
-there to learn the true secret of earthly happiness.
-
-When she had gone and the old palazzo was quiet and empty, the
-bewildered girl rose to her feet and tried to steady her shaking limbs
-sufficiently, to write what seemed to be a letter but was in reality a
-will.
-
-“I leave all that I possess,” so it ran, “to Margaret Pullen, the wife
-of Colonel Arthur Pullen, the best woman Tony said that he had ever
-met, and I beg her to accept it in return for the kindness she showed
-to me when I went to Heyst, a stranger. Signed, HARRIET PENNELL.”
-
-She put the paper into an envelope, and as soon as the morning had
-dawned, she asked her servant Lorenzo to show her the way to the
-nearest notary in whose presence she signed the document and directed
-him to whom it should be sent in case of her own death.
-
-And after another visit to a _pharmacien_, she returned to the palazzo
-and took up her watch again in the now deserted bedchamber.
-
-Her servants brought her refreshments and pressed her to eat, without
-effect. All she desired, she told them, was to be left alone, until the
-sister came for her in the afternoon.
-
-Sister Angelica arrived true to her appointment, and went at once to
-the bedchamber. To her surprise she found Harriet lying on the bed,
-just where the corpse of Anthony Pennell had lain, and apparently
-asleep.
-
-“_Pauvre enfant!_” thought the kind-hearted nun, “grief has exhausted
-her! I should not have attended to her request, but have watched with
-her through the night! _Eh, donc! ma pauvre_,” she continued, gently
-touching the girl on the shoulder, “_levez-vous! Je suis là._”
-
-But there was no awakening on this earth for Harriet Pennell. She had
-taken an overdose of chloral and joined her husband.
-
-When Margaret Pullen received the will which Harriet had left behind
-her, she found these words with it, scribbled in a very trembling hand
-upon a scrap of paper.
-
-“Do not think more unkindly of me than you can help. My parents have
-made me unfit to live. Let me go to a world where the curse of heredity
-which they laid upon me may be mercifully wiped out.”
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
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- frontmatter: moved one page (beginning of publisher’s list of
- Latest Volumes) to the end and joined with the rest
- of the list for continuity
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- kow-towing’
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The blood of the vampire, by Florence Marryat</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The blood of the vampire</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Florence Marryat</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 10, 2022 [eBook #68277]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Emmanuel Ackerman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE ***</div>
-
-<div class="transnote"><h2>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:</h2>
-
- The Table of Contents was created by the Transcriber
- and is placed in the public domain.<br />
-<br />
- A number of typographical errors have been corrected.
- A detailed list of the corrections and changes that were
- made to the text can be found at the end of the ebook.</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="450" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">EACH VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY.</p>
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="p4 pfs150">COLLECTION</p>
-<p class="pfs90">OF</p>
-<p class="pfs240">BRITISH AUTHORS</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs150">TAUCHNITZ EDITION.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="pfs120">VOL. 3245.</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs135 bolded">THE BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE.</p>
-<p class="pfs70">BY</p>
-<p class="pfs120 bolded">FLORENCE MARRYAT.</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs70 lsp2">IN ONE VOLUME.</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs90">LEIPZIG: BERNHARD TAUCHNITZ.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">PARIS: LIBRAIRIE C. REINWALD, 15, RUE DES SAINTS-PÈRES.</p>
-<p class="pfs70">PARIS: THE GALIGNANI LIBRARY, 224, RUE DE RIVOLI,<br />
-AND AT NICE, 48, QUAI ST. JEAN BAPTISTE.</p><br />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs90"><i>This Collection<br />
-is published with copyright for Continental circulation, but
-all purchasers are earnestly requested not to introduce the
-volumes into England, or into any British Colony.</i>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p class="p4 pfs180">COLLECTION</p>
-<p class="pfs70">OF</p>
-<p class="pfs240 lsp">BRITISH AUTHORS</p>
-<p class="pfs180">TAUCHNITZ EDITION.</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs180">VOL. 3245.</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs120 lsp">THE BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE.</p>
-<p class="pfs90">BY</p>
-<p class="pfs90">FLORENCE MARRYAT.</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs90 lsp1">IN ONE VOLUME.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="TAUCHNITZ_EDITION">TAUCHNITZ EDITION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs90">By the same Author,</p>
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">LOVE’S CONFLICT</td>
-<td class="tdr wide30">2&#160;v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">FOR EVER AND EVER</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE CONFESSIONS OF GERALD ESTCOURT</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">NELLY BROOKE</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">VÉRONIQUE</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">PETRONEL</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HER LORD AND MASTER</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE PREY OF THE GODS</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">LIFE OF CAPTAIN MARRYAT</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">MAD DUMARESQ</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">NO INTENTIONS</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">FIGHTING THE AIR</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A STAR AND A HEART</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE POISON OF ASPS</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A LUCKY DISAPPOINTMENT</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">“MY OWN CHILD”</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HER FATHER’S NAME</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A HARVEST OF WILD OATS</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A LITTLE STEPSON</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">WRITTEN IN FIRE</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HER WORLD AGAINST A LIE</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A BROKEN BLOSSOM</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE FAIR-HAIRED ALDA</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">WITH CUPID’S EYES</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">MY SISTER THE ACTRESS</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">PHYLLIDA.</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HOW THEY LOVED HIM</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">FACING THE FOOTLIGHTS <span class="allsmcap">(WITH PORTRAIT)</span></td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A MOMENT OF MADNESS, ETC.</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE GHOST OF CHARLOTTE CRAY, ETC.</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">PEERESS AND PLAYER</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">UNDER THE LILIES AND ROSES</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE HEART OF JANE WARNER</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE HEIR PRESUMPTIVE</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE MASTER PASSION</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">SPIDERS OF SOCIETY</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">DRIVEN TO BAY</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A DAUGHTER OF THE TROPICS</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">GENTLEMAN AND COURTIER</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">ON CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">MOUNT EDEN.</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">BLINDFOLD</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A SCARLET SIN</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A BANKRUPT HEART</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE SPIRIT WORLD</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE BEAUTIFUL SOUL</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">AT HEART A RAKE</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HANNAH STUBBS</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE DREAM THAT STAYED</td>
-<td class="tdr">2 v.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A PASSING MADNESS</td>
-<td class="tdr">1 v.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h1>THE BLOOD<br />
-OF THE VAMPIRE</h1>
-<p class="p2 pfs90">BY</p>
-<p class="pfs120">FLORENCE MARRYAT,</p>
-<p class="pfs70">AUTHOR OF</p>
-<p class="pfs90">“LOVE’S CONFLICT,” “A PASSING MADNESS,” ETC.</p>
-<p class="p4 pfs90"><i>COPYRIGHT EDITION.</i></p>
-<p class="p4 pfs100">LEIPZIG<br /><br />
-BERNHARD TAUCHNITZ<br /><br />
-1897.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="TABLE_OF_CONTENTS">TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr wide50">page</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER I</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">5</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER II</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">21</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER III</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">36</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER IV</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">52</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER V</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">65</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER VI</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">87</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER VII</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">106</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER VIII</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">123</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER IX</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">137</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER X</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">156</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER XI</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">178</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER XII</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER XIII</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">212</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER XIV</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">230</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER XV</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">248</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER XVI</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">269</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER XVII</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">285</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">CHAPTER XVIII</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">304</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span>
-<p class="pfs150">THE BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-
-<p>It was the magic hour of dining. The long Digue
-of Heyst was almost deserted; so was the strip of loose,
-yellow sand which skirted its base, and all the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tables
-d’hôtes</i> were filling fast. Henri, the youngest waiter of
-the Hôtel Lion d’Or, was standing on the steps between
-the two great gilded lions, which stood rampant on either
-side the portals, vigorously ringing a loud and discordant
-bell to summons the stragglers, whilst the ladies, who
-were waiting the commencement of dinner in the little
-salon to the side, stopped their ears to dull its clamour.
-Philippe and Jules were busy, laying white cloths and
-glasses, etc., on the marble tables in the open balcony,
-outside the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">salle à manger</i>, where strangers to the Hotel
-might dine <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la carte</i>, if they chose. Inside, the long,
-narrow tables, were decorated with dusty geraniums and
-fuchsias, whilst each cruet stand had a small bunch of
-dirty artificial flowers tied to its handle. But the visitors
-to the Lion d’Or, who were mostly English, were too
-eager for their evening meal, to cavil at their surroundings.
-The Baroness Gobelli, with her husband on one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>
-side, and her son on the other, was the first to seat
-herself at table. The Baroness always appeared with
-the soup, for she had observed that the first comers received
-a more generous helping than those who came
-in last. No such anxiety occupied the minds of Mrs.
-Pullen and her friend Miss Leyton, who sat opposite to
-the Baroness and her family. They did not care sufficiently
-for the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">potage aux croutons</i>, which usually formed
-the beginning of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table d’hôte</i> dinner. The long
-tables were soon filled with a motley crew of English,
-Germans, and Belgians, all chattering, especially the
-foreigners, as fast as their tongues could travel. Amongst
-them was a sprinkling of children, mostly unruly and
-ill-behaved, who had to be called to order every now
-and then, which made Miss Leyton’s lip curl with disgust.
-Just opposite to her, and next to Mr. Bobby
-Bates, the Baroness’s son by her first marriage, and
-whom she always treated as if he had been a boy of
-ten years old, was an unoccupied chair, turned up
-against the table to signify that it was engaged.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if that is for the German Princess of
-whom Madame Lamont is so fond of talking,” whispered
-Elinor Leyton to Mrs. Pullen, “she said this morning
-that she expected her this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! surely not!” replied her friend, “I do not
-know much about royalties, but I should think a Princess
-would hardly dine at a public <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table d’hôte</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! a German Princess! what is that?” said Miss
-Leyton, with a curled lip again, for she was a daughter
-of Lord Walthamstowe, and thought very little of any
-aristocracy, except that of her own country.</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke, however, the chair opposite was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
-sharply pulled into place, and a young lady seated herself
-on it, and looked boldly (though not brazenly) up
-and down the tables, and at her neighbours on each
-side of her. She was a remarkable-looking girl—more
-remarkable, perhaps, than beautiful, for her beauty did
-not strike one at first sight. Her figure was tall but
-slight and lissom. It looked almost boneless as she
-swayed easily from side to side of her chair. Her skin
-was colourless but clear. Her eyes were long-shaped,
-dark, and narrow, with heavy lids and thick black lashes
-which lay upon her cheeks. Her brows were arched
-and delicately pencilled, and her nose was straight and
-small. Not so her mouth however, which was large,
-with lips of a deep blood colour, displaying small white
-teeth. To crown all, her head was covered with a mass
-of soft, dull, blue-black hair, which was twisted in careless
-masses about the nape of her neck, and looked as
-if it was unaccustomed to comb or hairpin. She was
-dressed very simply in a white cambric frock, but there
-was not a woman present, who had not discovered in
-five minutes, that the lace with which it was profusely
-trimmed, was costly Valenciennes, and that it was
-clasped at her throat with brilliants. The new-comer
-did not seem in the least abashed by the numbers of
-eyes which were turned upon her, but bore the scrutiny
-very calmly, smiling in a sort of furtive way at everybody,
-until the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entrées</i> were handed round, when she
-rivetted all her attention upon the contents of her plate.
-Miss Leyton thought she had never seen any young
-person devour her food with so much avidity and enjoyment.
-She could not help watching her. The Baroness
-Gobelli, who was a very coarse feeder, scattering her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
-food over her plate and not infrequently over the table
-cloth as well, was nothing compared to the young
-stranger. It was not so much that she ate rapidly and
-with evident appetite, but that she kept her eyes fixed
-upon her food, as if she feared someone might deprive
-her of it. As soon as her plate was empty, she called
-sharply to the waiter in French, and ordered him to get
-her some more.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right, my dear!” exclaimed the Baroness,
-nodding her huge head, and smiling broadly at the new-comer;
-“make ’em bring you more! It’s an excellent
-dish, that! I’ll ’ave some more myself!”</p>
-
-<p>As Philippe deposited the last helping of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entrée</i>
-on the young lady’s plate, the Baroness thrust hers
-beneath his nose.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ere!” she said, “bring three more ’elpings for the
-Baron and Bobby and me!”</p>
-
-<p>The man shook his head to intimate that the dish
-was finished, but the Baroness was not to be put off
-with a flimsy excuse. She commenced to make a row.
-Few meals passed without a squabble of some sort, between
-the Hotel servants and this terrible woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Now we are in for it again!” murmured Miss
-Leyton into Mrs. Pullen’s ear. The waiter brought
-a different <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entrée</i>, but the Baroness insisted upon having
-a second helping of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tête de veau aux champignons</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il n’y a plus, Madame!</i>” asseverated Philippe, with
-a gesture of deprecation.</p>
-
-<p>“What does ’e say?” demanded the Baroness, who
-was not good at French.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no more, mein tear!” replied her husband,
-with a strong German accent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Confound their impudence!” exclaimed his wife
-with a heated countenance, “’ere, send Monsieur ’ere at
-once! I’ll soon see if we’re not to ’ave enough to eat
-in ’is beastly Hotel!”</p>
-
-<p>All the ladies who understood what she said, looked
-horrified at such language, but that was of no consequence
-to Madame Gobelli, who continued to call out
-at intervals for “Monsieur” until she found the dinner
-was coming to an end without her, and thought it would
-be more politic to attend to business and postpone her
-feud till a more convenient occasion. The Baroness
-Gobelli was a mystery to most people in the Hotel. She
-was an enormous woman of the elephant build, with a
-large, flat face and clumsy hands and feet. Her skin
-was coarse, so was her hair, so were her features. The
-only things which redeemed an otherwise repulsive face,
-were a pair of good-humoured, though cunning blue
-eyes and a set of firm, white teeth. Who the Baroness
-had originally been, no one could quite make out. It
-was evident that she must have sprung from some low
-origin from her lack of education and breeding, yet she
-spoke familiarly of aristocratic names, even of Royal
-ones, and appeared to be acquainted with their families
-and homes. There was a floating rumour that she had
-been old Mr. Bates’s cook before he married her, and
-when he left her a widow with an only child and a
-considerable fortune, the little German Baron had thought
-that her money was a fair equivalent for her personality.
-She was exceedingly vulgar, and when roused, exceedingly
-vituperative, but she possessed a rough good
-humour when pleased, and a large amount of natural
-shrewdness, which stood her instead of cleverness. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
-she was an unscrupulous liar, and rather boasted of the
-fact than otherwise. Having plenty of money at her
-command, she was used to take violent fancies to people—taking
-them up suddenly, loading them with presents
-and favours for as long as it pleased her, and then
-dropping them as suddenly, without why or wherefore—even
-insulting them if she could not shake them off
-without doing so. The Baron was completely under
-her thumb; more than that, he was servile in her presence,
-which astonished those people, who did not know
-that amongst her other arrogant insistences, the Baroness
-laid claim to holding intercourse with certain supernatural
-and invisible beings, who had the power to
-wreak vengeance on all those who offended her. This
-fear it was, combined with the fact that she had all the
-money and kept the strings of the bag pretty close where
-he was concerned, that made the Baron wait upon his
-wife’s wishes as if he were her slave. Perhaps the
-softest spot in the Baroness’s heart was kept for her
-sickly and uninteresting son, Bobby Bates, whom she
-treated, nevertheless, with the roughness of a tigress for
-her cub. She kept him still more under her surveillance
-than she did her husband, and Bobby, though
-he had attained his nineteenth year, dared not say Boo!
-to a goose, in presence of his Mamma. As the cheese
-was handed round, Elinor Leyton rose from her seat
-with an impatient gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“Do let us get out of this atmosphere, Margaret!” she
-said in a low tone. “I really cannot stand it any longer!”</p>
-
-<p>The two ladies left the table, and went out beyond
-the balcony, to where a number of painted iron chairs
-and tables were placed on the Digue, for the accommodation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
-of passing wayfarers, who might wish to rest awhile
-and quench their thirst with <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">limonade</i> or lager beer.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder who that girl is!” remarked Mrs. Pullen
-as soon as they were out of hearing. “I don’t know
-whether I like her or not, but there is something rather
-distinguished-looking about her!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think so?” said Miss Leyton, “I thought
-she only distinguished herself by eating like a cormorant!
-I never saw anyone in society gobble her food in such
-a manner! She made me positively sick!”</p>
-
-<p>“Was it as bad as that?” replied the more quiet
-Mrs. Pullen, in an indifferent manner. Her eyes were
-attracted just then by the perambulator which contained
-her baby, and she rose to meet it.</p>
-
-<p>“How is she, Nurse?” she asked as anxiously as if
-she had not parted from the infant an hour before.
-“Has she been awake all the time?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Ma’am, and looking about her like anything!
-But she seems inclined to sleep now! I thought it was
-about time to take her in!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no! not on such a warm, lovely evening! If she
-does go to sleep in the open air, it will do her no harm.
-Leave her with me! I want you to go indoors, and find
-out the name of the young lady who sat opposite to me
-at dinner to-day, Philippe understands English. He will
-tell you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why on earth do you want to know?” demanded
-Miss Leyton, as the servant disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“O! I don’t know! I feel a little curious, that is all!
-She seems so young to be by herself!”</p>
-
-<p>Elinor Leyton answered nothing, but walked across
-the Digue and stood, looking out over the sea. She was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
-anticipating the arrival of her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancé</i>, Captain Ralph
-Pullen of the Limerick Rangers, but he had delayed his
-coming to join them, and she began to find Heyst
-rather dull.</p>
-
-<p>The visitors of the Lion d’Or had finished their meal
-by this time, and were beginning to reassemble on the
-Digue, preparatory to taking a stroll before they turned
-into one of the many <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cafés-chantants</i>, which were situated
-at stated intervals in front of the sea. Amongst them
-came the Baroness Gobelli, leaning heavily on a thick
-stick with one hand, and her husband’s shoulder with
-the other. The couple presented an extraordinary appearance,
-as they perambulated slowly up and down the
-Digue.</p>
-
-<p>She—with her great height and bulk, towering a
-head above her companion, whilst he—with a full-sized
-torso, and short legs—a large hat crammed down upon
-his forehead, and no neck to speak of, so that the brim
-appeared to rest upon his shoulders—was a ludicrous
-figure, as he walked beside his wife, bending under the
-weight of her support. But yet, she was actually proud
-of him. Notwithstanding his ill-shaped figure, the Baron
-possessed one of those mild German faces, with pale
-watery blue eyes, a long nose, and hair and beard of a
-reddish-golden colour, which entitled him, in the estimation
-of some people, to be called a handsome man, and
-the Baroness was never tired of informing the public
-that his head and face had once been drawn for that of
-some celebrated saint.</p>
-
-<p>Her own appearance was really comical, for though
-she had plenty of means, her want of taste, or indifference
-to dress, made everyone stare at her as she passed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
-On the present occasion, she wore a silk gown which
-had cost seventeen shillings a yard, with a costly velvet
-cloak, a bonnet which might have been rescued from the
-dustbin, and cotton gloves with all her fingers out. She
-shook her thick walking-stick in Miss Leyton’s face as
-she passed by her, and called out loud enough for everyone
-to hear: “And when is the handsome Captain coming
-to join you, Miss Leyton, eh? Take care he ain’t running
-after some other gal! ‘When pensive I thought on
-my L.O.V.E.’ Ha! ha! ha!”</p>
-
-<p>Elinor flushed a delicate pink but did not turn her
-head, nor take any notice of her tormentor. She detested
-the Baroness with a perfectly bitter hatred, and
-her proud cold nature revolted from her coarseness and
-familiarity.</p>
-
-<p>“Tied to your brat again!” cried the Baroness, as
-she passed Margaret Pullen who was moving the perambulator
-gently to and fro by the handle, so as to keep
-her infant asleep; “why didn’t you put it in the tub as
-soon as it was born? It would ’ave saved you a heap
-of trouble! I often wish I had done so by that devil
-Bobby! ’Ere, where are you, Bobby?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m close behind you, Mamma!” replied the simple-looking
-youth.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! don’t you get running away from your father
-and me, and winking at the gals! There’s time enough
-for that, ain’t there, Gustave?” she concluded, addressing
-the Baron.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along, Robert, and mind what your mother
-tells you!” said the Herr Baron with his guttural German
-accent, as the extraordinary trio pursued their way down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
-the Digue, the Baroness making audible remarks on
-everybody she met, as they went.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Pullen sat where they had left her, moving
-about the perambulator, whilst her eyes, like Elinor’s,
-were fixed upon the tranquil water. The August sun
-had now quite disappeared, and the indescribably faint
-and unpleasant odour, which is associated with the
-dunes of Heyst, had begun to make itself apparent. A
-still languor had crept over everything, and there were
-indications of a thunderstorm in the air. She was thinking
-of her husband, Colonel Arthur Pullen, the elder
-brother of Miss Leyton’s <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancé</i>, who was toiling out in
-India for baby and herself. It had been a terrible blow
-to Margaret, to let him go out alone after only one year
-of happy wedded life, but the expected advent of her
-little daughter at the time, had prohibited her undertaking
-so long a journey and she had been compelled to
-remain behind. And now baby was six months old,
-and Colonel Pullen hoped to be home by Christmas, so
-had advised her to wait for his return. But her thoughts
-were sad sometimes, notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p>Events happen so unexpectedly in this world—who
-could say for certain that she and her husband would
-ever meet again—that Arthur would ever see his little
-girl, or that she should live to place her in her father’s
-arms? But such a state of feeling was morbid, she knew,
-and she generally made an effort to shake it off. The
-nurse, returning with the information she had sent her
-to acquire, roused her from her reverie.</p>
-
-<p>“If you please, Ma’am, the young lady’s name is
-Brandt, and Philippe says she came from London!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span></p>
-
-<p>“English! I should never have guessed it!” observed
-Mrs. Pullen, “She speaks French so well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I take the baby now, Ma’am?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Wheel her along the Digue. I shall come
-and meet you by and by!”</p>
-
-<p>As the servant obeyed her orders, she called to
-Miss Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>“Elinor! come here!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” asked Miss Leyton, seating herself
-beside her.</p>
-
-<p>“The new girl’s name is Brandt and she comes from
-England! Would you have believed it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not take sufficient interest in her to make
-any speculations on the subject. I only observed that
-she had a mouth from ear to ear, and ate like a pig!
-What does it concern us, where she comes from?”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment, a Mrs. Montague, who, with her
-husband, was conveying a family of nine children over
-to Brussels, under the mistaken impression, that they
-would be able to live cheaper there than in England,
-came down the Hotel steps with half a dozen of them,
-clinging to her skirts, and went straight up to Margaret
-Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Mrs. Pullen! What is that young lady’s name,
-who sat opposite to you at dinner? Everybody is asking!
-I hear she is enormously rich, and travelling alone.
-Did you see the lace on her dress? Real Valenciennes,
-and the diamond rings she wore! Frederick says they
-must be worth a lot of money. She must be someone
-of consequence I should imagine!”</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary, my nurse tells me she is English
-and her name is Brandt. Has she no friends here?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Madame Lamont says she arrived in company with
-another girl, but they are located at different parts of
-the Hotel. It seems very strange, does it not?”</p>
-
-<p>“And it sounds very improper!” interposed Elinor
-Leyton, “I should say the less we have to say to her,
-the better! You never know what acquaintances you
-may make in a place like this! When I look up and
-down the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table d’hôte</i> menagerie sometimes, it makes
-me quite ill!”</p>
-
-<p>“Does it?” rejoined Mrs. Montague, “I think it’s so
-amusing! That Baroness Gobelli, for instance——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t mention her before me!” cried Miss Leyton,
-in a tone of disgust, “the woman is not fit for civilised
-society!”</p>
-
-<p>“She is rather common, certainly, and strange in her
-behaviour,” said Mrs. Montague, “but she is very good-natured.
-She gave my little Edward a louis yesterday.
-I felt quite ashamed to let him take it!”</p>
-
-<p>“That just proves her vulgarity,” exclaimed Elinor
-Leyton, who had not a sixpence to give away, herself,
-“it shows that she thinks her money will atone for all
-her other shortcomings! She gave that Miss Taylor who
-left last week, a valuable brooch off her own throat.
-And poor payment too, for all the dirty things she made
-her do and the ridicule she poured upon her. I daresay
-this <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">nouveau riche</i> will try to curry favour with us by
-the same means.”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment, the girl under discussion, Miss
-Brandt, appeared on the balcony, which was only raised
-a few feet above where they sat. She wore the same
-dress she had at dinner, with the addition of a little
-fleecy shawl about her shoulders. She stood smiling,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
-and looking at the ladies (who had naturally dropped
-all discussion about her) for a few moments, and then
-she ventured to descend the steps between the rampant
-gilded lions, and almost timidly, as it seemed, took up
-a position near them. Mrs. Pullen felt that she could
-not be so discourteous as to take no notice whatever of
-the new-comer, and so, greatly to Miss Leyton’s disgust,
-she uttered quietly, “Good evening!”</p>
-
-<p>It was quite enough for Miss Brandt. She drew
-nearer with smiles mantling over her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening! Isn’t it lovely here?—so soft and
-warm, something like the Island, but so much fresher!”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up and down the Digue, now crowded
-with a multitude of visitors, and drew in her breath with
-a long sigh of content.</p>
-
-<p>“How gay and happy they all seem, and how happy
-I am too! Do you know, if I had my will, what I should
-like to do?” she said, addressing Mrs. Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“No! indeed!”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to tear up and down this road as
-hard as ever I could, throwing my arms over my head
-and screaming aloud!”</p>
-
-<p>The ladies exchanged glances of astonishment, but
-Margaret Pullen could not forbear smiling as she asked
-their new acquaintance the reason why.</p>
-
-<p>“O! because I am free—free at last, after ten long
-years of imprisonment! I am telling you the truth, I
-am indeed, and you would feel just the same if you had
-been shut up in a horrid Convent ever since you were
-eleven years old!”</p>
-
-<p>At the word “convent”, the national Protestant horror
-immediately spread itself over the faces of the three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
-other ladies; Mrs. Montague gathered her flock about
-her and took them out of the way of possible contamination,
-though she would have much preferred to hear the
-rest of Miss Brandt’s story, and Elinor Leyton moved
-her chair further away. But Margaret Pullen was interested
-and encouraged the girl to proceed.</p>
-
-<p>“In a convent! I suppose then you are a Roman
-Catholic!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt suddenly opened her slumbrous eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so! I’m not quite sure what I am!
-Of course I’ve had any amount of religion crammed
-down my throat in the Convent, and I had to follow
-their prayers, whilst there, but I don’t believe my parents
-were Catholics! But it does not signify, I am my own
-mistress now. I can be what I like!”</p>
-
-<p>“You have been so unfortunate then as to lose your
-parents!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes! years ago, that is why my guardian, Mr.
-Trawler, placed me in the Convent for my education.
-And I’ve been there for ten years! Is it not a shame?
-I’m twenty-one now! That’s why I’m free! You see,”
-the girl went on confidentially, “my parents left me
-everything, and as soon as I came of age I entered into
-possession of it. My guardian, Mr. Trawler, who lives in
-Jamaica,—did I tell you that I’ve come from Jamaica?—thought
-I should live with him and his wife, when I left
-the Convent, and pay them for my keep, but I refused.
-They had kept me too tight! I wanted to see the world
-and life—it was what I had been looking forward to—so
-as soon as my affairs were settled, I left the West
-Indies and came over here!”</p>
-
-<p>“They said you came from England in the Hotel!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span></p>
-
-<p>“So I did! The steamer came to London and I
-stayed there a week before I came on here!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you are too young to travel about by yourself,
-Miss Brandt! English young ladies never do so!” said
-Mrs. Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not by myself, exactly! Olga Brimont, who
-was in the Convent with me, came too. But she is ill,
-so she’s upstairs. She has come to her brother who is
-in Brussels, and we travelled together. We had the
-same cabin on board the steamer, and Olga was very
-ill. One night the doctor thought she was going to die!
-I stayed with her all the time. I used to sit up with
-her at night, but it did her no good. We stopped in
-London because we wanted to buy some dresses and
-things, but she was not able to go out, and I had to go
-alone. Her brother is away from Brussels at present
-so he wrote her to stay in Heyst till he could fetch her,
-and as I had nowhere particular to go, I came with her!
-And she is better already! She has been fast asleep
-all the afternoon!”</p>
-
-<p>“And what will you do when your friend leaves
-you?” asked Mrs. Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“O! I don’t know! Travel about, I suppose! I
-shall go wherever it may please me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you not going to take a walk this evening?”
-demanded Elinor Leyton in a low voice of her friend,
-wishing to put a stop to the conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly! I told nurse I would join her and baby
-by-and-by!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I fetch your hat then?” enquired Miss Leyton,
-as she rose to go up to their apartments.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes! if you will, dear, please, and my velvet cape,
-in case it should turn chilly!”</p>
-
-<p>“I will fetch mine too!” cried Miss Brandt, jumping
-up with alacrity. “I may go with you, mayn’t I? I’ll
-just tell Olga that I’m going out and be down again in
-five minutes!” and without waiting for an answer, she
-was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“See what you have brought upon us!” remarked
-Elinor in a vexed tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! it was not my fault,” replied Margaret, “and
-after all, what does it signify? It is only a little act of
-courtesy to an unprotected girl. I don’t dislike her,
-Elinor! She is very familiar and communicative, but
-fancy what it must be like to find herself her own mistress,
-and with money at her command, after ten years’
-seclusion within the four walls of a convent! It is
-enough to turn the head of any girl. I think it would
-be very churlish to refuse to be friendly with her!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! I hope it may turn out all right! But you
-must remember how Ralph cautioned us against making
-any acquaintances in a foreign hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I am not under Ralph’s orders, though you
-may be, and I should not care to go entirely by the
-advice of so very fastidious and exclusive a gentleman
-as he is! My Arthur would never find fault with me,
-I am sure, for being friendly with a young unmarried
-girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway, Margaret, let me entreat you not to discuss
-my private affairs with this new <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">protégée</i> of yours. I
-don’t want to see her saucer eyes goggling over the news
-of my engagement to your brother-in-law!”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly I will not, since you ask it! But you hardly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
-expect to keep it a secret when Ralph comes down here,
-do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not? Why need anyone know more than
-that he is your husband’s brother?”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect they know a good deal more now,” said
-Margaret, laughing. “The news that you are the Honourable
-Elinor Leyton and that your father is Baron
-Walthamstowe, was known all over Heyst the second
-day we were here. And I have no doubt it has been
-succeeded by the interesting intelligence that you are
-engaged to marry Captain Pullen. You cannot keep
-servants’ tongues from wagging, you know!”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose not!” replied Elinor, with a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">moue</i> of contempt.
-“However, they will learn no more through me
-or Ralph. We are not ‘’Arry and ’Arriet’ to sit on the
-Digue with our arms round each other’s waists.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still—there are signs and symptoms,” said Margaret,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“There will be none with us!” rejoined Miss Leyton,
-indignantly, as Harriet Brandt, with a black lace hat
-on, trimmed with yellow roses, and a little fichu tied
-carelessly across her bosom, ran lightly down the steps
-to join them.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The Digue was crowded by that time. All Heyst
-had turned out to enjoy the evening air and to partake
-in the gaiety of the place. A band was playing on the
-movable orchestra, which was towed by three skinny
-little donkeys, day after day, from one end of the Digue
-to the other. To-night, it was its turn to be in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-middle, where a large company of people was sitting on
-green painted chairs that cost ten centimes for hire each,
-whilst children danced, or ran madly round and round
-its base. Everyone had changed his, or her, seaside
-garb for more fashionable array—even the children were
-robed in white frocks and gala hats—and the whole
-scene was gay and festive. Harriet Brandt ran from one
-side to the other of the Digue, as though she also had
-been a child. Everything she saw seemed to astonish
-and delight her. First, she was gazing out over the
-calm and placid water—and next, she was exclaiming
-at the bits of rubbish in the shape of embroidered
-baskets, or painted shells, exhibited in the shop windows,
-which were side by side with the private houses and
-hotels, forming a long line of buildings fronting the
-water.</p>
-
-<p>She kept on declaring that she wanted to buy that
-or this, and lamenting she had not brought more money
-with her.</p>
-
-<p>“You will have plenty of opportunities to select and
-purchase what you want to-morrow,” said Mrs. Pullen,
-“and you will be better able to judge what they are
-like. They look better under the gas than they do by
-daylight, I can assure you, Miss Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! but they are lovely—delightful!” replied the
-girl, enthusiastically, “I never saw anything so pretty
-before! Do look at that little doll in a bathing costume,
-with her cap in one hand, her sponge in the other! She
-is charming—unique! <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tout ce qu’il y a de plus beau!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>She spoke French perfectly, and when she spoke
-English, it was with a slightly foreign accent, that greatly
-enhanced its charm. It made Mrs. Pullen observe:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You are more used to speaking French than English,
-Miss Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! We always spoke French in the Convent, and
-it is in general use in the Island. But I thought—I
-hoped—that I spoke English like an Englishwoman! I
-<em>am</em> an Englishwoman, you know!”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you? I was not quite sure! Brandt sounds
-rather German!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! my father was English, his name was Henry
-Brandt, and my mother was a Miss Carey—daughter of
-one of the Justices of Barbadoes!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! indeed!” replied Mrs. Pullen. She did not know
-what else to say. The subject was of no interest to
-her! At that moment they encountered the nurse and
-perambulator, and she naturally stopped to speak to her
-baby.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of the infant seemed to drive Miss Brandt
-wild.</p>
-
-<p>“O! is that your baby, Mrs. Pullen, is that really
-your baby?” she exclaimed excitedly, “you never told
-me you had one. O! the darling! the sweet dear little
-angel! I love little white babies! I adore them. They
-are so sweet and fresh and clean—so different from the
-little niggers who smell so nasty, you can’t touch them!
-We never saw a baby in the Convent, and so few English
-children live to grow up in Jamaica! O! let me
-hold her! let me carry her! I <em>must</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>She was about to seize the infant in her arms, when
-the mother interposed.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Miss Brandt, please, not this evening! She is
-but half awake, and has arrived at that age when she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
-is frightened of strangers. Another time perhaps, when
-she has become used to you, but not now!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I will be so careful of her, pretty dear!” persisted
-the girl, “I will nurse her so gently, that she will
-fall to sleep again in my arms. Come! my little love,
-come!” she continued to the baby, who pouted her lips
-and looked as if she were going to cry.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave her alone!” exclaimed Elinor Leyton in a
-sharp voice. “Do you not hear what Mrs. Pullen says—that
-you are not to touch her!”</p>
-
-<p>She spoke so acridly, that gentle Margaret Pullen
-felt grieved for the look of dismay that darted into Harriet
-Brandt’s face on hearing it.</p>
-
-<p>“O! I am sorry—I didn’t mean—” she stammered,
-with a side glance at Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you did not mean anything but what was
-kind,” said Mrs. Pullen, “Miss Leyton perfectly understands
-that, and when baby is used to you, I daresay
-she will be very grateful for your attentions. But to-night
-she is sleepy and tired, and, perhaps, a little cross.
-Take her home, Nurse,” she went on, “and put her to
-bed! Good-night, my sweet!” and the perambulator
-passed them and was gone.</p>
-
-<p>An awkward silence ensued between the three women
-after this little incident. Elinor Leyton walked somewhat
-apart from her companions, as if she wished to
-avoid all further controversy, whilst Margaret Pullen
-sought some way by which to atone for her friend’s
-rudeness to the young stranger. Presently they came
-across one of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cafés chantants</i> which are attached to
-the seaside hotels, and which was brilliantly lighted up.
-A large awning was spread outside, to shelter some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
-dozens of chairs and tables, most of which were already
-occupied. The windows of the hotel salon had been
-thrown wide open, to accommodate some singers and
-musicians, who advanced in turn and stood on the threshold
-to amuse the audience. As they approached the
-scene, a tenor in evening dress was singing a love song,
-whilst the musicians accompanied his voice from the
-salon, and the occupants of the chairs were listening
-with rapt attention.</p>
-
-<p>“How charming! how delightful!” cried Harriet
-Brandt, as they reached the spot, “I never saw anything
-like this in the Island!”</p>
-
-<p>“You appear never to have seen anything!” remarked
-Miss Leyton, with a sneer. Miss Brandt glanced apologetically
-at Mrs. Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“How could I see anything, when I was in the Convent?”
-she said, “I know there are places of entertainment
-in the Island, but I was never allowed to go to
-any. And in London, there was no one for me to go
-with! I should so much like to go in there,” indicating
-the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">café</i>. “Will you come with me, both of you I mean,
-and I will pay for everything! I have plenty of money,
-you know!”</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing to pay, my dear, unless you call
-for refreshment,” was Margaret’s reply. “Yes, I will go
-with you certainly, if you so much wish it! Elinor, you
-won’t mind, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Leyton was engaged talking to a Monsieur
-and Mademoiselle Vieuxtemps—an old brother and
-sister, resident in the Lion d’Or—who had stopped to
-wish her Good-evening! They were dear, good old
-people, but rather monotonous and dull, and Elinor had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
-more than once ridiculed their manner of talking and
-voted them the most terrible bores. Mrs. Pullen concluded
-therefore, that she would get rid of them as
-soon as courtesy permitted her to do so, and follow her.
-With a smile and a bow therefore, to the Vieuxtemps,
-she pushed her way through the crowd with Harriet
-Brandt, to where she perceived that three seats were
-vacant, and took possession of them. They were not
-good seats for hearing or seeing, being to one side of
-the salon, and quite in the shadow, but the place was
-so full that she saw no chance of getting any others.
-As soon as they were seated, the waiter came round for
-orders, and it was with difficulty that Mrs. Pullen prevented
-her companion purchasing sufficient liqueurs and
-cakes to serve double the number of their company.</p>
-
-<p>“You must allow me to pay for myself, Miss Brandt,”
-she said gravely, “or I will never accompany you anywhere
-again!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I have lots of money,” pleaded the girl, “much
-more than I know what to do with—it would be a
-pleasure to me, it would indeed!”</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Pullen was resolute, and three <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">limonades</i>
-only were placed upon their table. Elinor Leyton had
-not yet made her appearance, and Mrs. Pullen kept
-craning her neck over the other seats to see where she
-might be, without success.</p>
-
-<p>“She cannot have missed us!” she observed, “I
-wonder if she can have continued her walk with the
-Vieuxtemps!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! what does it signify?” said Harriet, drawing
-her chair closer to that of Mrs. Pullen, “we can do very
-well without her. I don’t think she’s very nice, do you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You must not speak of Miss Leyton like that to
-me, Miss Brandt,” remonstrated Margaret, gently, “because—she
-is a great friend of our family.”</p>
-
-<p>She had been going to say, “Because she will be
-my sister-in-law before long,” but remembered Elinor’s
-request in time, and substituted the other sentence.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think she’s very kind, though,” persisted the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>“It is only her manner, Miss Brandt! She does not
-mean anything by it!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you are so different,” said the girl as she crept
-still closer, “I could see it when you smiled at me at
-dinner. I knew I should like you at once. And I want
-you to like me too—so much! It has been the dream
-of my life to have some friends. That is why I would
-not stay in Jamaica. I don’t like the people there! I
-want friends—real friends!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must have had plenty of friends of your
-own age in the Convent.”</p>
-
-<p>“That shows you don’t know anything about a convent!
-It’s the very last place where they will let you
-make a friend—they’re afraid lest you should tell each
-other too much! The convent I was in was an Ursuline
-order, and even the nuns were obliged to walk three
-and three, never two, together, lest they should have
-secrets between them. As for us girls, we were never
-left alone for a single minute! There was always a sister
-with us, even at night, walking up and down between
-the rows of beds, pretending to read her prayers, but
-with her eyes on us the whole time and her ears open
-to catch what we said. I suppose they were afraid we
-should talk about lovers. I think girls do talk about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
-them when they can, more in convents than in other
-places, though they have never had any. It would be
-so dreadful to be like the poor nuns, and never have a
-lover to the end of one’s days, wouldn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You would not fancy being a nun then, Miss Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I</em>—Oh! dear no! I would rather be dead, twenty
-times over! But they didn’t like my coming out at all.
-They did try so hard to persuade me to remain with
-them for ever! One of them, Sister Féodore, told me I
-must never talk even with gentlemen, if I could avoid it—that
-they were all wicked and nothing they said was
-true, and if I trusted them, they would only laugh at me
-afterwards for my pains. But I don’t believe that,
-do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not!” replied Margaret warmly. “The
-sister who told you so knew nothing about men. My
-dear husband is more like an angel than a man, and
-there are many like him. You mustn’t believe such
-nonsense, Miss Brandt! I am sure you never heard your
-parents say such a silly thing!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! my father and mother! I never remember hearing
-them say anything!” replied Miss Brandt. She had
-crept closer and closer to Mrs. Pullen as she spoke, and
-now encircled her waist with her arm, and leaned her
-head upon her shoulder. It was not a position that
-Margaret liked, nor one she would have expected from
-a woman on so short an acquaintance, but she did not
-wish to appear unkind by telling Miss Brandt to move
-further away. The poor girl was evidently quite unused
-to the ways and customs of Society, she seemed moreover
-very friendless and dependent—so Margaret laid
-her solecism down to ignorance and let her head rest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-where she had placed it, resolving inwardly meanwhile
-that she would not subject herself to be treated in so
-familiar a manner again.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you remember your parents then?” she asked
-her presently.</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly! I saw so little of them,” said Miss Brandt,
-“my father was a great doctor and scientist, I believe,
-and I am not quite sure if he knew that he had a
-daughter!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! my dear, what nonsense!”</p>
-
-<p>“But it is true, Mrs. Pullen! He was always shut
-up in his laboratory, and I was not allowed to go near
-that part of the house. I suppose he was very clever
-and all that—but he was too much engaged in making
-experiments to take any notice of me, and I am sure I
-never wanted to see him!”</p>
-
-<p>“How very sad! But you had your mother to turn
-to for consolation and company, whilst she lived,
-surely?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! my mother!” echoed Harriet, carelessly. “Yes!
-my mother! Well! I don’t think I knew much more of
-her either. The ladies in Jamaica get very lazy, you
-know, and keep a good deal to their own rooms. The
-person there I loved best of all, was old Pete, the
-overseer!”</p>
-
-<p>“The overseer!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of the estate and niggers, you know! We had
-plenty of niggers on the coffee plantation, regular African
-fellows, with woolly heads and blubber lips, and yellow
-whites to their eyes. When I was a little thing of four
-years old, Pete used to let me whip the little niggers for
-a treat, when they had done anything wrong. It used<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
-to make me laugh to see them wriggle their legs under
-the whip and cry!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! don’t, Miss Brandt!” exclaimed Margaret Pullen,
-in a voice of pain.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s true, but they deserved it, you know, the little
-wretches, always thieving or lying or something! I’ve
-seen a woman whipped to death, because she wouldn’t
-work. We think nothing of that sort of thing, over there.
-Still—you can’t wonder that I was glad to get out of the
-Island. But I loved old Pete, and if he had been alive
-when I left, I would have brought him to England with
-me. He used to carry me for miles through the jungle
-on his back,—out in the fresh mornings and the cool,
-dewy eves. I had a pony to ride, but I never went
-anywhere, without his hand upon my bridle rein. He
-was always so afraid lest I should come to any harm.
-I don’t think anybody else cared. Pete was the only
-creature who ever loved me, and when I think of Jamaica,
-I remember my old nigger servant as the one friend I
-had there!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is very, very sad!” was all that Mrs. Pullen
-could say.</p>
-
-<p>She had become fainter and fainter, as the girl
-leaned against her with her head upon her breast. Some
-sensation which she could not define, nor account for—some
-feeling which she had never experienced before—had
-come over her and made her head reel. She felt as if
-something or someone, were drawing all her life away.
-She tried to disengage herself from the girl’s clasp, but
-Harriet Brandt seemed to come after her, like a coiling
-snake, till she could stand it no longer, and faintly exclaiming:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Miss Brandt! let go of me, please! I feel ill!” she
-rose and tried to make her way between the crowded
-tables, towards the open air. As she stumbled along,
-she came against (to her great relief) her friend, Elinor
-Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Elinor!” she gasped, “I don’t know what is
-the matter with me! I feel so strange, so light-headed!
-Do take me home!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Leyton dragged her through the audience, and
-made her sit down on a bench, facing the sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Why! what’s the matter?” demanded Harriet
-Brandt, who had made her way after them, “is Mrs.
-Pullen ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“So it appears,” replied Miss Leyton, coldly, “but
-how it happened, you should know better than myself!
-I suppose it is very warm in there!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! I do not think so,” said Margaret, with a
-bewildered air, “we had chairs close to the side. And
-Miss Brandt was telling me of her life in Jamaica, when
-such an extraordinary sensation came over me! I can’t
-describe it! it was just as if I had been scooped hollow!”</p>
-
-<p>At this description, Harriet Brandt burst into a loud
-laugh, but Elinor frowned her down.</p>
-
-<p>“It may seem a laughing matter to you, Miss Brandt,”
-she said, in the same cold tone, “but it is none to me.
-Mrs. Pullen is far from strong, and her health is not to
-be trifled with. However, I shall not let her out of my
-sight again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t make a fuss about it, Elinor,” pleaded her
-friend, “it was my own fault, if anyone’s. I think there
-must be a thunderstorm in the air, I have felt so oppressed
-all the evening. Or is the smell from the dunes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
-worse than usual? Perhaps I ate something at dinner
-that disagreed with me!”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot understand it at all,” replied Miss Leyton,
-“you are not used to fainting, or being suddenly attacked
-in any way. However, if you feel able to walk, let us
-go back to the Hotel. Miss Brandt will doubtless find
-someone to finish the evening with!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet was just about to reply that she knew no one
-but themselves, and to offer to take Mrs. Pullen’s arm
-on the other side, when Elinor Leyton cut her short.</p>
-
-<p>“No! thank you, Miss Brandt! Mrs. Pullen would,
-I am sure, prefer to return to the Hotel alone with me!
-You can easily join the Vieuxtemps or any other of the
-visitors to the Lion d’Or. There is not much ceremony
-observed amongst the English at these foreign places.
-It would be better perhaps if there were a little more!
-Come, Margaret, take my arm, and we will walk as
-slowly as you like! But I shall not be comfortable until
-I see you safe in your own room!”</p>
-
-<p>So the two ladies moved off together, leaving Harriet
-Brandt standing disconsolately on the Digue, watching
-their departure. Mrs. Pullen had uttered a faint Good-night
-to her, but had made no suggestion that she
-should walk back with them, and it seemed to the girl
-as if they both, in some measure, blamed her for the
-illness of her companion. What had she done, she
-asked herself, as she reviewed what had passed between
-them, that could in any way account for Mrs. Pullen’s
-illness? She liked her so much—so very much—she
-had so hoped she was going to be her friend—she would
-have done anything and given anything sooner than put
-her to inconvenience in any way. As the two ladies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-moved slowly out of sight, Harriet turned sadly and
-walked the other way. She felt lonely and disappointed.
-She knew no one to speak to, and there was a cold
-empty feeling in her breast, as though, in losing her hold
-on Margaret Pullen, she had lost something on which
-she had depended. Something of her feeling must have
-communicated itself to Margaret Pullen, for after a minute
-or two she stopped and said,</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t half like leaving Miss Brandt by herself,
-Elinor! She is very young to be wandering about a
-town by night and alone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!” returned Miss Leyton, shortly, “a young
-lady who can make the voyage from Jamaica to Heyst
-on her own account, knocking about in London for a
-week on the way, is surely competent to walk back to
-the Hotel without your assistance. I should say that
-Miss Brandt was a very independent young woman!”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps, by nature, but she has been shut up in a
-convent for the best part of her life, and that is not
-considered to be a good preparation for fighting one’s
-way through the world!”</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll be able to fight her own battles, never fear!”
-was Elinor’s reply.</p>
-
-<p>Just then they encountered Bobby Bates, who lifted
-his cap as he hurried past them.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going so fast, Mr. Bates?” said
-Elinor Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>“I am going back to the Hotel to fetch Mamma’s fur
-boa!” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>They were passing a lighted lamp at the time, and
-she noticed that the lad’s eyes were red, and his features
-bore traces of distress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Are you ill?” she enquired quickly, “or in any
-trouble?”</p>
-
-<p>He halted for a minute in his stride.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! not exactly,” he said in a low voice, and
-then, as if the words came from him against his will, he
-went on, “But O! I do wish someone would speak to
-Mamma about the way she treats me. It’s cruel—to
-strike me with her stick before all those people, as if I
-were a baby, and to call me such names! Even the
-servant William laughs at me! Do all mothers do the
-same, Miss Leyton? Ought a man to stand it quietly?”</p>
-
-<p>“Decidedly not!” cried Elinor, without hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Elinor! remember, she is his mother,” remonstrated
-Margaret, “don’t say anything to set him against
-her!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I was nineteen last birthday,” continued the
-lad, “and sometimes she treats me in such a manner,
-that I can’t bear it! The Baron dare not say a word to
-her! She swears at him so. Sometimes, I think I will
-run away and go to sea!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! you mustn’t do that!” called Miss Leyton
-after him, as he quickened his footsteps in the direction
-of the Lion d’Or.</p>
-
-<p>“What an awful woman!” sighed Mrs. Pullen.
-“Fancy! striking her own son in public, and with that
-thick stick too. I believe he had been crying!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am <em>sure</em> he had,” replied her friend, “you can
-see the poor fellow is half-witted, and very weakly into
-the bargain. I suppose she has beaten his brains to a
-pap. What a terrible misfortune to have such a mother!
-You should hear some of the stories Madame Lamont
-has to tell of her!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But how does she hear them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Through the Baron’s servant William, I suppose.
-He says the Baroness has often taken her stick to him
-and the other servants, and thinks no more of swearing
-at them than a trooper! They all hate her. One day,
-she took up a kitchen cleaver and advanced upon her
-coachman with it, but he seized her by both arms and
-sat her down upon the fire, whence she was only rescued
-after being somewhat severely burned!”</p>
-
-<p>“It served her right!” exclaimed Margaret, laughing
-at the ludicrous idea, “but what a picture she must have
-presented, seated on the kitchen range! Where can the
-woman have been raised? What sort of a person can
-she be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not what she pretends, Margaret, you may be sure
-of that! All her fine talk of lords and ladies is so much
-bunkum. But I pity the poor little Baron, who is, at all
-events, inoffensive. How can he put up with such a wife!
-He must feel very much ashamed of her sometimes!”</p>
-
-<p>“And yet he seems devoted to her! He never leaves
-her side for a moment. He is her walking stick, her
-fetcher and carrier, and her scribe. I don’t believe she
-can write a letter!”</p>
-
-<p>“And yet she was talking at the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table d’hôte</i> yesterday
-of the Duke of This and the Earl of That, and hinting
-at her having stayed at Osborne and Windsor. Of
-course they are falsehoods! She has never seen the inside
-of a palace unless it was in the capacity of a char-woman!
-Have you observed her hair? It is as coarse
-as a horse-tail! And her hands! Bobby informed me
-the other day that his Mamma took nines in gloves!
-She’s not a woman, my dear! She’s a female elephant!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span></p>
-
-<p>Margaret was laughing still, when they reached the
-steps of the Lion d’Or.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very naughty and very scandalous, Elinor,”
-she said, “but you have done me a world of good. My
-unpleasant feelings have quite gone. I am quite capable
-of continuing our walk if you would like to do so.”</p>
-
-<p>“No such thing, Madam,” replied Miss Leyton. “I
-am responsible for your well-doing in Arthur’s absence.
-Upstairs and into bed you go, unless you would like a
-cup of coffee and a chasse first. That is the only indulgence
-I can grant you.”</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Pullen declined the proffered refreshment,
-and the two ladies sought their rooms in company.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The next morning dawned upon a perfect August
-day. The sun streamed brightly over every part of
-Heyst, turning the loose dry yellow sand (from end to
-end of which not a stone or boulder was to be seen),
-into a veritable cloth of gold. The patient asses, carrying
-their white-covered saddles, and tied to stakes, were
-waiting in a row for hire, whilst some dozen Rosinantes,
-called by courtesy, horses, were also of the company.
-The sands were already strewn with children, their short
-petticoats crammed into a pair of bathing-drawers, and
-their heads protected by linen hats or bonnets, digging
-away at the dry sand as if their lives depended on their
-efforts. The bathing-machines, painted in gay stripes of
-green, red, blue, or orange, were hauled down, ready for
-action, and the wooden tents, which can be hired for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
-season at any foreign watering place, were being swept
-out and arranged for the day’s use.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the more pretentious ones, belonging to
-private families, were surmounted by a gilt coronet, the
-proud possession of the Comte Darblaye, or the Herr
-Baron Grumplestein—sported flags moreover of France
-or Germany, and were screened from the eyes of the
-vulgar, by lace or muslin curtains, tied up with blue
-ribbons. On the balcony of the Lion d’Or, where the
-visitors always took their breakfast, were arranged tables,
-piled with dishes of crevettes, fresh from the sea, pistolets,
-and beautiful butter as white and tasteless as cream.
-It was a delight to breakfast on the open balcony, with
-the sea breeze blowing in one’s face, and in the intervals
-of eating prawns and bread and butter, or perusing the
-morning papers, to watch the cheerful scene below.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness was there, early of course. She, and
-her husband, and the ill-used Bobby, occupied a table
-to themselves, whence she addressed her remarks to
-whomever she chose, whether they wished to listen, or
-not, and the Baron shelled her crevettes and buttered
-her pistolets for her. Margaret and Elinor were rather
-later than usual, for Mrs. Pullen had not passed a good
-night, and Miss Leyton would not have her disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt was there as they appeared, and beside
-her, a pale, unhealthy-looking young woman, whom
-she introduced as her friend, and travelling companion,
-Olga Brimont.</p>
-
-<p>“Olga did not wish to come down. She thought
-she would lie another day in bed, but I made her get
-up and dress, and I was right, wasn’t I, Mrs. Pullen?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think the fresh air will do Mademoiselle Brimont<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
-more good than the close bedroom, if she is strong
-enough to stand it!” replied Margaret, with a smile. “I
-am afraid you are still feeling weak,” she continued, to
-the new-comer.</p>
-
-<p>“I feel better than I did on board the steamer, or
-in London,” said Mademoiselle Brimont. She was an
-under-sized girl with plain features, and did not shew off
-to advantage beside her travelling companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you suffer so much from sea-sickness? I can
-sympathise with you, as I am a very bad sailor myself!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no! Madame, it was not the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mal de mer</i>. I
-can hardly tell you what it was. Miss Brandt and I
-occupied a small cabin together, and perhaps, it was
-because it was so small, but I did not feel as if I could
-breathe there—such a terrible oppression as though some
-one were sitting on my chest—and such a general feeling
-of emptiness. It was the same in London, though
-Miss Brandt did all she could for me, indeed she sat up
-with me all night, till I feared she would be ill herself—but
-I feel better now! Last night I slept for the first
-time since leaving Jamaica!”</p>
-
-<p>“That is right! You will soon get well in this lovely
-air!”</p>
-
-<p>They all sat down at the same table, and commenced
-to discuss their rolls and coffee. Margaret Pullen, glancing
-up once, was struck by the look with which Harriet
-Brandt was regarding her—it was so full of yearning
-affection—almost of longing to approach her nearer, to
-hear her speak, to touch her hand! It amused her to
-observe it! She had heard of cases, in which young unsophisticated
-girls had taken unaccountable affections for
-members of their own sex, and trusted she was not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-going to form the subject for some such experience on
-Miss Brandt’s part. The idea made her address her
-conversation more to Mademoiselle Brimont, than to her
-companion of the evening before.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you and Miss Brandt were great friends
-in the Convent,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“O! no, Madame, we hardly ever saw each other
-whilst there, except in chapel. There is so much difference
-in our ages, I am only seventeen, and was in the
-lower school, whilst Miss Brandt did hardly any lessons
-during the two last years she spent there. But I was
-very glad to have her company across to England. My
-brother would have sent for me last year, if he could
-have heard of a lady to travel with me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going on to join your brother soon?”</p>
-
-<p>“He says he will fetch me, Madame, as soon as he
-can be spared from his business. He is my only relation.
-My parents died, like Miss Brandt’s, in the West
-Indies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! you must be sure and get your looks back
-before he arrives!” said Margaret, kindly.</p>
-
-<p>The head waiter now appeared with the letters from
-England, amongst which was one for Miss Leyton in a
-firm, manly handwriting, with a regimental crest in blue
-and gold upon the envelope. Her face did not change
-in the least as she broke the seal, although it came from
-her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancé</i>, Captain Ralph Pullen. Elinor Leyton’s was
-an exceptionally cold face, and it matched her disposition.
-She had attractive features;—a delicate nose,
-carved as if in ivory—brown eyes, a fair rose-tinted
-complexion, and a small mouth with thin, firmly closed
-lips. Her hair was bronze-coloured, and it was always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
-dressed to perfection. She had a good figure too, with
-small hands and feet—and she was robed in excellent
-taste. She was pre-eminently a woman for a man to be
-proud of as the mistress of his house, and the head of
-his table. She might be trusted never to say or do an
-unladylike thing—before all, she was cognisant of the
-obligations which devolved upon her as the daughter of
-Lord Walthamstowe and a member of the British aristocracy.
