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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68790 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68790)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A haunted life, by James Grant
-
-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: A haunted life
-
-Author: James Grant
-
-Release Date: August 19, 2022 [eBook #68790]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HAUNTED LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A HAUNTED LIFE
-
-
- BY
-
- JAMES GRANT
-
- AUTHOR OF 'THE ROMANCE OF WAR'
-
-
-
- LONDON
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS
- BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL
- NEW YORK: 9, LAFAYETTE PLACE
-
- 1883
-
-
-
-
-
- JAMES GRANT'S NOVELS,
-
- _Price 2s. each, Fancy Boards._
-
- The Romance of War
- The Aide-de-Camp
- The Scottish Cavalier
- Bothwell
- Jane Seton: or, the Queen's Advocate
- Philip Rollo
- The Black Watch
- Mary of Lorraine
- Oliver Ellis: or, the Fusileers
- Lucy Arden: or, Hollywood Hall
- Frank Hilton: or, the Queen's Own
- The Yellow Frigate
- Harry Ogilvie: or, the Black Dragoons
- Arthur Blane
- Laura Everingham: or, the Highlanders of Glenora
- The Captain of the Guard
- Letty Hyde's Lovers
- Cavaliers of Fortune
- Second to None
- The Constable of France
- The Phantom Regiment
- The King's Own Borderers
- The White Cockade
- First Love and Last Love
- Dick Rooney
- The Girl he Married
- Lady Wedderburn's Wish
- Jack Manly
- Only an Ensign
- Adventures of Rob Roy
- Under the Red Dragon
- The Queen's Cadet
- Shall I Win Her?
- Fairer than a Fairy
- One of the Six Hundred
- Morley Ashton
- Did She Love Him?
- The Ross-shire Buffs
- Six Years Ago
- Vere of Ours
- The Lord Hermitage
- The Royal Regiment
- Duke of Albany's Own Highlanders
- The Cameronians
- The Scots Brigade
- Violet Jermyn
- Jack Chaloner
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I. THE MEET OF THE COACHING CLUB
- II. TREVOR CHUTE'S REVERIE
- III. HIS VISIT TO CLARE
- IV. IDA
- V. HOW WILL IT END?
- VI. SIR CARNABY COLLINGWOOD
- VII. A PROPOSAL
- VIII. 'THE DESIRE OF THE MOTH FOR THE STARS'
- IX. DOUBTS DISPELLED
- X. FOR WHOM THE JEWELS WERE INTENDED
- XI. A ROMANCE OF THE DRAWING-ROOM
- XII. IN THE KONGENS NYTORV
- XIII. BY THE EXPRESS FOR LUBECK
- XIV. AN IMBROGLIO
- XV. 'LOVE IS STRONG AS DEATH'
- XVI. 'JEALOUSY CRUEL AS THE GRAVE'
- XVII. A QUARREL
- XVIII. THE EMEUTE AT LUBECK
- XIX. SIR CARNABY'S GRATITUDE
- XX. CARNABY COURT
- XXI. CHRISTMAS EVE
-
-
-
-
-A HAUNTED LIFE.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE MEET OF THE COACHING CLUB.
-
-'Be patient, Trevor Chute; they are sure to be here to-day, old
-fellow, for Ida told me so.'
-
-'Ida?'
-
-'Yes, Mrs. Beverley; does that surprise you?' asked the other, with a
-singular smile--one that was rather sardonic.
-
-'No, Jerry, I have long ceased to be surprised at anything. As I
-have told you, my special mission in town is a visit to her; but--so
-you and she are good friends still?'
-
-'Yes, though she has been six months a widow, we are on the same
-strange terms in which you left us last--friends pure and simple.'
-
-'And nothing more?'
-
-'As yet,' replied Jerry Vane, lowering his voice, with something of
-despondency perceptible in his tone, and to a close observer it might
-have been apparent that he, though by nature frank, jovial, and
-good-humoured, had, by force of habit, or by circumstances, a
-somewhat cynical mode of expression and gravity of manner.
-
-The time was the noon of a bright and lovely day in May, when the
-newly-opened London season is at its height; and it was the first
-meet of the Coaching Club in Hyde Park, where the expectant crowd,
-filling all the seats under the pleasant trees, or in occupation of
-handsome carriages, snug barouches, dashing phaetons and
-victorias--in everything save hackney cabs--covered all the wide
-plateau which stretches from the Marble Arch to the somewhat prosaic
-powder magazine beside the Serpentine, and waited with the
-characteristic patience and good-humour of Londoners for the
-assembling of the coaches, though some were seeking to while away the
-time with a morning paper or the last periodical.
-
-The speakers, though young men, were old friends, who had known each
-other since boyhood in the playing-fields of Rugby.
-
-Jervoise, or, as he was familiarly called, Jerry Vane, was a
-curly-pated, good-looking young fellow of the genuine Saxon type,
-with expressive, but rather thoughtful eyes of bluish grey, long fair
-whiskers, and somewhat the bearing of a 'man about town;' while the
-other, perhaps in aspect the manlier of the two, Trevor Chute, in
-figure compact and well set-up, was dark-haired, hazel-eyed, and had
-a smart moustache, imparting much decision of expression to a
-handsome and regular face, which had been scorched and embrowned by a
-tropical sun; and where the white flap of the puggaree had failed to
-protect his neck and ears, they had deepened to a blister hue.
-
-He had but the day before come to town, on leave from his regiment
-(which had just returned from India), on a special errand, to be
-detailed in its place.
-
-In front was the great bend of the blue Serpentine rippling and
-sparkling in the sunshine, with its tiny fleet of toy-ships; beyond
-it was the leafy background of trees, and the far stretch of emerald
-lawn, chequered with clumps of rhododendron in full flower, and
-almost covered with sight-seers, some of whom gave an occasional
-cheer as a stately drag passed to the meeting-place, especially if
-its driver was recognized as a personage of note or a public
-favourite.
-
-'I don't know what you may have seen in India, Trevor,' said Jerry
-Vane, 'but I am assured that the gayest meetings on the continent of
-Europe can present nothing like this. I have been in the Prater at
-Vienna on the brightest mornings of summer, and on gala days at the
-Bois de Boulogne, and seen there all the _élite_ of Paris wending its
-way in equipages, on horse or on foot, but no scene in either place
-equals this of to-day by the Serpentine!'
-
-To this his friend, who had so recently returned from military exile,
-in the East, warmly assented, adding:
-
-'The day is as hot as my last Christmas was in the Punjaub.'
-
-'Christmas in the Paunjaub, by Jove!' exclaimed Jerry Vane, with a
-laugh. 'Eating ices and fanning oneself under a punkah, with the
-thermometer at 90 in the shade, eh?'
-
-Captain Chute laughed in turn at this idea; but as he stood at that
-time by the inner railings in Hyde Park, waiting anxiously to see the
-fair occupants of a certain drag, he could foresee, as little as his
-friend, where they were to spend their coming Christmas, or on its
-eve to hear, through the stillness thereof, the sweet evensong coming
-over a waste of snow from an old chapel, amid a group of
-crystal-shrouded trees, where many soft voices, with _hers_ among
-them, told again of the angels' message, given more than eighteen
-hundred years ago to the shepherds of Chaldea, as they watched their
-fleecy flock by night.
-
-'It seems but yesterday that I last stood here, Jerry,' said Trevor
-Chute, thoughtfully, almost sadly; 'and how much has come and gone to
-us both since then!'
-
-'Yes; and here, as of old, Trevor, are the last new beauties who have
-come out, and the overblown belles of seasons that are past, and, of
-course, all those great folks whom everybody knows, and others of
-whom no one knows anything, save that they have swell equipages, and
-are "like magnificent red and purple orchids, which grow out of
-nothing, yet do so much credit to their origin."'
-
-'You grow cynical, Jerry.'
-
-'Perhaps; but there was a time when I was not wont to be so. And
-you, Trevor, are not without good reason for being so too. Why, man
-alive! when in the Guards, how popular you were with all the mammas
-of unmarried daughters; a seat in the carriage, a box at the opera, a
-balcony at the boat-race, whenever you felt disposed. By Jove! there
-was no man in town I envied more than you in those days.'
-
-'And what has it all come to now, Jerry? I feel quite like a fogey,'
-exclaimed Trevor Chute.
-
-'Yet this was but four years ago.'
-
-'Only four years, old fellow, and _she_ is not married yet! But here
-come the party, and on Desmond's drag; he has the "lead," it seems.'
-
-It was now the hour of one; the procession had started, and the eyes
-of all the onlookers were eagerly engaged in critically examining the
-various drags, so magnificently horsed and brilliantly appointed, as
-they passed in succession, with all their silver harness shining in
-the sun.
-
-About thirty drove from the well-known rendezvous of the Coaching
-Club along the pretty drive which skirts the Serpentine and ends with
-the bridge that divides the Park from Kensington Gardens; and though
-some of the drivers adhered to the Club uniform--blue, with gilt
-buttons--many appeared in the perfection of morning costume; and as
-team after team went by, chestnut, white, or grey, with satin-like
-skins, murmurs of applause, rising at times to a cheer, greeted the
-proprietors.
-
-The costumes of the ladies who occupied the lofty seats were as
-perfect as, in many instances, was their beauty; and no other capital
-in Europe could have presented such a spectacle as Trevor Chute saw
-then, when the summer sun was at its height in the heavens, gilding
-the trees with brilliant light, and showing Hyde Park in all its
-glory.
-
-The leading drag was the one which fascinated him, and all the other
-twenty-nine went clattering past like same phantasmagoria, or a
-spectacle one might seem to behold in a dream.
-
-Several ladies were on the drag, including the owner's somewhat
-_passé_ sister, the Hon. Evelyn Desmond; but Chute saw only
-two--Clare and Violet Collingwood--or one, rather, the elder, who
-riveted all his attention.
-
-Both girls were remarkable for their beauty even then, when every
-second female face seemed fair to look upon; but the contrast was
-strong in the opposite styles of their loveliness, for Clare was a
-brilliant brunette, while Violet was even more brilliant as a blonde;
-and as the drag swept past, Trevor Chute had only time to remark the
-perfect taste of Clare's costume or habit, that her back hair was a
-marvel of curious plaiting, and that she was laughingly and hastily
-thrusting into her silver-mounted Marguerite pouch a note that
-Desmond had handed to her, almost surreptitiously it seemed; and
-then, amid the crowd and haze, she passed away from his sight, as
-completely as she had done four years before, when, by the force of
-circumstances--a fate over which he had no control--they had been
-rent asunder, when their engagement was declared null, and they were
-informed that thenceforward their paths in life must be far apart.
-
-'Clare Collingwood is the same girl as ever, Trevor,' said Jerry
-Vane, breaking a silence of some minutes. 'You saw with what
-imperial indifference she was receiving the admiration of all who
-passed, and the attention of those who were about her.'
-
-'Is she much changed, Jerry, since--since I left England?' Trevor
-asked.
-
-'Oh, no,' replied the other, cynically; 'she and her sisters--Violet,
-at least--have gone, and are still going, over the difficult ways of
-life pleasantly, gracefully, and easily, as all in their "set"
-usually do. In her fresh widow's weeds Ida Beverley could not be
-here to-day, of course.'
-
-'I have an express and most melancholy mission to her on the morrow,'
-said Captain Chute. 'But why is Collingwood _père_ not with his
-daughters on this occasion?'
-
-'Though girls that any man might be proud of escorting in any
-capacity, the old beau, with his dyed hair and curled whispers, is
-never seen with them, nor has been since their mother's death.
-Though sixty, if he is a day, he prefers to act the _rôle_ of a young
-fellow on his preferment, and doesn't like to have these young
-women--one of them a widow, too--calling him "papa." He knows
-instinctively--nay, he has overheard--that he is called "old
-Collingwood," and he doesn't like the title a bit,' added Vane,
-laughing genuinely, for the first time that forenoon, as they made
-their way towards the nearest gate of the Park, which the glittering
-drags were all leaving by the Marble Arch, and setting forth, _viâ_
-Portman Square, for luncheon at Muswell Hill or elsewhere.
-
-'And has Clare had no offers since my time?' asked Trevor Chute,
-almost timidly.
-
-'Two; good ones, also.'
-
-'And she refused them?'
-
-'So Ida told me.'
-
-'Ida again; you and Mrs. Beverley seem very good friends.'
-
-'Yes, though she used me shockingly in throwing me over for Beverley.'
-
-'And why did--Clare refuse?'
-
-'Can't say, for the life of me; women are such enigmas; unless a
-certain Trevor Chute, then broiling in the Punjaub, wherever that may
-be, had something to do with it.'
-
-'I can pardon much in you, Jerry Vane,' said Chute, gravely; 'for we
-have been staunch friends ever since I was a species of big brother
-to you at Rugby; but please not to make a jest of Clare and me. And
-what of pretty Violet?'
-
-'Oh, Violet is all right,' replied Vane, speaking very fast, and
-reddening a little at his friend's reproach. 'She has those
-graceful, taking, and pretty ways with her and about her that will be
-sure to do well for her in the end; thus, sooner or later, Violet's
-fortune is certain to be made in a matrimonial point of view.'
-
-'I have heard of this fellow, Harvey Desmond, before,' said Chute,
-musingly. 'I remember his name when I was in the Household Brigade.
-He was lately, I think, gazetted a C.B.'
-
-'Of course.'
-
-'For what?'
-
-'In consideration of his great services at Wormwood Scrubs and on
-Wimbledon Common.'
-
-To see Clare on _his_ drag, even with his sister, the Hon. Evelyn, to
-play propriety, stung Trevor Chute, and, as if divining his very
-thoughts, Jerry Vane said, let us hope unintentionally:
-
-'All the clubs have linked their names together for some time past.'
-
-'Well,' replied Trevor, with something like a malediction, as he
-proceeded in a vicious manner to manipulate a cigar, and bite off the
-end of it. 'What the deuce does that matter to me?'
-
-His expression of face, however, belied the indifference he affected
-for the moment, and feeling that he had caused pain by his remark,
-Jerry Vane said, as they walked arm and arm along Piccadilly, by the
-side of the Green Park:
-
-'Neither of us have been very successful in our love affairs with the
-Collingwoods; and with me even more than you, Trevor, it was a case
-of "love's labours lost." Yet, when I think of all that Ida
-Collingwood was in the past time to me, I cannot help feeling maudlin
-over it. We had, time to me, I cannot help feeling maudlin over it.
-We had, as you know well, been engaged a year when, unluckily,
-Beverley, of your corps, became a friend of the family. I know not
-by what magic he swayed her mind, her heart, and all her thoughts,
-but, from the first day she knew him, I felt that I was thrown over
-and that she was lost to me for ever! And on that day when she
-became Beverley's wife----'
-
-In the bitterness of his heart Vane paused, for his voice became
-tremulous.
-
-'The friend equally of you and of poor Jack Beverley, whom I laid in
-his grave, far, far away, I felt all the awkwardness of my position
-when that bitter rivalry arose between him and you about Ida
-Collingwood,' said Trevor Chute, and the usually lively Jerry, who
-seemed lost in thoughts which the voice and presence of his friend
-had summoned from the past, walked slowly forward in moody silence.
-
-He was recalling, as he had too often done, the agony of the time
-when he first began to learn--first became grimly conscious--that the
-tender eyes of Ida sought to win glances from other eyes than his,
-and ask smile for smile from other lips too! And when desperately
-against hope he had hoped the game would change, and oblivion would
-follow forgiveness--but the time never came.
-
-Jerry could recall, too, the sickly attempts he had made to arouse
-her pique and jealousy by flirting with Evelyn Desmond and other
-girls, but all in vain, as the sequel proved.
-
-She had become so absorbed in Beverley as to be oblivious of every
-action of the discarded one, and almost careless of what he thought
-or felt.
-
-But now, though Beverley was dead and had found his grave on a
-distant and a deadly shore, it was scarcely in human flesh and blood
-for Vane--even jolly Jerry Vane--to forgive, and still less to regret
-him as Trevor Chute did, though he affected to do so, on which the
-soldier shook his hand, saying:
-
-'You are indeed a good-hearted fellow!'
-
-But Vane felt that the praise was perhaps undeserved, and to change
-the subject, said--
-
-'She has been to a certain extent getting over Beverley's death.'
-
-'Getting over it?'
-
-'Of course.'
-
-'How?'
-
-'By becoming more composed and settled; no grief lasts for ever, you
-know,' replied Vane, a little tartly; 'but now your return, your
-special visit to her, and the mementoes you bear, will bring the
-whole thing to the surface again, and--and--even after six months of
-widowhood--may----'
-
-'Will make matters more difficult for you?' interrupted Trevor Chute,
-smiling.
-
-'Precisely. I am a great ass, I know; but I cannot help loving Ida
-still.'
-
-'You will accompany me to the Collingwoods' to-morrow, Jerry?' urged
-the soldier, after a pause.
-
-'No, old fellow, decidedly not. Ida's grief would only worry me and
-make me feel _de trop_. What the deuce do you think I am made of,
-Trevor, to attempt to console the woman I love when she is weeping
-for _another_?'
-
-'Dine with me at the club this evening, then--sharp eight--and we'll
-talk it over.'
-
-'Thanks; and then we shall have a long "jaw" together about all that
-is and all that _might_ have been; so, till then, old man, good-bye.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-TREVOR CHUTE'S REVERIE.
-
-Protracted by various culinary devices, the late dinner had
-encroached on the night, just as the final cigar in the smoking-room
-had done on the early hours of morning; and after a long
-conversation, full of many stirring and tender reminiscences and many
-mutual confidences, Jerry Vane had driven away to his rooms, and
-Trevor Chute was left alone to ponder over them all again, and
-consider the task--if task it really was--that lay before him on the
-following morn.
-
-And now to tell the reader more precisely the relation in which some
-of the _dramatis personæ_ stand to each other.
-
-Four years before the time when our story opens, Trevor Chute, then
-in the Foot Guards, had been engaged to Clare Collingwood. She was
-in her second season, though not yet in the zenith of her beauty,
-which was undeniably great, even in London; and his friend, Jervoise
-Vane, was at the same time the accepted of her second sister Ida, who
-had just 'come out' under the best auspices; yet the loves of all
-were fated to end unhappily.
-
-Monetary misfortune overtook the family of Trevor Chute; expected
-settlements ended in smoke, and he had to begin what he called 'the
-sliding scale,' by exchanging from the Guards into a Line regiment
-then serving in India; and then the father of Clare--Sir Carnaby
-Collingwood--issued the stern fiat which broke off their engagement
-for ever.
-
-'Of course,' thought he, as he looked dreamily upward to the
-concentric rings and wreaths of smoke, the produce of his mild
-havannah, 'we shall meet as mere friends, old acquaintances, and that
-sort of thing. Doubtless she has forgotten me, and all that I was to
-her once. Here, amid the gaieties of three successive seasons since
-_those days_, she must have found many greater attractions than poor
-Trevor Chute--this fellow Desmond among them--while the poor devil in
-the Line was broiling up country, with no solace save the memory--if
-solace it was--of the days that were no more!'
-
-Sir Carnaby Collingwood was by nature proud, cold, and selfish. He
-had married for money, as his father had done before him; and though
-he seemed to have a pleasure in revenging himself, as some one has
-phrased it, by quenching the love and sunshine in the life of others,
-because of the lack of both in his own, Trevor Chute felt that he
-could scarcely with justice be upbraided for breaking off the
-marriage of a girl having such expectations as Clare with an almost
-penniless subaltern officer.
-
-Ida's engagement terminated as related in the preceding chapter.
-With a cruelty that was somewhat deliberate, she fairly jilted Vane
-and married Jack Beverley, undeniably a handsomer and more showy man,
-whose settlements were unexceptionable, and came quite up to all that
-Sir Carnaby could wish.
-
-Yet Beverley did not gain much by the transaction. Ida fell into a
-chronic state of health so delicate that decline was threatened; the
-family physicians interposed, and nearly three years passed away
-without her being able to join her husband in India, where he was
-then serving with Trevor Chute's regiment, and where he met his death
-by a terrible accident.
-
-Jerry Vane felt deeply and bitterly the loss of the girl he had loved
-so well; and he would rather that she had gone to India and passed
-out of his circle, as he was constantly fated to hear of her, and not
-unfrequently to meet her; for Jerry's heart did not break, and sooth
-to say, between balls and dinners, croquet and Badminton parties,
-cricket matches, whist and chess tournaments, rinking, and so forth,
-his time was pretty well parcelled out, when in town or anywhere else.
-
-Trevor Chute and Beverley had been warm friends when with the
-regiment. Loving Clare still, and treasuring all the tender past, he
-felt that her brother-in-law was a species of link between them,
-through whom he could always hear of her welfare, while he half hoped
-that she might wish to hear of his, and yet be led to take an
-interest in him.
-
-With all this mutual regard, Chute's dearest friend of the two was
-not the dead man, but Jerry Vane; yet there had been a great
-community of sentiment between them. This was born of the affection
-they fostered for the two sisters, and sooth to say, Beverley, while
-in India, loved his absent wife with a passion that bordered on
-something beyond either enthusiasm or romance. It became eventually
-spiritualised and refined, this love for the distant and the ailing,
-beyond what he could describe or altogether conceive, though times
-there were when in moments of confidence, over their cheroots and
-brandy pawnee, he would gravely observe to Trevor Chute that so
-strong, and yet so tender, was the tie between him and Ida, that,
-though so many thousand miles apart, they were _en rapport_ with each
-other, and thus that each thought, or talked, and dreamt of the
-absent at the same moment.
-
-Be all this as it may, a time was to come when Trevor was to recall
-these strange confidences and apparently wild assertions with
-something more than terror and anxiety, though now he only thought of
-the death-bed of his friend in India, the details of all that befell
-him, and the messages and mementoes which Jack Beverley had charged
-him to deliver to Ida on his return to England.
-
-They had been stationed together, on detachment, at the cantonment of
-Landour, which is situated on one of the outer ridges of the Himalaya
-range, immediately above the Valley of the Deyrah Dhoon, where they
-shared the same bungalow.
-
-The dulness of the remote station at which the two friends found
-themselves became varied by the sudden advent of a tiger in an
-adjacent jungle: a regular man-eater, a brute of unexampled strength
-and ferocity, which had carried off more than one unfortunate native
-from the pettah or village adjoining the cantonment; thus, as a point
-of honour, it behoved Trevor Chute and Beverley, as European officers
-and English sportsmen, to undertake its destruction. Indeed, it was
-to them, and to their skill, prowess, and hardihood, the poor natives
-looked entirely for security and revenge.
-
-'I have sworn to kill that tiger, and send its skin as a trophy to
-Ida,' said Beverley, when the subject was first mooted at tiffin one
-day. 'She shall have it for the carriage in the Park, and to show to
-her friends!'
-
-About two in the morning, the comrades, accompanied by four native
-servants, took their guns, and set forth on this perilous errand, and
-leaving the secluded cantonment, proceeded some three or four miles
-in the direction of the jungle in which the tiger was generally seen.
-
-As he sat in reverie now, how well Trevor Chute could remember every
-petty detail of that eventful day; for an eventful one it proved, in
-more ways than one.
-
-The aspect of Jack Beverley, his dark and handsome face, set off by
-his white linen puggaree, his lips clearly cut, firm and proud, his
-eyes keen as those of a falcon, filled with the fire of youth and
-courage, and his splendid figure, with every muscle developed by the
-alternate use of the saddle, the oar, and the bat, his chest broad,
-and his head nobly set on his shoulders, and looking what he was, the
-model of an Englishman.
-
-'Now, Chute, old fellow, you will let me have the first shot, for
-Ida's sake, when this brute breaks cover,' said he, laughing, as he
-handed him a case worked by her hands, adding, 'Have a cheroot--they
-are only chinsurrahs, but I'll send a big box to your crib; they will
-be too dry for me ere I get through them all, and we may find them
-serviceable this evening.'
-
-Poor Beverley could little foresee the evening that was before _him_!
-
-Though late in the season, the day and the scenery were beautiful.
-Leaving behind a noble thicket, where the fragrant and golden bells
-of the baubul trees mingled with the branches of other enormous
-shrubs, from the stems and branches of which the baboon ropes and
-other verdant trailers hung in fantastic festoons, the friends began
-to step short, look anxiously around them while advancing, a few
-paces apart, with their rifles at half-cock; for now they were close
-upon that spot called the jungle, and the morning sun shone brightly.
-
-After six hours' examination of the jungle the friends saw nothing,
-and the increasing heat of the morning made them descend thankfully
-into a rugged nullah that intersected the thicket, to procure some of
-the cool water that trickled and filtered under the broad leaves and
-gnarled roots far down below.
-
-Just as Chute was stooping to drink, Beverley said, in a low but
-excited voice:
-
-'Look out, Trevor; by Jingo, there's the tiger!'
-
-Chute did so, and his heart gave a kind of leap within him when, sure
-enough, he saw the dreaded tiger, one of vast strength and bulk,
-passing quietly along the bottom of the nullah, but with something
-stealthy in its action, with tail and head depressed.
-
-In silence Beverley put his rifle to his shoulder, just as the
-dreadful animal began to climb the bank towards him, and at that
-moment a ray of sunlight glittering on the barrel caused the tiger to
-pause and look up, when about twenty yards off.
-
-It saw him: the fierce round face seemed to become convulsed with
-rage; the little ears fell back close; the carbuncular eyes filled
-with a dreadful glare; from its red mouth a kind of steam was
-emitted, while its teeth and whiskers seemed to bristle as it drew
-crouchingly back on its haunches prior to making a tremendous spring.
-
-Ready to take it in flank, Chute here cocked his rifle, when
-Beverley, not without some misgivings, sighted it near the shoulder,
-and fired both barrels in quick succession.
-
-Then a triumphant shout escaped him, for on the smoke clearing away
-he saw the tiger lying motionless on its side, with its back towards
-him.
-
-'You should have reserved the fire of one barrel,' said Chute, 'for
-the animal may not be dead, and it may charge us yet.'
-
-'I have knocked the brute fairly over,' replied Beverley; 'don't
-fire, Chute, please, as, for Ida's sake, I wish to have all the glory
-of the day.'
-
-And without even reloading his rifle the heedless fellow rushed
-towards the fallen animal, which was certainly lying quietly enough
-among the jungle-grass that clothed the rough sides of the
-water-course.
-
-The tiger suddenly rose with a frightful roar, that made the jungle
-re-echo; and springing upon Beverley with teeth and claws, they
-rolled together to the bottom of the nullah!
-
-Two of the native attendants fled, and two clambered up a tree. Left
-thus alone, with a heart full of horror, anxiety, and trepidation,
-Trevor Chute went plunging down the hollow into which his friend had
-vanished, and from whence some indescribable, but yet terrible
-sounds, seemed to ascend.
-
-He could see nothing of Beverley; but suddenly the crashing of
-branches, and the swaying of the tall feathery grass, announced the
-whereabouts of the tiger, which became visible a few yards off,
-apparently furious with rage and pain, and tearing everything within
-its reach to pieces.
-
-On Trevor firing, his ball had the effect of making it spring into
-the air with a tremendous bound; but the contents of his second
-barrel took the savage right in the heart, after which it rolled dead
-to the bottom of the nullah.
-
-On being assured that the tiger was surely killed, the cowardly
-natives came slowly to the aid of Chute, who found his friend
-Beverley in a shocking condition, with his face fearfully lacerated,
-and his breast so torn and mutilated by the dreadful claws, that the
-very action of the heart was visible.
-
-He was breathing heavily, but quite speechless and insensible.
-
-Though many minutiæ of that day's dreadful occurrence came vividly
-back to Chute's memory, he could scarcely remember how he got his
-friend conveyed back to the cantonment of Landour, and laid on a
-native charpoy in their great and comfortless-looking bungalow, where
-the doctor, after a brief examination, could afford not the slightest
-hope of his recovery.
-
-'It's only an affair of time now,' said he; 'muscles, nerves, and
-vessels are all so torn and injured that no human system could
-survive the shock.'
-
-So, with kind-hearted Trevor Chute, the subsequent time was passed in
-a species of nightmare, amid which some catastrophe seemed to have
-happened, but the truth of which his mind failed to grasp or realize;
-and mourning for his friend as he would for a brother, they got
-through the hot and dreary hours of the Indian night, he scarcely
-knew how.
-
-About gunfire, and just when dawn was empurpling the snowy summits of
-the vast hills that overshadow the Deyrah Dhoon, the doctor came and
-said to him, with professional coolness:
-
-'Poor Jack Beverley is going fast; I wish you would do your best to
-amuse him.'
-
-'Amuse him?' repeated Chute, indignantly.
-
-'Yes; but no doubt you will find it difficult to do so, when you know
-the poor fellow is dying.'
-
-In the grey dawn his appearance was dreadful, yet he was quite cool
-and collected, though weaker than a little child--he who but
-yesterday had been in all the strength and glory of manhood when in
-its prime!
-
-'The regiment is under orders for home,' said he, speaking painfully,
-feebly, and at long intervals. 'Dear old friend, you will see
-her--Ida--and give my darling all the mementoes of me that you deem
-proper to take: my V.C. and all that sort of thing; among others,
-_this gipsy ring_; it was her first gift to me; and see, the tiger's
-cruel teeth have broken it quite in two! I have had a little sleep,
-and I dreamt of _her_ (God bless her for ever!)--dreamt of her
-plainly and distinctly as I see you now, old fellow, for I know that
-we are _en rapport_--and we shall soon meet, moreover.'
-
-'_En rapport_ again!' thought Chute; 'what can he--what does he mean?'
-
-'Promise me that you will do what I ask of you, and break to my
-darling, as gently as possible, the mode in which I died.'
-
-Trevor Chute promised all that his friend required of him, especially
-that he should see Ida personally.
-
-This was insisted on, and after that the victim sank rapidly.
-
-As he lay dying, he seemed in fancy, as his feeble mutterings
-indicated, to float through the air as his thoughts and aspirations
-fled homeward--homeward by Aden, the Red Sea, and Cairo--homeward by
-Malta and the white cliffs to the home of the Collingwoods; and he
-saw Ida standing on the threshold to welcome him; and then, when her
-fancied kiss fell on his lips, the soul of the poor fellow passed
-away.
-
-The name of Ida was the last sound he uttered.
-
-All was silent then, till as Trevor Chute closed his eyes he heard
-the merry drums beating the reveille through the echoing cantonments.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-HIS VISIT TO CLARE.
-
-Though not yet thirty years of age, Trevor Chute was no longer a
-young man with a wild and unguessed idea of existence before him.
-Thought and experience of life had tamed him down, and made him in
-many respects more a man of the world than when last he stood upon
-the threshold of Sir Carnaby Collingwood's stately mansion in
-Piccadilly, and left it, as he thought, for ever behind him.
-
-Yet even now a thrill came over him as he rang the visitors' bell.
-
-It would have been wiser, perhaps, and, circumstanced as he was with
-the family, the most proper mode, to have simply written to Sir
-Carnaby or to Ada Beverley instead of calling; but he had promised
-his friend, when dying at Landour, to see her personally; and it is
-not improbable that in the kindness of his heart Jack Beverley, even
-in that awful hour, was not without a hope that the visit might
-eventually lead to something conducive to the future happiness of his
-friend, to whom the chance of such a hope had certainly never
-occurred.
-
-Trevor Chute had urged Jerry Vane to accompany him, hoping, by the
-aid of his presence and companionship, to escape some of the
-awkwardness pertaining to his visit; but the latter, though on terms
-of passable intimacy with the family still, and more especially since
-the widowhood of Ida, considering the peculiar mission of Chute to
-her, begged to be excused on this occasion.
-
-And now, while a clamorous longing to see Clare once again--to hear
-her voice, to feel the touch of her hand, though all for the last
-time in life--rose in his heart, and while conning over the terms in
-which he was to address her, and how, in their now altered relations,
-he was to comport himself with her from whom he had been so cruelly
-separated by no fault of either, he actually hoped that, if not from
-home, she might at least be engaged with visitors.
-
-Full of such conflicting thoughts, he rang the bell a second time.
-The lofty door of the huge house was slowly unfolded by a tall
-powdered lackey of six feet and some odd inches, the inevitable
-'Jeames,' of the plush and cauliflower head, who glanced suspiciously
-at a glazed sword-case and small travelling-bag which Chute had taken
-from his cab.
-
-'Is Sir Carnaby at home?'
-
-'No, sir--gone to his club,' was the reply, languidly given.
-
-'Mrs. Beverley, then?'
-
-'She does not see anyone--to-day, at least.'
-
-'Miss Collingwood?'
-
-_She_ was at home, and on receiving the card of Chute, the valet, who
-knew that his name was not on the visitors' list, again looked
-suspiciously at the bag and sword-case, and while marvelling 'what
-line the "Captain" was in--barometers, French jewellery, or fancy
-soaps,' passed the card to a 'gentleman' in plain clothes, and after
-some delay and formality our friend was ushered upstairs.
-
-Again he found himself in that familiar drawing-room--but alone.
-
-It seemed as if not a day had elapsed since he had last stood there,
-and that all the intervening time was a dream, and that he and Clare
-were as they might have been.
-
-From the windows the view was all unchanged; he could see the trees
-of the Green Park, and the arch surmounted by the hideous statue of
-the 'Iron Duke,' and even the drowsy hum of the streets was the same
-as of old.
-
-Chute had seen vast and airy halls in the City of Palaces by the
-Hooghly; but, of late, much of his time had been spent under canvas,
-or in shabby straw-roofed bungalows; and now the double drawing-room
-of this splendid London house, though familiar enough to him, as we
-have said, appealed to his sense of costliness, with its rich
-furniture, its lofty mirrors, lace curtains, gilded cornices,
-statues, and jardinières, loading the atmosphere with the perfume of
-heliotrope and tea-roses, and brought home to him, by its details,
-the gulf that wealth on one hand, and unmerited misfortune on the
-other, had opened between him and Clare Collingwood.
-
-A rustle of silk was heard, and suddenly she stood before him.
-
-She was very, very pale, and while striving to conceal her emotion
-under the cool exterior enforced by good breeding, it was evident
-that the hand in which she held his card was trembling.
-
-But she presented the other frankly to Trevor Chute, and hastily
-begging him to be seated, bade him welcome to England, and skilfully
-threw herself into a sofa with her back to the light.
-
-'We saw in the papers that your regiment was coming home, and then
-that it had landed at Portsmouth,' she remarked, after a brief pause,
-and Chute's heart beat all the more lightly that she seemed still to
-have some interest in his movements. 'Poor Ida,' she resumed, 'is
-confined to her room; Violet is at home,--you remember Violet? but I
-am so sorry that papa is out.'
-
-'My visit was to him, or rather to Mrs. Beverley,' said Chute, with
-the slightest tinge of bitterness in his tone; 'and believe me that I
-should not have intruded at all on Sir Carnaby Collingwood but for
-the dying wish of my poor friend your brother-in-law.'
-
-'Intruded! Oh, how can you speak thus, Captain Chute--and to _me_?'
-she asked in almost breathless voice, while her respiration became
-quicker, and a little flush crossed her pale face for a second.
-
-Then Chute began to feel more than ever the miserable awkwardness of
-the situation, and of the task which had been set him; for when a man
-and woman have ever been more to each other than mere friends, they
-can never meet in the world simply as acquaintances again.
-
-For a minute he looked earnestly at Clare, and thought that never
-before, even in the buried past that seemed so distant now--yet only
-four years ago--had she seemed more lovely than now.
-
-The blood of a long line of fair and highly bred ancestresses had
-given to her features that, though perfectly regular and beautifully
-cut, were full of expression and vivacity, though times there were
-when a certain fixity or statue-like repose that pervaded them seemed
-to enhance their beauty.
-
-Her eyes and hair were wonderfully dark when contrasted with the pale
-purity of her complexion, and the colour and form of her lips, though
-full and pouting, were expressive of softness, of sweetness, and even
-of passionate tenderness, but without giving the slightest suggestion
-of aught that was sensuous; for if the heart of Clare Collingwood was
-passionate and affectionate, its outlet was rather in her eyes than
-in the form of her mouth.
-
-And now, while gazing upon her and striving hard to utter the merest
-commonplaces with an unfaltering tongue, Trevor Chute could but
-ponder how often he had kissed those lips, those thick dark tresses,
-and her charming hands, on which his eyes had to turn as on a picture
-now.
-
-His eyes, however, were speaking eyes; they were full of tenderness
-and truth, and showed, though proper pride and the delicacy of their
-mutual position forbade the subject, how his tongue longed to take up
-the dear old story he had told her in the past years, ere cold
-worldliness parted them so roughly, and, as it seemed, for ever.
-
-On the other hand, Clare Collingwood--perfectly high-bred, past
-girlhood, a woman of the world, and fully accustomed to society, if
-she received him now without any too apparent emotion, by the
-delicate flush that flitted across her beautiful face, and the almost
-imperceptible constraint in her graceful yet--shall we say
-it?--startled manner, imparted the flattering conviction to her
-visitor that he was far from indifferent to her still, and her eyes
-filled alternately with keen interest, with alarm, affection, and
-sorrow, as she heard, for the first time, all the details of
-Beverley's death in that distant hill cantonment, a place of which
-she had not the slightest conception.
-
-'Will Mrs. Beverley see me?' he concluded.
-
-'Though much of an invalid now, poor Ida undoubtedly will; but you
-must not tell her all that you have told to me,' said Clare, in her
-earnestness almost unconsciously laying her hand on his arm, which
-thrilled beneath her touch. 'Dearest mamma is, of course you know,
-no more. We lost her since--since you left England.'
-
-'Yes, I heard of the sorrowful event when we were up country on the
-march to Benares, and it seemed to--to bring my heart back to its
-starting-place.'
-
-'Since then I have been quite a matron to Violet, and even to Ida,
-though married; thus I feel myself, when in society, equal to half a
-dozen of chaperones.'
-
-A little laugh followed this remark, and to Chute's ear it had, he
-thought, a hollow sound, and Vane's report of 'what the clubs said'
-concerning Desmond and the 'linked names,' and the recollection of
-the note placed so hastily in the Marguerite pouch which she wore at
-that very time, rankled in Chute's mind, and began to steel him
-somewhat against her, in spite of himself, but only for a time, for
-the charm of her presence was fast bewildering him.
-
-Her heart, like his own, perhaps, was full to bursting--beating with
-love and yearning, yet stifled under the exterior that good breeding
-and the conventionality of 'society' inculcated.
-
-'I hope you find the climate of England pleasant after--after India,'
-she remarked, when there was a pause in the conversation.
-
-'Oh, yes--of course--Miss Collingwood--my native air.'
-
-'Our climate is so very variable.'