-But in disposition she was undoubtedly cold,
-and her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancé</i> had already begun to find it out. Their
-engagement had come about neither of them quite knew
-how, but he liked the idea of being connected with an
-aristocratic family, and she was proud of having won a
-man, for whom many caps had been pulled in vain. He
-was considered to be one of the handsomest men of his
-generation, and she was what people called an unexceptional
-match for him. She was fond of him in her
-way, but her way was a strange one. She called the
-attitude she assumed towards him, a proper and ladylike
-reserve, but impartial spectators, with stronger feelings,
-would have deemed it indifference.</p>
-
-<p>However, like the proverbial dog in the manger,
-whether she valued her rights in Captain Pullen or not,
-Miss Leyton had no intention of permitting them to be
-interfered with. She would have died sooner than admit
-that he was necessary to her happiness,—at the same time
-she considered it due to her dignity as a woman, never
-to give in to his wishes, when they opposed her own,
-and often when they did not.</p>
-
-<p>She displayed no particular enthusiasm when they
-met, nor distress when they parted—neither was she
-ever troubled by any qualms lest during their frequent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
-separations, he should meet some woman whom he might
-perchance prefer to herself. They were engaged, and
-when the proper time came they would marry—meanwhile
-their private affairs concerned no one but themselves.
-In short, Elinor Leyton was not what is termed
-“a man’s woman”—all her friends (if she had any) were
-of her own sex.</p>
-
-<p>Having perused her letter, she refolded and replaced
-it in its envelope without a glance in the direction of
-Mrs. Pullen. Margaret thought she had a right to be
-informed of her brother-in-law’s movements. She had
-invited Miss Leyton to accompany her to Heyst at his
-request, and any preparations which might be requisite
-before he joined them, would have to be made by herself.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that from Ralph? What does he say?” she
-enquired in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing in particular!”</p>
-
-<p>“But when may we expect him at Heyst?”</p>
-
-<p>“Next week, he says, in time for the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bataille des
-Fleurs</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you not pleased?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I am!” replied Elinor, but without a
-sparkle or blush.</p>
-
-<p>“O! if it were only my Arthur that were coming!”
-exclaimed Margaret, fervently, “I should go mad with joy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it is just as well perhaps that it is <em>not</em> your
-Arthur!” rejoined her companion, as she put the letter
-into her pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Bobby,” announced the strident tones of the
-Baroness Gobelli from the other side of the balcony,
-“leave off picking the shrimps! You’ve ’ad more than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
-enough! Ain’t bread and butter good enough for you?
-What’ll you want next?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Mamma,” pleaded the youth, “I’ve only had a
-few! I’ve been shelling Papa’s all this time!”</p>
-
-<p>“Put ’em down at once, I say!” reiterated the
-Baroness, “’ere William, take Bobby’s plate away! He’s
-’ad plenty for this morning!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I haven’t begun yet. I’m hungry!” remonstrated
-Bobby.</p>
-
-<p>“Take ’is plate away!” roared the Baroness. “’Ang
-it all! Can’t you ’ear what I say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mein tear! mein tear!” ejaculated the Herr Baron
-in a subdued voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave me alone, Gustave! Do you suppose I can’t
-manage my own son? He ain’t yours! ’E’d make ’imself
-ill if I didn’t look after him. Take ’is plate away, at
-once!”</p>
-
-<p>The man-servant William lifted the plate of peeled
-shrimps and bread and butter from the table, whilst
-Bobby with a very red face rose from his seat and rushed
-down the steps to the beach.</p>
-
-<p>“He! he! he!” cackled the Baroness, “that’ll teach
-’im not to fiddle with ’is food another time! Bobby don’t
-care for an empty belly!”</p>
-
-<p>“What a shame!” murmured Margaret, who was
-nothing if she was not a mother, “now the poor boy will
-go without his breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p>Presently, William was to be seen sneaking past the
-Hotel with a parcel in his hands. The Baroness pounced
-upon him like a cat upon a mouse.</p>
-
-<p>“William!” she cried from the balcony, “what ’ave
-you got in your ’and?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Summat of my own, my lady!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring it ’ere!”</p>
-
-<p>The man mounted the steps and stood before his
-mistress. He held a parcel in his hands, wrapped up
-in a table napkin.</p>
-
-<p>“Open that parcel!” said the Baroness.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, my lady, it’s only the shrimps as Master
-Robert left behind him and I thought they would make
-me a little relish on the sands, my lady!”</p>
-
-<p>“Open that parcel!”</p>
-
-<p>William obeyed, and disclosed the rolls and butter
-and peeled shrimps just as Bobby had left them.</p>
-
-<p>“You were going to take ’em down to Bobby on the
-beach!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, indeed, my lady!”</p>
-
-<p>“Confound you, Sir, don’t you lie to me!” exclaimed
-the Baroness, shaking her stick in his face, “I’ve ways
-and means of finding out things that you know nothing
-of! Throw that stuff into the road!”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my lady——”</p>
-
-<p>“Throw it into the road at once, or you may take
-your month’s warning! ’Ang it all! are you the mistress,
-or am I?”</p>
-
-<p>The servant threw a glance of enquiry in the direction
-of the Herr Baron but the Herr Baron kept his face
-well down in his plate, so after a pause, he walked to
-the side, and shook the contents of the napkin upon the
-Digue.</p>
-
-<p>“And now don’t you try any more of your tricks
-upon me or I’ll thrash you till your own mother won’t
-know you! You leave Bobby alone for the future, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
-it’ll be the worst day’s work you ever did! Remember
-that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, my lady!” replied William, but as he
-left the balcony he gave a look at the other occupants,
-which well conveyed his feelings on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“I should not be surprised to hear that that woman
-had been murdered by her servants some day!” said
-Margaret to Elinor Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>“No! and I should not be sorry! I feel rather like
-murdering her myself. But let us go down to the sands,
-Margaret, and try to find the disconsolate Bobby! I’m
-not afraid of his mother if William is, and if he wants
-something to eat, I shall give it him!”</p>
-
-<p>They fetched their hats and parasols, and having
-left the Hotel by a side entrance, found their way down
-to the sands. It was a pretty sight there, and in some
-cases, a comical one. The bathing-machines were placed
-some sixty or more feet from the water, according to the
-tide, and their occupants, clad in bathing-costumes, had
-to run the gauntlet of all the eyes upon the beach, as
-they traversed that distance in order to reach the sea.
-To some visitors, especially the English ones, this ordeal
-was rather trying. To watch them open a crevice of
-the machine door, and regard the expectant crowd with
-horror;—then after some hesitation, goaded on by the
-cries of the bathing women that the time was passing,
-to see them emerge with reluctant feet, sadly conscious
-of their unclothed condition, and of the unsightly corns
-and bunions which disfigured their feet—to say nothing
-of the red and blue tint which their skin had suddenly
-assumed—was to find it almost impossible to refrain
-from laughter. The very skinny and knuckle-kneed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
-ones; the very fat and bulging ones; the little fair men
-who looked like Bobby’s peeled shrimps, and the muscular
-black and hairy ones who looked like bears escaped
-from a menagerie,—these types and many others, our
-ladies could not help being amused at, though they told
-each other it was very improper all the time. But
-everybody had to pass through the same ordeal and
-everybody submitted to it, and tried to laugh off their
-own humiliation by ridiculing the appearance of their
-neighbours. Margaret and Elinor were never tired of
-watching the antics of the Belgians and Germans whilst
-they were (what they called) bathing. The fuss they
-made over entering two feet of water—the way in which
-they gasped and puffed as they caught it up in their
-hands and rubbed their backs and chests with it—the
-reluctance with which the ladies were dragged by their
-masculine partners into the briny, as if they expected
-to be overwhelmed and drowned by the tiny waves
-which rippled over their toes, and made them catch
-their breath. And lastly, when they were convinced
-there was no danger, to see them, men and women, fat
-and thin, take hands and dance round in a ring as if
-they were playing at “Mulberry Bush” was too delightful.
-But if one bather, generally an Englishman, more
-daring than his fellows, went in for a good swim, the
-coast-guardsmen ran along the breakwater, shouting
-“Gare, gare!” until he came out again.</p>
-
-<p>“They are funnier than ever to-day,” remarked Margaret,
-after a while, “I wonder what they will say when
-they see Ralph swimming out next week. They will be
-frightened to death. All the Pullens are wonderful
-swimmers. I have seen Anthony Pennell perform feats<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
-in the water that made my blood run cold! And Ralph
-is famous for his diving!”</p>
-
-<p>The topic did not appear to interest Elinor. She
-reverted to the subject of Anthony.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that the literary man—the cousin?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Have you not met him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure you would like him! He is such a fine
-fellow! Not such a ‘beauty man’ as Ralph, perhaps,
-but quite as tall and stalwart! His last book was a
-tremendous success!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ralph has never mentioned him to me, though I
-knew he had a cousin of that name!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well!—if you won’t be offended at my saying so—Ralph
-has always been a little jealous of Anthony, at
-least so Arthur says. He outstripped him at school and
-college, and the feeling had its foundation there. And
-anyone might be jealous of him now! He has shewn
-himself to be a genius!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like geniuses as a rule,” replied Elinor,
-“they are so conceited. I believe that is Bobby Bates
-sitting out there on the breakwater! I will go and see
-if he is still hungry!”</p>
-
-<p>“Give the poor boy a couple of francs to get himself
-a breakfast in one of the restaurants,” said Margaret,
-“he will enjoy having a little secret from his terrible
-Mamma!”</p>
-
-<p>She had not been alone long before the nurse came
-up to her, with the perambulator, piled up with toys,
-but no baby. Margaret’s fears were excited at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Nurse! nurse, what is the matter? Where is the
-baby?” she exclaimed in tones of alarm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Nothing’s the matter, Ma’am! pray don’t frighten
-yourself!” replied the servant, “it’s only that the young
-ladies have got baby, and they’ve bought her all these
-toys, and sent me on to tell you that they would be
-here directly!”</p>
-
-<p>The perambulator was filled with expensive playthings
-useless for an infant of six months’ old. Dolls,
-woolly sheep, fur cats, and gaily coloured balls with a
-huge box of chocolates and caramels, were piled one on
-the top of the other. But Mrs. Pullen’s face expressed
-nothing but annoyance.</p>
-
-<p>“You had no right to let them take her, Nurse—you
-had no right to let the child out of your sight! Go
-back at once and bring her here to me! I am exceedingly
-annoyed about it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Here are the young ladies, Ma’am, and you had
-better lay your orders on them, yourself, for they wouldn’t
-mind me,” said the nurse, somewhat sullenly.</p>
-
-<p>In another minute Harriet Brandt, and Olga Brimont
-had reached her side, the former panting under the
-weight of the heavy infant, but with her face scarlet
-with the excitement of having captured her.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Miss Brandt!” cried Margaret, “you have given
-me such a fright! You must never take baby away from
-her nurse again, please! As I told you last night, she
-is afraid of strangers, and generally cries when they try
-to take her! Come to me, my little one!” she continued,
-holding out her arms to the child, “come to mother and
-tell her all about it!”</p>
-
-<p>But the baby seemed to take no notice of the fond
-appeal. It had its big eyes fixed upon Miss Brandt’s
-face with a half-awed, half-interested expression.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span></p>
-
-<p>“O! no! don’t take her away!” said Harriet, eagerly,
-“she is so good with me! I assure you she is not
-frightened in the least bit, are you, my little love?” she
-added, addressing the infant. “And nurse tells me her
-name is Ethel, so I have ordered them to make her a
-little gold bangle with ‘Ethel’ on it, and she must wear
-it for my sake, darling little creature!”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Miss Brandt, you must not buy such expensive
-things for her, indeed. She is too young to appreciate
-them, besides I do not like you to spend so much money
-on her!”</p>
-
-<p>“But why shouldn’t I? What am I to do with my
-money, if I may not spend it on others?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, such a quantity of toys! Surely, you have not
-bought all these for my baby!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I have! I would have bought the whole
-shop if it would have pleased her! She likes the colours!
-Little darling! look how earnestly she gazes at me with
-her lovely grey eyes, as if she knew what a little beauty
-I think her! O! you pretty dear! you sweet pink and
-white baby!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Pullen felt somewhat annoyed as she saw the
-dolls and furry animals which were strewn upon the
-sands, at the same time she was flattered by the admiration
-exhibited of her little daughter, and the endearments
-lavished upon her. She considered them all
-well deserved (as what mother would not?)—and it
-struck her that Harriet Brandt must be a kindhearted,
-as well as a generous girl to spend so much money on
-a stranger’s child.</p>
-
-<p>“She certainly does seem wonderfully good with
-you,” she observed presently, “I never knew her so quiet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
-with anybody but her nurse or me, before. Isn’t it
-marvellous, Nurse?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is, Ma’am! Baby do seem to take surprisingly
-to the young lady! And perhaps I might go into the
-town, as she is so quiet, and get the darning-wool for
-your stockings!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no! no! We must not let Miss Brandt get tired
-of holding her. She is too heavy to be nursed for long!”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, indeed she is not!” cried Harriet, “do let
-me keep her, Mrs. Pullen, whilst nurse goes on her
-errand. It is the greatest pleasure to me to hold her.
-I should like never to give her up again!”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, Nurse, since Miss Brandt is so kind,
-you can go!”</p>
-
-<p>As the servant disappeared, she said to Harriet,</p>
-
-<p>“Mind! you give her to me directly she makes your
-arm ache! I am more used to the little torment than
-you are.”</p>
-
-<p>“How can you call her by such a name, even in
-fun? What would I not give to have a baby of my
-very own to do what I liked with? I would never part
-with it, night nor day, I would teach it to love me so
-much, that it should never be happy out of my sight!”</p>
-
-<p>“But that would be cruel, my dear! Your baby
-might have to part with you, as you have had to part
-with your mother!”</p>
-
-<p>At the mention of her mother, something came into
-Miss Brandt’s eyes, which Margaret could not define.
-It was not anger, nor sorrow, nor remorse. It was a
-kind of sullen contempt. It was something that made
-Mrs. Pullen resolve not to allude to the subject again.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-The incident made her examine Harriet’s eyes more
-closely than she had done before. They were beautiful
-in shape and colour, but they did not look like the eyes
-of a young girl. They were deeply, impenetrably black—with
-large pellucid pupils, but there was no sparkle
-nor brightness in them, though they were underlaid by
-smouldering fires which might burst forth into flame at
-any moment, and which seemed to stir and kindle and
-then go out again, when she spoke of anything that interested
-her. There was an attraction about the girl,
-which Mrs. Pullen acknowledged, without wishing to
-give in to. She could not keep her eyes off her! She
-seemed to hypnotise her as the snake is said to hypnotise
-the bird, but it was an unpleasant feeling, as if
-the next moment the smouldering fire would burst
-forth into flame and overwhelm her. But watching her
-play with, and hearing her talk to, her baby, Margaret
-put the idea away from her, and only thought how
-kindly natured she must be, to take so much trouble
-for another woman’s child. It was not long before Miss
-Leyton found her way back to them, and as her glance
-fell upon Harriet Brandt and the baby, she elevated
-her eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the nurse?” she demanded curtly.</p>
-
-<p>“She has gone to the shops to see if she can get
-some darning-wool, and Miss Brandt was kind enough
-to offer to keep baby for her till she returns. And O!
-Elinor, look what beautiful toys Miss Brandt has bought
-her! Isn’t she too kind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Altogether too kind!” responded Elinor. “By the
-way, Margaret, I found our friend and transacted the
-little business we spoke of! But he says his Mamma<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
-has ordered him to remain here, till she comes down to
-see him bathe, and dry him, I suppose, with her own
-hands! And do I not descry her fairy feet indenting
-the sands at this very moment, and bearing down in
-our direction?”</p>
-
-<p>“You could hardly mistake her for anything else!”
-replied Mrs. Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>In another minute the Baroness was upon them.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo,” she called out, “you’re just in time to see
-Gustave bathe! He looks lovely in his bathing costume!
-His legs are as white as your baby’s, Mrs. Pullen, and
-twice as well worth looking at!”</p>
-
-<p>“Mein tear! mein tear!” remonstrated the Baron.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be a fool, Gustave! You know it’s the
-truth! And the loveliest feet, Miss Leyton! Smaller than
-yours, I bet. Where’s that devil, Bobby? I’m going to
-give ’im a dousing for his villainy this morning, I can
-tell you! Once I get ’is ’ead under water, it won’t
-come up again in a hurry! I expect ’e’s pretty ’ungry
-by this time! But ’e don’t get a centime out of me
-for cakes to-day. I’ll teach ’im not to stuff ’imself like
-a pig again. Come, Gustave! ’ere’s a machine for you!
-Get me a chair that I may sit outside it! Now, we’ll
-’ave some fun,” she added, with a wink at Mrs. Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us move on to the breakwater!” said Margaret
-to Elinor Leyton, and the whole party got up and walked
-some little distance off.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you don’t hoodwink me!” screamed the
-Baroness after them. “You’ve got glasses with you,
-and you’re going to ’ave a good squint at Gustave’s
-legs through ’em, I know! You’d better ’ave stayed
-’ere, like honest women, and said you enjoyed the sight!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span></p>
-
-<p>“O! Margaret!” said Miss Leyton, with a look of
-horror, “if it had not been for the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bataille de Fleurs</i>
-and ... the other thing ... I should have said, for
-goodness’ sake, let us move on to Ostende or Blankenburghe,
-with the least possible delay. That woman will
-be the death of me yet! I’m sure she will!”</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding which, they could not help laughing
-in concert, a little later on, to see the unwilling Bobby
-dragged down by William to bathe, and as he emerged
-from his machine, helpless and half naked, to watch his
-elephantine mother chase him with her stout stick in
-hand, and failing to catch him in time, slip on the wet
-sand and flounder in the waves herself, from which
-plight, it looked very much as though her servant instead
-of rescuing her, did his best to push her further
-in, before he dragged her, drenched and disordered, on
-dry land again.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The Baroness Gobelli’s temperament was as inconsistent
-as her dress. Under the garb of jocose good-humour,
-which often degenerated to horse-play, she concealed
-a jealous and vindictive disposition, which would
-go any lengths, when offended, to revenge itself. She
-was wont to say that she never forgot, nor forgave an
-injury, and that when she had her knife (as she termed
-it) in a man, she knew how to bide her time, but that
-when the time came, she turned it. These bloodthirsty
-sentiments, coupled with an asseveration which was constantly
-on her lips, that when she willed the death of
-anyone, he died, and that she had powers at her command<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
-of which no one was aware but herself, frightened
-many timid and ignorant people into trying to propitiate
-so apparently potent a mortal, and generally kow-towing
-before her. To such votaries, so long as they pleased
-her, Madame Gobelli was used to shew her favour by
-various gifts of dresses, jewelry, or money, according to
-their circumstances, for in some cases she was lavishly
-generous, but she soon tired of her acquaintances and
-replaced them by fresh favourites.</p>
-
-<p>The hints that she gave forth, regarding herself and
-her antecedents, were too extraordinary to gain credence
-except from the most ignorant of her auditors, but the
-Baroness always spoke in parables, and left no proof of
-what she meant, to be brought up against her. This
-proved that if she were clever, she was still more cunning.
-The hints she occasionally gave of being descended
-from Royal blood, though on the wrong side of the
-blanket, and of the connection being acknowledged
-privately, if not publicly, by the existing members of the
-reigning family, were received with open mouths by
-people of her own class, but rejected with scorn by such
-as were acquainted with those whom she affected to
-know. It was remarkable also, and only another proof
-that, whatever her real birth and antecedents, the
-Baroness Gobelli was unique, that, notwithstanding her
-desire to be considered noble by birth if not by law,
-she never shirked the fact that the Baron was in trade—on
-the contrary she rather made a boast of it, and
-used to relate stories bringing it into ridicule with the
-greatest gusto. The fact being that Baron Gobelli was
-the head of a large firm of export bootmakers, trading
-in London under the name of Fantaisie et Cie, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
-boots and shoes of which, though professedly French,
-were all manufactured in Germany, where the firm
-maintained an enormous factory. The Baroness could
-seldom be in the company of anyone for more than five
-minutes without asking them where they bought their
-boots and shoes, and recommending them to Fantaisie
-et Cie as the best makers in London. She wanted to
-be first in everything—in popularity, in notice, and in
-conversation—if she could not attract attention by her
-personality, she startled people by her vulgarity—if she
-could not reign supreme by reason of her supposed
-birth, she would do so by boots and shoes, if nothing
-else—and if anybody slighted her or appeared to discredit
-her statements, he or she was immediately marked
-down for retaliation.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt had not been many days in Heyst
-before the Baroness had become jealous of the attention
-which she paid Mrs. Pullen and her child. She saw
-that the girl was attractive, she heard that she was rich,
-and she liked to have pretty and pleasant young people
-about her when at home—they drew men to the house
-and reflected a sort of credit upon herself—and she
-determined to get Harriet away from Margaret Pullen
-and chain her to her own side instead. The Baroness
-hated Miss Leyton quite as much as Elinor hated her.
-She was quick of hearing and very intuitive—she had
-caught more than one of the young lady’s uncomplimentary
-remarks upon herself, and had divined still
-more than she had heard. She had observed her sympathy
-with Bobby also, and that she encouraged him in
-his boyish rebellion. For all these reasons, she “had
-her knife” into Miss Leyton, and was waiting her opportunity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
-to turn it. And she foresaw—with the assistance
-perhaps of the Powers of Darkness, of whose
-acquaintance she was so proud—that she would be enabled
-to take her revenge on Elinor Leyton through
-Harriet Brandt.</p>
-
-<p>But her first advances to the latter were suavity itself.
-She was not going to frighten the girl by shewing
-her claws, until she had stroked her down the right way
-with her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pattes de velours</i>.</p>
-
-<p>She came upon her one morning, as she sat upon
-the sands, with little Ethel in her arms. The nurse was
-within speaking distance, busy with her needlework, and
-the infant seemed so quiet with Miss Brandt and she
-took such evident pleasure in nursing it, that Mrs. Pullen
-no longer minded leaving them together, and had gone
-for a stroll with Miss Leyton along the Digue. So the
-Baroness found Harriet, comparatively speaking, alone.</p>
-
-<p>“So you’re playing at nursemaid again!” she commenced
-in her abrupt manner. “You seem to have
-taken a wonderful fancy to that child!”</p>
-
-<p>“She is such a good little creature,” replied Harriet,
-“she is no trouble whatever. She sleeps half the day!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Brandt had a large box of chocolates beside
-her, into which she continually dipped her hand. Her
-mouth, too, was stained with the delicate sweetmeat—she
-was always eating, either fruit or bonbons. She
-handed the box now, with a timid air, to the Baroness.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you care for chocolate, Madame?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness did not like to be called “Madame”
-according to the French fashion. She thought it derogated
-from her dignity. She wished everyone to
-address her as “my lady,” and considered she was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
-cheated out of her rights when it was omitted. But she
-liked chocolate almost as well as Harriet did.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you! I’ll ’ave a few!” she said, grabbing
-about a dozen in her huge hand at the first venture.
-“What a liking for candies the Amurricans seem to ’ave
-introduced into England! I can remember the time
-when you never saw such a thing as sweets in the palace—I
-don’t think they were allowed—and now they’re all
-over the place. I shouldn’t wonder if Her Majesty hasn’t
-a box or two in her private apartments, and as for the
-Princesses, well!—”</p>
-
-<p>“The Palace!—Her Majesty!”—echoed Miss Brandt,
-opening her dark eyes very wide.</p>
-
-<p>“As I tell ’em,” continued the Baroness, “they won’t
-’ave a tooth left amongst the lot of ’em soon! What
-are you staring at?”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but—do you go to the Queen’s palace?” demanded
-Harriet, incredulously, as well she might.</p>
-
-<p>“Not unless I’m sent for, you may take your oath!
-I ain’t fond enough of ’em for all that; besides, Windsor’s
-’orribly damp and don’t suit me at all. But you mustn’t
-go and repeat what I tell you, in the Hotel. It might
-give offence in high places if I was known to talk of it.
-You see there’s some of ’em has never seen me since I
-married the Baron! Being in trade, they thought ’e
-wasn’t good enough for me! I’ve ’eard that when Lady
-Morton—the dowager Countess, you know—was asked
-if she ’ad seen me lately, she called out loud enough for
-the whole room to ’ear, ‘Do you mean the woman that
-married the boot man? No! I ’aven’t seen ’er, and I
-don’t mean to either!’ Ha! ha! ha! But I can afford
-to laugh at all that, my dear!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But—I don’t quite understand!” said Harriet Brandt,
-with a bewildered look.</p>
-
-<p>“Why! the Baron deals in shoe-leather! ’Aven’t
-you ’eard it? I suppose we’ve got the largest manufactory
-in Germany! Covers four acres of ground, I give
-you my word!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shoe-leather!” again ejaculated Harriet Brandt, not
-knowing what to say.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes! of course all the aristocracy go in for
-trade now-a-days! It’s the fashion! There’s the Viscountess
-Gormsby keeps a bonnet-shop, and Lord Charles
-Snowe ’as a bakery, and Lady Harrison ’as an old curiosity-shop,
-and stands about it, dusting tables and chairs, all
-day! But how can you know anything about it, just
-coming from the West Indies, and all those ’orrid blacks!
-Ain’t you glad to find yourself amongst Christians again?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is the first time I ever left Jamaica,” said Miss
-Brandt, “I was born there.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you won’t die there, or I’m much mistaken!
-You’re too good to be wasted on Jamaica! When are
-you going back to England?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I don’t know! I’ve hardly thought about it
-yet! Not while Mrs. Pullen stays here, though!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why! you’re not tied to ’er apron-string, surely!
-What’s she to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“She is very kind, and I have no friends!” replied
-Miss Brandt.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness burst into a coarse laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t want for friends, once you shew your
-face in England, I can tell you. I’d like to ’ave you at
-our ’ouse, the Red ’Ouse, we call it. Princess—but
-there, I mustn’t tell you ’er name or it’ll go through the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
-Hotel, and she says things to me that she never means
-to go further—but she said the other day that she preferred
-the Red ’Ouse to Windsor! And for comfort,
-and cheerfulness, so she may!”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it is very beautiful then!” observed Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“You must judge for yourself,” replied the Baroness,
-with a broad smile, “when you come to London. You’ll
-be your own mistress there, I suppose, and not so tied
-as you are here! I call it a shame to keep you dancing
-attendance on that brat, when there’s a nurse whose
-business it is to look after ’er!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! but indeed it is my own wish!” said the girl,
-as she cuddled the sleeping baby to her bosom, and
-laid her lips in a long kiss upon its little mouth. “I asked
-leave to nurse her! She loves me and even Nurse cannot
-get her off to sleep as I can! And it is so beautiful to
-have something to love you, Madame Gobelli! In the
-Convent I felt so cold—so lonely! If ever I took a
-liking to a girl, we were placed in separate rooms! It is
-what I have longed for—to come out into the world and
-find someone to be a friend, and to love me, only me,
-and all for myself!”</p>
-
-<p>Madame Gobelli laughed again.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! you’ve only got to shew those eyes of yours,
-to get plenty of people to love you, and let you love
-them in return—that is, if the men count in your estimation
-of what’s beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet raised her eyes and looked at the woman
-who addressed her!</p>
-
-<p>There was the innocence of Ignorance in them as
-yet, but the slumbering fire in their depths proved of
-what her nature would be capable, when it was given<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
-the opportunity to shew itself. Hers was a passionate
-temperament, yearning to express itself—panting for the
-love which it had never known—and ready to burst
-forth like a tree into blossom, directly the sun of Desire
-and Reciprocity shone upon it. The elder woman, who
-had not been without her little experiences in her day,
-recognised the feeling at once, and thought that she
-would not give a fig for the virtue of any man who was
-subjected to its influence.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think that you’ll confine your attentions to
-babies long!” quoth the Baroness, as she encountered
-that glance.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?” said her young companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! it’s enough that I <em>do</em> know, my dear! I ’ave
-ways and means of knowing things that I keep to myself!
-I ’ave friends about me too, who can tell me
-everything—who can ’elp me, if I choose, to give Life
-and Fortune to one person, and Trouble and Death to
-another—and woe to them that offend me, that’s all!”</p>
-
-<p>But if the Baroness expected to impress Miss Brandt
-with her hints of terror, she was mistaken. Harriet did
-not seem in the least astonished. She had been brought
-up by old Pete and the servants on her father’s plantation
-to believe in witches, and the evil eye, and “Obeah”
-and the whole cult of Devil worship.</p>
-
-<p>“I know all about that,” she remarked presently,
-“but you can’t do me either good or harm. I want
-nothing from you and I never shall!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you be too sure of that!” replied Madame
-Gobelli, nodding her head. “I’ve brought young women
-more luck than enough with their lovers before now—yes!
-and married women into the bargain! If it ’adn’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
-been for me, Lady—there! it nearly slipped out, didn’t
-it?—but there’s a certain Countess who would never
-’ave been a widow and married for the second time to
-the man of ’er ’eart, if I ’adn’t ’elped ’er, and she knows
-it too! By the way, ’ow do you like Miss Leyton?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” replied Harriet, quickly, “she is not a
-bit like Mrs. Pullen—so cold and stiff and disagreeable!
-She hardly ever speaks to me! Is it true that she’s the
-daughter of a lord, as Madame Lamont says, and is it
-that makes her so proud?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s the daughter of Lord Walthamstowe, but
-that’s nothing. They’ve got no money. ’Er people live
-down in the country, quite in a beggarly manner. A gal
-with a fortune of ’er own, would rank ’eads and ’eads
-above ’er in Society. There’s not much thought of beside
-money, nowadays, I can tell you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why does she stay with Mrs. Pullen then? Are
-they any relation to each other?” demanded Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“Relation, no! I expect she’s just brought ’er ’ere
-out of charity, and because she couldn’t afford to go to
-the seaside by ’erself!”</p>
-
-<p>She had been about to announce the projected relationship
-between the two ladies, when a sudden thought
-struck her. Captain Ralph Pullen was expected to arrive
-in Heyst in a few days—thus much she had ascertained
-through the landlady of the Lion d’Or. She knew
-by repute that he was considered to be one of the handsomest
-and most conceited men in the Limerick Rangers,
-a corps which was noted for its good-looking officers. It
-might be better for the furtherance of her plans against
-the peace of Miss Leyton’s mind, she thought, to keep
-her engagement to Captain Pullen a secret—at all events,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
-no one could say it was her business to make it public.
-She looked in Harriet Brandt’s yearning, passionate eyes,
-and decided that it would be strange if any impressionable
-young man could be thrown within their influence,
-without having his fidelity a little shaken, especially if
-affianced to such a cold, uninteresting “bit of goods” as
-Elinor Leyton. Like the parrot in the story, though she
-said nothing, she “thought a deal” and inwardly rumbled
-with half-suppressed laughter, as she pictured the discomfiture
-of the latter young lady, if by any chance she
-should find her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancé’s</i> attentions transferred from herself
-to the little West Indian.</p>
-
-<p>“You seem amused, Madame!” said Harriet presently.</p>
-
-<p>“I was thinking of you, and all the young men who
-are doomed to be slaughtered by those eyes of yours,”
-said the Baroness. “You’d make mischief enough amongst
-<em>my</em> friends, I bet, if I ’ad you at the Red ’Ouse!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet felt flattered and consciously pleased. She
-had never received a compliment in the Convent—no one
-had ever hinted that she was pretty, and she had had
-no opportunity of hearing it since.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think I am handsome then?” she enquired
-with a heightened colour.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you’re a deal worse! I think you’re
-dangerous!” replied her new friend, “and I wouldn’t
-trust you with the Baron any further than I could see
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! how can you say so?” exclaimed the girl,
-though she was pleased all the same to hear it said.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t, and that’s the truth! Gustave’s an
-awful fellow after the gals. I ’ave to keep a tight ’old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
-on ’im, I can tell you, and the more you keep out of ’is
-way, the better I shall be pleased! You’ll make a grand
-match some day, if you’re only sharp and keep your
-eyes open.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you call a grand match?” asked Harriet,
-as she let the nurse take the sleeping child from her
-arms without remonstrance.</p>
-
-<p>“Why! a Lord or an Honourable at the very least!
-since you ’ave money of your own. It’s money they’re
-all after in these times, you know—why! we ’ave dooks
-and markisses marrying all sorts of gals from Amurrica—gals
-whose fathers made their money in oil, or medicine,
-or electricity, or any other dodge, so long as they
-made it! And why shouldn’t you do the same as the
-Amurrican gals? You have money, I know—and a
-goodish lot, I fancy—” added the Baroness, with her
-cunning eyes fixed upon the girl as if to read her
-thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes!” replied Harriet, “Mr. Trawler, my trustee,
-said it was too much for a young woman to have under
-her own control, but I don’t know anything about the
-value of money, never having had it to spend before. I
-am to have fifteen hundred pounds every year. Is that
-a good deal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite enough to settle you in life, my dear!” exclaimed
-the Baroness, who immediately thought what a
-good thing it would be if Miss Brandt could be persuaded
-to sink her capital in the boot trade, “and all
-under your own control too! You are a lucky young
-woman! I know ’alf-a-dozen lords,—not to say Princes—who
-would jump at you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Princes!” cried Harriet, unable to believe her ears.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Certainly! Not English ones of course, but German,
-which are quite as good after all, for a Prince is a Prince
-any day! There’s Prince Adalbert of Waxsquiemer, and
-Prince Harold of Muddlesheim, and Prince Loris of
-Taxelmein, and ever so many more, and they’re in and
-out of the Red ’Ouse, twenty times a day! But don’t
-you be in an ’urry! Don’t take the first that offers, Miss
-Brandt! Pick and choose! Flirt with whom you like
-and ’ave your fun, but wait and look about you a bit
-before you decide!”</p>
-
-<p>The prospect was too dazzling! Harriet Brandt’s
-magnificent eyes were opened to their widest extent—her
-cheeks flushed with expectation—both life and light
-had flashed into her countenance. Her soul was expanding,
-her nature was awakening—it shone through
-every feature—the Baroness had had no idea she was
-so beautiful! And the hungry, yearning look was more
-accentuated than before—it seemed as if she were on
-the alert, watching for something, like a panther awaiting
-the advent of its prey. It was a look that women
-would have shrunk from, and men welcomed and eagerly
-responded to.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to go and see you when I go to England—very
-much!” she articulated slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“And so you shall, my dear! The Baron and me
-will be very glad to ’ave you on a visit. And you
-mustn’t let that capital of yours lie idle, you know! If
-it’s in your own ’ands, you must make it yield double to
-what it does now! You consult Gustave! ’E’s a regular
-business man and knows ’ow many beans make five!
-’E’ll tell you what’s best to be done with it—’e’ll be a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
-good friend to you, and you can trust ’im with everything!”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you!” replied the girl, but she still seemed
-to be lost in a kind of reverie. Her gaze was fixed—her
-full crimson lips were slightly parted—her slender
-hands kept nervously clasping and unclasping each other.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you are ’andsome and no mistake!” exclaimed
-the Baroness. “You remind me a little of the
-Duchess of Bewlay before she was married! The first
-wife, I mean—the second is a poor, pale-faced, sandy-’aired
-creature. (’Ow the Dook can stomach ’er after
-the other, I can’t make out!) The first Duchess’s mother
-was a great flame of my grandfather, the Dook of—however,
-I mustn’t tell you that! It’s a State secret, and I
-might get into trouble at Court! You’d better not say
-I mentioned it.”</p>
-
-<p>But Harriet Brandt was not in a condition to remember
-or repeat anything. She was lost in a dream
-of the possibilities of the Future.</p>
-
-<p>The bell for <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">déjeuner</i> roused them at last, and
-brought them to their feet. They resembled each other
-in one particular ... they were equally fond of the
-pleasures of the table.</p>
-
-<p>The little Baron appeared dutifully to afford his
-clumsy spouse the benefit of his support in climbing the
-hillocks of shifting sand, which lay between them and
-the hotel, and Miss Brandt sped swiftly on her way
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been ’aving a talk with that gal Brandt,”
-chuckled the Baroness to her husband, “she’s a regular
-green-’orn and swallows everything you tell ’er. I’ve
-been stuffing ’er up, that she ought to marry a Prince,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
-with ’er looks and money, and she quite believes it.
-But she ain’t bad-looking when she colours up, and I expect
-she’s rather a warm customer, and if she takes a
-fancy to a man, ’e won’t well know ’ow to get out of it!
-And if he tries to, she’ll make the fur fly. Ha! ha! ha!”</p>
-
-<p>“Better leave it alone, better leave it alone!” said
-the stolid German, who had had more than one battle
-to fight already, on account of his wife’s match-making
-propensities, and considered her quite too clumsy an
-artificer to engage in so delicate a game.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There was a marked difference observable in the
-manner of Harriet Brandt after her conversation with the
-Baroness. Hitherto she had been shy and somewhat
-diffident—the seclusion of her conventual life and its
-religious teachings had cast a veil, as it were, between
-her and the outer world, and she had not known how
-to behave, nor how much she might venture to do, on
-being first cast upon it. But Madame Gobelli’s revelations
-concerning her beauty and her prospects, had torn
-the veil aside, and placed a talisman in her hands,
-against her secret fear.</p>
-
-<p>She was beautiful and dangerous—she might become
-a Princess if she played her cards well—the knowledge
-changed the whole face of Nature for her. She became
-assured, confident, and anticipatory. She began to frequent
-the company of the Baroness, and without neglecting
-her first acquaintances, Mrs. Pullen and her baby,
-spent more time in the Gobelli’s private sitting-room<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
-than in the balcony, or public salon, a fact for which
-Margaret did not hesitate to declare herself grateful.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know how it is,” she confided to Elinor
-Leyton, “I rather like the girl, and I would not be unkind
-to her for all the world, but there is something
-about her that oppresses me. I seem never to have
-quite lost the sensation she gave me the first evening
-that she came here. Her company enervates me—I get
-neuralgia whenever we have been a short time together—and
-she leaves me in low spirits and more disposed
-to cry than laugh!”</p>
-
-<p>“And no wonder,” said her friend, “considering that
-she has that detestable school-girl habit of hanging upon
-one’s arm and dragging one down almost to the earth!
-How you have stood it so long, beats me! Such a delicate
-woman as you are too. It proves how selfish
-Miss Brandt must be, not to have seen that she was
-distressing you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! it will take a large amount of expended force
-to drag Madame Gobelli to the ground,” said Margaret,
-laughing, “so I hope Miss Brandt will direct that portion
-of her attention to her, and leave me only the residue.
-Poor girl! she seems to have had so few people to love,
-or to love her, during her lifetime, that she is glad to
-practise on anyone who will reciprocate her affection.
-Did you see the Baroness kissing her this morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“I saw the Baroness scrubbing her beard against
-Miss Brandt’s cheek, if you call that ‘kissing’?” replied
-Elinor. “The Baroness never kisses! I have noticed
-her salute poor Bobby in the morning exactly in the
-same manner. I have a curiosity to know if it hurts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you try it?” said Margaret.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you! I am not so curious as all that!
-But the Gobellis and Miss Brandt have evidently struck
-up a great friendship. She will be the recipient of the
-Baroness’s cast-off trinkets and laces next!”</p>
-
-<p>“She is too well off for that, Elinor! Madame
-Lamont told me she has a fortune in her own right, of
-fifteen hundred a year!”</p>
-
-<p>“She will want it all to gild herself with!” said Elinor.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Pullen looked at Miss Leyton thoughtfully.
-Did she really mean what she said, or did her jealousy
-of the West Indian heiress render her capable of uttering
-untruths? Surely, she must see that Harriet Brandt
-was handsome—growing handsomer indeed, every day,
-with the pure sea air tinting her cheeks with a delicate
-flush like the inside of a shell—and that her beauty,
-joined to her money, would render her a tempting morsel
-for the men, and a formidable rival for the women.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not think you would find many people to
-agree with your opinion, Elinor!” she said after a pause,
-in answer to Miss Leyton’s last remark.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! I think she’s altogether odious,” replied her
-friend with a toss of her head, “I thought it the first
-time I saw her, and I shall think it to the last!”</p>
-
-<p>It was the day that Captain Ralph Pullen was expected
-to arrive in Heyst and the two ladies were preparing
-to go to the station to meet him.</p>
-
-<p>“The Baroness has at all events done you one good
-turn,” continued Miss Leyton, “she has delivered you
-for a few hours from your ‘Old Man of the Sea.’ What
-have you been doing with yourself all the morning! I
-expected you to meet me on the sands, after I had
-done bathing!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I have not stirred out, Elinor. I am uneasy about
-baby! She does not seem at all well. I have been
-waiting your return to ask you whether I had not better
-send for a doctor to see her. But I am not sure if
-there is such a thing in Heyst!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure to be, but don’t send unless it is absolutely
-necessary. What is the matter with her?”</p>
-
-<p>The nurse was sitting by the open window with
-little Ethel on her lap. The infant looked much the
-same as usual—a little paler perhaps, but in a sound
-sleep and apparently enjoying it.</p>
-
-<p>“She does not seem ill to me,” continued Elinor,
-“is she in any pain?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, Miss,” said the nurse, “and begging the
-mistress’s pardon, I am sure she is frightening herself
-without cause. Baby is cutting two more teeth, and she
-feels the heat. That’s all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why are you frightened, Margaret?” asked Miss
-Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>“Because her sleep is unnatural, I am sure of it,”
-replied Mrs. Pullen, “she slept all yesterday, and has
-hardly opened her eyes to-day. It is more like torpor
-than sleep. We can hardly rouse her to take her bottle
-and you know what a lively, restless little creature she
-has always been.”</p>
-
-<p>“But her teeth,” argued Elinor Leyton, “surely her
-teeth account for everything! I know my sister, Lady
-Armisdale, says that nothing varies so quickly as teething
-children—that they’re at the point of death one
-hour and quite well the next, and she has five, so she
-ought to know!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s quite right, Miss,” interposed the nurse, respectfully,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-“and you can hardly expect the dear child
-to be lively when she’s in pain. She has a little fever
-on her too! If she were awake, she would only be fretful!
-I am sure that the best medicine for her is sleep!”</p>
-
-<p>“You hear what Nurse says, Margaret, but if you
-are nervous, why not send for a doctor to see her! We
-can ask Madame Lamont as we go downstairs who is
-the best here, and call on him as we go to the station,
-or we can telegraph to Bruges for one, if you think it
-would be better!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no! no! I will not be foolish! I will try and
-believe that you and Nurse know better than myself. I
-will wait at all events until to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where has baby been this morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was with Miss Brandt on the sands, Miss!”
-replied the nurse.</p>
-
-<p>“Since you are so anxious about Ethel, Margaret,
-I really wonder that you should trust her with a stranger
-like Miss Brandt! Perhaps she let the sun beat on her
-head.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no, Elinor, Nurse was with them all the time.
-I would not let Miss Brandt or anyone take baby away
-alone. But she is so good-natured and so anxious to
-have her, that I don’t quite know how to refuse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps she has been stuffing the child with some
-of her horrid chocolates or caramels. She is gorging
-them all day long herself!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know my duty too well for that, Miss!” said the
-nurse resentfully, “I wouldn’t have allowed it! The
-dear baby did not have anything to eat at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! you’re both on <em>her</em> side evidently, so I will
-say no more,” concluded Miss Leyton, “At the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
-time if <em>I</em> had a child, I’d sooner trust it to a wild beast
-than the tender mercies of Miss Brandt. But it’s past
-four o’clock, Margaret! If we are to reach the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entrepôt</i>
-in time we must be going!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Pullen hastily assumed her hat and mantle,
-and prepared to accompany her friend. They had opened
-the door, and were about to leave the room when a
-flood of melody suddenly poured into the apartment. It
-proceeded from a room at the other end of the corridor
-and was produced by a mandoline most skilfully played.
-The silvery notes in rills and trills and chords, such as
-might have been evolved from a fairy harp, arrested the
-attention of both Miss Leyton and Mrs. Pullen. They
-had scarcely expressed their wonder and admiration to
-each other, at the skilful manipulation of the instrument
-(which evinced such art as they had never heard before
-except in public) when the strings of the mandoline
-were accompanied by a young, fresh contralto voice.</p>
-
-<p>“O! hush! hush!” cried Elinor, with her finger on
-her lip, as the rich mellow strains floated through the
-corridor, “I don’t think I ever heard such a lovely voice
-before. Whose on earth can it be?”</p>
-
-<p>The words of the song were in Spanish, and the
-only one they could recognise was the refrain of,
-“Seralie! Seralie!” But the melody was wild, pathetic,
-and passionate, and the singer’s voice was touching beyond
-description.</p>
-
-<p>“Some professional must have arrived at the Hotel,”
-said Margaret, “I am sure that is not the singing of an
-amateur. But I hope she will not practise at night, and
-keep baby awake!”</p>
-
-<p>Elinor laughed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span></p>
-
-<p>“O! you mother!” she said, “I thought you were
-lamenting just now that your ewe lamb slept too much!
-For my part, I should like to be lulled to sleep each
-night by just such strains as those. Listen, Margaret!
-She has commenced another song. Ah! Gounod’s delicious
-‘Ave Maria.’ How beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t profess to know much about music,” said
-Margaret, “but it strikes me that the charm of that
-singing lies more in the voice than the actual delivery.
-Whoever it is, must be very young!”</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever it proceeds from, it is charming,” repeated
-Elinor. “How Ralph would revel in it! Nothing
-affects him like music. It is the only thing which
-makes me regret my inability to play or sing. But I
-am most curious to learn who the new arrival is. Ah!
-here is Mademoiselle Brimont!” she continued, as she
-caught sight of Olga Brimont, slowly mounting the steep
-staircase, “Mademoiselle, do you happen to know who
-it is who owns that lovely voice? Mrs. Pullen and I are
-perfectly enchanted with it!”</p>
-
-<p>Olga Brimont coloured a little. She had never got
-over her shyness of the English ladies, particularly of
-the one who spoke so sharply. But she answered at once,</p>
-
-<p>“It is Harriet Brandt! Didn’t you know that she
-sang?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Leyton took a step backward. Her face expressed
-the intensest surprise—not to say incredulity.</p>
-
-<p>“Harriet Brandt! Impossible!” she ejaculated.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed it is she,” repeated Olga, “she always sang
-the solos in the Convent choir. They used to say she
-had the finest voice in the Island. O! yes, it is Harriet,
-really.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span></p>
-
-<p>And she passed on to her own apartment.</p>
-
-<p>“Do <em>you</em> believe it?” said Elinor Leyton, turning almost
-fiercely upon Mrs. Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“How can I do otherwise,” replied Margaret, “in
-the face of Mademoiselle Brimont’s assertion? But it
-is strange that we have heard nothing of Miss Brandt’s
-talent before!”</p>
-
-<p>“Has she ever mentioned the fact to you, that she
-could sing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never! but there has been no opportunity. There
-is no instrument here, and we have never talked of such
-a thing! Only fancy her possessing so magnificent a
-voice! What a gift! She might make her fortune by
-it if she needed to do so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! she ought to be able to sing with that mouth
-of hers,” remarked Miss Leyton almost bitterly, as she
-walked into the corridor. She was unwilling to accord
-Harriet Brandt the possession of a single good attribute.
-As the ladies traversed the corridor, they perceived that
-others had been attracted by the singing as well as
-themselves, and most of the bedroom doors were open.
-Mrs. Montague caught Margaret by the sleeve as she
-passed.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Mrs. Pullen, what a heavenly voice! Whose is
-it? Fred is just mad to know!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only that girl Brandt!” replied Elinor roughly,
-as she tried to escape further questioning.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Brandt! what, the little West Indian! Mrs.
-Pullen, is Miss Leyton jesting?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, indeed, Mrs. Montague! Mademoiselle Brimont
-was our informant,” said Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>But at that moment their attention was diverted by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
-the appearance of Harriet Brandt herself. She looked
-brilliant. In one hand she carried her mandoline, a
-lovely little instrument, of sandal-wood inlaid with mother-of-pearl,—her
-face was flushed with the exertion she
-had gone through, and her abundant hair was somewhat
-in disorder. Mrs. Montague pounced on her at once.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Miss Brandt! you are a sly puss! We have
-all been delighted—enchanted! What do you mean
-by hiding your light under a bushel in this way? Do
-come in here for a minute and sing us another song!
-Major Montague is in ecstasies over your voice!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t stop, I can’t indeed!” replied Miss Brandt,
-evidently pleased with the effect she had produced, “because
-I am on my way down to dear Madame Gobelli.
-I promised to sing for her this afternoon. I was only
-trying my voice to see if it was fit for anything!”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled at Mrs. Pullen as she spoke and added,</p>
-
-<p>“I hope I have not disturbed the darling baby! I
-thought she would be out this lovely afternoon!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no! you did not disturb her. We have all
-been much pleased, and surprised to think that you
-have never told us that you could sing!”</p>
-
-<p>“How could I tell that anyone would care about
-it?” replied Harriet, indifferently, with a shrug of her
-shoulders. “But the Baron is very musical! He has
-a charming tenor voice. I have promised to accompany
-him! I mustn’t delay any longer! Good afternoon!”</p>
-
-<p>And she flew down the stairs with her mandoline.</p>
-
-<p>“It is all the dear Baroness and the dear Baron
-now, you perceive,” remarked Elinor to Mrs. Pullen, as
-they walked together to the railway-station, “you and
-the baby are at a discount. Miss Brandt is the sort of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-young lady, I fancy, who will follow her own interests
-wherever they may lead her!”</p>
-
-<p>“You should be the last to complain of her for that,
-Elinor, since you have tried to get rid of her at any
-cost,” replied her friend.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Ralph Pullen arrived punctually by the train
-which he had appointed, and greeted his sister-in-law
-and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancée</i> with marked cordiality.</p>
-
-<p>He was certainly a man to be proud of, as far as
-outward appearance went. He was acknowledged, by
-general consent, to be one of the handsomest men in
-the British Army, and he was fully aware of the fact.
-He was tall and well built, with good features, almost
-golden hair; womanish blue eyes, and a long drooping
-moustache, which he was always caressing with his left
-hand. He regarded all women with the same languishing,
-tired-to-death glance, as if the attentions shewn him
-by the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beau sexe</i> had been altogether too much for him,
-and the most he could do now was to regard them with
-an indolent, worn-out favour, which had had all the excitement,
-and freshness, and flavour taken out of it long
-before. Most women would have considered his method
-of treatment as savouring little short of insult, but Elinor
-Leyton’s nature did not make extravagant demands
-upon her lover, and so long as he dressed and looked
-well and paid her the courtesies due from a gentleman
-to a gentlewoman, she was quite satisfied. Margaret,
-on the other hand, had seen through her brother-in-law’s
-affectations from the first, and despised him for them.
-She thought him foolish, vain, and uncompanionable,
-but she bore with him for Arthur’s sake. She would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
-have welcomed his cousin Anthony Pennell, though, with
-twice the fervour.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph was looking remarkably well. His light grey
-suit of tweed was fresh and youthful looking, and the
-yellow rose in his buttonhole was as dainty as if he had
-just walked out of his Piccadilly club. He was quite
-animated (for him) at the idea of spending a short time
-in Heyst, and actually went the length of informing
-Elinor that she looked “very fit”, and that if it was not so
-public a place he should kiss her. Miss Leyton coloured
-faintly at the remark, but she turned her head away
-and would not let him see that she was sorry the place
-was so public.</p>
-
-<p>“Heyst seems to have done you both a lot of good,”
-Captain Pullen went on presently, “I am sure you are
-fatter, Margaret, than when you were in Town. And,
-by the way, how is the daughter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not very well, I am sorry to say, Ralph! She is
-cutting more teeth. Elinor and I were consulting whether
-we should send for a doctor to see her, only this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, I have good news for you, or you will
-consider it so. Old Phillips is coming over to join us
-next week.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doctor Phillips, my dear old godfather!” exclaimed
-Margaret, “O! I <em>am</em> glad to hear it! He will set baby
-to rights at once. But who told you so, Ralph?”</p>
-
-<p>“The old gentleman himself! I met him coming out
-of his club the other day and told him I was coming
-over here, and he said he should follow suit as soon as
-ever he could get away, and I was to tell you to get a
-room for him by next Monday!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I shall feel quite happy about my baby now,” said
-Mrs. Pullen, “I have not much faith in Belgian doctors.
-Their pharmacopœia is quite different from ours, but
-Doctor Phillips will see if there is anything wrong with
-her at once!”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you will not be disappointed with the Hotel
-visitors, Ralph,” said Elinor, “but they are a terrible set
-of riff-raff. It is impossible to make friends with any one
-of them. They are such dreadful people!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! you mustn’t class them all together, Elinor,”
-interposed Margaret, “I am sure the Montagues and the
-Vieuxtemps are nice enough! And <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">du reste</i>, there is no
-occasion for Ralph even to speak to them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” said Captain Pullen, “I have come
-over for the sake of your company and Margaret’s, and
-have no intention of making the acquaintance of any
-strangers. When is the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bataille de Fleurs</i>? Next week?
-that’s jolly! Old Phillips will be here by that time, and
-he and Margaret can flirt together, whilst you and I are
-billing and cooing, eh, Elinor?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be vulgar, Ralph,” she answered, “you know
-how I dislike that sort of thing! And we have had so
-much of it here!”</p>
-
-<p>“What, billing and cooing?” he questioned. But
-Elinor disdained to make any further remark on the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of Ralph Pullen at the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table d’hôte</i>
-dinner naturally excited a good deal of speculation.
-The English knew that Mrs. Pullen expected her brother-in-law
-to stay with her, but the foreigners were all curious
-to ascertain who the handsome, well-groomed, military-looking
-stranger might be, who was so familiar with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
-Mrs. Pullen and her friend. The Baroness was not behind
-the rest in curiosity and admiration. She was
-much before them in her determination to gratify her
-curiosity and make the acquaintance of the new-comer,
-whose name she guessed, though no introduction had
-passed between them. She waited through two courses
-to see if Margaret Pullen would take the initiative, but
-finding that she addressed all her conversation to Captain
-Pullen, keeping her face, meanwhile, pertinaciously turned
-from the party sitting opposite to her, she determined to
-force her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Pullen!” she cried, in her coarse voice, “when
-are you going to introduce me to your handsome friend?”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret coloured uneasily and murmured,</p>
-
-<p>“My brother-in-law, Captain Pullen—Madame Gobelli.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very glad to see you, Captain,” said the Baroness,
-as Ralph bowed to her in his most approved fashion,
-“your sister thought she’d keep you all to ’erself, I suppose!
-But the young ladies of Heyst would soon make
-mincemeat of Mrs. Pullen if she tried that little game
-on them. We ’aven’t got too many good-looking young
-men ’ereabouts, I can tell you. Are you going to stay
-long?”</p>
-
-<p>Captain Pullen murmured something about “uncertain”
-and “not being quite sure”, whilst the Baroness
-regarded him full in the face with a broad smile on her
-own. She always had a keen eye for a handsome young
-man!</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you’ll stay as long as it suits your purpose,
-won’t you? I expect you ’ave your own little game to
-play, same as most of us! And it’s a pretty little game,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
-too, isn’t it, especially when a fellow’s young and good-looking
-and ’as the chink-a-chink, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy I know some of your brother officers, Mr.
-Naggett, and Lord Menzies, they belong to the Rangers,
-don’t they?” continued Madame Gobelli, “Prince Adalbert
-of Waxsquiemer used to bring ’em to the Red ’Ouse!
-By the way I ’aven’t introduced you to my ’usband,
-Baron Gobelli! Gustave, this is Captain Ralph Pullen,
-the Colonel’s brother, you know. You must ’ave a talk
-with ’im after dinner! You two would ’it it off first-rate
-together! Gustave’s in the boot trade, you know, Captain
-Pullen! We trade under the name of Fantaisie et Cie!
-The best boots and shoes in London, and the largest
-manufactory, I give you my word! You should get your
-boots from us. I know you dandy officers are awfully
-particular about your tootsies. If you’ll come and see
-me in London, I’ll take you over the manufactory, and
-give you a pair. You’ll never buy any others, once
-you’ve tried ’em!”</p>
-
-<p>Ralph Pullen bowed again, and said he felt certain
-that Madame was right and he looked forward to the
-fulfilment of her promise with the keenest anticipation.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt meanwhile, sitting almost opposite to
-the stranger, was regarding him from under the thick
-lashes of her slumbrous eyes, like a lynx watching its
-prey. She had never seen so good-looking and aristocratic
-a young man before. His crisp golden hair and drooping
-moustaches, his fair complexion, blue eyes and
-chiselled features, were a revelation to her. Would the
-Princes whom Madame Gobelli had promised she should
-meet at her house, be anything like him, she wondered—<em>could</em>
-they be as handsome, as perfectly dressed, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
-fashionable, as completely at their ease, as the man before
-her? Every other moment, she was stealing a veiled
-glance at him—and Captain Pullen was quite aware of
-the fact. What young man, or woman, is not aware
-when they are being furtively admired? Ralph Pullen
-was one of the most conceited of his sex, which is not
-saying a little—he was <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">accomblé</i> with female attentions
-wherever he went, yet he was not <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">blasé</i> with them, so
-long as he was not called upon to reciprocate in kind.
-Each time that Harriet’s magnetic gaze sought his face,
-his eyes by some mystical chance were lifted to meet it,
-and though all four lids were modestly dropped again,
-their owners did not forget the effect their encounter
-had left behind it.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ave you been round Heyst yet, Captain Pullen,”
-vociferated Madame Gobelli, “and met the Procession?
-I never saw such rubbish in my life. I laughed fit to
-burst myself! A lot of children rigged out in blue and
-white, carrying a doll on a stick, and a crowd of fools
-following and singing ’ymns. Call that Religion? It’s
-all tommy rot. Don’t you agree with me, Mrs. Pullen?”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot say that I do, Madame! I have been
-taught to respect every religion that is followed with
-sincerity, whether I agree with its doctrine or not. Besides,
-I thought the procession you allude to a very
-pretty sight. Some of the children with their fair hair
-and wreaths of flowers looked like little angels!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! you’re an ’umbug!” exclaimed the Baroness,
-“you say that just to please these Papists. Not that I
-wouldn’t just as soon be a Papist as a Protestant, but I
-’ate cant. I wouldn’t ’ave Bobby ’ere, brought up in
-any religion. Let ’im choose for ’imself when ’e’s a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-man, I said, but no cant, no ’umbug! I ’ad a governess
-for ’im once, a dirty little sneak, who thought she’d get
-the better of me, so she made the boy kneel down each
-night and say, ‘God bless father and mother and all
-kind friends, and God bless my enemies.’ I came on
-’em one evening and I ’ad ’im up on his legs in a
-moment. I won’t ’ave it, Bobby, I said, I won’t ’ave
-you telling lies for anyone, and I made ’im repeat after
-me, ‘God bless father and mother and all kind friends,
-and d—n my enemies.’ The governess was so angry with me, that she gave
-warning, he! he! he! But I ’ad my way, and Bobby
-’asn’t said a prayer since, ’ave you, Bobby?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sometimes, Mamma!” replied the lad in a low voice.
-Margaret Pullen’s kind eyes sought his at once with an
-encouraging smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! you’d better not let me ’ear you, or I’ll give
-you ‘what for’. I ’ate ’umbug, don’t you, Captain
-Pullen?”</p>
-
-<p>“Unreservedly, Madame!” replied Ralph in a stifled
-voice and with an inflamed countenance. He had been
-trying to conceal his amusement for some time past,
-greatly to the disgust of Miss Leyton, who would have
-had him pass by his opposite neighbour’s remarks in
-silent contempt, and the effort had been rather trying.
-As he spoke, his eyes sought those of Harriet Brandt
-again, and discovered the sympathy with his distress,
-lurking in them, coupled with a very evident look of
-admiration for himself. He looked at her back again—only
-one look, but it spoke volumes! Captain Pullen
-had never given such a glance at his <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancée</i>, nor received
-one from her! It is problematical if Elinor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
-Leyton <em>could</em> make a telegraph of her calm brown eyes—if
-her soul (if indeed she had in that sense a soul at all)
-ever pierced the bounds of its dwelling-place to look
-through its windows. As the dessert appeared, Margaret
-whispered to her brother-in-law,</p>
-
-<p>“If we do not make our escape now, we may not
-get rid of her all the evening,” at which hint he rose
-from table, and the trio left the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">salle à manger</i> together.
-As Margaret descended again, equipped for their evening
-stroll, she perceived Harriet Brandt in the corridor also
-ready, and waiting apparently for her. She took her
-aside at once.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot ask you to join us in our walk this evening,
-Miss Brandt,” she said, “because, as it is the first
-day of my brother’s arrival, we shall naturally have
-many family topics to discuss together!”</p>
-
-<p>For the first time since their acquaintance, she observed
-a sullen look creep over Harriet Brandt’s features.</p>
-
-<p>“I am going to walk with the Baron and Baroness,
-thank you all the same!” she replied to Margaret’s remark,
-and turning on her heel, she re-entered her room.
-Margaret did not believe her statement, but she was
-glad she had had the courage to warn her—she knew
-it would have greatly annoyed Elinor if the girl she
-detested had accompanied them on that first evening.
-The walk proved after all to be a very ordinary one.
-They paraded up and down the Digue, until they were
-tired and then they sat down on green chairs and
-listened to the orchestra whilst Ralph smoked his
-cigarettes. Elinor was looking her best. She was
-pleased and mildly excited—her costume became her—and
-she was presumably enjoying herself, but as far as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
-her joy in Captain Pullen went, she might have been
-walking with her father or her brother. The conscious
-looks that had passed between him and Harriet Brandt
-were utterly wanting.</p>
-
-<p>They began by talking of home, of Elinor’s family,
-and the last news that Margaret had received from
-Arthur—and then went on to discuss the visitors to the
-Hotel. Miss Leyton waxed loud in her denunciation of
-the Baroness and her familiar vulgarity—she deplored
-the ill fate that had placed them in such close proximity
-at the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table d’hôte</i>, and hoped that Ralph would not
-hesitate to change his seat if the annoyance became too
-great. She had warned him, she said, of what he might
-expect by joining them at Heyst.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear girl,” he replied, “pray don’t distress yourself!
-In the first place I know a great deal more about
-foreign hotels than you do, and knew exactly what I
-might expect to encounter, and in the second, I don’t
-mind it in the least—in fact, I like it, it amuses me, I
-think the Baroness is quite a character, and look forward
-to cultivating her acquaintance with the keenest anticipations.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! <em>don’t</em>, Ralph, pray don’t!” exclaimed Miss
-Leyton, fastidiously, “the woman is beneath contempt!
-I should be exceedingly annoyed if you permitted her
-to get at all intimate with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not, if it amuses him?” demanded Margaret,
-laughing, “for my part, I agree with Ralph, that her very
-vulgarity makes her most amusing as a change, and it is
-not as if we were likely to be thrown in her way when
-we return to England!”</p>
-
-<p>“She is a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rara avis</i>,” cried Captain Pullen enthusiastically,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
-“she certainly must know some good people
-if men like Naggett and Menzies have been at her house,
-and yet the way she advertises her boots and shoes is
-too delicious! O! dear yes! I cannot consent to cut the
-Baroness Gobelli! I am half in love with her already!”</p>
-
-<p>Elinor Leyton made a gesture of disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“And you—who are considered to be one of the most
-select and fastidious men in Town,” she said, “I wonder
-at you!”</p>
-
-<p>Then he made a bad matter worse, by saying,</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, Margaret, who was that beautiful girl
-who sat on the opposite side of the table?”</p>
-
-<p>“The <em>what</em>,” exclaimed Elinor Leyton, ungrammatically,
-as she turned round upon the Digue and confronted
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“He means Miss Brandt!” interposed Margaret,
-hastily, “many people think that she is handsome!”</p>
-
-<p>“No one could think otherwise,” responded Ralph.
-“Is she Spanish?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no; her parents were English. She comes from
-Jamaica!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! a drop of Creole blood in her then, I daresay!
-You never see such eyes in an English face!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with her eyes?” asked Elinor
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re very large and dark, you know, Elinor!”
-said Mrs. Pullen, observing the cloud which was settling
-down upon the girl’s face, “but it is not everybody who
-admires dark eyes, or you and I would come off badly!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, with all due deference to you, my fair sister-in-law,”
-replied Ralph, with the stupidity of a selfish
-man who never knows when he is wounding his hearers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-“most people give the preference to dark eyes in women.
-Anyway Miss Brandt (if that is her name) is a beauty
-and no mistake!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t say that I admire your taste,” said Elinor,
-“and I sincerely hope that Miss Brandt will not force
-her company upon us whilst you are here. Margaret
-and I have suffered more than enough already in that
-respect! She is only half educated and knows nothing
-of the world, and is altogether a most uninteresting
-companion. I dislike her exceedingly!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! don’t forget her singing!” cried Margaret, unwittingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Does she sing?” demanded the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! and wonderfully well for an amateur! She
-plays the mandoline also. I think Elinor is a little hard
-on her! Of course she is very young and unformed, but
-she has only just come out of a convent where she has
-been educated for the last ten years. What can you
-expect of a girl who has never been out in Society? I
-know that she is very good-natured, and has waited on
-baby as if she had been her servant!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you think we have had about enough of Miss
-Harriet Brandt?” said Elinor, “I want to hear what Ralph
-thinks of Heyst, or if he advises our going on to Ostende.
-I believe Ostende is much gayer and brighter than
-Heyst!”</p>
-
-<p>“But we must wait now till Doctor Phillips joins us,”
-interposed Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>“He could come after us, if Ralph preferred Ostende
-or Blankenburghe,” said Elinor eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear ladies,” exclaimed Captain Pullen, “allow
-me to form an opinion of Heyst first, and then we will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
-talk about other places. This seems pleasant enough in
-all conscience to me now!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! you two are bound to think any place pleasant,”
-laughed Margaret, “but I think I must go in to my
-baby! I do not feel easy to be away from her too long,
-now that she is ailing. But there is no need for you to
-come in, Elinor! It is only just nine o’clock!”</p>
-
-<p>“I would rather accompany you,” replied Miss
-Leyton, primly.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! Elinor, stay with me! If you are tired
-we can sit in the balcony. I have seen nothing of you
-yet!” remonstrated her lover.</p>
-
-<p>She consented to sit in the balcony with him for a
-few minutes, but she would not permit his chair to be
-placed too close to hers.</p>
-
-<p>“The waiters pass backward and forward,” she said,
-“and what would they think?”</p>
-
-<p>“The deuce take what they think,” replied Captain
-Pullen, “I haven’t seen you for two months, and you
-keep me at arms’ length as if I should poison you!
-What do you suppose a man is made of?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Ralph, you know it is nothing of the kind,
-but it is quite impossible that we can sit side by side
-like a pair of turtle doves in a public Hotel like this!”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us go up to your room then?”</p>
-
-<p>“To my bedroom?” she ejaculated with horror.</p>
-
-<p>“To Margaret’s room then! she won’t be so prudish,
-I’m sure! Anywhere where I can speak to you
-alone!”</p>
-
-<p>“The nurse will be in Margaret’s room, with little
-Ethel!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hang it all, then, come for another walk! Let us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-go away from the town, out on those sand hills. I’m
-sure no one will see us there!”</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Ralph, you must be reasonable! If I were
-seen walking about Heyst alone with you at night, it
-would be all over the town to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let it be! Where’s the harm?”</p>
-
-<p>“But I have kept our engagement most scrupulously
-secret! No one knows anything, but that you are Margaret’s
-brother-in-law! You don’t know how they gossip
-and chatter in a place like this. I could never consent
-to appear at the public <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table d’hôte</i> again, if I thought
-that all those vulgarians had been discussing my most
-private affairs!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! well! just as you choose!” replied Ralph Pullen
-discontentedly, “but I suppose you will not object to <em>my</em>
-taking another turn along the Digue before I go to bed!
-Here, garçon, bring me a chasse! Good-night, then, if
-you will not stay!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is not that I <em>will</em> not—it is that I <em>cannot</em>, Ralph!”
-said Miss Leyton, as she gave him her hand. “Good-night!
-I hope you will find your room comfortable, and
-if it is fine to-morrow, we will have a nice walk in whichever
-direction you prefer!”</p>
-
-<p>“And much good that will be!” grumbled the young
-man, as he lighted his cigarette and strolled out again
-upon the Digue.</p>
-
-<p>As he stood for a moment looking out upon the sea,
-which was one mass of silvery ripples, he heard himself
-called by name. He looked up. The Gobellis had a
-private sitting-room facing the Digue on the ground floor,
-and the Baroness was leaning out of the open window,
-and beckoning to him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you come in and ’ave a whiskey and soda?”
-she asked. “The Baron ’as ’is own whiskey ’ere, real
-Scotch, none of your nasty Belgian stuff, ’alf spirits of
-wine and ’alf varnish! Come along! We’ve got a jolly
-little parlour, and my little friend ’Arriet Brandt shall
-sing to you! Unless you’re off on some lark of your
-own, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! indeed,” replied Ralph, “I was only wondering
-what I should do with myself for the next hour. Thank
-you so much! I’ll come with pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p>And in another minute he was seated in the company
-of the Baron and Baroness and Harriet Brandt.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The day had heralded in the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bataille de Fleurs</i> and
-all Heyst was <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en fête</i>. The little furnished villas, hired
-for the season, were all built alike, with a balcony, on
-the ground floor, which was transformed into a veritable
-bower for the occasion. Villa Imperatrice vied with Villa
-Mentone and Villa Sebastien, as to which decoration
-should be the most beautiful and effective, and the result
-was a long line of arbours garlanded with every sort of
-blossom. From early morning, the occupants were busy,
-entwining their pillars with evergreens, interspersed with
-flags and knots of ribbon, whilst the balustrades were
-laden with growing flowers and the tables inside bore
-vases of severed blooms. One balcony was decorated
-with corn, poppies and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bluets</i>, whilst the next would display
-pink roses mixed with the delicate blue of the sea-nettle,
-and the third would be all yellow silk and white
-marguerites. The procession of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">charrettes</i>, and the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bataille</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-itself was not to commence till the afternoon, so
-the visitors crowded the sands as usual in the morning,
-leaving the temporary owners of the various villas, to toil
-for their gratification, during their absence. Margaret
-Pullen felt sad as she sat in the hotel balcony, watching
-the proceedings on each side of her. She had intended
-her baby’s perambulator to take part in the procession
-of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">charrettes</i>, and had ordered a quantity of white field-lilies
-with which to decorate it. It was to be a veritable
-triumph—so she and Miss Leyton had decided between
-themselves—and she had fondly pictured how lovely
-little Ethel would look with her fluffy yellow hair, lying
-amongst the blossoms, but now baby was too languid
-and ill to be taken out of doors, and Margaret had given
-all the flowers to the little Montagues, who were trimming
-their mail-cart with them, in their own fashion. As she
-sat there, with a pensive, thoughtful look upon her face,
-Harriet Brandt, dressed in a costume of grass-cloth, with
-a broad-brimmed hat, nodding with poppies and green
-leaves, that wonderfully became her, on her head, entered
-the balcony with an eager, excited appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Mrs. Pullen! have you seen the Baroness?” she
-exclaimed. “We are going to bathe this morning. Aren’t
-you coming down to the sands?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! Miss Brandt, not to-day. I am unhappy about
-my dear baby! I am sure you will be sorry to hear that
-she has been quite ill all night—so restless and feverish!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! she’ll be all right directly her teeth come
-through!” replied Harriet indifferently, as her eyes
-scanned the scene before them. “There’s the Baroness!
-She’s beckoning to me! Good-bye!” and without a word<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-of sympathy or comfort, she rushed away to join her
-friends.</p>
-
-<p>“Like the way of the world!” thought Margaret, as
-she watched the girl skimming over the sands, “but
-somehow—I didn’t think she would be so heartless!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Leyton and her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancé</i> had strolled off after
-breakfast to take a walk, and Mrs. Pullen went back to
-her own room, and sat down quietly to needlework.
-She was becoming very anxious for Doctor Phillips’ arrival;
-had even written to England to ask him to hurry
-it if possible—for her infant, though not positively ill,
-rejected her food so often that she was palpably thinner
-and weaker.</p>
-
-<p>After she had sat there for some time, she took up
-her field glasses, to survey the bathers on the beach.
-She had often done so before, when confined to the
-hotel—it afforded her amusement to watch their faces
-and antics. On the present occasion, she had no difficulty
-in distinguishing the form of the Baroness Gobelli,
-looking enormous as, clad in a most conspicuous bathing
-costume, she waddled from her machine into the water,
-loudly calling attention to her appearance, from all assembled
-on the sands, as she went. The Baron, looking
-little less comical, advanced to conduct his spouse
-down to the water, whilst after them flew a slight boyish
-figure in yellow, with a mane of dark hair hanging down
-her back, which Margaret immediately recognised as
-that of Harriet Brandt.</p>
-
-<p>She was dancing about in the shallow water, shrieking
-whenever she made a false step, and clinging hold
-of the Baron’s hand, when Margaret saw another gentleman
-come up to them, and join in the ring. She turned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
-the glasses upon him and saw to her amazement that it
-was her brother-in-law. Her first feeling was that of
-annoyance. There was nothing extraordinary or improper,
-in his joining the Baroness’s party—men and
-women bathed promiscuously in Heyst, and no one
-thought anything of it. But that Ralph should voluntarily
-mix himself up with the Gobellis, after Elinor’s particular
-request that he should keep aloof from them, was a
-much more serious matter. And by the way, that reminded
-her, where was Elinor the while? Margaret
-could not discern her anywhere upon the sands, and
-wondered if she had also been persuaded to bathe. She
-watched Captain Pullen, evidently trying to induce Miss
-Brandt to venture further into the water, holding out
-both hands for her protection,—she also saw her yield
-to his persuasion, and leaving go of her hold on the
-Herr Baron, trust herself entirely to the stranger’s care.
-Mrs. Pullen turned from the window with a sigh. She
-hoped there were not going to be any “ructions” between
-Ralph and Elinor—but she would not have liked
-her to see him at that moment. She bestowed a silent
-benediction, “not loud but deep” on the foreign fashion
-of promiscuous bathing, and walked across the corridor
-to her friend’s room, to see if she had returned to the
-Hotel. To her surprise, she found Miss Leyton dismantled
-of her walking attire, soberly seated at her table,
-writing letters.</p>
-
-<p>“Why! Elinor,” she said, “I thought you were out
-with Ralph!”</p>
-
-<p>The young lady was quite composed.</p>
-
-<p>“So I was,” she answered, “until half an hour ago!
-But as he then expressed his determination to bathe, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
-left him to his own devices and came back to write my
-letters.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would he not have preferred your waiting on the
-sands till he could join you again?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not ask him! I should think he would hardly
-care for me to watch him whilst bathing, and I am sure
-I should not consent to do so!”</p>
-
-<p>“But everybody does it here, Elinor, and if you did
-not care to go down to the beach, you might have waited
-for him on the Digue.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Margaret, I am not in the habit of dancing
-attendance upon men. It is their business to come after
-me! If Ralph is eager for another walk after his dip,
-he can easily call for me here!”</p>
-
-<p>“True! and he can as easily go for his walk with
-any stray acquaintance he may pick up on the sands!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! if he should prefer it, he is welcome to do so,”
-replied Elinor, resuming her scribbling.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Elinor, I don’t think you quite understand
-Ralph! He has been terribly spoilt, you know, and
-when men have been accustomed to attention they will
-take it wherever they can get it! He has come over
-here expressly to be with you, so I think you should
-give him every minute of your time. Men are fickle
-creatures, my dear! It will take some time yet to despoil
-them of the idea that women were made for their
-convenience.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid the man is not born yet for whose
-convenience I was made!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! you know the old saying: ‘Most women can
-catch a man, but it takes a clever woman to keep him.’
-I don’t mean to insinuate that you are in any danger of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
-losing Ralph, but I think he’s quite worth keeping, and,
-I believe, you think so too!”</p>
-
-<p>“And I mean to keep him!” replied Miss Leyton, as
-she went on writing.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret did not venture to give her any further
-hints, but returned to her own room, and took another
-look through her spyglass.</p>
-
-<p>The bathers in whom she was interested had returned
-to their machines by this time, and presently
-emerged, “clothed and in their right minds,” Miss Brandt
-looking more attractive than before, with her long hair
-hanging down her back to dry. And then, that occurred
-which she had been anticipating. Captain Pullen, having
-taken a survey of the beach, and seeing none of his
-own party there, climbed with Harriet Brandt to where
-they were high and dry above the tide, and threw himself
-down on the hot, loose sand by her side, whilst the
-Baron and Baroness with a laughing injunction to the
-two young people, to take care of themselves, toiled up
-to the Digue and walked off in another direction.</p>
-
-<p>When they all met at <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">déjeuner</i>, she attacked her
-brother-in-law on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you been bathing all this while?” she said to
-him, “you must have stayed very long in the water!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! dear no!” he replied, “I wasn’t in above a
-quarter of an hour!”</p>
-
-<p>“And what have you been doing since?”</p>
-
-<p>“Strolling about, looking for you and Elinor!” said
-Captain Pullen. “Why the dickens didn’t you come out
-this lovely morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“I could not leave baby!” cried Margaret shortly.</p>
-
-<p>“And I was writing,” chimed in Elinor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Very well, ladies, if you prefer your own company
-to mine, of course I have nothing to say against it! But
-I suppose you are not going to shut yourselves up this
-afternoon!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no. It is a public duty to attend the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bataille
-de Fleurs</i>. Have you bought any confetti, Ralph?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have! Miss Brandt was good enough to show
-me where to get them, and we are well provided. There
-is to be a race between lady jockeys at the end of the
-Digue too, I perceive!”</p>
-
-<p>“What, with horses?”</p>
-
-<p>“I conclude so. I see they have railed in a portion
-of ground for the purpose,” replied Captain Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ow could they race without ’orses?” called out the
-Baroness.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt did not join in the conversation, but
-she was gazing all the while at Ralph Pullen—not
-furtively as she had done the day before, but openly,
-and unabashedly, as though she held a proprietary right
-in him. Margaret noticed her manner at once and interpreted
-it aright, but Miss Leyton, true to her principles,
-never raised her eyes in her direction and ignored everything
-that came from that side of the table.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Pullen was annoyed; she knew how angry Elinor
-would be if she intercepted any telegraphic communication
-between her lover and Miss Brandt; and she rose
-from the table as soon as possible, in order to avert
-such a catastrophe. She had never considered her
-brother-in-law a very warm wooer, and she fancied that
-his manner towards Miss Leyton was more indifferent
-than usual. She took one turn with them along the
-Digue to admire the flower-bedecked villas, which were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
-in full beauty, and then returned to her nursery, glad of
-an excuse to leave them together, and give Elinor a
-chance of becoming more cordial and affectionate to
-Ralph, than she had yet appeared to be. The lovers
-had not been alone long, however, before they were
-waylaid, to the intense disgust of Elinor, by Harriet
-Brandt and her friend, Olga Brimont.</p>
-
-<p>Still further to her annoyance, Captain Pullen seemed
-almost to welcome the impertinent interference of the
-two girls, who could scarcely have had the audacity to
-join their company, unless he had invited them to do so.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">charrettes</i> are just about to start!” exclaimed
-Harriet. “O! they are lovely, and such dear little children!
-I am so glad that the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bataille de Fleurs</i> takes place to-day,
-because my friend’s brother, Alfred Brimont, is
-coming to take her to Brussels the day after to-morrow!”</p>
-
-<p>“Brussels is a jolly place. Mademoiselle Brimont
-will enjoy herself there,” said Ralph. “There are theatres,
-and balls and picture-galleries, and every pleasure that
-a young lady’s heart can desire!”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you been to Brussels?” asked Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! when I was a nasty little boy in jacket and
-trousers. I was placed at Mr. Jackson’s English school
-there, in order that I might learn French, but I’m afraid
-that was the last thing I acquired. The Jackson boys
-were known all over the town for the greatest nuisances
-in it!”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you do?”</p>
-
-<p>“What did we <em>not</em> do? We tore up and down the
-rue Montagne de la Cour at all hours of the day, shouting
-and screaming and getting into scrapes. We ran
-up bills at the shops which we had no money to pay—we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-appeared at every place of amusement—and we made
-love to all the school-girls, till we had become a terror
-to the school-mistresses.”</p>
-
-<p>“What naughty boys!” remarked Miss Brandt, with
-a side glance at Miss Leyton. She did not like to say
-all she thought before this very stiff and proper young
-English lady. “But Captain Pullen,” she continued,
-“where are the confetti? Have you forgotten them?
-Shall I go and buy some more?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! my pockets are stuffed with them,” he
-said, producing two bags, of which he handed Harriet
-one. Her thanks were conveyed by throwing a large
-handful of tiny pieces of blue and white and pink paper
-(which do duty for the more dangerous chalk sugar-plums)
-at him and which covered his tweed suit and
-sprinkled his fair hair and moustaches. He returned
-the compliment by flying after her retreating figure, and
-liberally showering confetti upon her.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Ralph! I do hope you are not going to engage
-in this horse-play,” exclaimed Elinor Leyton, “because
-if so I would rather return to the Hotel. Surely, we
-may leave such vulgarities to the common people, and—Miss
-Harriet Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“What nonsense!” he replied. “It’s evident you’ve
-never been in Rome during the Carnival! Why, everyone
-does it! It’s the national custom. If you imagine
-I’m going to stand by, like a British tourist and stare at
-everything, without joining in the fun, you’re very much
-mistaken!”</p>
-
-<p>“But is it fun?” questioned Miss Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>“To me it is! Here goes!” he cried, as he threw<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
-a handful of paper into the face of a passing stranger,
-who gave him as good as she had got, in return.</p>
-
-<p>“I call it low—positively vulgar,” said Miss Leyton,
-“to behave so familiarly with people one has never seen
-before—of whose antecedents one knows nothing! I
-should be very much surprised if the mob behaved in
-such a manner towards me. Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>The exclamation was induced by the action of some
-young <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">épicier</i>, or hotel <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">garçon</i>, who threw a mass of confetti
-into her face with such violence as almost for the
-moment to blind her.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! ha! ha!” roared Ralph Pullen with his healthy
-British lungs, as he saw her outraged feelings depicted
-in her countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you’d get it before long!” he said, as she
-attempted to brush the offending paper off her mantle.</p>
-
-<p>“It has not altered my opinion of the indecency of
-the custom!” she replied.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind!” he returned soothingly. “Here come
-the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">charrettes</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>They were really a charming sight. On one cart
-was drawn a boat, with little children dressed as fishermen
-and fisherwomen—another represented a harvest-field,
-with the tiny haymakers and reapers—whilst a third
-was piled with wool to represent snow, on the top of
-which were seated three little girls attired as Esquimaux.
-The mail-carts, and perambulators belonging to
-the visitors to Heyst were also well represented, and
-beautifully trimmed with flowers. The first prize was
-embowered in lilies and white roses, whilst its tiny inmate
-was seated in state as the Goddess Flora, with a
-wreath twined in her golden curls. The second was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>
-taken by a gallant Neapolitan fisherman of about four
-years old, who wheeled a mail cart of pink roses, in
-which sat his little sisters, dressed as angels with large
-white wings. The third was a wheel-barrow hidden in
-moss and narcissi, on which reposed a Sleeping Beauty
-robed in white tissue, with a coronal of forget-me-nots.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt fell into ecstasies over everything she
-saw. When pleased and surprised, she expressed herself
-more like a child than a young woman, and became
-extravagant and ungovernable. She tried to kiss each
-baby that took part in the procession, and thrust coins
-into their chubby hands to buy bonbons and confetti
-with. Captain Pullen thought her conduct most natural
-and unaffected; but Miss Leyton insisted that it was all
-put on for effect. Olga Brimont tried to put in a good
-word for her friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Harriet is very fond of children,” she said, “but
-she has never seen any—there were no children at the
-Convent under ten years of age, so she does not know
-how to make enough of them when she meets them.
-She wants to kiss every one. Sometimes, I tell her, I
-think she would like to eat them. But she only means
-to be kind!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure of that!” said Captain Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“But she should be told,” interposed Elinor, “that
-it is not the custom in civilised countries for strangers
-to kiss every child they meet, any more than it is to
-speak before being introduced, or to bestow their company
-where it is not desired. Miss Brandt has a great
-deal to learn in that respect before she can enter English
-Society!”</p>
-
-<p>As is often the case when a woman becomes unjust<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
-in abusing another, Miss Leyton made Captain Pullen
-say more to cover her discourtesy, than, in other circumstances,
-he would have done.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Brandt,” he said slowly, “is so beautiful, that
-she will have a great deal forgiven her, that would not
-be overlooked in a plainer woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“That may be <em>your</em> opinion, but it is not mine,”
-replied Miss Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>Her tone was so acid, that it sent him flying from
-her side, to battle with his confetti against the tribe of
-Montagues, who fortunately for the peace of all parties,
-joined their forces to theirs, and after some time spent
-on the Digue, they returned, a large party, to the Hotel.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until they had sat down to dinner, that
-they remembered they had never been to see the lady
-jockey race.</p>
-
-<p>“He! he! he!” laughed Madame Gobelli, “but <em>I</em> did,
-and you lost something, I can tell you! We ’ad great
-difficulty to get seats, but when we did, it was worth it,
-wasn’t it, Gustave?”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>You</em> said so, mein tear!” replied the Baron, gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“And you <em>thought</em> so, you old rascal! don’t you tell
-me! <em>I</em> saw your wicked eyes glozing at the gals in their
-breeches and boots! There weren’t any ’orses, after all,
-Captain Pullen, but sixteen gals with different-coloured
-jackets on and top boots and tight white breeches—such
-a sight you never saw! Gustave ’ere did ’ave a treat!
-As for Bobby, when I found we couldn’t get out again,
-because of the crowd, I tied my ’andkerchief over ’is
-eyes, and made him put ’is ’ead in my lap!”</p>
-
-<p>“Dear! dear!” cried Ralph, laughing, “was it as bad
-as that, Madame?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Bad! my dear boy! It was as bad as it could be!
-It’s a mercy you weren’t there, or we shouldn’t ’ave
-seen you ’ome again so soon! There were the sixteen
-gals, with their tight breeches and their short racing
-jackets, and a fat fellow dressed like a huntsman whipping
-’em round and round the ring, as if they were so
-much cattle! You should ’ave seen them ’op, when he
-touched ’em up with the lash of ’is whip. I expect
-they’ve never ’ad such a tingling since the time their
-mothers smacked ’em! There was a little fat one, there!
-I wish you could ’ave seen ’er, when ’e whipped ’er to
-make ’er ’urry! It was comical! She ’opped like a
-kangaroo!”</p>
-
-<p>“And what was the upshot of it all? Who won?”
-asked Ralph.</p>
-
-<p>“O! I don’t know! I got Gustave out as soon as I
-could! I wasn’t going to let ’im spend the whole afternoon,
-watching those gals ’opping. There were ’is eyes
-goggling out of ’is ’ead, and his lips licking each other,
-as if ’e was sucking a sugar-stick—”</p>
-
-<p>“Mein tear! mein tear!” interposed the unfortunate
-Baron.</p>
-
-<p>“You go on with your dinner, Gustave, and leave
-me alone! <em>I</em> saw you! And no more lady jockey races
-do you attend, whilst we’re in this Popish country. They
-ain’t good for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m very thankful that I have been saved such a
-dangerous experiment,” said Captain Pullen, “though if
-I thought that you would tie your handkerchief over my
-eyes, and put my head in your lap, Madame, I should
-feel tempted to try it as soon as dinner is over!”</p>
-
-<p>“Go along with you, you bad boy!” chuckled the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
-Baroness, “there’s something else to see this evening!
-They are going to ’ave a procession of lanterns as soon
-as it’s dark!”</p>
-
-<p>“And it is to stop in front of every hotel,” added
-Harriet, “and the landlords are going to distribute bonbons
-and gâteaux amongst the lantern-bearers.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! we must not miss that on any account!” replied
-Captain Pullen, addressing himself to her in reply.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret and Elinor thought, when the time came,
-that they should be able to see the procession of lanterns
-just as well from the balcony as when mingled
-with the crowd, so they brought their work and books
-down there, and sat with Ralph, drinking coffee and
-conversing of all that had occurred. The Baroness had
-disappeared, and Harriet Brandt had apparently gone
-with her—a fact for which both ladies were inwardly
-thankful.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, as the dusk fell, the procession of lanterns
-could be seen wending its way from the further end of
-the Digue. It was a very pretty and fantastical sight.
-The bearers were not only children—many grown men
-and women took part in it, and the devices into which
-the Chinese lanterns had been formed were quaint and
-clever. Some held a ring around them, as milkmaids
-carry their pails—others held crosses and banners designed
-in tiny lanterns, far above their heads. One,
-which could be seen topping all the rest, was poised
-like a skipping-rope over the bearer’s shoulders, whilst
-the coloured lanterns swung inside it, like a row of bells.
-The members of the procession shouted, or sang, or
-danced, or walked steadily, as suited their temperaments,
-and came along, a merry crowd, up and down the Digue,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-stopping at the various hotels for largesse in the shape
-of cakes and sugar-plums.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph Pullen found his eyes wandering more than
-once in the direction of the Baroness’s sitting-room, to
-see if he could catch a glimpse of her or her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">protégée</i>
-(as Harriet Brandt seemed to be now universally acknowledged
-to be), but he heard no sound, nor caught a
-glimpse of them, and concluded in consequence that
-they had left the hotel again.</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever is carrying that skipping-rope of lanterns
-seems to be in a merry mood,” observed Margaret after
-a while, “for it is jumping up and down in the most
-extravagant manner! She must be dancing! Do look,
-Elinor!”</p>
-
-<p>“I see! I suppose this sort of childish performance
-amuses a childish people, but for my own part, I think
-once of it is quite enough, and am thankful that we are
-not called upon to admire it in England!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I think it is rather interesting,” remarked Margaret,
-“I only wish my dear baby had been well enough
-to enjoy it! How she would have screamed and cooed
-at those bright-coloured lanterns! But when I tried to
-attract her attention to them just now, she only whined
-to be put into her cot again. How thankful I shall be
-to see dear Doctor Phillips to-morrow!”</p>
-
-<p>The procession had reached the front of the Hotel
-by this time, and halted there for refreshment. The
-waiters, Jules and Phillippe and Henri, appeared with
-plates of dessert and cakes and threw them indiscriminately
-amongst the people. One of the foremost
-to jump and scramble to catch the falling sweetmeats
-was the girl who carried the lantern-skipping rope above<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-her head, and in whom Ralph Pullen, to his astonishment,
-recognised Harriet Brandt. There she was, fantastically
-dressed in a white frock, and a broad yellow
-sash, with her magnificent hair loose and wreathed with
-scarlet flowers. She looked amazingly handsome, like
-a Bacchante, and her appearance and air of abandon,
-sent the young man’s blood into his face and up to the
-roots of his fair hair.</p>
-
-<p>“Surely!” exclaimed Margaret, “that is never Miss
-Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! it is,” cried Harriet, “I’m having the most
-awful fun! Why don’t you come too? I’ve danced the
-whole way up the Digue, and it is so warm! I wish the
-waiters would give us something to drink! I’ve eaten so
-many bonbons I feel quite sick!”</p>
-
-<p>“What will you take, Miss Brandt?” asked Captain
-Pullen eagerly, “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">limonade</i> or soda water?”</p>
-
-<p>“A <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">limonade</i>, please! You <em>are</em> good!” she replied,
-as he handed her the tumbler over the balcony balustrades.
-“Come along and dance with me!”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot! I am with my sister and Miss Leyton!”
-he replied.</p>
-
-<p>“O! pray do not let <em>us</em> prevent you,” said Elinor
-in her coldest voice; “Margaret was just going upstairs
-and I am quite ready to accompany her!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Elinor,” whispered Mrs. Pullen with a shake
-of her head, “stay here, and keep Ralph company!”</p>
-
-<p>“But it is nearly ten o’clock,” replied Miss Leyton,
-consulting her watch, “and I have been on my feet all
-day! and feel quite ready for bed. Good-night, Ralph!”
-she continued, offering him her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! if you two are really going to bed, I shall go<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
-too,” said Captain Pullen, rising, “for there will be
-nothing for me to do here after you’re gone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not even to follow the procession?” suggested Miss
-Leyton, with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk nonsense!” he rejoined crossly. “Am I
-the sort of man to go bobbing up and down the Digue
-amongst a parcel of children?”</p>
-
-<p>He shook hands with them both, and walked away
-rather sulkily to his own quarter of the hotel. But he
-did not go to bed. He waited until some fifteen minutes
-had elapsed, and then telling himself that it was impossible
-to sleep at that hour, and that if Elinor chose
-to behave like a bear, it was not his fault, he came
-downstairs again and sauntered out on the sea front.</p>
-
-<p>It was very lonely there at that moment. The procession
-had turned and gone down to the other end
-again, where its lights and banners could be seen, waving
-about in the still summer air.</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t the girl jump about and enjoy herself
-if she chooses,” thought Ralph Pullen. “Elinor makes
-no allowances for condition or age, but would have everyone
-as prim and old-maidish as herself. I declare she
-gets worse each time I see her! A nice sort of wife she
-will make if this kind of thing goes on! But by Jingo!
-if we are ever married, I’ll take her prudery out of her,
-and make her—what? The woman who commences by
-pursing her mouth up at everything, ends by opening it
-wider than anybody else! There’s twice as much harm
-in a prude as in one of these frank open-hearted girls,
-whose eyes tell you what they’re thinking of, the first
-time you see them!”</p>
-
-<p>He had been strolling down the Digue as he pondered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
-thus, and now found himself meeting the procession
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“Come and dance with me,” cried Harriet Brandt,
-who, apparently as fresh as ever, was still waving her
-branch of lanterns to the measure of her steps. He
-took her hand and tried to stop her.</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t you had about enough of this?” he said,
-“I’m sure you must be tired. Here’s a little boy without
-a lantern! Give him yours to hold, and come for
-a little walk with me!”</p>
-
-<p>The touch of his cool hand upon her heated palm,
-seemed to rouse all the animal in Harriet Brandt’s blood.
-Her hand, very slight and lissom, clung to his with a
-force of which he had not thought it capable, and he
-felt it trembling in his clasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Come!” he repeated coaxingly, “you mustn’t dance
-any more or you will overtire yourself! Come with me
-and get cool and rest!”</p>
-
-<p>She threw her branch of lanterns to the boy beside
-her impetuously.</p>
-
-<p>“Here!” she cried, “take them! I don’t want them
-any more! And take me away,” she continued to Ralph,
-but without letting go of his hand. “You are right! I
-want—I want—rest!”</p>
-
-<p>Her slight figure swayed towards him as he led her
-out of the crowd, and across a narrow street, to where
-the road ran behind all the houses and hotels, and was
-dark and empty and void. The din of the voices, and
-the trampling of feet, and the echo of the songs still
-reached them, but they could see nothing—the world
-was on the Digue, and they were in the dusk and quietude
-together—and alone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span></p>
-
-<p>Ralph felt the slight form beside him lean upon his
-shoulder till their faces almost touched. He threw his
-arm about her waist. Her hot breath fanned his cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“Kiss me!” she murmured in a dreamy voice.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Pullen was not slow to accept the invitation
-so confidingly extended. What Englishman would be?
-He turned his face to Harriet Brandt’s, and her full red
-lips met his own, in a long-drawn kiss, that seemed to
-sap his vitality. As he raised his head again, he felt
-faint and sick, but quickly recovering himself, he gave
-her a second kiss more passionate, if possible, than the
-first. Then the following whispered conversation ensued
-between them.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know,” he commenced, with his head close
-to hers, “that you are the very jolliest little girl that I
-have ever met!”</p>
-
-<p>“And you—you are the man I have dreamt of, but
-never seen till now!”</p>
-
-<p>“How is that? Am I so different from the rest of
-my sex?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very—very different! So strong and brave and
-beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>“Dear little girl! And so you really like me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I love you,” said Harriet feverishly, “I loved you
-the first minute we met.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I love you! You’re awfully sweet and pretty,
-you know!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really think so? What would Mrs. Pullen
-say if she heard you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Pullen is not the keeper of my conscience.
-But she must not hear it.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no! nor Miss Leyton either!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Most certainly not Miss Leyton. She is a terrible
-prude! She would be awfully shocked!”</p>
-
-<p>“It must be a secret,—just between you and me!”
-murmured the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Just so! A sweet little secret, all our own, and
-nobody else’s!”</p>
-
-<p>And then the fair head and the dark one came
-again in juxtaposition, and the rest was lost in—Silence!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Doctor Phillips had not been in the Hôtel Lion
-d’Or five minutes before Margaret Pullen took him upstairs
-to see her baby. She was becoming terribly anxious
-about her. They encountered Captain Ralph Pullen on
-the staircase.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo! young man, and what have <em>you</em> been doing
-to yourself?” exclaimed the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>He was certainly looking ill. His face was chalky
-white, and his eyes seemed to have lost their brightness
-and colour.</p>
-
-<p>“Been up racketing late at night?” continued Doctor
-Phillips. “What is Miss Leyton about, not to look after
-you better?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, indeed, Doctor,” replied the young man with
-a smile, “I am sure my sister-in-law will testify to the
-good hours I have kept since here. But I have a headache
-this morning—a rather bad one,” he added, with his
-hand to the nape of his neck.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps this place doesn’t agree with you—it was
-always rather famous for its smells, if I remember aright!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
-However, I am going to see Miss Ethel Pullen now, and
-when I have finished with her, I will look after you!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you, Doctor,” said Ralph laughing, as he
-descended the stairs. “None of your nostrums for me!
-Keep them for the baby!”</p>
-
-<p>“He is not looking well,” observed Doctor Phillips to
-Margaret, as they walked on together.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think he is, now you point it out to me,
-but I have not noticed it before,” replied Margaret. “I
-am sure he has been living quietly enough whilst
-here!”</p>
-
-<p>The infant was lying as she had now done for several
-days past—quite tranquil and free from pain, but inert
-and half asleep. The doctor raised her eyelids and
-examined her eyeballs—felt her pulse and listened to
-her heart—but he did not seem to be satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>“What has this child been having?” he asked abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“Having, Doctor? Why! nothing, of course, but her
-milk, and I have always that from the same cow!”</p>
-
-<p>“No opium—no soothing syrup, nor quackeries of
-any kind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not! You know how often you have
-warned me against anything of the sort!”</p>
-
-<p>“And no one has had the charge of her, except you
-and the nurse here? You can both swear she has never
-been tampered with?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I think so, certainly, yes! Baby has never been
-from under the eye of one or the other of us. A young
-lady resident in the hotel—a Miss Brandt—has often
-nursed her and played with her, but one of us has
-always been there at the time.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A Miss—what did you say?” demanded the doctor,
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“A Miss Brandt—a very good-natured girl, who is
-fond of children!”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well then! I will go at once to the pharmacien’s,
-and get a prescription made up for your baby,
-and I hope that your anxiety may soon be relieved!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! thank you, Doctor, so much!” exclaimed Margaret
-“I knew you would do her good, as soon as you
-saw her!”</p>
-
-<p>But the doctor was not so sure of himself. He
-turned the case over and over in his mind as he walked
-to the chemist’s shop, wondering how such a state of
-exhaustion and collapse could have been brought about.</p>
-
-<p>The baby had her first dose and the doctor had just
-time to wash and change his travelling suit before they
-all met at the dinner-table.</p>
-
-<p>Here they found the party opposite augmented by
-the arrival of Monsieur Alfred Brimont, a young Brussels
-tradesman, who had come over to Heyst to conduct his
-sister home. He was trying to persuade Harriet Brandt
-to accompany Olga and stay a few days with them, but
-the girl—with a long look in the direction of Captain
-Pullen—shook her head determinedly.</p>
-
-<p>“O! you might come, Harriet, just for a few days,”
-argued Olga, “now that the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bataille de Fleurs</i> is over,
-there is nothing left to stay for in Heyst, and Alfred
-says that Brussels is such a beautiful place.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are the theatres, and the Parc, and the
-Quinçonce, and Wauxhall!” said young Brimont, persuasively.
-“Mademoiselle would enjoy herself, I have no
-doubt!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span></p>
-
-<p>But Harriet still negatived the proposal.</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t we make up a party and all go together,”
-suggested the Baroness, “me and the Baron and
-Bobby and ’Arriet? You would like it then, my dear,
-wouldn’t you?” she said to the girl, “and you really
-should see Brussels before we go ’ome! What do you
-say, Gustave? We’d go to the Hôtel de Saxe, and see
-everything! It wouldn’t take us more than a week or
-ten days.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do as you like, mein tear,” acquiesced the Baron.</p>
-
-<p>“And why shouldn’t you come with us, Captain?”
-continued Madame Gobelli to Ralph. “You don’t look
-quite the thing to me! A little change would do you
-good. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy!
-’Ave you been to Brussels?”</p>
-
-<p>“I lived there for years, Madame, and know every
-part of it!” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>“Come and renew your acquaintance then, and take
-me and ’Arriet about!! The Baron isn’t much good
-when it comes to sight-seeing, are you, Gustave? ’E
-likes ’is pipe and ’is slippers too well! But you’re young
-and spry! Well! is it a bargain?”</p>
-
-<p>“I really could not decide in such a hurry,” said
-Ralph, with a glance at Margaret and Elinor, “but we
-might all go on to Brussels perhaps, a little later on.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think you must buoy up the hopes of the
-Baroness and Miss Brandt with that idea,” remarked
-Miss Leyton, coldly, “because I am sure that Mrs. Pullen
-has no intention of doing anything of the sort. If you
-wish to accompany Madame Gobelli’s party, you had
-better make your arrangements without any reference
-to us!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span></p>
-
-<p>“All right! If you prefer it, I will,” he answered in
-the same indifferent tone.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Who</em> is that young lady sitting opposite, with the
-dark eyes?” demanded Doctor Phillips of Mrs. Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“The same I spoke to you of, upstairs, as having
-been kind to baby—Miss Harriet Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew a Brandt once,” he answered. “Has she anything
-to do with the West Indies?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes! she comes from Jamaica! She is an orphan,
-the daughter of Doctor Henry Brandt, and has been
-educated in the Ursuline Convent there! She is a young
-lady with an independent fortune, and considered to be
-quite a catch in Heyst!”</p>
-
-<p>“And you and Miss Leyton are intimate with her?”</p>
-
-<p>“She has attached herself very much to us since
-coming here. She has few friends, poor girl!”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you introduce me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Brandt, my friend, Doctor Phillips, wishes for
-an introduction to you.”</p>
-
-<p>The usual courtesies passed between them, and then
-the doctor said,</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy I knew your father, Miss Brandt, when I
-was quartered in Jamaica with the Thirteenth Lances.
-Did he not live on the top of the Hill, on a plantation
-called Helvetia?”</p>
-
-<p>“That was the name of our place,” replied Harriet,
-“but I left it when I was only eleven. My trustee, Mr.
-Trawler, lives there now!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Trawler the attorney! I have no doubt he
-made as much out of the property as he could squeeze.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean that he cheated me?” asked Harriet,
-naïvely.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span></p>
-
-<p>“God forbid! my dear young lady. But he was a
-great crony of your father’s, and a d—d sharp lawyer,
-and those sort of gentry generally feather their own nest
-pretty well, in payment of their friendship.”</p>
-
-<p>“He can’t do me any harm now,” said Harriet, “for
-I have my property in my own hands!”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite right! quite right! that is, if you’re a business
-woman,” rejoined the doctor. “And are you travelling
-all by yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet was about to answer in the affirmative, when
-the Baroness took the words out of her mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Sir, she ain’t! She came over with her friend,
-Mademoiselle Brimont, and now she’s under my chaperonage.
-She’s a deal too ’andsome, ain’t she? to be travelling
-about the world alone, with her money-bags under
-her arm. My name’s the Baroness Gobelli,—this is my
-’usband, Baron Gustave Gobelli, and this is my little boy,
-Bobby Bates—by my first ’usband, you’ll understand—and
-when you return to London, if you like to come
-and see Miss Brandt at our ’ouse—the Red ’Ouse, ’Olloway,
-we shall be very pleased to see you!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure, Madame, you are infinitely kind,” replied
-Doctor Phillips gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all! You’ll meet no end of swells there,
-Prince Loris of Taxelmein, and Prince Adalbert of Waxsquiemer,
-and ’eaps of others. But all the same we’re
-in trade, the Baron and I—and we’re not ashamed of
-it either. We make boots and shoes! Our firm is Fantaisie
-et Cie, of Oxford Street, and though I say it, you
-won’t find better boots and shoes in all London than
-ours. No brown paper soles, and rotten uppers! Not a
-bit of it! It’s all genuine stuff with us. You can take<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>
-any boot out of the shop and rip it to pieces, and
-prove what I say! The best materials, and the best
-workmen, that’s our principle, and it answers. We can’t
-make ’em fast enough!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no doubt of it,” again gravely responded the
-old doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you might send some of your patients to us,
-Doctor, and we’ll pay back by recommending you to our
-friends. Are you a Gout man? Prince Adalbert ’as the
-gout awfully! I’ve rubbed ’is feet with Elliman’s Embrocation,
-by the hour together, but nothing gives ’im relief!
-Now if you could cure ’im your fortune would be
-made! ’E says it’s all the English climate, but <em>I</em> say
-it’s over-eating, and ’e’d attend more to a medical man,
-if ’e told ’im to diet, than ’e will to me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Doubtless, doubtless!” said the Doctor, in a dreamy
-manner. He seemed to be lost in a reverie, and Margaret
-had to touch his arm to remind him that the meal
-was concluded.</p>
-
-<p>She wanted him to join the others in a promenade
-and see the beauties of Heyst, but he was strangely
-eager in declining it.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! let the youngsters go and enjoy themselves,
-but I want to speak to you, <em>alone</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear doctor, you frighten me! Nothing about
-baby, I hope!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all! Don’t be foolish! But I want to talk
-to you where we cannot be overheard.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think we had better wait till the rest have dispersed
-then, and go down upon the sands. It is almost
-impossible to be private in a hotel like this!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span></p>
-
-<p>“All right! Get your hat and we will stroll off together.”</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they were out of earshot, he commenced
-abruptly,</p>
-
-<p>“It is about that Miss Brandt! You seem pretty intimate
-with her! You must stop it at once. You must
-have nothing more to do with her.”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret’s eyes opened wide with distress.</p>
-
-<p>“But, Doctor Phillips, for what reason? I don’t see
-how we could give her up now, unless we leave the
-place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then leave the place! You mustn’t know her, neither
-must Miss Leyton. She comes of a terrible parentage.
-No good can ever ensue of association with her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must tell me more than this, Doctor, if you
-wish me to follow your advice!”</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell you all I know myself! Some twelve or
-thirteen years ago I was quartered in medical charge of
-the Thirteenth Lances, and stationed in Jamaica, where
-I knew of, rather than knew, the father of this girl,
-Henry Brandt. You called him a doctor—he was not
-worthy of the name. He was a scientist perhaps—a
-murderer certainly!”</p>
-
-<p>“How horrible! Do you really mean it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to me! This man Brandt matriculated in
-the Swiss hospitals, whence he was expelled for having
-caused the death of more than one patient by trying his
-scientific experiments upon them. The Swiss laboratories
-are renowned for being the foremost in Vivisection
-and other branches of science that gratify the
-curiosity and harden the heart of man more than they
-confer any lasting benefit on humanity. Even there,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
-Henry Brandt’s barbarity was considered to render him
-unfit for association with civilised practitioners, and he
-was expelled with ignominy. Having a private fortune
-he settled in Jamaica, and set up his laboratory there,
-and I would not shock your ears by detailing one hundredth
-part of the atrocities that were said to take place
-under his supervision, and in company of this man
-Trawler, whom the girl calls her trustee, and who is one
-of the greatest brutes unhung.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you not a little prejudiced, dear Doctor?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all! If when you have heard all, you still
-say so, you are not the woman I have taken you for.
-Brandt did not confine his scientific investigations to the
-poor dumb creation. He was known to have decoyed
-natives into his Pandemonium, who were never heard of
-again, which raised, at last, the public feeling so much
-against him, that I am glad to say that his negroes revolted,
-and after having murdered him with appropriate
-atrocity, set fire to his house and burned it and all his
-property to the ground. Don’t look so shocked! I repeat
-that I am <em>glad</em> to say it, for he richly deserved his
-fate, and no torture could be too severe for one who spent
-his worthless life in torturing God’s helpless animals!”</p>
-
-<p>“And his wife—” commenced Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>“He had no wife! He was never married!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never married! But this girl Harriet Brandt—”</p>
-
-<p>“Has no more right to the name than you have!
-Henry Brandt was not the man to regard the laws, either
-of God or man. There was no reason why he should
-not have married—for that very cause, I suppose, he
-preferred to live in concubinage.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Poor Harriet! Poor child! And her mother, did
-you know her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t speak to me of her mother. She was not a
-woman, she was a fiend, a fitting match for Henry Brandt!
-To my mind she was a revolting creature. A fat, flabby
-half-caste, who hardly ever moved out of her chair but
-sat eating all day long, until the power to move had
-almost left her! I can see her now, with her sensual
-mouth, her greedy eyes, her low forehead and half-formed
-brain, and her lust for blood. It was said that
-the only thing which made her laugh, was to watch the
-dying agonies of the poor creatures her brutal protector
-slaughtered. But she thirsted for blood, she loved the
-sight and smell of it, she would taste it on the tip of
-her finger when it came in her way. Her servants had
-some story amongst themselves to account for this lust.
-They declared that when her slave mother was pregnant
-with her, she was bitten by a Vampire bat, which are
-formidable creatures in the West Indies, and are said
-to fan their victims to sleep with their enormous wings,
-whilst they suck their blood. Anyway the slave woman
-did not survive her delivery, and her fellows prophecied
-that the child would grow up to be a murderess. Which
-doubtless she was in heart, if not in deed!”</p>
-
-<p>“What an awful description! And what became of
-her?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was killed at the same time as Brandt, indeed
-the natives would have killed her in preference to him,
-had they been obliged to choose, for they attributed all
-the atrocities that went on in the laboratory to her influence.
-They said she was ‘Obeah’ which means diabolical
-witchcraft in their language. And doubtless their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
-unfortunate child would have been slaughtered also, had
-not the overseer of the plantation carried her off to his
-cabin, and afterwards, when the disturbance was quelled,
-to the Convent, where, you say, she has been educated.”</p>
-
-<p>“But terrible as all this is, dear Doctor, it is not the
-poor girl’s fault. Why should we give up her acquaintance
-for that?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Margaret, are you so ignorant as not to
-see that a child born under such conditions cannot turn
-out well? The bastard of a man like Henry Brandt, cruel,
-dastardly, Godless, and a woman like her terrible mother,
-a sensual, self-loving, crafty and bloodthirsty half-caste—what
-do you expect their daughter to become? She
-may seem harmless enough at present, so does the tiger
-cub as it suckles its dam, but that which is bred in
-her will come out sooner or later, and curse those with
-whom she may be associated. I beg and pray of you,
-Margaret, not to let that girl come near you, or your
-child, any more. There is a curse upon her, and it will
-affect all within her influence!”</p>
-
-<p>“You have made me feel very uncomfortable, Doctor,”
-replied Mrs. Pullen. “Of course if I had known all this
-previously, I would not have cultivated Miss Brandt’s
-acquaintance, and now I shall take your advice and
-drop her as soon as possible! There will be no difficulty
-with Miss Leyton, for she has had a strange dislike to
-the girl ever since we met, but she has certainly been
-very kind to my baby—”</p>
-
-<p>“For Heaven’s sake don’t let her come near your
-baby any more!” cried Doctor Phillips, quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly I will not, and perhaps it would be as
-well if we moved on to Ostende or Blankenburghe, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
-we have sometimes talked of doing. It would sever the
-acquaintance in the most effectual way!”</p>
-
-<p>“By all means do so, particularly if the young lady
-does not go to Brussels, as that stout party was proposing
-at dinner time. What an extraordinary person
-she appears to be! Quite a character!”</p>
-
-<p>“That is just what she is! But, Doctor, there is
-another thing I should like to speak to you about, concerning
-Miss Brandt, and I am sure I may trust you to
-receive it in the strictest confidence. It is regarding my
-brother-in-law, Ralph Pullen. I am rather afraid, from
-one or two things I have observed, that he likes Miss
-Brandt—O! I don’t mean anything particular, for (as
-you know) he is engaged to be married to Elinor Leyton
-and I don’t suspect him of wronging her, only—young
-men are rather headstrong you know and fond of their
-own way, and perhaps if you were to speak to Ralph—”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me plainly, has he been carrying on with this
-girl?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the sense you would take it, Doctor, but
-he affects her company and that of the Gobellis a good
-deal. Miss Brandt sings beautifully, and Ralph loves
-music, but his action annoys Elinor, I can see that, and
-since you think we should break off the intimacy——”</p>
-
-<p>“I consider it most imperatively necessary, for many
-reasons, and especially in the case of a susceptible
-young man like Captain Pullen. She has money, you
-say—”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifteen hundred a year, so I am told!”</p>
-
-<p>“And Miss Leyton has nothing, and Ralph only his
-pay! O! yes! you are quite right, such an acquaintanceship
-is dangerous for him. The sense of honour is not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
-so strong now, as it was when I was a boy, and gold
-is a powerful bait with the rising generation. I will
-take an early opportunity of talking to Captain Pullen
-on the subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will not wound his feelings, Doctor, nor betray
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Trust me for doing neither! I shall speak from
-my own experience, as I have done to you. If he will
-not take my advice, you must get someone with more
-influence to caution him about it. I hardly know how
-to make my meaning clear to you, Margaret, but Miss
-Brandt is a <em>dangerous</em> acquaintance, for all of you. We
-medical men know the consequences of heredity, better
-than outsiders can do. A woman born in such circumstances—bred
-of sensuality, cruelty, and heartlessness—cannot
-in the order of things, be modest, kind, or sympathetic.