-
-_Captain_ Chute agreed with her cordially that it was so.
-
-Though subjects not to be approached by either, each was doubtful how
-the heart of the other stood in the matters of love and affection.
-
-Trevor Chute had, all things considered, though their engagement had
-been brought to a calamitous end, good reason, he thought, to be
-jealous of Harvey Desmond; while Clare had equal reason to doubt
-whether, in the years that were gone, and in his wanderings in that
-land of the sun from whence he had just returned so bronzed and
-scorched, he might have loved, and become, even now, engaged to
-another.
-
-She was only certain of one fact: that he was yet unmarried.
-
-These very ideas and mutual suspicions made their conversation
-disjointed; hollow, and unprofitable; but now, luckily, an awkward
-pause was interrupted by the entrance of a fair and handsome, dashing
-yet delicate-looking girl, attired for a ride in the Row, with her
-whip and gloves in one hand, her gathered skirt in the other.
-
-Though neither bashful nor shy, her bright blue eyes glanced
-inquiringly at their military-looking visitor, to whom she merely
-bowed, and was, perhaps, about to withdraw, when Clare said:
-
-'Don't you remember who this is, Captain Chute?'
-
-Turning more fully towards the young girl, whose beauty and charming
-grace in her riding-habit were undeniable, he said:
-
-'I think I do; you are----'
-
-'Violet; you can't have forgotten Violet, Trevor? Oh, how well I
-remember you, though you are as brown as a berry now!' exclaimed
-Violet Collingwood, as she threw aside her gloves and whip, and took
-each of his hands in hers. 'I was thirteen when you saw me last; I
-am seventeen, quite a woman, now.'
-
-Kindly he pressed the fairy fingers of Violet, whose merry blue eyes
-gazed with loving kindness into his, for the girl had suddenly struck
-a chord of great tenderness in his heart by so frankly calling him
-'Trevor,' while another, who was wont to do so once, was now styling
-him ceremoniously 'Captain Chute.'
-
-Clare seemed sensible of the situation in which her somewhat girlish
-sister placed them; for a moment her face looked haughty and
-aristocratic, but the next its normal sweet expression of character,
-all that is womanly, beautiful, and tender, stole into it, and she
-fairly laughed when Violet twitched off her hat and veil, and,
-seating herself beside Trevor Chute, declared that the Row should not
-be honoured with her presence that day.
-
-Though naturally playful, frank, and almost hoydenish--if such an
-expression could be applied to a girl of Violet's appearance, and one
-so highly bred, too--she gazed with something of wonder, curiosity,
-and undeniable interest on the handsome face, the tender eyes, and
-well-knit figure of this once lover of her elder sister, whose story,
-with all the romance of a young girl's nature, she so genuinely
-pitied, whom she remembered so well as being her particular friend
-when she was permitted to come home for the holidays, who had petted
-and toyed with her so often, as with a little sister, and of whom she
-had only heard a little from time to time as being absent with
-Beverley in a distant, and to her unknown, land; and now, girl-like,
-she began to blunder, to the confusion and annoyance of her more
-stately sister.
-
-'Trevor Chute here _after all_!' she exclaimed, with a merry burst of
-laughter. 'Why! it seems all like a story in one of Mudie's novels!'
-
-'What does?' asked Clare, with a little asperity of tone.
-
-'Can you ask?' persisted Violet.
-
-'His visit is a very melancholy one; and if Captain Chute will excuse
-me, I shall go and prepare poor Ida for it,' said Clare, rising.
-
-'What does it all mean?' asked Violet, again capturing the willing
-hands of their visitor, as Clare hastily, and not without some
-confusion, swept away through the outer drawing-room. 'Why doesn't
-she call you Trevor, as I do? _Captain_ Chute sounds so formal! I
-am sure I have often heard her talk to Ida of you as "Trevor" when
-they thought I was asleep, yet was very much awake indeed. So you
-are Clare's first love, are you?'
-
-'I am glad to find that I am not quite forgotten,' replied Chute,
-smiling in earnest now; 'you were quite a child when I--I----'
-
-'Left this for India.'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'_Why_ did you go?'
-
-'To join my regiment.'
-
-'Leaving Clare behind you? I must have a long, long talk with you
-about this, and you shall be my escort in the Park the next time I
-ride with Evelyn Desmond, for her brother is perpetually dangling
-after Clare, eyeing her with his stupid china-blue eyes, and doing
-his dreary best to be pleasing, like a great booby as he is.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-IDA.
-
-Preceded by Clare, and accompanied by Violet, Trevor Chute entered
-the apartment of Ida Beverley, a species of little drawing-room,
-appropriated to her own use, and where, when not driving in the Park,
-she spent most of the day, apart from everyone.
-
-Ere they entered, Clare again touched his arm lightly, and whispered,
-
-'Be careful in all you say.'
-
-'Be assured that I shall.'
-
-'Thanks, for poor Ida looks as though she would never smile again.'
-
-Though warned by these words to expect some marked change in the
-beautiful coquette who had been the sun of Beverley's life, and who
-had taken nearly all the life out of the less luckless Jerry Vane,
-the visitor was greatly shocked by the appearance of Ida, who rose
-from her easy-chair to receive him with the saddest of smiles on one
-of the sweetest of faces--Ida, who had the richest and brightest
-auburn hair in London, and the 'most divine complexion in the same
-big village by the Thames,' as Beverley used to boast many a time and
-oft, when he and Trevor were far, far away from home and her.
-
-Her beauty had become strangely ethereal; her complexion purer, even,
-and more waxen than ever; her eyes seemed larger, but clearer, more
-lustrous, and filled at times with a far-seeing expression, and they
-were long-lashed and heavily lidded.
-
-Her hands seemed very thin and white, yet so pink in the palms.
-
-To Trevor Chute she had the appearance of one in consumption; but
-strange to say, poor Jerry Vane, who still loved her so well, saw
-nothing of all this, even when meeting her at intervals.
-
-She received Trevor Chute with outstretched hands, and with an
-_empressement_ which, perhaps, her elder sister envied; she invited
-him to sit close by her side, and to tell her all he knew, all he
-could remember, and every detail of Beverley's last hours; but to do
-this, after the warning he had received from Clare, required all the
-tact, ingenuity, and delicacy that Chute was master of.
-
-She had become composed and calm during the past months; but now the
-proffered relics brought so vividly and painfully before her the
-individuality of the dead, the handsome young husband she had lost,
-that a heavy outburst of anguish was the result, as all expected.
-
-There were rings, each of which had its own story; a miniature of
-herself, with a lock of her auburn hair behind it; there were his
-medals and his Victoria cross, gained by an act of bravery among the
-hills, his sword and sash: all were kissed with quivering lips,
-commented on, and wept over again and again, not noisily or
-obstreperously, but with a quiet, gentle, subdued, and ladylike grief
-that proved very touching, especially in one so young and so
-beautiful in her deep crape dress; and Trevor Chute, as he observed
-all this, began to think that even yet his friend Vane's chances of
-regaining the widow's heart were of the slightest kind.
-
-'I knew, Trevor Chute,' said she, after a pause, 'that I should
-never, never see him again!'
-
-'How?' he asked.
-
-'Because in the dawn of that morning when--when he died, I dreamt of
-him, and he showed me the ring you have brought--the gipsy ring I
-gave him, broken in two, as it now is.'
-
-'The tiger's teeth did that.'
-
-'It is true,' said Clare. 'She was sleeping with me, and started up
-in tears and agitation to tell me of her dream and of the ring.'
-
-Trevor Chute's mind went back to that time when the pale face of the
-dead man looked so sad in the half-darkened bungalow, while the drums
-beat merrily in the square without; the last words of Beverley came
-back to him, and could it be, as he had often said, that he and Ida
-were indeed _en rapport_, and had a spiritual and unseen link between
-them?
-
-It began to seem so now.
-
-Then, fearing that his visit was somewhat protracted, he rose, yet
-lingeringly, to go.
-
-'Dear Captain Chute--Trevor we all called you once,' said Ida, taking
-his hand in both of hers, while Clare drew a little way back, 'you
-will call again and see us?'
-
-'It is better that I should not,' replied Chute, in a voice that
-became agitated in spite of himself; 'you know all the circumstances,
-Ida, under which we parted,' he added, in a lower voice.
-
-'You will surely come again and see _me_?' she urged.
-
-'If the family were out of town,' Chute was beginning.
-
-'Trevor,' said the widow, passionately, 'love me as if--as if I were
-your sister; for you were more than a friend--yes, a very brother--to
-my poor Beverley, and I must be as your sister.'
-
-Clare's eyes met those of Chute for an instant, and then were dropped
-on the carpet; but she did not blush, as another might have done, at
-all this speech implied or suggested, for her face grew very pale,
-and then, feeling the dire necessity of saying something, she
-muttered, falteringly:
-
-'You will surely call and see papa, after--after----'
-
-'What, Miss Collingwood?'
-
-'Your long absence from this country.'
-
-'It has seemed somewhat of an eternity to me.'
-
-She trembled as he added, in a gentle, yet cold manner:
-
-'Excuse me, but it were better to pay my first visit to him at his
-club.'
-
-Chute, who had been all tenderness to Ida, could not help this manner
-to Clare, for Violet's remarks about Desmond seemed to corroborate
-those of Vane.
-
-Unstable of purpose, he held Clare's hand, and she permitted him to
-do so, with a slow, regretful clasp. Why should he not do so, and
-why should she withdraw her slender fingers?
-
-As he descended the staircase, he heard the name of the Honourable
-Harvey Desmond announced with his card, and the rivals passed each
-other in the marble vestibule, the former with the easy air of a
-daily, at least a frequent, visitor; the other with that of one whose
-mission was over.
-
-'On what terms are he and Clare if the clubs link their names
-together?' thought Trevor, bitterly and sadly, as he came forth.
-
-Did she, after all, love himself still?
-
-He was almost inclined to flatter himself that she did so.
-
-Worldly or monetary matters were unchanged between them, as at that
-cruel time when he lost her; so perhaps he had only returned to
-London to stand idly by and see her become the wife of Desmond!
-
-After all that had passed between them, after all that seemed gone
-for ever, after the bitterness and mortification he had endured, the
-years of hopeless separation in a distant land, he could scarcely
-realize, while walking along the sunny and crowded pavement of
-Piccadilly, the assured fact that he had again seen and spoken with
-Clare Collingwood; and that the whole interview had not been one of
-those day-dreams in which, when in Beverley's society, he had been so
-often wont to indulge when quartered far up country in the burning
-East.
-
-Then he recalled the cold terms of that letter in which her father--a
-hard and heartless, frivolous and luxurious man of the world, with
-much of aristocratic snobbery in his composition--had bluntly
-informed him that the engagement between him and Clare was ended for
-ever, and _why_; and he resolved that neither at the baronet's club
-nor anywhere else would he waste a calling card upon him; and in this
-pleasant mood of mind he hailed a hansom and drove to the rooms of
-his friend Jerry Vane.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-HOW WILL IT END?
-
-If Jerry Vane was not very contented in mind, his rooms, the windows
-of which overlooked a fashionable square, bore evidence that he was
-surrounded by every luxury, that he was behind the young fellows of
-his set in nothing; while the velvet and silk cases for cigars or
-vestas that littered the table and mantelpiece, even the slippers and
-smoking-cap he wore, all the work of feminine fingers, seemed to hint
-of the many fair ones who were ready to console him.
-
-Possessed of means ample enough to indulge in every whim and fancy,
-the mantelpiece and the tables about him were littered by the
-'hundred and one' objects with which a young man like Jerry is apt to
-surround himself.
-
-There were pipes of all kinds, whips, spurs, fencing-foils,
-revolvers, Derringer pistols, Bohemian glass, and gold-mounted
-bottles full of essences, statuettes pell-mell with soiled kid
-gloves, soda-water bottles, pink notes, faded bouquets, and French
-novels in their yellow covers.
-
-The hangings and furniture were elegant and luxurious, on the walls
-were some crayons of very fair girls in rather _décolleté_ dress,
-while on a marble console lay a gun-case, hunting-flasks, and many
-other things that were quite out of place in a drawing-room, and a
-Skye terrier and an enormous St. Bernard mastiff were gambolling
-together on a couple of great tiger-skins, the spoil of Trevor
-Chute's gun in some far Indian jungle.
-
-The day was far advanced, yet Jerry had not long breakfasted, and
-lay, not fully dressed, in a luxurious dressing-robe, tasselled and
-braided, on the softest of sofas, enjoying the inevitable cigar, when
-Chute was ushered in, and he sprang up to receive him.
-
-It may easily be supposed that Vane was most impatient to hear all
-the details of his friend's remarkable visit to the
-Collingwoods--remarkable, at least, under all circumstances--but he
-could not fail to listen with emotions of a somewhat mingled cast to
-the account of Ida's undoubted grief for his supplanter--an account
-which he certainly, with that love of self-torment peculiar to some
-men, wrung from Trevor Chute by dint of much industrious
-cross-questioning.
-
-Could he blame her for it?
-
-'This sadness, of which all are cognizant,' said Chute, 'is not
-unaccountable, you know, Jerry.'
-
-'I suppose so.'
-
-'It is natural grief for Jack Beverley.'
-
-'Pleasant fact to thrust on me!' said Vane, grimly.
-
-'Pardon me, old fellow, I did not thrust it on you. But take heart;
-a girl with such capacity for love and tenderness is worth the
-winning.'
-
-'I won her, man alive!' said Jerry, savagely.
-
-'Well, such a fortune is worth winning again.'
-
-'This is barrack slang, Trevor.'
-
-'Not at all,' said Chute, laughing at his friend's petulance. 'Be
-assured that she must love something; and your turn will deservedly
-come in due time.'
-
-'If a cat or a monkey don't take my place.'
-
-'Cynical again.'
-
-'I can't help being so, Trevor, as well as being a simpleton.'
-
-'Nay, don't say so, Jerry,' said the soldier, kindly; 'I think this
-unchanging love you have for a girl who used you so does honour to
-your heart, especially in this age of ours, when we are much more
-addicted to pence than to poetry; and, as some one says, the _sauce
-piquante_ of life is its glorious uncertainty.'
-
-'And Clare--what were your thoughts and conclusions about _her_?
-
-'My thoughts you know; my conclusions--I have none,' replied Chute,
-who, since he had again seen and talked with Clare Collingwood, had
-felt his heart too full of her to confide, even to his friend, as
-yet, what hope or fear he had.
-
-'And you saw Violet, too?' asked Vane, to fill up a pause.
-
-'Oh, yes,' replied Chute, with animation; 'Violet, whilom the pretty
-little girl--the child with a wealth of golden hair flowing below her
-waist, and no end of mischief and fun in her bright blue eyes; she
-seems the same now as then. She actually spoke of Desmond being an
-admirer of Clare.'
-
-'Surely that was bad form in the girl, to _you_ especially.'
-
-'She did so through pure inadvertence, Jerry; but I must own that,
-when coupled with your remarks, the circumstance stung me more than a
-week ago I could have anticipated. But I suppose such trials as
-those of ours,' he continued, helping himself to a bumper of sherry
-without waiting to be asked, 'are part and parcel of the ills that
-manhood has to encounter--"Manhood, with all its chances and changes,
-its wild revels and its dark regrets--its sparkling champagne-cup and
-its bitter aconite lying at the dregs."'
-
-'Times there are when I blush at my own want of proper pride of heart
-in continuing to mourn after a girl who has quietly let me drop into
-the place of a mere friend.'
-
-'Nay, depend upon it, Jerry, you must be much more than any mere
-friend can be to Ida Beverley; and now, as far as her grief goes, my
-visit to-day will prove, I think, the turning point.'
-
-'And so Violet actually blundered out with some remark about Desmond.'
-
-'Yes, and that which galled me more was to see him come lounging into
-the house to visit Clare just as I took my departure, so there _must_
-be some truth in what the clubs say.'
-
-Jerry Vane did not reply, and his silence seemed to give a marked
-assent to the surmise, as he had been in London, for some time past,
-and must, as Chute thought bitterly, know all the _on dits_ of the
-fashionable world, and he sat also silent, watching the ice in the
-sherry cobbler melt slowly away.
-
-Though Trevor Chute had, with emotions of doubt, regret, and envy,
-seen Desmond lounging into the house of the Collingwoods on the
-eventful day of his visit thereto, it did not follow, he thought on
-reflection, that he visited there daily.
-
-Nor was it so.
-
-It was the height of a crowded and brilliant London season, and the
-Brigade had to undergo what that branch of the service deem 'hard
-work.'
-
-There were guards of honour for Royal drawing-rooms; escort duty;
-heavy morning drills at Wormwood Scrubs; the daily ride in the Lady's
-Mile; polo at Lillie Bridge; perhaps a match with the Coldstreams at
-Lord's; a Bacchanalian water party and a nine o'clock dinner at
-Richmond with some of the pets of the Opera; midnight receptions and
-later waltzes; at homes, and so forth: thus the time of Desmond was
-pretty well filled up; and yet at many of these places he had ample
-opportunities for meeting Clare, and being somewhat of a privileged
-dangler, without committing himself so far as a special visit might
-imply.
-
-All was over between Clare Collingwood and Trevor Chute; yet the
-interest of the latter in her and her future was irrepressible.
-
-Two days passed, and he remained in great doubt what to do: whether
-to accept Ida's piteous and pressing invitation to call on _her_,
-heedless, of course, though not forgetting it, of Violet's proposal
-that he should escort her in the Park when Clare rode with Desmond.
-
-And now he began to think that to remain in London, where there would
-be daily chances of seeing Clare, would be but to trifle with his own
-happiness and that peace of mind which he had been gradually
-attaining in India, and that he and Jerry Vane should betake
-themselves to Paris or Brussels, and kill thought as best they could;
-to this conclusion they came as they sat far into the hours of a
-sultry summer night over cigars and iced drinks, and resolved that
-the morrow should see them leave 'the silver streak' behind them.
-
-And at that very time, when they were forming their plans, what was
-Clare about?
-
-Could Trevor have seen her then, and known her secret thoughts,
-perhaps he might have been less decided in his views of foreign
-travel.
-
-Returning wearily and long before the usual time from a brilliant
-rout, greatly to the surprise of Violet, and not a little to the
-vexation of that young lady, Clare was seated alone in her own room,
-lost in thought and unwilling to consult poor sad Ida, who was now
-fast asleep.
-
-It was long past midnight; the throng of foot passengers was gone,
-but the rattle of carriages was incessant as if the time were mid-day.
-
-She had unclasped her ornaments as if they oppressed her, and
-forgetful of her maid, who yawned fitfully and impatiently in an
-adjoining room, she sat with her rounded chin placed in the palm of a
-white hand, with her dark eyes fixed on vacancy.
-
-The soft air of the summer night--or morning, rather--came gently
-through the lace curtains of an open window, bringing with it the
-delicious perfume of flowers from the jardinière in the balcony; and
-perhaps the fragrance of these blossoms, and the half-hushed hum of
-the streets without, 'stole through the portals of the senses,' and
-lured her into waking dreams of the past and of the future.
-
-At the ball she had quitted so early, her father, who had been making
-himself appear somewhat absurd by his senile attentions to Desmond's
-rather _passée_ sister, Evelyn, had actually _spoken_ to her of
-Trevor Chute, and in unwonted friendly terms; and the flood of
-thought this episode had called up within her, conflicting with the
-half-decided addresses of Desmond, partly drew her home, to think and
-ponder over her future, if a future she had that was worth
-considering now.
-
-So far as monetary matters were concerned, the same barriers existed
-still between her and poor Trevor Chute as when Sir Carnaby broke off
-the engagement as cruelly as he would have 'scratched' a horse; and
-then the settlements which the great, languid guardsman could make
-were known to be unexceptional.
-
-These did not weigh much with gentle, yet proud, and unambitious
-Clare; but she knew that they had vast weight with her worldly-minded
-father, so why torment herself by thinking of Trevor Chute at all?
-
-But thoughts came thick and fast in spite of reason and cool
-reflection, and the girl sank into a reverie that was far from being
-a pleasant one.
-
-But what if Trevor Chute had learned to love another!
-
-She bit her lovely nether lip, which was like a scarlet camellia bud,
-for an instant; her dark eyes flashed, then drooped, and she smiled
-softly, confidently, and perhaps triumphantly, as she said, half
-audibly:
-
-'Ah, no--he loves me still; poor Trevor! I saw it in his eyes--I
-heard it in the cadence of his voice, and I never was mistaken! He
-loves me still--but to what purpose, _to what end_?'
-
-Tears started to her eyes; but she crushed her emotion, and, with a
-quick, impatient little hand, rang for her waiting-maid.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-SIR CARNABY COLLINGWOOD.
-
-Still intent upon his Continental scheme, and somewhat impatiently
-waiting the arrival of Jerry Vane, Trevor Chute was idling over a
-late breakfast, so full of thoughts--sweet, regretful, and angry
-thoughts--of Clare Collingwood that he seemed like one in a dream.
-
-It was nearly noon. The sun of May was bathing in light the leafy
-foliage of the Green Park, and throwing its shadows darkly and
-strongly on the green below; while the far extent of the lofty street
-seemed all aglow and quivering in the sunshine.
-
-How fair and fresh the world looked, and yet, since his last
-interview with Clare, everything seemed indistinct and unusual to his
-senses.
-
-'Bah!' thought he; 'to-night Jerry and I shall be in France, and
-then----'
-
-What _then_, he scarcely knew.
-
-The current of his ideas changed, for times there were, and this
-became one of them, when he longed morbidly to go through all the
-luxury of grief and sentiment in taking that which he had never
-before taken, save by letter--a last farewell of her; to beg of her
-to let no hour of sorrow for him mar her peace, no regret for his
-loss of fortune, a loss that was no fault of his own; to think of him
-with no pain, but with a soft memory of their past love, or to forget
-him, though he never could, or should, forget _her_, but would ever
-treasure in his heart how dear she had been to him, etc., etc.; and
-in this mood he was indulging, when his valet laid before him a note,
-the envelope of which caused him to feel a kind of electric shock.
-
-It bore the Collingwood crest.
-
-With hands tremulous as those of an agitated girl, he tore it open,
-and found that it was from Sir Carnaby Collingwood--a brief
-invitation to dine with him at his club at eight to-morrow evening
-(if disengaged), 'that they might have a little talk over old times.'
-
-'Old times,' he repeated; 'what does that phrase mean?'
-
-He had read over the note for the fourth or fifth time when Jerry
-Vane arrived.
-
-He, too, had a similar invitation, but in that there was nothing
-remarkable, as he had never ceased to be on terms of intimacy with
-Sir Carnaby.
-
-'What _can_ old Collingwood mean by this invitation to smoke the
-calumet of peace?' exclaimed Trevor Chute.
-
-'Time will show.'
-
-'After the cutting tenor of the letter he sent me--that cold and
-formal letter of dismissal--I--I----'
-
-'Forget it, like the good fellow you are; and remember only that he
-is the father of Clare Collingwood.'
-
-'True.'
-
-'You'll go, of course?' said Jerry, after a pause; but Chute was
-silent.
-
-His pride suggested that under all the circumstances, especially if
-what 'the clubs said' were true, he should decline the invitation.
-
-But why?
-
-He had already been at the Collingwoods', but on a special mission,
-certainly.
-
-Then Sir Carnaby was proud, and it was impossible to forget that the
-first formal advance had come from him. More than all, as Jerry Vane
-had said, he was the father of Clare, of her who had never ceased to
-be the idol of all his thoughts.
-
-'By Jove, I'll go--and you, Jerry,' he exclaimed. 'Of course.'
-
-Each dashed off an acceptance, and they were despatched to Pall Mall
-in the care of Trevor's valet.
-
-After a time, as if repenting of his sudden facility, Trevor Chute
-muttered:
-
-'He used barely to bow to me in the Row or in the streets after he
-gave me my _congé_. What the deuce can his object be? Is he--is he
-relenting?'
-
-The pulsation of Chute's heart quickened at the idea, and the colour
-deepened in his bronzed cheek.
-
-'How anomalous and singular is the position in which we both stand
-with this selfish old fellow and his daughters,' said he to Jerry as
-they ascended the stately marble staircase of the baronet's club next
-evening, and gave their cards to a giant in livery, with the small
-head and enormous calves and feet peculiar to the fraternity of the
-shoulder-knot.
-
-As they were ushered into a lofty and magnificent room, the great
-windows of which opened to Pall Mall, Sir Carnaby took their cards
-mechanically from the silver salver, but seemed chiefly intent on
-bowing out a tall and fashionable-looking man, whose leading
-characteristics were languor of gait and bearing, with insipid blue
-eyes, and a bushy, sandy-coloured moustache.
-
-'And you won't dine with us, Desmond?' he was saying.
-
-'Impossible, thanks very much,' drawled the other. 'Then I have your
-full permission, Sir Carnaby?'
-
-'With all my warmest wishes, my dear fellow,' responded the baronet
-cordially; and, hat in hand, the visitor bowed himself out, with a
-brief kind of stare at Trevor Chute, whose face, he thought, he
-somehow remembered, and a dry shake of the hand with Jerry Vane, whom
-he knew.
-
-He was gone, 'with full permission,' to do what?
-
-Chute's heart foreboded at that moment all the two words meant, and
-the next he found himself cordially greeted by the man whose
-son-in-law he had once so nearly been.
-
-'Ha, Captain Chute, welcome back from India,' he exclaimed. 'By
-Jove, how brown you look--brown as a berry, Violet said--after
-potting tigers, and all that sort of thing; too much for Beverley,
-though. Poor Jack--good fellow, Beverley, but rash, I fear. Very
-glad to thank you in person for all your kindness to him and to poor
-Ida. Most kind of you both, I am sure, to come on so hurried an
-invitation.'
-
-Of Beverley and Ida, with reference to the death of the first, and
-the grief of the second, he spoke in the same jaunty and smiling way
-that he did of the beauty of the weather, the brilliance of the
-London season, the topics before the House last night, or anything
-else, and laughingly he led the way to dinner, the courses of which
-were perfect, and included all manner of far-fetched luxuries, even
-to pigeons stewed in champagne, and other culinary absurdities.
-
-Sir Carnaby did not seem one day older than when Trevor Chute had
-seen him last, and yet he had attained to those years when most men
-age rapidly.
-
-He had been a singularly handsome man in that time which he was
-exceedingly loath to convince himself had departed--his youth.
-
-His firm, though thin--very thin--figure was still erect,
-well-stayed, and padded, perhaps; his eyes were keen and bright,
-their smile as insincere, artificial, and hollow as it had been forty
-years Before. His cheek was not pale, for there was a suspicious
-dash of red about it, while his well-shaved hair and ragged moustache
-were dyed beyond a doubt, like his curled whiskers.
-
-His mouth was perhaps weak and rather sensual; he had thin white
-diaphanous hands, with carefully trimmed nails and sparkling diamond
-rings. In general accuracy of costume he might have passed for a
-tailor's model, while to Chute's eye his feet were as small, his
-boots as glazed, as ever; yet he had undergone the tortures of the
-gout, drunk colchicum with toast and water till he shuddered at the
-thoughts thereof, and talked surreptitiously of high and dry
-localities as being most suitable for his health.
-
-He had, as we have said, keen--others averred rather wicked--grey
-eyes, a long and thin aristocratic nose, on which, when ladies were
-_not_ present, he sometimes perched a gold eyeglass. He was
-certainly wrinkled about the face; but his smooth white forehead
-showed no line of thought or care, as he had never known either, yet
-death had more than once darkened his threshold, and hung above it a
-scutcheon powdered with tears. He had still the appearance of what
-he was--a well-shaved, well-dressed, and well 'got-up' old beau and
-man about town, and still flattered himself that he was not without
-interest in a pretty girl's eye.
-
-He had the reputation of being a courtly and well-bred man; and yet,
-in his present hilarity, or from some inexplicable cause, he had the
-bad taste to refer in his jaunty way to his past relations with
-Trevor Chute, and to mingle them with some praises of his recent
-visitor.
-
-'Good style of fellow, Desmond!--devilish good style, you know; has a
-nice place in Hants, and no end of coal-pits near the Ribble,' he
-continued, after the decanters had been replenished more than once.
-'Wishes to stand well with Clare--_your_ old flame, Chute; got over
-all that sort of thing long ago, of course, for, as a lady writer
-says, "nothing on earth is so pleasant as being a little in love, and
-nothing on earth so destructive as being too much so." Desmond has
-my best wishes--but, Chute, the decanters stand with you.'
-
-Chute exchanged one brief and lightning-like glance with Jerry Vane;
-he felt irrepressible disgust, and for this stinging tone to him
-would have hated the heartless old man but that he was the father of
-(as he now deemed her) his lost Clare Collingwood. But Jerry was
-made to wince too.
-
-'Your visit the other day, Chute, seems quite to have upset poor
-Ida,' said he, after an awkward pause.
-
-'So sorry to hear you say so, Sir Carnaby,' replied Chute, drily.
-
-'I don't like girls to betray emotion on every frivolous occasion; it
-is bad form, you know.'
-
-Frivolous occasion! thought Chute, receiving the last relics and
-mementoes of her husband from the comrade in whose arms he died, and
-who commanded the funeral party that fired over him.
-
-'She has begun to mope more horribly than ever during the last few
-days; but if I take her down to the country, she becomes more dull
-than ever, or goes in for parochial work--bad style of things, I
-think--blankets and coals--Dorcas meetings--and helps the rector's
-wife in matters of soup and psalm-singing.'
-
-Indeed, if the truth were known, Sir Carnaby Collingwood was not ill
-pleased by Beverley's death, all things considered. Ida's jointure
-was most ample--even splendid--and she had no little heir to attend
-to. To be the father of these grown-up girls was bad enough, he
-thought; but to have been a 'grandfather' would prove the culmination
-of horror to the would-be youthful beau of sixty.
-
-His own lover and romance, if he ever had any--which may be
-doubted--were put by and forgotten years ago, and he never dreamed
-that others might indulge in such dreams apart from the prose of
-life. From his school-days he had been petted, pampered, and
-caressed by wealth and fortune, so much so that he was actually
-ignorant of human wants, ailments, or sufferings. Hence his utter
-callousness and indifference in such a matter as Trevor Chute's love
-for Clare, or her love for Chute. Though his dead wife, a fair and
-gentle creature, who was the antitype of Ida, and had been quite as
-lovely, loved him well, he had married her without an atom of
-affection, to suit the views of his family and her own.
-
-Hence it was that, as we have shown, he could talk in the manner he
-did to his two guests--men whose past relations with his own
-household were of a nature so delicate, and to be approached with
-difficulty; yet, had anyone accused Sir Carnaby of want of tact or
-taste, or more than all of ill-breeding, he would have been filled
-with astonishment. But the ill-breeding shown by Sir Carnaby simply
-resulted from a total want of feeling, good taste, and perception.
-
-Thus it was that he could coolly expatiate to Chute on the good
-qualities of Desmond, adding, 'You'll be glad to hear of my girl's
-welfare and expectations; he'll be a peer, you know, some of these
-days; and to poor Jerry Vane upon Ida's grief for the loss of her
-husband, _his_ rival.
-
-Then, while smoothing his dyed moustache with a dainty girl-like
-handkerchief, all perfume and point, with a Collingwood crest in the
-corner thereof, he would continue in this fashion:
-
-'Poverty is a nuisance. I have admired dowerless girls in my day--do
-so still--but never go farther than mere admiration; so no girl of
-mine shall ever marry any man who cannot keep her in the style to
-which she has been accustomed. It was, perhaps, a foolish match Ida
-made with Beverley, though he had that snug place in the Midlands--or
-rather, the reversion of it when his father died; but now she is a
-widow--ha! ha! bless my soul, that I should be the father of a
-widow!--and with her natural attractions, enhanced by a handsome
-dowry, may yet be a peeress--who knows?'
-
-Jerry Vane, with silent rage swelling in his heart, glanced at Chute,
-as much as to say:
-
-'How intolerable--how detestable--all this is!'
-
-'She is a widow,' continued Sir Carnaby, eyeing fondly the ruby wine
-in his glass, as he held it between him and the lustre, with one eye
-closed for a moment, 'but with all her attractions, may perhaps
-remain so if she continues this horrible folly of unfathomable grief,
-and all that sort of thing.'
-
-'It does honour to her heart!' sighed poor Jerry.
-
-'She is becoming an enthusiast and a visionary. The girl's grief
-bores me, and times there are when I wish that you, friend Vane, may
-come to the rescue, after all.'
-
-A little smile flitted across the face of Vane as he merely bowed to
-this remark, which he cared not to follow, as he was doubtful whether
-it was the baronet or his wine that was talking now; but he glanced
-at Trevor Chute, and both rose to depart, thinking they had now quite
-enough of Sir Carnaby's 'hospitality.'
-
-But the latter, seized by a sudden access of friendship or
-familiarity, on finding that he could no longer prevail on them to
-remain, proposed, as the night was fine, and their ways lay together,
-to walk so far and enjoy a cigar.
-
-It was impossible to decline this: the 'weeds' were lit; Sir Carnaby
-took an arm of each--perhaps his steps were a little unsteady--and as
-they turned away towards Piccadilly, he began anew to sing the
-praises of Desmond, with the pertinacity with which wine will
-sometimes make a man recur again and again to the same subject.
-
-'Good style of fellow, and all that sort of thing, don't you know,
-Chute? Has a fortune--comfortable thing that--very!--but it has
-prevented--it has prevented----'
-
-'What, Sir Carnaby?' asked Trevor, wearily.
-
-'The development of his genius.'
-
-Trevor Chute laughed aloud at this, and said:
-
-'Ah! there is nothing like a hand-to-hand free fight with the world
-for _that_.'
-
-'You are a soldier, Chute, but the world is no longer a bivalve,
-which one may, like ancient Pistol, open by the sword. Desmond
-graduated at Oxford.'
-
-'As stroke oar, Sir Carnaby, I presume.'
-
-'He would have taken the highest honours, Chute, and all that sort of
-thing, don't you know, only--only----'
-
-'He could not?'
-
-'Not at all,' replied Sir Carnaby, somewhat tartly. 'He preferred
-that they should be taken, Chute, by those who set their hearts on
-such things; yet for Clare's sake, I wish----'
-
-Whatever it was he wished, Trevor Chute never learned, for now he
-lost all patience, and affecting suddenly to remember another
-engagement, bade farewell, curtly and hurriedly, to Sir Carnaby, who
-said:
-
-'Must have you down at Carnaby Court when the event--perhaps the
-double event--comes off; good style of old place--the baronial, the
-mediæval, the picturesque, and all that sort of thing--bored by
-artists and tourists, don't you know, but, of course, you remember
-it--ta-ta!'
-
-And arresting skilfully an undeniable hiccup, the senile baronet
-trotted, or rather 'toddled,' away in the moonlight. Remember it!
-
-Well and sadly did Trevor Chute remember it; for there, on a soft
-autumn night, when the music and the hum of the dancers' voices came
-through the ball-room oriels, when the moonlight steeped masses of
-the ancient pile in silver sheen or sunk them in shadow--
-
- 'When buttresses and buttresses alternately
- Seem framed of ebon or ivory,'
-
-as he and Clare stole forth for one delicious moment from the
-conservatory, had he first told her how deeply and tenderly he loved
-her; and now again memories of the waltz they had just concluded, of
-the delicate perfume of her floating dress, of the scarlet flower in
-her dark hair, of the drooping, downcast eyes, and her lovely lips,
-near which his own were hovering, come vividly back to haunt him, as
-they had done many a time and oft when he had seen the same moon that
-lit up prosaic Piccadilly shining in its Orient splendour on the
-marble domes and towers of Delhi, on the waters of the Jumna or the
-Indus, and on the snow-clad peaks that look down, from afar, on the
-vast plains of Assam!
-
-Now that their old tormentor was gone, both Chute and Jerry Vane
-laughed, but with much of scornful bitterness in their merriment.
-
-'Hope you enjoyed your dinner, Jerry!'
-
-'Hereditary rank is very noble, according to Burke and Debrett,'
-replied Vane, cynically. 'He is a baronet, true; but I would rather
-win a title than succeed to one; and to meet a few more men like Sir
-Carnaby would make a down-right Republican of me.'
-
-'How such an empty fool ever had a daughter like Clare Collingwood is
-a riddle to me. He is so cool, so listless, so heartless----'
-
-'Yet so thoroughbred, as it is deemed!'
-
-'And so worldly--she, all heart!'
-
-'Perhaps; but what does all this about Desmond mean, eh, friend
-Trevor?'
-
-'A little time will show now,' said the other, bitterly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-A PROPOSAL.
-
-It was the noon of the following day when Major Desmond ordered his
-mail phaeton, and drove to the mansion of the Collingwoods to avail
-himself of the 'permission' granted to him so fully by Sir Carnaby on
-the evening before.
-
-The hour was somewhat early for a usual call; but as an _ami de la
-maison_, and considering the errand on which he was come, Desmond
-thought he might venture to take the liberty, and he felt a kind of
-pleasure in the belief that he would surprise his intended, for he
-came with the full resolution of sacrificing himself at last, and
-making a proposal to Clare, and feeling apparently as cool in the
-matter as if he were going to buy a horse at Tattersall's.
-
-Miss Collingwood was at home and disengaged; Miss Violet and Mrs.
-Beverley were out driving; so all seemed to favour the object he had
-in view, and he was ushered into the drawing-room. His name was
-announced; but Clare, who was seated at a writing-table, with a
-somewhat abstracted air, did not hear it, as she was intently
-perusing a tiny note she had just written. She seemed agitated, too,
-for her eyes bore unmistakable traces of tears.
-
-Agitation was so unusual with her, and indeed with anyone Desmond met
-in society, that he paused with some surprise, standing irresolutely
-near her, hat in hand; and as he watched the contour of her head with
-a gleam of sunshine in her braided hair, the curve of her shoulders,
-the pure beauty of her profile, the grace of the tender white neck
-encircled by its frill of tulle, and the quick movement of the lovely
-little hand, as she rapidly closed and addressed the note, he thought
-what a creditable-looking wife she would be to show the world--aye,
-even the world of London.
-
-There seemed something of a sad expression on her usually serene
-face; but he knew not then that her heart was beating with a new
-joy--yea, that 'it throbbed like a bird's heart when it is wild with
-the first breath of spring.'
-
-Suddenly his figure caught her eye.
-
-'Major Desmond, pray pardon me; I did not hear you announced.'
-
-'I fear, Miss Collingwood'--he could not at that moment trust himself
-to say 'Clare'--'that I intrude upon your privacy,' and the nearest
-approach to anger and surprise that the usually imperturbable and
-impassive Desmond could permit himself to manifest appeared in his
-face when he saw her, with a rapidity, and even with something of
-alarm, which she could not or cared not to conceal, thrust the
-recently addressed envelope into the Marguerite pouch--the same in
-which Trevor Chute had seen her place a note from Desmond on the
-coaching day; but that referred only to a bet of gloves and the
-coming Derby.
-
-All this seemed terribly unwonted, and the deduction instantly drawn
-by the tall guardsman was that a note thus concealed was not intended
-for one of her own sex.
-
-'You do not intrude,' said Clare, timidly, yet composedly. 'I am, as
-you see, quite alone--my sisters have gone to the Park.'
-
-Desmond was too well bred to make any direct allusion either to
-Clare's emotion or the matter of the note, to which that emotion gave
-an importance it otherwise could not merit; but he was nevertheless
-anxious for some light on the episode.
-
-'You dined with papa yesterday?' said Clare, after a pause.
-
-'I had to deny myself that pleasure, being otherwise engaged; but he
-had an old _friend_ with him,' replied Desmond, tugging his moustache
-as he accentuated the word; 'and I have come here with his express
-permission,' he added; but instead of seating himself, he drew very
-near, and bent over her, with tenderness in his tone and manner.
-
-'Express permission?' repeated Clare, lifting her clear, bright eyes
-composedly to his.
-
-'Yes--to take you out for a ride; we may join Sir Carnaby and my
-sister, who----'
-
-He paused, for this was _not_ what he came to say; but he felt an
-awkwardness in the situation, and the perfect coolness or apparent
-unconsciousness of Clare put him out, all the more so that now a
-smile stole over her face.
-
-Vanity and admiration of her beauty had made him dangle so much about
-Clare, that he felt the time was come when 'something must be done.'
-
-He had come to do that 'something'--to propose, in short; and now,
-with all his _insouciance_, he had a doubt that, if it did not give
-him pain, certainly piqued his pride; and he actually hoped that
-visitors might interrupt the _tête-à-tête_.
-
-But he hoped in vain; the hour was too early for callers.
-
-Clare's smile brightened; but there was an undeniable curl on her
-lovely lip.
-
-He had just enough of lazy tenderness in his manner, with something
-in his tone and eye which seemed to indicate what he had in view, and
-yet seemed unmistakably to say: 'I can't act the lover, so why the
-deuce do I come here to talk nonsense?'
-
-'My mail phaeton is at the door; shall I send for my horse and ring
-for yours?' he asked.
-
-'Excuse me--I have a headache this morning.'
-
-'So sorry; but, perhaps, you may be better amused at home.'
-
-'How, Major?' asked Clare.
-
-'With books, music, or--or correspondence.'
-
-At the last word she _did_ colour, he saw, a very little.
-
-'Ladies have a thousand ways of passing time that men don't possess,'
-he added, lapsing into his habitual bearing, which in his style of
-man some one describes as 'gentle and resigned weariness.'
-
-It actually seemed too much trouble to make love when the matter
-became serious.
-
-There was a pause, after which, for a change of subject, Clare asked
-about the horse he was to run in the Derby.
-
-'Oh! Crusader is in capital form,' said he with animation, as this
-was a subject to be approached with ease. 'Though neither a large
-nor a powerful horse, he is "blood" all over, and there is no better
-animal in the stud book!'
-
-'I know that he stands high in the betting.'
-
-'How?'
-
-'From the racing column in the _Times_.'
-
-'Ah, you take an interest in my horse, then!'
-
-'Of course,' replied Clare, smiling, thinking of her bets in gloves;
-'a very deep interest.'
-
-Encouraged by this trivial remark, he thought to himself, 'Hang
-it--here goes!' and while there occurred vaguely to his lazy mind
-recollections of all he had read of proposals, and seen of them on
-the stage, he took her hand in his, and said abruptly:
-
-'Miss Collingwood--Clare--dearest Clare--will you be my wife? Will
-you marry me--love me--and all that, don't you know?'
-
-Clare withdrew her hand, and slightly elevated her proud eyebrows,
-which were dark and straight rather than arched, while something of a
-dangerous and then of a droll sparkle came into her dreamy and
-beautiful eyes, for neither the tone nor the mode of the proposal
-proved pleasing to her, in her then mood of mind especially.
-
-'Excuse me, Major Desmond,' said she, scarcely knowing how to frame
-her reply, 'you have done me an honour, which--which I must, however,
-decline.'
-
-'Just now, perhaps; but--but in time, dearest Clare?'
-
-'Your sister may call me that; but to you I am Miss Collingwood.'
-
-'Shall I ever get beyond that?' he urged, in a soft tone.
-
-'I do not know,' murmured Clare, doubtfully; for she knew what her
-father wished and expected of her; 'but as yet let us be friends as
-we have been, and not talk of marriage, I implore you.'
-
-'Deuced odd!' thought the Major, who, perhaps, felt relieved in his
-mind.
-
-Clare knew well the calm, half-passionless, and _insouciant_ world of
-the Major and his 'set,' her own 'set' too; she was not surprised;
-she had ere now expected some such declaration or proposal as this
-from Desmond; but certainly, with all his inanity, and perhaps
-stupidity, she expected it to be made in other terms, and with more
-ardour and earnestness; and at the moment he spoke her memory flashed
-back to the same moonlight night of which Trevor Chute had thought
-and remembered so vividly when he parted from her father but a few
-hours before.
-
-While Desmond was considering what to say next, it chanced that Clare
-drew her handkerchief from the Marguerite pouch, and with it the
-note, which fell at the feet of her visitor. Ere she was aware, he
-had picked it up, and saw that it was addressed to _Trevor Chute_.
-
-With a greater sense of irritation, pique, and even jealousy than he
-thought himself capable of feeling--certainly than ever he felt
-before--he presented it to her, saying blandly:
-
-'You have dropped a note, Miss Collingwood--addressed to some one at
-the "Rag," I think.'
-
-'Oh, thanks,' she replied in a voice with the slightest tinge of
-alarm and annoyance.
-
-'Have you many correspondents there?' he ventured to ask, with the
-slightest approach to a sneer, as he placed his glass in his eye.
-
-'Only one,' replied Clare, now thoroughly irritated. 'Captain
-Chute--Trevor Chute--perhaps you have heard of him.'
-
-'Yes; does Sir Carnaby know of this correspondence?'
-
-'No,' she replied, a little defiantly.
-
-The Major began to feel himself, as he would have phrased it,
-'nowhere,' and to wish that he had _not_ called that morning. There
-ensued a break in the conversation which was embarrassing to both,
-till Clare, who was the first to recover her equanimity, said with a
-smile, as she deemed some explanation due, if not to him, at least to
-herself:
-
-'It is to Trevor--to Captain Chute--concerning poor Ida--not on any
-affair of mine, be assured; but,' she added, colouring a little, 'you
-will not mention this circumstance to--to papa?'
-
-'You have my word, Miss Collingwood; and now good-morning.'
-
-He left her with coldness of manner, but only a little; for whatever
-he thought, he deemed it bad style to discover the least emotion.
-But he felt that even in a small way, in virtue of his promised
-secrecy, he and Clare had a secret understanding. Why had she been
-so afraid that he should know of her correspondence with this fellow
-Chute, who he understood had been a discarded admirer of hers in her
-first season; and why keep her father in ignorance of it, when Chute
-was the old man's guest but yesterday?
-
-It was, he thought, altogether one of those things 'no fellow can
-understand,' and drove off in his mail phaeton to visit Crusader in
-his loose box.
-
-Clare remained full of thought after he had gone, and the note had
-been despatched to Trevor Chute; she felt none of the excitement a
-proposal might cause in another. She was, in fact, more annoyed than
-fluttered or flattered by it. Yet Clare felt a need for loving some
-one and being beloved in turn. It is a necessity in every female,
-perhaps every true human heart.
-
-Clare had certainly many admirers, but she was always disposed to
-criticise them, and the woman who criticises a man rarely ends by
-loving him; so since that old time, to which we have already
-referred, she had gone through the world of gaiety heart-free; and
-though mingling much in society, she had somehow made a little world
-of her own--a species of independent existence, and even preferred
-the retirement of their country home, with a few pleasant visitors,
-of course, and weaving out schemes of benevolence to the tenantry, to
-the whirl of life in London, with its balls, drums, crushes, and
-at-homes, attending sometimes three in the same evening, as it was
-called, though the early morning was glittering on the silver harness
-as the carriage drove her home.
-
-Though the proposal of Desmond had excited not the least emotion in
-the heart of Clare Collingwood, it caused some unpleasant and
-unwelcome thoughts to arise, and at such a time as this more than
-ever did she miss her mother, whose affection and counsel were never
-wanting. She had a dread of her father, and of his cold and cutting,
-yet withal courtly, way of addressing her, when in any way, however
-lightly, she displeased him, and now she feared intuitively that she
-would do so, or had done so, in a serious manner.
-
-She knew how much he was under the influence of the Desmonds, and
-felt assured that something unpleasant would come out of that
-morning's episode; and apart from having such a husband as the Major,
-even with his great wealth and prospective title, too, Clare felt
-that she could not tolerate the close relationship of his sister, a
-_passé_ belle, horsey in nature and style, who had been engaged in
-intrigues and flirtations that were unnumbered, and more than once
-had made a narrow escape from being a source of downright scandal,
-for the Honourable Evelyn Desmond was fast--undeniably very fast
-indeed for an unmarried lady, and the queen of a fast set, too--yet
-it never reached the ears of Clare, though the rumour went current
-that she had dined at Richmond and elsewhere with Sir Carnaby
-Collingwood and some of the fastest men in the Brigade, and without
-any other chaperon than her brother. But then the baronet was more
-than old enough to be her father, with whom a late conversation now
-recurred to Clare's memory. While talking of Desmond, she had
-remarked:
-
-'I am surprised, papa, that, with all her opportunities, his sister
-does not get married.'
-
-'Why?' he asked, curtly.
-
-'She has now been out for seven or eight seasons--even more, I
-think--and is getting quite _passé_!
-
-'Yet she is much admired; besides, Clare, it is not her place to make
-proposals.'
-
-'Of course not.'
-
-'Nor is it every proposal she would accept, any more than yourself,'
-said the baronet, with a loftiness of manner.
-
-'She seems to dazzle without touching men's hearts.'
-
-'Indeed!'
-
-'Papa, how sententious you have become! But really I don't think
-Evelyn will ever be married at all.'
-
-'Time will show, Clare--time will show,' chuckled Sir Carnaby,
-showing all his brilliantly white Parisian teeth.
-
-'It will not be her fault if she is _not_, papa,' said Violet, who
-had a special dislike to the lady in question. 'I wonder how long
-she has studied the language of the flowers in the conservatory with
-old Colonel Rakes' son?'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'And never got _him_ to propose, I mean, papa. Her eyes are
-handsome, yet they smiled exclusively, for the time, on young Rakes.'
-
-'Violet!'
-
-'One good flirtation, she told me, always led to another.'
-
-'Surely that is not _her_ style,' said Sir Carnaby, with some
-asperity; 'and I have to request, Miss Violet, that you will not
-speak in this rough manner of any lady in the position of Miss
-Desmond.'
-
-This and many similar conversations of the kind now recurred to
-Clare, and led her to dread her father's questions, and perhaps his
-lectures, on the subject, and she began to feel sadness and doubt.
-
-From these thoughts she was roused by the entrance of a servant, who
-said:
-
-'Miss Collingwood, a jeweller's man is here with the jewels from Bond
-Street for your inspection.'
-
-'_The_ jewels! what jewels? I ordered none,' said Clare.
-
-'He 'ave Sir Carnaby's card, miss,' replied the man, pulling his long
-whiskers, in imitation of Desmond and others.
-
-The man entered with a mincing step, and bowed very low, announcing
-the name of the firm he represented, and unlocking a handsome walnut
-and brass-bound box, took out the morocco cases, and unclasping them,
-displayed, to the surprise of Clare, three magnificent suites of
-diamond ornaments, all set in gold and blue enamel, reposing on the
-whitest of velvet. In each suite were a tiara, pendant ear-rings,
-and a necklace, each and all worth several thousand pounds.
-
-'Oh, such lovely jewels!' exclaimed Violet, who came in at the
-moment, and with a burst of girlish delight; 'these diamonds are fit
-for a prince or a maharajah! Clare! Clare! are they meant for you?'
-
-'They are submitted for inspection and choice.'
-
-'What can this mean? There is some mistake,' replied Clare,
-colouring with extreme annoyance. If they came by her father's
-order, they came as a bribe; if from Desmond, they could not be left
-for a moment! 'Did Sir Carnaby give his address?' she asked.
-
-'No, miss; he simply ordered the three sets to be sent on approval,
-and I brought them here. This is Sir Carnaby's card.'
-
-'They are all too large--much too large for me,' said Clare, hastily.
-'Take them away, please, and I shall ask Sir Carnaby about them when
-he returns.'
-
-The man bowed, returned the jewels to their cases, and was ushered
-out.
-
-'Oh, papa, how kind of you!' exclaimed Violet, apostrophizing the
-absent. 'Are you sure, Clare, that these three lovely suites were
-not for us?'
-
-'I am sure of--nothing, Violet: I don't know what to think,' replied
-Clare, wearily, and with an unmistakable air of annoyance. 'The
-Collingwood jewels are enough for us all, Violet.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-'THE DESIRE OF THE MOTH FOR THE STAR.'
-
-Ignorant of the little scene that had passed in the Collingwoods'
-drawing-room, Trevor Chute felt only something very nearly amounting
-to transports of rage when he thought of all that had occurred
-overnight at Sir Carnaby's club. The callous remarks of the
-frivolous old man stung him to the heart. So Clare as well as her
-father had blotted him out of their selfish world, and Desmond was
-the man who took his place!
-
-Love, doubt, indignation, and jealousy tormented him by turns, or all
-together at once: love for Clare--the dear old love that had never
-died within him, and that, seeing her again and hearing her voice,
-had roused in all its former strength and tenderness; doubt whether
-she were worthy of it, and whether he had a place yet in her heart;
-indignation at the underbred indifference of her father to whatever
-he might think or feel, and jealousy of the influence of Desmond with
-them both.
-
-Nor were the visions of hope and revenge absent. He pondered that if
-she loved him--if she still loved him--why leave it unknown? why
-should he trifle with himself and her? Why tamper with fate? Why
-not marry her in spite of her father and Desmond, too? In mere
-revenge he might make Clare his own, after all!
-
-Then second, and perhaps better, thoughts came anon; for Trevor
-Chute, though to his friends apparently but an ordinary good fellow
-in most respects, a mere captain of the line, and so forth, was in
-spirit as genuine a soldier and a knight as chivalrous as any that
-ever rode at Hastings with the bastard Conqueror, or at Bannockburn;
-and thus, on reflection, his heart recoiled from making any advances
-to his old love--to the girl that had been torn from him, unless he
-obtained that which he considered hopeless--the permission of her
-father.
-
-In India, why was it, when so many perished of jungle-fever and other
-pests, that he escaped with scarcely the illness of a day?--when
-among Nagas, Bhotanese, and Thibetians, matchlock balls and poisoned
-arrows whistled past him, and keen-edged swords crossed his, no
-missile or weapon had found a passage to his heart?
-
-Amid these stirring scenes and episodes he had striven to forget
-everything--more than all, those days of his Guards' life in England;
-and now--now a lovely face--'only the face of a woman--only a woman's
-face, nothing more,' as the song has it, and a woman's voice, with
-all its subtle music, had summoned again all the half-buried memories
-of the past!
-
-From day-dreams, tormenting thoughts, and weary speculative fancies,
-which were in some respects alien to his natural temperament, Chute
-was roused by his valet, Tom Travers, presenting him with a note on
-the inevitable silver salver.
-
-If, as we have related, he was startled before by seeing an envelope
-with the Collingwood crest thereon still more was he startled now on
-receiving another addressed in the well-remembered handwriting of
-Clare! How long, long it seemed since last he had looked upon it!
-
-While his heart and hands trembled with surprise, he opened Clare's
-note, which stated briefly that she had heard from Mr. Vane of their
-intention of going abroad, and begged that he would not forget his
-promise of once more visiting Ida, by whose request she now wrote.
-
-'The pallor of her complexion and the lowness of her spirits alarm me
-greatly,' continued Clare. 'I can but hope that when the season is
-over, and we go to Carnaby Court, the quietness there and the
-pleasant shady groves in autumn may restore her to health; only papa
-always likes to have the house full of lively friends from town, as
-you know of old.'
-
-'Did her hand tremble when she referred to the past?' thought Chute,
-viciously. 'Was Desmond hanging over her chair when she penned this?
-Why does she and not Ida write to me? Is this angling or coquetry?
-But Clare needs not to angle with me, and she never was a coquette.'
-
-The truth was that poor Clare had written, but with the greatest
-reluctance, by desire of Ida, who, for secret and kind reasons of her
-own, wished her sister to address him; and the sight of her
-handwriting did not fail to produce much of the effect which the
-gentle Ida intended; for Chute, while resolving to pay a visit, meant
-it to be a farewell one; and if he saw Clare, to suppress all
-emotion, to seem 'as cool as a cucumber.'
-
-And yet, but for his promise given, and in accordance with Jack
-Beverley's dying request, he would, on visiting London, no more have
-gone near the Collingwood family than have faced a volcano in full
-flame; perhaps he would not have come to London at all till the
-season was over; and now he was preparing to pay a second visit, but
-as he meant, a farewell one, to Ida, after dining--actually dining,
-per express invitation--with the father, who, in a spirit of selfish
-policy, had broken his engagement with Clare.
-
-It was an absurdly anomalous situation, and altogether strange.
-
-With all Trevor Chute's regard for Jerry Vane, many of his deepest
-sympathies were with his brave comrade, Beverley, whose last moments
-he had soothed, and to whose last faint mutterings he had listened
-when life ebbed in that hot and distant bungalow--mutterings of his
-past years and absent love--of the beechen woods of his English home.
-
-Chute had a brotherly love for Ida, and had she not asked him to love
-_her_ as a sister?
-
-He could remember a dainty, delicate little girl, with a rose-leaf
-complexion, a face of smiles and dimples, all gay with white lace and
-blue ribbon, and the floating masses of her auburn hair bound by a
-simple fillet of gold.
-
-And the memory of these past times, with all their dear and deep
-associations, came strongly back to Trevor's heart when, within a
-short time of the receipt of Clare's note, he sat with Ida's thin
-white hand in his, gazing into the depths of her tender brown eyes,
-on her pale and delicate cheek, and confessing to himself how lovely
-she was, and how charming as a friend.
-
-She was every way more calm and composed than when he visited her
-before, and she seemed much inclined to talk of their first
-intercourse and relations in the years that were gone; and more than
-once she stirred the depths of Trevor's honest heart by a few words,
-dropped as if casually, yet so delicately, from which he was led to
-infer that he had frequently formed the topic of conversation between
-her and Clare, and that he was not without an interest in the breast
-of the latter still.
-
-After a pause he sighed, but with some little bitterness, as he
-thought of the formidable rival who had Sir Carnaby's 'warmest
-wishes,' and said:
-
-'Am I, then, to suppose that you have pleaded for me with Clare?'
-
-'Yes, dear Trevor,' she replied, as her slender fingers tightened
-upon his.
-
-'There was a time when I did not require even you, Ida, to do so for
-me,' he replied, mistaking, perhaps, her meaning, for he was
-oversensitive. 'That is all past and gone now; but in the same kind
-spirit may I not plead with you for one who was very dear to you
-once--poor Jerry Vane?'
-
-She coloured deeply, and then grew very pale again, and while the
-long lashes of her soft eyes dropped, she said:
-
-'Do not speak of this again, Trevor--my heart is in Beverley's grave.'
-
-'Yet,' he urged gently, 'a time may come----'
-
-'It will never come.'
-
-'Poor Jerry--as he loved you once, he loves you still. I hope, dear
-Ida, you pardon me for speaking of this to you.'
-
-'I do from my heart, Trevor; but tell me, in the time that you have
-seen me--I mean since your return--have you not been struck by a
-certain strangeness of action about me?'
-
-'I confess that I have.'
-
-'I am conscious of it repeatedly,' she continued with a strange and
-sad smile.
-
-'In the midst of an animated conversation, I have all at once
-perceived your thoughts to wander, an expression of alarm to creep
-over your face, a kind of shudder through your frame, and your hand
-to tremble.'
-
-'It is so.'
-
-'And this sudden emotion, Ida?
-
-'Comes when I think of Beverley--or, rather, this emotion, which I
-can neither avert nor control, makes _me_ think of _him_ even when my
-thoughts have been elsewhere.'
-
-'This is very strange,' said Trevor Chute, as some of what he deemed
-Beverley's 'wild speeches' came back to memory again.
-
-'Strange indeed, Trevor; but morbid thoughts come over me, with the
-_thrill_ you have remarked, even in the sunshine and when with
-others, but more especially when I am alone; and there seems to
-be--oh, Trevor Chute, I know not how to phrase it, lest you think me
-absurd or eccentric,' she continued, while a wild, sad earnestness
-stole into her eyes, 'that there hovers near me, and unknown to all,
-a spirit--a something that is unseen and intangible.'
-
-'This is but overheated fancy,' said Chute tenderly, and with
-commiseration; 'you should be alone as seldom as possible, and change
-of air and scene will cure you of all this gloom. On my return--if I
-should return to London--I shall hope to hear that you are, as you
-used to be, the bright and happy Ida of my own brighter and happier
-days.'
-
-And rising now, he lingered with Ida's hand in his, intent on
-departure, as his last orders to his valet had been to pack at once
-for France or Germany; and Tom Travers, a faithful fellow, whose
-discharge he had bought from the Guards, and who had been with him in
-India and everywhere else, was fully engaged on that duty by this
-time.
-
-'But, dear Ida,' he said, 'dismiss as soon as you can these gloomy
-ideas from your mind, and cease to imagine that anything so
-unnatural, so repugnant to the fixed laws of nature, as aught
-hovering near you _unseen_, forcing you to think of Beverley, could
-exist.'
-
-'I do not require to be forced to think of Beverley,' said she, with
-tender sadness.
-
-'Pardon me, I did not mean that,' said he.
-
-'I know; but that which seems to haunt me at times may exist; the
-world is full of mystery, and so is all nature. We know not how even
-a seed takes root, or a blade of grass springs from the earth.'
-
-'Ida, this is the cant of the spiritualists!' urged Trevor Chute; 'do
-not adopt it. What would Sir Carnaby think of such a theme?'
-
-She slightly shrugged her shoulders, and with a little laugh said:
-
-'Papa's views of life are very different from mine, and his ideas of
-the superiority of mind over matter must be vague, if, indeed, he has
-any views on the subject at all. Do you go to the Continent alone?'
-
-'No, Jerry Vane proposes to accompany me.'
-
-'Also leaving London in the height of the season!'
-
-'His reasons are nearly the same as mine,' replied Chute. 'Have you
-any message to him?'
-
-'None,' said she, colouring and looking down.
-
-'None,' repeated Chute, in a half-reproachful tone.
-
-'Save my kindest wishes. You know, Trevor, that I used Jerry very
-ill; I am well aware of that, but it is too late now to--to----' She
-paused in confusion, and then said, 'Poor Jerry, I pity him with
-unspeakable pity.'
-
-'I would that he heard you,' said Chute, caressing her pretty hand.
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Does not Dryden tell us that pity melts the mind to love?'
-
-'Do not repeat the admission I have made,' said Ida, as a shade of
-annoyance crossed her pallid face, adding firmly, 'Let him have no
-false hopes; my heart has a great tenderness, but no such love as he
-wishes, for him.'
-
-'And now farewell, Ida, for a long time.'
-
-'A pleasant journey to you,' said she, and tears started to her eyes,
-as he bowed himself out of her boudoir.
-
-'Thanks--to-night may see me in Paris.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-DOUBTS DISPELLED.
-
-'In Paris to-night?' said a voice that thrilled him, and he found
-himself face to face with Clare, who unexpectedly, and somewhat to
-her own confusion, appeared at the drawing-room door.
-
-'I knew not that you were at home,' replied Chute, with some coldness
-of manner, as the memories of last night occurred to him, and he too
-became confused as he added, 'I meant to have left a farewell card
-for Sir Carnaby.'
-
-Mechanically they entered the drawing-room. For reasons of her own,
-Ida did not follow them, and feeling full of the awkwardness of the
-situation, Trevor Chute lingered, hat in hand, and Clare, amid the
-tremor and tumult of her thoughts, forgot to offer him a seat.
-
-She was provoked now that she had yielded to Ida's urgency, and
-written personally to Chute.
-
-Yet wherefore, or why? She had loved him in the past time, and loved
-him still, as she whispered in her heart; and felt sure that he loved
-her; and yet--and yet she thought now that letter should have been
-written by Ida, not her, if written at all.
-
-'I hope you enjoyed your evening with papa at the club,' she said;
-with polite frigidity of manner.
-
-'Far from it,' said he abruptly, as he felt piqued thereby.
-
-'Indeed!'
-
-'I can scarcely tell you why.'
-
-'Do, if possible,' said she, with genuine surprise.
-
-'Pardon the admission, Miss Collingwood, but all night long Sir
-Carnaby sang the praises of a certain Major Desmond.'
-
-Clare coloured deeply; her eyes darkened, and sparkled, yet softly,
-under the sweep of their long black lashes.
-
-'It was horrible taste in papa--to _you_ especially! How could he
-act so strangely?'
-
-'So cruelly, Clare,' said Trevor Chute, with a burst of honest
-emotion, born of the sudden line this conversation had taken.
-
-'Fear not for Desmond,' said she, in a bitter, yet low tone, as she
-shook her graceful head.
-
-'He was to--to propose for your hand.'
-
-'He did so this morning,' was the calm reply.
-
-'And you, Miss Collingwood, you----'
-
-'Refused him.'
-
-'Oh, Clare!' exclaimed Trevor, and all the old love beamed in his
-eyes as he uttered her name.
-
-'Neither doubt nor misunderstand me,' said Clare, very calmly, and in
-a voice that was earnest, sweet, and low. 'Papa and others too'
-('What others?' thought Chute) 'have tried hard to make me forget
-what you and I were to each other once, but he and they have failed.'
-
-'Thank God!' exclaimed Chute, so full of emotion that he clutched the
-back of a chair for support.
-
-'In the seeming emptiness of my heart,' said Clare, speaking in a low
-tone and with downcast eyes, while the throbbing of her bosom was
-apparent beneath her dress, 'I made for myself a life within a life,
-known to myself alone.'
-
-'And that life, darling?'
-
-'Was full of _you_.'
-
-He made a step towards her; but she drew back, and said,
-questioningly:
-
-'And you, Trevor, in the days of this long separation?'
-
-'Have never, never forgotten you, Clare!'
-
-'Yet you must have seen many!'
-
-'Many--yes, and lovely women, too; but never have I felt a touch of
-even the slightest passing pang or preference for any one out of the
-many.'
-
-Clare gazed at him softly and sweetly. She did not, she could not,
-tell him that in the intervals of a brilliant garden party she had
-rejected for the third time the passionate supplications and
-proposals of one who could have made her a marchioness; and those who
-knew of this thought her cold and proud, but they were wrong, for
-Clare was 'one of those women who, beneath the courtly negligence of
-a chill manner, are capable of infinite tenderness, infinite
-nobility, and infinite self-reproach,' and her heart was loving,
-tender, sweet, and warm as a summer rose to those who knew her, and
-whom she loved.
-
-The mist was dispelling fast now.
-
-Again they were discovering, or recalling, all that was sympathetic
-in each other, and learning to understand each other by word, and
-hint, or glance, when soul seemed to speak to soul, and more than
-all, when hand met hand, did Clare feel that which she had never felt
-since their separation, how magnetic was the influence between them,
-and how no other hand had made the blood course through her veins as
-his had done.
-
-The situation was becoming perilous, and Sir Carnaby might at any
-moment come upon them, like the ogre of a fairy tale, or the irate
-father of a melodrama.
-
-'I must go, Clare,' said he, but yet he lingered.
-
-Again he was calling her by her name--her Christian name--as of old,
-in the dear past time, and how sweetly it sounded in her ear!
-
-'Trevor,' said she, pressing a hand on her heart as if to soothe its
-throbbing, while she leant on a table with the other, 'stay yet a
-moment.'
-
-Clare was with him again; he was conscious of nothing more; and the
-old love that had never passed out of his heart, or hers either,
-stronger now than it had ever been, made him linger in her presence,
-and made eye dwell on eye, tenderly, sadly, and passionately, till
-emotion got the better of all prudence, pride, and policy, and
-snatching the hand that was pressed upon her bosom, he besought her,
-in what terms, or with what words, he scarcely knew in the whirl of
-his thoughts, to be his wife at all risks and hazards.
-
-But Clare drew her hand away, and mournfully shook her head, and
-then, with an effort, spoke calmly--
-
-'You know, Trevor, how I loved poor mamma, and how she loved me?'
-
-'I do, my own Clare.'
-
-'Well, on her death-bed she made me give her two solemn promises.'
-
-'And these were?'
-
-'First, to be, so far as I could, a mother to Ida and Violet,
-and--and----'
-
-'The second? Oh, Clare, keep me not in suspense!'
-
-'Never to marry without the fullest consent of papa; and as he acted
-before, so will he act again, out of mere petulance and pride,
-perhaps, as he will never acknowledge himself in error. Oh, Trevor!'
-she added, pathetically, 'I would that we had never met, and almost
-wish that after being so cruelly parted we had never met more.'
-
-Trevor Chute was silent for a time, but a sense of irritation against
-her father gave him courage to hope.
-
-'Clare, Sir Carnaby is a somewhat gay man,' said he, 'and he has
-hinted to Jerry Vane, to Colonel Rakes, and others, the chance----'
-
-'Of what?' asked Clare, as her lips became pale.
-
-'Pardon me--his marrying again.'
-
-'With whom?'
-
-'I heard no name.'
-
-'Marrying again!' she exclaimed, with anger, as certain undefined
-suspicions occurred to her or came to memory. 'If Sir Carnaby does
-aught so absurd, I shall consider myself absolved from my promise to
-await his permission, and--and----'
-
-'What, dearest Clare?'
-
-'Become that which I should have been three long years ago,' she
-replied, with tenderness and vehemence.
-
-'My wife, darling?'
-
-'Your wife, Trevor.'
-
-'Oh, Clare, God bless you for these words!'
-
-And as his arms went round her, all the man's brave heart went out to
-her, and tears started to his eyes as he kissed her with a passionate
-warmth in which he had never indulged in the past days of their early
-and unclouded love.
-
-Soft Clare in his arms again! Clare's tender lips touching his! Oh,
-which was a dream and which was the truth? The three years of
-excitement, sorrow, and disappointment in burning India; the marches
-under the fierce glaring sun; long days of drought and thirst, when
-facing death among the fierce hill tribes; nights, chill and bitter,
-among the Himalayan snows; the hard existence in barrack, tent, and
-bungalow, all so different from what his Guards life had been in
-London--the present or the past!
-
-But to what would the present lead?
-
-They knew too well that, so far as Sir Carnaby was concerned, his
-consent would never be given.
-
-'Heavens, Clare!' exclaimed Trevor, in this bitter conviction, 'to
-what a death in life does your father doom you!'
-
-'Say _us_, Trevor,' said she, in a choking voice.
-
-'Bless you, dear girl, for saying so; but you it seems, and all for
-my sake!'
-
-At last he had to retire--literally to tear himself away.
-
-So there was acted and there was ended, for the time, their bitter
-but sorrowful romance, in that most prosaic of all places a
-fashionable drawing-room, with all its mirrors, lounges, porcelains,
-and _objets d'art_, which seem so necessary to that apartment which
-Button Cook calls essentially 'the British drawing-room,' and
-mentally over and over again did Trevor Chute react and recall every
-detail of that delicious, yet painful interview, which had come so
-unexpectedly about, while the swift tidal train bore him from Charing
-Cross; and her last words seemed to linger yet in his ear--her face
-before his eye, like the vision of a waking dream--as on the deck of
-the steam-packet he sat, apart from all, full of his own thoughts,
-and saw the lights of Harwich and Landguard Fort mingling with
-moonshine on the water, while the clang of the Bell Buoy came on the
-wind, and the Shipwash floating beacon was soon left astern, and
-Trevor Chute, careless of whither he went, changed his mind and
-resolved to go to Germany.
-
-Happy thoughts banished sleep from his eyes, and on deck he stayed
-nearly the whole night through, till the muddy waters of the Maese
-were rippling against the bow of the Dutch steamer.
-
-Clare loved him still, as she had ever, ever done! New happiness
-grew with hope in his heart.
-
-Yet the prospect was a hard one. He could only know that, though not
-his wife, Clare Collingwood should never be the wife of another, and
-tenderly he looked on a ring of sapphires and opals from her hand, on
-which he had slipped their old engagement ring of diamonds.
-
-He was alone, we have said, for his friend Vane did not accompany him.
-
-He had a card for Lady Rakes' 'at home;' Clare was going, and Ida
-too; so the former asked Trevor to get him to defer his journey and
-be present, adding:
-
-'It is for Ida's sake; you know _all_ I mean, and all I hope she
-wishes.'
-
-'I do, Clare, and so will Jerry.'
-
-'But do not speak of her.'
-
-Hence Vane remained behind in London.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-FOR WHOM THE JEWELS WERE INTENDED.
-
-Clare was seated in a shady corner of the library, looking
-alternately at the German map in Murray's Guide and the diamond ring
-which she had first received from Trevor Chute on the eventful
-moonlight night at Carnaby Court.
-
-How strange that it should be on her finger again after all!
-
-'And to think,' she muttered, 'that papa should so unkindly and, with
-bad taste have stung his tender and loving heart by speaking to _him_
-of me and that big butterfly soldier, Desmond! No wonder it is that
-Trevor seemed cold, constrained, and strange. Oh, my love, what must
-you have thought of me!'
-
-And the girl, as she uttered this aloud, pressed the ring to her
-lips, while her eyes filled with tears. Then she sank into one of
-her reveries, from which, after a time, she was roused by the
-entrance of her father. He was attired for a ride in the Row, had
-his whip in his hand, and was buttoning his faultlessly fitting
-gloves on his thin white aristocratic hands with the care that he
-usually exhibited; but Clare could perceive that his face wore an
-undoubtedly cloudy expression.
-
-'Papa, for whom were those lovely jewels that came here for
-inspection yesterday?' she asked.
-
-'Not for you, Miss Collingwood.'
-
-'Yet they were sent here.'
-
-'A mistake of the shop-people.'
-
-Clare looked up with surprise in her sweet face, for his manner,
-though studiously polite in tone, was curt and strange.
-
-'Perhaps they were for Ida?' said Clare, gently.
-
-'No.'--'Violet, then?'
-
-'No.'--'For whom, then, papa?'
-
-'The sister of him you rejected yesterday.'
-
-'Evelyn Desmond!'
-
-'Yes, Miss Collingwood; and thereby hangs a tale,' replied Sir
-Carnaby, giving a final touch to his stock in a mirror opposite.
-'Did any silly fancy for this man who has just returned to
-India--this Captain Chute--influence you in this matter?'
-
-Clare coloured painfully, but said 'No.'
-
-'Glad to hear it, Clare, as I thought all that stuff was forgotten
-long ago,' he continued, with the nearest approach to a frown that
-was ever seen on his usually impassible visage.
-
-'You asked him to dine at your club, papa,' said Clare, evasively.
-
-'Yes, out of mere politeness, to thank him, as Beverley's friend, for
-visiting Ida, though I fear the visit may make her grief a greater
-bore than ever. But why did you decline an alliance that would be so
-advantageous as that with Desmond?'
-
-'Simply because I cannot love him, and I don't wish to leave you,
-dearest papa; now that you are getting old.'
-
-'Old!' He was frowning in earnest now.
-
-'Pardon me, papa, I love no man sufficiently to make me leave your
-roof for his.'
-
-'What stuff and nonsense is this, Clare Collingwood!'
-
-'It is neither, but truth, papa.'
-
-'Though you have the bad taste to inform me that I am getting old,
-permit me to remind you that in many things you, Clare, are a mere
-child, though a woman in years.'
-
-'A child, perhaps, compared with such women as Desmond's sister
-Evelyn,' replied Clare, with some annoyance.
-
-'And as a woman in years, I, foreseeing the time when I could not
-have you always to reign over my table at Carnaby Court or in
-Piccadilly, have deemed it necessary to provide myself with a--a----'
-
-'Papa!'
-
-'Well, a substitute,' he added, giving a finishing adjust to his
-gloves, and then looking Clare steadily in the face.
-
-'In the person of Evelyn Desmond!' she exclaimed, in a breathless
-voice, and becoming very pale.
-
-'Precisely, my dear Miss Collingwood. She has promised to fill up in
-my heart all the fearful void left there by the loss of your good
-mother. I meant to have told you this long ago, but--but it was an
-awkward subject to approach.'
-
-'So I should think!'
-
-'With one who comports herself like you; and--ah--in fact, now that
-we are about it, I may mention that the marriage has been postponed
-only in consequence of Beverley's death, Ida's mourning, illness, and
-all that sort of thing.'
-
-'So my sacrifice in declining poor Trevor Chute, after all his faith,
-love, and cruel treatment, was uncalled for,' thought Clare, as she
-stood like a marble statue, with scorn growing on her lovely lip,
-while endeavouring to realize the startling tidings now given to her.
-
-'Is _this_ to be the end of Evelyn's endless manoeuvring and
-countless flirtations?' she exclaimed after a pause.
-
-'Miss Collingwood, I spoke of Miss Desmond,' said he.
-
-'So did I,' replied Clare, with growing anger.
-
-'Don't be so impulsive--rude, I should say--it is bad form, bad
-style, very.'
-
-'Poor mamma!' sighed Clare; 'she was a good and true gentlewoman.'
-
-'That I grant you, but a trifle cold and stately.'
-
-'When she died I thought it is only when angels leave us that we see
-the light of heaven on their wings.'
-
-'Now don't be melodramatic; it is absurd, and to be emotional is bad
-taste. As one cuckoo does not make a spring any more than one
-swallow a summer, so no more should one affair of the human heart
-make up the end of a human existence.'
-
-'Are you really in earnest about this, papa?'
-
-'Of course, though I am not much in earnest about anything usually;
-it is not worth one's while.'
-
-'At a certain age, perhaps,' thought Clare; 'but you were earnest
-enough once, in dismissing poor Trevor Chute.'
-
-'You will break this matter to your sisters,' said he, preparing to
-leave her.