-And she probably carries unknown dangers
-in her train. Whatever her fascinations or her position
-may be, I beg of you to drop her at once and for ever!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I will, but it seems hard upon her! She
-has seemed to crave so for affection and companionship.”</p>
-
-<p>“As her mother craved for food and blood; as her
-father craved for inflicting needless agony on innocent
-creatures, and sneered meanwhile at their sufferings! I
-am afraid I should have little faith in Miss Brandt craving
-for anything, except the gratification of her own
-senses!”</p>
-
-<p>They were seated on the lower step of the wooden
-flight that led from the Digue to the sands, so that
-whilst they could see what went on above them, they
-were concealed from view themselves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span></p>
-
-<p>Just then, Harriet Brandt’s beautiful voice, accompanied
-by the silvery strains of the mandoline, was heard
-to warble Gounod’s “Marguerite” from the open window
-of the Baroness’s sitting-room. Margaret glanced up.
-The apartment was brilliantly lighted—on the table
-were bottles of wine and spirits, with cakes and fruit,
-and Madame Gobelli’s bulky form might be seen leaning
-over the dishes. She had assembled quite a little
-party there that night. The two Brimonts were present,
-and Captain Pullen’s tall figure was distinctly visible
-under the lamplight. Harriet was seated on the sofa,
-and her full voice filled the atmosphere with melody.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something like a voice!” remarked the old
-doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“That is the very girl we have been talking of!” replied
-Mrs. Pullen. “I told you she had a lovely voice,
-and was an accomplished musician.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that so?” said Doctor Phillips, “then she is still
-more dangerous than I imagined her to be! Those
-tones would be enough to drag any man down to perdition,
-especially if accompanied by such a nature as I
-cannot but believe she must have inherited from her
-progenitors!”</p>
-
-<p>“And see, Doctor, there is Ralph,” continued Margaret,
-pointing out her brother-in-law! “I left him with
-Miss Leyton. He must have got rid of her by some
-means and crept up to the Gobellis. He cannot go for
-<em>them</em>. He is so refined, so fastidious with regard to
-people in general, that a woman like the Baroness must
-grate upon his feelings every time she opens her mouth,
-and the Baron never opens his at all. He can only
-frequent their company for the sake of Harriet Brandt!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
-I have seen it for some time past and it has made me
-very uneasy.”</p>
-
-<p>“He shall know everything about her to-morrow, and
-then if he will not hear reason—” Doctor Phillips
-shrugged his shoulders and said no more.</p>
-
-<p>“But surely,” said his companion, “you do not think
-for a moment that Ralph could ever seriously contemplate
-breaking his engagement with Elinor Leyton for
-the sake of this girl! O! how angry Arthur would be
-if he suspected his brother could be guilty of such a
-thing—<em>he</em>, who considers that a man’s word should be
-his bond!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is impossible to say, Margaret—I should not like
-to give an opinion on the subject. When young men
-are led away by their passions, they lose sight of everything
-else—and if this girl is anything like her mother,
-she must be an epitome of lust!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! you will speak to Ralph as soon as ever you
-can,” cried Margaret, in a tone of distress. “You will
-put the matter as strongly before him as possible, will
-you not?”</p>
-
-<p>“You may depend on my doing all I can, Margaret,
-but as there seems no likelihood of my being able to
-interview the young gentleman to-night, suppose you and
-I go to bed! I feel rather tired after my passage over,
-and you must want to go back to your baby!”</p>
-
-<p>“Doctor,” said Margaret, in a timid voice, as they
-ascended the hotel staircase together, “you don’t think
-baby <em>very</em> ill, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think she requires a great deal of care, Margaret!”</p>
-
-<p>“But she has always had that!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t doubt it, but I can’t deny that there are
-symptoms about her case that I do not understand.
-She seems to have had all her strength drawn out of
-her. She is in the condition of a child who has been
-exercised and excited and hurried from place to place,
-far beyond what she is able to bear. But it may arise
-from internal causes. I shall be better able to judge
-to-morrow when my medicine has had its effect. Good-night,
-my dear, and don’t worry. Please God, we will
-have the little one all right again in a couple of days.”</p>
-
-<p>But he only said the words out of compassion. In
-his own opinion, the infant was dying.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Harriet having finished her songs, was
-leaning out of the window with Ralph Pullen by her
-side. She wore an open sleeve and as he placed his
-hand upon her bare arm, the girl thrilled from head to
-foot.</p>
-
-<p>“And so you are determined <em>not</em> to go to Brussels,”
-he whispered in her ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I go? You will not be there! The
-Baroness wants to stay for a week! What would become
-of me all that time, moping after you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure that you <em>would</em> mope? Monsieur
-Brimont is a nice young man, and seems quite ready to
-throw himself at your feet! Would he not do as well,
-<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro tem</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet’s only answer was to cast her large eyes upwards
-to meet his own.</p>
-
-<p>“Does that mean, ‘No’?” continued Captain Pullen.
-“Then how would it do, if <em>I</em> joined you there, after a
-couple of days? Would the Baroness be complaisant,
-do you think, and a little short-sighted, and let us go<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
-about together, and show each other the sights of the
-town?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I’m sure she would!” cried Harriet, all the
-blood in her body flying into her face, “she is so very
-kind to me! Madame Gobelli!” she continued, turning
-from the window to the light, “Captain Pullen says that
-if you will allow him to show us the lions of Brussels,
-he will come and join us there in a couple of days—”</p>
-
-<p>“If I find I can manage it!” interposed Ralph, cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Manage it! Why, of course you can manage it,”
-said the Baroness. “What’s to ’inder a young man like
-you doing as ’e chooses? You’re not tied to your sister’s
-apron-string, are you? Now mind! we shall ’old you
-to it, for I believe it’s the only thing that will make
-’Arriet come, and I think a week in Brussels will do us
-all good! You’re not looking well yourself, you know,
-Captain Pullen! You’re as white as ashes this evening,
-and if I didn’t know you were such a good boy, I should
-say you’d been dissipating a bit lately! He! he! he!”</p>
-
-<p>“The only dissipating I have indulged in, is basking
-in the sunshine of your eyes, Madame!” replied Ralph
-gallantly.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a good ’un!” retorted the Baroness, “it is
-more likely you’ve been looking too much in the eyes
-of my little friend ’ere. You’re a couple of foxes, that’s
-what you are, and I expect it would take all my time
-to be looking after you both! And so I suppose it’s
-settled, Miss ’Arriet, and you’ll come with us to Brussels
-after all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Madame, if you’ll take charge of me!” said
-Miss Brandt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We’ll do that for a couple of days, and then we’ll
-give over charge. Are we to engage a room for you,
-Captain, at the Hôtel de Saxe?”</p>
-
-<p>“I had better see after that myself, Madame, as the
-date of my coming is uncertain,” replied Ralph.</p>
-
-<p>“But you <em>will</em> come!” whispered Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“Need you ask? Would I not run over the whole
-world, only to find myself by your side? Haven’t you
-taken the taste out of everything else for me, Harriet?”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Doctor Phillips was a man of sixty, and a bachelor.
-He had never made any home ties for himself, and was
-therefore more interested in Margaret Pullen (whose
-father had been one of his dearest friends) than he might
-otherwise have been. He feared that a heavy trial lay
-before her and he was unwilling to see it aggravated by
-any misconduct on the part of her brother-in-law. He
-could see that the young man was (to say the least of
-it) not behaving fairly towards his <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancée</i>, Elinor Leyton,
-and he was determined to open his eyes to the true
-state of affairs with regard to Harriet Brandt. He spent
-a sleepless night, his last visit to Margaret’s suffering
-child having strengthened his opinion as to her hopeless
-condition, and he lay awake wondering how he should
-break the news to the poor young mother. He rose
-with the intention of speaking to Ralph without delay,
-but he found it more difficult to get a word with him
-than he had anticipated. The Gobelli party had decided
-to start with the Brimonts that afternoon, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
-Captain Pullen stuck to them the entire morning, ostensibly
-to assist the Baroness in her preparations for departure,
-but in reality, as anyone could see, to linger by
-the side of Miss Brandt. Miss Leyton perceived her
-lover’s defalcation as plainly as the rest, but she was too
-proud to make a hint upon the subject, even to Margaret
-Pullen. She sat alone in the balcony, reading a
-book, and gave no sign of annoyance or discomfiture.
-But a close observer might have seen the trembling of
-her lip when she attempted to speak, and the fixed,
-white look upon her face, which betrayed her inward
-anxiety. It made Margaret’s kind heart ache to see her,
-and Dr. Phillips more indignant with Ralph Pullen than
-before.</p>
-
-<p>The party for Brussels had arranged to travel by
-the three o’clock train, and at the appointed time the
-doctor was ready in the balcony to accompany them to
-the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entrepôt</i>. There were no cabs in Heyst, the station
-being in the town. Luggage was conveyed backwards
-and forwards in hand carts drawn by the porters, and
-travellers invariably walked to their destination. The
-Baroness appeared dressed for her journey, in an amazing
-gown of blue velvet, trimmed with rare Maltese lace,
-with a heavy mantle over it, and a small hat on her
-head, which made her round, flat, unmeaning face, look
-coarser than before. She used the Herr Baron as a
-walking-stick as usual, whilst Harriet Brandt, in a white
-frock and large hat shading her glowing eyes under a
-scarlet parasol, looked like a tropical bird skimming by
-her side, with Captain Pullen in close attendance, carrying
-a flimsy wrap in case she should require it before
-she reached her journey’s end. The Brimonts, following<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>
-in the rear, were of no account beside their more
-brilliant and important friends.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph Pullen did not look pleased when he saw
-Doctor Phillips join the party.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you also going to the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entrepôt</i>?” he exclaimed,
-“what can you find to interest you there?—a dirty little
-smutty place! I am going just to help the ladies over
-the line, as there is no bridge for crossing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I am bent on the same errand,” replied
-the doctor, “do you give me credit for less gallantry
-than yourself, Pullen?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right, Doctor,” said the Baroness, “and I’ve
-no doubt you’ll be very useful! My Bobby ain’t any
-manner of good, and the Baron ’as so many traps to
-carry that ’e ’asn’t got an arm to spare. I only wish
-you were coming with us! Why don’t you make up
-your mind to come over with Captain Pullen the day
-after to-morrow, and ’ave a little ’oliday?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was not aware that Captain Pullen <em>was</em> going to
-Brussels, madame! I fancy he will have to get Miss
-Leyton’s consent first!”</p>
-
-<p>At the mention of Miss Leyton’s name in connection
-with himself, Ralph Pullen flushed uneasily, and Harriet
-Brandt turned a look of startled enquiry upon the
-speaker.</p>
-
-<p>“O! ’ang Miss Leyton!” retorted the Baroness, graphically,
-“she surely wouldn’t stop Captain Pullen’s fun,
-just because ’e’s staying with ’is sister-in-law! I should
-call that very ’ard. You can’t always tie a young man
-to ’is relations’ apron-strings, Doctor!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not always, madame!” he replied, and dropped the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t let Miss Leyton or Mrs. Pullen keep
-you from me!” whispered Harriet, to her cavalier.</p>
-
-<p>“Never!” he answered emphatically.</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the little station by this time, and
-the porters were calling out vociferously that the train
-was about to start for Brussels, so that in the hurry of
-procuring their tickets, and conveying the ladies and the
-luggage across the cinder-besprinkled line, to where the
-train stood puffing to be off, there was no more time to
-exchange sentimentalities, or excite suspicion. The party
-being safely stowed away in their carriage, Ralph Pullen
-and Doctor Phillips stood on the wooden platform with
-their hats off, bowing their farewells.</p>
-
-<p>“Mind you don’t put off your coming after Thursday!”
-screamed the Baroness to Ralph, as she filled up
-the entire window with her bulky person, “we shall expect
-you by dinner-time! And I shall bespeak a room
-for you, whether you will or no! ’Arriet ’ere will break
-’er ’eart if you don’t turn up, and I don’t want the responsibility
-of ’er committing suicide on my ’ands!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right! all right!” responded Ralph, pretending
-to turn it off as a joke, “None of you shall do that on
-my account, I promise you!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! well! I ’ope you’re going to keep your word,
-or we shall come back to ’Eyst in double quick time.
-Good-bye! Good-bye!” and kissing her fat hand to the
-two gentlemen, the Baroness was whisked out of Heyst.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph looked longingly after the departing line of
-carriages for a minute, and then crossed the line again
-to the road beyond.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Phillips did not say a word till they were
-well clear of the station, and then he commenced,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Of course you’re not in earnest about following
-these people to Brussels.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I not be? I knew Brussels well as a
-lad, and I should enjoy renewing my acquaintance with
-the old town.”</p>
-
-<p>“In proper company perhaps, but you can hardly
-call that party a fit one for you to associate with!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re alluding to the Baron and Baroness being
-in trade. Well! as a rule I confess that I do not care
-to associate intimately with bootmakers and their friends,
-but one does things abroad that one would not dream
-of doing in England. And for all her vulgarity, Madame
-Gobelli is very good-natured and generous, and I
-really don’t see that I lower my dignity by being on
-friendly terms with her whilst here!”</p>
-
-<p>“I was not alluding to Madame Gobelli, though I do
-not think that either she or the Brimonts are fit companions
-for a man who belongs to the Limerick Rangers,
-or is engaged to marry the daughter of Lord Walthamstowe.
-Neither do I admire the spirit which would induce
-you to hobnob with them in Heyst, when you
-would cut them in Bond Street. But as far as I know
-the Baron and his wife are harmless. It is Miss Harriet
-Brandt that I would caution you against!”</p>
-
-<p>A quick resentment appeared on Ralph Pullen’s
-features. His eyes darkened, and an ominous wrinkle
-stood out on his brow.</p>
-
-<p>“And what may you have to say of Miss Brandt?”
-he demanded, coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“A great deal more than you know, or can possibly
-imagine! She is not a fit person for Elinor Leyton to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>
-associate with, and consequently, one whom it is your
-duty to avoid, instead of cultivating.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you exceed <em>your</em> duty, Doctor, in speaking
-to me thus!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry you should think so, Pullen, but your
-anger will not deter me from telling you what is in my
-mind. You must not forget how old a friend I am of
-both sides of your family. Your brother Arthur is one
-of my greatest chums, and his wife’s father was, without
-exception, my dearest friend—added to this, I am on
-intimate terms with the Walthamstowes. Knowing what
-I do, therefore, I should hold myself criminal if I left
-you in ignorance of the truth concerning this young
-woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you alluding, may I ask, to Miss Brandt?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am alluding to the girl who calls herself by that
-name, but who is in reality only the bastard daughter of
-Henry Brandt, one of the most infamous men whom God
-ever permitted to desecrate this earth, and his half-caste
-mistress.”</p>
-
-<p>“Be careful what you say, Doctor Phillips!” said
-Ralph Pullen, with ill-suppressed wrath gleaming in his
-blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no need to be, my dear fellow, I can
-verify everything I say, and I fear no man’s resentment.
-I was stationed in Jamaica with my regiment, some fifteen
-years ago, when this girl was a child of six years
-old, running half naked about her father’s plantation,
-uncared for by either parent, and associating solely with
-the negro servants. Brandt was a brute—the perpetrator
-of such atrocities in vivisection and other scientific
-experiments, that he was finally slaughtered on his own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>
-plantation by his servants, and everyone said it served
-him right. The mother was the most awful woman I
-have ever seen, and my experience of the sex in back
-slums and alleys has not been small. She was the
-daughter of a certain Judge Carey of Barbadoes by one
-of his slave girls, and Brandt took her as his mistress
-before she was fourteen. At thirty, when I saw her, she
-was a revolting spectacle. Gluttonous and obese—her
-large eyes rolling and her sensual lips protruding as if
-she were always licking them in anticipation of her prey.
-She was said to be ‘Obeah’ too by the natives and they
-ascribed all the deaths and diseases that took place on
-the plantation, to her malign influence. Consequently,
-when they got her in their clutches, I have heard that
-they did not spare her, but killed her in the most torturing
-fashion they could devise.”</p>
-
-<p>“And did the British Government take no notice of
-the massacre?”</p>
-
-<p>“There was an enquiry, of course, but the actual
-perpetrator of the murders could not be traced, and so
-the matter died out. The hatred and suspicion in which
-Brandt had been held for some time, had a great effect
-upon the verdict, for in addition to his terrible experiments
-upon animals—experiments which he performed
-simply for his own gratification and for no use that he
-made of them in treating his fellow creatures—he had
-been known to decoy diseased and old natives into his
-laboratory, after which they were never seen again, and
-it was the digging up of human bones on the plantation,
-which finally roused the negroes to such a pitch of indignation
-that they rose <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en masse</i>, and after murdering
-both Brandt and his abominable mistress, they set fire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
-to the house and burned it to the ground. There is no
-doubt but that, if the overseer of the plantation, an
-African negro named Pete, had not carried off the little
-girl, she would have shared the fate of her parents.
-And who can say if it would not have been as well if
-she had!”</p>
-
-<p>“I really cannot see what right you have to give vent
-to such a sentiment!” exclaimed Captain Pullen. “What
-has this terrible story got to do with Miss Brandt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Everything! ‘When the cat is black, the kitten is
-black too!’ It’s the law of Nature!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe it! Miss Brandt bears no trace in
-feature or character of the parentage you ascribe to her!”</p>
-
-<p>“Does she not? Your assertion only proves your
-ignorance of character, or characteristics. The girl is a
-quadroon, and she shews it distinctly in her long-shaped
-eyes with their blue whites and her wide mouth and
-blood-red lips! Also in her supple figure and apparently
-boneless hands and feet. Of her personal character, I
-have naturally had no opportunity of judging, but I can
-tell you by the way she eats her food, and the way in
-which she uses her eyes, that she has inherited her half-caste
-mother’s greedy and sensual disposition. And in
-ten years’ time she will in all probability have no figure
-at all! She will run to fat. I could tell that also at a
-glance!”</p>
-
-<p>“And have you any more compliments to pay the
-young lady?” enquired Captain Pullen, sarcastically.</p>
-
-<p>“I have this still to say, Pullen—that she is a woman
-whom you must never introduce to your wife, and that
-it is your bounden duty to separate her, as soon as possible,
-from your <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancée</i> and your sister-in-law!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And what if I refuse to interfere in a matter which,
-as far as I can see, concerns no one but Miss Brandt
-herself?”</p>
-
-<p>“In that case, I regret to say that I shall feel it <em>my</em>
-duty, to inform your brother Colonel Pullen and your
-future father-in-law, Lord Walthamstowe of what I have
-told you! Come, my dear boy, be reasonable! This
-girl has attracted you, I suppose! We are all subject
-to a woman’s influence at times, but you must not let it
-go further. You must break it off, and this is an excellent
-opportunity to do so! Your sister’s infant is, I
-fear, seriously ill. Take your party on to Ostende,
-and send the Baroness a polite note to say that you are
-prevented from going to Brussels, and all will be right!
-You will take my advice—will you not?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! I’ll be hanged if I will,” exclaimed the young
-man, “I am not a boy to be ordered here and there, as
-if I were not fit to take care of myself. I’ve pledged
-my word to go to Brussels and to Brussels I shall go.
-If Miss Leyton doesn’t like it, she must do the other
-thing! She does not shew me such a superfluity of
-affection as to prevent the necessity of my seeking for
-sympathy and friendship elsewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry to hear you speak like that, Pullen. It
-does not augur well for the happiness of your married
-life!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have thought more than once lately, that I shall
-not be married at all—that is to Miss Leyton!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! don’t say so. It is only a passing infidelity,
-engendered by the attraction of this other girl.
-Consider what your brother would say, and what Lord
-Walthamstowe would think, if you committed the great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>
-mistake at this late hour, of breaking off your engagement!”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot see why my brother’s opinion, or Lord
-Walthamstowe’s thoughts, should interfere with the
-happiness of my whole life,” rejoined Ralph, sullenly.
-“However, let that pass! The question on the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tapis</i>
-is, my acquaintance with Miss Brandt, which you consider
-should be put a stop to. For what reason? If
-what you bring against her is true, it appears to me that
-she has all the more need of the protection and loyalty
-of her friends. It would be cowardly to desert a girl,
-just because her father and mother happened to be
-brutes. It is not <em>her</em> fault!”</p>
-
-<p>“I quite allow that! Neither is it the fault of a
-madman that his progenitors had lunacy in their blood,
-nor of a consumptive, that his were strumous. All the
-same the facts affect their lives and the lives of those
-with whom they come in contact. It is the curse of
-heredity!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! and if so, how can it concern anyone but
-the poor child herself?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes, it can and it will! And if I am not greatly
-mistaken, Harriet Brandt carries a worse curse with her
-even than that! She possesses the fatal attributes of
-the Vampire that affected her mother’s birth—that
-endued her with the thirst for blood, which characterised
-her life—that will make Harriet draw upon the
-health and strength of all with whom she may be
-intimately associated—that may render her love fatal to
-such as she may cling to! I must tell you, Pullen, that
-I fear we have already proofs of this in the illness of
-your little niece, whom, her mother tells me, was at one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
-time scarcely ever out of Miss Brandt’s arms. I have
-no other means of accounting for her sudden failure of
-strength and vitality. You need not stare at me, as if
-you thought I do not know what I am talking about!
-There are many cases like it in the world. Cases of
-persons who actually feed upon the lives of others, as
-the deadly upas tree sucks the life of its victim, by lulling
-him into a sleep from which he never wakens!”</p>
-
-<p>“Phillips, you must be mad! Do you know that
-you are accusing Miss Brandt of murder—of killing the
-child to whom she never shewed anything but the
-greatest kindness. Why! I have known her carry little
-Ethel about the sands for a whole afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“All the worse for poor little Ethel! I do not say
-she does harm intentionally or even consciously, but
-that the deadly attributes of her bloodthirsty parents
-have descended on her in this respect, I have not a
-shadow of doubt! If you watch that young woman’s
-career through life, you will see that those she apparently
-cares for most, and clings to most, will soonest fade out
-of existence, whilst she continues to live all the stronger
-that her victims die!”</p>
-
-<p>“Rubbish! I don’t believe it!” replied Ralph sturdily.
-“You medical men generally have some crotchet in your
-brains, but this is the most wonderful bee that ever
-buzzed in a bonnet! And all I can say is, that I should
-be quite willing to try the experiment!”</p>
-
-<p>“You <em>have</em> tried it, Pullen, in a mild form, and it
-has had its effect on you! You are not the same fellow
-who came over to Heyst, though by all rules, you should
-be looking better and stronger for the change. And
-Margaret has already complained to me of the strange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>
-effect this girl has had upon her! But you must not
-breathe a suspicion to her concerning the child’s
-illness, or I verily believe she would murder Miss
-Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“Putting all this nonsense aside,” said Ralph, “do
-you consider Margaret’s baby to be seriously ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very seriously. My medicines have not had the
-slightest effect upon her condition, which is inexplicable.
-Her little life is being slowly sapped. She may cease
-to breathe at any moment. But I have not yet had the
-courage to tell your sister the truth!”</p>
-
-<p>“How disappointed poor Arthur will be!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! but his grief will be nothing to the mother’s.
-She is quite devoted to her child!”</p>
-
-<p>By mutual consent, they had dropped the subject of
-Harriet Brandt, and now spoke only of family affairs.
-Ralph was a kind-hearted fellow under all his conceit,
-and felt very grave at the prospect held out in regard
-to his baby niece.</p>
-
-<p>The fulfilment of the prophecy came sooner than
-even Doctor Phillips had anticipated. As they were all
-sitting at dinner that evening, Madame Lamont, her eyes
-over-brimming with tears, rushed unceremoniously into
-the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">salle à manger</i>, calling to Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame! Madame! please come up to your room
-at once! The dear baby is worse!”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret threw one agonised glance at Doctor Phillips
-and rushed from the room, followed by himself and
-Elinor Leyton. The high staircase seemed interminable—more
-than once Margaret’s legs failed under her and
-she thought she should never reach the top. But she
-did so all too soon. On the bed was laid the infant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
-form, limp and lifeless, and Martin the nurse met them
-at the door, bathed in tears.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Ma’am!” she cried, “it happened all of a
-minute! She was lying on my lap, pretty dear, just as
-usual, when she went off in a convulsion and died.”</p>
-
-<p>“Died, died!” echoed Margaret in a bewildered
-voice, “Doctor Phillips! <em>who</em> is it that has died?”</p>
-
-<p>“The baby, Ma’am, the dear baby! She went off
-like a lamb, without a struggle! O! dear mistress, do
-try to bear it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is my baby—<em>dead</em>?” said Margaret in the same
-dazed voice, turning to the doctor who had already
-satisfied himself that the tiny heart and pulse had ceased
-to beat.</p>
-
-<p>“No! my dear child, she is not dead—she is living—with
-God! Try to think of her as quite happy and
-free from this world’s ill.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! but I <em>wanted</em> her so—I <em>wanted</em> her,” exclaimed
-the bereaved mother, as she clasped the senseless form
-in her arms, “O! baby! baby! why did you go, before
-you had seen your father?”</p>
-
-<p>And then she slid, rather than sank, from the bedside,
-in a tumbled heap upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p>“It is better so—it will help her through it,” said
-Doctor Phillips, as he directed the nurse to carry the
-dead child into Elinor Leyton’s room, and placed Margaret
-on her own bed. “You will not object, Miss
-Leyton, I am sure, and you must not leave Mrs. Pullen
-to-night!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I shall not,” replied Elinor; “I have been
-afraid for days past that this would happen, but poor
-Margaret would not take any hints.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span></p>
-
-<p>She spoke sympathetically, but there were no tears in
-her eyes, and she did not caress, nor attempt to console
-her friend. She did all that was required of her, but
-there was no spontaneous suggestion on her part, with
-regard either to the mother, or the dead child, and as
-Doctor Phillips noted her coolness, he did not wonder
-so much at Ralph’s being attracted by the fervour and
-warmth of Harriet Brandt.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as poor Margaret had revived and had her
-cry out, he administered a sleeping draught to her, and
-leaving her in charge of Elinor Leyton, he went downstairs
-again to consult Captain Pullen as to what would
-be the best thing for them to do.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph was very much shocked to hear of the baby’s
-sudden death, and eager to do all in his power for his
-brother’s wife. There was no Protestant cemetery in
-Heyst, and Doctor Phillips proposed that they should at
-once order a little shell, and convey the child’s body
-either to Ostende or England, as Margaret might desire,
-for burial. The sooner she left the place where she had
-lost her child, he said, the better, and his idea was that
-she would wish the body to be taken to Devonshire and
-buried in the quiet country churchyard, where her husband’s
-father and mother were laid to sleep. He left
-Ralph to telegraph to his brother in India and to anyone
-the news might concern in England—also to settle
-all hotel claims and give notice to the Lamonts that they
-would leave on the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>“But supposing Margaret should object,” suggested
-Ralph.</p>
-
-<p>“She will not object!” replied the Doctor, “she might
-if we were not taking the child’s body with us, but as it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>
-is, she will be grateful to be thought, and acted, for. She
-is a true woman, God bless her! I only wish He had
-not seen fit to bring this heavy trial on her head!”</p>
-
-<p>Not a word was exchanged between the two men
-about Harriet Brandt. Ralph, remembering the hint the
-doctor had thrown out respecting her being the ultimate
-cause of the baby’s illness, did not like to bring up her
-name again—felt rather guilty with respect to it, indeed—and
-Doctor Phillips was only too glad to see the
-young man bestirring himself to be useful, and losing
-sight of his own worry in the trouble of his sister-in-law.
-Of course he could not have refused, or even demurred,
-at accompanying his party to England on so mournful
-an errand—and to do him justice, he did not wish it to
-be otherwise. Brussels, and its anticipated pleasures,
-had been driven clean out of his head by the little
-tragedy that had occurred in Heyst, and his attitude
-towards Margaret when they met again, was so quietly
-affectionate and brotherly that he was of infinite comfort
-to her. She quite acquiesced in Doctor Phillips’ decision
-that her child should be buried with her father’s family,
-and the mournful group with the little coffin in their
-midst, set out without delay for Devonshire.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt set off for Brussels in the best of
-spirits. Captain Pullen had pledged himself to follow
-her in a couple of days, and had sketched with a free
-hand the pleasure they would mutually enjoy in each
-other’s company, without the fear of Mrs. Pullen, or Miss
-Leyton, popping on them round the corner. Madame<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
-Gobelli also much flattered her vanity by speaking of
-Ralph as if he were her confessed lover, and prospective
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancé</i>, so that, what with the new scenes she was passing
-through, and her anticipated good fortune, Harriet was
-half delirious with delight, and looked as “handsome as
-paint” in consequence.</p>
-
-<p>Olga Brimont, on the contrary, although quietly
-happy in the prospect of keeping house for her brother,
-did not share in the transports of her Convent companion.
-Alfred Brimont, observed, more than once, that
-she seemed to visibly shrink from Miss Brandt, and took
-an early opportunity of asking her the reason why. But
-all her answer was conveyed in a shrug of the shoulders,
-and a request that he would not leave her at the Hotel
-de Saxe with the rest of the party, but take her home
-at once to the rooms over which she was to preside for
-him. In consequence, the two Brimonts said good-bye
-to the Gobellis and Harriet Brandt at the Brussels station,
-and drove to their apartments in the rue de Vienne,
-after which the others saw no more of them. The
-Baroness declared they were “a good riddance of bad
-rubbish,” and that she had never liked that pasty-faced
-Mademoiselle Brimont, and believed that she was jealous
-of the brilliancy and beauty of her dear ’Arriet. The
-Baroness had conceived one of her violent, and generally
-short-lived, fancies for the girl, and nothing, for the time
-being, was too good for her. She praised her looks and
-her talents in the most extravagant manner, and told
-everyone at the Hotel that the Baron and she had known
-her from infancy—that she was their ward—and that
-they regarded her as the daughter of the house, with
-various other falsehoods that made Harriet open her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>
-dark eyes with amazement, whilst she felt that she could
-not afford to put a sudden end to her friendship with
-Madame Gobelli, by denying them. Brussels is a very
-pretty town, full of modern and ancient interest, and
-there was plenty for them to see and hear during their
-first days there. But Harriet was resolved to defer
-visiting the best sights until Captain Pullen had joined
-them.</p>
-
-<p>She went to the concerts at the Quinçonce and
-Wauxhall, and visited the Zoological Gardens, but she
-would not go to the Musée nor the Académie des Beaux
-Arts, nor the Cathedral of Sainte Gudule, whilst Ralph
-remained in Heyst. Madame Gobelli laughed at her for
-her reticence—called her a sly cat—said she supposed
-they must make up their minds to see nothing of her
-when the handsome Captain came to Brussels—finally
-sending her off in company of Bobby to walk in the
-Parc, or visit the Wiertz Museum. The Baroness was
-not equal to much walking at the best of times, and had
-been suffering from rheumatism lately, so that she and
-the Baron did most of their sight-seeing in a carriage,
-and left the young people to amuse themselves. Bobby
-was very proud to be elected Miss Brandt’s cavalier, and
-get out of the way of his formidable Mamma, who made
-his <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table-d’hôte</i> life a terror to him. He was a well-grown
-lad and not bad-looking. In his blue eyes and
-white teeth, he took after his mother, but his hair was
-fair, and his complexion delicate. He was an anæmic
-young fellow and very delicate, being never without a
-husky cough, which, however, the Baroness seemed to
-consider of no consequence. He hardly ever opened his
-mouth in the presence of his parents, unless it were to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
-remonstrate against the Baroness’s strictures on his appearance,
-or his conduct, but Harriet Brandt found he
-could be communicative enough, when he was alone with
-her. He gave her lengthy descriptions of the Red House,
-and the treasures which it contained—of his Mamma’s
-barouche lined with satin—of the large garden which
-they had at Holloway, with its greenhouses and hot-houses,
-and the numbers of people who came to visit
-them there.</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes!” rejoined Harriet, “the Baroness has told
-me about them, Prince Adalbert and Prince Loris and
-others! She said they often came to the Red House! I
-should like to know them very much!”</p>
-
-<p>The youth looked at her in a mysterious manner.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! they do come, very often, and plenty of other
-people with them; the Earl of Watherhouse and Lord
-Drinkwater, and Lady Mountacue, and more than I know
-the names of. But—but—did Mamma tell you <em>why</em>
-they come?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! not exactly! To see her and the Baron, I
-suppose!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! yes! for that too perhaps,” stammered Bobby.
-“But there is another reason. Mamma is very wonderful,
-you know! She can tell people things they never
-knew before. And she has a room where—but I had
-better not say any more. You might repeat it to her
-and then she would be so angry.” The two were on
-their way to the Wiertz Museum at the time, and Harriet’s
-curiosity was excited.</p>
-
-<p>“I will not, I promise you, Bobby,” she said, “what
-has the Baroness in that room?”</p>
-
-<p>Bobby drew near enough to whisper, as he replied,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span></p>
-
-<p>“O! I don’t know, I daren’t say, but horrible things
-go on there! Mamma has threatened sometimes to make
-me go in with her, but I wouldn’t for all the world.
-Our servants will never stay with us long. One girl
-told me before she left that Mamma was a witch, and
-could raise up the dead. Do you think it can be true—that
-it is possible?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” said Harriet, “and I don’t want to
-know! There are no dead that <em>I</em> want to see back again,
-unless indeed it were dear old Pete, our overseer. He
-was the best friend I ever had. One night our house
-was burned to the ground and lots of the things in it,
-and old Pete wrapped me up in a blanket and carried
-me to his cabin in the jungle, and kept me safe until
-my friends were able to send me to the Convent. I
-shall never forget that. I should like to see old Pete
-again, but I don’t believe the Baroness could bring him
-back. It wants ‘Obeah’ to do that!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is ‘Obeah,’ Miss Brandt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Witchcraft, Bobby!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it wicked?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I know nothing about it! But let
-us talk of something else. I don’t believe your Mamma
-can do anything more than other people, and she only
-says it to frighten you. But you mustn’t tell her I said
-so. Is this the Wiertz Museum? I thought it would be
-a much grander place!”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard father say that it is the house Wiertz lived
-in, and he left it with all his pictures to the Belgian
-Government on condition they kept it just as it was.”</p>
-
-<p>They entered the gallery, and Harriet Brandt, although
-not a great lover of painting in general, stood enwrapt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
-before most of the pictures. She passed over the
-“Bouton de Rose” and the sacred paintings with a cursory
-glance, but the representation of Napoleon in Hell,
-being fed with the blood and bones of his victims—of
-the mother in a time of famine devouring her child—and
-of the Suicide between his good and evil angels,
-appeared to absorb all her senses. Her eyes fixed themselves
-upon the canvasses, she stood before them, entranced,
-enraptured, and when Bobby touched her arm
-as a hint to come and look at something else, she drew
-a long breath as though she had been suddenly aroused
-from sleep. Again and again she returned to the same
-spot, the pictures holding her with a strange fascination,
-which she could not shake off, and when she returned
-to the Hotel, she declared the first thing she should do
-on the following morning, would be to go back to the
-Wiertz Museum and gaze once more upon those inimitable
-figures.</p>
-
-<p>“But such ’orrid subjects, my dear,” said the Baroness,
-“Bobby says they were all blood and bones!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I like them—I <em>like</em> them!” replied Harriet,
-moving her tongue slowly over her lips, “they interest
-me! They are so life-like!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! to-morrow will be Thursday, you know, so I
-expect you will have somebody’s else’s wishes to consult!
-You will ’ave a letter by the early post, you may depend
-upon it, to say that the Captain will be with us by dinner-time!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt flushed a deep rose. It was when
-the colour came into her usually pale cheeks, and her
-eyes awakened from their slumbers and sparkled, that
-she looked beautiful. On the present occasion as she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
-glanced up to see Bobby Bates regarding her with steadfast
-surprise and curiosity, she blushed still more.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be ’aving a fine time of it together, you
-two, I expect,” continued the Baroness facetiously, “and
-Bobby, ’ere, will ’ave to content ’imself with me and his
-Papa! But we’ll all go to the theatre together to-morrow
-night. I’ve taken five seats for the Alcazar, which
-the Captain said was the house he liked best in Brussels.”</p>
-
-<p>“How good you are to me!” exclaimed Harriet, as
-she wound her slight arms about the uncouth form of
-the Baroness.</p>
-
-<p>“Good! Nonsense! Why! Gustave and I look upon
-you as our daughter, and you’re welcome to share everything
-that is ours. You can come and live altogether
-at the Red ’Ouse, if you like! But I don’t expect we
-shall keep you long, though I must say I should be
-vexed to see you throw yourself away upon an army
-Captain before you have seen the world a bit!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! don’t talk of such a thing, pray don’t!” said
-the girl, hiding her face in the Baroness’s ample bosom,
-“you know there is nothing as yet—only a pleasant
-friendship.”</p>
-
-<p>“He! he! he!” chuckled Madame Gobelli, “so that’s
-what you call a pleasant friendship, eh? I wonder
-what Captain Pullen calls it! I expect we shall ’ear in
-a few days. But what ’e thinks is of no consequence,
-so long as <em>you</em> don’t commit yourself, till you’ve looked
-about you a little. I do want you to meet Prince
-Adalbert! ’Is ’air’s like flax—such a nice contrast to
-yours. And you speaking French so well! You would
-get on first-rate together!”</p>
-
-<p>Bobby did not appear to like this conversation at all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I call Prince Adalbert hideous,” he interposed.
-“Why! his face is as red as a tomato, and he drinks
-too much. I’ve heard Papa say so! I am sure Miss
-Brandt wouldn’t like him.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Old your tongue,” exclaimed the Baroness, angrily,
-“’Ow dare you interrupt when I’m speaking to Miss
-Brandt? A child like you! What next, I wonder!
-Just mind your own business, Bobby, or I’ll send you
-out of the room. Go away now, do, and amuse yourself!
-We don’t want any boys ’ere!”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Brandt is going into the Parc with me,” said
-Bobby sturdily.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! well, if she is going to be so good, I ’ope you
-won’t worry ’er, that’s all! But if you would prefer to
-come out in the carriage with the Baron and me, my
-dear, we’ll take a drive to the Bois de Cambres.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, if Bobby can come too,” acquiesced
-Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“Lor! whatever do you want that boy to come with
-us for? ’E’ll only take up all the room with ’is long
-legs.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we mustn’t leave him alone,” said the girl,
-kindly, “I shouldn’t enjoy my drive if we were to do so!”</p>
-
-<p>The lad gave her a grateful glance through eyes
-that were already moist with the prospect of disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well then,” said Madame Gobelli, “if you will
-’ave your own way, ’e may come, but you must take all
-the trouble of ’im, ’Arriet, mind that!”</p>
-
-<p>Bobby was only too happy to accompany the party,
-even in these humiliating circumstances, and they all set
-out together for the Bois de Cambres. The next day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>
-was looked forward to by Harriet Brandt as one of
-certain happiness, but the morning post arrived without
-bringing the anticipated notice from Ralph Pullen that
-he should join them as arranged in the afternoon. The
-piteous eyes that she lifted to the Baroness’s face as
-she discovered the defalcation, were enough to excite
-the compassion of anyone.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right!” said her friend, across the breakfast
-table, “’E said ’e would come, so there’s no need of
-writing. Besides, it was much safer not! ’E couldn’t
-stir, I daresay, without one of those two cats, Mrs.
-Pullen or Miss Leyton, at ’is elbow, so ’e thought they
-might find out what ’e was after, and prevent ’is starting.
-Say they wanted to leave ’Eyst or something, just
-to keep ’im at their side! You mark my words, I’ve
-means of finding out things that you know nothing of,
-and I’ve just seen it written over your ’ead that ’e’ll be
-’ere by dinner time, so you can go out for your morning’s
-jaunt in perfect comfort!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet brightened up at this prophecy, and Bobby
-had never had a merrier time with her than he had
-that morning.</p>
-
-<p>But the prophecy was not fulfilled. Ralph Pullen
-was by that time in England with his bereaved sister-in-law,
-and the night arrived without the people in
-Brussels hearing anything of him. He had not even
-written a line to account for his failure to keep his engagement
-with them. The fact is that Captain Pullen,
-although as a rule most punctilious in all matters of
-courtesy, felt so ashamed of himself and the folly into
-which he had been led, that he felt that silence would
-be the best explanation that he had decided to break<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>
-off the acquaintanceship. He had no real feeling for
-Harriet Brandt or anybody (except himself)—with him
-“out of sight” was “out of mind”—and the sad occurrence
-which had forced him to return to England
-seemed an excellent opportunity to rid himself of an
-undesirable entanglement. But Harriet became frantic
-at the nonfulfilment of his promise. Her strong feelings
-could not brook delay. She wanted to rush back to
-Heyst to demand the reason of his defalcation—and in
-default of that, to write, or wire to him at once and
-ascertain what he intended to do. But the Baroness
-prevented her doing either.</p>
-
-<p>“Look ’ere, ’Arriet!” she said to the girl, who was
-working herself up into a fever, “it’s no use going on
-like this! ’E’ll come or ’e won’t come! Most likely
-you’ll see ’im to-morrow or next day, and if not, it’ll be
-because ’is sister won’t let ’im leave ’er, and the poor
-young man doesn’t know what excuse to make! Couldn’t
-you see ’ow that Doctor Phillips was set against the
-Captain joining us? ’E went most likely and told Mrs.
-Pullen, and she ’as dissuaded her brother from coming
-to Brussels. It’s ’ard for a man to go against ’is own
-relations, you know!”</p>
-
-<p>“But he should have written,” pleaded Harriet, “it
-makes me look a fool!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit of it! Captain Pullen thinks you no fool.
-’E’s more likely to be thinking ’imself one. And, after
-all, you know, we shall be going back to ’Eyst in a
-couple more days, and then you can ’ave ’im all to
-yourself in the evenings and scold ’im to your ’eart’s
-content!”</p>
-
-<p>But the girl was not made of the stuff that is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
-amenable to reason. She pouted and raved and denounced
-Ralph Pullen like a fury, declaring she would
-not speak to him when they met again,—yet lay awake
-at night all the same, wondering what had detained him
-from her side, and longing with the fierceness of a
-tigress for blood, to feel his lips against her own and to
-hear him say that he adored her. Bobby Bates stood
-by during this tempestuous time, very sorrowful and
-rather perplexed. He was not admitted to the confidence
-of his mother and her young friend, so that he
-did not quite understand why Harriet Brandt should
-have so suddenly changed from gay to grave, just because
-Captain Pullen was unable to keep his promise to
-join them at Brussels. He had so enjoyed her company
-hitherto and she had seemed to enjoy his, but now she
-bore the gloomiest face possible, and it was no pleasure
-to go out with her at all. He wondered if all girls were
-so—as capricious and changeable! Bobby had not
-seen much of women. He had been kept in the schoolroom
-for the better part of his life, and his Mamma had
-not impressed him with a great admiration for the sex.
-So, naturally, he thought Harriet Brandt to be the most
-charming and beautiful creature he had ever seen,
-though he was too shy to whisper the truth, even to
-himself. He tried to bring back the smiles to her face
-in his boyish way, and the gift of an abnormally large
-and long <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sucre de pomme</i> really did achieve that object
-better than anything else. But the defalcation of Captain
-Pullen made them all lose their interest in Brussels,
-and they returned to Heyst a day sooner than they had
-intended.</p>
-
-<p>As the train neared the station, Harriet’s forgotten<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
-smiles began to dimple her face again, and she peered
-eagerly from the windows of the carriage, as if she expected
-Ralph Pullen to be on the platform to meet
-them. But from end to end, she saw only cinders,
-Flemish country women with huge baskets of fish or
-poultry on their arms, priests in their <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soutanes</i> and
-broad-brimmed hats, and Belgians chattering and screaming
-to each other and their children, as they crossed the
-line. Still, she alighted with her party, expectant and
-happy, and traversed the little distance between the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entrepôt</i> and the Hotel, far quicker than the Baroness
-and her husband could keep up with her. She rushed
-into the balcony and almost fell into the arms of the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">proprietaire</i>, Madame Lamont.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Mademoiselle!” she cried, “welcome back to
-Heyst, but have you heard the desolating news?”</p>
-
-<p>“What news?” exclaimed Harriet with staring eyes
-and a blanched cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“Why! that the English lady, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cette Madame, si
-tranquille, si charmante</i>, lost her dear <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bébé</i> the very
-day that Mademoiselle and Madame la Baronne left the
-Hotel!”</p>
-
-<p>“Lost,” repeated Harriet, “do you mean that the
-child is <em>dead</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! yes, I do indeed,” replied Madame Lamont,
-“the dear <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bébé</i> was taken with a fit whilst they were all
-at dinner, and never recovered again. <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">C’était une perte
-irréparable!</i> Madame was like a creature distracted
-whilst she remained here!”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is she then? Where has she gone?” cried
-Harriet, excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! that I cannot tell Mademoiselle. The dear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bébé</i> was taken away to England to be buried. Madame
-Pullen and Mademoiselle Leyton and Monsieur Phillippe
-and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">le beau Capitaine</i> all left Heyst on the following
-day, that is Wednesday, and went to Ostende to take
-the boat for Dover. I know no more!”</p>
-
-<p>“Captain Pullen has gone away—he is not here?”
-exclaimed Miss Brandt, betraying herself in her disappointment.
-“Oh! I don’t believe it! It cannot be true!
-He has gone to Ostende to see them on board the
-steamer, but he will return—I am sure he will?”</p>
-
-<p>Madame Lamont shrugged her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur paid everything before he went and gave
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">douceurs</i> to all the servants—I do not think he has any
-intention of returning!”</p>
-
-<p>At that juncture the Baron and Baroness reached
-the hotel. Harriet flew to her friend for consolation.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot believe what Madame Lamont says,” she
-exclaimed; “she declares that they are all gone for good,
-Mrs. Pullen and Miss Leyton and Captain Pullen and
-the doctor! They have returned to England. But he
-is sure to come back, isn’t he? after all his promises to
-meet us in Brussels! He couldn’t be so mean as to run
-off to England, without a word, or a line, unless he intended
-to come back.”</p>
-
-<p>She clung to Madame Gobelli with her eyes wide
-open and her large mouth trembling with agitation, until
-even the coarse fibre of the Baroness’s propriety made
-her feel ashamed of the exhibition.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ould up, ’Arriet!” she said, “you don’t want the
-’ole ’ouse to ’ear what you’re thinking of, surely! Let
-me speak to Madame Lamont! What is all the row about,
-Madame?” she continued, turning to the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">proprietaire</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There is no ‘row’ at all, Madame,” was the reply,
-“I was only telling Mademoiselle Brandt of the sad
-event that has taken place here during your absence—that
-that <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">chère</i> Madame Pullen had the great misfortune
-to lose her sweet <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bébé</i>, the very day you left Heyst,
-and that the whole party have quitted in consequence
-and crossed to England. I thought since Mademoiselle
-seemed so intimate with Madame Pullen and so fond of
-the dear child, that she would be <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">désolée</i> to hear the
-sad news, but she appears to have forgotten all about it,
-in her grief at hearing that the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beau Capitaine</i> accompanied
-his family to England where they go to bury the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">petite</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>And with rather a contemptuous smile upon her face,
-Madame Lamont re-entered the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">salle à manger</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, ’Arriet, don’t make a fool of yourself!” said
-the Baroness. “You ’eard what that woman said—she’s
-laughing at you and your Captain, and the story will be
-all over the Hotel in half an hour. Don’t make any
-more fuss about it! If ’e’s gone, crying won’t bring ’im
-back. It’s much ’arder for Mrs. Pullen, losing her baby
-so suddenly! I’m sorry for ’er, poor woman, but as for
-the other, there’s as good fish in the sea as ever came
-out of it!”</p>
-
-<p>But Harriet Brandt only answered her appeal by
-rushing away down the corridor and up the staircase to
-her bedroom like a whirlwind. The girl had not the
-slightest control over her passions. She would listen to
-no persuasion, and argument only drove her mad. She
-tumbled headlong up the stairs, and dashing into her
-room, which had been reserved for her, threw herself
-tumultuously upon the bed. How lonely and horrible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
-the corridor, on which her apartment opened, seemed. Olga
-Brimont, Mrs. Pullen, Miss Leyton, and Ralph, all gone!
-No one to talk to—no one to walk with—except the
-Baroness and her stupid husband! Of course this interpreted
-simply, meant that Captain Pullen had left the
-place without leaving a word behind him, to say the why
-or wherefore, or hold out any prospect of their meeting
-again. Of course it was impossible but that they must
-meet again—they <em>should</em> meet again, Harriet Brandt said
-to herself between her closed teeth—but meanwhile,
-what a wilderness, what a barren, dreary place this detestable
-Heyst would seem without him!</p>
-
-<p>The girl put her head down on the pillow, and taking
-the corner of the linen case between her strong,
-white teeth, shook it and bit it, as a terrier worries a
-rat! But that did not relieve her feelings sufficiently,
-and she took to a violent fit of sobbing, hot, angry tears
-coursing each other down her cheeks, until they were
-blurred and stained, and she lay back upon the pillow
-utterly exhausted.</p>
-
-<p>The first dinner bell rang without her taking any
-notice of it, and the second was just about to sound,
-when there came a low tap at her bedroom door. At
-first she did not reply, but when it was repeated, though
-rather timidly, she called out,</p>
-
-<p>“Who is it? I am ill. I don’t want any dinner! I
-cannot come down!”</p>
-
-<p>A low voice answered.</p>
-
-<p>“It is <em>I</em>, dear Miss Brandt, Bobby! May I come in?
-Mamma has sent me to you with a message!”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well! You can enter, but I have a terrible
-headache!” said Harriet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span></p>
-
-<p>The door opened softly, and the tall lanky form of
-Bobby Bates crept silently into the room. He held a
-small bunch of pink roses in his hand, and he advanced
-to the bedside and laid them without a word on the
-pillow beside her hot, inflamed cheek. They felt deliciously
-cool and refreshing. Harriet turned her face towards
-them, and in doing so, met the anxious, perturbed
-eyes of Bobby.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” she said smiling faintly, “and what is your
-Mamma’s message?”</p>
-
-<p>“She wishes to know if you are coming down to
-dinner. It is nearly ready!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! I cannot! I am not hungry, and my eyes
-are painful,” replied Harriet, turning her face slightly
-away.</p>
-
-<p>The lad rose and drew down the blind of her window,
-through which the setting sun was casting a stream of
-light, and then captured a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">flacon</i> of eau de Cologne
-from her toilet-table, and brought it to her in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“May I sit beside you a little while in case you need
-anything?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! Bobby! You will want your dinner, and
-your Mamma will want you. You had better go down
-again at once, and tell her that if my head is better, I
-will meet her on the Digue this evening!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want any dinner, I could not eat it whilst
-you lie here sick and unhappy. I want to stay, to see
-if I can help you, or do you any good. I wish—I <em>wish</em>
-I could!” murmured the lad.</p>
-
-<p>“Your roses have done me good already,” replied
-Harriet, more brightly. “It was sweet of you to bring
-them to me, Bobby.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had ten thousand pounds a year,” said
-Bobby feverishly, “that I might bring you roses, and
-everything that you like best!”</p>
-
-<p>He laid his blonde head on the pillow by the side of
-hers and Harriet turned her face to his and kissed him.</p>
-
-<p>The blood rushed into his face, and he trembled. It
-was the first time that any woman had kissed him. And
-all the feelings of his manhood rushed forth in a body
-to greet the creature who had awakened them.</p>
-
-<p>As for Harriet Brandt, the boy’s evident admiration
-flattered and pleased her. The tigress deprived of
-blood, will sometimes condescend to milder food. And
-the feelings with which she regarded Captain Pullen were
-such as could be easily replaced by anyone who evinced
-the same reciprocity. Bobby Bates was not a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beau
-sabreur</i>, but he was a male creature whom she had
-vanquished by her charms, and it interested her to watch
-his rising passion, and to know that he could never possibly
-expect it to be requited. She kissed and fondled
-him as he sat beside her with his head on the pillow—calling
-him every nice name she could think of, and
-caressing him as if he had been what the Baroness chose
-to consider him—a child of ten years old.</p>
-
-<p>His sympathy and entreaties that she would make
-an effort to join them on the Digue, added to his lovelorn
-eyes, the clear childish blue of which was already
-becoming blurred with the heat of passion, convinced
-her that all was not lost, although Ralph Pullen <em>had</em> been
-ungrateful and impolite enough to leave Heyst without
-sending her notice, and presently she persuaded the lad
-to go down to his dinner, and inform the Baroness that
-she had ordered a cup of tea to be sent up to her bedroom,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>
-and would try to rise after she had taken it, and
-join them on the Digue.</p>
-
-<p>“But you will keep a look-out for me, Bobby, won’t
-you?” she said in parting. “You will not let me miss
-your party, or I shall feel so lonely that I shall come
-straight back to bed!”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss you! as if I would!” exclaimed the boy
-fervently, “why, I shall not stir from the balcony until
-you appear! O! Miss Brandt! I love you so. You cannot
-tell—you will never know—but you seem like part
-of my life!”</p>
-
-<p>“Silly boy!” replied Harriet, reproachfully, as she
-gave him another kiss. “There, run away at once, and
-don’t tell your mother what we’ve been about, or she
-will never let me speak to you again.”</p>
-
-<p>Bobby’s eyes answered for him, that he would be
-torn to pieces before he let their precious secret out of
-his grasp, as he took his unwilling way down to the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">table d’hôte</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! you <em>’ave</em> made a little fool of yourself, and
-no mistake,” was the Baroness’s greeting, as Harriet
-joined her in the balcony an hour later, “and a nice lot
-of lies I’ve ’ad to tell about you to Mrs. Montague and
-the rest. But luckily, they’re all so full of the poor child’s
-death, and the coffin of white cloth studded with silver
-nails that was brought from Bruges to carry the body to
-England in, that they ’ad no time to spare for your
-tantrums. Lor! that poor young man must ’ave ’ad
-enough to do, I can tell you, from all accounts, without
-writing to you! Everything was on ’is ’ands, for Mrs.
-Pullen wouldn’t let the doctor out of ’er sight! ’E ’ad
-to fly off to Bruges to get the coffin and to wire half<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
-over the world, besides ’aving the two women to tow
-about, so you mustn’t be ’ard on ’im. ’E’ll write soon,
-and explain everything, you may make sure of that, and
-if ’e don’t, why, we shall be after ’im before long!
-Aldershot, where the Limerick Rangers are quartered, is
-within a stone’s throw of London, and Lord Menzies and
-Mr. Nalgett often run over to the Red ’Ouse, and so can
-Captain Pullen, if he chooses! So you just make yourself
-’appy, and it will be all right before long.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I’m all right!” cried Harriet, gaily, “I was only
-a little startled at the news, so would anyone have been.
-Come along, Bobby! Let us walk over the dunes to the
-next town. This cool air will do my head good. Good-bye,
-Baroness! You needn’t expect us till you see us!
-Bobby and I are going for a good long walk!”</p>
-
-<p>And tucking the lad’s arm under her own, she walked
-off at a tremendous pace, and the pair were soon lost
-to view.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish that Bobby was a few years older,” remarked
-the Baroness thoughtfully to her husband, as
-they were left alone, “she wouldn’t ’ave made a bad
-match for him, for she ’as a tidy little fortune, and it’s
-all in Consols. But perhaps it’s just as well there’s no
-chance of it! She ain’t got much ’eart—I couldn’t ’ave
-believed that she’d receive the news of that poor baby’s
-death, without a tear or so much as a word of regret,
-when at one time she ’ad it always in ’er arms. She
-quite forgot all about it, thinking of the man. Drat the
-men! They’re more trouble than they’re worth, but ’e’s
-pretty sure to come after ’er as soon as ’e ’ears she’s at
-the Red ’Ouse!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But to what good, mein tear,” demanded the Baron,
-“when you know he is betrothed to Miss Leyton?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! and ’e’ll marry Miss Leyton, too. ’E’s not the
-sort of man to let the main chance go! And ’Arriet will
-console ’erself with a better beau. I can read all that
-without your telling me, Gustave. But Miss Leyton won’t
-get off without a scratch or two, all the same, and that’s
-what I’m aiming at. I’ll teach ’er not to call me a
-female elephant! I’ve got my knife into that young
-woman, and I mean to turn it! Confound ’er impudence!
-What next?”</p>
-
-<p>And having delivered herself of her feelings, the
-Baroness rose and proceeded to take her evening
-promenade along the Digue.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The Red House at Holloway was, like its owner, a
-contradiction and an anomaly. It had lain for many
-years in Chancery, neglected and uncared-for, and the
-Baroness had purchased it for a song. She was very
-fond of driving bargains, and sometimes she was horribly
-taken in. She had been known to buy a house for two
-thousand pounds for a mere caprice, and exchange it,
-six months afterwards, for a dinner service. But as a
-rule she was too shrewd to be cheated, for her income
-was not a tenth part of what she represented. When
-she had concluded her bargain for the Red House, which
-she did after a single survey of the premises, and
-entered on possession, she found it would take double
-the sum she had paid to put it into proper repair. It
-was a very old house of the Georgian era standing in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
-its own grounds of about a couple of acres, and containing
-thirty rooms, full of dust, damp, rats, and decay.