-
-'My sisters!' said Clare, bitterly and sadly. 'Oh, papa! think of
-Violet's prospects with--with' (she feared to add such a
-chaperon)--'and of Ida, so sad, so delicate in health.'
-
-'Nonsense, Miss Collingwood, Ida will soon marry again; such absurd
-grief never lasts; and I am sure that Vane loves her still.'
-
-'Then _he_ is not supposed to have got over "that stuff," as you
-think Trevor Chute and I have done.'
-
-'Miss Collingwood, I do not like my words repeated; so with your
-permission we shall cease the subject, and I shall bid you
-good-morning.'
-
-Whenever he was offended with any of his own family the tone he
-adopted was one of elaborate politeness; and twiddling his eyeglass,
-with a kind of Dundreary skip, this model father, this 'awful dad' of
-Clare, departed to the abode of his inamorata.
-
-Clare remained for some time standing where he had left her as if
-turned to stone. The proud and sensitive girl's cheek burned with
-mingled shame and anger as she thought of the ridicule, the perhaps
-coarse gibes of the clubs, and general irony of society, which such
-an alliance was apt to excite; and with all the usual command of
-every emotion peculiar to her set and style, as this conviction came
-upon her, tears hot and swift rushed into her sweet dark eyes.
-
-Could Sir Carnaby have been so insane as to contemplate a double
-alliance with that fast family? she asked of herself.
-
-'It would have made us all more than ever ridiculous!' she muttered
-aloud; and then she thought with more pleasure of her re-engagement
-with Trevor Chute, the promise given, and which she would certainly
-redeem; yet she fairly wept for the price of its redemption, as she
-shrank with a species of horror from seeing that 'Parky party,' as
-she knew the men about town called the fair Evelyn, occupying the
-place of her dead mother at home and abroad, and presented at Court
-and elsewhere in the Collingwood jewels.
-
-Vanity, perhaps, as much as anything else, was the cause of this new
-idea in the mind of the shallow Sir Carnaby. Though he felt
-perfectly conscious that his own day was past, he would not
-acknowledge it. He knew well, too, that though many enjoyed his
-dinners and wines, his crushes in Piccadilly, and his cover-shooting
-at Carnaby Court, and that many tolerated him for the sake of his
-rank, position, and charming daughters, they deemed him 'no end of an
-old bore,' and this conviction galled and cut him to the quick.
-
-Hence, if Evelyn Desmond became his wife, the fact would be a kind of
-protest against _Time_ itself!
-
-'How society will laugh! it is intolerable!' exclaimed Ida,
-thoroughly rousing herself when she heard the startling tidings.
-'You, Clare, were ever his favourite--the one who, as he said always,
-reminded him most of poor mamma 'when she last folded her pale, thin
-hands so meekly, and after kissing us all, gave up her soul to God;
-yet he could tell you, in this jaunty way, that another was to take
-her place, and that other was such a woman as Evelyn Desmond!'
-
-Already the rumour of 'the coming event' must, they thought, be known
-in town, else wherefore the hint thrown out so vaguely by Trevor
-Chute? Already! The mortification of the girls was unspeakable.
-
-Had the unwelcome announcement been made to her but a day sooner, at
-least before her chance interview with Trevor--that interview so full
-of deep and tender interest to them both--she might have been tempted
-to make a promise more distinct than she had given, for Clare's
-gentle heart was full of indignation now.
-
-Trevor Chute could not now make, as in the past time, such
-settlements as her father's ambition required and deemed necessary;
-yet his means were ample, and she had lands, riches, and position
-enough for both; so why should she not be his wife?
-
-Such are the idiosyncrasies of human nature, that her father, who
-once liked Trevor Chute, now disliked, and more than disliked him,
-because he felt quite sensible that he had done the frank but
-unfortunate soldier who had loved his daughter a wrong.
-
-To stay in town with this engagement on the _tapis_, and this
-marriage in prospect, was more, however, than Clare cared to endure,
-or Ida either. When it was pressed upon the baronet that the three
-sisters should go to Carnaby Court or elsewhere, he affected much
-surprise, as they had barely reached the middle of the season, and
-the engagement list contained many affairs towards which Clare, and
-certainly Violet, had looked forward with interest.
-
-Though he made a show of some opposition to all this, Sir Carnaby was
-not unwilling to be left in town alone at this time, where he had to
-be in frequent attendance upon his intended, where there were
-settlements to arrange, a _trousseau_ to prepare, and jewels to
-select, so the plan of Clare and Ida was at once adopted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-A ROMANCE OF THE DRAWING-ROOM.
-
-'It is bitter,' says a powerful writer, 'to know those whom we love
-dead; but it is more bitter to be as dead to those who, once having
-loved us, have sunk our memory deep beneath an oblivion that is not
-the oblivion of the grave.'
-
-Jerry Vane had experienced much of this bitterness in the past time;
-but new hopes were already dawning within him.
-
-He had received Clare's message from Trevor Chute, who, for the life
-of him, in the fulness of his own joy, could not, nathless his
-promise to her, help telling Vane what she had said of Ida's probable
-wishes; thus, with a heart light as a bird's, on the evening of the
-'at-home,' he betook himself to a part of Belgravia where at that
-season the great houses, rising floor above floor, have usually every
-window ablaze with light, and awnings of brilliant hues extending
-from the pillared portico to the kerb, with soft bright carpets
-stretched beneath for the tread of pretty feet in the daintiest of
-boots, while the carriages, with rich liveries and flashing harness,
-line the way, waiting to set down or take up.
-
-Countless carriages were there; those which had deposited their
-freights were drawn up on the opposite side of the square, wheel to
-wheel, like a park of artillery; others were setting down past the
-lighted portico, which was crowded by servants in livery. The bustle
-was great, nor were smart hansoms and even rickety 'growlers' wanting
-in the throng of more dashing vehicles, bringing bachelors, like
-Jerry, from their clubs.
-
-Full of one thought--Ida--he was betimes at Colonel Rakes'
-house--earlier, indeed, than was his wont--and piloted his way up the
-great staircase and through the great drawing-rooms, which were hung
-with stately family portraits of the Rakes of other times, and were
-already crowded with people of the best style, for the 'at-home' was
-usually a 'crusher' in this house; a sea of velvets and silks,
-diamonds, and sapphires; and every other man wore a ribbon, star, or
-order of some kind.
-
-Of his hostess Lady Rakes, a _fade_ old woman of fashion, with her
-company smile and insipid remarks for all in succession, and her
-husband the Colonel, who, till Sir Carnaby came, was ever about
-Evelyn Desmond, with whom he fancied himself to have an incipient
-flirtation, we shall say no particular more, as they have no part in
-our story.
-
-The Collingwoods had not yet arrived. Vane could see nothing of them
-amid the throng while looking everywhere for Ida. Any very definite
-idea he had none; but love was the impulse that led him to seek her
-society so sedulously again--to see her, and hear her voice. How
-often had he said and thought, even while his whole heart yearned for
-her, 'I shall never torment myself by looking on her face again!' and
-now he was searching for her with a heart that was hungry and eager.
-
-He heard carriage after carriage come up and deposit its occupants,
-name after name announced, and saw group after group stream up the
-staircase and glide through the doors. Would she come after all? He
-was beginning to fear not, when suddenly the name of 'Collingwood'
-caught his ear, and the well-saved old dandy, with an unusually
-bright smile on his thin aristocratic face, appeared with Clare
-leaning on one arm and Ida on the other. With all their beauty, we
-have said that he felt his daughters a bore; thus, so soon as he
-could, he made all haste to leave them in the care of others, while
-he mixed with the glittering throng.
-
-So dense was the latter that a considerable time elapsed ere Vane
-could make his way to where the sisters stood, with more than one
-admirer near them.
-
-There, too, was Desmond, with his cross of the Bath, and a delicate
-waxen flower in his lapel. Clara's refusal had certainly piqued, but
-not pained, the tall, languid guardsman with the tawny hair; yet he
-did not think his chances of ultimate success, if he cared
-sufficiently to attain it, were over yet; but his love was of that
-easy nature--more like a listless flirtation than love--that he was
-in no haste to press his suit again; for if this affair, and 'a very
-absurd affair, by Jove!' he deemed it, between Sir Carnaby and his
-fast sister actually came off, he would find himself often enough in
-the charming society of Clare; but what a joke it would be to think
-that Evelyn might be his mother-in-law.
-
-All things considered, the Honourable Major was not much in want of
-consolation, and if he had required it, there were plenty of lovely
-belles there and elsewhere 'who would gladly be bride,' not 'to young
-Lochinvar,' but to the future Lord Bayswater.
-
-And what of Clare, so calm in aspect and aristocratically serene?
-
-Her thoughts were not with the gay yet empty throng that buzzed and
-glittered around her, but with her soldier-lover, browned and tanned
-by the fierce sun-glare of India, from whom she had been so long
-wantonly separated, and was now separated again, yet with the sweet
-memory of his last passionate kisses on her lip, that looked so proud
-to others, and who was not now, thank God! as before--facing the
-toils and terrors of an obscure mountain war in India, but simply
-self-banished to Germany till time should show what might be before
-them both. Where was he then? what doing, and with whom?
-
-Thinking, doubtless, of her! so thought and pondered Clare, when she
-could thrust aside the coming marriage of Sir Carnaby, with all its
-contingent ridicule; but it was in vain that she repelled it, for the
-fact took full and bitter possession of her, and could not be
-displaced; and her lip curled scornfully as she saw her father, with
-his bald head shining in the light like a billiard ball, his dyed
-moustache, and false teeth, his undoubtedly handsome and aristocratic
-figure, though thin and shrunken, clad in evening costume of the most
-perfect fashion, simpering and bending over Evelyn, of whom we shall
-have more to say anon.
-
-None that looked on Clare, and saw the greatness of her beauty, the
-general sweetness of her smile, her tranquil air, and somewhat
-languid grace, could have dreamed that irritating or bitter thoughts
-were flitting through her mind.
-
-'Oh,' thought she, as she fanned herself, 'how vapid it all is,
-exchanging the same hackneyed commonplaces with dozens in succession.'
-
-Yet society compelled her to appear like other people, and she found
-herself listening to Desmond, who lisped away in his usual fashion of
-things in general: the debates in the House last night, the envious
-screen of the ladies' gallery, la crosse at Hurlingham, polo,
-tent-pegging, and lemon-slicing at Lillie Bridge, the coaching club
-and the teams, Colonel Rakes' greys, Bayswater's roans, the Scottish
-Duke of Chatelherault's snow-whites, the matching of wheelers and
-leaders; of this party and that rout; who were and were not at the
-Chiswick Garden Fete.
-
-One circumstance pleased her. Nothing in the well-bred and impassive
-manner of Desmond, though he hung over her and tugged his long fair
-moustache, could have led anyone to suppose that he had actually made
-her a proposal the other morning, and as to his sister's intended
-'fiasco,' for such they both deemed it, the subject was not even
-hinted at; and now, as he moved on to speak to some one else, a
-gloved hand was laid on her arm, and Clare found herself beside
-Evelyn Desmond.
-
-She was perhaps about thirty, yet she had more experience of the
-world than Clare could ever have won in a lifetime. In girlhood she
-had been handsome; but her beauty--if real beauty she ever
-possessed--was already gone; bloom at least had departed. She was
-fair, blue-eyed, and not unlike her brother, with a proportionately
-tall figure, and a face rather aristocratic in contour, but with a
-keener, sharper, more haughty and defiant expression.
-
-One of the _three_ suites of diamonds that Clare had seen was
-sparkling on her brow and bosom. She was attired in violet velvet,
-with priceless point lace, cut in the extreme mode: her neck and
-shoulders were bare, and her dress cut so absurdly low behind as to
-show rather too much of a certainly fair and snow-white back.
-
-Clare's chief objection to her, apart from the disparity of years,
-was that the Honourable Evelyn had the unpleasant reputation of
-having done more than one very fast thing in her life, though no one
-could precisely say what they were; and though she was the daughter
-of a peer and a sister of a major in the Guards, all men had a cool,
-_insouciant_, and even flippant or half 'chaffing' mode of addressing
-her, that they would never have dared to adopt to a girl like Clare
-Collingwood.
-
-'Your papa has told you about--you know what, Clare?' said Miss
-Desmond, looking not in the slightest degree abashed, though lowering
-her tone, certainly.
-
-'Yes,' said Clare, curtly and wearily.
-
-'We must be better friends than ever, Clare.'
-
-Miss Collingwood fanned herself in silence, so Evelyn spoke again:
-
-'I suppose you know when the--the event takes place?'
-
-'No.'
-
-'How monosyllabic you are,' said the other, while her lip quivered,
-and her eye lightened. 'Has Sir Carnaby not told you?'
-
-'I never asked him,' was the half-contemptuous response.
-
-'Why?'
-
-'I was not aware that matters were in such a state of progression. A
-time is named, then, for--for this _affaire de fantasie_?'
-
-'A month from to-day. Pray call it an _affaire du cœur_.'
-
-'A month!' repeated Clare, dreamily.
-
-'He would have it, he was so impatient,' said Evelyn Desmond, with
-something of a smile; but whether it was a triumphant or malignant
-one, Clare cared not to analyze. She only feared that the
-'impatience' had been elsewhere, as Evelyn had been on the point of
-marrying with more than one man already, but there was always a flaw
-somewhere, and the affairs ended. Perhaps, as some hinted, they were
-too easily begun.
-
-As she could neither express pleasure or congratulation, Clare fanned
-herself in silence, until Evelyn said:
-
-'And so you have refused Harvey?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'How exceedingly funny.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Because on that same morning I finally accepted Sir Carnaby. By the
-way,' she added, with a glance that was not a pleasant one, 'I heard
-that your old admirer, Trevor Chute, once of the Guards, was in town
-again.'
-
-'Indeed.'
-
-'Yes; perhaps that accounts for poor Harvey's disappointment.'
-
-'Think so if you choose,' replied Clare, haughtily, as she turned
-away to conceal how her soft cheek coloured with the excess of her
-annoyance.
-
-By this time Vane, after being entangled by innumerable trains, had
-made his way to the side of Ida.
-
-Jerry Vane was popular in society, and could have had many a girl for
-the asking. Clare and Ida, too, had often wished--for he was still
-the dearest of their friends--that he should marry; but they had
-never suggested it to him, for under the circumstances it would have
-seemed bad taste, and though he had but one thought--Ida, and Ida
-only--Jerry Vane went everywhere, and was deemed the gayest of the
-gay; and now, when their eyes met, there was a kind, sad smile in
-hers--a smile of the olden time--that took a load off his heart, and
-still lighter did it grow when, rising, she took his arm--as a widow
-she could do so now, and said:
-
-'Take me to a cool place; the heat here is stifling, especially in
-this dark dress; there is a cool seat just within the conservatory
-door. Thanks, that will do.'
-
-Many a picture--many a soft Gainsborough or softer Greuze--may
-suggest a face as delicate and beautiful as that which was turned up
-to his; but no picture ever painted by human hand had such a power of
-expression as that possessed by the face of Ida Beverley, as she sat
-there, slightly flushed by the heat of the crowded room, and feeling
-with pleasure the breeze from the great square without blowing on her
-cheek, and laden with perfumes of fresh flowers as it passed through
-the long conservatory.
-
-The broken ring, the gipsy ring of the dream, rent in two by the
-cruel tiger's fangs, was now on the marriage finger beside the
-wedding hoop, as Jerry could see when she drew off her glove, but he
-was glad to observe that her mourning was becoming lessened by
-trimmings of grey silk; yet the dark costume, by its contrast to the
-pallor and purity of her complexion, made Ida seem lovelier than
-ever, and his heart ached to think that those trappings of woe were
-worn for a rival.
-
-Why did he seek her presence? he was asking himself again. Did some
-lingering hope inspire him? Without it Jerry felt that it would be
-madness to place himself within the sphere of her beauty, with their
-mutual past; yet he could not deny himself the joy of the present, in
-watching the tenderness of her soft grey-blue eye, the glory of her
-auburn hair, and the grace of all her actions.
-
-She had been the wife of Beverley, true; but the wife of only a few
-months, and left behind in loneliness while yet a bride.
-
-Worried by her sadness, and sick of her repining, selfish old Sir
-Carnaby had become, unknown to her, somewhat an adherent of her first
-lover. He was not disinclined to let his widowed daughter become the
-wife of this unappropriated man, whose good looks and style were as
-undeniable as his position and expectations. Thus he whispered to
-Evelyn Desmond that he was not ill-pleased to see them draw apart
-within the conservatory door.
-
-Jerry's friends would have called him 'a muff,' to sigh as he did,
-and make himself 'a blighted being' for Ida, whose whole heart and
-soul seemed devoted to another, and who sorrowed as some women only
-sorrow over their dead, going through the world with one visionary
-yet formed fancy that floated drearily and vaguely in her memory.
-Yet, in spite of himself, Jerry Vane hovered near the sad one like a
-love-bird by the nest of its young.
-
-It was impossible that the love of this faithful, honest, and
-good-hearted fellow should fail to impress Ida. She was conscious
-that his fate was a cruel one, and of her own making; and she felt a
-great pity for him; for although she _had_ been fickle once, her
-nature was generous and compassionate.
-
-A dead flirtation can seldom be revived, but an old love is often
-rekindled; yet Ida bore him none as yet; it was only pity, as we have
-said--compunction for what she had done--a tenderness, nothing more,
-save, perhaps, a sense of honour for him, that gave Jerry Vane an
-indefinable and, it may be, dangerous attraction to her; and now, as
-he spoke to her, bending over her as he used to do of old, her dark
-blue eyes changed and shadowed with the changing thoughts that passed
-quickly through her mind.
-
-'We are good friends as ever,' said she, smiling upward in reply to
-some remark of his.
-
-'Ida, some one has written that after love, mere friendship becomes
-more cruel than hate, and says it is the worst cruelty "when we seek
-love--as a stone proffered to us when we ask for bread in famine."'
-
-Jerry felt that in this remark he had made somewhat of a 'header;'
-but fanning herself, she said calmly:
-
-'I _believe_ in you, Mr. Vane; is not that the highest trust one
-creature can give another?'
-
-'May I not implore you to call me Jerry, as--as of old?' he asked, in
-a tremulous voice.
-
-'When alone--yes.'
-
-'Mr. Vane sounds so odiously formal after--after----' his lip
-quivered.
-
-'Well--Jerry it shall be.'
-
-'Thanks, dear, dear Ida; I begin to hope again.'
-
-Poor Jerry did begin indeed to have fresh hope; and are we not told
-that its promises are sweeter than roses in the bud, and more
-flattering to expectation?
-
-'Combine love with friendship, Ida,' he urged, softly, with the tip
-of his moustache almost touching her ear, 'and its tranquillity will
-be great and happy.'
-
-She could not, without growing interest and tenderness, see the
-mournful love-me look that his eyes wore; yet she said, over her
-bouquet of stephanotis, Beverley's favourite flower and perfume:
-
-'Do not talk thus, I implore you, Jerry Vane.'
-
-A gesture of impatience escaped Vane, yet he said, in a voice of
-tenderness:
-
-'Oh, Ida, _I do know it_--too well and bitterly; for as I loved you
-in the past time, so do I love you still!'
-
-'Pardon me, Jerry; you are indeed a kind and faithful----'
-
-'Fool!' he interrupted her, bitterly. 'That is the word, Ida.'
-
-'Nay, nay, don't say so,' she urged, with tremulous lips and
-moistened eyes.
-
-'The first love of a woman's heart is a holy thing, Ida--and yours
-was mine.'
-
-'Let us be friends,' said she, in a painful tone.
-
-'I can never, never be your--mere friend, Ida!'
-
-Like that of Clare and Trevor Chute, but a few days before, it was
-another romance of the drawing-room, the strange intercourse and
-perilous friendship between these two.
-
-She looked wistfully at Vane.
-
-'We know not what God may have in store for us yet,' said she,
-colouring while she spoke, but only with the desire to soothe and not
-ignore the passion he was avowing. 'It may be--may be that we have
-only in our hearts been waiting for each other after all.'
-
-Ere Vane could make a response to this speech, which she felt
-conscious was a rash one, she shivered and grew deadly pale.
-
-'Does the night air chill you, Ida?' he asked.
-
-'I know not--surely no,' said she, in a strange voice: 'it is close,
-rather; and yet----'
-
-'What, dear Ida?'
-
-'I felt a strange shudder come over me as I spoke.'
-
-'It is nervousness, and will soon pass away.'
-
-For a moment she sat with her eyes dropped and her heart palpitating.
-Whence came that strange, cold, and irrepressible tremor, like the
-shock of an electric battery, yet so chilly? What could it be?
-Could she have an affection of the heart?
-
-She started from her seat with manifest uneasiness, and taking his
-arm, said, 'Let us return to the rooms.'
-
-And now there occurred an episode which, however trivial then, Jerry
-Vane recalled with singular and very mingled emotions at a future
-time. As they came out of the conservatory, Colonel Rakes said,
-laughingly:
-
-'Who is your friend, Vane, that is so strangely dressed--at least,
-not in evening costume?'
-
-'Friend! What friend?--where, Colonel?'
-
-'In the conservatory with you and Mrs. Beverley. Ah, Mrs. Beverley,
-too bad of you to appropriate our friend Vane when you know all the
-women are in love with him.'
-
-'Colonel--I?'
-
-'You, my dear girl--for I am old enough to call you so. But about
-your friend----'
-
-'There was no one but ourselves in the conservatory,' said Vane.
-
-'Oh pardon me, Vane, you three were close together.'
-
-'Impossible!'
-
-'As you rose to retire, I saw him slide, as it were, behind the
-shelves of flowers.'
-
-'We saw no one,' urged Ida.
-
-'Can it be a thief or an intruder? Let us see,' said the Colonel;
-and he and Vane searched all over the place, which was brilliantly
-lighted with gas, but without success.
-
-'You must be mistaken, Colonel,' said Jerry, 'as the only other door
-of the conservatory is locked, and on the inside.'
-
-'Though a little short-sighted, I was not mistaken, Vane.'
-
-'And this man----?'
-
-'Stood close behind Mrs. Beverley's chair, within less than
-arm's-length of you both.'
-
-'What was he like?' asked Vane, with genuine irritation and
-astonishment.
-
-'That I can scarcely describe.'
-
-'His face?'
-
-'Was singularly pale, with dark eyes and a dark, heavy moustache.'
-
-'And he actually hung over Ida--Mrs. Beverley, I mean--unseen by me.'
-
-'Yes; closer than good breeding warranted. You must have been very
-much absorbed not to have seen him,' said the Colonel, with a wicked
-smile in his old eyes.
-
-'I was indeed absorbed, Colonel.'
-
-'Don't wonder at it; there are not many Ida Beverleys even in the
-world of London. But, egad, the butler must be told to have an eye
-upon the plate-chest--the racing-cups and silver spoons!'
-
-_Who_ was this strange-looking man whom the Colonel could not
-describe, yet had so distinctly seen close by Ida's chair, listening,
-doubtless, to all their remarkable conversation? It was, to say the
-least of it, a most ungentlemanly proceeding; and Jerry, amid the
-clatter of tongues around him, strove to remember all they had said,
-and whether he had let fall anything that shed a light upon their
-past relations and his present hopes; with the pleasant conviction
-that the eavesdropper must have heard much that was intended for
-Ida's ear alone!
-
-'By Jove!' thought Jerry, 'if I had caught the fellow, there would
-have been an unseemly scene among the Colonel's majolica flower-pots,
-his orchids, and azaleas.'
-
-The interview in the conservatory, and the strange emotion that came
-over her, had somewhat wearied Ida; and like Clare, who had overheard
-some unmistakable remarks on the 'coming event'--remarks certainly
-not meant for her sensitive ear--she was anxious to be home.
-
-'A game old fellah,' she heard Lord Brixton say--a peer whose only
-known ancestor was one of the cottonocracy--to another, whose
-adjusted eye-glass was focussed on Sir Carnaby; 'game indeed! but
-will live to repent his matrimonial folly. _She'll_ lead him a
-dance, believe me, don't you know.'
-
-Even the servants in the hall and at the portico had heard some
-rumour, for there fell upon Clare's ear, as they swept out to the
-carriage, something like this:--
-
-'Oh, yes! I knows 'em--the Honourable Miss Desmond, with her big
-mastiff, whip, and wissel, and only Sir Carnaby on dooty. I've seen
-'em by the Serpentine many times.'
-
-So, then, their names were linked together, even by the men in livery!
-
-And as they drove home in the carriage, leaving Sir Carnaby with his
-fair one, by the lighted windows of the far extent of streets and
-squares, Ida lay back in a corner, muffled in her gossamer-like
-Shetland shawl, soft as Dacca muslin, the 'woven wind,' very silent
-and sad.
-
-She was thinking very much of what Jerry had said, and the hopes she
-had, perhaps unwisely, awakened; but more of the strange cold thrill
-that came over her, for she had too often experienced that unwelcome
-emotion or sensation of late.
-
-In another direction Jerry was 'tooling' home in a hansom, with a
-heart full of happiness. He had struck the vein; he had an interest,
-even though but a renewed interest, in the eyes and heart of his old
-love. Had she not admitted that they knew not what Fate had in store
-for them yet, and that their hearts might only have been waiting for
-each other after all!
-
-Moreover, Sir Carnaby had given, and he had accepted, a formal
-invitation for the shooting and then for the Christmas festivities at
-Carnaby Court; and he drove on, sunk in happy waking dreams of all
-that the future might have in store for him yet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-IN THE KONGENS NYTORV.
-
-'Married, at St. George's Church, Hanover Square, on Saturday, Sir
-Carnaby Collingwood, Bart., of Carnaby Court, to the Hon. Evelyn
-Desmond, only daughter of the Right Hon. Lord Bayswater..... The
-bride wore a dress composed of rich ivory-white Duchesse satin, the
-skirt,' &c., &c.
-
-Such was the announcement which suddenly met the eye of startled
-Trevor Chute, as it was running leisurely and carelessly over the
-columns of a _Times_, nearly a fortnight old, as he lingered over his
-coffee one morning, when seated under the awning in front of the
-Hotel d'Angleterre, in the Kongens Nytorv of Copenhagen.
-
-'Whew!' whistled Chute, as he read and re-read the paragraph, with
-all its details of the bride's elaborate costume, the uniform of the
-bridesmaids, the presents, and so forth, down to the shower of satin
-slippers, and the departure of the happy couple by the Great Western
-Railway.
-
-This event was all the more startling to Chute, as he had been
-wandering from place to place, through Germany and the North of
-Europe, and thus few letters and no papers from England had reached
-him for some time past; and now it was the end of the first week of
-September, when the brown partridges would be learning to their cost
-that the tall waving wheat, amid which their little broods had
-thriven, was shorn on the uplands, and the sharp-bladed plough was
-turning up the barley-stubbles.
-
-It may well be supposed that the contents of this paragraph among the
-fashionable intelligence gave our wanderer occasion for much thought;
-and from the bustle around him--for he had been taking his coffee at
-a little marble table placed literally on the pavement of the square,
-which, if not one of the handsomest places in Europe, is certainly
-the finest in the Danish capital, with its statue of Christian V.,
-with its green plateau and flower-borders--he retired to the solitude
-of his own room; but even as he did so there were others, he found,
-who were near him, and took a gossiping interest in the paragraph.
-
-There were several English people in the hotel, of course, for one
-must travel a long way to find solitude in these our days of
-universal locomotion. Among others there was young Charley Rakes, at
-whose house we have lately seen the Collingwoods--a fast youth of
-Belgravian breed, whom Chute did not like; and he had rather a way of
-keeping at full arm's-length those whom he viewed thus.
-
-'So, so,' he heard him say to a friend; 'the old fellow is married at
-last, and to the Desmond. What the little birds said proves right,
-after all.'
-
-'Poor Clare!' thought Chute, as a burst of laughter followed the
-reading of the paragraph, with great accentuation, aloud.
-
-'Fancy Evelyn Desmond airing flannel bags for the gouty feet of old
-Collingwood, fomenting his bald pate--(he is bald, isn't
-he?)--putting his lovely teeth into a tumbler at night, unlacing his
-stays, and all that sort of thing, don't you know!'
-
-From this rough jesting with names in which he had an interest so
-vital now, Trevor Chute, we say, gladly sought the privacy of his own
-room, where, stretched upon a sofa, he gave himself tip to the luxury
-of lonely thinking, while watching the pale blue wreaths evoked from
-his meerschaum bowl floating upward into the lofty ceiling overhead,
-while the drowsy hum of the city came through the green jalousies of
-the windows, which opened to the Kongens Nytorv, and faced the
-Theatre Royal.
-
-Would this alliance mar for ever the chances of the Major, or
-redouble them, as he would be quite _en famille_ at Carnaby Court and
-the town mansion in Piccadilly?
-
-He recalled the parting words of Clare, and thrust the speculation
-aside as unworthy the consideration of a second. He could awaken in
-the morning now with other thoughts than the dull ache of the bitter
-olden time; for though their prospects were vague and undefined, he
-had her renewed promise, and now more than ever did he recall it,
-with the delicious threat that accompanied the renewal.
-
-'Clare, Clare!' he muttered aloud; and with all the passionate
-longing of a lad of twenty, the man's heart went out to her, the
-absent one.
-
-She was his in spirit only; but oh, for Surrey's magic mirror, to
-bring her before him once again, that he might revel on the calm
-poses of her statuesque figure, her soft, yet aristocratic face, and
-the curve of her lips, that were exquisite as those of a Greuze--even
-as Surrey revelled on the beauties of Geraldine when conjured up by
-Cornelius Agrippa!
-
-Again he was sunk in thoughts of her, as when far away amid the awful
-and undisturbed solitude of the Himalayan forests, where the pines
-that rose to the height of two hundred feet were tipped with
-sunshine, while all was night below; and where the torrents, with
-their ceaseless roar, that wearied the ear, when, swollen by the
-winter rains, they tore past the lonely cantonment of Landour, where
-the last home of Beverley and many more lie, rolling on and on to the
-plains and tea-gardens of Assam.
-
-But his prospects were brighter now, and thus he had thought of her
-happily when idling from place to place, in the glittering Kursaal at
-Hamburg, the many gaieties of Berlin, and of more domestic
-Copenhagen; when among the lonely woods of Norway, and the countless
-isles of the Christiana Fiord, which the Norse packet had traversed
-when its waters were moonlit and luminous, when the dark
-violet-tinted waves of eve rolled on the green shores of the Jungfrau
-land, when he had seen the gorgeous sun setting redly beyond the
-bronze-like forests of Sweden, and flushing alike the sky above and
-the waters of the Sound below--her face was ever before him, and he
-had remembered its expressions and the tone of her voice in every
-hour he spent, especially when alone, by land and sea, in city, wood,
-or wilderness.
-
-'I have Clare's promise and assurance that she loves me still,' he
-would think; 'but how long am I to drag on this absurd life, this
-separate existence? Surely we are not so hopeless now as in that
-time when I was broiling up country.'
-
-With reference to her promise, he pondered, would she write to him?
-Scarcely. Should he write to her, and remind her of it--not that for
-a moment he ever believed it to be forgotten; but of, this policy he
-was doubtful, and so resolved to wait a little, as he would be
-certain to hear from Jerry Vane or some other friend.
-
-But while waiting, Clare might be cast into the attractive influence
-of some one else, and he knew that she was surrounded by all the
-charms and allurements of rank and of wealth. Then he deemed himself
-a wretch to think of such things. Anon he became terrified lest she
-should be ill, as he knew how much this marriage would mortify, fret,
-and worry her.
-
-From his reverie he was roused by the appearance of his valet, Tom
-Travers, standing close by at 'attention,' by pure force of old
-habit. He had neither heard him knock nor enter; neither had he
-heard his tread on the polished floor, which as usual in these
-countries, was uncarpeted.
-
-'Letter for you, sir,' said he, presenting one on a salver.
-
-'Thanks, Tom.'
-
-He tore it open; it was from Jerry Vane, and dated from 'Carnaby
-Court.' This made Trevor's heart leap.
-
-'Jerry must have been making his innings,' thought he, 'to be there.
-He has surely been seized with a most unusual _cacoethes scribendi_.
-I have not heard from the fellow for months, and now he sends me
-nearly sixteen pages. What can they all be about? Perhaps the
-marriage, but more likely that alluring _ignis fatuus_, Ida.'
-
-And once more filling his pipe, he composed himself to peruse the
-letter of his old chum, Jerry, who ran on thus:--
-
-'I suppose you have long since heard how Sir Carnaby Collingwood made
-a fool of himself at St. George's. He has now gone on his wedding
-tour, and I am thankful he is out of the way. It is ungracious to
-write these lines of one's host, and still more so of one I would
-fain be more nearly connected with; but it is the old story of Doctor
-Fell, and you know I never liked Sir Carnaby. How difficult it is to
-analyse sympathy. By Jove, Trevor, it is a thing that no fellow can
-understand, for it takes possession of us whether we will or no;
-hence it is that we are unconsciously attracted or repelled by some
-of those we meet at first sight. And why? No one can tell. Hence,
-a magnetic influence draws us sometimes even to those we should shun,
-or compels us to shun sometimes those whom, from policy, we should
-attract, and in whom we should confide.' ('Has Jerry had a
-sunstroke?' thought Trevor; 'what _is_ all this about?') 'And thus
-it was that a magnetic influence led me to love Ida at first sight,
-and at the same time to dislike Sir Carnaby, and I fear the feeling
-will never pass away, so far as he is concerned.
-
-'I know not where this may find you; but any place is better than
-London at this season. You know what it is in August and September,
-with its pavement fit only for a salamander or a fireman. After
-Ascot, the Collingwoods--the three ladies, at least--left London in
-the height of the season, and went to Carnaby Court. I was with
-them--Ida and Clare, I mean--on Rakes' drag on the Royal Heath on the
-Cup day. Don't you envy me, old fellow? I am sure you do. We spoke
-much of you among ourselves, anyhow, and Clare looked her brightest
-and her best when we did so. By not starting early, we were delayed
-waiting for the young engaged couple; we lost the first two races,
-but that was nothing.
-
-'It was with quiet anger the girls saw the half-concealed billing and
-cooing of the old baronet and the _fiancée_, and with what excellent
-grace he lost some heavy bets to her brother, the Guardsman, and
-others to the lady herself, which she entered in a dainty little book
-with a jewelled pencil, and laughing girlishly as she buried her
-pretty nose in a hot-house bouquet of the colours affected by Sir
-Carnaby.
-
-'Desmond's animal was nowhere; but, perhaps, you won't be sorry for
-that. Some say he has lost a pot of money, and may have to leave the
-Brigade; anyway, it did not prevent him from returning with some
-dolls in his hat-band. For some reason--gout, it was whispered--the
-baronet did not go to the Derby, so the fair Evelyn agreed with him
-that it was only fit for boys, and declined to go either. Why should
-a gentleman go, to have his clothes covered by dust or flour, his
-hat, perhaps, banished by a cocoa-nut; and why a lady, to see and
-hear all the horrid things that were said or done? Yet, in times
-past, she had gone and faced all these things and more, so it suited
-her to play propriety on that Derby Day; but when Ascot came, she was
-there making bets, even 'ponies,' in full swing.
-
-'I came here at first to have a shot or two at the birds for a week,
-by express invitation, as I told you, and then I may, perhaps, join
-you on the Continent after all. Ida matronises the household, and a
-lovely matron she makes, with her sweet, sad grace. Sir John and
-Lady Oriel are here, old Colonel Rakes and his wife, and that titled
-_parvenu_, Lord Brixton, with some others, to await the return of the
-"young couple" from Germany, whither they have gone to hide their
-blushes; and the tenantry are getting up an enormous triumphal
-archway at the avenue gate; the public-house at the village is
-getting a new signboard; the ringers are practising chimes in the old
-Saxon spire; the schoolmaster is composing an epithalamium, and the
-Carnaby volunteer artillery are to fire a salute on the lawn. But I
-wonder how I can write so frivolously, for something occurred on the
-third day after I came that has caused me much discomfort and
-perplexity.
-
-'There is an arbour in the garden, one of many, but before this I
-mean there stands a marble Psyche.'
-
-(How well Trevor Chute could remember that arbour--a kiosk--with all
-its iron lattice-work and gilded knobs, and the masses of roses and
-clematis, Virginia creeper and ivy, all matted and woven in profusion
-over it. Many a time had he sat there with Clare, and often in a
-silence that was not without its eloquence. 'Well; and what of the
-arbour?' thought he, turning again to the letter of Jerry.)
-
-'When passing among the shrubberies, I saw Ida seated in that arbour,
-with a book in her lap, and, to all appearance, lost in thought. A
-flood of amber light, shed by the evening sun, poured aslant through
-an opening in the greenery upon her white neck and lustrous auburn
-hair, which shone like gold, as her hat was off and lay beside her.
-A great joy filled my heart as I thought of the hopes given me during
-the meeting at Rakes' house, and after watching her beauty for a
-minute or so in silence I was about to join her, when she looked
-upward, and then there appeared, what I had not before perceived, so
-absorbed had I been in her, a man, unknown to me, looking down upon
-her--a man with whom she seemed to be in close conversation.
-
-'Some huge branches of roses concealed his figure from me, but his
-face was distinct enough, in closer proximity to hers than good
-breeding generally warrants. It was pale, very, with dark eyes and a
-black moustache--in detail, by Jove, Chute, the same fellow whom
-Colonel Rakes found eavesdropping in the conservatory!
-
-'Startled, alarmed, and scarcely knowing what to think, I still
-resolved to join her. I could scarcely deem myself an intruder,
-considering the terms we had been on, and are on now, and approached
-the arbour, but in doing so had to make a circuit among the
-shrubberies. Half a minute had not elapsed when I reached the
-arbour; no one passed me on the walk, not a footfall was heard on the
-gravel, at least by me; but when I joined her she was alone, with her
-head stooped forward, her face buried in her hands, and when she
-looked up its pallor startled me; yet her grey-blue, changeful, and
-lustrous eyes looked, and with a smile, into mine.
-
-'"Have I disturbed you?" I asked, scarcely knowing what to say.
-
-'"Disturbed me? Oh, no; I was done reading."
-
-'"But some one was with you."
-
-'"When?"
-
-'"Just now."
-
-'"Impossible!"
-
-'"I thought that some one was here," I said, in great perplexity.
-
-'"Oh no--but sit down and let us talk," said she, frankly.
-
-'I thought of the face I had just seen so near her own. I was
-rendered dumb, as I felt my tenure of favour was too slight to risk
-offending her by further remark on a subject so singular; but I was
-pained, grieved, and bewildered to a degree beyond what words can
-express. I looked at her earnestly, and seeing her so pale, said:
-
-'"Are you not well, Ida?"