-The Baroness, however, having sent for a couple of workmen
-from the firm, to put the tangled wilderness which
-called itself a garden, into something like order, sent in
-all her household gods, and settled down there, with
-William and two rough maid servants, as lady of the
-Manor. The inside of the Red House presented an incongruous
-appearance. This extraordinary woman, who
-could not sound her aspirates and could hardly write
-her own name, had a wonderful taste for old china and
-pictures, and knew a good thing from a bad one. Her
-drawing-room was heaped with valuables, many of them
-piled on rickety tables which threatened every minute to
-overturn them upon the ground. The entrance hall was
-dingy, bare, and ill-lighted, and the breakfast-room to the
-side was furnished with the merest necessities. Yet the
-dressing-table in the Baroness’s sleeping apartment was
-draped in ruby velvet, and trimmed with a flounce of
-the most costly Brussels lace, which a Princess might not
-have been ashamed to wear. The bed was covered with
-a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">duvet</i> of the thickest satin, richly embroidered by her
-own hand, whilst the washing-stand held a set of the
-commonest and cheapest crockery. Everything about
-the house was on the same scale; it looked as though it
-belonged to people who had fallen from the utmost
-affluence to the depths of poverty. Harriet Brandt was
-terribly disappointed when she entered it, Bobby’s accounts
-of the magnificence of his home having led her
-to expect nothing short of a palace.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness had insisted on her accompanying
-them to England. She had taken one of her violent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-fancies to the girl, and nothing would satisfy her but
-that Harriet should go back with her husband and herself
-to the Red House, and stay there as long as she
-chose.</p>
-
-<p>“Now look ’ere,” she said in her rough way, “you
-must make the Red ’Ouse your ’ome. Liberty ’All, as
-I call it! Get up and go to bed; go out and come in,
-just when you see fit—do what you like, see what you
-like, and invite your friends, as if the ’ouse was your
-own. The Baron and I are often ’alf the day at the
-boot shop, but that need make no difference to you. I
-daresay you’ll find some way to amuse yourself. You’re
-the daughter of the ’ouse, remember, and free to do as
-you choose!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet gladly accepted the offer. She had no friends
-of her own to go to, and the prospect of living by herself,
-in an unknown city, was rather lonely. She was
-full of anticipation also that by means of the Red House
-and the Baroness’s influence, she would soon hear of, or
-see, Captain Pullen again—full of hope that Madame
-Gobelli would write to the young man and force him to
-fulfil the promises he had made to her. She did not
-want to know Prince Adalbert or Prince Loris—at the
-present moment, it was Ralph and Ralph only, and none
-other would fill the void she felt at losing him. She
-was sure there must be some great mistake at the bottom
-of his strange silence, and that they had but to meet, to
-see it rectified. She was only too glad then, when the
-day for their departure from Heyst arrived. Most of
-the English party had left the Lion d’Or by that time.
-The death of Mrs. Pullen’s child seemed to have frightened
-them away. Some became nervous lest little Ethel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>
-had inhaled poisonous vapours from the drainage—others
-thought that the atmosphere was unhealthy, or that it
-was getting too late in the year for the seaside, and so
-the visitors dwindled, until the Baroness Gobelli found
-they were left alone with foreigners, and elected to return
-to England in consequence.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet had wished to write to Captain Pullen and
-ask for an explanation of his conduct, but the Baroness
-conjured her not to do so, even threatened to withdraw
-her friendship, if the girl went against her advice. The
-probabilities were, she said, that the young man was
-staying with his sister-in-law wherever she might be, and
-that the letter would be forwarded to him from the
-Camp, and fall into the hands of Mrs. Pullen, or Miss
-Leyton. She assured Harriet that it would be safer to
-wait until she had ascertained his address, and was sure
-that any communication would reach him at first hand.</p>
-
-<p>“A man’s never the worse for being let alone,
-’Arriet,” she said. “Don’t let ’im think ’e’s of too much
-consequence and ’e’ll value you all the more! Our
-fellows don’t care for the bird that walks up to the gun.
-A little ’olesome indifference will do my gentleman all
-the good in the world!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! but how <em>can</em> I be indifferent, when I am burning
-to see him again, and to hear why he never wrote
-to say that he could not come to Brussels,” exclaimed
-Harriet, excitedly. “Do you think it was all falsehoods,
-Madame Gobelli? Do you think that he does not want
-to see me any more?”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes were flashing like diamonds—her cheeks
-and hands were burning hot. The Baroness chuckled
-over her ardour and anxiety.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He! he! he! you little fool, no, I don’t! Anyone
-could see with ’alf an eye, that he took a fancy for
-you! You’re the sort of stuff to stir up a man and
-make ’im forget everything but yourself. Now don’t you
-worry. ’E’ll be at the Red ’Ouse like a shot, as soon
-as ’e ’ears we’re back in London. Mark my words! it
-won’t be long before we ’ave the ’ole lot of ’em down
-on us, like bees ’umming round a flower pot.”</p>
-
-<p>After this flattering tale, it was disheartening to arrive
-in town on a chilly September day, under a pouring
-rain, and to see the desolate appearance presented by
-the Red House.</p>
-
-<p>It was seven in the evening before they reached
-Holloway, and drove up the dark carriage drive, clumped
-by laurels, to the hall door.</p>
-
-<p>After the grand description given by Bobby of his
-Mamma’s barouche lined with olive green satin, Harriet
-was rather astonished that they should have to charter
-cabs from the Victoria Station to Holloway, instead of
-being met by the Baroness’s private carriage. But she
-discovered afterwards that though there was a barouche
-standing in the coach-house, which had been purchased
-in a moment of reckless extravagance by Madame Gobelli,
-there were no horses to draw it, and the only
-vehicle kept by the Baroness was a very much patched,
-not to say disreputable looking Victoria, with a spavined
-cob attached to it, in which William drove the mistress
-when she visited the boot premises.</p>
-
-<p>The chain having been taken down, the hall door
-was opened to them by a slight, timid looking person,
-whom Harriet mistook for an upper housemaid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, Miss Wynward,” exclaimed the Baroness, as
-she stumped into the hall, “’ere we are, you see!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! my lady,” said the person she addressed, “but
-I thought, from not hearing again, that you would travel
-by the night boat! Your rooms are ready,” she hastened
-to add, “only—dinner, you see! I had no orders about it!”</p>
-
-<p>“That doesn’t signify,” interrupted the Baroness,
-“send out for a steak and give us some supper instead!
-’Ere William, where are you? Take my bag and Miss
-Brandt’s up to our rooms, and, Gustave, you can carry
-the wraps! Where’s that devil Bobby? Come ’ere at
-once and make yourself useful! What are you standing
-there, staring at ’Arriet for? Don’t you see Miss Wynward?
-Go and say ‘’ow d’ye do’ to ’er?”</p>
-
-<p>Bobby started, and crossing to where Miss Wynward
-stood, held out his hand. She shook it warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“How are you, Bobby?” she said. “You don’t look
-much stronger for your trip. I expected to see you
-come back with a colour!”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!” commenced the Baroness testily, “what
-rubbish you old maids do talk! What should you know
-about boys? ’Ow many ’ave <em>you</em> got? ’Ere, why don’t
-you kiss ’im? You’ve smacked ’im often enough, <em>I</em> know!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynward tried to pass the coarse rejoinder off
-as a joke, but it was with a very plaintive smile that
-she replied,</p>
-
-<p>“I think Bobby is growing rather too tall to be
-kissed, and he thinks so too, don’t you, Bobby?”</p>
-
-<p>Bobby was about to make some silly reply, when his
-Mamma interrupted him,</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! does he? ’E’ll be wanting to kiss the gals soon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
-so ’e may as well practise on you first! Come! Bobby,
-do you ’ear what I say? Kiss ’er!”</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Wynward drew up her spare figure with
-dignity.</p>
-
-<p>“No! my lady!” she said quietly, “I do not wish it!”</p>
-
-<p>“He! he! he!” giggled the Baroness, as she commenced
-to mount the stairs, “’e ain’t old enough for you,
-that’s what’s the matter! Come along, ’Arriet, my dear!
-I’m dog-tired and I daresay you’re much the same! Let
-us ’ave some ’ot water to our rooms, Miss Wynward!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt was now ushered by her hostess into
-a bedroom on the same floor as her own, and left to
-unpack her bundles and boxes as she best might. It
-was not a badly furnished room, but there was too much
-pomp and too little comfort in it. The mantelshelf was
-ornamented with some rare old Chelsea figures, and a
-Venetian glass hung above them, but the carpet was
-threadbare, and the dressing-table was inconveniently
-small and of painted deal. But as though to atone for
-these discrepancies, the hangings to the bed were of satin,
-and the blind that shaded the window was edged with
-Neapolitan lace. Harriet had not been used to luxuries
-in the Convent, but her rooms in the Lion d’Or had
-been amply provided with all she could need, and she
-was a creature of sensual and indolent temperament,
-who felt any rebuff, in the way of her comfort, terribly.</p>
-
-<p>There was an un-homelike feeling in the Red House
-and its furniture, and a coldness in their reception,
-which made the passionate, excited creature feel inclined
-to sit down and burst into tears. She was on
-the very brink of doing so, when a tap sounded on the
-door, and Miss Wynward entered with a zinc can of hot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>
-water, which she placed on the washing-stand. Then
-she stood for a moment regarding the girl as though
-she guessed what was in her mind, before she said,</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Brandt, I believe! I am so sorry that the
-Baroness never wrote me with any certainty regarding
-her arrival, or things would have been more comfortable.
-I hope you had a good dinner on board!”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” said Harriet, shaking her head, “I felt too
-ill to eat. But it does not signify, thank you!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you are looking quite upset! Supper cannot
-be ready for another hour. I will go and make you a
-cup of tea!”</p>
-
-<p>She hurried from the room again, and presently returned
-with a small tray on which was set a Sèvres cup
-and saucer and Apostle teaspoon, with an earthenware
-teapot that may possibly have cost sixpence. But Harriet
-was too grateful for the tea to cavil whence it came,
-and drinking it refreshed her more than anything else
-could have done.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, thank you so much,” she said to Miss
-Wynward, “I think the long journey and the boat had
-been too much for me. I feel much better now!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is such a melancholy house to come to when one
-is out of sorts,” observed her companion, “I have felt
-that myself! It will not give you a good impression of
-your first visit to London. Her ladyship wrote me you
-had just come from the West Indies,” she added, timidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! I have not long arrived in Europe,” replied
-Harriet. “But I thought—I fancied—the Baroness gave
-me the idea that the Red House was particularly gay
-and cheerful, and that so many people visited her here!”</p>
-
-<p>“That is true! A great many people visit here! But—not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
-such people, perhaps, as a young lady would care
-for!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I care for every sort,” said Harriet, more gaily,
-“and you,—don’t you care for company, Miss Wynward?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have nothing to do with it, Miss Brandt, beyond
-seeing that the proper preparations are made for receiving
-it. I am Bobby’s governess, and housekeeper to the
-Baroness!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bobby is getting rather tall for a governess!” laughed
-Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“He is, poor boy, but his education is very deficient.
-He ought to have been sent to school long ago, but her
-ladyship would not hear of it. But I never teach him
-now. He is supposed to be finished!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you find another situation then?” demanded
-Harriet, who was becoming interested in the
-ex-governess.</p>
-
-<p>She was a fragile, melancholy looking woman of perhaps
-five-and-thirty, who had evidently been good-looking
-in her day and would have been so then but for her
-attenuation, and shabby dress. But she was evidently
-a gentlewoman, and far above the menial offices she appeared
-to fill in the Red House. She gazed at Harriet
-for a minute in silence after she had put the last question
-to her, and then answered slowly:</p>
-
-<p>“There are reasons which render it unadvisable.
-But you, Miss Brandt, have you known the Baroness
-before?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never saw her till we met at Heyst and she invited
-me here,” replied the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“O! why did you come? Why did you come?” exclaimed
-Miss Wynward, as she left the room.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span></p>
-
-<p>Harriet stood gazing at the door as it closed behind
-her. <em>Why had she come?</em> What an extraordinary question
-to ask her! For the same reason that other people
-accepted invitations to them by their friends—because
-she expected to enjoy herself, and have the protection
-of the Baroness on first entering English society! But
-why should this governess—her dependant, almost her
-servant—put so strange a question to her? Why had
-she come? She could not get it out of her mind. She
-was roused from her train of speculation by hearing the
-Baroness thumping on the outside panels of her door
-with her stick.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along,” she cried, “never mind dressing!
-The supper’s ready at last and I’m as ’ungry as an ’unter.”</p>
-
-<p>Hastily completing her toilet, Harriet joined her
-hostess, who conducted her down to a large dining-room,
-wrapt in gloom. The two dozen morocco chairs
-ranged against the wall, looked sepulchral by the light
-of a single lamp, placed in the centre of a long mahogany
-table, which was graced by a fried steak, a huge
-piece of cheese, bread and butter, and lettuces from the
-garden. Harriet regarded the preparations for supper
-with secret dismay. She was greedy by nature, but it
-was the love of good feeding, rather than a superfluity
-of food, that induced her to be so. However, when the
-Baron produced a couple of bottles of the very best
-Champagne to add to the meal, she felt her appetite
-somewhat revive, and played almost as good a knife and
-fork as the Baroness. Bobby and Miss Wynward, who
-as it appeared, took her meals with the family, were the
-only ones who did not do justice to the supper.</p>
-
-<p>The lad looked worn-out and very pale, but when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>
-Miss Wynward suggested that a glass of champagne
-might do him good, and dispel the exhaustion under
-which he was evidently labouring, his mother vehemently
-opposed the idea.</p>
-
-<p>“Champagne for a child like ’im,” she cried, “I never
-’eard of such a thing. Do you want to make ’im a
-drunkard, Miss Wynward? No! thank you, there ’ave
-been no ’ard drinkers in <em>our</em> family, and ’e shan’t begin
-it! ’Is father was one of the soberest men alive!
-’E never took anything stronger than toast and water all
-the time I knew ’im.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not, your ladyship,” stammered Miss
-Wynward, who seemed in abject fear of her employer,
-“I only thought as Bobby seems so very tired, that a
-little stimulant——”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let ’im go to bed,” replied Madame Gobelli.
-“Bed is the proper place for boys when they’re tired!
-Come, Sir, off to bed with you, at once, and don’t let
-me ’ear anything more of you till to-morrow morning!”</p>
-
-<p>“But mayn’t I have some supper?” pleaded Bobby.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit of it!” reiterated the Baroness, “if you’re
-so done up that you require champagne, your stomach
-can’t be in a fit state to digest beef and bread! Be off
-at once, I say, or you’ll get a taste of my stick.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my lady—” said Miss Wynward, entreatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a bit of good, Miss Wynward, I know more
-about boys’ insides than you do. Sleep’s the thing for
-Bobby. Now, no more nonsense, I say—”</p>
-
-<p>But Bobby, after one long look at Harriet Brandt,
-had already quitted the room. This episode had the
-effect of destroying Miss Wynward’s appetite. She sat
-gazing at her plate for a few minutes, and then with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>
-some murmured excuse of its being late, she rose and
-disappeared. The Baroness was some time over her
-meal, and Harriet had an opportunity to examine the
-apartment they sat in, as well as the dim light allowed
-her to do. The walls were covered with oil paintings
-and good ones, as she could see at a glance, whilst at
-the further end, where narrow shelves were fixed from
-the floor to the ceiling, was displayed the famous
-dinner service of Sèvres, for which the Baroness was
-said to have bartered the two thousand lease of her
-house.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet glanced from the pictures and the china
-upon the walls to the steak and bread and cheese upon
-the table, and marvelled at the incongruity of the whole
-establishment. Madame Gobelli who, whilst at the Lion
-d’Or, had appeared to think nothing good enough for
-her, was now devouring fried steak and onions, as if
-they had been the daintiest of fare. But the champagne
-made amends, on that night at least, for the solids which
-accompanied it, and the girl was quite ready to believe
-that the poverty of the table was only due to the fact
-that they had arrived at the Red House unexpectedly.
-As they reached the upper corridor, her host and hostess
-parted with her, with much effusion, and passing into
-their own room, shut the door and locked it noisily. As
-Harriet gained hers, she saw the door opposite partly
-unclose to display poor Bobby standing there to see her
-once again.</p>
-
-<p>He was clothed only in his long night-shirt, and
-looked like a lanky ghost, but he was too childish in
-mind to think for one moment that his garb was not a
-suitable one for a lover to accost his mistress in. She<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
-heard him whisper her name as she turned the handle
-of her own door.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Bobby,” she exclaimed, “not in bed yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush! hush!” he said in a low voice, “or Mamma
-will hear you! I couldn’t sleep till I had seen you again
-and wished you good-night!”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor dear boy! Are you not very hungry?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thanks. Miss Wynward is very kind to me.
-She has seen after that. But to leave without a word
-to you. That was the hard part of it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Bobby!” ejaculated Harriet again, drawing
-nearer to him. “But you must not stay out of bed.
-You will catch your death of cold!”</p>
-
-<p>“Kiss me then and I will go!”</p>
-
-<p>He advanced his face to the opening of the door,
-and she put her lips to his, and drew his breath away
-with her own.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night! good-night!” murmured Bobby with a
-long sigh. “God bless you! good-night!” and then he
-disappeared, and Harriet entered her own room, and
-her eyes gleamed, as she recognised the fact that Bobby
-also was going to make a fool of himself for her sake.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning she was surprised on going downstairs
-at about nine o’clock, to find a cloth laid over only
-part of the dining table, and breakfast evidently prepared
-for one person. She was still gazing at it in
-astonishment, and wondering what it meant, when Miss
-Wynward entered the room, to express a hope that
-Miss Brandt had slept well and had everything that she
-required.</p>
-
-<p>“O! certainly yes! but where are we going to have
-breakfast?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Here, Miss Brandt, if it pleases you. I was just
-about to ask what you would like for your breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the Baron and Baroness—”</p>
-
-<p>“O! they started for the manufactory two hours ago.
-Her ladyship is a very early riser when at home, and
-they have some four miles to drive.”</p>
-
-<p>“The manufactory!” echoed Harriet, “do you mean
-where they make the boots and shoes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! There is a manufactory in Germany, and another
-in England, where the boots and shoes are finished
-off. And then there is the shop in Oxford Street,
-where they are sold. The Baron’s business is a very
-extensive one!”</p>
-
-<p>“So I have understood, but what good can Madame
-Gobelli do there? What can a woman know about such
-things?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynward shrugged her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“She looks after the young women who are employed,
-I believe, and keeps them up to their work.
-The Baroness is a very clever woman. She knows
-something about most things—and a good deal that were
-better left unknown,” she added, with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“And does she go there every morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not always, but as a rule she does. She likes to
-have a finger in the pie, and fancies that nothing can
-go on properly without her. And she is right so far that
-she has a much better head for business than the Baron,
-who would like to be out of it all if he could!”</p>
-
-<p>“But why can’t he give it up then, since they are so
-very rich?” demanded Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynward regarded her for a moment, as if she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
-wondered who had given her the information, and then
-said quietly,</p>
-
-<p>“But all this time we are forgetting your breakfast,
-Miss Brandt! What will you take? An egg, or a piece
-of bacon?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I don’t care,” replied Harriet, yawning, “I never
-can eat when I am alone! Where is Bobby? Won’t he
-take his breakfast with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! he had his long ago with his Mamma, but I daresay
-he would not mind a second edition, poor boy!”</p>
-
-<p>She walked to the French windows which opened
-from a rustic porch to the lawn, and called “Bobby!
-Bobby!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Miss Wynward,” replied the lad in a more
-cheerful tone than Harriet remembered to have ever
-heard him use before, “what is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Come in, my dear, and keep Miss Brandt company,
-whilst she takes her breakfast!”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t I!” cried Bobby, as he came running from
-the further end of the disorderly garden, with a bunch
-of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>“They are for you!” he exclaimed, as he put them
-into Harriet’s hand, “I gathered them on purpose!”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Bobby,” she replied. “It <em>was</em> kind of
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>She felt cheered by the simple attention. For her
-hostess to have left her on the very first morning, without
-a word of explanation, had struck her as looking
-very much (notwithstanding all the effusive flattery and
-protestations of attachment with which she had been
-laden) as if she were not wanted at the Red House.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span></p>
-
-<p>But when her morning meal was over, and she had
-been introduced to every part of the establishment under
-the chaperonage of Bobby—to the tangled, overgrown
-garden, the empty stables, Papa’s library, which was
-filled with French and German books, and Mamma’s
-drawing-room, which was so full of valuable china that
-one scarcely dared move freely about it—the burning
-thirst to see, or hear something of Ralph Pullen returned
-with full force upon Harriet, and she enquired eagerly
-of Miss Wynward when her hostess might be expected
-to return.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynward looked rather blank as she replied,</p>
-
-<p>“Not till dinner time, I am afraid! I fancy she will
-find too much to enquire about and to do, after so long
-an absence from home. I am so sorry, Miss Brandt,”
-she continued, noting the look of disappointment on the
-girl’s face, “that her ladyship did not make this plain
-to you last night. Her injunctions to me were to see
-that you had everything you required, and to spare no
-trouble or expense on your account. But that is not
-like having her here, of course! Have you been into the
-library? There are some nice English works there, and
-there is a piano in the drawing-room which you might
-like to use. I am afraid it is not in tune, on account
-of the rain we have had, and that I have not opened it
-myself during the Baroness’s absence, and indeed it is
-never used, except to teach Bobby his music lessons on,
-but it may amuse you in default of anything else.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I daresay I shall find something to amuse myself
-with,” replied Harriet rather sullenly, “I have my
-own instrument with me, and my books, thank you! But
-is no one likely to call this afternoon, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span></p>
-
-<p>“This afternoon,” echoed Miss Wynward, “are you
-expecting any of your own friends to see you?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no! I have no friends in England,—none at
-least that know I have returned from Heyst. But the
-Baroness told me—she said the Red House was always
-full of guests—Prince Adalbert and Prince Loris, and a
-lot of others—do you think they may come to-day to
-see her?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! not in September,” replied her companion, “it
-is not the season now, Miss Brandt, and all the fashionable
-people are out of town, at the foreign watering-places,
-or shooting in the country. Her ladyship could
-never have intended you to understand that the people
-you have mentioned would come here at any time except
-between May and July! They <em>do</em> come here then—sometimes—but
-not I expect, as <em>you</em> think—not as
-friends, I mean!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not as <em>friends</em>! What as, then?” demanded Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” returned Miss Wynward, dubiously, “many
-of them have business with her ladyship, and they come
-to see her upon it! I generally conduct them to her
-presence, and leave them alone with her, but that is all
-I see of them! They have never come here to a party,
-or dinner, to my knowledge!”</p>
-
-<p>“How very extraordinary!” cried Harriet. “What do
-they come for then?”</p>
-
-<p>“The Baroness must tell you that!” replied the
-other, gravely, “I am not in her confidence, and if I
-were, I should not feel justified in revealing it.”</p>
-
-<p>This conversation drove Harriet to her room to indite
-a letter to Captain Pullen. If she were to be deprived
-of the society of dukes and princes, she would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>
-at least secure the company of one person who could
-make the time pass pleasantly to her. As she wrote to
-him, rapidly, unadvisedly, passionately, her head burned
-and her heart was fluttering. She felt as if she had
-been deceived—cheated—decoyed to the Red House
-under false pretences, and she was in as much of a
-rage as her indolent nature would permit her to be.
-The revelations of Miss Wynward had sunk down into
-her very soul. No parties, no dinners, with princes
-handing her into the dining-room and whispering soft
-nothings into her ears all the time! Why had Madame
-Gobelli so often promised to console her for the loss of
-Captain Pullen by this very means, and it was a dream,
-a chimera, they only came to the Red House on business—business,
-horrid unromantic word—and were shut
-up with the Baroness. <em>What</em> business, she wondered! Could
-it be about boots and shoes, and if so, why did they
-not go to the shop, which surely was the proper place
-from which to procure them! The idea that she had
-been deceived in this particular, made her write far
-more warmly and pleadingly perhaps, than she would
-otherwise have done. A bird in the hand was worth
-two in the bush—Harriet was not conversant with the
-proverb, but she fully endorsed the sentiment. When
-her letter was written and addressed to the Camp at
-Aldershot, and she had walked out with Bobby to post
-it in the pillar box, she felt happier and less resentful.
-At all events she was her own mistress and could leave
-the Red House when she chose, and take up her abode
-elsewhere. A hot sun had dried the garden paths and
-grass, and she spent the rest of the afternoon wandering
-about the unshaven lawn with Bobby, and lingering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>
-on the rotten wooden benches under the trees, with the
-boy’s arm round her waist, and his head drooping on
-her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>Bobby was blissfully happy, and she was content.
-If we cannot get caviare, it is wise to content ourselves
-with cod’s roe. They spent hours together that afternoon,
-until the dusk had fallen and the hour of dining
-had drawn nigh. They talked of Heyst and the pleasures
-they had left behind them, and Harriet was astonished
-to hear how manly were some of Bobby’s ideas and
-sentiments, when out of sight of his Mamma.</p>
-
-<p>At last, the strident tones of the Baroness’s voice
-were heard echoing through the grounds. Harriet and
-Bobby leaped to their feet in a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ere, ’Arriet! Bobby! where are you? You’re a
-nice son and daughter to ’ide away from me, when I’ve
-been toiling for your benefit all the day.”</p>
-
-<p>She came towards them as she spoke, and when
-Harriet saw how fatigued she looked, she almost forgave
-her for leaving her in the lurch as she had done.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you thought we were both dead, didn’t
-you?” she continued. “Well, we are, almost. Never
-’ad such a day’s work in my life! Found everything
-wrong, of course! You can’t turn your back for five
-minutes but these confounded workmen play old ’Arry
-with your business! I sent off ten fellows before I’d
-been in the factory ten minutes, and fined as many
-girls, and ’ave been running all over London since to
-replace ’em. It’s ’ard work, I can tell you!”</p>
-
-<p>She plumped down upon the rotten seat, nearly
-bringing it to the ground, as she spoke, and burst out
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You should ’ave seen one man, you would ’ave
-died of laughing! ‘Get out,’ I said to ’im, ‘not another
-day’s work do you do ’ere!’ ‘Get out of the factory
-where I’ve worked for twenty years?’ ’e said, ‘Well,
-then, I shan’t, not for you! If the governor ’ad said
-so, it might be a different thing, but a woman ’as no
-right to come interfering in business as she knows nothing
-about!’ ‘That’s the way the wind lies,’ I replied,
-‘and you want a man to turn you out! We’ll soon see
-if a woman can’t do it!’ and I took my stick and laid
-it on his back till he holload again. He was out of the
-place before you could say Jack Robinson! ‘’Ow will
-that do?’ I said to the others, ‘who else wants a taste
-of my stick before ’e’ll go!’ But they all cleared out
-before I ’ad done speaking! I laughed till I was ill!
-But come along, children! It’s time for dinner!” As
-they returned to the house, she accosted Harriet,</p>
-
-<p>“I ’ope you’ve amused yourself to-day! You’ll ’ave
-to look after yourself whenever I’m at the factory! But
-a ’andsome gal like you won’t want long for amusement.
-We’ll ’ave plenty of company ’ere, soon! Miss Wynward,”
-she continued, as they entered the dining-room,
-“Mr. Milliken is coming to-morrow! See that ’is room
-is ready for ’im!”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, my lady!” replied Miss Wynward, but
-Harriet fancied she did not like the idea of Mr. Milliken
-staying with them.</p>
-
-<p>The dinner proceeded merrily. It was more sumptuous
-than the day before, consisting of several courses,
-and the champagne flowed freely. Harriet, sitting at
-her ease and thoroughly enjoying the repast, thought
-that it atoned for all the previous inconvenience. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>
-a strange incident occurred before the meal was over.
-The Baron, who was carver, asked Bobby twice if he
-would take some roast beef, and received no answer,
-which immediately aroused the indignation of the Baroness.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you ’ear what your father is saying to you,
-Bobby?” she cried, shrilly. “Answer ’im at once or
-I’ll send you out of the room! Will you ’ave some beef?”</p>
-
-<p>But still there was no reply.</p>
-
-<p>“My lady! I think that he is ill,” said Miss Wynward
-in alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Ill! Rubbish!” exclaimed the Baroness. Being so
-coarse-fibred and robust a woman herself, she never had
-any sympathy with delicacy or illness, and generally declared
-all invalids to be humbugs, shamming in order
-to attract the more attention. She now jumped up
-from her seat, and going round to her son’s chair, shook
-him violently by the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ere, wake up! what are you about?” she exclaimed,
-“if you don’t sit up at once and answer your
-father’s question, I’ll lay my stick about your back!”</p>
-
-<p>She was going to put her argument into effect, when
-Harriet prevented her.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop! stop! Madame Gobelli!” she exclaimed;
-“can’t you see, he has fainted!”</p>
-
-<p>It was really true! Bobby had fainted dead away
-in his chair, where he lay white as a sheet, with closed
-eyes, and limp body. Miss Wynward flew to her pupil’s
-assistance.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor dear boy! I was sure he was not well directly
-he entered the house,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Not well!” replied the Baroness, “nonsense! what
-should ail ’im? ’Is father was one of the strongest men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
-on God’s earth! He never ’ad a day’s illness in ’is
-life. ’Ow should the boy, a great ’ulking fellow like ’im,
-’ave got ill?”</p>
-
-<p>She spoke roughly, but there was a tremor in her
-voice as she uttered the words, and she looked at Bobby
-as though she were afraid of him.</p>
-
-<p>But as he gradually revived under Miss Wynward’s
-treatment, she approached nearer, and said with some
-tenderness in her tones,</p>
-
-<p>“Well! Bobby, lad, and ’ow do you feel now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Better, Mamma, thank you! only my head keeps
-going round!”</p>
-
-<p>“Had I not better help him up to his bed, my
-lady?” asked Miss Wynward.</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes! but I ’ope ’e isn’t going to make a fool of
-’imself like this again, for I don’t ’old with boys fainting
-like hysterical gals!”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t help it, Mamma!” said Bobby faintly.</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes! you could, if you ’ad any pluck! You
-never saw <em>me</em> faint. Nor Gustave either! It’s all ’abit!
-Trundle ’im off to bed, Miss Wynward. The sooner ’e’s
-there, the better!”</p>
-
-<p>“And I may give him a little stimulant,” suggested
-Miss Wynward timidly, recalling the scene of the evening
-before, “a little champagne or brandy and water—I
-think he requires it, my lady!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes! Coddle ’im to your ’eart’s content, only
-don’t let me ’ear of it! I ’ate a fuss! Good-night,
-Bobby! Mind you’re well by to-morrow morning!”</p>
-
-<p>And she brushed the lad’s cheek with her bristly chin.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night!” replied Bobby, “good-night to all!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
-as he was supported from the room on the arm of Miss
-Wynward.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness did not make any further remarks
-concerning her son, but Harriet noticed that her appetite
-disappeared with him, and declaring that she had tired
-herself too much to eat, she sat unoccupied and almost
-silent for the remainder of the meal.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Mr. Alexander Milliken arrived punctually upon
-the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>He was a tall, gaunt, weak-kneed man, with a prominent
-nose and eyes that required the constant use of
-glasses. Harriet Brandt could not at first determine his
-relationship to the Baroness, who received him with one
-of the rough kisses she was wont to bestow on Bobby
-and herself.</p>
-
-<p>He established himself in the Red House as if he
-had been a member of the family, and Harriet frequently
-surprised him engaged in confidential talk with
-their hostess, which was immediately stopped on her
-arrival. She perceived that Miss Wynward had an
-evident dislike for the new-comer, and never addressed
-him but in the most formal manner and when it was
-strictly necessary. The Baroness did not go so often to
-the manufactory after Mr. Milliken’s arrival, but often
-shut herself up with him in a room with locked doors,
-after which Mr. Milliken would be much occupied with
-secretarial work, writing letters with his short-sighted
-eyes held close to the paper. He was a source of much
-curiosity to Harriet Brandt, but he need not have been.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
-He was only that very common and unclean animal—the
-jackal to Madame Gobelli’s lion.</p>
-
-<p>He was poor and she was rich, so he did all the
-dirty work which she was unable, or afraid, to do for
-herself. Mr. Milliken called himself an author and an
-actor, but he was neither. On account of his accidental
-likeness to a popular actor, he had once been engaged
-to play the part of his double at a West-end theatre, but
-with the waning of the piece, Mr. Milliken’s fame evaporated,
-and he had never obtained an engagement since.
-His assumed authorship was built on the same scale.
-He had occasionally penned anonymous articles for newspapers,
-which had been inserted without pay, but no
-one in the literary or any other world knew him by
-name or by fame. Of late he had attached himself to
-Madame Gobelli, writing her letters for her (of doing
-which she was almost incapable), and occasionally dabbling
-in dirtier work, which she was too cunning to do
-for herself. Miss Wynward could have told tales of
-abusive epistles which had been sent through his hand
-to people, whom the Baroness considered had offended
-her—of anonymous letters also, which if traced would
-have landed them both in the County Court. But Mr.
-Milliken was out at elbows. He found it very convenient
-to hang about the Red House for weeks together, to the
-saving of his pocket—receiving douceurs sometimes in
-actual coin of the realm at the hands of his benefactress,
-and making himself useful to her in any way in return.
-Lately, notwithstanding her grand promises to Harriet
-Brandt of introductions to lords, and princes, the Baroness
-had thought it would be a very good thing for her
-favourite jackal if the young heiress took a fancy for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-him, and gave him full leave in consequence to go in
-and conquer if he could. She would praise his appearance
-and his qualities to the girl, before his very face—calling
-attention to the fact of what a clever creature
-he was, and what a fine figure he possessed, and how
-well he was connected, and advising her in her coarse
-fashion to cultivate his acquaintance better. She even
-descended to having visions in the broad daylight, and
-prophesying the future, for them both.</p>
-
-<p>“’Arriet!” she would suddenly exclaim, “I see a
-man standing be’ind you!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! gracious!” the girl would reply, jumping in her
-seat, “I wish you would not say such things, Madame!”</p>
-
-<p>“Rubbish! Why shouldn’t I say ’em, if they’re
-there? Stop a bit! Let me see ’im plainly! ’E’s got
-dark ’air, slightly sprinkled with grey—a fine nose—deep-set
-eyes, with bushy eyebrows—no ’air on ’is face—a
-tall figure, and long ’ands and feet! ’E’s living in
-this world too! Do you know anybody that answers to
-the description?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” replied the girl, though she recognised it at
-once as being meant for Mr. Milliken.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! if you don’t know ’im now, you will before
-long, but it’s my belief you’ve met. And mark my words!
-you and ’e will be closely connected in life! I shouldn’t
-wonder if ’e turns out to be your future ’usband!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! nonsense!” exclaimed Harriet, trying to speak
-lightly, “I’m not going to marry anybody, thank you,
-Madame Gobelli, unless it’s one of the princes you promised
-to introduce me to.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! princes are all rubbish!” replied the Baroness,
-forgetting her former assertions, “they’ve none of them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
-got any money, and yours wouldn’t go far enough for
-’em. <em>They</em> want a gal with something like five thousand
-a year at ’er back. I’d rather ’ave an Englishman any
-day, than a dirty little German prince!”</p>
-
-<p>But Harriet Brandt was not the sort of woman to be
-forced into an intimacy against her will. Born under
-an hereditary curse, as she undoubtedly had been, and
-gifted with the fatal propensity of injuring, rather than
-benefiting those whom she took a fancy for, she was an
-epicure in her taste for her fellow creatures, and would
-not have permitted Mr. Alexander Milliken to take a
-liberty with her, had he been the last man left upon the
-earth. She avoided his society as much as it was possible
-to do, without being rude to her hostess, but as
-the Baroness was continually calling her to her side, it
-was difficult to do so. Meanwhile the days went on
-very differently from what she had anticipated when
-coming to the Red House. Bobby was languid and indifferent
-to everything but hanging about the place
-where she might have located herself—sitting on the
-sofa beside her, with his heavy head on her shoulder,
-and his weak arm wound about her waist. Miss Wynward
-feared he must have contracted some species of
-malaria at the seaside, and Harriet could see for herself
-that the lad was much altered from the time when they
-first met—the Baroness alone, either from ignorance or
-obstinacy, declaring that nothing ailed him but laziness,
-and she would give him the stick if he didn’t exert himself
-more. Sometimes Harriet took him out with her—for
-a drive into the country, or to a concert or <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">matinée</i>
-in London, but what was that compared to the entertainment
-of Royalty and Aristocracy, which she had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>
-promised. And she had not heard a word from Captain
-Pullen, though her first letter of appeal had been
-succeeded by two or three more. Such a rebuff would
-have driven another girl to despondency or tears, but
-that was not the effect it had on Harriet Brandt. If
-you throw a bone to a tigress and then try to take it
-away, she does not weep—she fights for her prey. Harriet
-Brandt, deprived of the flatteries and attentions of
-Captain Pullen, did not weep either, but set her pretty
-teeth together, and determined in her own mind that if
-she were to give him up she would know the reason
-why. She was reckless—she did not care what she did
-to obtain it, but she would learn the truth of his defalcation
-if she travelled down to Aldershot for the purpose.
-She was in this mood one day, when the maidservant
-who answered the door came to tell her that a lady was
-in the drawing-room, and desired to see her. The
-Baroness had gone out that afternoon and taken Mr.
-Milliken with her, so that Harriet was alone. She
-eagerly demanded the name of her visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“The lady didn’t give me her name,” replied the
-servant, “but she asked if Miss Brandt was at home,
-plain enough!”</p>
-
-<p>“Go back and say that I will be with her in a
-minute!” said Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>She had decided in her own mind that the stranger
-must be Margaret Pullen, bringing her, doubtless, some
-news of her brother-in-law. She only stayed to smoothe
-her hair, which was rather disordered from Bobby laying
-his head on her shoulder, before, with a heightened
-colour, she entered the drawing-room. What was her
-surprise to encounter, instead of Mrs. Pullen, Miss Leyton—Miss<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>
-Leyton, who had been so reserved and proud
-with her at Heyst, and who even though she had sought
-her out at the Red House, looked as reserved and proud
-as before. Harriet advanced with an extended hand,
-but Elinor Leyton did not appear to see the action, as
-she coldly bowed and sank into her chair again.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet was rather taken aback, but managed to
-stammer out,</p>
-
-<p>“I am very glad to see you, Miss Leyton! I thought
-you and Mrs. Pullen had forgotten all about me since
-leaving Heyst.”</p>
-
-<p>“We had not forgotten, Miss Brandt,” replied Elinor,
-“but we had a great deal of trouble to encounter in the
-death of Mrs. Pullen’s baby, and that put everything else
-for a while out of our minds. But—but—lately, we
-have had reason to remember your existence more
-forcibly than before!”</p>
-
-<p>She spoke slowly and with an evident effort. She
-was as agitated as it was in her nature to be the while,
-but she did not show it outwardly. Elinor Leyton had
-at all times the most perfect command over herself.
-She was dressed on the present occasion with the utmost
-neatness and propriety, though she had left her
-home labouring under a discovery which had pierced
-her to the very soul. She was a woman who would
-have died upon the scaffold, without evincing the
-least fear.</p>
-
-<p>“Reason to remember my existence!” echoed Harriet,
-“I do not understand you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you soon will!” said Elinor, as she took
-three letters from her hand-bag and laid them on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
-table, “I do not think you can fail to recognise that
-handwriting, Miss Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet stooped down and read the address upon
-the envelopes. They were her own letters to Captain
-Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you get these?” she demanded angrily,
-as she seized them in her hand. “Is thieving one of
-your proclivities, Miss Leyton?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Miss Brandt, thieving, as you elegantly put it,
-is not one of my proclivities! But Captain Pullen has
-been staying in the house of my father, Lord Walthamstowe,
-at Richmond, and left those letters behind him—thrown
-in the empty grate just as they are, a proof of
-how much he valued them! One of the housemaids,
-whilst setting his room in order after his departure,
-found them and brought them to me. So I determined
-that I would return them to your hands myself!”</p>
-
-<p>“And have you read them?” demanded Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“I have read them! I considered it my duty!”</p>
-
-<p>“Your duty!” replied the other, scornfully, “what
-duty is there in a mean, dishonourable action like that?
-What right had you to interfere with things that don’t
-belong to you? These letters concern myself and Captain
-Pullen alone!”</p>
-
-<p>“I deny that, Miss Brandt! They concern me quite
-as much, if not more—Captain Pullen is my affianced
-husband! We are to be married in the spring!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe it!” cried Harriet, starting to her
-feet. “A woman who would read letters not addressed
-to her, would say anything! You are <em>not</em> engaged to
-be married to Captain Pullen!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Indeed! And on what grounds do you refuse to
-believe my statement?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because he made love to me all the time he was
-in Heyst! Because he used to kiss me and tell me
-again and again that I was the only woman who had
-ever touched his heart! Because he had arranged to
-follow the Baroness’s party to Brussels, only to be near
-me, and he would have done so, had <em>you</em> not prevented
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>Her great eyes were blazing with indignation and
-mortified vanity—her slender hands were clenched—she
-looked as if she were about to spring upon her rival and
-tear her to pieces—whilst Miss Leyton sat there, calm
-and collected—and smiled at her ravings.</p>
-
-<p>“You are quite mistaken,” she said after a pause,
-“I have never mentioned your name to Captain Pullen—I
-had no idea, until those letters fell into my hands,
-that he had so far forgotten what he owes to me, as to
-address you in any terms but those of mere acquaintanceship.
-But now that I <em>do</em> know, it must of course
-be put a stop to at once and for ever! It was to tell
-you so, that I came here this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Put a stop to! Do you imagine that I am going to
-give up Captain Pullen at your request? You are vastly
-mistaken!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must—you <em>shall</em>!” exclaimed Elinor, getting
-(for her) quite excited. “He is engaged to marry
-me, and I will not allow him to keep up any communication
-with you! My decision is final, and you will be
-good enough to respect it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Your decision is <em>final</em>!” cried Harriet in mocking
-tones. “Oh! indeed, is it? And what about Ralph’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>
-decision? Does that count for nothing? What if Ralph
-refuses to give me up?”</p>
-
-<p>Elinor rose to her feet, trembling with indignation at
-the other’s boldness.</p>
-
-<p>“You shall not call him ‘Ralph’,” she exclaimed.
-“How dare you speak of a man who is nothing to you,
-in such familiar terms?”</p>
-
-<p>“But <em>is</em> he nothing to me?” retorted Harriet, “and
-am I nothing to him? We must have that question answered
-first. Ralph told me to call him by his name,
-and he calls me Hally. How can you prevent our doing
-so? He loves me—he has told me so—and I shall
-write to him as often as I choose—yes! and I will take
-him from you, if I choose, and keep him into the bargain!
-What do you say to that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I say that you are a bold, brazen girl, not fit for
-me to associate with, and that I refuse to be contaminated
-by your presence any longer! Let me go!”</p>
-
-<p>She made an effort to gain the door, as she spoke,
-but Harriet barred her exit.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Miss Leyton,” she said, “you don’t come
-here to insult me, and then leave before you have heard
-all I have to say to you! In the first place your assurance
-to-day is the first I ever heard of your being engaged
-to marry Captain Pullen. <em>He</em> didn’t take the trouble to
-make it public. He never mentioned you except to say
-what a cold, reserved, unpleasant nature you had, and
-how impossible it would be for a man with any human
-feeling to get on with you! That is what <em>he</em> thought!
-And he said it too, when he had his arm round my
-waist, and his face close to mine. And now he has
-come to England, I suppose he is afraid to carry on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
-with me any more, for fear that you should hear of it!
-But I don’t mean to let him off so easily, I can tell you!
-He shall answer those letters, which you <em>say</em> he threw
-away in the grate, but which you are just as likely to
-have pilfered from his desk, before he is many days
-older!”</p>
-
-<p>“You cannot <em>make</em> him answer them,” said Elinor,
-proudly, “whatever you may affirm!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not on paper perhaps, but by word of mouth!
-I will take them back to him at Aldershot, and see
-whether he can deny what I have told when he is face
-to face with me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Surely!—surely!—you would never proceed to so
-unmaidenly an extremity,” exclaimed Elinor, losing sight
-for a moment of her indignation in her horror at the
-idea. “You must not think of such a thing! You would
-create a scandal in the Camp! You would be despised
-for it ever after!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can take care of myself!” replied Harriet, boldly,
-“you need not fear for me! And if even you <em>do</em> get
-your own way about this matter, you will have the
-satisfaction all your married life of knowing that your
-husband was a coward and a traitor to you, even during
-your engagement, and that you will never be able to
-trust him further than you can see him, to the end! If
-you can care for such a husband, take him, for I’m sure
-I wouldn’t. But he shall answer to me for all that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Miss Brandt, let me go, pray let me go!” said
-Elinor in a tone of such unmistakeable pain, that the
-other involuntarily drew back, and let her push her way
-past her to the door.</p>
-
-<p>As Miss Leyton disappeared, Harriet Brandt commenced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>
-to pace up and down the length of the drawing-room.
-It was not the swaying walk of disappointment
-and despair; it was determined and masterful, born of
-anger and a longing for revenge. All the Creole in her,
-came to the surface—like her cruel mother, she would
-have given over Ralph Pullen to the vivisecting laboratory,
-if she could. Her dark eyes rolled in her passion; her
-slight hands were clenched upon each other; and her
-crimson lips quivered with the inability to express all
-she felt. Bobby, glancing in upon her from the French
-windows which opened on the garden, crept to her side
-and tried to capture her clenched hands, and to keep
-her restless body still. But she threw him off, almost
-brutally. At that moment she <em>was</em> brutal.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave me alone,” she exclaimed impatiently, “don’t
-touch me! Go away!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! Hally,” the boy replied, sympathetically, “what
-is the matter? Has anyone offended you? Let me
-know! Let me try to comfort you! Or tell me what I
-shall do to help you.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Do!</em>” cried the girl, contemptuously, “what could
-you do?—a baby tied to your mother’s apron-string!
-Leave me to myself, I say! I don’t want you, or anyone!
-I want to be alone! Boys are of no use! It requires a
-<em>man</em> to revenge a woman’s wrong!”</p>
-
-<p>The lad, after one long look of bitter disappointment,
-walked quietly away from the spot, and hid his grief in
-some sequestered part of the garden. Hally despised
-him—she, who had kissed him and let him lay his head
-upon her shoulder and tell her all his little troubles—said
-he was of no use, when she stood in need of help
-and comfort! When, if she only knew it, he was ready<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-to stand up in her defence against twenty men, if need
-be, and felt strong enough to defeat them all! But she
-had called him a baby, tied to his mother’s apron-strings.
-The iron entered into his very soul.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Elinor Leyton, having blindly found her
-way out of the Red House, hailed a passing hansom,
-and gave the driver directions to take her to a certain
-number in Harley Street, where Margaret Pullen was
-staying with her godfather, Doctor Phillips. She knew
-no one else to whom she could go in this great trouble,
-which made her feel as if her life had suddenly been
-cut in two. Yet she made no outward moan. Most
-young women having kept a bold front, as she had
-done, towards the enemy, would have broken down, as
-soon as they found themselves alone. But Elinor Leyton
-was not in the habit of breaking down. As soon as she
-had started for her destination, she leaned her head
-upon the back of the cab, closed her eyes and set her
-teeth fast together. Her face grew deadly pale, and an
-observer would have noted the trembling of her lips,
-and the ball which rose and fell in her throat. But she
-uttered no sound, not even a sigh—her misery was too
-deep for words.</p>
-
-<p>Since she had returned to London, Margaret Pullen
-had stayed with Doctor Phillips, for he had insisted that
-it should be so. The telegram which had conveyed to
-Colonel Pullen the news of his little daughter’s death,
-had been answered by one to say that he had applied
-for immediate leave, and should join his wife as soon
-as he received it. And Margaret was now expecting
-his arrival, every day—almost every hour. She looked
-very sad in her deep mourning dress, as she came forward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
-to greet Elinor, but as soon as she caught sight
-of her visitor’s face, she forgot her own trouble in her
-womanly sympathy for her friend.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Elinor!” she exclaimed, “what has brought
-you to town? You have bad news for me—I can read
-it in your eyes. Nothing wrong with Ralph, I hope!”</p>
-
-<p>She kissed the girl affectionately, and held her hand,
-but Elinor did not answer. She turned her white face
-towards her friend, and bit her lips hard, but the words
-would not come.</p>
-
-<p>“You are suffering, my poor dear,” went on Margaret,
-tenderly, as she made her sit down, and removed her
-hat and cloak. “Can’t you trust me with your trouble?
-Haven’t I had enough of my own? Ah! cry, that’s better.
-God sends us tears, in order that our hearts may not
-break! And now, what is it? Is anyone ill at home?”</p>
-
-<p>Elinor shook her head. The tears were rolling
-slowly one by one, down her marble cheeks, but she
-jerked them away as they came, as though it were a
-shame to weep.</p>
-
-<p>After a long pause, she swallowed something in her
-throat and commenced in a husky voice:</p>
-
-<p>“It concerns Ralph, Margaret! He has been untrue
-to me! All is over between us!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! surely not!” said Margaret, “have you had a
-full explanation with him? Who told you he had been
-untrue? Has Ralph asked for a release from his engagement?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! but he shall have it!”</p>
-
-<p>She then went on to tell the story of the finding of
-Harriet Brandt’s letters in Captain Pullen’s grate—and
-of the interview she had had with the girl that afternoon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span></p>
-
-<p>“She did not attempt to deny it,” continued Elinor.
-“On the contrary she declared that he had made love
-to her all the time he was at Heyst—that he had said
-she was the only woman who had ever touched his
-heart, and that no man with human feelings could be
-happy with such a cold, reserved nature as mine! And
-if you could see her letters to him, Margaret—I wish I
-had not given them to her, but she snatched them from
-my hand—they were <em>too</em> dreadful! I never read such
-letters from a woman to a man. I did not know they
-could be written.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Elinor, it strikes me that all this time, you
-have only heard one side of the question. What does
-it signify what Miss Brandt may say? The only thing of
-importance to you is, what Ralph will say.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there were her letters—they told their own
-story! They were full of nothing but ‘dearests’ and
-‘darlings,’ and reminders of how he had embraced her
-in one place, and what he had said to her in another—such
-letters as I could not write to a man, if it were to
-save my life!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can quite understand that! Miss Brandt and you
-possess two totally different natures. And cannot you
-understand that a girl like that, half educated, wholly
-ignorant of the usages of society, with a passionate undeveloped
-nature and a bold spirit, might write as you
-have described her doing, against the wishes of the
-recipient of her letters? You say that Ralph threw her
-epistles in the grate just as they were. Does that look
-as if he valued them, or felt himself to be guilty concerning
-their reception?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Margaret, you know he <em>did</em> make himself conspicuous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
-with the Gobellis and Miss Brandt at Heyst!
-I think everyone noticed their intimacy!”</p>
-
-<p>“I noticed it also, and I was very sorry for it, but,
-Elinor, my dear, it was partly your own fault! You
-were so much opposed to the idea of your engagement
-to Ralph being made public, that I feared it might lead
-to some <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">contretemps</i>. And then,” she continued gently,
-“don’t be offended if I say that your reserve with him,
-and your objection to anything like love-making on his
-part is in itself calculated to drive a young man to
-society he cares less for!”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but—still—I love him!” said poor Elinor,
-with a tremendous effort.</p>
-
-<p>“I know you do,” replied Margaret, kissing her
-again, “and better and more faithfully, perhaps, than
-half the women who show their love so openly—yet,
-men are but men, Elinor, and as a rule they do not
-believe in the affection which is never expressed by
-caresses and fond words.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! whether I have been right or wrong, it is
-over now,” said Miss Leyton, “and Ralph can go to
-Miss Brandt or anyone else he chooses for amusement.
-I shall never stand in his way, but I cannot brook an
-affront, so I shall write and release him from his promise
-to me at once!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Elinor, you must not do anything so rash!
-I beg—I implore you, to do nothing, until Ralph has
-had an opportunity of denying the charges brought
-against him by this girl. They may be utterly untrue!
-She may be simply persecuting him. Depend upon it,
-you have only to ask him for an explanation of those
-letters, and everything will be satisfactorily cleared up.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You have more belief in him than I have, Margaret.
-Miss Brandt has great confidence in her cause. She
-told me that she had not only taken him from me, but
-she meant to keep him, and expressed her intention of
-going down to Aldershot and confronting Ralph with the
-letters she had written him!”</p>
-
-<p>At this intelligence, Margaret grew alarmed for her
-friend’s peace of mind.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! that must never be,” she exclaimed, “that
-girl must not be permitted to make a scandal in the
-Camp, and get your name perhaps mixed up with it!
-It must be prevented.”</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy you will find that a difficult task,” said
-Elinor; “she seems the most determined young woman
-I have ever come across. She became so vehement at
-last, that she frightened me, and I was only too glad to
-get out of the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Elinor,” said Mrs. Pullen suddenly, “will you leave
-this matter in my hands to settle in my own way?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you intend to do? See Miss Brandt yourself?
-I advise you not! She will only insult you, as she
-did me.”</p>
-
-<p>“No! I shall not see her myself, I promise you that,
-but I will send a proper ambassador to interview Miss
-Brandt and the Baroness. This sort of thing must not
-be allowed to go on, and unless Ralph comes forward
-to second the girl’s assertions (which I am sure he will
-never do), she and her friend Madame Gobelli must be
-made to understand that if they don’t behave themselves,
-the law will be called into requisition to enforce
-obedience. I should not be at all surprised if the
-Baroness were not at the bottom of all this.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span></p>
-
-<p>“At anyrate, it has ruined my life!” said Elinor,
-mournfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense! my dear girl, no such thing! It is only
-an unpleasant episode which will soon be forgotten. But
-let it make you a little more careful for the future, Elinor.
-Ralph is a very conceited man. He has been spoilt by
-the women all his life, ‘<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pour l’amour de ses beaux yeux</i>.’
-He has been used to flattery and attention, and when
-he doesn’t get it he misses it, and goes where it is to
-be found. It is rather a contemptible weakness, but
-he shares it in common with most of his sex, and you
-have promised, remember, to take him for better or
-worse!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet, thank goodness!” retorted Elinor, with
-something of her usual spirit. “He and father got talking
-together about the marriage, the other day, when he
-was down at Richmond, and fixed it, I believe, for the
-spring, but they will have to unfix it again now, if I am
-not mistaken.”</p>
-
-<p>“No such thing,” replied Margaret, “and now you
-have consented—have you not?—to leave the settlement
-of this other affair in my hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you wish it, Margaret! But, remember, no compromise!
-If Ralph has really promised this girl what
-she says, let him keep his promises, for I will have none
-of him. And now I must go home or they will wonder
-what has become of me!”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret was not sorry to see her depart, for she
-was most anxious to summon Anthony Pennell, her husband’s
-cousin, to her aid, and ask his advice as to what
-was best to be done in the circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>She had great faith in Anthony Pennell, not only in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
-his genius, which was an accepted thing, but in his good
-sense, which is not usually found associated with the
-higher quality. He was a man of about thirty, with a
-grand intellect—a sound understanding—a liberal mind,
-and a sympathetic disposition. He had been originally
-intended for the Bar, but having “taken silk,” and made
-a most promising debut, he had suddenly blossomed
-into an author, and his first novel had taken London
-by storm.</p>
-
-<p>He had accomplished the rare feat of being lifted
-up at once on the waves of public opinion and carried
-over the heads of all his fellows.</p>
-
-<p>Since his first success, he had continued writing—had
-given up the law in consequence—and was now
-making a large and steady income.</p>
-
-<p>But Anthony Pennell’s great charm lay in his unassuming
-manner and modest judgment of his own work.
-His triumphs were much more astonishing to him than
-to his friends. In person, he was less handsome than
-his cousin Ralph Pullen, but much more manly looking,
-having been a distinguished athlete in his College days,
-and still finding his best recreation on the cricket field
-and the golf ground. He was very fair, with a white
-skin, embrowned here and there by sun and outdoor
-exercise—short, curly hair—a fine figure, standing six
-foot high, and the bluest of blue eyes. He was smoking
-in his own chambers late that afternoon, when he received
-a telegram from Margaret Pullen, “Can you come
-over this evening?” and as soon as he had changed his
-lounging coat, he obeyed her summons.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Anthony Pennell was a very fresh, pleasant, and
-good-looking presentment of a young English gentleman,
-as he entered the room where Margaret was sitting with
-Doctor Phillips that evening. It had been arranged between
-them beforehand, that as little as need be should
-be confided to him of Harriet Brandt’s former history.
-All that was necessary for him to know, was the danger
-that threatened to blast the future happiness of Ralph
-Pullen and Elinor Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! Mrs. Pullen,” he said, as he shook hands
-cordially with Margaret and the doctor, “and what important
-business is it, that you want to consult me upon?