-
-'"Only in so far that one of those mysterious shudders which I feel
-at times came over me a minute ago."
-
-'I am aware that she has complained of this emotion or sensation
-before, and that the best medical skill in town has failed to make
-anything of it.
-
-'"The odour of those flowers has perhaps affected you," said I,
-somewhat pettishly thrusting aside a bouquet tied by a white ribbon
-which lay near her.
-
-'"Oh no," she replied, "their perfume has always been a favourite of
-mine."
-
-'They were stephanotis, and I have often heard it was a favourite
-flower with Beverley.
-
-'"From whom did you receive the bouquet?" I asked, but something
-indefinable in my tone attracted her.
-
-'"Vane--Jerry!" she exclaimed. "It was brought me by the gardener,"
-she added, and her calm face and serene eye all spoke of one to whom
-doubt or further question would have been intolerable, and the fear
-of anything unknown. Did she know what I had seen, or suspect what
-was passing in my mind? It would seem not; and still more was I
-perplexed and startled on perceiving, as we rose to join Clare,
-Violet, and others who were proceeding laughingly to the croquet
-lawn, a gentleman's glove lying on the seat which she had just
-quitted.
-
-'"Some one has dropped this," said I, taking it up.
-
-'"I never observed it," she replied, quietly; "is it not your own?"
-
-'"No," said I, curtly, as I tossed it into the arbour, with the fear,
-the crushing conviction, that some fellow _had_ been there after all
-How he had effected his exit from the arbour unseen by me was a
-mystery; but how I enjoyed our croquet that afternoon you may imagine.
-
-'In the course of our game I casually discovered that the lost glove
-belonged to Sir John Oriel, but you know that his personal appearance
-scarcely answers to that of the man I have described to you.
-
-'I am loath to admit myself to be jealous; but there is a mystery in
-all this I cannot fathom. My visit here terminates at the end of a
-week, when I shall return to town more miserable in mind than I ever
-did before. I am to be at Carnaby Court for the Christmas
-festivities, but have a vague fear of what may happen in the
-meantime. _This fellow_----' (Jerry had drawn his pen through words,
-evidently as if checking some ebullition, and then continued).
-
-'It was, perhaps, with the naturally kind and womanly desire to
-soothe the sorrow she had caused, and the wound she had inflicted,
-that when next day we met by chance in the same arbour--in fact, I
-followed her to it--she was more than usually affable and sweet with
-me, and I ventured in the plainest terms to speak of the subject that
-was nearest my heart.
-
-'"Confident in my own unchanging love for you, Ida," said I, "honour
-for your feelings, tenderness and kindness have made me silent for
-long; but I think the better time has come when I might openly speak
-to you of love again, dear Ida."
-
-'"Do not urge that subject on me now," she replied, with undisguised
-agitation. "You are a dear good and kind fellow--dear and good
-as--as--as when I first knew you; but I--I----" She paused and
-trembled.
-
-'"What?" I whispered.
-
-'"My heart is in the grave!"
-
-'"This is absurd; it is morbid--it is irreligious!" I exclaimed.
-
-'"Do not say so, Jerry Vane."
-
-'I thought to myself, bitterly (excuse me, Chute), could not this
-confounded fellow Beverley die without bothering her with all his
-gloomy messages and mementoes?
-
-'"If you do not marry me, I shall die an old bachelor. Let not the
-one love of my life be utterly hopeless--you, my first and last!"
-
-'"Poor Jerry, what _can_ I say?" she exclaimed, interlacing her
-white, slender fingers.
-
-'"That you will love me."
-
-'"In time, perhaps--I will try--but cease to urge me now."
-
-'"Bless you for those words, Ida."
-
-'"I am glad to make you happy, Jerry," said she, with a bright smile
-in her beautiful eyes.
-
-'"You do indeed cause my heart to swell with happiness--but--but why
-do you _shudder_?" I exclaimed.
-
-'"Did I shudder?" she asked, growing very pale, and withdrawing her
-hand from mine. "Oh, let us cease this subject, Jerry, and--and
-excuse me leaving you."
-
-'She glided away from my sight down the garden walk, quitting me with
-an abruptness unusual to her, which I observed on more than one
-occasion, and the cause of which I was unable to discover, or
-reconcile even with the rules of common politeness; but now she
-returned with a sad yet smiling and somewhat confused expression of
-face, and showed me the book she had been perusing on the preceding
-day. It was the Baron von Reichenbach's work on magnetism and vital
-force, and pointing to a passage wherein he details the effect
-produced on a girl of highly sensitive organization when influenced
-by a magnet, she said:
-
-'"I feel when I start and leave you exactly what this girl describes
-her sensation to be, drawn from you by an irresistible attraction
-which I am compelled to follow unconditionally and involuntarily, and
-which, while the power lasts, I am obliged to obey, even against my
-own will. So do pardon me, Jerry; I am powerless, and not to blame."
-
-'She spoke with quiet sweetness--with an infinite gentleness and
-sadness, but I saw the man's glove yet lying in the arbour--the
-tangible glove--and thought: "Good heavens! is all this
-acting--insanity, or what?"
-
-'Anyway, I was filled with keen anxiety and deep sorrow to find that
-she whom I loved so tenderly was under influences so strange and
-accountable--so far beyond one's grasp.
-
-'Could the figure of the man I had seen so near her, with his odious
-face so close--so very close--to hers, have been an illusion--a
-hallucination--a thing born of my own heated fancy, and the shifting
-lights and shadows of the arbour and its foliage?
-
-'If so, it seemed very odd indeed that an appearance exactly similar
-should have been seen in his conservatory by such a sentimental and
-matter-of-fact old fellow as Colonel Rakes!'
-
-Here ended Jerry's long and rambling letter, many items in which gave
-Trevor Chute food for long thought and reverie.
-
-As for Ida's nervous illness, for such he deemed it beyond a doubt to
-be--an illness born of her grief for Beverley, and annoyance at her
-father's marriage--he believed the bracing country air would cure all
-that; and as for her magnetic fancies, he thought that the less she
-read of such far-fetched philosophy as that of the Baron the better.
-
-The two stories of the man who had been seen were odd, certainly, and
-to some minds the bouquet, though alleged to be given by the
-gardener, and the glove might have seemed suspicious; but Ida, though
-she had jilted Jerry in time that was past, was not by nature a
-coquette; and knowing this, Trevor Chute, as a man of the world,
-dismissed the whole affair as some fancy or coincidence, and then his
-ideas went direct to Clare and Carnaby Court, and he envied Jerry.
-
-The strange medley of foreign sounds in the vast space of the Kongens
-Nytorv were forgotten and unheard, for Chute's mind was revelling
-amid other scenes and places now. He was even thinking over the
-Derby to which Vane had alluded, and he recalled the days when he had
-been a species of pet in 'the Brigade,' when he looked forward to the
-Derby as the great event of the year, and his own delight when he
-first drove the regimental drag, the selection of the horses, the
-ordering of the luncheon, the colour of the veils, and the road along
-which all the world of London seemed pouring, the golden laburnums at
-Balham in all their glory, the hawthorn hedges at Ewell, the beeches
-and chestnuts that shaded the dusty way, the myriads on the course,
-the wonderful bird's-eye view from the grand-stand, the excitement of
-the races, the stakes and the bets, from thousands to pretty boxes of
-delicate gloves for Clare and others; all of which he should never
-enjoy as he had enjoyed them once. And now impatience made him
-peripatetic, so he rang for his valet, Travers.
-
-'Pack up, Tom,' said he; 'we leave Copenhagen to-morrow.'
-
-'All right, sir--for where?'
-
-'Lubeck. Have a droski ready at ten; I shall take the morning train.'
-
-Travers saluted and withdrew, without thinking or caring whether
-Lubeck was in Hanover, Hindostan, or the island of Laputa.
-
-It was the merest whim or chance in the world that led to the
-selection of Lubeck as a place to be visited; but Trevor Chute could
-little foresee whom he was to meet there, or all that meeting led to.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-BY THE EXPRESS FOR LUBECK.
-
-Though Trevor Chute's old habits of decision and activity remained, a
-new kind of life had come upon him of late; thus he who had found the
-greatest pleasure in his military duties and attending to the wants
-of his men, in the saddle hunting, enjoying the day-dawn gallop, or
-with his rifle and hog-spear, watching under the fierce sun-glare for
-the red-eyed tiger or the bristly boar, as they came to drink in some
-secluded nullah, had now changed into one of the veriest day-dreamers
-that ever let the slow hours steal past him uselessly in succession.
-
-So that time were got through, he cared little how. Would Vane join
-him? He rather fancied that he would not.
-
-Nor did he wish it, though Jerry was the friend he valued most in the
-world, for the urgent reason that through him alone could he hear
-aught of her to whom he could not write, and who would not write to
-him.
-
-Thus Chute lived in a little world of his own, lighted up by the
-remembered face of Clare and the hopes she had bade him cherish.
-
-He marvelled much how Jerry's love affair was progressing, and
-whether Ida would yet forget his other friend, Jack Beverley.
-
-He thought not, by all he knew of her, yet wished that she should do
-so, for Jerry's sake.
-
-There was much of humility in the latter, and he held himself of
-small account with her.
-
-Though proud enough with his own sex, even to hauteur at times, his
-love for Ida made him her very slave; and now how often came back to
-Vane's memory, with regret and reproach, the bygone scoffs and silly
-ironies he had often cast on his friends, who, when he was
-heart-whole, were suffering from the lost smile of those they had
-loved, perhaps more truly than wisely.
-
-Recollections of his own laughter, his gibes and his quips, came back
-to him as if in mockery now.
-
-Trevor Chute and Clare were separated again; but not as before: now
-he did not feel, as in the old time, that he had lost her, and he
-looked back to his last interview with joy.
-
-Long though the time seemed since then, it was but recently that her
-dark eyes had smiled lovingly into his; that all the nameless charms
-of her presence had been with him, that she had spoken with him, and
-that he had listened to her.
-
-When would all this come to pass again?
-
-Till then what mattered it how he killed the time, or whither he went?
-
-Yet pleasure and amusement palled on him; the sea breeze had lost its
-charm, and the sparkling waves their beauty; flowers seemed to be
-without fragrance; the fertile green pastures of Germany and Denmark,
-in all their summer glory, and the woods with the first tints of
-autumn, were without interest to his eye; for he was, more than ever,
-a man of one thought, and that thought was Clare Collingwood.
-
-In this mood of mind, without thinking how or why, he started for the
-famous old Hans town.
-
-The train took him to Korsor, in Zealand; there he crossed the Great
-Belt, and from the deck of the _Maid of Norway_ steamer could see the
-Danish Isles steeped in the noon-day heat, when every sandy holm and
-green headland seemed to vibrate in the sunshine that glistened on
-the blue waves which roll round Nyeborg and picturesque old Odensee;
-and after running through Sleswig and Holstein on a pleasant
-afternoon in autumn, he found himself at Hamburg, in the train for
-Lubeck, 'the Carthage of the North.'
-
-Tom Travers had seen to the luggage and the inspection thereof;
-procured the tickets for himself and his master, and the latter had
-just lit his cigar, and composed himself for his journey, pleased to
-find himself the sole occupant of a carriage, when he suddenly
-observed a lady, undoubtedly an Englishwoman, procuring a bouquet of
-rose-buds from a Vierlander _fleuriste_, one of those picturesquely
-costumed girls who wear a bodice that is a mass of spangles and
-embroidery, a straw hat shaped like a Spanish sombrero, and thick,
-bunchy skirts, such as we may see in an old picture of Teniers, and
-who come from that district which lies between the Elbe and the
-Bille, where the whole population are market-gardeners.
-
-There was some delay, during which the train was shifted a little,
-and amid the bustle of the platform the lady looked about in
-confusion, uncertain which was her carriage.
-
-Already the starting bell had been rung and the shrill steam-whistle
-had sent up its preparatory shriek.
-
-'Dritte klasse, zweite klasse!' the bearded German guard was
-shouting, while waving his little flag of the North Germanic colours.
-'Hierher--nach hinten--nach vorn--Bitte, steigen sie ein, madame!'
-('Pray get in,' etc.)
-
-Mechanically, Chute, in mere politeness, opened the carriage door,
-and she was half handed, half pushed in by the hasty guard, for
-already the train was in motion, and she found herself, it would
-seem, separated from her friends, and swept away by the express in
-companionship with a total stranger.
-
-'How awkward,' she said in German; 'I have been put--almost thrust, I
-may say--into the wrong carriage.'
-
-'You can change at Buchen, the only place where the express stops,'
-replied Chute.
-
-'Ah! you are English,' said she, her countenance languidly lighted
-up. 'So glad; for though I speak German pretty well, I don't
-understand the patois of the people hereabouts, on the borders of
-Holstein.'
-
-Chute merely made an inclination of his head, and was about to throw
-his cigar out of the window, when she begged he would not do so;
-smoking never incommoded her--indeed, she rather liked it.
-
-He thanked her, and they slid into the usual little commonplaces
-about the weather, the scenery, and so forth.
-
-Though handsome, she was _passée_, and Trevor Chute could detect that
-she had in her manner much of the polished _insouciance_, the
-cultivated, yet apparently careless fascination of a woman of the
-world; and it soon became evident that she knew it, and the world of
-London too, in many phases.
-
-Apart from the rank that was indicated by a coronet and monogram that
-were among the silver ornaments on her blue velvet Marguerite pouch,
-he felt certain that she was an Englishwoman of undoubted position,
-and was quite _aplomb_--even a little 'fast'--in her manner; but that
-amused Chute.
-
-He could perceive that she was married, as a wedding hoop was among
-the gemmed rings that sparkled on her left hand--a very lovely one in
-shape and whiteness; moreover, she spoke of her husband, and said
-they were to take the branch line at Buchen for the Elbe, adding:
-
-'Do you go so far?'
-
-'Farther; to Lubeck--a place few people go to, and few come from.'
-
-'Ah! And you travel----'
-
-'To kill time.'
-
-'Most people do so. _We_ came here to be out of the way of people
-one knows and is sure to meet everywhere in more beaten tracks; also
-to get rid of the tedium of visiting ambassadors, and undergoing
-their receptions--one of the greatest bores when abroad.'
-
-She evidently knew London well. In the course of conversation they
-discovered that several of their acquaintances were mutual, and Chute
-began to wonder who she was, and became interested in her, in spite
-of his general indifference.
-
-She seemed to be 'up to' a good deal, too; acknowledged that she made
-quite a little book on the Derby and Ascot--was above taking a bet on
-a favourite in kid gloves only; and told in the prettiest way how
-skilfully, and with a little spice of naughtiness, she had, on more
-than one occasion, learned the secrets of the stables, and of the
-trials in the early morning gallops; and actually how she had
-persuaded people to lay five to one, when the printed lists said
-'evens,' to square herself in the end; and then she laughed, and said
-it was so odd to have her husband travelling in the next carriage,
-and thus quite separated from her; but at Buchen she would rejoin him.
-
-'Do you travel much?' she asked, after a pause.
-
-'Well; yes.'
-
-'Who does not nowadays!'
-
-'My profession----'
-
-'The army?'
-
-'Yes; I have just returned from India.'
-
-'To one who has seen all the wonders and marvels there--the rock-hewn
-temples, the marble palaces and mosques, the vast plains and mighty
-mountains of India--how tame you must think these level landscapes
-and little German villages!'
-
-'They are peaceful scenes, and most English in aspect.'
-
-'But all this part of Europe is quite like the midland counties. You
-were, of course, with the Line in India; but--you have been in the
-Guards?'
-
-'Yes,' replied Chute, becoming thoroughly interested now.
-
-'Ah! I discovered that from a slight remark you made about the
-Derby.'
-
-'Who the deuce can this woman be, who picks all my past life out of
-me?' thought Chute, as they mutually recalled the names of many men
-of 'the Brigade.'
-
-'Do you know Major Desmond?' she asked.
-
-'Slightly,' replied Chute, while a shade crossed his face.
-
-She was quick enough to perceive it, so the subject was not pursued;
-and now the train glided into the station.
-
-She bowed politely to Chute, who endeavoured to open the door for
-her; but it was locked fast, and the guard was at the other end of
-the train.
-
-A sound was heard, like the clanking of a heavy chain, as some
-carriages were uncoupled; and the train again began to move. Chute
-called and gesticulated to some men on the platform.
-
-'Sitzen sie ruhig!' was the only response. 'Sit still! the train is
-in motion!'
-
-And once more they were sweeping with increased speed, through the
-open country. The carriages for the branch line had been left
-behind, with the lady's husband, suite and baggage; and she borne
-helplessly off by the express for Lubeck.
-
-She became very much discomposed on learning this, and that she would
-be carried on fifty-six English miles in a wrong direction before she
-could telegraph to or communicate with her friends in any way; but
-after a time she laughed at it as being quite a little adventure, and
-to amuse her, Chute, by the aid of his Continental guide, indicated
-the various places of interest through which they swept with a mighty
-rush; now it was Ahrensburg or Bargtehude, and after traversing a
-flat, stupid, and uninteresting district, Oldeslohe with its salt
-mines and lime pits, and then Reinfeldt.
-
-Anon the scenery became more and more English in aspect, and enclosed
-with hedges in English fashion, and all so homelike, that one could
-not but remember that not far off lies the nook which still bears the
-name of England, which was transferred by the emigrant Saxons to
-South Britain. The rich meadows, the well-tilled corn-lands, the
-farmhouses and villages, all looking as clean and as pretty as red
-brick, white plaster, green paint and flowers could make them, all
-seem there to remind one of the most beautiful parts in England;
-while in the distance, more than once could be had glimpses of the
-Baltic, with its dark blue waters sparkling in the evening sun.
-Lakes and groves add then to the beauty of the scenery, and
-wood-covered hills that slope gently upward from the bordering sea,
-or smooth sheets of inland water.
-
-Chute's companion seemed really to enjoy her journey; and her first
-annoyance over, she relapsed into her occasional air of nonchalance
-and languid carelessness, that seemed born of Tyburnia and the
-West-end of London; and soon the tall red spires of Lubeck, which had
-been long in sight above the greenness of the level land, were close
-by, as the train ran into the station, near the magnificent and
-picturesque double towers and deep dark archways of the Holstein
-Thor, which stands among the long and shady avenues of the
-Linden-platz.
-
-Though small, beautiful indeed looked the ancient Hans city rising on
-its ridge, with its twelve great earthen bastions covered by
-luxuriant foliage, all steeped in the glorious crimson of the
-after-glow from the set sun that blended with amber and blue.
-
-Trevor Chute handed out his fair companion. There was no train for
-Buchen that night, nor would there be one till nearly noon on the
-morrow. The lady knew that her husband would be taken on to
-Lauenberg, but as she did not know where to telegraph to him there,
-she could but do so to the station-master at Buchen, and on this
-being done, she turned to Chute, for, traveller though she was, she
-was perplexed to find herself in a strange place, without servants or
-escort, and surrounded by unceremonious German touts bawling out,
-'Stadt Hamburg,' 'Hotel du Nord,' 'Funf Thurme,' and the names of
-other hotels.
-
-'Permit me to be your guide,' said he, as Travers procured an open
-droski; 'the Stadt Hamburg is the chief hotel. I shall have the
-honour to escort you there.'
-
-'Thanks, very much indeed,' said she, bowing, and for the first time
-colouring slightly; 'when' (he did not catch the name amid the hubbub
-around them) 'my husband arrives he will be most grateful to you for
-all this.'
-
-And now, as they drove through the Holstein Thor towards the hotel,
-Chute was provoked to see in the face of his man, Travers, a comical
-and perplexed expression. He had never seen his master escorting an
-apparent stranger thus before, and hence knew not what to make of the
-situation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-AN IMBROGLIO.
-
-The great dining-hall of the hotel, where the _table d'hôte_ was
-daily served, was empty; all the visitors had gone to the theatres,
-the Tivoli gardens, and so forth, so Trevor Chute and the lady found
-themselves seated at a long table alone, to partake of a meal that
-was of course deemed supper there, where people dine at 2 p.m.
-
-The _salle_ was elegant; at one end a great console glass, with all
-its curved branches, lit up the gilded cornices, the tall mirrors,
-the long extent of damask table-cloth, the rich fruit, the silver
-epergnes, and the wines.
-
-Without, through the open windows, could be seen, on one side, the
-partially-lighted streets of quaint gable-ended houses, all of the
-middle ages; on the other, the dark and silent woods, where the Trave
-and the Wakenitz wandered towards the Baltic, showing here and there
-amid the shadows 'the phosphor crests of star-lit waves,' while
-overhead was a cloudless sky, the constellations of which had a
-brilliance and a clearness all unknown in England.
-
-All was very still without, and perhaps--for all are abed betimes in
-these northern cities--the only sounds that stirred the air were the
-murmur of the Trave, with the music of a band in a distant Tivoli
-garden.
-
-'Oh, that Clare were with me here!' thought Chute, while endeavouring
-to make himself agreeable to a woman of whom he knew nothing, and for
-whom he cared nothing; and Chute had a natural turn and capacity for
-doing it with all, but with a lady more especially; and she, to all
-appearance naturally fast and coquettish, could not help giving
-Chute, even amid her dilemma, what she deemed one of her most
-effective side-glances; but, though they were not unperceived, they
-were wholly wasted upon him, save as a little source of amusement;
-and after a time her face and manner seemed to express a wish to know
-who this man was who seemed so politely insensible to her powers--to
-those of all women, perhaps. He was quite unlike, she thought,
-anything she had ever met in _her_ world, and she was, consequently,
-somewhat piqued.
-
-On the other side of the table Chute, while toying with the fruit and
-drinking with her the golden moselle, was wondering who his fair
-_compagnon de voyage_ was; and felt that it might be bad taste to
-inquire her name, as she had not asked for his; yet she knew many of
-his old friends in the Brigade--men who were well up in the service
-when he joined, and long before he left it for India.
-
-She seemed fond of questioning about the latter, and led him to speak
-more of himself, and of wild adventures in the dark jungle, where
-daylight scarcely came, than was his wont. She asked him what his
-regiment was, and on his telling her, the expression of her face
-brightened; and laughingly tapping his hand with her perfumed fan,
-she said:
-
-'Then you must know well a friend of mine.'
-
-'Very probably; was he of ours?'
-
-'If not quite a friend, one at least in whom I have an interest.'
-
-'And his name?'
-
-'Chute--Captain Trevor Chute.'
-
-'I am he you speak of,' replied the other, feeling considerably
-mystified.
-
-'You!' exclaimed the lady, colouring.
-
-'There is no other so named in the regiment.'
-
-'You the Trevor Chute who was engaged to--to Clare Collingwood!' she
-exclaimed.
-
-It was Chute's turn to colour now at this blunt remark, and with some
-surprise and annoyance he said:
-
-'I knew not that our engagement was such a common topic as to be
-known to every chance stranger.'
-
-'But I am no stranger to all this,' she replied, with something of a
-haughty smile; 'I have heard much of your love and devotion--a love
-quite like that of a romance rather than of everyday life; but I fear
-greatly that in the present instance your chances of success----'
-
-'Are rather small,' said a voice, and Sir Carnaby Collingwood,
-looking somewhat flurried and weary, but yet endeavouring to cover
-his annoyance by his perpetual smile, suddenly appeared beside them.
-'Got your telegram at Buchen just in time to catch the last train for
-this place, and so am here; and so I find you, Evelyn, _tête-à-tête_
-with Captain Chute!'
-
-Evelyn!
-
-So the lady was the sister of Desmond, and the newly married bride of
-Sir Carnaby. The words he had casually overheard, without
-understanding their exact application, had filled him with a secret
-annoyance that almost amounted to rage and jealousy. The old baronet
-was aware of Chute's great personal attractions, his popularity with
-women, his charms of manner and handsome person, and of the disparity
-in years between them; he was fully aware also of the name Lady
-Evelyn had for scientific flirtation, and for a time he almost feared
-that, perhaps in revenge, Chute might have been overattentive, or
-tempted to improve the occasion, so little did he understand the real
-nature of the man at whom he was gazing now with a cold stare, while
-his lips attempted a smile.
-
-'This is a doubly unexpected pleasure, Sir Carnaby,' said Chute,
-presenting his hand, which the other seemed not to perceive; 'I am so
-glad to have been of service to Lady Evelyn, and permit me to
-congratulate----'
-
-'Thanks, that will do,' replied the baronet, abruptly interrupting
-him; 'you are too apt, sir, to thrust yourself upon members of my
-family, and at times, too, when you are neither wanted nor wished
-for.'
-
-'Sir, this is most unwarrantable!' exclaimed Chute, who grew very
-pale with mortification and bitterness of heart.
-
-'Sir Carnaby!' urged the lady.
-
-'I am astonished, Lady Evelyn, that you could so far forget the
-proprieties as to sit down and sup at a common _table d'hôte_, and
-with a stranger!'
-
-'A stranger!' said Lady Evelyn, with much of hauteur in her manner,
-for never in her life had she been reprehended before; 'he has been
-most kind to me, and seems to know many of my friends.'
-
-'By name, doubtless,' sneered Sir Carnaby.
-
-'Sir,' said Chute, 'you are offensive--unnecessarily so; and, after
-my past relations with your family, your manner is unjustifiable.
-Were you not the father of Clare Collingwood, whom I love better than
-my own life,' he added, with a tremulous voice, 'I would here, in
-Lubeck, teach you--even at your years--Sir Carnaby, the peril of
-insulting me thus!'
-
-'My years! my years! impertinence!' muttered the other, who, we have
-said, had conceived an unwarrantable and unjust dislike of Trevor
-Chute, and now was disposed to give full swing to the emotion.
-Chute's faith to Clare, like that of Vane to Ida, was a sentiment
-utterly beyond Sir Carnaby's comprehension; and, indeed, was perhaps
-beyond 'the present unheroic, unadventurous, unmoved, and unadmiring
-age,' as it has, perhaps justly, been described.
-
-Like all persons of her order, Lady Evelyn had a horror of everything
-that bordered on a scene. For a moment her calm _insouciance_ left
-her, and she darted an angry glance at her husband, but was silent.
-She had lived amidst luxury, splendour, and pleasure, power and, at
-times, triumph, but now 'the perfume and effervescence of the wine
-were much evaporated, and there was bitterness in the cup and a
-canker in the roses that crowned its brim.' At that moment she felt,
-perhaps, ashamed of herself, and of him to whom she was bound, for
-thus insulting an unoffending man.
-
-'Yes, Sir Carnaby,' continued Chute, 'your age and relationship to
-Clare, together with the presence of Lady Evelyn, alone protect you
-in daring to sneer at me.'
-
-Feeling intuitively, with all his anger, that there was something
-grotesque in the situation, and that in it he was forgetting the
-rules he prescribed for himself, and was in 'bad form,' he looked at
-Chute for a moment with a languid but impertinent stare, and after
-ringing the hand-bell, said to the head waiter:
-
-'Desire my valet to select rooms for us on the first _étage_, if
-unoccupied. Lady Evelyn, your maid will attend you at once.'
-
-They left the _salle_ together, she alone bowing to Chute, who,
-though swelling with passion, returned it, but with frigid politeness.
-
-'Thank Heaven,' thought he, as he tossed over a bumper of moselle,
-'poor Clare knows nothing of a scene like this, and never shall from
-me!'
-
-He then thought with mad bitterness of the glory that had departed
-amid the monetary misfortunes of the old general, his father; of all
-that would have been, and once was, his by right to lay at the feet
-of the beautiful girl that returned his love so tenderly; and his
-heart seemed to shrink up within him at the tone assumed by Sir
-Carnaby.
-
-The dislike of that personage towards the man he had injured in the
-past years, and openly insulted now, was at this time as great as
-though the injury and the insult had been received by himself. He
-was one of whom it might be said that 'he never went out of his way
-in wrath, but, all the same, he never missed his way to revenge. He
-had a good deal of ice in his nature; but it was, perhaps, the most
-dangerous of ice--that which smiles in the sun, and breaks to drop
-you into the grave.'
-
-Disquietude of any kind, or mental tumult, were usually all unknown
-to Sir Carnaby, and were, he thought, as unbeseeming as any
-exhibition of temper; hence he was intensely provoked by the manner
-in which, through his own fault, the adventures of the day had wound
-up, as by means of their servants or others--perhaps Trevor Chute
-himself--the affair might be noised abroad till it assumed the absurd
-form of some genuine fiasco.
-
-'Could the old man have been inflamed by the bad wine of the railway
-buffets,' thought Chute. It almost seemed so; and he began to hope
-that when the morrow came, and with it temper and reflection, some
-approach to a reconciliation might--especially if Lady Evelyn acted
-the part of peacemaker--be made by her husband; and if anything like
-an apology came, Chute felt that he would with joy take the hand of
-his cold-hearted insulter.
-
-But in the artificial life she had led since girlhood Lady Evelyn had
-never found much use for a heart, and was not disposed to take upon
-herself the task of pouring oil upon troubled waters. At first she
-had been inclined, in her own insipid way, to like Chute very much,
-as who did not? But afterwards she conceived a pique to him, as the
-lover of Clare, for she remembered how the latter had called her
-marriage 'an affaire de fantasie;' and there had been other passages
-of arms between them, in which such as women, especially well-bred
-ones, with a singular subtlety of the tongue, can gibe and goad each
-other to the core; so, perhaps, she was not ill-pleased, after all,
-that an affront had been put upon Trevor Chute as the known lover of
-Clare.
-
-Feeling himself galled, insulted, and outraged by the whole affair,
-he resolved to quit Lubeck--or the hotel, certainly--the next day, if
-no apology came, but it so happened that he had reason to change his
-mind.
-
-The treatment he had received at the hands of _her_ father was, to a
-man of Chute's sensitive nature, a source of intense pain.
-
-This sudden and insulting hostility to himself made the love of him
-and of Clare seem more than ever hopeless, unless--unless what? in
-revenge he eloped with her, but that Clare would never consent to;
-and now, despite all that had passed between them at their last
-interview, the old dull ache of the heart had come back to him again.
-
-From what did the old baronet's indignation spring?
-
-'What were we saying when he came so suddenly upon us?' thought
-Chute; 'we were speaking of love, but it was mine for Clare. Could
-he have dreamed for a moment that I meant for Lady--oh, absurd!
-absurd!'
-
-Yet perhaps it was not so much so as Chute deemed it.
-
-So long after darkness had sunk over Lubeck, he sat at his window
-thinking, and smoking a favourite pipe given him by Beverley in
-India, and many times he filled and emptied it without seeing his way
-very clear in the future, while the clear northern moon flooded the
-sky with a light against which the taper church spires of the little
-city stood up in sharp and dark outlines, and the bells of the
-cathedral tolled the hours in succession, and the sunshine, or at
-least the grey dawn, began to steal over the woodlands that surround
-Lubeck; and with it came the odour of peat, as the fires were
-lighted--an odour as strong as there is in any Irish village, or a
-Scottish clachan in the wilds of Lorne or Lochabar; and he strove to
-court sleep, thinking that it would be better were he sleeping as
-Jack Beverley did, under the shadowy shelter of the Indian palms and
-the fragrance of the baubul trees.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-'LOVE IS STRONG AS DEATH.'
-
-Jerry Vane did not leave Carnaby Court at the time he intended to do;
-with ulterior views in her kind heart, Clare pressed him to lengthen
-his visit, and enjoy a few days' more shooting. She found but little
-pressing requisite to influence Jerry's actions; yet ere long he had
-cause greatly to deplore that he had not taken his departure earlier,
-and he was again doomed to experience a bitter shock concerning his
-rival--if rival, indeed, he had.
-
-Daily and hourly intercourse afforded him all the facilities he could
-wish for now; but it seemed as though Ida would never again receive
-him or accept him as her lover, yet would permit him to be the slave
-of her fascinations, and without the slightest symptoms of vanity or
-coquetry. She knew all the simple and single-hearted fellow's love,
-and yet, apparently, would not yield him hers.
-
-Indeed, she had more than once hinted or said, he scarcely knew
-which, as he declined to accept the proposition, that she wished his
-regard for her to die away in silence. If so, why did she permit her
-sister to urge that she should remain at Carnaby Court, where, in
-virtue of her widowhood, she yet presided as matron, though some
-change would assuredly take place on the return of Lady Evelyn to
-England.
-
-Whatever were her motives, he could not but give himself up blindly
-and helplessly to the intoxication of the present time, to gaze upon
-her face, to hear her voice, and conjure up the hope that a time
-would come when she would love him better than ever. Besides, her
-society was full of many charms. As in Clare, there was in Ida a
-wonderful attraction to a companion. She had, though young,
-travelled much in Europe, and seen all that was worth seeing. She
-was thus familiar with many countries; and so far as their histories
-and traditions went, together with a knowledge of literature that was
-classic, refined, abstruse, and even mystic, as we have shown, she
-was far beyond an everyday young Englishman like Jerry Vane.
-
-'I am neither a boy nor a madman, yet I dream like both in hanging on
-here as I do!' he would sometimes say in bitterness; and then he
-would recall her remarkable words on that evening in town--'It may be
-that we have only been in our hearts waiting for each other after
-all.'
-
-From what did these hopeful words spring?--coquetry, mockery,
-reality, or what?
-
-She was never known to coquet; she was too genuine a creature for
-mockery; hence, they must have been reality, and, full of this
-conviction, he resolved once more to put it to the issue on the first
-opportunity, and one was secured on the very afternoon he made the
-resolution.
-
-He had not, that day, gone to shoot; the men were all abroad; nearly
-all the ladies were out driving or riding, save Ida, whom he found in
-the curtained oriel of the inner drawing-room, where she was standing
-alone and gazing out on the far-stretching landscape, that was
-steeped in the evening sunshine; the square spire of the village
-church, the tossing arms of an old windmill, the yellow-thatched
-roofs of white-walled cottages stood out strongly against the dark
-green of the woodlands at the end of a long vista of the chase, and
-made a charming picture. In the middle distance was some pasture
-land, where several of Sir Carnaby's fierce little Highland cattle
-and great fat brindled Alderneys stood knee-deep amid the rich grass.
-
-Perhaps she was thinking of how often she had ridden there with
-Beverley, and loved to hear him compliment her on the daring grace
-and ease with which she topped her fences, and the lightness of hand
-with which she lifted her bay cob's head; and Jerry feared that some
-such thoughts might be passing through her mind as he paused
-irresolutely and thought how beautiful was the outline and pose of
-her darkly dressed figure against the flood of light that poured
-through the painted oriel.
-
-The dark shadow had been less upon her to-day than usual, and on
-hearing his footstep on the soft carpet she turned and welcomed him
-with a bright smile. Would that smile ever change again to coldness
-and gloom? Would his hand ever again wander lovingly and half
-fatuously among the richness of her auburn hair, that shone like
-plaits of golden sheen in the light? Heaven alone knew.
-
-'Dear Ida,' said he, longing, but not venturing to take her hand (he
-had been on the point of saying 'darling'--had he not been privileged
-once to do so?), 'I am so glad to find you thus alone, for I have
-much to say, too, that cannot brook interruption.'
-
-'Say on, then, Jerry,' said she, knowing too surely it would be 'the
-old, old story,' while his devotion seemed to touch and pain her, for
-she did honour and pity him, as she had already admitted.
-
-'Ida, save on that night in the conservatory, I have hitherto, from
-motives that you must be well aware of--motives most pure and
-honourable--never spoken to you of the love that my heart has never,
-never ceased to feel for you.'
-
-'Love is no word for me to listen to now, Jerry.'
-
-'Not from--from _me_?'
-
-'Even from you, Jerry.'
-
-'I implore you to be mine, Ida. Do not weep--do not turn away--you
-stand alone now; this recent marriage has made your home a broken
-one; I, too, am alone, and each needs the love of the other. Do not
-trifle with me, Ida!'
-
-'Trifle--I--oh, Jerry Vane.'
-
-'You loved me once!' he urged, drawing very near.
-
-'Yes--I loved you once,' she said, vaguely and wearily.
-
-_Once!_ How cruel the speech sounded, though she did not mean it to
-be so, of course; for as she turned to him, an infinite tenderness
-filled her sparkling eyes of grey or violet blue--for times there
-were when they seemed both; and his met them with something wistful
-and pathetic in their gaze as he said:
-
-'Ida, dearest Ida, time and separation--separation that seemed as if
-it would be lifelong, have but strengthened the regard I bear you;
-and now--now----'
-
-'That I am free, you would say?'
-
-'I entreat you to be mine. Your father would wish it, and I know
-that dear Clare does. All my brightest hopes and associations, all
-my fondest memories are of you; and all have been bound up now in the
-hope that we might yet be so happy, beloved Ida.'
-
-'Do not address me thus,' said she, imploringly, as she covered her
-eyes with her slender fingers tightly interlaced.
-
-'Ah--why?' he asked, entreatingly, and venturing to put a hand
-lightly on each side of her little waist; but she stepped back, and
-said in a low and concentrated voice:
-
-'Because--how shall I say it? Each time you speak thus the strange
-thrill I spoke of passes through me.'
-
-'A thrill?'
-
-'A shudder!' she answered,
-
-'What causes it?'
-
-'I cannot, cannot tell'
-
-'My poor Ida! your nerves are all unstrung, and that absurd book of
-Reichenbach's has made you worse. Promise to marry me, Ida, and we
-will go to Switzerland, to Scotland, or anywhere that the breezes of
-mountains or the sea may restore you to what you once were, even as
-fate has restored you to me!'
-
-But the lovely head was shaken sadly, and the pale face was turned to
-the distant landscape. The passion with which he loved her was of a
-quality certainly very rare in the world of 'society,' she knew that.
-
-'Your wants are very simple, as your tastes are, Ida, and my fortune
-is more than equal to your own--in worldly matters there can be
-nothing wanting.'
-
-'I know, Jerry, that a devotion such as yours deserves all the love I
-could and ought to give it; and yet----'
-
-She paused, and permitted him to retain her hand. Was she, in spite
-of her asseverations to the contrary, about to love him after all?
-The heart of Vane beat wildly amid the dawn of fresh hope.
-
-'Many men have loved, Ida,' he urged, in a soft, low, passionate
-tone; 'but it seems to me that I love you as few men have ever loved
-before. From the first moment I met you I loved
-you--and--and--surely circumstances have tested and tried that love
-to the uttermost.'
-
-'Most true, Jerry.'
-
-'I ask not of what your--your regard has been for another since we
-parted; I ask you only to love me as you did before that time, if you
-can.'
-
-The words that Vane spoke came from the depth of the honest fellow's
-heart, in the full tide of emotion, and Ida could not fail to be
-touched; and as she gave him one of her profound yet indefinable
-glances of pity, the light in her beautiful eyes seemed to brighten
-as her lashes drooped, and Jerry read in them an expression he had
-not seen there since the happy time that was past.
-
-In fact, Ida seemed to be trembling in her heart to think how
-dear--was it indeed so?--how dear Jerry Vane was becoming to her
-again, and how necessary to her his society was daily becoming, and
-how like the old time it was--more like than, with all her past love
-for Jack Beverley and her strange dreams and hauntings, she dared to
-acknowledge to herself!
-
-'Say, Ida, that the gap in my life is to be forgotten--filled up it
-can never be!'
-
-'Jerry, Jerry,' she urged, 'do not press me so--at present, at least!'
-
-She was yielding after all.
-
-'May I hope that you will accept me yet?' he said, pressing her hand
-caressingly between both of his.
-
-'A heart is not worth having, Jerry, that accords to pity only what
-it should accord to love. You have all my esteem, and, perhaps, in
-time, Jerry----'
-
-She paused and shuddered visibly, and sank back with eyes half closed
-and a hand pressed on her bosom as if about to faint or fall, but
-Jerry's arm supported her.
-
-'Good heavens, that sensation again!' he exclaimed.
-
-'I must struggle against it, or it will conquer me,' she said,
-suddenly regaining her firmness and striving to crush or shake off
-the nervous emotion that shook her fragile form and gentle spirit.
-
-'My darling, I am to blame; oh, pardon me, if I, at a time when your
-health--your nervous system, at least--so selfishly urge my claim
-upon your heart, for a strong and tender claim I have, indeed, Ida.'
-
-There was in this an eloquence greater than more florid phrases could
-express, as he spoke, for it seemed as if Jerry's very soul was spent
-in what he said. After a pause, he said, with an arm still round her:
-
-'I will not press you to answer me now, dearest Ida; you are pale and
-seem so weary. I will go, but ere I do so, give me one kiss in
-memory of the past, if not to encourage hope for the future.'
-
-She lifted her sweet face to his, and there was infinite tenderness,
-but no passion in the kiss she accorded him so frankly; and Vane was
-but too sensible of that; while a sound like a deep sigh fell at the
-same moment on the ears of both.
-
-'Who sighed?' she asked, startled, in the fear that they were
-overseen or overheard; 'did you, Jerry?'
-
-'No; yourself, perhaps, darling.'
-
-'Nay--I sigh often enough, but I did not do so now, Jerry.'
-
-'Most strange! We must have deceived ourselves, for here are people
-coming,' he added, as steps were heard in the outer drawing-room.
-'You will give me a final answer, then?' he urged, in a deep, soft
-whisper.
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'When?'
-
-'This evening.'
-
-'Bless you, darling Ida. Where?
-
-'After dinner--we dine at six--say eight o'clock, in the rhododendron
-walk.'
-
-And as she left him, on her pouting lip and in her grey-blue
-eyes--eyes that seemed black at night--Jerry thought that the sadness
-was gone, and replaced by the beautiful smile of old. Unheard by
-both, the dressing-bell for dinner had already rung, and several of
-the sportsmen, Sir John Oriel, Colonel Rakes, and others, entered the
-room. Among them was Major Desmond, the languid, irrepressible, and
-imperturbable Desmond--who, en route from town, had turned up for a
-single day's cover shooting at Carnaby Court.
-
-Overcome by the new tide of his own thoughts, Jerry Vane hurriedly
-left them to talk over their hits, misses, experiences, and exploits
-of the day, the results of which had filled a small-sized pony cart.
-
-He retired to his room to dress, and threw open the window to admit
-the autumn breeze, that it might cool his flushed cheeks and
-throbbing temples. The kiss of that beloved lip--albeit one so
-coldly given--yet seemed to linger on his, and all nature around him
-seemed to grow lighter now that hope had swelled in his heart.
-
-Lit by the evening sun, the leaves of the masses of wild roses and
-other creepers that clambered round the mullioned window of his room,
-seemed to murmur pleasantly on the passing breeze, that brought also
-the chimes of the village spire, the voices of the exulting birds,
-and the pleasant rustle of the old oak trees in the chase. To the
-ear of Jerry Vane there seemed to be a melody in all the voices of
-nature now, for his own heart was all aglow with joy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-'JEALOUSY CRUEL AS THE GRAVE.'
-
-He could gather from the manner of Ida nothing of what was passing in
-her mind during dinner. He observed, however, that she wore on this
-occasion a flower in her auburn hair, the first with which she had
-appeared since the time of her mourning--a simple white rose. He
-remembered that he had admired the simple decoration long ago, and
-that she had been wont to wear it to please him ere she had worn
-flowers to please another, so hope grew stronger in the heart of Vane.
-
-She chatted away with Desmond and joined in the general conversation
-with more gaiety than usual, but not without showing a little
-abstraction at times, as if her thoughts wandered. She accorded
-little more than an occasional glance to Vane, with a soft smile on
-her sweet face, though there was the old languor in all her actions
-and manner, while she gave a programme of the forthcoming Christmas
-festivities at Carnaby Court, to which he, and some of the others
-present, were invited.
-
-At last the ladies left the room, and the last glance, as she
-retired, rested on _him_. Jerry's heart beat like lightning. The
-hands of the clock above the mantel-piece were close upon the hour of
-eight when--after having to linger over a glass or two of wine--he
-quitted the table, and the house unperceived, and hastening through
-the garden, where the few flowers of autumn were lingering yet, he
-reached the appointed place, the long vista of which he could see in
-the twilight, bordered by gigantic rhododendron bushes, intermingled
-with lilac trees and Portugal laurels.
-
-She had not yet come, and with a heart in which much of joyous
-happiness was blended with hope and anxiety, Jerry walked slowly to
-and fro, as he knew not at which end of the alley she might appear.
-The sun had set more than an hour and a half; there was a deep
-crimson flush in the west, against which the great trees of the chase
-stood up still, motionless, and dark as bronze, for the night was
-calm, without a breath of wind, and the garden was so lonely and
-still, that Jerry thought he could actually hear the beating of his
-heart.
-
-Time stole on; the twilight passed away, and the shadows and shapes
-became lost and blended in darkness. The clock in the central gable
-of the court struck quarter after quarter, till Jerry, peevish with
-impatience now, and alone, too, found the hour of nine was nigh, and
-that Ida had not appeared.
-
-Could he have mistaken the place, or she the time? Had sudden
-illness come upon her, as her health was so uncertain now? Had she
-been interrupted by some of their numerous guests? To forget, or
-omit to come, were surely impossible!
-
-A distant step on the ground made his pulses quicken.
-
-'At last, dearest, dearest Ida!' he muttered aloud.
-
-But no; that could not be the step of Ida, hastening lightly and
-quickly to keep her appointment. It was a slow and heavy one--that
-of a man; and Major Desmond came sauntering along, in full evening
-costume, with his hands in his coat-pockets, and the red glowing end
-of a cigar projecting from his bushy moustache. He was chuckling,
-laughing to himself, and evidently much amused by something.
-
-Vane would gladly have avoided him and quitted the rhododendron walk,
-but to do so might be to lose the last chance of seeing whether Ida
-kept her appointment; while, if she came, it might indicate that one
-had been made.
-
-He could but hope that the tall guardsman would pass and leave him;
-but it was not to be so. He had partaken freely of wine, and he was
-disposed to be jocular, confidential, and particularly friendly, so
-he passed his arm through Vane's, saying:
-
-'As I passed into the garden a few minutes ago, just to enjoy a
-soothing weed, I made the funniest discovery in the world--by Jove I
-did!'
-
-'You discovered what?' asked Vane, intensely annoyed.
-
-'Well--ah--that, with all her grief for our friend Beverley, I don't
-think the fair Ida is quite beyond being consoled. Do you take?'
-
-'Not in the least,' was the curt response.
-
-'She has an admirer.'
-
-'Many, I should think,' replied Jerry, becoming more and more amazed
-and nettled by the tone and laughter of the guardsman.
-
-'But she has one in particular, I tell you.'
-
-'Who do you mean?' asked Vane, colouring, as he thought the reference
-was to himself.
-
-'By Jove, that is more than I can tell you!' said Desmond, with
-another quiet laugh, as he tossed his cigar away; 'I only know that
-as I lounged slowly past the arbour where the marble statue stands,
-about ten minutes ago, I saw her in close proximity--quite a
-confabulation--with a fellow, though I did not hear their voices;
-doubtless they were "low and sweet," like that of Annie Laurie.'
-
-Was this assertion a piece of Desmond's impudence, or the result of
-the baronet's champagne? his idea of wit, fun, or what?
-
-Jerry Vane felt his face first redden and then grow pale with fury in
-the dark.
-
-'You must be mistaken,' he said, sternly--almost imperiously.
-
-'Not at all, Vane,' replied the other; 'I passed on without affecting
-to perceive them; but I could make out that the fellow who hung over
-her as she sat at the table was not one of the guests--very pale,
-with a black, lanky moustache.'
-
-'Oh, it is impossible!' urged Vane in a very strange voice.
-
-'Not at all, I tell you,' replied Desmond, in a somewhat nettled
-tone. 'I simply amused myself with the fun of the thing. I heard a
-sound, and on looking up saw her start up, look at her watch, and
-then hurry--almost rush----'
-
-'This way?'
-
-'Oh, no!'
-
-'Whither, then?'
-
-'Straight into the house by the back drawing-room window.' And the
-tall dandy stroked his long moustache, and uttered one of his quiet
-laughs again.
-
-Vane, past making any comment, remained silent and in utter
-bewilderment. His heart seemed to stand still; and he felt a more
-deadly jealousy, a more sickening and permanent pang in it, than he
-had ever endured before. He remembered what he himself had seen in
-that bower, and recalled the eavesdropper in the conservatory, who
-was seen by another, and whose personal appearance tallied exactly
-with what Desmond had said, and an emotion of heart-sick misery--of
-bitter, bitter disappointment and hopeless desolation, came upon him.
-
-Great was the mental torture he endured for some moments. While he
-had been awaiting her in that walk, with such emotions in his soul as
-were known only to heaven and himself, she had been in dalliance with
-another--an unknown man--in that accursed bower _again_! 'Violent
-passions,' he knew, 'are formed in solitude. In the bustle of the
-world no object has time to make deep impression.' So are deep
-emotions formed in solitude; but where had she learned to love this
-unknown, if love she did? and if she did not, what was the object of
-their secret meetings, and whence the power he seemed to have over
-her?
-
-All these ideas and many more flashed through the mind of Jerry Vane,
-whose lips became dry as dust. His tongue, though parched, seemed
-cleaving to the roof of his mouth, whilst a rush of blood seemed
-mounting to his brain, and a giddiness came upon him. He heard the
-drawling and 'chaffing' remarks upon the arbour scene, which Desmond
-had resumed, but knew not a word he said, while arm-and-arm he
-mechanically promenaded to and fro with him.
-
-He had but one idea--Ida false, and _thus_!
-
-He knew not what to think, in whom to believe, or in whom to trust
-now, if it were so. Heaven, could such falsehood be, and within a
-few brief hours! he thought.
-
-Then for the first time there began to creep into the heart of Vane
-something of that hatred which in the end becomes so fierce, cruel,
-and bitter--the hate that is born of baffled or unrequited love!
-
-Anon, his heart wavered again; the unwonted emotion began to die
-away; it seemed too strange and unnatural and the passion he had for
-Ida vanquished him once more, by suggestions of utter unbelief, or
-there being an unexplainable, but dreadful, mistake somewhere.
-
-It could not be that all along she had been deceiving him and others
-by playing a double game of dissimulation, while acting outwardly
-such gravity and grief! The soft and sad expression of the chaste
-and sweetly pretty face that seemed before him even then forbade the
-idea, yet the galling fear, the stinging suspicion, remained behind.
-
-'She refused Jerningham, of ours, who was foolish enough to propose
-in the first flush of her widowhood, and she refused Jack Rakes of
-the Coldstreams last month, and sent him off to the Continent to
-console himself,' Desmond was saying; 'she has vowed, they say, that
-she would never, never marry, after the death of that fellow in the
-line--what's his name?--Beverley, don't you know, and here I find her
-billing and cooing most picturesquely in an arbour! It is right good
-fun, by Jove! I only wonder who the party is that was receiving "the
-outpouring of an enamoured heart, secluded in moral widowhood;" and I
-might have discovered, if I had only pretended to blunder into the
-arbour; but then I hate to make a scene, and it's deuced bad form to
-spoil sport.'
-
-Vane felt it in his heart to knock the laughing plunger down, when
-hearing him run on thus.
-
-It began to seem painfully evident that all this episode could not be
-falsification. Major Desmond had no particular interest in Ida,
-though piqued, as much as it was in his lazy nature to be, at Clare,
-for refusing the lounging offer he had made her.
-
-For the other he had neither liking nor disliking; but, in all he
-told Vane, he seemed inspired only by that love of gossipy chit-chat
-in which even men of the best position will indulge by the hour at
-their club or elsewhere, together, perhaps, with the desire, so
-invariable, to quiz the grief of a widow, especially if she is young
-and handsome.
-
-'There is,' says a writer, 'no weakness of which men are so ashamed
-of being convicted as credulity, and there is none so natural to an
-honest nature.'
-
-But to the storm that gathered in the honest heart of Jerry were
-added rage, astonishment, and an overwhelming sense of utter
-disappointment.
-
-Where had this unknown come from, and whither did he go? Where had
-she met him, and how long had this mysterious, and, to all
-appearance, secret intimacy lasted? What manner of man was he, that
-she was ashamed to have him introduced to her family? He had
-heard--he had certainly _read_--of ladies, even of the highest, most
-delicate nurture and tender culture, by some madness, inversion of
-the mind, or by temptation of the devil, taking wild fancies for
-valets and grooms, and even marrying them in secret, and thus at
-times all manner of horrible speculations crowded into the now giddy
-brain of Jerry.
-
-Ida! wildly as he loved her he would rather she were dead than less
-or not what he supposed and believed her to be; but he thought
-bitterly, 'Alas! where was there ever man or woman who reached the
-spiritualised standard of idealistic love?'
-
-So, in spite of himself--it was not in human nature that it could be
-otherwise--his old jealousy, that barbarous yet just leaven which he
-had felt in the past time, when she preferred Jack Beverley to
-himself, grew in his heart again.
-
-He marvelled much how she would look when he joined her among other
-guests in the drawing-room; but the face he had looked for so
-anxiously was not there when he and Desmond entered it; and he was
-actually somewhat relieved when he was informed by Clare that Ida was
-unable to appear, and had retired to her room 'with a crushing
-headache.'
-
-He expressed some well-bred sorrow to hear this, very mechanically
-and quietly, adding that he was the more sorry to hear it as he
-believed he would have to leave for town early on the morrow.
-
-Clare heard this sudden announcement with surprise, and regarded
-Jerry's face earnestly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-A QUARREL.
-
-But one idea or conviction, prevailed in the mind of Jerry Vane:
-
-'She who was so readily false to me before, may easily be so again!'
-
-If he slept at all that night, his sleep was but a succession of
-nightmares, with dreams such as might spring from a slumber procured
-by the mandragora; one aching thought ever recurring amid the
-darkness of the waking hours, and all the more keenly when morning
-came, and he knew that he must inexorably see and talk with Ida in
-the usual commonplace way before others, ere he left her for ever,
-and quitted Carnaby Court to return no more.
-
-The tortures he had endured he resolved never to endure again. It
-should never be in the power of Ida or any other woman to place her
-heel upon his heart and crush it, as she had crushed it twice!
-
-Yet when he saw her at the breakfast-table, in all her fresh morning
-loveliness, and in the most becoming demi-toilette, with her gorgeous
-hair so skilfully manipulated by her maid, and her grave, chastely
-beautiful face rippling with a kind--almost fond--smile, as if
-greeting him and asking his forgiveness too, he knew not what to
-think, but strove to steel himself against her for the future.
-
-She had a newly gathered white rose--his flower, she was wont to call
-it--in her bosom; and that rose was not whiter than the slender neck
-round which the frills of tulle were clasped by a tiny coral brooch.
-
-At times, when he looked on her, and heard the steadiness of her
-musical voice and sweet silvery little laugh, and beheld the perfect
-ease of her manner and the candour of her eyes, he could have
-imagined the affair in the garden to have been a dream, but for the
-strange and conscious smile that hovered in the face of Desmond when
-he addressed Ida, while making a hurried breakfast before his
-departure for London.
-
-'I would take the same train with you, Desmond,' said Vane, 'but that
-my things are not packed.'
-
-'Do you leave us so soon?' asked Ida, who overheard him.
-
-'I must,' said Vane, for whom there had been no letters that morning,
-much to his annoyance, as he wished to plead something like a genuine
-excuse to Clare for taking an abrupt departure. 'I mean to leave
-England--perhaps even Europe, if I can.'
-
-'For where?' asked Ida, growing very pale.
-
-'Well, I scarcely know,' replied Vane, with a laugh that certainly
-had no merriment in it.
-
-'Do you really mean this?'
-
-'Yes,' he replied, curtly.
-
-She was silent, but looked at him pleadingly, and even upbraidingly
-across the table, while Jerry, becoming, as he thought, grim as Ajax,
-busied himself with a piece of partridge pie.
-
-'No, no,' thought he; 'I shall not again begin that hazardous play
-with love, which some one truly calls "the deadly gambling of heart
-and thought and sense, which casts all stakes in faith upon the
-venture of another's life."'
-
-He had hoped that by the mere force of his own passionate love for
-her some tenderness might be reawakened in her heart for him; and
-now--now, after all, she was actually fooling him--vulgarly fooling
-him!
-
-By a glance that was exchanged between them they tacitly quitted the
-room when breakfast was over, and passed together--he following with
-undisguised reluctance--into the garden, through a window which
-opened like a folding-door on the back terrace of the mansion.
-
-'What is the meaning of this sudden departure, Jerry?' she asked,
-when they reached a part of the garden near the very bower Desmond
-had referred to. 'Do you mean it?'
-
-'I do.'
-
-'How strange you are in your manner, Jerry! Look at me! why, you are
-quite pale!'
-
-He dared not tell her the cause at first; he felt ashamed of his own
-folly--ashamed of her and of the accusation he had to make.
-
-'I was in the rhododendron walk last night. You did not come, as you
-promised.'
-
-'I--I could not,' said she, her pallor increasing, as she cast down
-her eyes.
-
-'My heart was wrung by your absence, Ida; but still more wrung--ay,
-tortured nigh unto death--by the cause!'
-
-'_Cause?_' said she, trembling.
-
-'Yes,' he replied, sharply and bitterly.
-
-'Oh, you know not the cause,' she said sadly, as she shook her head.
-
-'I do know, and so do others; but I have no right to question your
-actions or control your movements--no warrant for--God help me, Ida,
-I scarcely know what I say.'
-
-'So it seems,' said she, a little haughtily.
-
-'Oh, Ida, what is this man to you?' he asked, huskily.
-
-'To me--who--what man?' she asked, with a bewildered air.
-
-'He who is always hanging about you--he who detained you in that
-arbour last night, when you promised to meet me, and give me the
-answer I prayed for in yonder oriel.'
-
-Astonishment, alarm, and anxiety pervaded the delicate coldness of
-her pure, pale face, and then a flush--the hectic of unwonted
-anger--crossed it.
-
-'Jerry--Mr. Vane--are you mad?' she exclaimed. 'How dare you address
-me thus?'
-
-'Mad--I fear so; but for the love of pity, Ida----'
-
-'Well, sir.'
-
-'Tell me, what am I to think?'
-
-'Enough,' said she coldly; 'the words we have exchanged are most
-painful to us both.'
-
-'They are agony to me, Ida. But say, were you in that arbour last
-night?'
-
-'On the way to meet you, _I was_,' she replied, but with hesitation
-in her manner.
-
-'And there you remained?'
-
-'Oh, thrice I endeavoured to leave the arbour and keep my appointment
-with you, and then--then----'
-
-She paused, and her voice died away upon her quivering lip.
-
-'What? Speak, dearest Ida.'
-
-'That strange magnetic influence, which I told you impels my actions
-and controls my movements, came over me like a species of drowsy
-sleep, and I remained till the time to meet you was long since past.'
-
-'And _he_ who had this influence over you--he who detained you,' said
-Vane, bitterly and incredulously.
-
-'Jerry! this to _me_!' she exclaimed, her eyes expressive now of sad
-reproach. 'Think of me as you will, I can explain no more.'
-
-Her eyes closed, her little white hands were clenched and pressed
-upon her bosom, and again, as yesterday in the oriel, she seemed on
-the point of sinking. She had suddenly become bewildered and
-confused, and this bewilderment and confusion were but too painfully
-apparent to the sorrowing and exasperated Vane.
-
-Was she thinking it possible that _that_ of which she had spoken in a
-moment of confidence to Trevor Chute--the thing or being unseen, but
-which she felt conscious of being near her--could have been by her
-side in that dark arbour then, or what caused her emotion? Did a
-memory of the icy and irrepressible shudder she felt at times, when
-that dread pang occurred to her, come over her then?
-
-Perhaps so, for the nameless dread that paralysed her tongue made her
-more tolerant to Jerry. Anon she recovered herself, and pride of
-heart, dignity of position, and a sense of insult came to her rescue
-and restored her strength, and she looked Vane steadily, even
-haughtily, in the face.
-
-'You put my faith to a hard test, Ida,' said he; 'God alone knows how
-hard.'
-
-'If I could spare you a pang, Mr. Vane, He knows I would,' she
-replied; 'but when last you spoke to me about a strange gentleman
-being with me in the arbour, I thought your manner odd and
-unwarrantable, and now I think it more so. I trust this is the last
-time the subject will be referred to--and, and--now I wish you
-good-morning.'
-
-And bowing with gravity and grace, not unmingled with hauteur, she
-swept away towards the house and left him. Great was the shock this
-event, and this most unanticipated interview or explanation, gave the
-heart of Vane, who made not the slightest attempt to detain her, or
-soothe the indignation he had apparently kindled; but he stood rooted
-to the spot, motionless as the marble Psyche on its pedestal close by.
-
-If perfidy rendered her unworthy of him, why regret her? Yet it was
-so hard, so bitter, and so unnatural to deem her so. With all his
-pride, we have said that Jerry had none with Ida, and the moment the
-accusation against her escaped him, he repented of it. With all her
-tenderness and gentleness, he knew how dignified and resolute Ida
-could be. He recalled all the varying expressions he had seen in her
-sweet face, great amazement, pain, alarm, and sorrow, culminating in
-indignation and pride; and though she left him in undisguised anger,
-he still seemed to hear the pathos of her voice, which seemed filled
-with unshed tears.
-
-Was he yielding her up in anger now, and not in sorrow as before, to
-another who would revel in all the spells of her beauty and
-sweetness, and thus ruining all for himself again?
-
-Then he said through his clenched teeth:
-
-'What matters it? If she is so perfidious, let her go. But I have
-been too long here playing the moonstruck fool.'
-
-Yet with a pitiful desperation he clung to the faint hope that ere he
-left, some explanation, other than he had received, might be given
-him; that another interview might pass between them which would
-change the present gloomy aspect of their affairs, and place them
-even on their former vague and unsatisfactory basis. But Major
-Desmond had taken his departure during the interview in the garden;
-thus Vane had no opportunity of recurring to what he had related
-overnight in the garden; and Ida remained studiously aloof,
-sequestered in her own room, and he saw no more till the moment of
-his departure, and even then not a word passed between them.
-
-Clare Collingwood heard with genuine concern the announcement of
-Vane's sudden departure that day; he was the sole link between her
-and Trevor Chute, and the medium through which she heard of all the
-wanderer's movements.
-
-It was long past mid-day ere he could leave the Court, and as he
-passed through the hall he saw the ladies taking their afternoon tea
-in the morning room, and amid that brilliant group, with their
-shining silks and rich laces, their perfumed hair and glittering
-ornaments, he saw only the bright Aurora tresses and sombre dress of
-Ida, her jet ear-rings and necklet contrasting so powerfully with the
-paleness of her blonde beauty--the wondrous whiteness of her skin.
-She was smiling lightly now at Violet, who was coquetting with, or
-quizzing, old Colonel Rakes.
-
-Why should not Ida smile when the eyes of 'Society' were upon her?
-
-It fretted Vane, however, that she should be doing so on the eve of
-his departure, and added fuel to the fire that consumed him. He was
-just in the humour to quarrel with trifles. He simply bade her adieu
-as he did all the rest, and bowed himself out; but he could not
-resist making some explanation to Clare, who followed him to the
-porch, and whose expressive eyes seemed to ask it, for she had
-detected in a moment that something unusual had passed between him
-and Ida.
-
-She heard him with pain and bewilderment.
-
-'All this must, and shall, be fully explained,' said Clare, with her
-dark eyes swimming in tears.
-
-'I doubt it.'
-
-'Doubt not!' said she, firmly, 'and, dear Jerry, promise me that you
-will forget your quarrel with Ida, and visit us again at Christmas;
-papa and--and Lady Evelyn will be home long before that. Do you
-promise?'
-
-'I promise you, Clare--dear Clare, you were ever my friend,' said he,
-in a broken voice, as he kissed her hand, and would have kissed her
-cheek, perhaps, but for the servants who stood by; and in half an
-hour afterwards the train was sweeping him onward to London.
-
-'I had hoped, Ida, that Jerry Vane's visit would have had a different
-termination than this,' said Clare, the moment she got her sister
-alone. 'Why, you have actually quarrelled.'
-
-'No, not quarrelled,' urged Ida.
-
-'What then?'
-
-'Parted coldly, certainly.'
-
-'Why did you not keep your appointment with him?'
-
-Again the expression that Vane had seen on her face--pain and
-embarrassment, sorrow and bewilderment, were all visible to Clare,
-who had to repeat the question three times; then Ida said:
-
-'As he himself has told you, he accused me--me--of meeting another,
-and I was almost bluntly accused thus, Clare, when--when I was
-certainly beginning to feel that I might love him with the emotion
-that I deemed dead in my heart and impossible to resuscitate.'
-
-'All this seems most inexplicable to me!' said Clare, with the
-smallest expression of irritation in her tone. 'Poor Jerry! he loves
-you very truly, Ida, and sorely indeed has that love been tested.'
-
-'He loved me because he believed in me; that regard will cease when
-he ceases to believe, as he has done, through some insulting
-suspicion, the source or cause of which is utterly beyond my
-conception,' said Ida, wearily and sadly. Then she threw an arm
-round the waist of Clare, and lying on her sister's breast, said in a
-low voice, 'Another seems to hold me by bonds that will never be
-unloosed, Clare.'
-
-'_Another_, Ida!'
-
-'Beverley.'
-
-'What madness is this?' asked Clare, regarding her sister's face with
-great and deep anxiety.
-
-'I loved Beverley as I never loved Jerry; it was, indeed, the passion
-which Scott describes as given by God alone:
-
- '"It is the secret sympathy,
- The silver link, the silken tie,
- Which heart to heart and mind to mind
- _In body and in soul can bind_."
-
-Beverley's last words were that we should meet again; and we have met
-again--nay, seem to be always meeting in my thoughts by day and
-dreams by night; but always the memory of him was most vivid when
-Jerry Vane was near me or in my mind.'
-
-'How will all this end?' said Clare, in a voice of sorrow. 'I would
-that papa were here.'
-
-'He had never much sympathy with, or toleration for, my grief, and
-now that it is passing away, he would have still less with these
-secret thoughts or strange impressions I have told to you, dear
-Clare, and even hinted at to Trevor Chute.'
-
-'It is a disease of the mind, Ida; but all this seems so
-incomprehensible to me. Surely we have power and will over our own
-acts, and even in these days, when so much is said, thought,
-written--yes, and practised too, about spiritualism, mysticism, etc.,
-there is the danger of adopting that as an _inevitable law_ to which
-we must conform, but which we should with all our power resist as the
-vilest of superstition.'
-
-Ida only shook her head mournfully, and poor Clare's motherly and
-sisterly heart was stirred within her. She knew not what to think;
-but she clung to the hope that ultimately a marriage with Jerry Vane
-would dissipate these morbid impressions with which the mind of Ida
-had become so singularly and so strongly imbued.
-
-But now, after this, rumours began to spread--though the strange man,
-if man he was, had disappeared, and was seen no more, but seemed to
-have taken his departure with Jerry Vane--rumours born of chance,
-remarks overheard by listening servants, and taken to the still-room,
-the kitchen, the stable court and gamekeeper's lodge, of spectral
-appearances in the rhododendron walk, in the arbour where the Psyche
-stood, and elsewhere about the ancient mansion, till at last, through
-Major Desmond, they actually reached the ears of Sir Carnaby
-Collingwood abroad, and though they excited the merriment and languid
-curiosity of Lady Evelyn, they caused him anger and annoyance, and
-not a little contempt: 'Such stories are such deuced bad form--get
-into the local papers, and all that sort of thing, don't you know.'
-
-One fact became pleasantly apparent to Clare ere long, that though
-Ida regretted the departure of Vane, and still more the inexplicable
-cause of their mutual coldness, her health for a time improved
-rapidly: the colour came back to her cheek, and the brightness to her
-eyes; she loved as of old to take her share in pleasures and
-amusements; and the chill shiver she had been wont to experience
-affected her less and less--but for a time only.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE EMEUTE AT LUBECK.
-
-At the Stadt Hamburg Sir Carnaby and his bride probably secluded
-themselves in their own apartments on the day after the unpleasant
-rencontre related in Chapter XIV.; at least Trevor Chute saw nothing
-of them at the _table d'hôte_, which was filled by its usual
-frequenters, officers of the garrison, German Jews and Jewesses, and
-those whose names inevitably figure on the board in the hall as
-'Grafs, Herrs, Rentiers, and Privatiers.'
-
-Avoiding the hotel--on consideration, Chute saw no reason why _he_
-should change his quarters--he had 'done' all Lubeck, seen the Dom or
-Cathedral, a huge red-brick edifice of the twelfth century, with its
-wonderful screen, stone pulpit, and brass font; the Marien Kirche,
-with its astronomical clock, where daily the figures of the seven
-Electors pass in review, and bow before the Emperor; the wonderful
-old Rathhaus; and the stone in the marketplace whereon 'the Byng' of
-Lubeck, Admiral Mark Meyer, was judicially murdered for not fighting
-a Danish fleet; the wood carvings in the Schusselbuden Strasse; and
-the famous letter of Sir William Wallace to the Hans cities--the
-first 'free trade' document the world ever saw; and when evening was
-come again he found himself seated, somewhat weary and almost alone,
-at the long board of the _table d'hôte_ in the great dining-room.
-
-A tempestuous sun was setting in the west, against the crimson glow
-of which the black kites, like flies amid wine, seemed to float above
-the trees of the Linden Platz; and the waters of the Trave and the
-Wakenitz were reddened, as they flowed past the timber-clothed
-ramparts, the copse woods and turfy moors, towards the sea.
-
-Something portentous seemed in the air, the sky, and even in the
-manner of the people of Lubeck that evening. Trevor Chute observed
-that the Prussian officers who were at the table, or smoking under
-the verandah outside the windows, all talked confidentially of
-something that was expected--he could not make out what, and the
-military eye of Chute observed that, since noon, double sentinels had
-been posted at the Burg Thor, the Rathhaus, and elsewhere.
-
-The thoughts of Trevor Chute went back over the many stirring events
-of his past life since he had known Clare and been rent from
-her--events full of sporting excitement, of military peril, and
-Indian adventures, of rapid change by land and sea, of aimless
-wanderings like the present, of wet night marches and wild gallops,
-amid the scorching heats of the Punjaub, when men fell by the
-wayside, stricken and foaming at the mouth with sunstroke, or
-writhing with the deadlier cholera, and he knew not why all this
-retrospect occurred to him. Was he on the eve of any great danger?
-It almost seemed so.
-
-The evening closed in dark and gloomy, and though the atmosphere was
-stifling, Chute perceived that the lower windows of the hotel were
-being all closed and barricaded. He was then informed by the _Ober
-Kellner_ that a serious riot was expected by 'His High Wisdom, the
-Senior Burgomaster,' among the tradesmen and working population, who
-were all 'on strike,' and hence the doubling of the guards on the
-town house and at the city gates.
-
-Sounds of alarm from time to time, shouts and other noises, were
-heard in the echoing streets, then followed the tolling of an alarm
-bell, and the beating of the Prussian drums, while flames began to
-redden the sky in one quarter, thus indicating that the houses of
-some persons obnoxious to the rabble had been set on fire outside the
-Holstein Thor.
-
-Despite the advice of the landlord and the waiters, Trevor Chute
-remained on the steps at the hotel door, enjoying a cigar, and
-determined to see what was going on, though but little was visible,
-as in the streets the rioters had turned off the gas. Ere long he
-could make out something like the head of a great column debouching
-over the open space before the hotel.
-
-For a moment nothing could be distinguished but that it was a crowd,
-shadows moving in the shade, but accompanied by a roar of sounds,
-cheers, hoarse hurrahs, oaths and imprecations in German, with the
-patois of Schleswig and of Holstein. The rabble, consisting of many
-thousands, were in readiness to commit outrage on anyone or anything
-that came in their way, and were now in fierce pursuit of an open
-droski that was brought at a gallop up to the door of the hotel, and
-out of which there sprang, looking very pale and bewildered, Sir
-Carnaby Collingwood and Lady Evelyn, whom the crowd had overtaken
-when returning from a visit to one of the three Syndics. Above the
-heads of the grimy rabble seven or eight torches were shaking like
-tufts of flame, and by their uncertain glare added much to the terror
-of the scene, for a madly infuriated mob has terrors that are
-peculiarly its own, and the simple circumstance that Sir Carnaby and
-Lady Evelyn were the occupants of a hired vehicle was sufficient to
-make all these half-starved and tipsified boors--tipsy with beer and
-fiery corn-brandy--turn their vengeance on them.
-
-Even while rushing alongside the fast-flying wheels--for the driver
-lashed his horses to a gallop--they could see that Sir Carnaby was an
-aristocrat, an _hochgeboren_, or well-born man; that was enough to
-ensure insult and ridicule, or worse, and all the more when they
-discovered that he was an Englishman--and, like a true Englishman,
-the baronet, with all his folly and shortcomings in many ways, did
-not want a proper amount of pluck.
-
-All that passed now seemed to do so with the quickness of lightning.
-
-Sir Carnaby, highly exasperated by what he had undergone, and the
-terror of Lady Evelyn, instead of retiring at once into the hotel,
-unwisely turned and struck the foremost man in the crowd a sharp blow
-across the face with his cane.
-
-The voices of the crowd now burst into one united roar of senseless
-rage, and a piercing and agonising shriek escaped Lady Evelyn, as she
-saw him seized by many hands, torn from her side, and dragged
-violently along the streets, amid shouts of 'To the Trave!--to the
-Trave!'
-
-She did not and could not love this old man--she was, perhaps,
-incapable of loving anyone--but she loved well the position her
-marriage gave her, though a viscount's daughter, with the luxury and
-splendour in which she was cradled when at home. She had been used
-since childhood to obedience; to be followed and caressed; to have
-every wish gratified, every caprice supplied; to see every doubt and
-difficulty cleared away; to feel neither pain nor illness, not even
-the least excitement about anything; and now--now, the man with whom
-she had linked her fate was at the mercy of an infamous and brutal
-foreign mob; and with her shriek there came a cry to Chute to save
-him; but Trevor never heard her, for the moment hands were laid on
-Sir Carnaby, followed by Tom Travers, his servant, he had plunged
-into the moving and shouting mass, which went surging down the
-street; then Lady Evelyn saw the three disappear in the obscurity;
-out of which there came the roar of mingling shouts, the gleam of
-cutlasses as the night-watch attacked the rioters; and then followed
-the red flashes and the report of musketry, as the Prussian guard at
-the Rathhaus opened fire upon them; and Lady Evelyn, unused, as we
-have said, to any excitement, especially the sudden and unwonted
-horrors of an episode like this, fainted, and was borne senseless
-into the hotel.
-
-Meanwhile, amid the wild whirl of that seething mob, how fared it
-with Trevor Chute and him whom he sought to save or rescue?
-
-In all his service in India--service so different from the silk and
-velvet dawdling tenor of life in the Guards--dread of death had been
-unknown to Trevor Chute, and never felt by him, even when he knew
-that he was supposed to be dying of fever or a wound, or when he lay
-in the dark jungle, where the thick and rank vegetation ran riot, as
-it were; where the Brahminese cobra had its lair, the tiger and the
-cheetah, too; where, heavy, hot, and oppressive, the vapour rose like
-steamy clouds about the stems of the trees, while his life-blood
-ebbed away, and he had the knowledge that, if undiscovered, he might
-die of thirst, of weakness, under the kuttack dagger of a mountain
-robber, or by the feet of a wild elephant, for oblivion thus clouded
-the end of many a comrade who was reported 'missing,' and no more was
-known; so Chute was not to recoil before a German rabble now.
-
-He knocked down by main strength of arm and sheer weight of hand the
-two who had hold of Sir Carnaby, and were dragging him helplessly
-along the street; and then, with the aid of Travers, he assisted him
-towards an archway which opened off the street, while the rabble
-closed in upon them, showering blows and execrations, but impeding
-each other in their mad efforts; thus man after man of them, uttering
-groans and shouts, went down before the regular facers, dealt
-straight out from the shoulder by Chute and Travers into the eyes and
-jaws of their assailants, who had a wholesome Continental terror of
-'the art de box,' as the French name it, while breathless,
-bewildered, and certainly appalled to find himself so suddenly become
-the sole victim of a dreadful mob, Sir Carnaby stood between his two
-defenders, his polite and deprecatory gestures (for voice he had
-none), and the elegance of his delicate white hands, as seen in the
-torchlight, exciting only the ridicule of the unwashed rabble.
-
-Through the archway, which was narrow, they conveyed Sir Carnaby, and
-by their united strength succeeded in closing the door, and by an
-iron bar that was behind it completely excluding the crowd, who
-continued to shout and rave without as they surged against it and
-beat upon it with sticks and stones. Anon the crash of glass was
-heard, and then the cries of women, as the house itself was assailed.
-
-Infuriated to find that their victim or victims, whom many of them
-now supposed to be some of their wealthy and oppressive monopolists,
-had escaped them, the blows upon the door were redoubled, but its
-strength baffled them.
-
-'It is me they want, Chute, because I struck that rascal at the
-hotel,' said Sir Carnaby: 'leave me--they will tear you to pieces to
-get at me, the German brutes!'