-I thought, at the very least, that I should meet my cousin
-Arthur here!”</p>
-
-<p>“If I had had Arthur, perhaps I should not have
-needed you,” replied Margaret, with a faint smile. “But
-really, Mr. Pennell, I am in want of advice sorely, and
-the Doctor agreed with me that you would be the best
-person to whom I could apply!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am at your service, Madam!” said the young man,
-gaily, as he seated himself.</p>
-
-<p>Then she told him the story of Harriet Brandt—how
-Ralph had met her at the Lion d’Or, and devoted his
-time to her—and how she was persecuting him with
-letters, and had threatened to follow him to the Camp
-and interview him there.</p>
-
-<p>“And it must be put a stop to, you know, Mr. Pennell,”
-she concluded, “not only for Ralph’s sake and
-Elinor’s, but for the sake of the Walthamstowes and my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
-husband. I am sure that Arthur would be exceedingly
-annoyed at any scandal of that sort, and especially as
-Lord Walthamstowe is so old a friend of his family!”</p>
-
-<p>Anthony Pennell had looked very grave during her
-recital. After a pause he said,</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure that Ralph has not given this young
-lady good cause to run after him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think not—I hope not! There was very little
-amusement in Heyst, and this girl, and the people with
-whom she is now staying—a Baron and Baroness Gobelli,
-they call themselves—were amongst the visitors to the
-Lion d’Or. Miss Leyton is rather a stickler for the
-proprieties, and used to refuse to walk out with Ralph
-alone in the evenings, and I was too much occupied with
-my poor darling baby to accompany them,” said Margaret,
-in a faltering voice, “so Ralph took to going to
-the Baroness’s private rooms instead, and became intimate
-with Miss Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“You acknowledge then, that he <em>was</em> intimate with
-her!”</p>
-
-<p>“I think he must have been—because it appears that
-he had agreed to join their party at Brussels, when—when—my
-great trouble obliged him to return to England
-with us instead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know this young lady, Mrs. Pullen?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, and at one time I was rather intimate with
-her, that is, before the Baroness took her up, when she
-passed almost all her time with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is, I suppose, very attractive in person?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! dear no, not at all!” cried Margaret, with a
-woman’s dull appreciation of the charms of one of her
-own sex, “she has fine eyes, and what men would, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>
-suppose, call a good figure, but no complexion and an
-enormous mouth. Not at all pretty, but nice-looking at
-times,—that is all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Clever?” said Pennell, interrogatively.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not think so! She had just come out of a
-Convent school and was utterly unused to society. But
-she has a very good voice and plays well on the mandoline!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ladies are not always the best judges of their own
-sex,” remarked Anthony, turning to Doctor Phillips, “what
-do <em>you</em> say, Doctor? Had you an opportunity of appraising
-Miss Brandt’s beauties and accomplishments for
-yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“I would rather say nothing, Mr. Pennell,” replied
-the Doctor. “The fact is, I knew her parents in the
-West Indies, and could never believe in anything good
-coming from such a stock. Whatever the girl may be,
-she inherits terrible proclivities, added to black blood.
-She is in point of fact a quadroon, and not fit to marry
-into any decent English family!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! dear!” exclaimed Mr. Pennell laconically.</p>
-
-<p>“And how do you expect me to help you?” he enquired,
-after a pause.</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to see the Baroness, or Miss Brandt,
-and tell them that this girl must cease all communication
-with Captain Pullen,” said Margaret, “tell them that he
-is engaged to marry Miss Leyton—that the marriage is
-fixed to take place next spring, and that the Walthamstowe
-family will be excessively annoyed if any scandal
-of this sort occurs to break it off.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do they not know that such an engagement exists?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! that is the unfortunate part of it! Elinor Leyton<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>
-is so absurdly scrupulous that she will not have the
-fact made public, and forbade me to tell Miss Brandt
-about it! Elinor went to the Red House where Miss
-Brandt is staying this morning and had a most stormy
-interview with her. She came here afterwards in a most
-distressed state of mind. Harriet Brandt had told her
-that she had secured Ralph Pullen and meant to keep
-him—that he had told her he loved her—and that Miss
-Leyton was too cold and prudish a nature for any man
-to be happy with! Of course Elinor was terribly upset.
-She seldom shows her feelings, but it was quite impossible
-for her to disguise them to-day. I begged her to
-leave the matter in my hands, and she consented to do
-so. That is why I telegraphed for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is rather an awkward predicament!” said Anthony
-Pennell, thoughtfully, “you will forgive me for saying,
-Mrs. Pullen, that Ralph is so very likely to have done
-this sort of thing, that I feel one might be treading on
-very delicate ground—in fact, putting one’s foot in it—by
-interfering. You know what Ralph is—selfish and
-indolent and full of vanity. He considers it far too
-much trouble to make love (as it is called) to a woman,
-but he will accept any amount of love that is offered
-him, so long as it gives him no trouble. If this Miss
-Brandt is all that you and the doctor here say of her,
-she may possibly have drawn Ralph on, and taken his
-languid satisfaction as proof that he agreed to all she
-said and did. But it will make the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">dénouement</i> just as
-unpleasant. Besides, how will Ralph himself take my
-interference in the matter? He may have some designs
-on this girl—some ideas in the future connected with her—and
-will ask what business I had to come between them.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span></p>
-
-<p>“O! no! Did I not tell you that he had left her
-letters in his grate!”</p>
-
-<p>“That might be part of his indolent carelessness, or
-they may have been left there by design, as a means of
-breaking the ice between himself and Miss Leyton. Is
-not he, after all, the most proper person to appeal to?
-Why not wait till your husband returns, and let him
-speak to his brother?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am so afraid in that case, that Ralph might consider
-that he had gone too far with Miss Brandt, and
-honour demanded that he should marry her! And, Mr.
-Pennell, Doctor Phillips could tell you things, if he chose,
-to prove to you that Harriet Brandt is not a fit wife for
-any decent man.”</p>
-
-<p>Anthony Pennell thought again for a few minutes—sitting
-silent with his hand caressing his smooth chin.
-Then he said:</p>
-
-<p>“If you are very much bent on my doing what I can
-in this matter, I see only one way to accomplish it. I
-must enter the Red House under a flag of truce. Did
-you know this Baroness Gobelli? Can you tell me what
-sort of woman she is? I never heard the name before!”</p>
-
-<p>“She is quite a character,” replied Margaret; “I believe
-her husband <em>is</em> a German Baron, but she was a
-Mrs. Bates, and is an extraordinary Baroness. A strange
-mixture also, of vulgarity and refined tastes. She drops
-all her aspirates, yet talks familiarly of aristocratic and
-royal titles, she dresses like a cook out on Sundays, and
-yet has a passion for good paintings and old china.”</p>
-
-<p>At the last words, Anthony Pennell pricked up his
-ears.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A passion for old china!” he exclaimed, “then there
-must be some good in her! Cannot you give me an
-introduction to the Red House on the plea that I am a
-connoisseur and am desirous of seeing her collection?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I can, but how can you approach these
-people in amity, with a censure of Miss Brandt’s conduct
-in your hand? Madame Gobelli is infatuated with
-Harriet Brandt! I was telling poor Elinor only this afternoon,
-that I should not be at all surprised if she were
-at the bottom of all this unpleasantness.”</p>
-
-<p>“She could not be at the bottom of anything unless
-Ralph had given her cause,” replied Mr. Pennell, who
-had never had a good opinion of his cousin’s straightforward
-dealing, “and however it may turn out, I should
-think he would have a heavy reckoning to settle with
-Miss Leyton! This is not the first time, remember!
-You have not forgotten the trouble Arthur had to get
-him out of that scrape with the laundress’s girl at Aldershot,
-the year before last!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Arthur told me about it,” replied Margaret.
-“But you are going to help us, this time, Mr. Pennell,
-are you not?”</p>
-
-<p>“In so far as procuring an introduction to the Baroness,
-and taking my opportunity to let her know the true state of
-affairs with Miss Leyton, yes,” said Mr. Pennell, “but there,
-my responsibility must cease. Should Ralph have committed
-himself in writing, or anything of that sort, you
-must promise to let them fight it out their own way. I
-daresay there will be no trouble about the matter. I
-can see how it has occurred at a glance. Ralph has
-been merely amusing himself with the girl, and she has
-taken his philandering in earnest. But I wish he would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
-leave that sort of thing off. It will ruin his married life
-if he does not!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! indeed, and Elinor Leyton really loves him,
-more, I am sure, than he imagines. She declared this
-afternoon, that if it were not put a complete stop to, she
-should break off her engagement. And I think she
-would be right!”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I,” acquiesced Anthony Pennell. “Well! if
-these people are ordinarily decent, they will, as soon as
-they hear the truth, prevent their young friend interfering
-with another woman’s rights. Write me the introduction,
-Mrs. Pullen, and I will pay the Red House a
-visit as soon as its owner gives me leave. And now let
-us talk of something pleasanter. How soon do you expect
-Arthur to arrive?”</p>
-
-<p>“Any day,” replied Margaret, “and I am longing so
-for him to come!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you are! Will he remain long in England?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only a few weeks! He has taken three months’
-leave. Then, I shall return with him to Hosur.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you like the idea of India?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! anything—anything—to find myself with him
-again,” she answered feverishly.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation turned upon more indifferent subjects,
-and armed with the note of introduction to the
-Baroness, Anthony Pennell presently took his leave. He
-did not like the task imposed upon him, and he hardly
-knew how he should set about it, but on consideration
-he thought he could do no harm by having a look at
-the young lady, who had taken the fancy of his fickle-minded
-cousin Ralph, and leaving his future action to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
-be decided by the interview. He sat down therefore before
-turning into bed, and wrote a note to the Baroness,
-enclosing the introduction from Mrs. Pullen, and asking
-permission to call and inspect her rare collection of china,
-of which he had heard so much.</p>
-
-<p>His letter reached the Red House on the following
-morning, at an unfortunate moment, when Madame Gobelli
-was giving full display to the worst side of her eccentric
-character.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness was not a lover of animals, either dogs
-or horses. She was merciless to the latter and the former
-she kicked whenever they came in her way. It was considered
-necessary, however, for the safety of the Red
-House, that it should be guarded by a watch-dog, and
-a miserable retriever, which answered to that name,
-lived in a rotten cask in the stable yard. This unhappy
-animal, which had neither sufficient food, exercise, nor
-straw to lie on, was in the habit of keeping up a continuous
-baying at night, in remonstrance at the cruelty
-of its treatment, which was a cause of annoyance to the
-neighbours, who had often written to the Baroness about
-it in vain.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning in question, a Captain Hill, who
-lived on one side of the Red House, with his parents, sent
-in his card to Madame Gobelli and asked for an interview.
-She admitted him at once. She liked men of all
-sorts, and particularly if they were young and she could
-kiss them with impunity, under the pretence that she
-was old enough to be their mother.</p>
-
-<p>She therefore welcomed Captain Hill quite amiably.
-She came in from the garden to receive him, attired in
-a Genoa velvet dress that trailed half a yard on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-damp ground behind, and a coarse Zulu hat perched on
-her large bullet head. She was attended by Harriet
-Brandt, who had been making a tour of the premises
-with her, and was always eager to see anybody who
-might call at the Red House. Miss Wynward also, who
-was dusting the china with a feather brush as the visitor
-was announced, continued her occupation, and without
-apologising for doing so, or asking leave.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet had not yet been able to determine the exact
-place which this lady held in the Baroness’s household,
-for she was treated as one of the family, and yet degraded
-at times to the position of a servant.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness expected her to cook, or dust rooms,
-or darn stockings, or do anything required of her, whilst
-she introduced her to all her friends as if on a perfect
-equality with themselves. As she entered the drawing-room
-through one of the French windows, she shook
-hands familiarly with Captain Hill, and introduced him
-to both her companions.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” she went on, “and so you’ve come to see
-us at last! I thought you were going to live and die in
-that tumble-down old place of yours, without so much as
-a shake of the ’and! I ’ope you’re all well at ’ome!”</p>
-
-<p>The stranger did not seem to know how to receive
-these civilities. He had not seated himself, but stood
-in the centre of the room with his hat in his hand, as
-though he found a difficulty in stating his errand at the
-Red House.</p>
-
-<p>“Take a chair,” said Madame Gobelli in her rough
-way, “there’s enough and to spare, and my young friend
-’ere won’t eat you!”</p>
-
-<p>Still Captain Hill deliberated about accepting her offer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” he commenced, “but I shall not detain
-you above a few moments. I came to speak to you
-about your dog, Madame Gobelli. My parents are both
-very old, and my mother especially delicate—indeed, I
-fear that she may never rise from her bed again!”</p>
-
-<p>Here his voice faltered a little, but quickly recovering
-himself he went on,</p>
-
-<p>“She sleeps very little, and that little has now become
-impossible to her on account of the incessant
-barking of your yard dog. I am here to-day by the
-wish of my mother’s medical attendant, Doctor Parker,
-to tell you that the noise is seriously affecting her health,
-and to beg that you will adopt some measures to have
-the annoyance stopped.”</p>
-
-<p>As the Baroness understood the reason for which
-her neighbour had called upon her, her countenance
-palpably changed. The broad smile faded from her face
-and was replaced by an ominous frown. If there was
-one thing which she resented above another, it was being
-called to task for any disturbance in her household. Without
-taking any notice apparently of Captain Hill’s complaint,
-she turned to Miss Wynward and said,</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Wynward, come ’ere! Does that dog bark at
-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sometimes, my lady,” replied the governess dubiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe it! You’re lying! ’Arriet, does
-Nelson ever bark so as to disturb anyone?”</p>
-
-<p>“He barks whenever there is a ring at the bell, or
-a stranger enters the grounds, Madame,” said Harriet,
-with politic evasion.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I assure you he does more than that!” interposed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
-the visitor, “the poor animal howls without ceasing.
-Either he is ill, or the servants do not give him
-sufficient food!”</p>
-
-<p>But at this censure cast upon her domestics whom
-she bullied from morning till night, the Baroness’s uncontrolled
-temper burst forth.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ow dare you come ’ere,” she exclaimed loudly,
-“and bring false accusations against my servants? No
-one in this ’ouse is kept short of food. What do you
-mean—a rubbishing fellow like you—by coming ’ere,
-and accusing the Baron of starving ’is animals? There’s
-more money spent upon our animals, I bet, than goes
-in your poverty-stricken ’ouse-’old in a year!”</p>
-
-<p>Captain Hill was now offended, as he well might be.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know what knowledge you may possess
-of the exigencies of my parents’ household, Madam,” he
-replied, “but what I came here to tell you is this—that
-from whatever cause it may arise, the howling and whining
-of your dog is a public nuisance and it must be
-stopped!”</p>
-
-<p>“Must, must!” exclaimed Madame Gobelli, shaking
-her stick at him, “and pray ’oo’s to make me stop it?”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I</em> will,” said Captain Hill, “the noise is endangering
-the life of my mother, and I shall insist upon the
-animal being destroyed, or taken elsewhere. If you cannot
-take a friendly hint—if you have so callous a nature
-that the sufferings of an aged and invalid lady cannot
-excite your sympathy, the law shall teach you that, whatever
-you may fail to feel, you cannot annoy your neighbours
-with impunity!”</p>
-
-<p>“Fine neighbours indeed!” cried the Baroness, her
-whole face trembling and contorted with passion. “A<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
-beggarly lot of half-pay officers and retired parsons!
-I’ll soon see if you’ll be allowed to come riding the ’igh
-’orse over me! Confound your impudence! Do you
-know ’oo I am?”</p>
-
-<p>“A Billingsgate fishwoman, I should imagine, from
-your language! Certainly not a gentlewoman!” said
-Captain Hill, his eyes blazing with his wrath.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ang you! I’ll soon teach you ’ow to insult a lady
-that’s connected with Royalty!”</p>
-
-<p>At that, the stranger burst into a derisive laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Down the back stairs!” he muttered to himself, but
-Madame Gobelli caught the words.</p>
-
-<p>“Get out of my ’ouse,” she cried. “’Ere, Miss Wynward,
-see this fellow out at the front door, and never
-you let ’im in again, or I’ll give you a month’s warning!
-Down the back stairs indeed! Confound you! If you
-don’t clear out this very minute, I’ll lay my stick across
-your back! You’ll make me destroy my dog, will you,
-and just because your trumpery mother don’t like ’is
-barking! Go ’ome and tell ’er to ’old ’er own row!
-And you accuse my servants of not giving ’im enough to
-eat. You’d be glad enough to see ’is dinner on your
-own table once or twice a week. Out with you, I say—out
-with you at once, and don’t let me see your ugly
-mug and your carroty ’ead in ’ere again, or I’ll set the
-dog you don’t like upon you.”</p>
-
-<p>Captain Hill had turned white as a sheet with anger.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll hear more of this, Madam, and from my
-solicitor next time,” he said. “Heartless, unfeeling
-woman! How can you call yourself a mother, when
-you have no pity for a son’s grief at his mother’s illness?
-Pray God you may not have occasion to remember this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>
-morning, when you have to part from your own
-son!”</p>
-
-<p>He rushed from the room as he spoke, and they
-heard the hall door slam after him. For a minute after
-he left, there was a dead pause between the three women.
-His last words seemed to have struck the Baroness as
-with a two-edged sword. She stood silent, staring into
-vacancy, and breathing hard, whilst Harriet Brandt and
-Miss Wynward regarded each other with furtive dismay.
-The silence was broken by Madame Gobelli bursting
-into a harsh laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t fancy ’e will show ’is face in my ’ouse again,
-in an ’urry,” she exclaimed. “It was as good as a play
-to watch ’im, trying to brave it out! Confound ’is old
-mother! Why don’t she die and ’ave done with it! I’ve
-no patience with old people ’anging on in that way, and
-worrying the ’ole world with their fads! Well! what is
-it?” she continued to a maid who brought her a
-letter.</p>
-
-<p>“By the post, my lady!”</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness broke the seal. There was such a
-look of scare upon her features, that some people might
-have thought she was glad to have anything to do that
-should hide it from her companions. The letter was
-from Anthony Pennell, whose name was familiar to her,
-as to all the world.</p>
-
-<p>As she finished its perusal, her manner entirely
-altered. The broad smile broke out on her countenance—her
-eyes sparkled—one would have thought she could
-never be in anything but a beaming good temper.</p>
-
-<p>“’Olloa! ’Arriet!” she exclaimed, “’ere’s news for
-you! ’Oo do you think this letter’s from?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How can I guess?” replied the girl, though her
-thoughts had flown at once to Ralph Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“From Mr. Anthony Pennell, the great author, you
-know, and own cousin to that rapscallion, Captain Pullen!
-Now we shall ’ear all about the ’andsome Captain! Mr.
-Pennell says ’e wants to come ’ere and see my china,
-but I know better! ’E’s bringing you a message from ’is
-cousin, mark my words! I can see it written up be’ind
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet’s delicate face flushed with pleasure at the
-news.</p>
-
-<p>“But why shouldn’t Captain Pullen have come himself?”
-she asked, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell you that! Perhaps ’e is coming, be’ind
-the other, and this is only a feeler! There’s wheels within
-wheels in these big families, sometimes, you know, and
-the Pullens are connected with a lot of big-wigs! But
-we’ll ’ave some news, anyway! You just sit down, my
-dear, and write Mr. Pennell a pretty note in my name—you
-write a prettier ’and than I do—and say we shall
-be very pleased to see ’im to-morrow afternoon, if convenient,
-and I ’ope ’e will stay to dinner afterwards and
-be introduced to the Baron—will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes, of course, Madame, if you wish it!” replied
-the girl, smiles dimpling her face at the thought of her
-triumph over Elinor Leyton.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Miss Wynward, we must ’ave a first-rate
-dinner to-morrow for Mr. Pennell, and you and Bobby
-’ad better dine at one o’clock, or you’ll spoil the table.
-Let me see! We’ll ’ave——”</p>
-
-<p>But turning to enforce her orders, the Baroness discovered
-that Miss Wynward had quitted the room.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why! where ’as the woman gone? Did you see ’er
-leave the room, ’Arriet?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not! I was too much occupied listening to
-you,” replied the girl from the table, where she was inditing
-the answer to Anthony Pennell’s note.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ere, Miss Wynward! Miss Wynward!” screamed
-the Baroness from the open door, but no reply came to
-her call.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go and see after ’er!” she said, as she
-stumped from the room, as intent upon procuring a good
-dinner for one young man, as she had been in insulting
-the other, and turning him from her doors.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Captain Hill, hot and angry, was striding
-away in the direction of his own home, when he heard
-a soft voice calling his name in the rear. He turned to
-encounter the spare, humiliated form of Miss Wynward.</p>
-
-<p>“Captain Hill,” she ejaculated, “I beg your pardon,
-but may I speak to you for a moment?”</p>
-
-<p>Recognising her as having been in the room, when
-the Baroness had so grossly insulted him, he waited
-rather coldly for her to come up with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t think me impertinent or interfering,” faltered
-Miss Wynward, “but I was so shocked—so distressed—I
-could not let you go without saying how grieved and
-sorry I am!”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not quite understand you,” replied Captain
-Hill.</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes, surely, did you not see me in the room just
-now! I felt as if I should die of shame! But if you
-knew what it is to be dependent—to be unable to speak
-or to expostulate—you would guess perhaps——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Yes! I think I can understand. But pray don’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
-distress yourself about it! It was my own fault! I should
-have addressed her first through my solicitor. But I
-thought she was a gentlewoman!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is her temper that gets the better of her,” said
-Miss Wynward in an apologetic tone, “she is not always
-so bad as she was this morning!”</p>
-
-<p>“That is fortunate for the world at large,” replied
-Captain Hill, gravely. “I could have forgiven her
-vulgarity, but not her heartlessness. I can only think
-that she is a most terrible woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is what everybody says,” answered his companion,
-“but she will admit of no remonstrance. She
-<em>will</em> have her own way, and the Baron is as powerless
-to refrain her, as you, or I. But that she should so insult
-a gentleman like yourself, even descending to oaths
-and personalities—O! I cannot tell you how much I felt
-it—how ashamed I was, and how anxious that you should
-not confound me with anything the Baroness said, or did!”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed,” said Captain Hill, holding out his hand,
-“you need have no fear on that score. I hope I know
-a gentlewoman when I see her! But tell me, since your
-eyes are open to all this, how is it that a lady like yourself
-can stay under the roof of so terrible a person?
-There are plenty of other situations to be had! Why do
-you not leave her, and go elsewhere?”</p>
-
-<p>He was struck by the look of mingled anxiety and
-fear with which she regarded him.</p>
-
-<p>“O! Captain Hill, there are reasons that are difficult
-to explain—that I could not tell to anyone on so short
-an acquaintance. But the Baroness possesses great
-power—she could ruin me, I believe she could <em>kill</em> if
-she chose!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span></p>
-
-<p>“She threatens you then!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!” came from Miss Wynward’s lips, but in almost
-a whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! this is hardly the time and place to discuss
-such a question,” said Captain Hill, “but I should much
-like to see more of you, Miss Wynward! If you have any
-time at your disposal, will you come over and see my
-old mother? She is quite confined to her room, but I
-know it would please her to have a quiet talk with you!”</p>
-
-<p>A light glistened in Miss Wynward’s washed-out eyes,
-and a smile stole over her countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really mean it, Captain Hill?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never say anything that I do not mean,” he answered,
-“I am sure both my parents would be glad to
-give you their advice, and my dear father, who is a
-clergyman, though past an active ministry, may be able
-to be of use to you in a more practical way. At anyrate,
-you will come and see us. That is a bargain!”
-and he held out his hand to her again in farewell.</p>
-
-<p>“O! I will—I will, indeed,” exclaimed Miss Wynward,
-gratefully, “and thank you so very much for the permission.
-You have put a little hope into my life!”</p>
-
-<p>She seized the hand he proffered her, and kissed it,
-as an inferior might have done, and then hurried back
-to the Red House, before he had had time to remonstrate
-with her on the proceeding.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>When Anthony Pennell received the Baroness’s invitation,
-penned in the delicate foreign handwriting of
-Harriet Brandt, he accepted it at once. Being out of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
-the season, he had no engagement for that evening, but
-he would have broken twenty engagements, sooner than
-miss the chance, so unexpectedly offered him, of meeting
-in an intimate family circle, the girl who appeared
-to have led his cousin Ralph’s fancy astray. He pictured
-her to himself as a whitey-brown young woman with
-thick lips and rolling eyes, and how Ralph, who was so
-daintily particular where the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beau sexe</i> was concerned,
-could have been attracted by such a specimen, puzzled
-Anthony altogether. The knowledge that she had money
-struck him unpleasantly, for he could think of no other
-motive for Captain Pullen having philandered with her,
-as he evidently had done. At anyrate, the idea that
-there was the least chance of allying herself with their
-family, must be put out of her head, at once and for ever.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pennell amused himself with thinking of the scare
-he should create at the dinner table, by “springing” the
-news of Ralph’s intended marriage upon them, all at
-once. Would the young lady have hysterics, he wondered,
-or faint away, or burst into a passion of tears? He
-laughed inwardly at the probability! He felt very cruel
-over it! He had no pity for the poor quadroon, as
-Doctor Phillips had called her. It was better that she
-should suffer, than that Elinor Leyton should have to
-break off her engagement. And, by Margaret Pullen’s
-account, Miss Brandt had been both defiant and insulting
-to Miss Leyton. She must be a brazen, unfeeling
-sort of girl—it was meet that she paid the penalty of
-her foolhardiness.</p>
-
-<p>It was in such a mood that Anthony Pennell arrived
-at the Red House at five o’clock in the afternoon, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
-he might have the opportunity to inspect the collection
-of china that had gained him an entrance there.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness had promised to be home in time to
-receive him, but he was punctual and she was not.
-Harriet Brandt was loitering about the garden, which
-was still pleasant enough on fine days in the middle of
-September, when the news that Mr. Pennell was in the
-drawing-room was brought to her by Miss Wynward.
-Harriet had been very eager to meet Anthony Pennell—not
-because she was pining after his cousin, but because
-her feminine curiosity was strong to discover <em>why</em> Ralph
-had deserted her, and if he had been subjected to undue
-influence to force him to do so. But now that the time
-had come, she felt shy and nervous. Suppose he, Mr.
-Pennell, had seen Miss Leyton meanwhile, and heard all
-that had taken place between them, when she visited the
-Red House. And suppose he should take Miss Leyton’s
-part! Harriet’s mind was full of “supposes” as she
-turned to Miss Wynward and said,</p>
-
-<p>“O! I can’t go and receive him, Miss Wynward!
-Mr. Pennell has come to see the Baroness, not me!
-Cannot you entertain him until she comes home? She
-will not be long now!”</p>
-
-<p>“Her ladyship’s last words to me, Miss Brandt, were,
-that if she had not returned from the factory by the
-time Mr. Pennell arrived, you were to receive him and
-give him afternoon tea in her stead! I hope you will
-do as her ladyship desired!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! I suppose I must then,” replied Harriet,
-screwing up her mouth, with a gesture of dissatisfaction,
-“but do send in the tea, quickly, please!”</p>
-
-<p>“It shall be up, Miss Brandt, as soon as I can get<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>
-back to make it! Mr. Pennell seems a very pleasant
-gentleman! I wouldn’t mind if I were you!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynward hurried back to the house, as she
-spoke, and Harriet walked slowly over the lawn towards
-the drawing-room windows.</p>
-
-<p>Anthony Pennell, who had been bending over some
-rare specimens of old Chelsea, looked up suddenly as
-she approached, and was struck dumb with admiration.
-She had improved wonderfully in looks since she had
-been in Europe, though the women who lived with her
-continually, were slow to perceive it. Her delicate complexion
-had acquired a colour like that of a blush rose,
-which was heightened by contrast with her dark, glowing
-eyes, whilst her hair, by exposure to the rays of the sun,
-had caught some of its fire and showed ruddily, here
-and there, in streaks of auburn. Her figure, without
-having lost its lissom grace, was somewhat fuller, and
-her manner was altogether more intelligent, and less
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gauche</i> than it had been. But the dark eyes were still
-looking for their prey, and the restless lips were incessantly
-twitching and moving one over the other. She
-was beautifully dressed that evening—she had not been
-in London for a month, without finding a way to spend
-her money—and Anthony Pennell, like most artistic
-natures, was very open to the influence of dress upon a
-woman. Harriet wore a frock of the palest lemon colour,
-cut quite plain, but perfect in every line and pleat and
-fold, and finished off at the throat with some rare lace,
-caught up here and there with tiny diamond pins.</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove! what a beautiful girl!” was Mr. Pennell’s
-inward ejaculation as he saw her drawing nearer the
-spot where he stood. It was strange that his first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>
-judgment of Harriet Brandt should have been the same
-as that of his cousin, Ralph Pullen, but it only proves
-from what a different standpoint men and women judge
-of beauty. As Harriet walked over the grass, Anthony
-Pennell noted each line of her swaying figure—each tint
-of her refined face—with the pretty little hands hanging
-by her side, and the slumbrous depths of her magnificent
-eyes. He did not, for one moment, associate her with
-the idea which he had formed of the West Indian heiress
-who was bent on capturing his cousin Ralph. He concluded
-she was another young friend who might be
-partaking of the Baroness’s hospitality. He bowed low
-as she entered through the open French window looking
-as a Georgian or Cashmerian houri might have looked,
-he thought, if clad in the robes of civilisation. Harriet
-bowed in return, and said timidly,</p>
-
-<p>“I am so sorry that Madame Gobelli is not here to
-receive you, but she will not keep you waiting more than
-a few minutes, I am sure. She particularly said that
-she would not be later than five o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>“She has left a very charming substitute in her
-place,” replied Pennell, with another bow.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you have come to see the china,” continued
-Harriet, “I do not know much about it myself,
-but Miss Wynward will be here in a minute, and she
-knows the name of every piece, and where it came
-from!”</p>
-
-<p>“That will be eminently satisfactory,” rejoined Anthony
-Pennell, “but I happen to be a connoisseur in
-such things myself. I have one or two charming bits
-of old Sèvres and Majolica in my chambers, which I
-think the Baroness would like to see if she will honour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>
-me with a visit to my little place. A lonely bachelor
-like myself must take up some hobby, you know, to fill
-his life, and mine happens to be china. Madame Gobelli
-appears to have some lovely Chelsea there. I would
-like to steal one or two of those groups on the cabinet.
-Will you hold the door open for me, whilst I run away
-with them?”</p>
-
-<p>At this sally, Harriet laughed, and Mr. Pennell thought
-she looked even handsomer when she laughed than
-when she was pensive.</p>
-
-<p>“Here is the tea!” she cried nervously, as Miss Wynward
-appeared with the tray. “O! Miss Wynward, surely
-Madame cannot be much longer now! Have you looked
-down the road to see if she is coming?”</p>
-
-<p>“The carriage has just turned into the stable yard,”
-replied Miss Wynward, and in another minute, the doorway
-was filled with the ample proportions of the Baroness.</p>
-
-<p>“’Olloa! Mr. Pennell, and so you’ve stolen a march
-upon me!” was her first greeting, “’ow are you?” extending
-her enormous hand, “’ave you been looking at
-the china? Wait till I’ve ’ad my tea; I’ll show you one
-or two bits that’ll make your mouth water! It’s my
-’obby! I used to save my pocket money when I was a
-little gal to buy china. I remember my grandfather, the
-Dook of—but there, I ’aven’t known you long enough
-to let you into family secrets. Let’s ’ave our tea and
-talk afterwards! I ’ope ’Arriet ’as entertained you well!”</p>
-
-<p>“This young lady—” commenced Anthony Pennell,
-interrogatively.</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure, Miss ’Arriet Brandt! ’Asn’t she introduced
-’erself to you? She’s like a daughter of the ’ouse
-to us! We look upon ’er as one of our own, Gustave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
-and me! Miss Brandt from Jamaica! And she knew
-your cousin, Captain Pullen, too, at Heyst, we all did,
-and we’re dying to ’ear what ’as become of ’im, for ’e’s
-never shown ’is face at the Red ’Ouse!”</p>
-
-<p>The murder was out now, and Harriet waited tremblingly
-for the result! What did Mr. Pennell know?
-What would he say?</p>
-
-<p>But Mr. Pennell said nothing—he was too much
-startled to speak. <em>This</em>, Harriet Brandt—this lovely girl,
-the quadroon of whom both Doctor Phillips and Mrs.
-Pullen had spoken so disparagingly?—of whom they had
-said that she was not fit to be the wife of any decent
-man? Oh! they must be fools and blind—or he was
-dreaming! The Baroness was not slow to see the look
-upon his face and to interpret it rightly.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you surprised? You needn’t look so incredulous!
-I give you my word that this is ’Arriet Brandt—the
-same young lady that knew Mrs. Pullen and her brother-in-law
-and Miss Leyton over at Heyst. What sort of a
-character ’ave they been giving ’er be’ind ’er back?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, I assure you, Madame—” commenced Mr.
-Pennell, deprecatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t take the trouble to tell any tarradiddles
-about it! I can see it in your face! I didn’t think
-much of that cousin of yours from the beginning; ’e’s
-got a shifty sort of look, and as for that cold bit of
-goods, Miss Leyton, well, all I say is, God ’elp the man
-that marries ’er, for she’s enough to freeze the sun himself!
-But I liked Mrs. Pullen well enough, and I was
-sorry to ’ear that she ’ad lost ’er baby, for she was
-quite wrapt up in it! But I daresay she’ll soon ’ave
-another!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span></p>
-
-<p>Without feeling it incumbent on him to enter into
-an argument as to the probability of the Baroness’s last
-suggestion, Anthony Pennell was glad of the digression,
-as it gave him an opportunity of slurring over the
-dangerous subject of Ralph Pullen’s character.</p>
-
-<p>“The loss of her child was a very great blow to my
-poor cousin,” he replied, “and she is still suffering from
-it, bitterly. Else, I have no doubt that you would have
-seen something of her—and the others,” he added in a
-lower tone. After a slight interval, he ventured to raise
-his eyes and see how the girl opposite to him had taken
-what was said, but it did not appear to have made
-much impression on her—she was, on the contrary,
-gazing at him with that magnetic glance of hers as
-though she wanted to read into his very soul.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t go and say that I want to see ’em,” said the
-Baroness as, having devoured enough cake and bread
-and butter to feed an ordinary person for a day, she
-rose and led the way into another room. “I don’t want
-to see anybody at the Red ’Ouse that doesn’t want to
-come, and I ’aven’t expected the ladies. But as for
-Captain Pullen, ’oo made an engagement to follow our
-party to Brussels, and then never took the trouble to
-write a line to excuse ’imself for breaking ’is word, why,
-I say ’e’s a jerry sneak, and you may tell ’im so if you
-like! <em>We</em> didn’t want ’im. ’E proposed to come ’imself,
-and I engaged ’is room and everything, and then ’e
-skedaddled without a word, and I call it beastly be’aviour.
-You mustn’t mind my plain speaking, Mr. Pennell.
-I always say what I think! And I would like to
-break my stick over Captain Pullen’s back and that’s
-the truth.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span></p>
-
-<p>They were walking along the passage now, on their
-way to the Baron’s library—the Baroness in front with
-her hand leaning heavily on Pennell’s shoulder, and
-Harriet lingering a little behind. Anthony Pennell
-pondered awhile before he replied. Was this the time
-to announce Ralph’s intended marriage. How would the
-girl behind them take it?</p>
-
-<p>He turned slightly and looked at her face as the
-thought passed through his mind. Somehow the eyes
-that met his reassured him. He began to think it must
-be a mistake—that she did not care for Ralph as much
-as Mrs. Pullen had supposed—that she was only offended
-perhaps (as her hostess evidently was) by the curt and
-uncivil manner in which he had treated them both. So
-he replied,</p>
-
-<p>“I have not the slightest excuse to make for my
-cousin’s conduct, Madame Gobelli. It appears to me
-that he has treated you with very scant civility, and he
-ought to be ashamed of himself. But as you know, his
-little niece’s death was very sudden and unexpected,
-and the least he could do was to escort his sister-in-law
-and Miss Leyton back to England, and since then——”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! and what since then?” demanded the Baroness,
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord Walthamstowe and he have come to an arrangement,”
-said Pennell, speaking very slowly, “that his
-marriage with Miss Elinor Leyton shall take place sooner
-than was at first intended. The Limerick Rangers are
-under orders for foreign service, and Captain Pullen
-naturally wishes to take his wife out with him, and
-though, of course, all this is no excuse for his omitting
-to write you a letter, the necessary preparations and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-consequent excitement <em>may</em> have put his duty out of
-his head. Of course,” he continued, “you know that
-Ralph is engaged to marry Miss Leyton?”</p>
-
-<p>“I ’eard something of it,” replied the Baroness reluctantly,
-“but one never knows what is true and what
-is not. Anyway, Captain Pullen didn’t give out the
-news ’imself! ’E seemed ’appy enough without Miss
-Leyton, didn’t ’e, ’Arriet?”</p>
-
-<p>But turning round to emphasise her words, she found
-that Harriet had not followed them into the library.
-Whereupon she became confidential.</p>
-
-<p>“To tell you the truth, Mr. Pennell,” she continued,
-“’e just be’aved like a scoundrel to our little ’Arriet
-there. ’E ran after the gal all day, and spent all ’is
-evenings in our private sitting-room, gazing at ’er as if
-’e would eat ’er, whilst she sang and played to ’im. ’E
-never said a word about marrying Miss Leyton. It was
-all ‘’Ally, ’Ally, ’Ally’ with ’im. And if the gal ’adn’t
-been a deal too clever for ’im, and wise enough to see
-what a vain zany ’e is, she might ’ave broken ’er ’eart
-over it. The conceited jackanapes!”</p>
-
-<p>“But she has not fretted,” said Anthony Pennell
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Not she! I wouldn’t let ’er! She’s meat for Captain
-Pullen’s master! A gal with fifteen ’undred a year
-in ’er own ’ands, and with a pair of eyes like that! Oh!
-no! ’Arriet can pick up a ’usband worth two of your
-cousin any day!”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think so indeed,” replied Mr. Pennell
-fervently, “I have heard Mrs. Pullen mention Miss Brandt,
-but she did not prepare me for meeting so beautiful a
-girl. But I can hardly wonder at my cousin running<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>
-away from her, Madame Gobelli. Knowing himself to
-be already engaged, Miss Brandt must have proved a
-most dangerous companion. Perhaps he found his heart
-was no longer under his own control, and thought discretion
-the better part of valour. You must try and
-look upon his conduct in the best light you can!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! well! it don’t signify much anyway, for ’e’s no
-miss at the Red ’Ouse, I can tell you, and ’Arriet could
-marry to-morrow if she chose, and to a man worthy of
-’er. But now you must look at my Spode.”</p>
-
-<p>She walked up to a tall cabinet at one end of the
-room, which was piled with china, and took up a fragile
-piece in her hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you see that?” she said, turning up the plate
-and showing the mark upon the bottom, “there it is, you
-see! There’s the M. These five pieces are said to be
-the oldest in existence. And here’s a cup of Limoges.
-And that’s Majolica. Do you know the marks of Majolica?
-They’re some of the rarest known! A cross on
-a shield. The first real bit of china I ever possessed
-was a Strasbourg. Have you ever seen any Dutch Pottery—marked
-with an A.P.? I picked that up at an
-old Jew’s shop in the market in Naples. And this Capo
-di Monte, strange to say, in a back alley in Brighton.
-There’s nothing I like better than to grub about back
-slums and look for something good. Some of my best
-pieces ’ave come out of pawnbrokers’ shops. That plate
-you’re looking at is old Flemish—more than two ’undred
-years, I believe! It came out of the rag market at
-Bruges. There used to be first-rate pickings to be ’ad
-at Bruges and Ghent and in Antwerp some years ago,
-but the English ’ave pretty well cleared ’em out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I never saw a better private collection, Madame
-Gobelli,” said Anthony Pennell, as he gloated over the
-delicate morsels of Sèvres and Limoges and Strasbourg.
-“The Baron should have had an old curiosity and bric-a-brac
-establishment, instead of anything so prosaic as
-boots and shoes.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I couldn’t ’ave ’ad it!” exclaimed the Baroness,
-“it would ’ave gone to my ’eart to sell a good bargain
-when I ’ad made it! My cups and saucers and plates
-and teapots are like children to me, and if I thought my
-Bobby would sell ’em when I was gone, I believe I
-should rise from my grave and whack ’im.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman became almost womanly as her eyes
-rested lovingly on her art treasures. It seemed incongruous
-to Pennell, to watch her huge coarse hands, with
-their thick stumpy fingers and broad chestnut nails,
-fingering the delicate fabric with apparent carelessness.
-Cup after cup and vase and plate she almost tossed
-over each other, as she pushed some away to make
-room for others, and piled them up on the top of one
-another, until he trembled lest they should all come
-toppling down together.</p>
-
-<p>“You are more used to handle these treasures than
-I am,” he remarked presently, “I should be too much
-afraid of smashing something, to move them so quickly
-as you do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never broke a bit of china in my life,” returned
-the Baroness energetically. “I’ve broken a stick over a
-man’s back, more than once, but never ’ad an accident
-with my plates and dishes. ’Ow do you account for
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>“You must have a flow of good luck!” said Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
-Pennell, “I am so fearful for mine that I keep all the
-best under glass!”</p>
-
-<p>“I ’ave more friends to ’elp me than perhaps you
-know of,” said the Baroness, mysteriously, “but it ain’t
-only that! I never let a servant dust it! Miss Wynward
-does it, but she’s too much afraid to do more than
-touch ’em with the tip of her feather brush. They come
-to me sometimes and complain that the china is dirty.
-‘Let it be dirty,’ I say, ‘<em>that</em> won’t break it, but if you
-clean it, you will!’ Ha! ha! ha!”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Harriet Brandt entered the room,
-moving sinuously across the carpet as a snake might
-glide to its lair. Anthony Pennell could not take his
-eyes off that gliding walk of hers. It seemed to him
-the very essence of grace. It distracted all his attention
-from the china.</p>
-
-<p>“The Baron has just come in,” observed Harriet to
-her hostess.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! well! come along and leave the rest of the china
-till after dinner,” said Madame Gobelli. “Gustave likes
-to ’ave ’is dinner as soon as ’e comes ’ome.”</p>
-
-<p>She thrust her arm through that of Anthony Pennell,
-and conducted him to the dining-room, where the Baron
-(without having observed the ceremony of changing his
-coat or boots) was already seated just as he had come
-in, at the table. He gave a curt nod to the visitor as
-Mr. Pennell’s name was mentioned to him, and followed
-it up immediately by a query whether he would
-take fish. Mr. Pennell sat out the meal with increasing
-amazement at every course. He, who was accustomed,
-in consequence of his popularity, to sit at the tables of
-some of the highest in the land, could liken this one to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
-nothing but a farmhouse dinner. Course succeeded
-course, in rapid succession, and there was no particular
-fault to find with anything, but the utter want of
-ceremony—the mingling of well-known and aristocratic
-names with the boot and shoe trade—and the way in
-which the Baron and Baroness ate and drank, filled
-him with surprise. The climax was reached when Mr.
-Milliken, who was late for dinner, entered the room, and
-his hostess, before introducing him to the stranger, saluted
-him with a resounding smack on either cheek.</p>
-
-<p>Pennell thought it might be his turn next, and shuddered.
-But the wine flowed freely, and the Baroness,
-being in an undoubted good humour, the hospitality was
-unlimited. After dinner, the Baron having settled to
-sleep in an armchair, Madame Gobelli proposed that
-the party should amuse themselves with a game of
-“Hunt the slippers.”</p>
-
-<p>She was robed in an expensive satin dress, but she
-threw herself down on the ground with a resounding
-thump, and thrusting two enormous feet into view, offered
-her slipper as an inducement to commence the
-game.</p>
-
-<p>Pennell stood aloof, battling to restrain his laughter
-at the comical sight before him. The Baroness’s foot,
-from which she had taken the shoe, was garbed in a
-black woollen stocking full of holes, which displayed a
-set of bare toes. But, apparently quite unaware of the
-ludicrous object she presented, she kept on calling out
-for Harriet Brandt and Miss Wynward to come and
-complete the circle at which only Mr. Milliken and herself
-were seated. But Harriet shrank backwards and
-refused to play.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No! indeed, Madame, I cannot. I do not know
-your English games!” she pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, we’ll teach you!” screamed Madame
-Gobelli, “’ere’s Milliken, ’e knows all about it, don’t you,
-Milliken? ’E knows ’ow to look for the slipper under
-the gal’s petticoats. You come ’ere, ’Arriet, and sit
-next me, and Mr. Pennell shall be the first to ’unt.
-Come on!”</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Brandt would not “come on”. She remained
-seated, and declared that she was too tired to
-play and did not care for <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">les jeux innocents</i>, and she
-had a headache, and anything and everything, before
-she would comply with the outrageous request preferred
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>Madame Gobelli grumbled at her idleness and called
-her disobliging, but Anthony admired the girl for her
-steadfast refusal. He did not like to see her in the
-familiar society of such a woman as the Baroness—he
-would have liked still less to see her engaged in such a
-boisterous and unseemly game as “Hunt the slipper.”</p>
-
-<p>He took the opportunity of saying,</p>
-
-<p>“Since you are disinclined for such an energetic
-game, Miss Brandt, perhaps you would oblige me by
-singing a song! I should so much like to hear the
-mandoline. Mrs. Pullen has spoken to me of your efficiency
-on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“If Madame Gobelli wishes it, I have no objection,”
-replied Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! well! if you are all going to be so disagreeable
-as not to play a good game,” said the Baroness, as Mr.
-Milliken pulled her on her feet again, “’Arriet may as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>
-well sing to us! But a good romp first wouldn’t ’ave
-done us any ’arm!”</p>
-
-<p>She adjourned rather sulkily to a distant sofa with
-Mr. Milliken, where they entertained each other whilst
-Harriet tuned her mandoline and presently let her rich
-voice burst forth in the strains of “Oh! ma Charmante.”
-Anthony Pennell was enchanted. He had a passion for
-music, and it appealed more powerfully to him than
-anything else. He sat in rapt attention until Harriet’s
-voice had died away, and then he implored her to sing
-another song.</p>
-
-<p>“You cannot tell what it is for me, who cares more
-for music than for anything else in this world, to hear a
-voice like yours. Why! you will create a perfect <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">furore</i>
-when you go into society. You could make your fortune
-on the stage, but I know you have no need of that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! one never knows what one may have need of,”
-said Harriet gaily, as she commenced “Dormez, ma
-belle”, and sang it to perfection.</p>
-
-<p>“You must have had a very talented singing-master,”
-observed Pennell when the second song was finished.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed no! My only instructress was a nun in
-the Ursuline Convent in Jamaica. But I always loved
-it,” said the girl, as she ran over the strings of her mandoline
-in a merry little tarantelle, which made everyone
-in the room feel as if they had been bitten by the spider
-from which it took its name, and wanted above all other
-things to dance.</p>
-
-<p>How Pennell revelled in the music and the performer!
-How he longed to hear from her own lips that
-Ralph’s treatment had left no ill effects behind it.</p>
-
-<p>When she had ceased playing, he drew nearer to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
-her, and under the cover of the Baroness’s conversation
-with Mr. Milliken and the Baron’s snores, they managed
-to exchange a few words.</p>
-
-<p>“How can I ever thank you enough for the treat
-you have given me!” he began.</p>
-
-<p>“I am very glad that you liked it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I was not prepared to hear such rare talent! My
-experience of young ladies’ playing and singing has not
-hitherto been happy. But you have great genius. Did
-you ever sing to Mrs. Pullen whilst in Heyst?”</p>
-
-<p>“Once or twice.”</p>
-
-<p>“And to my cousin, Ralph Pullen?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot understand his having treated the Baroness
-with such scant courtesy. And you also, who had been
-kind enough to allow him to enjoy your society. You
-would not have found me so ungrateful. But you have
-heard doubtless that he is going to be married shortly!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! I have heard it!”</p>
-
-<p>“And that has, I suppose, put everything else out
-of his head! Perhaps it may be as well, especially for
-his future wife. There are some things which are
-dangerous for men to remember—such as your lovely
-voice, for example!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think so?” Harriet fixed her dark eyes
-on him, as she put the question.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure it will be dangerous for me, unless you
-will give me leave to come and hear it again. I shall
-not be able to sleep for thinking of it. Do you think
-the Baroness will be so good as to enrol me as a visitor
-to the house?”</p>
-
-<p>“You had better ask her!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And if she consents, will you sing to me sometimes?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am always singing or playing! There is nothing
-else to do here. The Baron and Baroness are almost
-always out, and I have no company but that of Bobby
-and Miss Wynward. It is terribly dull, I can tell you.
-I am longing to get away, but I do not know where
-to go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you no friends in England?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not one, except Mr. Tarver, who is my solicitor!”</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds very grim. If you will let me count
-myself amongst your friends, I shall be so grateful.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like it very much! I am not so ignorant
-as not to have heard your name and to know that you
-are a celebrated man. But I am afraid I shall prove a
-very stupid friend for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no such fear, and if I may come and see
-you sometimes, I shall count myself a very happy man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am generally alone in the afternoon,” replied Miss
-Brandt, sophistically.</p>
-
-<p>In another minute Mr. Pennell was saying good-night
-to his hostess and asking her permission to repeat his
-visit at some future time.</p>
-
-<p>“And if you and Miss Brandt would so far honour
-me, Madame Gobelli, as to come and have a little lunch
-at my chambers in Piccadilly, I shall feel myself only
-too much indebted to you. Perhaps we might arrange
-a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">matinée</i> or a concert for the same afternoon, if it
-would please you? Will you let me know? And pray
-fix as early a date as possible. And I may really avail
-myself of your kind permission to come and see you
-again. You may be sure that I shall not forget to do<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>
-so. Good-night! Good-night, Baron! Good-night, Miss
-Brandt!” and with a nod to Mr. Milliken he was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t ’e a nice fellow? Worth two of that conceited
-jackanapes, ’is cousin,” remarked the Baroness as
-he disappeared, “what do you think of ’im, ’Arriet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! he is well enough,” replied Miss Brandt with a
-yawn, as she prepared also to take her departure, “he
-is taller and broader and stronger looking than Captain
-Pullen—and he must be very clever into the bargain.”</p>
-
-<p>“And ’e never said a word about ’is books,” exclaimed
-Madame Gobelli, “only fancy!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! he never said a word about his books,” echoed
-Harriet.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Anthony Pennell had promised to let Margaret
-Pullen hear the result of his visit to the Red House, and
-as he entered her presence on the following evening, she
-saluted him with the queries,</p>
-
-<p>“Well! have you been there? Have you seen her?”</p>
-
-<p>To which he answered soberly,</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! I have been there and I have seen her!”</p>
-
-<p>“And what do you think of her? What did she
-say? I hope she was not rude to you!”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Mrs. Pullen,” said Pennell, as he seated
-himself, and prepared for a long talk, “you must let me
-say in the first place, that I should never have recognised
-Miss Brandt from your description of her! You led me
-to expect a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gauche</i> schoolgirl, a half-tamed savage, or a
-juvenile virago. And I am bound to say that she struck
-me as belonging to none of the species. I sent your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>
-note of introduction to Madame Gobelli, and received a
-very polite invitation in return, in accordance with which
-I dined at the Red House yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“You <em>dined</em> there!” exclaimed Margaret with renewed
-interest. “Oh! do tell me all about it, from the
-very beginning. What do you think of that dreadful
-woman, the Baroness, and her little humpty Baron, and
-did you tell Miss Brandt of Ralph’s impending marriage?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear lady, one question at a time, if you please.
-In the first place I arrived there rather sooner than I
-was expected, and Madame Gobelli had not returned
-from her afternoon drive, but Miss Harriet Brandt did
-the honours of the tea-table in a very efficient manner,
-and with as much composure and dignity as if she had
-been a duchess. We had a very pleasant time together
-until the Baroness burst in upon us!”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you chaffing me?” asked Margaret, incredulously.
-“What do you really think of her?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think she is, without exception, the most perfectly
-beautiful woman I have ever seen!”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>What!</em>” exclaimed his companion.</p>
-
-<p>She had thrown herself back in her armchair, and
-was regarding him as if he were perpetrating some mysterious
-joke, which she did not understand.</p>
-
-<p>“How extraordinary; how very extraordinary!” she
-exclaimed at length, “that is the very thing that Ralph
-said of her when they first met.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why extraordinary? There are few men who
-would not endorse the opinion. Miss Brandt possesses
-the kind of beauty that appeals to the senses of animal
-creatures like ourselves. She has a far more dangerous
-quality than that of mere regularity of feature. She<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
-attracts without knowing it. She is a mass of magnetism.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! do go on, Mr. Pennell! Tell me how she received
-the news you went to break to her!”</p>
-
-<p>“I never broke it at all. There was no need to do
-so. Miss Brandt alluded to the magnificent Captain
-Pullen’s marriage with the greatest nonchalance. She
-evidently estimates him at his true value, and does not
-consider him worth troubling her head about!”</p>
-
-<p>“You astonish me! But how are we to account then
-for the attitude she assumed towards Miss Leyton, and
-the boast she made of Ralph’s attentions to her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bravado, most likely! Miss Leyton goes to the Red
-House all aflame, like an angry turkey cock, and accuses
-Miss Brandt of having robbed her of her lover,
-and what would you have the girl do? Not cry Peccavi,
-surely, and lower her womanhood? She had but one
-course—to brave it out. Besides, you have heard only
-one side of the question, remember! I can imagine
-Miss Leyton being very ‘nasty’ if she liked!”</p>
-
-<p>“You forget the letters which Miss Brandt wrote to
-Ralph and which were found in his empty grate at
-Richmond!”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not! I remember them as only another proof
-of how unworthy he is of the confidence of any woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really, Mr. Pennell, you seem to be all on Miss
-Brandt’s side!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am, and for this reason. If your ideas concerning
-her are correct, she displayed a large amount of
-fortitude whilst speaking of your brother-in-law yesterday.
-But my own belief is, that you are mistaken—that
-Miss Brandt is too clever for Ralph, or any of you—and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>
-that she cares no more for him in that way than
-you do. She considers doubtless that he has behaved
-in a most ungentlemanly manner towards them all, and
-so do I. I did not know what excuse to make for
-Ralph! I was ashamed to own him as a relation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Harriet Brandt <em>did</em> then confide her supposed
-wrongs to you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all! When she mentioned Ralph’s name, it
-was like that of any other acquaintance. But when she
-was out of the room, the Baroness told me that he had
-behaved like a scoundrel to the girl—that he had never
-confided the fact of his engagement to her, but run after
-her on every occasion, and then after having promised
-to join their party in Brussels, and asked Madame
-Gobelli to engage his room for him, he left for England
-without even sending her a line of apology, nor has he
-taken the least notice of them since!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! but you know the reason of his sudden departure!”
-cried Margaret, her soft eyes welling over
-with tears.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Mrs. Pullen,” said Anthony Pennell, sympathetically,
-“even at that sad moment, Ralph might
-have sent a telegram, or scratched a line of apology.
-We have to attend to such little courtesies, you know,
-even if our hearts are breaking! And how can you excuse
-his not having called on them, or written since?
-No wonder the Baroness is angry. She did not restrain
-her tongue in speaking of him yesterday. She said she
-never wished to see his face again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does she know that Elinor went to the Red
-House?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think not! There was no mention of her name!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Then I suppose we may at all events consider the
-affair <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">une chose finie</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope so, sincerely! I should not advise Master
-Ralph to show his face at the Red House again. The
-Baroness said she longed to lay her stick across his back,
-and I believe she is quite capable of doing so!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! indeed she is,” replied Margaret, smiling, “we
-heard a great many stories of her valour in that respect
-from Madame Lamont, the landlady of the Lion d’Or.
-Has Miss Brandt taken up her residence altogether with
-Madame Gobelli?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think not! She told me her life there was very
-dull, and she should like to change it.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is in a most unfortunate position for a young
-girl,” remarked Margaret, “left parentless, with money
-at her command, and in a strange country! And with
-the strange stigma attached to her birth—”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe in stigmas being attached to one’s
-birth,” returned Pennell hastily, “the only stigmas worth
-thinking about, are those we bring upon ourselves by
-our misconduct—such a one, for instance, as my cousin
-Ralph has done with regard to Miss Brandt! I would
-rather be in her shoes than his. Ralph thinks, perhaps,
-that being a stranger and friendless she is fair game—”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that, taking my name in vain?” interrupted
-a languid voice at the open door, as Captain Pullen
-advanced into the room.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Pullen started and grew very red at being
-detected in discussing her brother-in-law’s actions, but
-Anthony Pennell, who was always ruffled by his cousin’s
-affected walk and drawl, blurted the truth right out.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I</em> was,” he replied, hardly touching the hand which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>
-Captain Pullen extended to him, “I was just telling Mrs.
-Pullen of the high estimation in which your name is held
-at the Red House!”</p>
-
-<p>It was now Ralph’s turn to grow red. His fair face
-flushed from chin to brow, as he repeated,</p>
-
-<p>“The Red House! what Red House?”</p>
-
-<p>“Did they not mention the name to you? I mean
-the residence of Madame Gobelli. I was dining there
-yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dining there, were you? By Jove! I didn’t know
-you were acquainted with the woman. Isn’t she a queer
-old party? Baroness Boots, eh? Fancy your knowing
-them! I thought you were a cut above that, Anthony!”</p>
-
-<p>“If the Gobellis were good enough for you to be
-intimate with in Heyst, I suppose they are good enough
-for me to dine with in London, Ralph! I did not know
-until last evening, however, that you had left them to
-pay for your rooms in Brussels, or I would have taken
-the money over with me to defray the debt.”</p>
-
-<p>Ralph had seated himself by this time, but he looked
-very uneasy and as if he wished he had not come.</p>
-
-<p>“Did the old girl engage rooms for me?” he stammered.
-“Well! you know the reason I could not go to
-Brussels, but of course if I had known that she had
-gone to any expense for me, I would have repaid her.
-Did she tell you of it herself?” he added, rather
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! and a good many more things besides. As
-you have happened to come in whilst we are on the
-question, I had better make a clean breast of it. Perhaps
-you have heard that Miss Leyton has been to the
-Red House and had an interview with Miss Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes! I’ve just come from Richmond, where we’ve
-had a jolly row over it,” grumbled Ralph, pulling his
-moustaches.</p>
-
-<p>“Your family all felt that sort of thing could not go
-on—that it must end one way or the other—and therefore
-I went to the Red House, ostensibly to view Madame
-Gobelli’s collection of china, but in reality to
-ascertain what view of the matter she and Miss Brandt
-took—and to undeceive them as to your being in a
-position to pursue your intimacy with the young lady
-any further.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what the devil business have you to meddle
-in my private affairs?” demanded Captain Pullen rousing
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Because, unfortunately, your mother happened to
-be my father’s sister,” replied Pennell sternly, “and the
-scrapes you get in harm me more than they do yourself!
-One officer more or less, who gets into a scrape
-with women, goes pretty well unnoticed, but I have attained
-a position in which I cannot afford to have my
-relations’ names bandied about as having behaved in a
-manner unbecoming gentlemen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who dares to say that of me?” cried Ralph angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“Everybody who knows of the attention you paid
-Miss Brandt in Heyst,” replied Anthony Pennell, boldly,
-“and without telling her that you were already engaged
-to be married. I do not wonder at Miss Leyton being
-angry about it! I only wonder she consents to have
-any more to do with you in the circumstances.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! we’ve settled all that!” said Ralph, testily, “we
-had the whole matter out at Richmond this afternoon,
-and I’ve promised to be a good boy for the future, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span>
-never speak to a pretty woman again! You need not
-wonder any more about Elinor! She is only glad enough
-to get me back at any price!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes? And what about Miss Brandt?” enquired
-Pennell.</p>
-
-<p>“Is she worrying about this affair?” asked Captain
-Pullen, quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit! I think she estimates your attentions
-at their true value. I was alluding to the opinion she
-and her friends must have formed of your character as
-an officer and a gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! I’ll soon set all that right! I’ll run over to the
-Red House and see the old girl, if you two will promise
-not to tell Elinor!”</p>
-
-<p>“I should not advise you to do that! I am afraid
-you might get a warm reception. I think Madame
-Gobelli is quite capable of having you soused in the
-horse-pond. You would think the same if you had heard
-the names she called you yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did she call me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Everything she could think of. She considers you
-have behaved not only in a most ungentlemanly manner
-towards her, but in a most dishonourable one to Miss
-Brandt. She particularly told me to tell you that she
-never wished to see your face again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Damn her!” exclaimed Captain Pullen, wrathfully,
-“and all her boots and shoes into the bargain. A vulgar,
-coarse old tradesman’s wife! How dare she——”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop a minute, Ralph! The Baroness’s status in
-society makes no difference in this matter. You know
-perfectly well that you did wrong. Let us have no more
-discussion of the subject.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span></p>
-
-<p>Captain Pullen leaned back sulkily in his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! if I <em>did</em> flirt a little bit more than was
-prudent with an uncommonly distracting little girl,” he
-muttered presently, “I am sure I have had to pay for
-it! Lord Walthamstowe insists that if I do not marry
-Elinor before the Rangers start for Malta the engagement
-shall be broken off, so I suppose I must do it! But it
-is a doosid nuisance to be tied up at five-and-twenty,
-before one has half seen life! What the dickens I am
-to do with her when I’ve got her, I’m sure I don’t
-know!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! you will find married life very charming when
-you’re used to it!” said Pennell consolingly, “and Miss
-Leyton is everything a fellow could wish for in a wife!
-Only you must give up flirting, my boy, or if I mistake
-not, you’ll find you’ve caught a tartar!”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect to have to give up everything,” said the
-other with a sour mouth.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as he perceived a favourable opportunity,
-Anthony Pennell rose to take his leave. He did not
-wish to quarrel with Ralph Pullen about a girl whom he
-had only seen once, at the same time he feared for his
-own self-control, if his cousin continued to mention the
-matter in so nonchalant a manner. Pennell had always
-despised Captain Pullen for his easy conceit with regard
-to women, and it seemed to him to have grown more
-detestably contemptible than before. He was anxious
-therefore to quit the scene of action. But, to his
-annoyance, when he bade Margaret good-evening, Ralph
-also rose and expressed his wish to walk with him in
-the direction of his chambers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you couldn’t put me up for the night,
-old chappie!” he said with his most languid air.</p>
-
-<p>“Decidedly not!” replied Pennell. “I have only my
-own bedroom, and I’ve no intention of your sharing it.
-Why do you not go back to Richmond, or put up at an
-hotel?”</p>
-
-<p>“Doosid inhospitable!” remarked Captain Pullen,
-with a faded smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry you think so, but a man cannot give what he
-does not possess. You had better stay and keep your
-sister-in-law company for a little while. I have work to
-do and am going straight home!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right! I’ll walk with you a little way,” persisted
-Ralph, and the two young men left the house
-together.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they found themselves in the street, Captain
-Pullen attacked his cousin, eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, Pennell, what is the exact direction of the
-Red House?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you want to know?” enquired his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I feel that I owe the Baroness a visit. I
-acknowledge that I was wrong not to write and make
-my apologies, but you must know what it is—with a
-deuce of a lot of women to look after, and the whole
-gang crying their eyes out, and everything thrown on
-my shoulders, coffin, funeral, taking them over from
-Heyst to England, and all—it was enough to drive
-everything else out of a man’s head. You must acknowledge
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“You owe no excuses to me, Pullen, neither do I
-quite believe in them. You have had plenty of time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>
-since to remedy your negligence, even if you did forget
-to be courteous at the moment!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that, and you’re quite right about the other
-thing. I had more reasons than one for letting the
-matter drop. You are a man and I can tell you with
-impunity what would set the women tearing my eyes
-out. I <em>did</em> flirt a bit with Harriet Brandt, perhaps more
-than was quite prudent in the circumstances—”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean the circumstance of your engagement to
-Miss Leyton?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes and No! If I had been free, it would have
-been all the same—perhaps worse, for I should not have
-had a loophole of escape. For you see Miss Brandt is
-not the sort of girl that any man could marry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” demanded Pennell with some asperity.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! because—well! you should hear old Phillips
-talk of her and her parents. They were the most awful
-people, and she has black blood in her, her mother was
-a half-caste, so you see it would be impossible for any
-man in my position to think of marrying her! One
-might get a piebald son and heir! Ha! ha! ha! But
-putting all that aside, she is one of the demndest
-fascinating little women I ever came across—you would
-say so too, if you had seen as much of her as I did—I
-can’t tell you what it is exactly, but she has a drawing
-way about her, that pulls a fellow into the net before
-he knows what he is about. And her voice, by Jove!—have
-you heard her sing?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have, but that has nothing to do that I can see
-with the subject under discussion. You, an engaged
-man, who had no more right to philander with a girl,
-than if you had been married, appear to me to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>
-followed this young lady about and paid her attentions,
-which were, to say the least of them, compromising,
-never announcing the fact, meanwhile, that you were
-bound to Miss Leyton. After which, you left her, without
-a word of explanation, to think what she chose of your
-conduct. And now you wish to see her again, in order
-to apologise. Am I right?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty well, only you make such a serious matter
-out of a little fun!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, I repeat that if you are wise, you will
-save yourself the trouble, Ralph! Miss Brandt is happily
-too sensible to have been taken in by your pretence of
-making love to her. She estimates you at your true
-value. She knows that you are engaged to Elinor Leyton—that
-you were engaged all the time she knew you—and,
-I think, she rather pities Miss Leyton for being
-engaged to you!”</p>
-
-<p>But this point of view had never presented itself
-before to the inflated vanity of Ralph Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Pities</em> her!” he exclaimed, “the devil!”</p>
-
-<p>“I daresay it seems incomprehensible to you that
-any woman should not be thankful to accept at your
-hands the crumbs that may fall from another’s table,
-but with regard to Miss Brandt, I assure you it is true!
-And even were it otherwise, I am certain Madame
-Gobelli would not admit you to her house. You know
-the sort of person she is! She can be very violent if
-she chooses, and the names she called you yesterday,
-were not pretty ones. I had much trouble, as your
-relative, to stand by and listen to them quietly. Yet I
-could not say that they were undeserved!”</p>
-
-<p>“O well! I daresay!” returned Ralph, impatiently.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-“Let us allow, for the sake of argument, that you are
-right, and that I behaved like a brute! The matter lies
-only between Hally Brandt and myself. The old woman
-has nothing to do with it! She never met the girl till
-she went to Heyst. What I want to do is to see Hally
-again and make my peace with her! You know how
-easily women are won over. A pretty present—a few
-kisses and excuses,—a few tears—and the thing is
-done. I shouldn’t like to leave England without making
-my peace with the little girl. Couldn’t you get her to
-come to your chambers, and let me meet her there?
-Then the Baroness need know nothing about it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you told us just now, that you had had a
-reconciliation with Miss Leyton on condition that you
-were to be a good boy for the future. Does that not
-include a surreptitious meeting with Miss Brandt?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it does, but we have to make all sorts
-of promises where women are concerned. A nice kind
-of life a man would lead, if he consented to be tied
-to his wife’s apron-strings, and never go anywhere, nor
-see anyone, of whom she did not approve. I swore to
-everything she and old Walthamstowe asked me, just
-for peace’s sake,—but if they imagine I’m going to be
-hampered like that, they must be greater fools than I
-take them for!”</p>
-
-<p>“You must do as you think right, Pullen, but I am
-not going to help you to break your word!”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me where the Red House is! Tell me whereabouts
-Hally takes her daily walks!” urged Captain
-Pullen.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall tell you nothing—you must find out for
-yourself!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well! you are damned particular!” exclaimed his
-cousin, “one would think this little half-caste was a
-princess of the Blood Royal. What is she, when all’s
-said and done? The daughter of a mulatto and a man
-who made himself so detested that he was murdered by
-his own servants—the bastard of a——”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop!” cried Pennell, so vehemently that the
-passers-by turned their heads to look at him, “I don’t
-believe it, and if it is true, I do not wish to hear it!
-Miss Brandt may be all that you say—I am not in a
-position to contradict your assertions—but to me she
-represents only a friendless and unprotected woman,
-who has a right to our sympathy and respect.”</p>
-
-<p>“A friendless woman!” sneered Captain Pullen, “yes!
-and a doosid good-looking one into the bargain, eh, my
-dear fellow, and much of your sympathy and respect
-she would command if she were ugly and humpbacked.
-O! I know you, Pennell! It’s no use your coming the
-benevolent Samaritan over me! You have an eye for
-a jimper waist and a trim ancle as well as most men.
-But I fancy your interest is rather thrown away in this
-quarter. Miss Brandt has a thorny path before her.
-She is a young lady who will have her own way, and
-with the glorious example of the Baroness the way is
-not likely to be too carefully chosen. To tell the truth,
-old boy, I ran away because I was afraid of falling into
-the trap. The girl wishes intensely to be married, and
-she is not a girl whom men will marry, and so—we
-need go no further. Only, I should not be surprised
-if, notwithstanding her fortune and her beauty, we should
-find Miss Harriet Brandt figuring before long, amongst
-the free lances of London.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And you would have done your best to send her
-there!” replied Anthony Pennell indignantly, as he stopped
-on the doorstep of his Piccadilly chambers. “But I am
-glad to say that your folly has been frustrated this time,
-and Miss Brandt sees you as you are! Good-night!”
-and without further discussion, he turned on his heel
-and walked upstairs.</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove!” thought Ralph, as he too went on his
-way, “I believe old Anthony is smitten with the girl himself,
-though he has only seen her once! That was the
-most remarkable thing about her—the ease with which
-she seemed to attract, looking so innocent all the while,
-and the deadly strength with which she resisted one’s
-efforts to get free again. Perhaps it is as well after all
-that I should not meet her. I don’t believe I could
-trust myself, only speaking of her seems to have revived
-the old sensation of being drawn against my will—hypnotised,
-I suppose the scientists would call it—to be
-near her, to touch her, to embrace her, until all power
-of resistance is gone. But I do hope old Anthony is not
-going to be hypnotised. He’s too good for that.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Pennell, having reached his rooms, lighted
-the gas, threw himself into an armchair, and rested his
-head upon his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor little girl!” he murmured to himself. “Poor
-little girl!”</p>
-
-<p>Anthony Pennell was a Socialist in the best and truest
-sense of the world. He loved his fellow creatures, both
-high and low, better than he loved himself. He wanted
-all to share alike—to be equally happy, equally comfortable—to
-help and be helped, to rest and depend upon
-one another. He knew that the dream was only a dream—that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
-it would never be fulfilled in his time, nor any
-other; that some men would be rich and some poor as
-long as the world lasts, and that what one man can do
-to alleviate the misery and privation and suffering with
-which we are surrounded, is very little. What little
-Pennell could do, however, to prove that his theories
-were not mere talk, he did. He made a large income
-by his popular writings and the greater part of it went
-to relieve the want of his humbler friends, not through
-governors and secretaries and the heads of charitable
-Societies, but from his own hand to theirs. But his
-Socialism went further and higher than this. Money was
-not the only thing which his fellow creatures required—they
-wanted love, sympathy, kindness, and consideration—and
-these he gave also, wherever he found that there
-was need. He set his face pertinaciously against all
-scandal and back-biting, and waged a perpetual warfare
-against the tyranny of men over women; the ill-treatment
-of children; and the barbarities practised upon dumb
-animals and all living things. He was a liberal-minded
-man, with a heart large enough and tender enough to
-belong to a woman—with a horror of cruelty and a great
-compassion for everything that was incapable of defending
-itself. He was always writing in defence of the
-People, calling the attention of those in authority to their
-misfortunes; their evil chances; their lack of opportunity;
-and their patience under tribulation. For this purpose
-and in order to know them thoroughly, he had gone and
-lived amongst them; shared their filthy dens in Whitechapel,
-partaken of their unappetising food in Stratford;
-and watched them at their labour in Homerton. His
-figure and his kindly face were well-known in some of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
-the worst and most degraded parts of London, and he
-could pass anywhere, without fear of a hand being lifted
-up against him, or an oath called after him in salutation.
-Anthony Pennell was, in fact, a general lover—a lover of
-Mankind.</p>
-
-<p>And that is why he leant his head upon his hand
-as he ejaculated with reference to Harriet Brandt, “Poor
-little girl.”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed so terrible in his eyes that just because
-she was friendless, and an orphan, just because her
-parents had been, perhaps, unworthy, just because she
-had a dark stream mingling with her blood, just because
-she needed the more sympathy and kindness, the more
-protection and courtesy, she should be considered fit
-prey for the sensualist—a fit subject to wipe men’s feet
-upon!</p>
-
-<p>What difference did it make to Harriet Brandt herself,
-that she was marked with an hereditary taint? Did
-it render her less beautiful, less attractive, less graceful
-and accomplished? Were the sins of the fathers ever
-to be visited upon the children?—was no sympathetic
-fellow-creature to be found to say, “If it is so, let us
-forget it! It is not your fault nor mine! Our duty is
-to make each other’s lives as happy as possible and
-trust the rest to God.”</p>
-
-<p>He hoped as he sat there, that before long, Harriet
-Brandt would find a friend for life, who would never
-remind her of anything outside her own loveliness and
-loveable qualities.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he rose, with a sigh, and going to his
-bookcase drew thence an uncut copy of his last work,
-“God and the People.” It had been a tremendous success,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
-having already reached the tenth edition. It dealt
-largely, as its title indicated, with his favourite theory,
-but it was light and amusing also, full of strong nervous
-language, and bristling every here and there, with wit—not
-strained epigrams, such as no Society conversationalists
-ever tossed backward and forward to each other—but
-honest, mirth-provoking humour, arising from the
-humorous side of Pennell’s own character, which ever
-had a good-humoured jest for the oddities and comicalities
-of everyday life.</p>
-
-<p>He regarded the volume for a moment as though he
-were considering if it were an offering worthy of its destination,
-and then he took up a pen and transcribed
-upon the fly leaf the name of Harriet Brandt—only her
-name, nothing more.</p>
-
-<p>“She seems intelligent,” he thought, “and she may
-like to read it. Who knows, if there is any fear of the
-sad destiny which Ralph prophesies for her, whether I
-may not be happy enough to turn her ideas into a worthier
-and more wholesome direction. With an independent
-fortune, how much good might she not accomplish,
-amongst those less happily situated than herself! But
-the other idea—No, I will not entertain it for a moment!
-She is too good, too pure, too beautiful, for so horrible
-a fate! Poor little girl! Poor, poor little girl!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The holiday season being now over, and the less
-fashionable people returned to town, Harriet Brandt’s
-curiosity was much excited by the number of visitors
-who called at the Red House, but were never shewn
-into the drawing-room. As many as a dozen might arrive
-in the course of an afternoon and were taken by
-Miss Wynward straight upstairs to the room where Madame
-Gobelli and Mr. Milliken so often shut themselves
-up together. These mysterious visitors were not objects
-of charity either, but well-dressed men and women, some
-of whom came in their own carriages, and all of whom
-appeared to be of the higher class of society. The
-Baroness had left off going to the factory, also, and
-stayed at home every day, apparently with the sole
-reason of being at hand to receive her visitors.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet could not understand it at all, and after
-having watched two fashionably attired ladies accompanied
-by a gentleman, ascend the staircase, to Madame
-Gobelli’s room, one afternoon, she ventured to sound
-Miss Wynward on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“Who were the ladies who went upstairs just now?”
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Friends of the Baroness, Miss Brandt!” was the
-curt reply.</p>
-
-<p>“But why do they not come down to the drawing-room<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span>
-then? What does Madame Gobelli do with them
-in that little room upstairs? I was passing one day just
-after someone had entered, and I heard the key turned
-in the lock. What is all the secrecy about?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no secrecy on my part, Miss Brandt. You
-know the position I hold here. When I have shewn the
-visitors upstairs, according to my Lady’s directions, my
-duty is done!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must know why they come to see her!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know nothing. If you are curious on the subject,
-you must ask the Baroness.”</p>
-
-<p>But Harriet did not like to do that. The Baroness
-had become less affectionate to her of late—her fancy
-was already on the wane—she no longer called the attention
-of strangers to her young friend as the “daughter
-of the house”—and Harriet felt the change, though she
-could scarcely have defined where it exactly lay. She
-had begun to feel less at home in her hostess’s presence,
-and her high spirit chafed at the alteration in her manner.
-She realised, as many had done before her, that she had
-out-stayed her welcome. But her curiosity respecting the
-people who visited Madame Gobelli upstairs was none
-the less. She confided it to Bobby—poor Bobby who
-grew whiter and more languid ever day—but her playful
-threat to invade the sacred precincts and find out what
-the Baroness and her friends were engaged upon, was
-received by the youth with horror. He trembled as he
-begged her not to think of such a thing.</p>
-
-<p>“Hally, you mustn’t, indeed you mustn’t! You don’t
-know—you have no idea—what might not happen to
-you, if you offended Mamma by breaking in upon her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
-privacy. O! don’t, pray don’t! She can be so terrible
-at times—I do not know what she might not do or
-say!”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Bobby, I was only in fun! I have not
-the least idea of doing anything so rude. Only, if you
-think that I am frightened of your Mamma or any other
-woman, you are very much mistaken. It’s all nonsense!
-No one person can harm another in this world!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes, they can—if they have <em>help</em>,” replied the
-boy, shaking his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Help! what help? The help of Mr. Milliken, I
-suppose! I would rather fight him than the Baroness
-any day—but I fear neither of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! Hally, you are wrong,” said the lad, “you
-must be careful, indeed you must—for my sake!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why! you silly Bobby, you are actually trembling!
-However, I promise you I will do nothing rash! And I
-shall not be here much longer now! Your Mamma is
-getting tired of me, I can see that plainly enough! She
-has hardly spoken a word to me for the last two days.
-I am going to ask Mr. Pennell, to advise me where to
-find another home!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no!” cried the lad, clinging to her, “you shall
-not leave us! Mr. Pennell shall not take you away! I
-will kill him first!”</p>
-
-<p>He was getting terribly jealous of Anthony Pennell,
-but Harriet laughed at his complaints and reproaches
-as the emanations of a love-sick schoolboy. She was
-flattered by his feverish longing for her society, and his
-outspoken admiration of her beauty, but she did not
-suppose for one moment that Bobby was capable of a
-lasting, or dangerous, sentiment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pennell had become a familiar figure at the Red
-House by this time. His first visit had been speedily
-succeeded by another, at which he had presented
-Harriet Brandt with the copy of his book—an attention,
-which had he known it, flattered her vanity more than
-any praises of her beauty could have done. A plain
-woman likes to be told that she is good-looking, a handsome
-one that she is clever. Harriet Brandt was not
-unintelligent, on the contrary she had inherited a very
-fair amount of brains from her scientific father—but no
-one ever seemed to have found it out, until Anthony
-Pennell came her way. She was a little tired of being
-told that she had lovely eyes, and the most fascinating
-smile, she knew all that by heart, and craved for something
-new. Mr. Pennell had supplied the novelty by
-talking to her as if her intellect were on a level with his
-own—as if she were perfectly able to understand and
-sympathise with his quixotic plans for the alleviation of
-the woes of all mankind—with his Arcadian dreams of
-Liberty, Equality and Fraternity,—and might help them
-also, if she chose, not with money only, but by raising
-her own voice in the Cause of the People. Harriet had
-never been treated so by anyone before, and her ardent,
-impetuous, passionate nature, which had a large amount
-of gratitude in its composition, fixed itself upon her new
-friend with a vehemence which neither of them would
-find it easy to overcome—or to disentangle themselves
-from. Her love (eager to repair the void left by the
-desertion of Captain Pullen) had poured itself, by means
-of looks and sighs and little timid, tender touches upon
-Anthony Pennell like a mountain torrent that had burst
-its bounds, and he had been responsive—he had opened<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>
-his arms to receive the flood, actuated not only by the
-admiration which he had conceived for her from the
-first, but by the intense, yearning pity which her loneliness
-and friendlessness had evoked in his generous,
-compassionate nature. In fact they were desperately in
-love with each other, and Harriet was expecting each
-time he came, to hear Anthony Pennell say that he
-could no longer live without her. And Bobby looked
-on from a little distance—and suffered. The next time
-that Mr. Pennell came to see her, Harriet confided to
-him the mystery of the upstairs room, and asked his
-opinion as to what it could possibly mean.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps they are people connected with the boot
-trade,” suggested Anthony jestingly, “does Madame keep
-a stock of boots and shoes up there, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! no! Mr. Pennell, you must not joke about it!
-This is something serious! Poor Bobby grew as white
-as a sheet when I proposed to make a raid upon the
-room some day and discover the mystery, and said that
-his mother was a terrible woman, and able to do me
-great harm if I offended her!”</p>
-
-<p>“I quite agree with Bobby in his estimate of his
-Mamma being a terrible woman,” replied Mr. Pennell,
-“but it is all nonsense about her being able to harm
-you! <em>I</em> should soon see about that!”</p>
-
-<p>“What would you do?” asked Harriet, with downcast
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“What would I <em>not</em> do to save you from anything
-disagreeable, let alone anything dangerous. But the
-Baroness is too fond of you, surely, to do you any
-harm!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet pursed up her lips.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am not so sure about her being fond of me, Mr.
-Pennell! She used to profess to be, I know, but lately
-her manner has very much altered. She will pass half
-a day without speaking a word to me, and they have
-cut off wine and champagne and everything nice from
-the dinner table. I declare the meals here are sometimes
-not fit to eat. And I believe they grudge me the
-little I consider worthy my attention.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why do you stay here, if you fancy you are
-not welcome?” asked Pennell, earnestly, “you are not
-dependent on these people or their hospitality.”</p>
-
-<p>“But where am I to go?” said the girl, “I know no
-one in London, and Miss Wynward says that I am too
-young to live at an hotel by myself!”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Wynward is quite right! You are far too
-young and too beautiful. You don’t know what wicked
-men and women there are in the world, who would
-delight in fleecing an innocent lamb like you. But I
-can soon find you a home where you could stay in respectability
-and comfort, until—until——”</p>
-
-<p>“Until <em>what</em>,” asked Harriet, with apparent ingenuousness,
-for she knew well enough what was coming.</p>
-
-<p>They were seated on one of those little couches
-made expressly for conversation, where a couple can sit
-back to back, with their faces turned to one another.
-Harriet half raised her slumbrous black eyes as she put
-the question, and met the fire in his own. He stretched
-out his arms and caught her round the waist.</p>
-
-<p>“Hally! Hally! you know—there is no need for me
-to tell you! Will you come home to me, dearest?
-Don’t ever say that you are friendless again! Here is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
-your friend and your lover and your devoted slave for
-ever! My darling—my beautiful Hally, say you will be
-my wife—and make me the very happiest man in all
-the world!”</p>
-
-<p>She did not shrink from his warm wooing—that
-was not her nature! Her eyes waked up and flashed
-fire, responsive to his own; she let her head rest on his
-shoulder, and turned her lips upwards eagerly to meet
-his kiss, she cooed her love into his ear, and clasped
-him tightly round the neck as if she would never let
-him go.</p>
-
-<p>“I love you—I love you,” she kept on murmuring,
-“I have loved you from the very first!”</p>
-
-<p>“O! Hally, how happy it makes me to hear you say
-so,” he replied, “how few women have the honesty
-and courage to avow their love as you do. My sweet
-child of the sun! The women in this cold country have
-no idea of the joy that a mutual love like ours has the
-power to bestow. We will love each other for ever and
-ever, my Hally, and when our bodies are withered by
-age, our spirits shall still go loving on.”</p>
-
-<p>He—the man whose whole thoughts hitherto had
-been so devoted to the task of ameliorating the condition
-of his fellow-creatures, that he had had no time
-to think of dalliance, succumbed as fully to its pleasures
-now, as the girl whose life had simply been a ripening
-process for the seed which had burst forth into flower.
-They were equally passionate—equally loving—equally
-unreserved—and they were soon absorbed in their own
-feelings, and noticed nothing that was taking place
-around them.</p>
-
-<p>But they were not as entirely alone as they imagined.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>
-A pale face full of misery was watching them through
-one of the panes in the French windows, gazing at what
-seemed like his death doom, too horribly fascinated to
-tear himself away. Bobby stood there and saw Hally—<em>his</em>
-Hally, as he had often fondly called her, without
-knowing the meaning of the word—clasped in the arms
-of this stranger, pressing her lips to his, and being released
-with tumbled hair and a flushed face, only to
-seek the source of her delight again. At last Bobby
-could stand the bitter sight no longer, and with a low
-moan, he fled to his own apartment and flung himself,
-face downward on the bed. And Anthony Pennell and
-Harriet Brandt continued to make love to each other,
-until the shadows lengthened, and six o’clock was near
-at hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go now, my darling,” he said at last, “though
-it is hard to tear myself away. But I am so happy,
-Hally, so very, very happy, that I dare not complain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why cannot you stay the evening?” she urged.</p>
-
-<p>“I had better not! I have not been asked in the
-first instance, and if what you say about the Baroness’s
-altered demeanour towards yourself be true, I am afraid
-I should find it difficult to keep my temper. But we
-part for a very short time, my darling! The first thing
-to-morrow, I shall see about another home for you,
-where I can visit you as freely as I like! And as soon
-as it can ever be, Hally, we will be married—is that a
-promise?”</p>
-
-<p>“A promise, yes! a thousand times over, Anthony!
-I long for the time when I shall be your wife!”</p>
-
-<p>“God bless you, my sweet! You have made my
-future life look all sunshine! I will write to you as soon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>
-as ever I have news and then you will lose no time in
-leaving your present home, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not an instant that I can help,” replied Harriet,
-eagerly; “I am longing to get away. I feel that I have
-lost my footing here!”</p>
-
-<p>And with another long embrace, the lovers parted.
-As soon as Anthony had left her, Harriet ran up to her
-room, to cool her feverish face and change her dress
-for dinner. She was really and truly fond of the man
-she had just promised to marry, and if anything could
-have the power to transform her into a thinking and
-responsible woman, it would be marriage with Anthony
-Pennell. She was immensely proud that so clever and
-popular a writer should have chosen her from out the
-world of women to be his wife, and she loved him for
-the excellent qualities he had displayed towards his fellow
-men, as well as for the passionate warmth he had
-shewn for herself. She was a happier girl than she had
-ever been in all her life before, as she stood, flushed
-and triumphant, in front of her mirror and saw the
-beautiful light in her dark eyes, and the luxuriant
-growth of her dusky hair, and the carmine of her lips,
-and loved every charm she possessed for Anthony’s
-sake. She felt less vexed even with the Baroness than
-she had done, and determined that she would not
-break the news of her intended departure from the Red
-House, that evening, but try to leave as pleasant an impression
-behind her as she could! And she put on the
-lemon-coloured frock, though Anthony was not there to
-see it, from a feeling that since he approved of her, she
-must be careful of her appearance for the future, to do
-justice to his opinion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span></p>
-
-<p>Madame Gobelli appeared to be in a worse temper
-than usual that evening. She stumped in to the dining-room
-and took her seat at table without vouchsafing a
-word to Harriet, although she had not seen her since
-luncheon time. She found fault with everything that
-Miss Wynward did, and telling her that she grew
-stupider and stupider each day, ordered her to attend
-her upstairs after dinner, as she had some friends
-coming and needed her assistance. The ex-governess
-did not answer at first, and the Baroness sharply demanded
-if she had heard her speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! my lady,” she replied, slowly, “but I trust
-that you will excuse my attendance, as I have made an
-engagement for this evening!”</p>
-
-<p>Madame Gobelli boiled over with rage.</p>
-
-<p>“Engagement! What do you mean by making an
-engagement without asking my leave first? You can’t
-keep it! I want you to ’elp me in something and you’ll
-’ave to come!”</p>
-
-<p>“You must forgive me,” repeated Miss Wynward,
-firmly, “but I cannot do as you wish!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet opened her eyes in amazement. Miss Wynward
-refusing a request from Madame Gobelli. What
-would happen next?</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness grew scarlet in the face. She positively
-trembled with rage.</p>
-
-<p>“’Old your tongue!” she screamed. “You’ll do as I
-say, or you leave my ’ouse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will leave your house!” replied Miss Wynward.</p>
-
-<p>Madame Gobelli was thunderstruck! Where was
-this insolent menial, who had actually dared to defy her,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span>
-going? What friends had she? What home to go to?
-She had received no salary from her for years past, but
-had accepted board and lodging and cast-off clothes in
-return for her services. How could she face the world
-without money?</p>
-
-<p>“You go at your peril,” she exclaimed, hoarse with
-rage, “you know what will ’appen to you if you try to
-resist me! I ’ave those that will ’elp me to be revenged
-on my enemies! You know that those I ’ate, <em>die</em>!
-And when I ’ave my knife in a body, I turn it! You
-’ad better be careful, and think twice about what you’re
-going to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your ladyship cannot frighten me any longer,” replied
-Miss Wynward, calmly, “I thank God and my
-friends that I have got over that! Nor do I believe any
-more in your boasted powers of revenge! If they are
-really yours, you should be ashamed to use them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gustave!” shrieked the Baroness, “get up and put
-this woman from the door. She don’t stop in the Red
-’Ouse another hour! Let ’er pack up ’er trumpery and
-go! Do you ’ear me, Gustave? Turn ’er out of the room!”</p>
-
-<p>“Mein tear! mein tear! a little patience! Miss Wynward
-will go quietly! But the law, mein tear, the law!
-We must be careful!”</p>
-
-<p>“Damn the law!” exclaimed the Baroness. “’Ere,
-where’s that devil Bobby? Why ain’t ’e at dinner?
-What’s the good of my ’aving a ’usband and a son if
-neither of ’em will do my bidding!”</p>
-
-<p>Then everyone looked round and discovered that
-Bobby was not at the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Bobby?” demanded the Baroness of the
-servant in waiting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know, I’m sure,” replied the domestic, who
-like most of Madame Gobelli’s dependents, talked as
-familiarly with her as though they had been on an
-equality. “The last time I saw ’im was at luncheon.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will go and look for him,” said Miss Wynward
-quietly, as she rose from table.</p>
-
-<p>“No! you don’t!” exclaimed the Baroness insolently,
-“you don’t touch my child nor my ’usband again whilst
-you remain under this roof. I won’t ’ave them polluted
-by your fingers. ’Ere, Sarah, you go upstairs and see
-if Bobby’s in ’is room. It’ll be the worse for ’im if ’e
-isn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Sarah took her way upstairs, in obedience to her
-employer’s behest, and the next minute a couple of
-shrieks, loud and terrified, proceeded from the upper
-story. They were in Sarah’s voice, and they startled
-everyone at the dinner table.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! what is that?” exclaimed Harriet, as her face
-grew white with fear.</p>
-
-<p>“Something is wrong!” said Miss Wynward, as she
-hastily left the room.</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness said nothing, until Miss Wynward’s
-voice was heard calling out over the banisters,</p>
-
-<p>“Baron! will you come here, please, at once!”</p>
-
-<p>Then she said,</p>
-
-<p>“Gustave! ’elp me up,” and steadying herself by
-means of her stick, she proceeded to the upper story,
-accompanied by her husband and Harriet Brandt. They
-were met on the landing by Miss Wynward, who addressed
-herself exclusively to the Baron.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you send for a doctor at once,” she said
-eagerly, “Bobby is very ill, very ill indeed!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter?” enquired the stolid German.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all rubbish!” exclaimed Madame Gobelli, forcing
-her way past the ex-governess, “’ow can ’e be ill
-when ’e was running about all the morning? ’Ere,
-Bobby,” she continued, addressing the prostrate figure
-of her son which was lying face downward on the bed,
-“get up at once and don’t let’s ’ave any of your nonsense,
-or I’ll give you such a taste of my stick as you’ve
-never ’ad before! Get up, I say, at once now!”</p>
-
-<p>She had laid hold of her son’s arm, and was about
-to drag him down upon the floor, when Miss Wynward
-interposed with a face of horror.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave him alone!” she cried, indignantly. “Woman!
-cannot you see what is the matter? Your son has left
-you! He is <em>dead</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness was about to retort that it was a lie
-and she didn’t believe it, when a sudden trembling overtook
-her, which she was powerless to resist. Her whole
-face shook as if every muscle had lost control, and her
-cumbersome frame followed suit. She did not cry, nor
-call out, but stood where the news had reached her, immovable,
-except for that awful shaking, which made her
-sway from head to foot. The Baron on hearing the intelligence
-turned round to go downstairs and dispatch
-William, who was employed in the stables, in search of
-a medical man. Miss Wynward took the lifeless body
-in her arms and tenderly turned it over, kissing the
-pallid face as she did so—when Harriet Brandt, full of
-mournful curiosity, advanced to have a look at her dead
-playmate. Her appearance, till then unnoticed, seemed
-to wake the paralysed energies of the Baroness into life.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>
-She pushed the girl from the bed with a violence that
-sent her reeling against the mantelshelf, whilst she exclaimed
-furiously,</p>
-
-<p>“Out of my sight! Don’t you dare to touch ’im!
-This is all <em>your</em> doing, you poisonous, wicked creature!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet stared at her hostess in amazement! Had
-she suddenly gone mad with grief?</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean, Madame?” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>“What I say! I ought to ’ave known better than to
-let you enter an ’ouse of mine! I was a fool not to ’ave
-left you be’ind me at Heyst, to practise your devilish
-arts on your army captains and foreign grocers, instead
-of letting you come within touch of my innocent child!”</p>
-
-<p>“You are mad!” cried Harriet. “What have I done?
-Do you mean to insinuate that Bobby’s death has anything
-to do with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is <em>you</em> ’oo ’ave killed ’im,” screamed the Baroness,
-shaking her stick, “it’s your poisonous breath that ’as
-sapped ’is! I should ’ave seen it from the beginning.
-Do you suppose I don’t know your ’istory? Do you
-think I ’aven’t ’eard all about your parents and their vile
-doings—that I don’t know that you’re a common bastard,
-and that your mother was a devilish negress, and your
-father a murderer? Why didn’t I listen to my friends
-and forbid you the ’ouse?”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Wynward!” said Harriet, who had turned
-deadly white at this unexpected attack, “what can I say?
-What can I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave the room, my dear, leave the room! Her
-ladyship is not herself! She does not know what she
-is saying!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t I?” screamed Madame Gobelli, barring the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>
-way to the door, “I am telling ’er nothing but the truth,
-and she doesn’t go till she ’as ’eard it! She has the
-vampire’s blood in ’er and she poisons everybody with
-whom she comes in contact. Wasn’t Mrs. Pullen and
-Mademoiselle Brimont both taken ill from being too intimate
-with ’er, and didn’t the baby die because she
-carried it about and breathed upon it? And now she
-’as killed my Bobby in the same way—curse ’er!”</p>
-
-<p>Even when reiterating the terrible truth in which she
-evidently believed, Madame Gobelli showed no signs of
-breaking down, but stood firm, leaning heavily on her
-stick and trembling in every limb.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt’s features had assumed a scared expression.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Wynward!” she stammered piteously, “Oh!
-Miss Wynward! this cannot be true!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not! Of course not!” replied the other,
-soothingly, “her ladyship will regret that she has spoken
-so hastily to you to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shan’t regret it!” said the Baroness sturdily, “for
-it is the truth! Her father and her mother were murderers
-who were killed by their own servants in revenge
-for their atrocities, and they left their curse upon this
-girl—the curse of black blood and of the vampire’s
-blood which kills everything which it caresses. Look
-back over your past life,” she continued to Harriet,
-“and you’ll see that it’s the case! And if you don’t
-believe me, go and ask your friend Dr. Phillips, for ’e
-knew your infamous parents and the curse that lies upon
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Madame! Madame!” cried Miss Wynward, “is this
-a moment for such recrimination? If all this were true,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>
-it is no fault of Miss Brandt’s! Think of what lies here,
-and that he loved her, and the thought will soften your
-feelings!”</p>
-
-<p>“But it don’t!” exclaimed the Baroness, “when I
-look at my dead son, I could kill ’er, because she has
-killed ’im.”</p>
-
-<p>And in effect, she advanced upon Harriet with so
-vengeful a look that the girl with a slight cry, darted
-from the room, and rushed into her own.</p>
-
-<p>“For shame!” said Miss Wynward, whose previous
-fear of the Baroness seemed to have entirely evaporated,
-“how dare you intimidate an innocent woman in the
-very presence of Death?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you try to browbeat me!” replied the Baroness.</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell you what I think,” said Miss Wynward
-boldly, “and that is, that you should blush to give way
-to your evil temper in the face of God’s warning to
-yourself! You accuse that poor girl of unholy dealings—what
-can you say of your own? You, who for years
-past have made money by deceiving your fellow creatures
-in the grossest manner—who have professed to hold
-communication with the spiritual world for their satisfaction
-when, if any spirits have come to you, they must
-have been those of devils akin to your own! And because
-I refused to help you to deceive—to take the
-place of that miserable cur Milliken and play cheating
-tricks with cards, and dress up stuffed figures to further
-your money-getting ends, you threatened me with loss of
-home and character and friends, until, God forgive me,
-I consented to further the fraud, from fear of starving.
-But now, thank Heaven, I have no more fear of you!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>
-Yes! you may shake your stick at me, and threaten to
-take my life, but it is useless! <em>This</em>,” pointing to the
-dead boy upon the bed, “was the only tie I had to the
-Red House, and as soon as he is dressed for his grave,
-I shall leave you for ever!”</p>
-
-<p>“And where would you go?” enquired the Baroness.
-The voice did not sound like her own; it was the cracked
-dry voice of a very old woman.</p>
-
-<p>“That is no concern of yours, my lady,” replied
-Miss Wynward, as she prepared to quit the room. “Be
-good enough to let me pass! The inexcusable manner
-in which you have insulted that poor young lady, Miss
-Brandt, makes me feel that my first duty is to her!”</p>
-
-<p>“I forbid you—” commenced Madame Gobelli in her
-old tone, but the ex-governess simply looked her in the
-face and passed on. She made the woman feel that her
-power was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynward found Harriet in her own room, tossing
-all her possessions into her travelling trunks. There
-was no doubt of her intention. She was going to leave
-the Red House.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at this time of night, my dear,” said Miss
-Wynward, kindly, “it is nearly nine o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would go if I had to walk the street all night!”
-replied Harriet, feverishly.</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes were inflamed with crying, and she shook
-like an aspen leaf.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Miss Wynward, such awful things to say! What
-could she mean? What have I done to be so cruelly
-insulted? And when I am so sorry for poor Bobby
-too!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span></p>
-
-<p>She began to cry afresh as she threw dresses,
-mantles, stockings, and shoes one on the top of the
-other, in her endeavour to pack as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me help you, dear Miss Brandt! It is cruel
-that you should be driven from the house in this way!
-But I am going too, as soon as the doctor has been and
-dear Bobby’s body may be prepared for burial. It is a
-great grief to me, Miss Brandt; I have had the care of
-him since he was five years old, and I loved him like
-my own. But I am glad he is dead! I am glad he
-has escaped from it all, for this is a wicked house, a
-godless, deceiving and slanderous house, and this trouble
-has fallen on it as a Nemesis. I will not stay here a moment
-longer now he has gone! I shall join my friends
-to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad you have friends,” said Harriet, “for I
-can see you are not happy here! Do they live far off?
-Have you sufficient money for your journey? Forgive
-my asking!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynward stooped down and kissed the girl’s
-brow.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you so much for your kind thought, but
-it is unnecessary. You will be surprised perhaps,” continued
-Miss Wynward, blushing, “but I am going to be
-married.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so am I,” was on Harriet’s lips, when she laid
-her head down on the lid of her trunk and began to
-cry anew. “Oh! Miss Wynward, what did she mean? Can
-there be any truth in it? Is there something poisonous
-in my nature that harms those with whom I come in
-contact? How can it be? <em>How</em> can it be?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No! no! of course not!” replied her friend, “Cannot
-you see that it was the Baroness’s temper that made
-her speak so cruelly to you? But you are right to go!
-Only, where are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know! I am so ignorant of London. Can
-you advise me?”</p>
-
-<p>“You will communicate with your friends to-morrow?”
-asked Miss Wynward anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! yes! as soon as I can!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I should go to the Langham Hotel in Portland
-Place for to-night at all events! There you will
-be safe till your friends advise you further. What can
-I do to help you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask Sarah or William to fetch a cab! And to
-have my boxes placed on it! There is a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">douceur</i> for
-them,” said Harriet, placing a handsome sum in Miss
-Wynward’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>“And you will not see the Baroness again?” asked
-her companion.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! for God’s sake, no. I could not trust myself!
-I can never look upon her face again!”</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes the hired vehicle rolled away from
-the door, bearing Harriet Brandt and her possessions to
-the Langham Hotel, and Miss Wynward returned to the
-room where Bobby lay. Madame Gobelli stood exactly
-where she had left her, gazing at the corpse. There
-were no tears in her eyes—only the continuous shaking
-of her huge limbs.</p>
-
-<p>“Come!” said Miss Wynward, not unkindly, “you
-had better sit down, and let me bring you a glass of
-wine! This terrible shock has been too much for
-you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span></p>
-
-<p>But the Baroness only pushed her hand away, impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“Who was that driving away just now?” she enquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Brandt! You have driven her from the house
-with your cruel and unnecessary accusations. No one
-liked Bobby better than she did!”</p>
-
-<p>“Has the doctor arrived?”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect so! I hear the Baron’s voice in the hall
-now!”</p>
-
-<p>Almost as she spoke, the Baron and the doctor
-entered the room. The medical man did what was required
-of him. He felt the heart and pulse of the
-corpse—turned back the eyelids—sighed professionally,
-and asked how long it was since it had happened.</p>
-
-<p>He was told that it was about an hour since they
-had found him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! he has been dead longer than that! Three
-hours at the least, maybe four! I am afraid there must
-be an inquest, and it would be advisable in the interests
-of science to have a post mortem. A great pity, a fine
-grown lad—nineteen years old, you say—shall probably
-detect hidden mischief in the heart and lungs. I will
-make all the necessary arrangements with the Baron.
-Good evening!”</p>
-
-<p>And the doctor bowed himself out of sight again.</p>
-
-<p>“It is quite true then,” articulated the Baroness
-thickly. “He is gone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! yes, my lady, he is gone, poor dear boy! I
-felt sure of that!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is quite certain?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Quite certain! The body is already stiffening!”</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness did not utter a sound, but Miss Wynward
-glancing at her, saw her body sway slowly backwards
-and forwards once or twice, before it fell heavily
-to the ground, stricken with paralysis.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Doctor Phillips was a great favourite with the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beau
-sexe</i>. He was so mild and courteous, so benevolent
-and sympathetic, that they felt sure he might be trusted
-with their little secrets. Women, both old and young,
-invaded his premises daily, and therefore it was no
-matter of surprise to him, when, whilst he was still
-occupied with his breakfast on the morning following
-Harriet Brandt’s flight from the Red House, his confidential
-servant Charles announced that a young lady
-was waiting to see him in his consulting room.</p>
-
-<p>“No name, Charles?” demanded the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“No name, Sir!” replied the discreet Charles without
-the ghost of a smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Say that I will be with her in a minute!”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Phillips finished his cutlet and his coffee before
-he rose from table. He knew what ladies’ confidences
-were like and that he should not have much
-chance of returning to finish an interrupted meal.</p>
-
-<p>But as he entered his consulting room, his air of
-indifference changed to one of surprise. Pacing restlessly
-up and down the carpet, was Harriet Brandt, but
-so altered that he should hardly have recognised her.
-Her face was puffy and swollen, as though she had
-wept all night, her eyelids red and inflamed, her whole
-demeanour wild and anxious.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear young lady—is it possible that I see Miss
-Brandt?” the doctor began.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span></p>
-
-<p>She turned towards him and coming up close to
-his side, grasped his arm. “I must speak to you!” she
-exclaimed, without further preliminary, “you are the
-only person who can set my doubts at rest.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! well! well!” he said, soothingly, for the girl
-looked and spoke as though her mind were disordered.
-“You may rely that I will do all I can for you! But
-let us sit down first!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no!” cried Harriet, “there is no time, I cannot
-rest; you must satisfy my mind at once, or I shall
-go mad! I have not closed my eyes all night—the
-time was interminable, but how could I sleep! I seemed
-to be torn in pieces by ten thousand devils!”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear child,” said Doctor Phillips, as he laid
-his hand on hers and looked her steadily in the face,
-“you are over-excited. You must try to restrain yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>He went up to a side table and, pouring out some
-cordial, made her drink it. Harriet gulped it down,
-and sank back exhausted in a chair. She was weak
-and worn-out with the excitement she had passed through.</p>
-
-<p>“Come! that is better,” said the doctor, as he saw
-the tears stealing from beneath her closed eyelids, “now,
-don’t hurry yourself! Keep quiet till you feel strong
-enough to speak, and then tell me what it is that brings
-you here!”</p>
-
-<p>The allusion appeared to stir up all her misery
-again. She sat upright and grasped the doctor by the
-arm as she had done at first.</p>
-
-<p>“You must tell me,” she said breathlessly, “you
-must tell me all I want to know. They say you knew
-my father and mother in Jamaica! Is that true?”</p>
-
-<p>The old doctor began to feel uncomfortable. It is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>
-one thing to warn those in whom you are interested
-against a certain person, or persons, and another to be
-confronted with the individual you have spoken of, and
-forced to repeat your words. Yet Doctor Phillips was
-innocent of having misjudged, or slandered anyone.</p>
-
-<p>“I <em>did</em> know your father and mother—for a short
-time!” he answered cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>“And were they married to each other?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear young lady, what is the use of dragging
-up such questions now? Your parents are both gone
-to their account—why not let all that concerned them
-rest also?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! you forget that I live—to suffer the effects
-of their wrong-doing! I <em>must</em> know the truth—I will
-not leave the house until you tell me! Were they
-married? Am I a—a—bastard?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you insist upon knowing, I believe they were not
-married—at least it was the general opinion in the Island.
-But would not Mr. Tarver be the proper person
-to inform you of anything which you may wish to know?”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet seized his hand and carried it to her forehead—it
-was burning hot.</p>
-
-<p>“Feel that!” she exclaimed, “and you would have
-me wait for weeks before I could get any satisfaction
-from Mr. Tarver, and not then perhaps! Do you think
-I could live through the agony of suspense. I should
-kill myself before the answer to my letter came. No!
-you are the only person that can give me any satisfaction.
-Madame Gobelli told me to ask you for the truth,
-if I did not believe her!”</p>
-
-<p>“Madame Gobelli,” reiterated the doctor in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! I was staying with her at the Red House<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>
-until last night, and then she was so cruel to me that
-I left. Her son Bobby is dead, and she accused me of
-having killed him. She said that my father was a
-murderer and my mother a negress—that they were
-both so wicked that their own servants killed them, and
-that I have inherited all their vices. She said that it
-was <em>I</em> who killed Mrs. Pullen’s baby and that I had
-vampire blood in me, and should poison everyone I
-came in contact with. What does she mean? Tell me
-the truth, for God’s sake, for more depends upon it
-than you have any idea of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Madame Gobelli was extremely wrong to speak in
-such a manner, and I do not know on what authority
-she did so. What can she know of your parents or
-their antecedents?”</p>
-
-<p>“But you—you—” cried Harriet feverishly, “what
-do <em>you</em> say?”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Phillips was silent. He did not know what
-to say. He was not a man who could tell a lie glibly
-and appear as if he were speaking the truth. Patients
-always guessed when he had no hope to give them, however
-soothing and carefully chosen his words might be.
-He regarded the distracted girl before him for some moments
-in compassionate silence, and then he answered:</p>
-
-<p>“I have said already that if a daughter cannot hear
-any good of her parents, she had better hear nothing
-at all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it is true—my father and mother were people
-so wicked and so cruel that their names are only fit for
-execration. If you could have said a good word for
-them, you would! I can read that in your eyes!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The purity and charity of your own life can do
-much to wipe out the stain upon theirs,” said the doctor.
-“You have youth and money, and the opportunity of
-doing good. You may be as beloved, as they were——”</p>
-
-<p>“Hated,” interposed the girl, “I understand you
-perfectly! But what about my possessing the fatal
-power of injuring those I come in contact with! What
-truth is there in that? Answer me, for God’s sake!
-Have I inherited the vampire’s blood? Who bequeathed
-to me that fatal heritage?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Miss Brandt, you must not talk of such
-a thing! You are alluding only to a superstition!”</p>
-
-<p>“But have I got it, whatever it may be?” persisted
-Harriet. “Had I anything to do with the baby’s death,
-or with that of Bobby Bates? I loved them both! Was
-it my love that killed them? Shall I always kill everybody
-I love? I <em>must</em> know—I <em>will</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Brandt, you have now touched upon a subject
-that is little thought of or discussed amongst medical
-men, but that is undoubtedly true. The natures of
-persons differ very widely. There are some born into
-this world who nourish those with whom they are associated;
-they <em>give out</em> their magnetic power, and their
-families, their husbands or wives, children and friends,
-feel the better for it. There are those, on the other
-hand, who <em>draw</em> from their neighbours, sometimes making
-large demands upon their vitality—sapping their physical
-strength, and feeding upon them, as it were, until they
-are perfectly exhausted and unable to resist disease.
-This proclivity has been likened to that of the vampire
-bat who is said to suck the breath of its victims. And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>
-it was doubtless to this fable that Madame Gobelli
-alluded when speaking to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But have I got it? Have I got it?” the girl demanded,
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor looked at her lustrous glowing eyes, at
-her parted feverish lips; at the working hands clasped
-together; the general appearance of excited sensuality,
-and thought it was his duty to warn her, at least a little,
-against the dangers of indulging such a temperament as
-she unfortunately possessed. But like all medical men,
-he temporised.</p>
-
-<p>“I should certainly say that your temperament was
-more of the <em>drawing</em> than the <em>yielding</em> order, Miss
-Brandt, but that is not your fault, you know. It is a
-natural organism. But I think it is my duty to warn
-you that you are not likely to make those with whom
-you intimately associate, stronger either in mind or body.
-You will always exert a weakening and debilitating effect
-upon them, so that after a while, having sapped their
-brains, and lowered the tone of their bodies, you will
-find their affection, or friendship for you visibly decrease.
-You will have, in fact, <em>sucked them dry</em>. So, if I may
-venture to advise you I would say, if there is any one
-person in the world whom you most desire to benefit
-and retain the affection of, let that be the very person
-from whom you separate, as often as possible. You
-must never hope to keep anyone near you for long,
-without injuring them. Make it your rule through life
-never to cleave to any one person altogether, or you will
-see that person’s interest in you wax and wane, until it
-is destroyed!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And what if I—marry?” asked Harriet, in a strained
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“If you insist upon my answering that question, I
-should advise you seriously <em>not</em> to marry! I do not
-think yours is a temperament fitted for married life, nor
-likely to be happy in it! You will not be offended by
-my plain speaking, I hope. Remember, you have forced
-it from me!”</p>
-
-<p>“And that is the truth, medically and scientifically—that
-I must not marry?” she repeated, dully.</p>
-
-<p>“I think it would be unadvisable, but everyone must
-judge for himself in such matters. But marriage is not,
-after all, the ultimatum of earthly bliss, Miss Brandt!
-Many married couples would tell you it is just the reverse.
-And with a fortune at your command, you have
-many pleasures and interests quite apart from that very
-over-rated institution of matrimony. But don’t think I
-am presuming to do more than advise you. There is
-no real reason—medical or legal—why you should not
-choose for yourself in the matter!”</p>
-
-<p>“Only—only—that those I cling to most nearly, will
-suffer from the contact,” said Harriet in the same strained
-tones.</p>
-
-<p>“Just so!” responded the doctor, gaily, “and an old
-man’s advice to you is, to keep out of it as he has
-done! And now—if there is anything more—” he continued,
-“that I can do for you——”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing more, thank you,” replied the girl rising,
-“I understand it all now!”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you not see your old friend, Mrs. Pullen, before
-you go?” asked the doctor. “She and her husband
-are staying with me!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh! no, no,” cried Harriet, shrinking from the idea,
-“I <em>could</em> not see her, I would rather go back at once!”</p>
-
-<p>And she hurried from the consulting-room as she
-spoke.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Phillips stood for a while musing, after her
-departure. Had he done right, he thought, in telling
-her, yet how in the face of persistent questioning, could
-he have done otherwise? His thoughts were all fixed
-upon Ralph Pullen and the scenes that had taken place
-lately with him, respecting this girl. He did not dream
-she had an interest in Anthony Pennell. He did not
-know that they had met more than once. He thought
-she might still be pursuing Ralph; still expecting that he
-might break his engagement with Miss Leyton in order
-to marry herself; and he believed he had done the
-wisest thing in trying to crush any hopes she might have
-left concerning him.</p>
-
-<p>“A most dangerous temperament,” he said to himself
-as he prepared to receive another patient, “one that
-is sufficient to mar a man’s life, if not to kill him entirely.
-I trust that she and Captain Pullen may never
-meet again. It was evident that my remarks on marriage
-disappointed the poor child! Ah! well, she will
-be much better without it!”</p>
-
-<p>And here the discreet Charles softly opened the
-door and ushered in another lady.</p>
-
-<p>An hour later, Anthony Pennell, who had projected
-a visit to the Red House that afternoon, received a note
-by a commissionaire instead, containing a few, hurried
-lines. “Come to me as soon as you can,” it said, “I
-have left Madame Gobelli. I am at the Langham Hotel,
-and very unhappy!” Needless to say that ten minutes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>
-after the reception of this news, her lover was rushing
-to her presence, as fast as hansom wheels could take him.</p>
-
-<p>He was very desperately and truly in love with
-Harriet Brandt. Like most men who use their brains
-in fiction, his work, whilst in course of progression, occupied
-his energies to such an extent that he had no
-time or thought for anything else. But the burden once
-lifted, the romance written, the strain and anxiety removed,
-the pendulum swung in the other direction, and
-Anthony Pennell devoted all his attention to pleasure
-and amusement. He had been set down by his colleagues
-as a reserved and cold-blooded man with regard
-to the other sex, but he was only self-contained and
-thoughtful. He was as warm by nature, as Harriet herself,
-and once sure of a response, could make love with
-the best, and as he flew to her assistance now, he resolved
-that if anything unpleasant had occurred to drive her
-from the Red House, and launch her friendless on the
-world, he would persuade her to marry him at once,
-and elect him her protector and defence.</p>
-
-<p>His fair face flushed with anticipation as he thought
-of the joy it would be to make her his wife, and take her
-far away from everything that could annoy or harass her.</p>
-
-<p>Having arrived at the Langham and flung a double
-fare to the cab-driver, he ran up the high staircase
-with the light step of a boy, and dashed into Harriet’s
-private room. The girl was sitting, much as she had
-done since returning from her interview with the doctor—silent,
-sullen, and alone, at war with Heaven and
-Destiny and all that had conduced to blight the brightest
-hopes she had ever had.</p>
-
-<p>“Hally, my darling, why is this?” exclaimed Pennell,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>
-as he essayed to fold her in his arms. But she pushed
-him off, not unkindly but with considerable determination.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t touch me, Tony!—don’t come near me. You
-had better not! I might harm you!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter? Are you ill? If so, you know
-me too well to imagine that I should fear infection.”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! you do not understand!” replied Harriet,
-as she rose from her seat and edged further away from
-him, “but I am going to tell you all! It is for that I
-sent for you!”</p>
-
-<p>Then, waving him from her with her hand, she
-related the whole story to him—what the Baroness had
-accused her of, and what Doctor Phillips had said in
-confirmation of it, only that morning. Pennell had heard
-something of it before, through Margaret Pullen, but he
-had paid no attention to it, and now, when Harriet repeated
-it in detail, with swollen eyes and quivering lips,
-he laughed the idea to scorn.</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! Nonsense! I don’t believe a word of it,”
-he exclaimed, “it is a parcel of old woman’s tales.