-
-'Leave you, Sir Carnaby! Never! If, even were you a stranger, I
-should stand by you, how much more am I bound to do so when you are
-the father of Clare Collingwood! And if I cannot by main strength
-save, I shall die with you--game, an Englishman to the last!'
-
-They were in a court which had no outlet. From it an open stair led
-to a species of ancient gallery overlooking the street; it was a
-species of balcony, with pillars and arches carved of stone, like
-those in front of the wonderfully quaint Rathhaus, which was not far
-from it, and was built in the middle of the fifteenth century.
-
-Their appearance in this place elicited a roar from the mob some
-fifteen feet below them, and hundreds of dirty hands were shaken
-clenched towards them, and hundreds of excited and upturned faces
-were visible in the red, uncertain glare of the torches that were
-held still by five or six of the rioters. But matters now began to
-look very serious; for the crowd was seen to part like the waves of
-the sea as a ladder was borne through it and planted against the
-wall. Then five or six men began to mount at once, while others
-pressed forward to follow, determined to visit the fugitives by
-escalade.
-
-Travers looked bewildered, and Sir Carnaby still more so; but Trevor
-Chute, by habit, profession, and nature, had all that coolness in
-front of immediate peril, and utter indifference of personal risk,
-which made him renowned in his regiment and the idol of the soldiers,
-and he had been in many critical situations, where caution and
-decision had to be combined with instant action.
-
-The head and shoulders of the uppermost man on the ladder had barely
-appeared above the front of the balcony when Chute seized the former
-by its two uprights, and thrust it fairly outward from the wall. For
-a moment it oscillated, or seemed to balance itself, and then,
-describing a radius of about thirty feet or more, fell back among the
-crowd with its load of ruffians.
-
-Then shrieks and the rattle of musketry were heard, as the Prussian
-guard arrived from the Rathhaus, and by orders of a burgomaster
-poured in a volley of some twenty muskets or so, on which the mob
-took to flight, and dispersed in all directions, leaving behind two
-or three dead men and the maimed wretches who had been on the upper
-portion of the ladder.
-
-So ended this episode of excitement and peril, after which the three
-Englishmen, to whom every species of apology was tendered--after due
-explanation given--were conducted by the armed night watch back to
-their hotel, and once more quietness settled over the little city of
-Lubeck.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-SIR CARNABY'S GRATITUDE.
-
-Save that he had got a terrible shaking, a few blows, and
-considerable fright, Sir Carnaby Collingwood, thanks to Trevor Chute
-and his servant, was not much the worse and between his draughts of
-iced seltzer and brandy, he sputtered and threatened the whole city
-of Lubeck with our ambassador at Berlin, and to have the outrage of
-the night brought 'before the House' as soon as he returned to town;
-while Lady Evelyn, filled with genuine admiration of the pluck shown
-by Chute, his manly and generous bearing, and with gratitude for the
-manner in which he had assuredly saved the life of her _caro sposo_,
-became his most ardent ally; but as he and Sir Carnaby lingered over
-their wine that night he felt--and still more next day--the weight of
-the many blows and buffets of which he had been quite unconscious at
-the time they were so freely bestowed upon him.
-
-'Egad, Chute,' chuckled Sir Carnaby, 'didn't think you and I should
-ever figure like two heroes in a melodrama; by Jove--absurd, don't
-you know--but those Germans _are_ beastly fellows. The moselle
-stands with you. We have had nothing here,' he continued, laughing
-with more genuine heartiness than was usual to him, for his feelings
-had undergone a revulsion--'we have had nothing here but mistakes and
-scenes--actually scenes. I refused you Clare, and you make off, per
-train, with Lady Evelyn. I was most unkind to you, and you act
-generously by returning good for exceeding evil.'
-
-Trevor was so unused to this tone from Sir Carnaby that his heart
-swelled with mingled hope and anticipation, joy and sadness, as he
-said:
-
-'I am only thankful to Heaven that I was here to-night, and able to
-be of service to you.'
-
-'Service--egad, my dear fellow, you have saved my life!'
-
-'The consciousness of that rewards me for more than one past
-misfortune.'
-
-'Ah, you mean those which caused you to leave the Guards?'
-
-'To leave England, and--lost me Clare!' said Chute, falteringly.
-
-'Ah, well, it was all no fault of yours. It was a thousand pities
-that your father, the old General--an extravagant dog he was--could
-touch the entail. That is all over now; and believe me, Trevor
-Chute, if you forgive me the past, you shall not go without your
-_reward_.'
-
-And the two shook hands in silence. The heart of the younger man
-beat tumultuously, for well did he know the glorious 'reward' that
-was referred to. He knew that Sir Carnaby would keep to his word,
-and he had, we have said, an ardent admirer and adherent in Lady
-Evelyn.
-
-'Captain Chute,' said she, 'do give up this peregrimania of yours,
-and spend Christmas with us at Carnaby Court. Promise me,' she
-added, taking his hands in hers; 'I will take no denial, and am
-always used to have my way in everything.'
-
-So Chute, without much difficulty, accepted an invitation in which
-kindness was perhaps mingled with some desire to get Clare off her
-hands.
-
-Chute, with Sir Carnaby's permission, wrote to Clare next day, saying
-that he had been so happy as to be of service to her father, and had
-saved him--'saved his life, in fact'--during a row among the Germans;
-that they were the best of friends now that all barriers were
-removed, and how happy he and she would yet be in the time to come.
-
-Poor Clare was extremely bewildered by all this, till the letter was
-supplemented by a more descriptive and effusive epistle from the,
-sometime to her, obnoxious Lady Evelyn, describing in glowing colours
-the terrors of the affair at Lubeck, Chute's bravery, and Sir
-Carnaby's rescue, and the heart of the girl leaped in her breast with
-gratitude to Heaven for this sudden change in the feelings of her
-father, and gratitude to Trevor for saving the selfish old man from
-injury, insult, and, too probably, a sudden and dreadful death; and
-amid this new-born happiness grew a longing to behold that of her
-sister and Jerry Vane.
-
-The latter, when in London, more than once, when with Desmond;
-contrived to draw on the subject of the male figure he had seen in
-the arbour with Ida, and found that he still adhered to it in all its
-somewhat vague details.
-
-On the other hand, he had a long private letter from Clare,
-impressing upon him that it must have been a delusion; that no such
-person had been seen by Ida; and dwelling delicately on the health of
-the latter, and the strange fancies which haunted her. Perplexed, he
-knew not what to think, and would mutter:
-
-'Delusion! Were Colonel Rakes, Desmond, and I all deluded alike? It
-is an impossibility!'
-
-He actually doubted her, and bitter as the doubt must be of that one
-loves, deep must be the love that struggles against it, and his was
-of that kind. Clare reminded him of his promised visit at
-Christmas-time.
-
-'Shall I go, to be snared again by the witchery of Ida's violet eyes
-and the golden gleam of her auburn hair?'
-
-The most rankling and bitter wounds are those of the heart; because
-they are unseen, and, too often, untellable; so Vane, amid the
-bitterness of his doubt, consoled, or strove to console himself with
-the remark of a Scottish writer, who says, 'How humbling it is to
-think that the strongest affections which have perplexed, or
-agitated, or delighted us from our birth, will, in a few years, cease
-to have an existence on the earth; and that all the ardour which they
-have kindled will be as completely extinguished and forgotten as if
-they had never been!'
-
-Love for him certainly seemed to have been dawning in her heart
-again; else whence that kiss--somewhat too sisterly, perhaps--which
-she accorded to him so frankly in the oriel window, filling his bosom
-with the old joy? Across the sunshine that was brightening his path
-why should this marring shadow have fallen, giving a pain that was
-only equalled in intensity by his love? hence it was simply horrid to
-hear a man like Desmond say, mockingly:
-
-'You ask me about that fellow in the arbour so often that, by Jove,
-Vane, you are becoming spoony on her again--heard you were so once,
-don't you know--threw you over for Beverley, and all that sort of
-thing. Fact is, my dear fellow, women always betray those who love
-them too much. Never throw your heart further away than just so far
-that you can easily recover it.'
-
-And with his thoughts elsewhere, Jerry, spoiled as women of the world
-will spoil a drawing-room pet, lingered on amid a gay circle in
-London, endowed with a vague flirting commission, and coquetted a
-little with the languid, the soft, and the lovely, to hide or heal
-the wound that Ida had inflicted; while it was with regret, and a
-sense of as much irritation and hauteur as her gentle nature was
-capable of feeling, Ida heard that Vane was to accompany Chute (after
-all that had passed between them, and his suspicions) to Carnaby
-Court, where now the beeches and elms were all yellow or brown with
-the last tints of autumn, and the tall trees in the chase showed
-flushes of crimson, purple, and orange when the sun was sinking
-beyond the uplands in the west.
-
-On very different terms were Clare and _her_ lover; and in their
-letters they wrote freely and confidently of their future--a happy
-time that seemed certain now--the future that had once been but as
-the mirage that Chute had often beheld on the march in the sandy
-deserts of Aijmere.
-
-'Clare--I shall see her again!' he muttered to himself; it was a
-great thought, a bright conviction, that to him she was no longer a
-dream but a reality; thus in his heart he felt 'that riot of hope,
-joy, and belief which is too tumultuous and impatient for happiness,
-but yet _is_ happy beyond all that the world holds.'
-
-Objectless till he saw her again, after Sir Carnaby and Lady Evelyn
-had left him for England, he lingered in Northern Germany; but Jerry
-Vane had accepted Lady Evelyn's written and actually reiterated
-invitation for Christmas with very mingled feelings indeed.
-
-Since the day he had left Carnaby Court so abruptly he had never
-exchanged a word, verbally or in writing, with Ida.
-
-In going there now he would do so with a deadened sense of sorrow,
-disappointment, and bitterness in his heart and the wretched doubt as
-to whether he was wise to throw himself into the lure--was it
-snare?--of her society again; even with the intention of showing, as
-he thought, poor goose, how bravely he could resist it, and seek to
-convince her that he had effaced the past and forgotten to view her
-amid the halo in which he had once enshrined her. Were they, then,
-to meet in a state of antagonism?
-
-Trevor Chute's brave rescue of Sir Carnaby Collingwood had, as a
-story, preceded his return to town, with many exaggerations; the
-clubs rang with it, and it actually stirred the blood in what 'Ouida'
-calls 'the languid, _nil admirari_, egotistic, listless pulses of
-high-bred society.'
-
-But time was creeping on now, and the Christmas of the year drew near
-at hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-CARNABY COURT.
-
-The baronet's country seat was popular among his 'set,' and in the
-county generally. The ladies were attractive, Sir Carnaby was fond
-of society, and was undeniably hospitable: the preserves were good,
-the corn-fed pheasants were among the best in the land, and
-partridges abounded in the coverts and thickets; the stud and cellar
-were good, and his French cook was a genius. The oak-studded chase,
-where the deer lay deep amid the fern, showed trees that were of vast
-antiquity--remnants, perhaps, of the days when Bucks was all a
-forest, as old historians tell us.
-
-The Collingwoods had been lords of Collingwood ever since tradition
-could tell of them. They were, it was said, old as the chalky
-Chiltern Hills and the woods of Whaddon Chase, and stories of their
-prowess had been rife among the people since the days when Edward was
-murdered at Tewkesbury, when 'bluff King Hal' burnt Catholics and
-Protestants together with perfect impartiality at Smithfield, when
-Mary spent her maudlin love on Philip, and Queen Bess boxed the ears
-of her courtiers: all had figured in history somehow; and everywhere,
-over the gateway half hidden by ivy, in the painted oriels, on the
-gables, and on the buttons of the livery servants, were three eels
-wavy on a bend, indicating a heraldic portion of the tenure by which
-they held their land, like the lord of Aylesbury in the same
-county--'By the sergentry of finding straw for the bed of the
-Defender of the Faith, with three eels for his supper, when he should
-travel that way.'
-
-Built, patched, and repaired in various ages, the Court is one of the
-most picturesque old mansions in the county. In one portion, chiefly
-inhabited by crows and bats, there was a half-ruined remnant left by
-the Wars of the Roses, on which the present Tudor, or, rather,
-Elizabethan mansion, with its peaked gables, oriel windows, and
-clustered chimney-stacks--square, twisted, or fluted--had been
-engrafted. Hawthorn, holly, and ivy grew out of the clefts of the
-ruinous portion; and there in childhood had Clare and Ida made baby
-houses; and there they had devoured in secret many a fairy and ghost
-story, and thrilled with joy over that of the 'Ugly Duckling.' The
-terrace balustrades were mossy and green, and though Carnaby Court
-had an old and decayed aspect, there was a lingering grandeur about
-it.
-
-The plate in the dining-hall was famous in the county for its value
-and antiquity, though many a goblet and salver had gone to the
-melting-pot when King Charles unfurled his standard at Nottingham.
-
-We have said that stories had been rumoured about of a figure seen in
-the garden and elsewhere; and Sir Carnaby, who loathed scenes,
-excitement, worry, 'and all that sort of thing,' as he phrased it
-(though he had undergone enough and to spare), was intensely provoked
-when the old butler gave him some hint of the shadowy addition to the
-family at the Court.
-
-'A ghost!' he exclaimed, with his gold glasses on his long, thin nose.
-
-'Yes, sir--so they say.'
-
-'They--who? Stuff! If this absurd story gets abroad, we shall find
-ourselves a subject for the speculation of the vulgar here and the
-spiritualists everywhere; and the house may be beset by all manner of
-intruders. And what is it like?'
-
-'Nobody knows; a tall man in black, I have heard,' replied the butler.
-
-'Black! How do ghosts or spirits get clothes?'
-
-'I don't know, Sir Carnaby.'
-
-'Of course you don't, how should you? _Your_ spirits are in wood,'
-chuckled the baronet. 'I have heard of tables spinning about, of
-bells ringing, banjos playing, of sticks beating on a drum-head by
-unseen hands, and even of people flying through the air at _séances_,
-but I'll have none of that nonsense at Carnaby Court. It's bad
-style--vulgar--very! We'll send for the disembodied police, and have
-your ghost taken up as a rogue and impostor.'
-
-Quite a gay party had assembled for the Christmas festivities at the
-old Court; there were Major Desmond, and two of his brother officers,
-with his intended, one of the belles of the last season at Tyburnia,
-Colonel and Lady Rakes, Lord Brixton, and many more, including old
-Lord Bayswater and Charley Rakes, a mere lad, steeped already in
-folly or worse, yet very much disposed to lionise and patronise the
-pretty Violet.
-
-When Trevor Chute and Vane first arrived they were both shocked--the
-latter particularly so--to find a great and fatal change had come
-over Ida, and it had come suddenly too, as Clare asserted. Jerry had
-begun to feel the sweetness of cheated hope, but this was fading now.
-She seemed in a decline apparently; large dark circles were under her
-eyes, and their old soft sweetness of gaze was blended with a weird
-and weary look of infinite melancholy at times; and when Clare had
-expressed to Sir Carnaby a hope that she might yet wed Jerry out of
-pity--
-
-'Let her wed him for anything, for--by Jove, this sort of thing is
-great boredom,' sighed or grumbled the baronet.
-
-'The idea of you, Captain Chute, eloping with our new mamma,' said
-Violet, when she met him.
-
-'That led to my being of service to your father, Violet--to my being
-here to-night,' he added, in a tender whisper to Clare, as the ladies
-left the dining-table, and Sir Carnaby changed his seat to the head
-of the table.
-
-'Ugh!' said he, in a low voice, 'unless poor Ida brightens up a
-little, a doleful Christmas we are likely to have of it; but I am
-glad to see you, Vane--the wine stands with you--pass the bottles,
-and don't insult my butler by neglecting to fill your glass.'
-
-With all his affected breeze of manner, his desire to appear juvenile
-before Lady Evelyn, and all his inborn selfishness, both Vane and
-Chute could perceive that the failing health of his favourite
-daughter had affected him. The unwelcome crow's-feet were deeper
-about his eyes; his general 'get-up' was less elaborate; his whiskers
-were out of curl, and like what remained of his hair, showed, by an
-occasional patch of grey, that dye was sometimes forgotten.
-
-The first quiet stolen interview of Clare and Trevor Chute was one of
-inexpressible happiness and joy. They were again in the recess of
-that oriel near which he had first said he loved her, and she had
-accepted him. The moon shone as bright now as then, but in the clear
-and frosty sky of a winter night, and the flakes of light threw down
-many a crimson, golden, and blue ray of colour on the snowy skin and
-white dress of Clare, as she nestled her face on Trevor's breast,
-while his arm went round her.
-
-Clare loved well the woods of the old Court--the lovely, leafy
-woods--with trees round and vast as the pillars of a Saxon
-cathedral--loved them in their vernal greenery, their summer foliage,
-and their varied autumnal tints of russet, brown, and gold, for there
-had Trevor told her again and again the old, old story, the story of
-both their hearts, hand locked in hand; and there she had first
-learned how sweet and good our earthly life may be, how full of hope,
-of sunshine, and glory to the loving and the loved; but never did she
-love them as when she saw them now, though standing black and
-leafless amid the far-stretching waste of snow that gleamed in the
-distance far away under the glare of the moon, for Trevor was with
-her once more, and never to be separated from her again!
-
-'Oh, Trevor, Trevor! I thank kind Heaven,' she whispered for the
-twentieth time, 'that you and papa are friends now--and such friends!
-Lady Evelyn has told me again and again all the debt we owe. If the
-poor old man had perished----'
-
-'Had I saved a nation, Clare, my reward is in you,' said he,
-arresting effectually further thanks or praises.
-
-He had dreamed by day of Clare, and loved her as much as ever man
-loved woman; he had undergone all the misery of separation, of
-hopelessness, doubt, and even of groundless jealousy; and now, after
-all, she was his own! For the most tranquil time of all his past
-life he would not have exchanged the tumultuous and brilliant joy of
-the present; yet that joy was not without a cloud, and that cloud was
-the regret and perplexity caused by Ida, for whom he had all the
-tenderness of a brother.
-
-On the day after his arrival he was writing in the library, and had
-been so for some time, before he discovered that Ida was lying fast
-asleep in an easy-chair near the fire, her slumber being induced
-either by weariness and languor, or the cosy heat of the room, with
-its warmth of colour and its heavy draperies, which partly hid the
-snowy scene without. For a few moments he watched the singular
-beauty of the girl's upturned face, the purity of her profile, and
-the sweetness of her parted lips, as her graceful head reclined
-against the back of the softly cushioned chair, over which, as they
-had become undone, bright masses of her auburn hair were rippling.
-
-Suddenly she seemed to shiver in her sleep, and to mutter, as terror
-and sorrow hardened the lines of her face. She was dreaming; and
-starting with a low cry, she awoke, and sprang almost into the arms
-of Chute. Her lips were white and parched--white as the teeth within
-them; her eyes, with a wild, hysterical, and overstrained expression,
-were fixed on the empty air, while the veins in her delicate throat
-were swollen; and then she turned to Chute, who kissed her forehead,
-caressed her hands, and besought her to be calm. She drew a long,
-gasping sigh, and said, while swaying forward, as if about to fall:
-
-'Oh, Trevor, Trevor! I have had a dream of Beverley--and such a
-dream! Hold me up, or I shall fall!' she added, pressing her
-tremulous hands upon her thin white temples. 'In this dream,
-Beverley said--said----' Tears choked her utterance.
-
-'_What_ did you think he said?' asked Chute, tenderly.
-
-'Think? I heard him as plainly as I hear you!'
-
-'Well, do speak, Ida.'
-
-'He said, "We are never to be parted, Ida, even by death. Fate has
-linked my soul to yours for ever; and though unseen, I am ever near
-you." Then a cry escaped me, and I awoke. Had you not been here, I
-should have fainted.'
-
-'This is--heavens! what shall I call it--morbid!' exclaimed Chute.
-'Such dreams----'
-
-'Come to me unbidden--uncontrolled,' continued Ida, sobbing heavily.
-'There seems to be a strange, half sad and sweet, half fearful and
-subtle, influence at work around me! I am sure that there is a world
-beyond the grave--an unseen world that is close, close to us all,
-Trevor.'
-
-As she spoke, Chute, who was regarding her with the tenderest
-sympathy, became deeply pained to see the grey, death-like hue that
-stole over her lovely face, and the droop that came into her--for the
-moment--lustreless eyes; and as he gazed he almost began to imbibe
-some of her wild convictions. 'It is a matter of knowledge,' says a
-writer, 'that there are persons whose yearning conceptions--nay,
-travelled conclusions--continually take the form of images which have
-a foreshadowing power: the deed they do starts up before them in
-complete shape, making a coercive type; the event they hunger for or
-dread rises into vision with a seed-like growth, feeding itself fast
-on unnumbered impressions. They are not always the less capable of
-argumentative process, nor less sane than the commonplace calculators
-of the market.'
-
-'Whenever I _think_ of Beverley, I seem to feel that he is, unseen,
-beside me; and this startling and oppressive emotion I can neither
-control, analyze, or conquer,' said Ida, wearily, as Chute led her to
-another room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-CHRISTMAS EVE.
-
-It was not in the heart of honest Jerry Vane to harbour much of doubt
-when pity was wanted; and, so far as Ida was concerned, it fully
-seemed wanted now.
-
-The change that came over her health had been rapid and
-unexplainable. Her nerves were evidently hopelessly unstrung; she
-seemed to be pining and passing away in the midst of them all. Her
-temperament was entirely changed; she could see the light emitted by
-a magnet in the dark, and always shuddered at the touch of one. The
-doctors shook their heads, and could only speak of change of air when
-the season opened, and so forth; while poor Jerry Vane hung about her
-in an agony of love and anxiety, hoping against hope that she might
-yet recover and be his dear little wife after all; but when Clare
-hinted at this, the ailing girl only shook her head and smiled sadly.
-
-It was just shortly before Christmas Eve, however, that Jerry felt
-himself lured and tempted, with his heart full of great pity for the
-feeble condition in which he saw the once brilliant Ida, to speak to
-her again of the love he bore her.
-
-The jealous shame that he had a rival--another who might have won her
-when he had failed--the lurker whom Desmond and himself had seen--was
-all forgotten now; and though her bloom was gone, her complexion had
-become waxen, her beautiful hands almost transparent, her eyes
-unnaturally large and bright, he seemed to see in her only the same
-Ida whom he had loved in the first flush of her beauty ere it budded,
-and whom he had wooed and won in happier and unclouded times, in the
-same old English home where they were all gathered together.
-
-She approached the subject herself, by saying to him, when they were
-alone:
-
-'Forgive me, Jerry, if I spoke hastily to you when last we parted.'
-
-'Forgive you!' he exclaimed, in a low voice.
-
-'Yes; surely that is not impossible.'
-
-'Oh, Ida! forgiveness is no word to pass between you and me.'
-
-'Especially now, Jerry; but though I treated you ill--very, very
-ill--in the past time----'
-
-'Let us not talk of that, Ida.'
-
-'Of what, then?'
-
-'Our future,' he whispered, while, drawing near, he took her passive
-hand in his, and longed to kiss, but dared not touch her, while great
-love and compassion filled his heart--the love that had never died;
-but as he held her hand she shivered like an aspen leaf.
-
-'Future--oh, Jerry, I would that I were at rest beside mamma in
-yonder church!' she said, looking to where the square tower of the
-village fane, mantled in ivy and snow, stood darkly up in purple
-shade against the crimson flush of the evening sky.
-
-'Can it be that your illness is such--your weakness--oh, what shall I
-term it!--is such that you are indeed tired of life, Ida?' he asked,
-with an anxiety that was not unmixed with fear.
-
-'Life is only a delusion. What is it that we should desire it?'
-
-'You are very strange this evening, dearest Ida,' he urged softly.
-
-'My health is shattered, Jerry--my spirit gone! hence, though you
-love me, no comfort or joy would ever come to you through me.'
-
-There were tears in the man's eyes as he listened to her. She was
-pressing his hand kindly between hers, but there was a weary
-wistfulness in the gaze of Ida which bewildered him, and he thought
-how unlike was this sad love-making to that of the past time.
-
-'Poor Jerry!' she resumed, after a long pause, 'I don't think I shall
-live very long; a little time, I fear, and I shall only be a dream to
-you, but a dream full of disappointment and pain.'
-
-'Do not say so, Ida--my own beloved Ida!' he exclaimed, as the last
-vestige of mistrust in her was forgotten, and sorrow, love, and
-perplexity took its place. 'Ida,' he continued, in a voice that was
-touching, passionate, and appealing, 'young, beautiful, and rich, you
-shall yet be well and strong; your own gay spirit will return with
-the renewed health which we shall find you in another and a sunnier
-land than ours. Oh, for the love I bear you, darling, do thrust
-aside these thoughts of gloom and death!'
-
-But she answered him slowly and deliberately, in a voice that was
-without tremor, though her eyes were full of melancholy, and with
-something of love, too, but not earthly loving, for that passion had
-long since departed.
-
-'The thoughts of gloom come over me unsought, and will not be thrust
-aside; and to dread or avoid death is folly, and to fear it is also
-folly; for that which is so universal must be for our general good;
-hence, to fear that which we cannot understand, and is for our good,
-is greater folly. Moreover, it puts an end to all earthly suffering
-and to all earthly sorrow. But leave me, dear Jerry, now; I am
-weary--_so_ weary.'
-
-Then Vane, with his eyes full of tears, pressed his lips to her pale
-forehead as she sank back in her chair and closed her eyes as if to
-court sleep; and he left her slowly and reluctantly, and with a heart
-torn by many emotions, and not the least of these was the aching and
-clamorous sense of a coming calamity.
-
-It was Christmas-tide, when, from all parts of the British Isles, the
-trains are pouring London-ward, laden with turkeys, game, and geese,
-and all manner of good things; when the post-bags are filled with
-dainty Christmas cards that express good and kind thoughts; when the
-warmest wishes of the jocund season are exchanged by all who meet,
-even to those whose hands they do not clasp, though eye looks kindly
-to eye; when the sparrows, finches, and robins flock about the
-farmyards, and the poor little blue tomtits feel cold and hungry in
-the leafless woods and orchards; Christmas Eve--'whose red signal
-fires shall glow through gloom and darkness till all the years be
-done'--the season of plum-pudding and holly, mistletoe and carolling,
-and of kind-hearted generosity, when the traditional stocking is
-filled, and the green branches of the festive tree are loaded with
-every species of 'goodies,' for excited and expectant little folks;
-and 'once a year,' the eve that, of all others, makes the place of
-those whom death has taken seem doubly vacant, and when the baby that
-came since last Christmas is hailed with a new joy; the eve that is
-distinguished by the solemnity of the mighty mission with which if is
-associated; and when over all God's Christian world, the bells ring
-out the chimes in memory of the star that shone over Bethlehem; and
-even now they were jingling merrily in the old square English tower
-of Collingwood church, from whence the cadence of the sweet
-even-song, in which the voices of Clare and Violet mingled with
-others, came on the clear frosty breeze to the old Court, the painted
-oriels of which were all aflame with ruddy light, that fell far in
-flakes across the snow-covered chase.
-
-One voice alone was wanting there--the soft and tender one of Ida,
-who was unable to leave the house and face the keen, cold winter air.
-
-She alone, of all the gay party assembled at the Court, remained
-behind.
-
-Anxious to rejoin her, the moment the service was over in the little
-village church--the altar and pillars of which Clare and her friends,
-with the assistance of the gardener, had elaborately decorated: with
-bays and glistening hollies--Jerry Vane slipped out of his pew and
-hastened away through the snow-covered fields to where the
-picturesque masses of the ancient Court, with all its traceried and
-tinted windows gaily lighted up, stood darkly against the starry sky.
-
-Unusual anxiety agitated the breast of Jerry Vane on this night; the
-strange words and stranger manner of Ida had made a great impression
-upon him.
-
-That she respected him deeply he saw plainly enough; but her regard
-for him, if it existed at all, which he often doubted, at least, such
-regard as he wished, seemed merely that of a sister; and every way
-the altered terms on which they now were seemed singular and
-perplexing; and yet he loved her fondly, truly, and, when he thought
-of her shattered health, most compassionately.
-
-On entering the drawing-room, which was brilliantly lighted, he saw
-Ida within an arched and curtained alcove that opened out of it; the
-blue silk hangings were festooned on each side by silver tassels and
-cords. The recess was thus partly in shadow, and, within, Ida
-reclined on a couch, near which lay a book, that had apparently
-dropped from her hand.
-
-Her attitude, expressive of great excitement or of great grief, made
-Vane pause for a moment. Her figure was in shadow, but her lovely
-auburn hair glittered in light as she lay back on the couch, with her
-white hands covering her eyes, pressing, to all appearance, hard upon
-them, while heavy sobs convulsed her bosom and throat.
-
-Vane was about to approach and question her as to this excessive
-grief, when his blood ran cold on perceiving the figure of a
-gentleman bending tenderly and caressingly over her--the man of the
-arbour.
-
-His form was in shadow, but his face was most distinct; it was
-handsome in contour, though very pale; his eyes, that were cast
-fondly down on Ida, were dark, as Vane could perceive, and his thick
-moustache was jetty in hue.
-
-What could he have to say to Ida that agitated her thus? And who was
-this stranger who seemed to avail himself of every conceivable moment
-she was alone to thrust himself upon her?--if, indeed, he were not,
-as Jerry's jealousy began to hint, but too welcome!
-
-How many times had he been with her, unknown to all? was the next
-bitter thought that flashed upon him.
-
-He resolved to bring Chute to the spot, for Chute had never believed
-the stories of Ida and her mysterious friend or admirer; so, instead
-of boldly advancing and intruding upon them, he softly quitted the
-room, and met the Captain in the entrance hall.
-
-'Where is Clare?' he asked.
-
-'Gone to take off her wraps,' replied Chute.
-
-'Quick!' said Jerry, in an agitated voice; 'come this way.'
-
-'What is the matter?'
-
-'You shall see. The honour--oh, that I should speak of it!--the
-honour of Ida is dearer to me than life,' said Vane, in a voice which
-indicated great mental pain; 'yet what am I to think, unless her
-brain is turned?'
-
-He leaned for a moment against a console table, as if a giddiness or
-a weakness had come over him.
-
-'Jerry, are you unwell?' asked Chute, anxiously.
-
-'I don't know what the devil is up, or whether Ida--with her face
-lovely as it is, and pure as that of a saint in some old cathedral
-window--is playing false to me and to us all!'
-
-'False!' exclaimed Chute, astonished by this outburst, which was made
-with great bitterness.
-
-'Yes, false.'
-
-'Ida--why--how?'
-
-'Because that mysterious fellow is with her now.'
-
-'Where?'
-
-'In the arched alcove off the drawing-room. I know not what he has
-been saying to her, but the effect of his presence is to fill her
-with grief and agitation; these are manifest enough, whatever may be
-the secret tie or sympathy between them.'
-
-They were for the present alone, Chute and Vane.
-
-The gentlemen had all gone unanimously to the smoking-room, and the
-voices of the ladies were heard merrily talking in the upper
-corridors, in anticipation of a ball on the morrow, for which the
-gayest and richest of toilettes that Paris and Regent Street could
-produce were spread on more than one bed to be exultingly
-contemplated.
-
-Trevor Chute gave Jerry a grave and inquiring glance, and with
-soldierlike promptitude stepped quickly towards the drawing-room.
-
-'She declined to go with us to the evensong, and _this_ is the reason
-why!' resumed Vane, bitterly. 'There--he is beside her still!'
-
-Ida now reclined with her face upward, and the pure outline of her
-profile could be distinctly seen against the dark background of the
-alcove, as also the dazzling whiteness of her hands, which were
-crossed upon her bosom. Over her hung the stranger, with his face so
-closely bowed to hers that his features could not be seen.
-
-'She is asleep or in a faint,' said Jerry, as they paused.
-
-'This man's figure is familiar to me--quite,' said Chute; '_where_
-have I seen him before?
-
-As he spoke, the stranger raised his head, and turning to them his
-pale, now ghastly, face, gazed at them for a moment with eyes that
-were dark, singularly piercing, and intensely melancholy; there was
-something in their expression which chilled the blood of Vane; but
-for a moment only did he so look, and then the face and figure
-melted, and in that moment a thrill of unnatural horror ran through
-the heart of Trevor Chute, who stood rooted to the spot, and next, as
-a wild cry escaped him, fell senseless on the carpet, for he had
-beheld the visual realization of that which he had begun to fear was
-Ida's haunting spirit--the face and form of Beverley, or of a demon
-in his shape.
-
-And ere he sank down where he lay, even when the eyes of this dread
-thing had turned upon him, there stole over his passing senses,
-quickly, the memory of the hot air of that breathless Indian morning,
-when the notes of the réveille seemed to mingle with the last dying
-words of his comrade--his farewell message to Ida!
-
-All this passed in the vibration of a pendulum.
-
-Vane was in equal terror and perplexity, all the more so that the
-name of 'Beverley' had mingled with the cry of Trevor Chute.
-
-'Beverley!' he thought. 'My God! can we look upon such things and
-live!'
-
-Like Chute and many others, he had ever prided himself on his
-superiority to all thoughts of superstition and vulgar fears; he had
-ever scoffed at all manner of warnings, dreams, visitations, and
-spiritual influences, believing that the laws of nature were fixed
-and immutable; and here, amid the blaze of light, he had been face to
-face with the usually unseen world! He was face to face with
-more--death!
-
-His beloved Ida was found to have been dead for many minutes. Her
-heart was cold, her pulses still, and when the cry of Chute brought,
-by its strange and unnatural sound, all the household thronging to
-the room in alarm and amazement, Vane was found hanging over her, and
-weeping as only women weep, and with all the wild and passionate
-abandonment he had never felt since childhood.
-
-Had she seen, as they had at last, this haunting figure, whose
-vicinity caused that mysterious icy chill and tremor which nevermore
-would shock her delicate system and lovely form? Had the--to
-her--long unseen been visible at last--that pale, solemn face with
-its sad, dark eyes and black moustache?
-
-It almost seemed so, for terror dwelt on her still features for a
-time, then repose, sadness, and sweetness stole over her beautiful
-face--still most beautiful in death.
-
-Had she died of terror, of grief, or of both, inducing perhaps a
-rupture of the heart? The pressure of her hands upon her breast
-would seem to say the latter, but all was wild and sad conjecture now
-in the startled and sorrowing household.
-
-So ended the _haunted life_!
-
-But the doctors discussed the subject learnedly, and her nervous
-thrills or involuntary tremors were accounted for by one who asserted
-'that such an emotion was producible in persons of a certain nervous
-_diathesis_ by the approach alike of an unseen spirit or the
-impingement of an electric fluid evolved by the superior will of
-another.'
-
-It was urged by some that anything supernatural could only be seen by
-a person who was under an extraordinary exaltation of the sensuous
-perceptions, and certainly this was not the case with either Desmond,
-Vane, or Chute; thus it was deemed doubly strange that such men as
-they should have seen this singular and terrible presence, when she,
-whose system was of the most refined and delicate nature, and
-rendered more spiritual by her sinking health, should only have felt
-that something unseen was near her, until, perhaps, that fatal night.
-
-What miracle, _diablerie_, or spiritualistic horror was this?
-speculated all, when the story came to be sifted around the couch
-whereon the dead Ida lay, like a marble statue, with her skin soft
-and pale as a white camellia leaf.
-
-Can it be, they asked, that 'his solicitude cannot rest with his
-bones,' far away in that Indian grave where Trevor Chute had laid
-him? Was that grave not deep enough to hide him, that his spiritual
-essence--if essence it is--comes here?
-
-It was a dark and sorrowful Christmas Eve at Carnaby Court; guests
-who came to be gay, and to rejoice in the festivities of the joyous
-season, departed in quick succession.
-
-Jerry Vane never quite recovered the death of Ida or the manner of
-it, and some time elapsed before the gallant heart of Trevor Chute
-got the better of the shock of that night; but he could never forget
-the expression of the dead eyes that seemed to have looked again into
-his!
-
-He could recall the fierce and sudden excitement of finding himself
-face to face with his first tiger in India, and putting the contents
-of both barrels into him, just as the monster was in the act of
-tearing down the shrieking mahout from his perch behind the ears of
-his shikaree elephant in a jungle where the twisted branches had to
-be torn aside at every step; and the nearly similar emotion with
-which he speared his first wild hog--an old boar, but too likely to
-turn like an envenomed devil when hard pressed and the pace grew hot;
-he could recall its glistening bristles that were like blue steel,
-its red eyes, and its fierce white tusks, as he whetted them in his
-dying wrath against a peepul tree; he could recall, too, the shock of
-the first bullet that took him in the arm, the vague terror of a
-barbed arrow that pierced his thigh, and which, for all he knew,
-might be poisoned; but never was mortal shock or emotion equal to the
-horror that burst upon him that night in the drawing-room of Carnaby
-Court, when a grasp of iron seemed to tighten round his heart, 'when
-the hair of his flesh stood up,' the light went out of his eyes, and
-he sank into oblivion.
-
-* * * * *
-
-Brighter times come anon.
-
-None can sorrow for ever; though that of the inmates of Carnaby Court
-did not pass away with the snows of winter--nay, nor with the sweet
-buds of spring or the roses of summer, when they climbed round the
-oriels and gables of the grand old mansion. Thus it was not for many
-months after that night of dread and dismay--that most mournful
-Christmas Eve--that the merry chimes were heard to ring in the old
-square tower of the Saxon church for the marriage of Clare and Trevor
-Chute, who passed, with chastened looks and much of tender sorrow,
-amid their long-deferred happiness, the now flower-covered garden of
-the gentle sister who had been indirectly the good angel who brought
-that happiness to pass.