-Phillips should be ashamed of himself to place any
-credence in it, far more to repeat it to you! Hally,
-my darling! you are surely not going to make yourself
-unhappy because of such nonsense. If so, you are not
-the sensible girl I have taken you for!”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Tony,” said the girl, still backing from his
-advances, “listen to me! It is not all nonsense, indeed.
-I know for myself that it is true! Having been shut up
-for so many years in the Convent dulled my memory
-for what went before it, but it has all come back to me
-now! It seems as if what Madame Gobelli and Doctor
-Phillips have said, had lifted a veil from my eyes, and I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
-can recall things that had quite escaped my memory before.
-I can remember now hearing old Pete say, that
-when I was born, I was given to a black wet nurse, and
-after a little while she was taken so ill, they had to send
-her away, and get me another, and the next one—<em>died</em>!
-Pete used to laugh and call me the puma’s cub, but I
-didn’t know the meaning of it, then. And—Oh! stop a
-moment, Tony, till I have done—there was a little white
-child, I can see her so plainly now. They called her
-little Caroline, I think she must have belonged to the
-planter who lived next to us, and I was very fond of
-her. I was quite unhappy when we did not meet, and
-I used to creep into her nursery door and lie down in
-the cot beside her. Poor little Caroline! I can see her
-now! So pale and thin and wan she was! And one
-night, I remember her mother came in and found me
-there and called to her husband to send the ‘Brandt
-bastard’ back to Helvetia. I had no idea what she
-meant, but I cried because she sent me home, and I
-asked Pete what a bastard was, but he would not tell
-me. And,” went on Harriet in a scared tone, “little
-Caroline <em>died</em>! Pete carried me on his shoulder to see
-the funeral, and I would not believe that Caroline could
-be in the narrow box, and I struck Pete on the face for
-saying so!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! my darling! and if you did, are these childish
-reminiscences to come between our happiness? Why
-should they distress you, Hally? Madame Gobelli’s insolence
-must have been very hard to bear—I acknowledge
-that, and I wish I had been by to prevent it, but
-you must make excuses for her. I suppose the poor
-creature was so mad with grief that she did not know<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>
-what she was saying! But you need never see her again,
-so you must try to forgive her!”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Anthony, you do not understand me! What
-the Baroness said was <em>true</em>! I see it now! <em>I killed
-Bobby!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“My dearest, you are raving! <em>You killed Bobby!</em>
-What utter, utter folly! How could you have killed Bobby?”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet passed her hand wearily across her brow, as
-if she found it too hard to make her meaning plain.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! yes, I did! We were always together, in the
-garden or the house! And he used to sit with his head
-on my shoulder and his arm round my waist, I should
-not have allowed it! I should have driven him away!
-But he loved me, poor Bobby, and it will be the same,
-Doctor Phillips says, with everybody I love! I shall only
-do them harm!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hally! I shall begin to think in another moment
-that you are ill yourself—that you have a fever or something,
-and that it is affecting your brain!”</p>
-
-<p>“There was a sister at the Convent, Sister Theodosia,
-who was very good to me when I first went
-there,” continued the girl in a dreamy voice, as if she
-had not heard his words; “and she used to sit with me
-upon her lap for hours together, because I was sad.
-But she grew ill and they had to send her away up to
-the hill, where they had their sanatorium. That made
-the fourth in Jamaica!”</p>
-
-<p>“Now! I will not have you talk any more of this
-nonsense,” said Pennell, half annoyed by her perseverance,
-“and to prove to you what a little silly you are to
-imagine that everyone who falls ill, or dies, or who comes
-within the range of your acquaintance, owes it to your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>
-influence, tell me how it is that your father and mother,
-who must have lived nearer to you than anybody else,
-did not fall sick and die also.”</p>
-
-<p>“My parents saw less of me than anybody,” replied
-Harriet, sadly, “they were ashamed of their ‘bastard’, I
-suppose! But old Pete loved me, and took me with him
-everywhere, and he didn’t get sick,” she concluded, with
-a faint smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not! See! what rubbish you have been
-talking—making yourself and me unhappy for nothing
-at all! So now let me take you in my arms and kiss
-the remembrance of it away!”</p>
-
-<p>He was about to put his suggestion into execution,
-but she still shrank from him.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! indeed you must not! It is all true! I
-cannot forget Olga Brimont, and Mrs. Pullen, and the
-baby, and poor Bobby! It is true, indeed it is, and I
-have been accursed from my birth.”</p>
-
-<p>And she burst into a torrent of passionate tears.</p>
-
-<p>Pennell let her expend some of her emotion, before
-he continued,</p>
-
-<p>“Well! and what is to be the upshot of it all!”</p>
-
-<p>“I must part from you,” replied the girl, “Indeed,
-indeed I must! I cannot injure you as I have done
-others! Doctor Phillips said I was not fit for marriage—that
-I should always weaken and hurt those whom I
-loved most—and that I should draw from them, physically
-and mentally, until I had sapped all their strength—that
-I have the blood of the vampire in me, the vampire
-that sucks its victims’ breaths until they die!”</p>
-
-<p>“Doctor Phillips be damned!” exclaimed Pennell,
-“what right has he to promulgate his absurd and untenable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>
-theories, and to poison the happiness of a girl’s
-life, with his folly? He is an old fool, a dotard, a senseless
-ass, and I shall tell him so! Vampire be hanged!
-And if it were the truth, I for one could not wish for a
-sweeter death! Come along, Hally, and try your venom
-upon me! I am quite ready to run the risk!”</p>
-
-<p>He held out his arms to her again, as he spoke, and
-she sank on her knees beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Tony! Tony! cannot you read the truth? I love
-you, dear, I love you! I never loved any creature in
-this world before I loved you. I did not know that it
-was given to mortals to love so much! And my love has
-opened my eyes! Sooner than injure you, whom I would
-die to save from harm, I will separate myself from you!
-I will give you up! I will live my lonely life without you,
-I <em>could</em> do that, but I can never, never consent to sap
-your manhood and your brains, which do not belong to
-me but to the world, and see you wither, like a poisoned
-plant, the leaves of which lie discoloured and dead upon
-the garden path.”</p>
-
-<p>Never in the course of their acquaintanceship had
-Harriet Brandt seemed so sweet, so pathetic, so unselfish
-to Anthony Pennell as then. If he had resolved
-not to resign her from the first, he did so a thousand
-times more now. He threw his arms around her kneeling
-figure and lowered his head until it lay upon the
-crown of her dusky hair.</p>
-
-<p>“My darling! my darling! my own sweet girl!” he
-murmured, “our destinies are interwoven for ever! No
-one and nothing shall come between us! You cannot
-give me up unless you have my consent to doing so. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span>
-hold your sacred promise to become my wife, and I
-shall not release you from it!”</p>
-
-<p>“But if I harmed you?” she said fearfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not believe in the possibility of your harming
-me,” he replied, “but if I am to die, which is what I
-suppose you mean, I claim my right to die in your
-arms. But whenever it happens, you will have neither
-hastened, nor retarded it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! if I could only think so!” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“You must! Why cannot you trust my judgment
-as much as that of Madame Gobelli or old Phillips—a
-couple of mischief-makers. And now, Hally, when
-shall it be?”</p>
-
-<p>“When shall ‘what’ be?” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“You know what I mean as well as I do! When
-shall we be married? We have no one to consult but ourselves!
-I am my own master and you are alone in the
-world! These things are very easily managed, you know.
-I have but to go to Doctors’ Commons for a special
-license to enable us to be married at a registrar’s office
-to-morrow. Shall it be to-morrow, love?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! no! no! I could not make up my mind so soon!”</p>
-
-<p>“But why not? Would you live in this dull hotel
-all by yourself, Hally?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know! I am so very unhappy! Leave
-me, Anthony, for God’s sake, leave me, whilst there is
-time! You do not know the risk you may be running
-by remaining by my side! How can I consent to let
-you, whom I love like my very life, run any risk for my
-sake! Oh! I love you—I love you!” cried the impassioned
-girl, as she clung tightly to him. “You are my
-lord and master and my king, and I will never, <em>never</em><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>
-be so selfish as to harm you for the sake of my own
-gratification. You must go away—put the seas between
-us—never see me, never write or speak to me more—only
-save yourself, my beloved, save yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled compassionately, as he would have smiled
-at the ravings of a child, as he raised her from her lowly
-position and placed her in a chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know what I am going to do, little woman?”
-he said cheerfully. “I am going to leave you all alone
-to think this matter over until to-morrow. By that time
-you will have been able to compare the opinions of two
-people who do not care a jot about you, with those of
-mine who love you so dearly. Think well over what
-they have said to you, and I have said to you, and you
-have said to me! Remember, that if you adhere to your
-present determination, you will make both yourself and
-me most unhappy, and do no one any good. As for
-myself, I venture to say that if I lose you my grief and
-disappointment will be so great, that, in all probability,
-I shall never do any good work again. But be a sensible
-girl—make up your mind to marry me, and give
-the lie to all this nonsense, and I’ll write a book that
-will astonish the world! Come, Hally, is it to be ruin or
-success for me?—Ruin to spend my life without the only
-woman I have ever cared for, or success to win my wife
-and a companion who will help me in my work and
-make my happiness complete?”</p>
-
-<p>He kissed her tear-stained face several times, and
-left her with a bright smile.</p>
-
-<p>“This time to-morrow, remember, and I shall come
-with the licence in my pocket.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Doctor Phillips did not meet Margaret and her
-husband until luncheon time and then they were full of
-an encounter which they had had during their morning
-walk.</p>
-
-<p>“Only fancy, Doctor!” exclaimed Margaret, with
-more animation than she had displayed of late, “Arthur
-and I have been shopping in Regent Street, and whom
-do you think we met?”</p>
-
-<p>“I give it up, my dear,” replied the doctor, helping
-himself to cold beef. “I am not good at guessing
-riddles.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ralph and Elinor! They had just come from some
-exhibition of pictures in New Bond Street, and I never
-saw them so pleased with each other before. Ralph
-was looking actually ‘spooney’, and Elinor was positively
-radiant.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Souvent femme varie</i>,” quoted Doctor Phillips,
-shrugging his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! but, Doctor, it made Arthur and me so glad
-to see them. Elinor is very fond of Ralph, you know,
-although she has shewn it so little. And so I have no
-doubt is he of her, and there would never have been
-any unpleasantness between them, if it had not been for
-that horrid girl, Harriet Brandt.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is not like you, my dear Margaret, to condemn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>
-anyone without a hearing. Perhaps you have not heard
-the true case of Miss Harriet Brandt. Although I am
-glad that Ralph has disentangled himself from her, I still
-believe that he behaved very badly to both the young
-ladies, and whilst I am glad to hear that Miss Leyton
-smiles upon him again, I think it is more than he deserves!”</p>
-
-<p>“And I agree with you, Doctor,” interposed Colonel
-Pullen, “I have never seen this Miss Brandt, but I know
-what a fool my brother is with women, and can quite
-understand that he may have raised her hopes just to
-gratify his own vanity. I have no patience with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! for Miss Leyton’s sake let us hope that this
-will be his last experience of dallying with forbidden
-pleasures. But what will you say when I tell you that
-one of my visitors this morning has been the young lady
-in question—Miss Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“Harriet Brandt!” exclaimed Margaret, “but why—is
-she ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! no! Her trouble is mental—not physical.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is not still hankering after Ralph, I hope.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are afraid he might not be able to resist the
-bait! So should I be. But she did not mention Captain
-Pullen. Her distress was all about herself!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! do tell me about it, Doctor, if it is not a secret!
-You know I have a kind of interest in Harriet Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p>“When she does not interfere with the prospects of
-your family,” observed the doctor, drily, “exactly so!
-Well, then, the poor girl is in great trouble, and I had
-very little consolation to give her! She has left Madame
-Gobelli’s house. It seems that the old woman insulted
-her terribly and almost turned her out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh! that awful Baroness!” cried Margaret; “it is only
-what might have been expected! We heard dreadful
-stories about her at Heyst. She has an uncontrollable
-temper and, when offended, a most vituperative tongue.
-Her ill-breeding is apparent at all times, but it must be
-overwhelming when she is angry. But how did she insult
-Miss Brandt?”</p>
-
-<p>“You remember what I told you of the girl’s antecedents!
-It appears that the Baroness must have got
-hold of the same story, for she cast it in her teeth, accusing
-her moreover of having caused the death of her
-son.”</p>
-
-<p>“Madame Gobelli’s son? What! Bobby—Oh! you do
-not mean to say that Bobby—is <em>dead</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! There was but one son, I think! He died
-yesterday, as I understood Miss Brandt. And the mother
-in her rage and grief turned upon the poor girl and told
-her such bitter truths, that she rushed from the house
-at once. Her visit to me this morning was paid in order
-to ascertain if such things were true, as the Baroness,
-very unjustifiably I think, had referred her to me for
-confirmation.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what did you tell her?”</p>
-
-<p>“What could I tell her? At first I declined to give
-an opinion, but she put such pertinent questions to me,
-that unless I had lied, I saw no way of getting out of it.
-I glossed over matters as well as I could, but even so,
-they were bad enough. But I impressed it upon her
-that she must not think of marrying. I thought it the
-best way to put all idea of catching Captain Pullen out
-of her mind. Let him once get safely married, and she
-can decide for herself with regard to the next. But at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span>
-all hazards, we must keep Ralph out of her way, for
-between you and me and the post, she is a young woman
-whom most men would find it difficult to resist.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! yes! she and Ralph must not meet again,” said
-Margaret, dreamingly. Her thoughts had wandered back
-to Bobby and Heyst, and all the trouble she had encountered
-whilst there. What despair had attacked her
-when she lost her only child, and now Madame Gobelli—the
-woman she so much disliked—had lost her only
-child also.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Madame Gobelli!” she ejaculated, “I cannot
-help thinking of her! Fancy Bobby being—<em>dead</em>! And
-she used to make him so unhappy, and humiliate him
-before strangers! How she must be suffering for it now!
-How it must all come back upon her! Poor Bobby!
-Elinor will be sorry to hear that he is gone! She used
-to pity him so, and often gave him fruit and cakes.
-Fancy his being dead! I cannot believe it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is true, nevertheless! But it is the common lot,
-Margaret! Perhaps, as his mother used to treat him so
-roughly, the poor lad is better off where he is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! of course, I have no doubt of that! But he was
-all she had—like me!” said Margaret, with her eyes
-over-brimming. Her husband put his arms round her,
-and let her have her cry out on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as he wiped her tears away she whispered,</p>
-
-<p>“Arthur, I should like to go and see her—the Baroness,
-I mean! I can sympathise so truly with her, I might be
-able to say a few words of comfort!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do as you like, my darling,” replied Colonel Pullen,
-“that is, if you are sure that the woman won’t insult you,
-as she did Miss Brandt!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh! no! no! I am not in the least afraid! Why
-should she? I shall only tell her how much I feel for
-her own our common loss——”</p>
-
-<p>She could not proceed, and the doctor whispered to
-the Colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Let her do as she wishes! The best salve for our
-own wounds is to try and heal those of others.”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret rose and prepared to leave the room.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall go at once,” she said, “I suppose there is
-no chance of my meeting Harriet Brandt there!”</p>
-
-<p>“I think not! She told me she had left the Red
-House for good and all, but she did not say where she
-was staying! Though, after all, I think she is in most
-want of comfort of the two.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! no!” replied Margaret, faintly, “there is no grief
-like that of—of—” She did not finish her sentence,
-but left the room hastily in order to assume her walking
-things.</p>
-
-<p>“Will she ever get over the loss of her child?” demanded
-Colonel Pullen, gloomily. The doctor regarded
-him with a half-amused surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear fellow, though it is useless to preach the
-doctrine to a bereaved mother, the loss of an innocent
-baby is perhaps the least trying in the category of human
-ills. To rear the child, as thousands do, to be unloving,
-or unsympathetic, or ungrateful, is a thousand times
-worse. But it is too soon for your dear wife to acknowledge
-it. Let her go to this other mother and let them
-cry together. It will do her all the good in the world!”</p>
-
-<p>And the doctor, having finished his luncheon, put
-on his top-coat and prepared to make a round of professional
-calls.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span></p>
-
-<p>Margaret came back ready for her visit.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not offer to go with you, darling,” said the
-Colonel, “because my presence would only be inconvenient.
-But mind you keep the cab waiting, or you
-may find some difficulty in getting another in that district.
-What address shall I give the driver?”</p>
-
-<p>“First to our florist in Regent Street that I may get
-some white flowers.”</p>
-
-<p>In another minute she was off, and in about an hour
-afterwards, she found herself outside the Red House,
-which looked gloomier than ever, with all the blinds
-drawn down. Margaret rang the front door bell, which
-was answered by Miss Wynward.</p>
-
-<p>“Can I see Madame Gobelli?” commenced Margaret,
-“I have just heard the sad news, and came to condole
-with her!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynward let her into the hall and ushered her
-into a side room.</p>
-
-<p>“You will excuse my asking if you are a friend of
-her ladyship’s,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“I can hardly call myself a friend,” replied Margaret,
-“but I stayed with her in the same hotel at Heyst last
-summer, and I knew the dear boy who is dead. I was
-most grieved to hear of his death, and naturally anxious
-to enquire after the Baroness. But if she is too upset
-to see me, of course I would not think of forcing my
-presence upon her!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think her ladyship would object to receiving
-any friend, but I am not sure if she would recognise
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not recognise me? It is not three months since
-we parted.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You do not understand me! Our dear boy’s death
-was so sudden—I have been with him since he was five
-years old, so you will forgive my mentioning him in
-such a fashion—that it has had a terrible effect upon
-his poor mother. In fact she is paralysed! The medical
-men think the paralysis is confined to the lower limbs,
-but at present they are unable to decide definitely, as
-the Baroness has not opened her lips since the event
-occurred.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! poor Madame Gobelli!” cried Margaret, tearfully,
-“I felt sure she loved him under all her apparent
-roughness and indifference!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! I have been with them so long, that I know
-her manner amounted at times to cruelty, but she did
-not mean it to be so! She thought to make him hardy
-and independent, instead of which it had just the opposite
-effect! But she is paying bitterly for it now! I
-really think his death will kill her, though the doctors
-laugh at my fears!”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I—too have lost my only child, my precious
-little baby,” replied Margaret, encouraged by the sympathetic
-tenderness in the other woman’s eyes, “and I
-thought also at first that I must die—that I could not
-live without her—but God is so good, and there is such
-comfort in the thought that whatever we may suffer, our
-darlings have missed all the bitterness and sin and disappointments
-of this world, that at last—that is, sometimes—one
-feels <em>almost</em> thankful that they are safe with
-Him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Madame Gobelli has not your hope and trust,
-Madam!” said Miss Wynward, “if she had, she would
-be a better and happier woman. But I must tell you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
-that she is in the same room as Bobby! She will not
-be moved from there, but lies on the couch where we
-placed her when she fell, stricken with the paralysis,
-gazing at the corpse!”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor dear woman!” exclaimed Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you would hardly care to go into that
-room!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I should like it! I want to see the dear boy
-again! I have brought some flowers to put over him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, what name shall I tell her ladyship?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Pullen, say Margaret Pullen whose little baby
-died at Heyst—then I think she will remember!”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you take a seat, Mrs. Pullen, whilst I go upstairs
-and see if I can persuade her to receive you?”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret sat down, and Miss Wynward went up to
-the chamber which had once been Bobby’s. On the bed
-was stretched the body of the dead boy, whilst opposite
-to it lay on a couch a woman with dry eyes, but palsied
-limbs, staring, staring without intermission at the silent
-figure which had once contained the spirit of her son.
-She did not turn her head as Miss Wynward entered
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>“My lady,” she said, going up to her, “Mrs. Pullen
-is downstairs and would like to see you! She told me
-to say that she is Margaret Pullen whose baby died in
-Heyst last summer, and she knew Bobby and has brought
-some flowers to strew over his bed. May she came up?”</p>
-
-<p>But she received no answer. Madame Gobelli’s features
-were working, but that was the only sign of life which
-she gave.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Pullen is so very sorry for your loss,” Miss
-Wynward went on, “she cried when she spoke of it,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>
-and as she has suffered the same, I am sure she will
-sympathise with you. May I say that you will see her?”</p>
-
-<p>Still there was no response, and Miss Wynward went
-down again to Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you had better come up without waiting for
-her consent,” she said, “if seeing you roused her, even
-to anger, it would do her good. Do you mind making
-the attempt?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Margaret, “but if the Baroness gets
-very angry, you must let me run away again. I am
-quite unequal to standing anything like a scene!”</p>
-
-<p>“You will have but to quit the room. Whatever her
-ladyship may say she cannot move from her couch. She
-attacked poor Miss Brandt most unwarrantably last evening,
-but that was in the first frenzy of her grief. She
-is quite different now!”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor woman!” again ejaculated Margaret, as she
-followed Miss Wynward, not without some inward qualms,
-to the presence of Madame Gobelli. But when she
-caught sight of the immovable figure on the couch, all
-her fear and resentment left her, overcome by a mighty
-compassion. She went straight up to the Baroness and
-bending down tenderly kissed her twitching face.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Madame,” she said, “I am—we all are—so
-truly sorry for your grievous loss. It reminds me of the
-bitter time, not so long ago, you may remember, when
-I lost my darling little Ethel, and thought for the while
-that my life was over! It is so hard, so unnatural, to
-us poor mothers, to see our children go before ourselves!
-I can weep with you tear for tear! But do remember—try
-to remember—that he is safe—that though you remain
-here with empty arms for a while, death can no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span>
-more take your boy from you, than a veil over your face
-can take God’s light from you. He is there, dear Madame
-Gobelli—just in the next room with the door
-closed between you, and though I know full well how
-bitter it is to see the door closed, think of the time
-when it will open again—when you and I will spring
-through it and find, not only our dear Bobby and Ethel,
-but Christ our Lord, ready to give them back into our
-arms again!”</p>
-
-<p>The Baroness said nothing, but two tears gathered
-in her eyes and rolled down her flabby cheeks. Margaret
-turned from her for a minute and walking up to
-the bed, knelt down beside it in prayer.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Christ!” she said, “Thou Who knowest what
-our mothers’ hearts are called upon to bear, have pity on
-us and give us Thy Peace! And open our eyes that we
-may gather strength to realise what our dear children
-have escaped by being taken home to Thee—the sin,
-the trouble, the anxiety, the disappointment—and make
-us thankful to bear them in their stead, and give us
-grace to look forward to our happy meeting and reunion
-in the Better Land.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she rose and bent over the dead boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Bobby!” she murmured, as she kissed the
-cold brow, and placed the white blossoms in his hands
-and round his head. “Good-bye! I know how happy
-you must be now, in company with the spirits of all
-those whom we have loved and who have gone home
-before us—how grateful you must feel to the dear Redeemer
-Who has called you so early—but don’t forget
-your poor mother upon earth! Pray for her, Bobby,—never
-cease to ask our dear Lord to send her comfort<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>
-and peace and joy in believing. For His own dear sake.
-Amen!”</p>
-
-<p>When she turned again, the Baroness’s cheeks were
-wet with tears and she was stretching forth her arms
-towards her.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” she gasped, as Margaret reached her side, “I
-am a godless woman—I am a godless woman!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! my dear friend, we are none of us godless,”
-replied Margaret, “we may think we are, but God
-knows better! We may forsake Him, but He never forsakes
-us! We should never be saved if we waited till
-we wanted to be so. It is <em>He</em> Who wants <em>us</em>—that is
-our great safeguard! He wanted our two dear children—not
-to spite us, but to draw us after them. Try to
-look at it in that light, and then Bobby’s death will
-prove your greatest gain.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am a godless woman,” repeated the Baroness,
-“and this is my punishment!” pointing to the bed. “I
-loved him best of all! My ’eart is broken!”</p>
-
-<p>“So much the better, if it was a hard heart,” rejoined
-Margaret, smiling. “Who was it that said, ‘If
-your heart is broken, give the pieces to Christ and He
-will mend it again’? Never think of Bobby, dear Madame
-Gobelli, except as with Christ—walking with Him,
-talking with Him, learning of Him and growing in grace
-and the love of God daily! Never disassociate the two
-memories, and in a little while you would hate yourself
-if you could separate them again. God bless you! I
-must go back to my husband now!”</p>
-
-<p>“You will come again?” said the Baroness.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid I shall have no time! We sail for
-India on Saturday, but I shall not forget you. Good-bye,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span>
-Bobby,” she repeated, with a last look at the corpse,
-“remember your mother and me in your prayers.”</p>
-
-<p>As Miss Wynward let her out of the Red House,
-she remarked,</p>
-
-<p>“I could never have believed that anyone could
-have had so much influence over her ladyship as you
-have, Mrs. Pullen. I hope you will come again.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not be able to do so. But Madame Gobelli
-will have you to talk to her! You live here altogether,
-do you not?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have lived here for many years, but I am on the
-point of leaving. Bobby was my only tie to the Red
-House, or I should have gone long ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“But now that the Baroness is so helpless surely you
-will delay your departure until she no longer needs you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not leave her until she has secured a better
-woman in my stead. But to tell you the truth, I am
-going to be married, Mrs. Pullen, and I consider my first
-duty is towards my future husband and his parents who
-are very old!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! doubtless! May I ask his name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Captain Hill! He lives in the next house to this—Stevenage!
-You are surprised, perhaps, that a man
-who has been in the army should marry a poor governess
-like myself. That is his goodness. I know that I am
-worn and faded and no longer young—thirty-three on
-my last birthday—but he is good enough to care for me
-all the more for the troubles I have passed through.
-Mine has been a chequered life, Mrs. Pullen, but I have
-told Captain Hill everything, and he still wishes to make
-me his wife! I ought to be a happy woman for the
-future, ought I not?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Indeed yes,” said Margaret, heartily, “and I sincerely
-hope that you may be so! But I can’t help thinking of
-poor Madame Gobelli! Is the Baron good to her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty well!” answered Miss Wynward, “but he is
-very stolid and unsympathetic! It is strange to think
-that her heart must have been bound up in that boy,
-and yet at times she was positively cruel to him!”</p>
-
-<p>“It has all been permitted for some good purpose,”
-said Margaret, as she bade her farewell, “perhaps her
-remorse and self-accusation are the only things which
-would have brought her down upon her knees.”</p>
-
-<p>She returned home considerably saddened by what
-she had seen, but in three days she was to accompany
-her husband to India, and in the bustle of preparation,
-and the joy of knowing that she was not to be separated
-from him again, her heart was comforted and at peace.
-Never once during that time did she give one thought
-to Harriet Brandt. Miss Wynward had hardly mentioned
-her name, and no one seemed to know where she had
-gone. The girl had passed out of their lives altogether.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret only regretted one thing in leaving England—that
-she had not seen Anthony Pennell again.
-Colonel Pullen had called twice at his chambers, but
-had each time found him from home. Margaret wanted
-to put in a good word for the Baroness with him. She
-thought perhaps that he might see her, after a while, and
-speak a few words of comfort to her. But she was
-obliged to be content with writing her wishes in a farewell
-letter. She little knew how hardened Anthony
-Pennell felt, at that moment, against anyone who had
-treated the woman he loved in so harsh a manner.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span></p>
-
-<p>Harriet Brandt spent the time, after her lover had
-left her to think over and decide upon their mutual fate,
-in walking up and down the room. She was like a
-restless animal; she could not stay two moments in the
-same place. Even when night fell, and the inhabitants
-of the Langham Hotel had retired to rest, she still kept
-pacing up and down the room, without thinking of undressing
-herself or seeking repose, whilst her conscience
-wrestled in warfare with her inclinations. Her thoughts
-took her far, far back to the earliest remembrance of
-which her mind was capable. She thought of her hard,
-unfeeling, indifferent father—of her gross, flabby, sensual
-mother—and shuddered at the remembrance! What
-had <em>she</em> done?—she said to herself—wherein had <em>she</em>
-sinned, that she should have been cursed with such
-progenitors? How had they <em>dared</em> to bring her into the
-world, an innocent yet hapless child of sin—the inheritor
-of their evil propensities—of their lust, their cruelty, their
-sensuality, their gluttony—and worst of all, the fatal
-heritage that made her a terror and a curse to her
-fellow-creatures? How dared they? <em>How dared they?</em>
-Why had God’s vengeance not fallen upon them before
-they had completed their cruel work, or having accomplished
-it, why did He not let her perish with them—so
-that the awful power with which they had imbued
-her, might have been prevented from harming
-others?</p>
-
-<p>Harriet thought of little Caroline; of her two nurses;
-of Sister Theodosia—of Mrs. Pullen’s baby; of Bobby
-Bates; until she felt as though she should go mad. No!
-no! she would never bring that curse upon her Beloved;
-he must go far away, he must never see her again, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>
-else she would destroy herself in order that he might
-escape!</p>
-
-<p>But if she persuaded Anthony to consent to her
-wishes—if she insisted upon a total separation between
-them, what would become of her? What should she do?
-She had no friends in England; Madame Gobelli had
-turned against her—she was all alone! She would live and
-die alone. How should she ever get to know people, or
-to obtain an entrance to Society. She would be a pariah
-to the end of her life! And if she did surmount all
-these obstacles, what would be the result, except a repetition
-of what had gone before? Strangers would come
-to know her—to like her—would grow more intimate,
-and she would respond to their kindness—with the same
-result. They would droop and fail, die perhaps, like
-Bobby and the baby—find out that she was the cause,
-and shun her ever after.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! God!” cried Harriet in her perplexity and
-anguish, “I am accursed! My parents have made me
-not fit to live!”</p>
-
-<p>She passed that night through the agonies of Death—not
-the death that overtakes the believer in a God
-and a Future—but the darkness and uncertainty that
-enwraps the man who knows he is full of sin and yet
-has no knowledge that His Lord has paid his debt to
-the uttermost farthing—the doubt and anxiety that beset
-the unbeliever when he is called upon to enter the dark
-Valley. The poor child saw her destiny entangling her
-as in a net—she longed to break through it, but saw no
-means of escape—and she rebelled against the cruel lot
-that heredity had marked out for her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why am <em>I</em> to suffer?” she exclaimed aloud; “I
-have youth and health and good looks, and money—everything,
-the world would say, calculated to make my
-life a pleasant one, and yet, I am tortured by this awful
-thought—that I must keep aloof from everybody, that I
-am a social leper, full of contagion and death! Doctor
-Phillips said that the more I loved a person, the more I
-must keep away from him! It is incredible! unheard-of!
-Could he have had any motive in saying such a thing?”</p>
-
-<p>The remembrance of her flirtation with Ralph Pullen
-recurred to her mind, and she seized it, as a drowning
-man clutches at a straw.</p>
-
-<p>“Was it a plant, after all? Did the old man want to
-put me off the track of Captain Pullen? Margaret Pullen
-is staying in the house—he said so—had she asked him
-to get rid of me if possible? After all, am I torturing
-myself by believing the story of my fatal power to be
-true, when it was only a ruse to get rid of me? The
-Baroness said the same thing, but she was mad about
-poor Bobby and would have said anything to annoy me—and,
-after all, what does it amount to? The baby
-died in teething—heaps of babies do—and Bobby was
-consumptive from the first—I have heard Miss Wynward
-say so, and would have died anyway, as he grew to be
-a man and had larger demands made upon his physical
-strength. And for the others—what happened to them,
-happens to all the world. It is <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fortune de guerre</i>;
-people drop every day like rotten sheep;—everyone
-might accuse himself of causing the death of his neighbour.
-I have been frightening myself with a chimera.
-Anthony said so, and he must know better than I! And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span>
-I can’t give up Tony—<em>I can’t, I can’t, I can’t!</em> It is of
-no use thinking of it! Besides, he wouldn’t let me! He
-would never leave me alone, until I had consented to
-marry him, so I may as well do it at the first as at the
-last.”</p>
-
-<p>But the tide of triumphant feeling would be succeeded
-by a wave of despondency, which threatened to
-upset all her casuistry.</p>
-
-<p>“But if—<em>if</em>—it should be true, and Anthony should—should—Oh!
-God! Oh! God! I dare not think of it!
-I will kill myself before it shall occur.”</p>
-
-<p>When the morning dawned it found her quite undecided—lamenting
-her unfortunate fate one instant, and
-declaring that she could never give up her lover the
-next. She tore off her clothes and took a cold bath,
-and re-robed herself, but she was looking utterly ill and
-exhausted when Pennell burst in upon her at eleven
-o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, darling,” he exclaimed, “and have you made
-up your mind by this time? Which death am I to die?—suffocated
-in your dear embrace, or left to perish of
-cold and hunger outside?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! Tony,” she cried, throwing herself into his
-arms, “I don’t know what to say! I have not closed my
-eyes all night, trying to decide what will be for the best.
-And I am as far off as ever—only I can never, <em>never</em>
-consent to do anything that shall work you harm!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I shall decide for you,” exclaimed her lover,
-“and that is that you make me and yourself happy, and
-forget all the rubbish these people have been telling you!
-Depend upon it, whatever they may have said was for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>
-their own gratification, and not yours, and that they
-would be quick enough to accept the lot that lies before
-you, were it in their power!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been so lonely and friendless all my life,”
-said Harriet, sobbing in his arms, “and I have longed
-for love and sympathy so much, and now that they have
-come to me, it is hard, Oh! <em>so</em> hard, to have to give
-them up.”</p>
-
-<p>“So hard, Hally, for <em>me</em>, remember, as well as yourself,
-that we will not make the attempt. Now, I want
-you to place yourself in my hands, and start for Paris
-to-night!”</p>
-
-<p>“To-night?” she cried, lifting such a flushed, startled,
-happy face from his breast, that he had no alternative
-but to kiss it again.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! to-night! What did I tell you yesterday—that
-I should come with the ring and the license in my pocket!
-I am as good as my word, and better—for I have given
-notice to the registrar of marriages in my district, that
-he is to be ready for us at twelve o’clock to-day. Am
-I not a good manager?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tony! Tony! but I have not made up my mind!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have made it up for you, and I will take no
-refusal! I have calculated it all to a nicety! Married at
-twelve—back here at one for lunch—a couple of hours
-to pack up, and off by the four o’clock train for Dover—sleep
-at the Castle Warden, and cross to-morrow to
-Paris! How will that do, Mrs. Pennell, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! ought I to do it, ought I to do it?” exclaimed
-Harriet, with a look of despair.</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t I’ll shoot myself. I swear it!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No! no! darling, don’t say that! It is of you alone
-that I am thinking! God forgive me if I am doing wrong,
-but I feel that I cannot refuse you! Take me and do
-with me as you think best.”</p>
-
-<p>After which it came to pass, that Mr. and Mrs.
-Anthony Pennell started in very high spirits for Dover,
-by the four o’clock train that afternoon.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>A fortnight afterwards, the married couple found
-themselves at Nice. Much as has been said and sung
-of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">lune de miel</i>, none ever surpassed, if it ever
-reached, this one in happiness. Harriet passed the time
-in a silent ecstasy of delight. Her cup of bliss was filled
-to overflowing; her satisfaction was too deep for words.
-To this girl, for whom the world had been seen as yet
-only through the barred windows of a convent—who had
-never enjoyed the society of an intellectual companion
-before; who had viewed no scenery but that of the
-Island; seen no records of the past; and visited no foreign
-capital—the first weeks of her married life were a
-panorama of novelties, her days one long astonishment
-and delight.</p>
-
-<p>She could not adore Anthony Pennell sufficiently for
-having afforded her the opportunity of seeing all this,
-and more especially of feeling it. The presents he
-lavished upon her were as nothing in her eyes, compared
-to the lover-like attentions he paid her; the
-bouquets of flowers he brought her every morning; the
-glass of lemonade or milk he had ready to supply her
-need when they were taking their excursions; the warm
-shawl or mantle he carried on his arm in the evenings,
-lest the air should become too chilly for her delicate
-frame after sunset. Money Harriet had no need of, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span>
-love—love she had thirsted for, as the hart thirsts for
-the water-streams, yet had never imagined it could be
-poured out at her feet, as her husband poured it now.</p>
-
-<p>And Pennell, on the other hand, though he had been
-much sought after and flattered by the fair sex for the
-sake of the fame he had acquired and the money he
-made, had never lost his heart to any woman as he had
-done to his little unknown wife. He had never met anyone
-like Hally before. She combined the intelligence of
-the Englishwoman with the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">espièglerie</i> of the French—the
-devotion of the Creole with the fiery passion of the
-Spanish or Italian. He could conceive her quite capable
-of dying silently and uncomplainingly for him, or anyone
-she loved; or on the other hand stabbing her lover without
-remorse if roused by jealousy or insult.</p>
-
-<p>He was hourly discovering new traits in her character
-which delighted him, because they were so utterly unlike
-any possessed by the women of the world, with whom
-he had hitherto associated. He felt as though he had
-captured some beautiful wild creature and was taming
-it for his own pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet would sit for hours at a time in profound
-silence, contemplating his features or watching his actions—crouched
-on the floor at his feet, until he was fain to
-lay down his book or writing, and take to fondling her
-instead. She was an ever-constant joy to him; he felt
-it would be impossible to do anything to displease her
-so long as he loved her—that like the patient Griselda
-she would submit to any injustice and meekly call it
-justice if from <em>his</em> hand. And yet he knew all the while
-that the savage in her was <em>not</em> tamed—that at any
-moment, like the domesticated lion or tiger, her nature<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>
-might assert itself and become furious, wild and intractable.
-It was the very uncertainty that pleased him;
-men love the women of whom they are not quite certain,
-all the more. From Nice they wandered to Mentone,
-but the proximity of the Monte Carlo tables had no
-charm for Anthony Pennell. He was not a speculative
-man: his brain was filled with better things, and he only
-visited such places for the sake of reproduction. Although
-the autumn was now far advanced, the air of Mentone
-was too enervating to suit either of them, and Pennell
-proposed that they should move on to Italy.</p>
-
-<p>“I must show you Venice and Rome before we return
-home, Hally,” he said, “and when I come to think of it,
-why should we return to England at all just yet? Why
-not winter in Rome? Richards is always advising me to
-take a good, long holiday. He says I overwork my brain
-and it reacts upon my body—what better opportunity
-could we find to adopt his advice? Hitherto I have
-pooh-poohed the idea! Wandering over a foreign country
-in solitary grandeur held no charms for me, but with
-you, my darling, to double the pleasure of everything,
-any place assumes the appearance of Paradise! What
-do you say, little wife? Shall we set up our tent South
-until the spring?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you feel well, Tony?” asked Harriet, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Never better in my life, dear! I am afraid you will
-not make an interesting invalid out of me. I am as fit
-as a fiddle. But I fancy my next novel will deal with
-Italy, and I should like to make a few notes of the spots
-I may require to introduce. It is nothing to take me
-away from you, darling. We will inspect the old places<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>
-together, and your quick eye and clear brain shall help
-me in my researches. Is it a settled thing, Hally?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! yes, darling!” she replied, “anywhere with you!
-The only place I shall ever object to, will be the one
-where I cannot go with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“That place does not exist on this earth, Hally,”
-said Pennell, “but if you are willing, we may as well
-start to-morrow, for if we leave it till too late, we shall
-find all the best winter quarters pre-engaged.”</p>
-
-<p>He left the room, as she thought rather hurriedly,
-but as he gained the hotel corridor he slightly staggered
-and leaned against the wall. He had told his wife that
-he was quite well, but he knew it was not the truth.
-He had felt weak and enervated ever since coming to
-Mentone, but he ascribed it to the soft mild atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>“Confound this dizziness!” he said inwardly, as the
-corridor swam before his eyes, “I think my liver must be
-out of order, and yet I have been taking plenty of
-exercise. It must be this mild moist air. Heat never
-did agree with me. I shall be glad to get on. We
-shall find Florence cold by comparison.”</p>
-
-<p>He descended to the bureau and announced his intention
-of giving up his rooms on the morrow, and then
-ordered a carriage and returned to take Hally out for a
-drive.</p>
-
-<p>In Florence they procured rooms in a grand old
-palazzo, furnished with rococo chairs and tables, placed
-upon marble floors. Harriet was charmed and astonished
-by the ease with which they got everything <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en route</i>, as
-though they possessed Aladin’s lamp, she told Pennell,
-and had but to wish to obtain.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Hally!” said her husband, “we have something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span>
-better than the genie’s lamp—we have money! <em>That</em> is
-the true magician in this century. I am very thankful
-that you have a fortune of your own, my dearest, because
-I know that whatever happens, my girl will be
-able to hold her own with the world!”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet grew pale.</p>
-
-<p>“What <em>could</em> happen?” she stammered.</p>
-
-<p>“My silly little goose, are we immortal?” he replied,
-“I make a first-rate income, my dear, but have not laid
-by enough as yet to leave you more than comfortably
-off, but with your own money——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t speak of it, pray don’t speak of it!” she exclaimed,
-with ashen lips, and noting her distress, Pennell
-changed the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a lucky little woman,” he continued, “I
-wonder what some people would give to possess your
-income—poor Margaret Pullen for instance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why Mrs. Pullen in particular, Tony? Are they
-poor?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not whilst Colonel Pullen is on active service, but
-he has nothing but his pay to depend upon, and whilst
-he can work, he must. Which means a residence in
-India, and perhaps separation from his wife and children—if
-he should lose his health, a compulsory retirement;
-and if he keeps it, toiling out there till old age, and
-then coming home to spin out the remainder of his life
-on an inadequate pension. A man who accepts service
-in India should make up his mind to live and die in
-the country, but so many accidents may prevent it.
-And at the best, it means banishment from England and
-all one’s friends and relations. Poor Margaret feels that
-severely, I am sure!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Has Mrs. Pullen many relations then?”</p>
-
-<p>“She has a mother still living, and several brothers
-and sisters, besides her husband’s family. What a sweet,
-gentle woman she is! She was kind to you, Hally, was
-she not, whilst you were abroad?”</p>
-
-<p>By mutual agreement they never spoke of Heyst, or
-the Red House, or anything which was associated with
-what Pennell called his wife’s infatuation regarding herself.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! she was very kind—at first,” replied Harriet,
-“until—until—it all happened, and they went to England.
-Oh! do not let us talk of it!” she broke off suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>“No! we will not! Have you unpacked your mandoline
-yet, Hally? Fetch it, dear, and let me hear your
-lovely voice again! I shall get you to sing to me when
-I am in the vein for composing! You would bring me
-all sorts of beautiful ideas and phantasies!”</p>
-
-<p>“Should I? should I?” exclaimed the girl joyfully.
-“Oh! how lovely! I should do a part of your work then,
-shouldn’t I, Tony?—I should inspire you! Why, I would
-sing day and night for that!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! my bird, I would not let you tire yourself!
-A few notes now and then—they will help me
-more than enough. I must draw from you for my next
-heroine, Hally! I could not have a fairer model!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Tony!”</p>
-
-<p>She rushed to him in the extremity of her delight
-and hid her face upon his breast.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not good enough, not pretty enough! Your
-heroines should be perfect!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so! I prefer them to be of flesh and
-blood, like you!”</p>
-
-<p>He stooped his head and kissed her passionately.</p>
-
-<p>“Hally! Hally!” he whispered, “you draw my very
-life away!”</p>
-
-<p>The girl got up suddenly, almost roughly, and walked
-into the next room to fetch her mandoline.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no!” she cried to herself with a cold fear,
-“not that, my God, not that!”</p>
-
-<p>But when she returned with the instrument, she did
-not revert to the subject, but played and sang as usual
-to her husband’s admiration and delight.</p>
-
-<p>They “did” Florence very thoroughly during the first
-week of their stay there, and were both completely tired.</p>
-
-<p>“I must really stay at home to-morrow,” cried Hally
-one afternoon on returning to dinner, “Tony, I am
-regularly fagged out! I feel as if I had a corn upon
-every toe!”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I,” replied her husband, “and I cannot have
-my darling knocked up by fatigue! We will be lazy to-morrow,
-Hally, and lie on two sofas and read our books
-all day! I have been thinking for the last few days
-that we have been going a little too fast! Let me see,
-child!—how long have we been married?”</p>
-
-<p>“Six weeks to-morrow,” she answered glibly.</p>
-
-<p>“Bless my soul! we are quite an old married couple,
-a species of Darby and Joan! And have you been
-happy, Hally?”</p>
-
-<p>The tears of excitement rushed into her dark eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Happy!</em> That is no word for what I have been,
-Tony; I have been in Heaven—in Heaven all the while!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And so have I,” rejoined her husband.</p>
-
-<p>“I met some nuns whilst I was out this morning,”
-continued Hally, “the sisters of the Annunciation, and
-they stopped and spoke to me, and were so pleased to
-hear that I had been brought up in a convent. ‘And
-have you no vocation, my child?’ asked one of them.
-‘Yes! Sister,’ I replied, ‘I have—a big, strong, handsome
-vocation called my husband.’ They looked quite
-shocked, poor dears, at first, but I gave them a subscription
-for their orphan schools—one hundred francs—and
-they were so pleased. They said if I was sick
-whilst in Florence, I must send for one of them, and
-she would come and nurse me! I gave it as a thanksgiving,
-Tony—a thanksgiving offering because I am so
-very happy. I am not a good woman like Margaret
-Pullen, I know that, but I love you—<em>I love you!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“Who said that you were not a good woman?” asked
-Pennell, as he drew her fondly to his side, and kissed
-away the tears that hung on her dark lashes.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I know I am not. Besides, you once said
-that Margaret Pullen was the best woman you had ever
-known.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think she is very sweet and unselfish,” replied
-Pennell musingly, “she felt the loss of her infant terribly,
-Doctor Phillips told me, but the way in which she
-struggled to subdue her grief, in order not to distress
-others, was wonderful! Poor Margaret! how she mourns
-little Ethel to this day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t! <em>don’t!</em>” cried Harriet in a stifled voice, “I
-cannot bear to think of it!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span></p>
-
-<p>“My darling, it had nothing to do with you! I have
-told you so a thousand times!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! yes! I know you have—but I loved the little
-darling! It is dreadful to me to think that she is
-mouldering in the grave!”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, child, you will be hysterical if you indulge
-in any more reminiscences! Suppose we go for a stroll
-through the Ghetto or some other antiquated part of
-Florence. Or shall we take a drive into the country? I
-am at your commands, Madam!”</p>
-
-<p>“A drive, darling, then—a drive!” whispered his
-wife, as she left him to get ready for the excursion.</p>
-
-<p>It was three hours before they returned to their
-rooms in the old palazzo. Harriet was dull and somewhat
-silent, and Anthony confessed to a headache.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not quite sure now,” he said, as they were
-dining, “whether a trip to Australia or America would
-not do us both more good than lingering about these
-mild, warm places. I think our constitutions both require
-bracing rather than coddling. Australia is a grand
-young country! I have often contemplated paying her
-a visit. What would you say to it, Hally?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should enjoy it as much as yourself, Tony! You
-so often have a headache now! I think the drainage
-of these southern towns must be defective!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! shocking! They are famous for typhoid and
-malarial fevers. They are not drained at all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t let us stay here long then! What should I
-do if you were to fall ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are far more liable to fall sick of the two, my
-darling,” returned her husband, “I do not think your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>
-beautiful little body has much strength to sustain it.
-And then what should <em>I</em> do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! neither of us could do without the other,
-Tony!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course we couldn’t, and so we will provide
-against such a contingency by moving on before our
-systems get saturated with miasma and mistral. Will
-you sing to me to-night, Hally?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not unless you very much wish it! I am a little
-tired. I feel as if I couldn’t throw any expression into
-my songs to-night!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then come here and sit down on the sofa beside
-me, and let us talk!”</p>
-
-<p>She did as he desired, but Pennell was too sleepy to
-talk. In five minutes he had fallen fast asleep, and it
-was with difficulty she could persuade him to abandon
-the couch and drag his weary limbs up to bed, where
-he threw himself down in a profound slumber. Harriet
-was also tired. Her husband was breathing heavily as
-she slipped into her place beside him. His arm was
-thrown out over her pillow, as though he feared she
-might go to sleep without remembering to wish him
-good-night! She bent over him and kissed him passionately
-on the lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night, my beloved,” she whispered, “sleep
-well, and wake in happiness!”</p>
-
-<p>She kissed the big hand too that lay upon her pillow
-and composed herself to sleep while it still encircled
-her.</p>
-
-<p>The dawn is early in Florence, but it had broken
-for some time before she roused herself again. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>
-sun was streaming brightly into the long, narrow, uncurtained
-windows, and everything it lighted on was
-touched with a molten glory. Harriet started up in bed.
-Her husband’s arm was still beneath her body.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! my poor darling!” she exclaimed, as though the
-fault were her own, “how cramped he must be! How
-soundly we must have slept not to have once moved
-through the night!”</p>
-
-<p>She raised Tony’s arm and commenced to chafe it.
-How strangely heavy and cold it felt. Why! he was
-cold all over! She drew up the bedclothes and tucked
-them in around his chin. Then, for the first time, she
-looked at his face. His eyes were open.</p>
-
-<p>“Tony, Tony!” she exclaimed, “are you making fun
-of me? Have you been awake all the time?”</p>
-
-<p>She bent over his face laughingly, and pressed a
-kiss upon his cheek.</p>
-
-<p>How stiff it felt! My God! what was the matter?
-Could he have fainted? She leapt from the bed, and
-running to her husband’s side, pulled down the bedclothes
-again and placed her hand upon his heart. The
-body was cold—cold and still all over! His eyes were
-glazed and dull. His mouth was slightly open. In one
-awful moment she knew the truth. Tony was—<em>dead</em>!</p>
-
-<p>She stood for some moments—some hours—some
-months—she could not have reckoned the time, silent
-and motionless, trying to realise what had occurred.
-Then—as it came upon her, like a resistless flood which
-she could not stem, nor escape, Harriet gave one fearful
-shriek which brought the servants hurrying upstairs to
-know what could be the matter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I have killed my husband—I have killed him—it
-was I myself who did it!” was all that she would say.</p>
-
-<p>Of course they did not believe her. They accepted
-the unmeaning words as part of their mistress’s frenzy
-at her sudden and unexpected loss. They saw what
-had happened, and they ran breathlessly for a doctor,
-who confirmed their worst fears—the Signor was dead!</p>
-
-<p>The old palazzo became like a disturbed ant-hill.
-The servants ran hither and thither, unknowing how to
-act, whilst the mistress sat by the bedside with staring,
-tearless eyes, holding the hand of her dead husband.
-But there were a dozen things to be done—half a hundred
-orders to be issued. Death in Florence is quickly
-followed by burial. The law does not permit a mourner
-to lament his Dead for more than four-and-twenty hours.</p>
-
-<p>But the signora would give no orders for the funeral
-nor answer any questions put to her! She had no
-friends in Florence—for ought they knew, she had no
-money—what were they to do? At last one of them
-thought of the neighbouring Convent of the Annunciation
-and ran to implore one of the good sisters to come to
-their mistress in her extremity.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly afterwards, Sister Angelica entered the bedroom
-where Harriet sat murmuring at intervals, “It is <em>I</em>
-who have killed him,” and attempted to administer comfort
-to the young mourner. But her words and prayers
-had no effect upon Harriet. Her brain could hold but
-one idea—she had killed Tony! Doctor Phillips was
-right—it was she who had killed Margaret Pullen’s baby
-and Bobby Bates, and to look further back, little Caroline,
-and now—now, her Tony! the light of her life, the passion
-of her being, the essence of all her joy—her hope<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span>
-for this world and the next. She had killed him—<em>she</em>,
-who worshipped him, whose pride was bound up in him,
-who was to have helped him and comforted him and
-waited on him all his life—she had killed him!</p>
-
-<p>Her dry lips refused to say the words distinctly,
-but they kept revolving in her brain until they dazed
-and wearied her. The little sister stood by her and
-held her hand, as the professional assistants entered the
-death chamber and arranged and straightened the body
-for the grave, finally placing it in a coffin and carrying
-it away to a mortuary where it would have to remain
-until buried on the morrow, but Harriet made no resistance
-to the ceremony and no sign. She did not
-even say “Good-bye” as Tony was carried from her
-sight for ever! Sister Angelica talked to her of the
-glorious Heaven where they must hope that her dear
-husband would be translated, of the peace and happiness
-he would enjoy, of the reunion which awaited them when
-her term of life was also past.</p>
-
-<p>She pressed her to make the Convent her refuge
-until the first agony of her loss was overcome—reminded
-her of the peace and rest she would encounter within
-the cloisters, and how the whole fraternity would unite
-in praying for the soul of her beloved that he might
-speedily obtain the remission of his sins and an entrance
-into the Beatific Presence.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet listened dully and at last in order to get rid
-of her well-intentioned but rather wearisome consoler,
-she promised to do all that she wished. Let the sister
-return to the Convent for the present, and on the morrow
-if she would come for her at the same time, she might
-take her back with her. She wanted rest and peace—she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span>
-would be thankful for them, poor Harriet said—only
-to-night, this one night more, she wished to be alone.
-So the good little sister went away rejoicing that she had
-succeeded in her errand of mercy, and looking forward
-to bearing the poor young widow to the Convent on the
-morrow, there to learn the true secret of earthly happiness.</p>
-
-<p>When she had gone and the old palazzo was quiet
-and empty, the bewildered girl rose to her feet and
-tried to steady her shaking limbs sufficiently, to write
-what seemed to be a letter but was in reality a will.</p>
-
-<p>“I leave all that I possess,” so it ran, “to Margaret
-Pullen, the wife of Colonel Arthur Pullen, the best woman
-Tony said that he had ever met, and I beg her to accept
-it in return for the kindness she showed to me when
-I went to Heyst, a stranger. Signed, <span class="smcap">Harriet Pennell</span>.”</p>
-
-<p>She put the paper into an envelope, and as soon as
-the morning had dawned, she asked her servant Lorenzo
-to show her the way to the nearest notary in whose
-presence she signed the document and directed him to
-whom it should be sent in case of her own death.</p>
-
-<p>And after another visit to a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pharmacien</i>, she returned
-to the palazzo and took up her watch again in the now
-deserted bedchamber.</p>
-
-<p>Her servants brought her refreshments and pressed
-her to eat, without effect. All she desired, she told
-them, was to be left alone, until the sister came for her
-in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>Sister Angelica arrived true to her appointment, and
-went at once to the bedchamber. To her surprise she
-found Harriet lying on the bed, just where the corpse
-of Anthony Pennell had lain, and apparently asleep.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Pauvre enfant!</i>” thought the kind-hearted nun, “grief
-has exhausted her! I should not have attended to her
-request, but have watched with her through the night!
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Eh, donc! ma pauvre</i>,” she continued, gently touching
-the girl on the shoulder, “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">levez-vous! Je suis là.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>But there was no awakening on this earth for Harriet
-Pennell. She had taken an overdose of chloral and
-joined her husband.</p>
-
-<p>When Margaret Pullen received the will which Harriet
-had left behind her, she found these words with it,
-scribbled in a very trembling hand upon a scrap of
-paper.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not think more unkindly of me than you can
-help. My parents have made me unfit to live. Let me
-go to a world where the curse of heredity which they
-laid upon me may be mercifully wiped out.”</p>
-
-<p class="p4 pfs90">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<hr class="r45a" />
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-2 francs per volume. A complete Catalogue of the Tauchnitz
-Edition is attached to this work.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="transnote"><h2>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:</h2>
-frontmatter: moved one page (beginning of publisher’s list of Latest Volumes) to the end and joined with the rest of the list for continuity<br /><br />
-
-page 10: ‘dared not say Bo!’ changed to ‘dared not say Boo!’<br /><br />
-
-page 53: ‘and generally kow-tooing’ changed to ‘and generally kow-towing’<br /><br />
-
-page 80: joined paragraphs of the same person speaking removing closing quotation mark at ‘The governess was so angry’<br /><br />
-
-page 124: ‘carrying a flimsey wrap’ changed to ‘carrying a flimsy wrap’<br /><br />
-
-page 202: ‘return with him to Hoosur’ changed to ‘return with him to Hosur’<br /><br />
-
-page 227: ‘who care more’ changed to ‘who cares more’<br /><br />
-
-page 285: ‘CHAPTER XVI’ changed to ‘CHAPTER XVII’<br /><br />
-
-page 285: ‘it it had not been for that’ changed to ‘if it had not been for that’<br /><br />
-
-page 317: ‘she returned to the Palazzo’ changed to ‘she returned to the palazzo’ for uniformity<br /><br />
-
-along with a few silent corrections to punctuation. Except for the above, original spelling has been retained.</div>
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