-
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD AND LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HAUNTED LIFE ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Haunted Life, by James Grant
-</title>
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A haunted life, by James Grant</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
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: A haunted life</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Grant</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August 19, 2022 [eBook #68790]</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: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HAUNTED LIFE ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- A HAUNTED LIFE<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- JAMES GRANT<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- AUTHOR OF 'THE ROMANCE OF WAR'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON<br />
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS<br />
- BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL<br />
- NEW YORK: 9, LAFAYETTE PLACE<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 1883<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- JAMES GRANT'S NOVELS,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Price 2s. each, Fancy Boards.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- The Romance of War<br />
- The Aide-de-Camp<br />
- The Scottish Cavalier<br />
- Bothwell<br />
- Jane Seton: or, the Queen's Advocate<br />
- Philip Rollo<br />
- The Black Watch<br />
- Mary of Lorraine<br />
- Oliver Ellis: or, the Fusileers<br />
- Lucy Arden: or, Hollywood Hall<br />
- Frank Hilton: or, the Queen's Own<br />
- The Yellow Frigate<br />
- Harry Ogilvie: or, the Black Dragoons<br />
- Arthur Blane<br />
- Laura Everingham: or, the Highlanders of Glenora<br />
- The Captain of the Guard<br />
- Letty Hyde's Lovers<br />
- Cavaliers of Fortune<br />
- Second to None<br />
- The Constable of France<br />
- The Phantom Regiment<br />
- The King's Own Borderers<br />
- The White Cockade<br />
- First Love and Last Love<br />
- Dick Rooney<br />
- The Girl he Married<br />
- Lady Wedderburn's Wish<br />
- Jack Manly<br />
- Only an Ensign<br />
- Adventures of Rob Roy<br />
- Under the Red Dragon<br />
- The Queen's Cadet<br />
- Shall I Win Her?<br />
- Fairer than a Fairy<br />
- One of the Six Hundred<br />
- Morley Ashton<br />
- Did She Love Him?<br />
- The Ross-shire Buffs<br />
- Six Years Ago<br />
- Vere of Ours<br />
- The Lord Hermitage<br />
- The Royal Regiment<br />
- Duke of Albany's Own Highlanders<br />
- The Cameronians<br />
- The Scots Brigade<br />
- Violet Jermyn<br />
- Jack Chaloner<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- CONTENTS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- I. <a href="#chap01">THE MEET OF THE COACHING CLUB</a><br />
- II. <a href="#chap02">TREVOR CHUTE'S REVERIE</a><br />
- III. <a href="#chap03">HIS VISIT TO CLARE</a><br />
- IV. <a href="#chap04">IDA</a><br />
- V. <a href="#chap05">HOW WILL IT END?</a><br />
- VI. <a href="#chap06">SIR CARNABY COLLINGWOOD</a><br />
- VII. <a href="#chap07">A PROPOSAL</a><br />
- VIII. <a href="#chap08">'THE DESIRE OF THE MOTH FOR THE STARS'</a><br />
- IX. <a href="#chap09">DOUBTS DISPELLED</a><br />
- X. <a href="#chap10">FOR WHOM THE JEWELS WERE INTENDED</a><br />
- XI. <a href="#chap11">A ROMANCE OF THE DRAWING-ROOM</a><br />
- XII. <a href="#chap12">IN THE KONGENS NYTORV</a><br />
- XIII. <a href="#chap13">BY THE EXPRESS FOR LUBECK</a><br />
- XIV. <a href="#chap14">AN IMBROGLIO</a><br />
- XV. <a href="#chap15">'LOVE IS STRONG AS DEATH'</a><br />
- XVI. <a href="#chap16">'JEALOUSY CRUEL AS THE GRAVE'</a><br />
- XVII. <a href="#chap17">A QUARREL</a><br />
- XVIII. <a href="#chap18">THE EMEUTE AT LUBECK</a><br />
- XIX. <a href="#chap19">SIR CARNABY'S GRATITUDE</a><br />
- XX. <a href="#chap20">CARNABY COURT</a><br />
- XXI. <a href="#chap21">CHRISTMAS EVE</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-A HAUNTED LIFE.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I.
-<br /><br />
-THE MEET OF THE COACHING CLUB.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'Be patient, Trevor Chute; they are sure to be here
-to-day, old fellow, for Ida told me so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ida?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Mrs. Beverley; does that surprise you?' asked the
-other, with a singular smile&mdash;one that was rather
-sardonic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Jerry, I have long ceased to be surprised at anything.
-As I have told you, my special mission in town is a
-visit to her; but&mdash;so you and she are good friends still?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, though she has been six months a widow, we are
-on the same strange terms in which you left us last&mdash;friends
-pure and simple.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And nothing more?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As yet,' replied Jerry Vane, lowering his voice, with
-something of despondency perceptible in his tone, and to a
-close observer it might have been apparent that he, though
-by nature frank, jovial, and good-humoured, had, by force
-of habit, or by circumstances, a somewhat cynical mode of
-expression and gravity of manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The time was the noon of a bright and lovely day in May,
-when the newly-opened London season is at its height; and
-it was the first meet of the Coaching Club in Hyde Park,
-where the expectant crowd, filling all the seats under the
-pleasant trees, or in occupation of handsome carriages, snug
-barouches, dashing phaetons and victorias&mdash;in everything
-save hackney cabs&mdash;covered all the wide plateau which
-stretches from the Marble Arch to the somewhat prosaic
-powder magazine beside the Serpentine, and waited with
-the characteristic patience and good-humour of Londoners
-for the assembling of the coaches, though some were seeking
-to while away the time with a morning paper or the last
-periodical.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The speakers, though young men, were old friends, who
-had known each other since boyhood in the playing-fields of
-Rugby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jervoise, or, as he was familiarly called, Jerry Vane, was
-a curly-pated, good-looking young fellow of the genuine
-Saxon type, with expressive, but rather thoughtful eyes of
-bluish grey, long fair whiskers, and somewhat the bearing of
-a 'man about town;' while the other, perhaps in aspect the
-manlier of the two, Trevor Chute, in figure compact and
-well set-up, was dark-haired, hazel-eyed, and had a smart
-moustache, imparting much decision of expression to a
-handsome and regular face, which had been scorched and
-embrowned by a tropical sun; and where the white flap of
-the puggaree had failed to protect his neck and ears, they
-had deepened to a blister hue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had but the day before come to town, on leave from
-his regiment (which had just returned from India), on a
-special errand, to be detailed in its place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In front was the great bend of the blue Serpentine rippling
-and sparkling in the sunshine, with its tiny fleet of
-toy-ships; beyond it was the leafy background of trees, and
-the far stretch of emerald lawn, chequered with clumps of
-rhododendron in full flower, and almost covered with
-sight-seers, some of whom gave an occasional cheer as a
-stately drag passed to the meeting-place, especially if its
-driver was recognized as a personage of note or a public
-favourite.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't know what you may have seen in India, Trevor,'
-said Jerry Vane, 'but I am assured that the gayest meetings
-on the continent of Europe can present nothing like this.
-I have been in the Prater at Vienna on the brightest
-mornings of summer, and on gala days at the Bois de Boulogne,
-and seen there all the <i>élite</i> of Paris wending its way in
-equipages, on horse or on foot, but no scene in either place
-equals this of to-day by the Serpentine!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To this his friend, who had so recently returned from
-military exile, in the East, warmly assented, adding:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The day is as hot as my last Christmas was in the
-Punjaub.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Christmas in the Paunjaub, by Jove!' exclaimed Jerry
-Vane, with a laugh. 'Eating ices and fanning oneself
-under a punkah, with the thermometer at 90 in the shade,
-eh?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Captain Chute laughed in turn at this idea; but as he
-stood at that time by the inner railings in Hyde Park,
-waiting anxiously to see the fair occupants of a certain drag,
-he could foresee, as little as his friend, where they were to
-spend their coming Christmas, or on its eve to hear, through
-the stillness thereof, the sweet evensong coming over a
-waste of snow from an old chapel, amid a group of
-crystal-shrouded trees, where many soft voices, with <i>hers</i> among
-them, told again of the angels' message, given more than
-eighteen hundred years ago to the shepherds of Chaldea, as
-they watched their fleecy flock by night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It seems but yesterday that I last stood here, Jerry,' said
-Trevor Chute, thoughtfully, almost sadly; 'and how much
-has come and gone to us both since then!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; and here, as of old, Trevor, are the last new
-beauties who have come out, and the overblown belles of
-seasons that are past, and, of course, all those great folks
-whom everybody knows, and others of whom no one knows
-anything, save that they have swell equipages, and are "like
-magnificent red and purple orchids, which grow out of
-nothing, yet do so much credit to their origin."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You grow cynical, Jerry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps; but there was a time when I was not wont to
-be so. And you, Trevor, are not without good reason for
-being so too. Why, man alive! when in the Guards, how
-popular you were with all the mammas of unmarried daughters;
-a seat in the carriage, a box at the opera, a balcony at
-the boat-race, whenever you felt disposed. By Jove! there
-was no man in town I envied more than you in those days.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what has it all come to now, Jerry? I feel quite
-like a fogey,' exclaimed Trevor Chute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet this was but four years ago.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Only four years, old fellow, and <i>she</i> is not married yet!
-But here come the party, and on Desmond's drag; he has
-the "lead," it seems.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was now the hour of one; the procession had started,
-and the eyes of all the onlookers were eagerly engaged in
-critically examining the various drags, so magnificently
-horsed and brilliantly appointed, as they passed in
-succession, with all their silver harness shining in the
-sun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About thirty drove from the well-known rendezvous of
-the Coaching Club along the pretty drive which skirts the
-Serpentine and ends with the bridge that divides the Park
-from Kensington Gardens; and though some of the drivers
-adhered to the Club uniform&mdash;blue, with gilt buttons&mdash;many
-appeared in the perfection of morning costume; and
-as team after team went by, chestnut, white, or grey, with
-satin-like skins, murmurs of applause, rising at times to a
-cheer, greeted the proprietors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The costumes of the ladies who occupied the lofty seats
-were as perfect as, in many instances, was their beauty;
-and no other capital in Europe could have presented such a
-spectacle as Trevor Chute saw then, when the summer sun
-was at its height in the heavens, gilding the trees with
-brilliant light, and showing Hyde Park in all its glory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The leading drag was the one which fascinated him,
-and all the other twenty-nine went clattering past like same
-phantasmagoria, or a spectacle one might seem to behold
-in a dream.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Several ladies were on the drag, including the owner's
-somewhat <i>passé</i> sister, the Hon. Evelyn Desmond; but
-Chute saw only two&mdash;Clare and Violet Collingwood&mdash;or
-one, rather, the elder, who riveted all his attention.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both girls were remarkable for their beauty even then,
-when every second female face seemed fair to look upon;
-but the contrast was strong in the opposite styles of their
-loveliness, for Clare was a brilliant brunette, while Violet
-was even more brilliant as a blonde; and as the drag swept
-past, Trevor Chute had only time to remark the perfect
-taste of Clare's costume or habit, that her back hair was a
-marvel of curious plaiting, and that she was laughingly and
-hastily thrusting into her silver-mounted Marguerite pouch
-a note that Desmond had handed to her, almost surreptitiously
-it seemed; and then, amid the crowd and haze, she
-passed away from his sight, as completely as she had done
-four years before, when, by the force of circumstances&mdash;a
-fate over which he had no control&mdash;they had been rent
-asunder, when their engagement was declared null, and they
-were informed that thenceforward their paths in life must
-be far apart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Clare Collingwood is the same girl as ever, Trevor,' said
-Jerry Vane, breaking a silence of some minutes. 'You saw
-with what imperial indifference she was receiving the
-admiration of all who passed, and the attention of those who
-were about her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is she much changed, Jerry, since&mdash;since I left
-England?' Trevor asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, no,' replied the other, cynically; 'she and her
-sisters&mdash;Violet, at least&mdash;have gone, and are still going, over the
-difficult ways of life pleasantly, gracefully, and easily, as all
-in their "set" usually do. In her fresh widow's weeds Ida
-Beverley could not be here to-day, of course.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have an express and most melancholy mission to
-her on the morrow,' said Captain Chute. 'But why
-is Collingwood <i>père</i> not with his daughters on this
-occasion?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Though girls that any man might be proud of escorting
-in any capacity, the old beau, with his dyed hair
-and curled whispers, is never seen with them, nor has
-been since their mother's death. Though sixty, if he is a
-day, he prefers to act the <i>rôle</i> of a young fellow on his
-preferment, and doesn't like to have these young women&mdash;one
-of them a widow, too&mdash;calling him "papa." He knows
-instinctively&mdash;nay, he has overheard&mdash;that he is called "old
-Collingwood," and he doesn't like the title a bit,' added
-Vane, laughing genuinely, for the first time that forenoon, as
-they made their way towards the nearest gate of the Park,
-which the glittering drags were all leaving by the Marble
-Arch, and setting forth, <i>viâ</i> Portman Square, for luncheon at
-Muswell Hill or elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And has Clare had no offers since my time?' asked
-Trevor Chute, almost timidly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Two; good ones, also.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And she refused them?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So Ida told me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ida again; you and Mrs. Beverley seem very good
-friends.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, though she used me shockingly in throwing me
-over for Beverley.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And why did&mdash;Clare refuse?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can't say, for the life of me; women are such enigmas;
-unless a certain Trevor Chute, then broiling in the
-Punjaub, wherever that may be, had something to do with it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can pardon much in you, Jerry Vane,' said Chute,
-gravely; 'for we have been staunch friends ever since I
-was a species of big brother to you at Rugby; but please
-not to make a jest of Clare and me. And what of pretty
-Violet?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Violet is all right,' replied Vane, speaking very fast,
-and reddening a little at his friend's reproach. 'She has
-those graceful, taking, and pretty ways with her and about
-her that will be sure to do well for her in the end; thus,
-sooner or later, Violet's fortune is certain to be made in a
-matrimonial point of view.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have heard of this fellow, Harvey Desmond, before,'
-said Chute, musingly. 'I remember his name when I was
-in the Household Brigade. He was lately, I think,
-gazetted a C.B.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For what?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In consideration of his great services at Wormwood
-Scrubs and on Wimbledon Common.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To see Clare on <i>his</i> drag, even with his sister, the
-Hon. Evelyn, to play propriety, stung Trevor Chute, and, as if
-divining his very thoughts, Jerry Vane said, let us hope
-unintentionally:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All the clubs have linked their names together for some
-time past.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well,' replied Trevor, with something like a malediction,
-as he proceeded in a vicious manner to manipulate a cigar,
-and bite off the end of it. 'What the deuce does that
-matter to me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His expression of face, however, belied the indifference
-he affected for the moment, and feeling that he had caused
-pain by his remark, Jerry Vane said, as they walked arm
-and arm along Piccadilly, by the side of the Green Park:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Neither of us have been very successful in our love
-affairs with the Collingwoods; and with me even more than
-you, Trevor, it was a case of "love's labours lost." Yet,
-when I think of all that Ida Collingwood was in the past
-time to me, I cannot help feeling maudlin over it. We had,
-time to me, I cannot help feeling maudlin over it. We had,
-as you know well, been engaged a year when, unluckily,
-Beverley, of your corps, became a friend of the family. I
-know not by what magic he swayed her mind, her heart,
-and all her thoughts, but, from the first day she knew him,
-I felt that I was thrown over and that she was lost to me
-for ever! And on that day when she became Beverley's
-wife&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the bitterness of his heart Vane paused, for his voice
-became tremulous.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The friend equally of you and of poor Jack Beverley,
-whom I laid in his grave, far, far away, I felt all the
-awkwardness of my position when that bitter rivalry arose
-between him and you about Ida Collingwood,' said Trevor
-Chute, and the usually lively Jerry, who seemed lost in
-thoughts which the voice and presence of his friend had
-summoned from the past, walked slowly forward in moody
-silence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was recalling, as he had too often done, the agony of
-the time when he first began to learn&mdash;first became grimly
-conscious&mdash;that the tender eyes of Ida sought to win
-glances from other eyes than his, and ask smile for smile
-from other lips too! And when desperately against hope
-he had hoped the game would change, and oblivion would
-follow forgiveness&mdash;but the time never came.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry could recall, too, the sickly attempts he had made
-to arouse her pique and jealousy by flirting with Evelyn
-Desmond and other girls, but all in vain, as the sequel
-proved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had become so absorbed in Beverley as to be
-oblivious of every action of the discarded one, and almost
-careless of what he thought or felt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now, though Beverley was dead and had found his
-grave on a distant and a deadly shore, it was scarcely in
-human flesh and blood for Vane&mdash;even jolly Jerry Vane&mdash;to
-forgive, and still less to regret him as Trevor Chute did,
-though he affected to do so, on which the soldier shook
-his hand, saying:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are indeed a good-hearted fellow!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Vane felt that the praise was perhaps undeserved,
-and to change the subject, said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She has been to a certain extent getting over Beverley's
-death.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Getting over it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By becoming more composed and settled; no grief
-lasts for ever, you know,' replied Vane, a little tartly;
-'but now your return, your special visit to her, and the
-mementoes you bear, will bring the whole thing to the
-surface again, and&mdash;and&mdash;even after six months of
-widowhood&mdash;may&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Will make matters more difficult for you?' interrupted
-Trevor Chute, smiling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Precisely. I am a great ass, I know; but I cannot
-help loving Ida still.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will accompany me to the Collingwoods' to-morrow,
-Jerry?' urged the soldier, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, old fellow, decidedly not. Ida's grief would only
-worry me and make me feel <i>de trop</i>. What the deuce do
-you think I am made of, Trevor, to attempt to console the
-woman I love when she is weeping for <i>another</i>?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dine with me at the club this evening, then&mdash;sharp
-eight&mdash;and we'll talk it over.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks; and then we shall have a long "jaw" together
-about all that is and all that <i>might</i> have been; so, till then,
-old man, good-bye.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II.
-<br /><br />
-TREVOR CHUTE'S REVERIE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Protracted by various culinary devices, the late dinner
-had encroached on the night, just as the final cigar in the
-smoking-room had done on the early hours of morning;
-and after a long conversation, full of many stirring and
-tender reminiscences and many mutual confidences, Jerry
-Vane had driven away to his rooms, and Trevor Chute
-was left alone to ponder over them all again, and consider
-the task&mdash;if task it really was&mdash;that lay before him on the
-following morn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now to tell the reader more precisely the relation in
-which some of the <i>dramatis personæ</i> stand to each other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Four years before the time when our story opens, Trevor
-Chute, then in the Foot Guards, had been engaged to Clare
-Collingwood. She was in her second season, though not
-yet in the zenith of her beauty, which was undeniably great,
-even in London; and his friend, Jervoise Vane, was at the
-same time the accepted of her second sister Ida, who had
-just 'come out' under the best auspices; yet the loves of
-all were fated to end unhappily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Monetary misfortune overtook the family of Trevor Chute;
-expected settlements ended in smoke, and he had to begin
-what he called 'the sliding scale,' by exchanging from the
-Guards into a Line regiment then serving in India; and
-then the father of Clare&mdash;Sir Carnaby Collingwood&mdash;issued
-the stern fiat which broke off their engagement for
-ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course,' thought he, as he looked dreamily upward
-to the concentric rings and wreaths of smoke, the produce
-of his mild havannah, 'we shall meet as mere friends, old
-acquaintances, and that sort of thing. Doubtless she has
-forgotten me, and all that I was to her once. Here, amid
-the gaieties of three successive seasons since <i>those days</i>, she
-must have found many greater attractions than poor Trevor
-Chute&mdash;this fellow Desmond among them&mdash;while the poor
-devil in the Line was broiling up country, with no solace
-save the memory&mdash;if solace it was&mdash;of the days that
-were no more!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Carnaby Collingwood was by nature proud, cold, and
-selfish. He had married for money, as his father had done
-before him; and though he seemed to have a pleasure in
-revenging himself, as some one has phrased it, by quenching
-the love and sunshine in the life of others, because of
-the lack of both in his own, Trevor Chute felt that he
-could scarcely with justice be upbraided for breaking off the
-marriage of a girl having such expectations as Clare with
-an almost penniless subaltern officer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ida's engagement terminated as related in the preceding
-chapter. With a cruelty that was somewhat deliberate, she
-fairly jilted Vane and married Jack Beverley, undeniably a
-handsomer and more showy man, whose settlements were
-unexceptionable, and came quite up to all that Sir Carnaby
-could wish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet Beverley did not gain much by the transaction. Ida
-fell into a chronic state of health so delicate that decline was
-threatened; the family physicians interposed, and nearly
-three years passed away without her being able to join her
-husband in India, where he was then serving with Trevor
-Chute's regiment, and where he met his death by a terrible
-accident.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry Vane felt deeply and bitterly the loss of the girl he
-had loved so well; and he would rather that she had gone
-to India and passed out of his circle, as he was constantly
-fated to hear of her, and not unfrequently to meet her; for
-Jerry's heart did not break, and sooth to say, between balls
-and dinners, croquet and Badminton parties, cricket matches,
-whist and chess tournaments, rinking, and so forth, his time
-was pretty well parcelled out, when in town or anywhere
-else.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute and Beverley had been warm friends when
-with the regiment. Loving Clare still, and treasuring all the
-tender past, he felt that her brother-in-law was a species of
-link between them, through whom he could always hear
-of her welfare, while he half hoped that she might
-wish to hear of his, and yet be led to take an interest
-in him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With all this mutual regard, Chute's dearest friend of the
-two was not the dead man, but Jerry Vane; yet there had
-been a great community of sentiment between them. This
-was born of the affection they fostered for the two sisters,
-and sooth to say, Beverley, while in India, loved his absent
-wife with a passion that bordered on something beyond
-either enthusiasm or romance. It became eventually
-spiritualised and refined, this love for the distant and the
-ailing, beyond what he could describe or altogether conceive,
-though times there were when in moments of confidence,
-over their cheroots and brandy pawnee, he would gravely
-observe to Trevor Chute that so strong, and yet so tender,
-was the tie between him and Ida, that, though so many
-thousand miles apart, they were <i>en rapport</i> with each other,
-and thus that each thought, or talked, and dreamt of the
-absent at the same moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Be all this as it may, a time was to come when Trevor
-was to recall these strange confidences and apparently wild
-assertions with something more than terror and anxiety,
-though now he only thought of the death-bed of his friend in
-India, the details of all that befell him, and the messages and
-mementoes which Jack Beverley had charged him to deliver
-to Ida on his return to England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had been stationed together, on detachment, at the
-cantonment of Landour, which is situated on one of the
-outer ridges of the Himalaya range, immediately above the
-Valley of the Deyrah Dhoon, where they shared the same
-bungalow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dulness of the remote station at which the two friends
-found themselves became varied by the sudden advent of a
-tiger in an adjacent jungle: a regular man-eater, a brute of
-unexampled strength and ferocity, which had carried off
-more than one unfortunate native from the pettah or village
-adjoining the cantonment; thus, as a point of honour, it
-behoved Trevor Chute and Beverley, as European officers
-and English sportsmen, to undertake its destruction.
-Indeed, it was to them, and to their skill, prowess, and
-hardihood, the poor natives looked entirely for security and
-revenge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have sworn to kill that tiger, and send its skin as a
-trophy to Ida,' said Beverley, when the subject was first
-mooted at tiffin one day. 'She shall have it for the carriage
-in the Park, and to show to her friends!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About two in the morning, the comrades, accompanied
-by four native servants, took their guns, and set forth on
-this perilous errand, and leaving the secluded cantonment,
-proceeded some three or four miles in the direction of the
-jungle in which the tiger was generally seen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he sat in reverie now, how well Trevor Chute could
-remember every petty detail of that eventful day; for an
-eventful one it proved, in more ways than one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The aspect of Jack Beverley, his dark and handsome face,
-set off by his white linen puggaree, his lips clearly cut, firm
-and proud, his eyes keen as those of a falcon, filled with the
-fire of youth and courage, and his splendid figure, with
-every muscle developed by the alternate use of the saddle,
-the oar, and the bat, his chest broad, and his head nobly
-set on his shoulders, and looking what he was, the model of
-an Englishman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, Chute, old fellow, you will let me have the first
-shot, for Ida's sake, when this brute breaks cover,' said he,
-laughing, as he handed him a case worked by her hands,
-adding, 'Have a cheroot&mdash;they are only chinsurrahs, but I'll
-send a big box to your crib; they will be too dry for me ere
-I get through them all, and we may find them serviceable
-this evening.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Beverley could little foresee the evening that was
-before <i>him</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though late in the season, the day and the scenery were
-beautiful. Leaving behind a noble thicket, where the
-fragrant and golden bells of the baubul trees mingled with the
-branches of other enormous shrubs, from the stems and
-branches of which the baboon ropes and other verdant
-trailers hung in fantastic festoons, the friends began to step
-short, look anxiously around them while advancing, a few
-paces apart, with their rifles at half-cock; for now they were
-close upon that spot called the jungle, and the morning sun
-shone brightly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After six hours' examination of the jungle the friends saw
-nothing, and the increasing heat of the morning made them
-descend thankfully into a rugged nullah that intersected the
-thicket, to procure some of the cool water that trickled and
-filtered under the broad leaves and gnarled roots far down
-below.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Just as Chute was stooping to drink, Beverley said, in a low
-but excited voice:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look out, Trevor; by Jingo, there's the tiger!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute did so, and his heart gave a kind of leap within
-him when, sure enough, he saw the dreaded tiger, one of
-vast strength and bulk, passing quietly along the bottom of
-the nullah, but with something stealthy in its action, with tail
-and head depressed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In silence Beverley put his rifle to his shoulder, just as
-the dreadful animal began to climb the bank towards him,
-and at that moment a ray of sunlight glittering on the barrel
-caused the tiger to pause and look up, when about twenty
-yards off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It saw him: the fierce round face seemed to become
-convulsed with rage; the little ears fell back close; the
-carbuncular eyes filled with a dreadful glare; from its red
-mouth a kind of steam was emitted, while its teeth and
-whiskers seemed to bristle as it drew crouchingly back on
-its haunches prior to making a tremendous spring.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ready to take it in flank, Chute here cocked his rifle,
-when Beverley, not without some misgivings, sighted it
-near the shoulder, and fired both barrels in quick
-succession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then a triumphant shout escaped him, for on the smoke
-clearing away he saw the tiger lying motionless on its side,
-with its back towards him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You should have reserved the fire of one barrel,' said
-Chute, 'for the animal may not be dead, and it may charge
-us yet.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have knocked the brute fairly over,' replied Beverley;
-'don't fire, Chute, please, as, for Ida's sake, I wish to have
-all the glory of the day.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And without even reloading his rifle the heedless fellow
-rushed towards the fallen animal, which was certainly lying
-quietly enough among the jungle-grass that clothed the
-rough sides of the water-course.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The tiger suddenly rose with a frightful roar, that made
-the jungle re-echo; and springing upon Beverley with teeth
-and claws, they rolled together to the bottom of the
-nullah!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two of the native attendants fled, and two clambered up
-a tree. Left thus alone, with a heart full of horror, anxiety,
-and trepidation, Trevor Chute went plunging down the
-hollow into which his friend had vanished, and from whence
-some indescribable, but yet terrible sounds, seemed to ascend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could see nothing of Beverley; but suddenly the
-crashing of branches, and the swaying of the tall feathery
-grass, announced the whereabouts of the tiger, which became
-visible a few yards off, apparently furious with rage and
-pain, and tearing everything within its reach to pieces.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On Trevor firing, his ball had the effect of making it
-spring into the air with a tremendous bound; but the contents
-of his second barrel took the savage right in the heart,
-after which it rolled dead to the bottom of the nullah.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On being assured that the tiger was surely killed, the
-cowardly natives came slowly to the aid of Chute, who found
-his friend Beverley in a shocking condition, with his face
-fearfully lacerated, and his breast so torn and mutilated
-by the dreadful claws, that the very action of the heart was
-visible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was breathing heavily, but quite speechless and insensible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though many minutiæ of that day's dreadful occurrence
-came vividly back to Chute's memory, he could scarcely
-remember how he got his friend conveyed back to the
-cantonment of Landour, and laid on a native charpoy in their
-great and comfortless-looking bungalow, where the doctor,
-after a brief examination, could afford not the slightest hope
-of his recovery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It's only an affair of time now,' said he; 'muscles,
-nerves, and vessels are all so torn and injured that no human
-system could survive the shock.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, with kind-hearted Trevor Chute, the subsequent time
-was passed in a species of nightmare, amid which some
-catastrophe seemed to have happened, but the truth of
-which his mind failed to grasp or realize; and mourning for
-his friend as he would for a brother, they got through the
-hot and dreary hours of the Indian night, he scarcely knew
-how.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About gunfire, and just when dawn was empurpling the
-snowy summits of the vast hills that overshadow the
-Deyrah Dhoon, the doctor came and said to him, with
-professional coolness:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor Jack Beverley is going fast; I wish you would do
-your best to amuse him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Amuse him?' repeated Chute, indignantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; but no doubt you will find it difficult to do so,
-when you know the poor fellow is dying.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the grey dawn his appearance was dreadful, yet he
-was quite cool and collected, though weaker than a little
-child&mdash;he who but yesterday had been in all the strength
-and glory of manhood when in its prime!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The regiment is under orders for home,' said he, speaking
-painfully, feebly, and at long intervals. 'Dear old friend,
-you will see her&mdash;Ida&mdash;and give my darling all the mementoes
-of me that you deem proper to take: my V.C. and all
-that sort of thing; among others, <i>this gipsy ring</i>; it was her
-first gift to me; and see, the tiger's cruel teeth have broken
-it quite in two! I have had a little sleep, and I dreamt of
-<i>her</i> (God bless her for ever!)&mdash;dreamt of her plainly and
-distinctly as I see you now, old fellow, for I know that we
-are <i>en rapport</i>&mdash;and we shall soon meet, moreover.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>En rapport</i> again!' thought Chute; 'what can he&mdash;what
-does he mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Promise me that you will do what I ask of you, and
-break to my darling, as gently as possible, the mode in
-which I died.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute promised all that his friend required of
-him, especially that he should see Ida personally.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was insisted on, and after that the victim sank
-rapidly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he lay dying, he seemed in fancy, as his feeble mutterings
-indicated, to float through the air as his thoughts
-and aspirations fled homeward&mdash;homeward by Aden, the
-Red Sea, and Cairo&mdash;homeward by Malta and the white
-cliffs to the home of the Collingwoods; and he saw Ida
-standing on the threshold to welcome him; and then, when
-her fancied kiss fell on his lips, the soul of the poor fellow
-passed away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The name of Ida was the last sound he uttered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All was silent then, till as Trevor Chute closed his eyes
-he heard the merry drums beating the reveille through the
-echoing cantonments.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III.
-<br /><br />
-HIS VISIT TO CLARE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Though not yet thirty years of age, Trevor Chute was no
-longer a young man with a wild and unguessed idea of
-existence before him. Thought and experience of life had
-tamed him down, and made him in many respects more a
-man of the world than when last he stood upon the
-threshold of Sir Carnaby Collingwood's stately mansion in
-Piccadilly, and left it, as he thought, for ever behind him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet even now a thrill came over him as he rang the
-visitors' bell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It would have been wiser, perhaps, and, circumstanced as
-he was with the family, the most proper mode, to have
-simply written to Sir Carnaby or to Ada Beverley instead of
-calling; but he had promised his friend, when dying at
-Landour, to see her personally; and it is not improbable
-that in the kindness of his heart Jack Beverley, even in that
-awful hour, was not without a hope that the visit might
-eventually lead to something conducive to the future
-happiness of his friend, to whom the chance of such a hope
-had certainly never occurred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute had urged Jerry Vane to accompany him,
-hoping, by the aid of his presence and companionship, to
-escape some of the awkwardness pertaining to his visit; but
-the latter, though on terms of passable intimacy with the
-family still, and more especially since the widowhood of Ida,
-considering the peculiar mission of Chute to her, begged to
-be excused on this occasion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, while a clamorous longing to see Clare once
-again&mdash;to hear her voice, to feel the touch of her hand,
-though all for the last time in life&mdash;rose in his heart, and
-while conning over the terms in which he was to address
-her, and how, in their now altered relations, he was to
-comport himself with her from whom he had been so cruelly
-separated by no fault of either, he actually hoped that, if
-not from home, she might at least be engaged with
-visitors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Full of such conflicting thoughts, he rang the bell a
-second time. The lofty door of the huge house was slowly
-unfolded by a tall powdered lackey of six feet and some
-odd inches, the inevitable 'Jeames,' of the plush and
-cauliflower head, who glanced suspiciously at a glazed
-sword-case and small travelling-bag which Chute had taken
-from his cab.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is Sir Carnaby at home?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, sir&mdash;gone to his club,' was the reply, languidly
-given.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mrs. Beverley, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She does not see anyone&mdash;to-day, at least.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Miss Collingwood?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>She</i> was at home, and on receiving the card of Chute, the
-valet, who knew that his name was not on the visitors' list,
-again looked suspiciously at the bag and sword-case, and
-while marvelling 'what line the "Captain" was in&mdash;barometers,
-French jewellery, or fancy soaps,' passed the
-card to a 'gentleman' in plain clothes, and after some delay
-and formality our friend was ushered upstairs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again he found himself in that familiar drawing-room&mdash;but
-alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed as if not a day had elapsed since he had
-last stood there, and that all the intervening time was a
-dream, and that he and Clare were as they might have been.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the windows the view was all unchanged; he could
-see the trees of the Green Park, and the arch surmounted
-by the hideous statue of the 'Iron Duke,' and even the
-drowsy hum of the streets was the same as of old.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute had seen vast and airy halls in the City of Palaces
-by the Hooghly; but, of late, much of his time had been
-spent under canvas, or in shabby straw-roofed bungalows;
-and now the double drawing-room of this splendid London
-house, though familiar enough to him, as we have said,
-appealed to his sense of costliness, with its rich furniture, its
-lofty mirrors, lace curtains, gilded cornices, statues, and
-jardinières, loading the atmosphere with the perfume of
-heliotrope and tea-roses, and brought home to him, by its
-details, the gulf that wealth on one hand, and unmerited
-misfortune on the other, had opened between him and Clare
-Collingwood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A rustle of silk was heard, and suddenly she stood before
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was very, very pale, and while striving to conceal her
-emotion under the cool exterior enforced by good breeding,
-it was evident that the hand in which she held his card was
-trembling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But she presented the other frankly to Trevor Chute, and
-hastily begging him to be seated, bade him welcome to
-England, and skilfully threw herself into a sofa with her
-back to the light.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We saw in the papers that your regiment was coming
-home, and then that it had landed at Portsmouth,' she
-remarked, after a brief pause, and Chute's heart beat all the
-more lightly that she seemed still to have some interest in
-his movements. 'Poor Ida,' she resumed, 'is confined to
-her room; Violet is at home,&mdash;you remember Violet? but I
-am so sorry that papa is out.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My visit was to him, or rather to Mrs. Beverley,' said
-Chute, with the slightest tinge of bitterness in his tone;
-'and believe me that I should not have intruded at all on
-Sir Carnaby Collingwood but for the dying wish of my poor
-friend your brother-in-law.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Intruded! Oh, how can you speak thus, Captain Chute&mdash;and
-to <i>me</i>?' she asked in almost breathless voice, while
-her respiration became quicker, and a little flush crossed her
-pale face for a second.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then Chute began to feel more than ever the miserable
-awkwardness of the situation, and of the task which had been
-set him; for when a man and woman have ever been more
-to each other than mere friends, they can never meet in the
-world simply as acquaintances again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a minute he looked earnestly at Clare, and thought
-that never before, even in the buried past that seemed so
-distant now&mdash;yet only four years ago&mdash;had she seemed more
-lovely than now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The blood of a long line of fair and highly bred ancestresses
-had given to her features that, though perfectly
-regular and beautifully cut, were full of expression and
-vivacity, though times there were when a certain fixity or
-statue-like repose that pervaded them seemed to enhance
-their beauty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her eyes and hair were wonderfully dark when contrasted
-with the pale purity of her complexion, and the colour and
-form of her lips, though full and pouting, were expressive of
-softness, of sweetness, and even of passionate tenderness,
-but without giving the slightest suggestion of aught that was
-sensuous; for if the heart of Clare Collingwood was
-passionate and affectionate, its outlet was rather in her eyes
-than in the form of her mouth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, while gazing upon her and striving hard to
-utter the merest commonplaces with an unfaltering tongue,
-Trevor Chute could but ponder how often he had kissed
-those lips, those thick dark tresses, and her charming hands,
-on which his eyes had to turn as on a picture now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His eyes, however, were speaking eyes; they were full of
-tenderness and truth, and showed, though proper pride and
-the delicacy of their mutual position forbade the subject,
-how his tongue longed to take up the dear old story he had
-told her in the past years, ere cold worldliness parted them
-so roughly, and, as it seemed, for ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the other hand, Clare Collingwood&mdash;perfectly high-bred,
-past girlhood, a woman of the world, and fully accustomed
-to society, if she received him now without any too
-apparent emotion, by the delicate flush that flitted across
-her beautiful face, and the almost imperceptible constraint
-in her graceful yet&mdash;shall we say it?&mdash;startled manner,
-imparted the flattering conviction to her visitor that he was
-far from indifferent to her still, and her eyes filled alternately
-with keen interest, with alarm, affection, and sorrow, as she
-heard, for the first time, all the details of Beverley's death
-in that distant hill cantonment, a place of which she had
-not the slightest conception.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Will Mrs. Beverley see me?' he concluded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Though much of an invalid now, poor Ida undoubtedly
-will; but you must not tell her all that you have told to
-me,' said Clare, in her earnestness almost unconsciously
-laying her hand on his arm, which thrilled beneath her
-touch. 'Dearest mamma is, of course you know, no more.
-We lost her since&mdash;since you left England.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, I heard of the sorrowful event when we were up
-country on the march to Benares, and it seemed to&mdash;to
-bring my heart back to its starting-place.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Since then I have been quite a matron to Violet, and
-even to Ida, though married; thus I feel myself, when in
-society, equal to half a dozen of chaperones.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A little laugh followed this remark, and to Chute's ear it
-had, he thought, a hollow sound, and Vane's report of
-'what the clubs said' concerning Desmond and the 'linked
-names,' and the recollection of the note placed so hastily in
-the Marguerite pouch which she wore at that very time,
-rankled in Chute's mind, and began to steel him somewhat
-against her, in spite of himself, but only for a time, for the
-charm of her presence was fast bewildering him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her heart, like his own, perhaps, was full to bursting&mdash;beating
-with love and yearning, yet stifled under the exterior
-that good breeding and the conventionality of 'society'
-inculcated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hope you find the climate of England pleasant after&mdash;after
-India,' she remarked, when there was a pause in the
-conversation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, yes&mdash;of course&mdash;Miss Collingwood&mdash;my native air.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Our climate is so very variable.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>Captain</i> Chute agreed with her cordially that it was so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though subjects not to be approached by either, each
-was doubtful how the heart of the other stood in the matters
-of love and affection.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute had, all things considered, though their
-engagement had been brought to a calamitous end, good
-reason, he thought, to be jealous of Harvey Desmond;
-while Clare had equal reason to doubt whether, in the
-years that were gone, and in his wanderings in that land of
-the sun from whence he had just returned so bronzed and
-scorched, he might have loved, and become, even now,
-engaged to another.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was only certain of one fact: that he was yet
-unmarried.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These very ideas and mutual suspicions made their
-conversation disjointed; hollow, and unprofitable; but
-now, luckily, an awkward pause was interrupted by the
-entrance of a fair and handsome, dashing yet delicate-looking
-girl, attired for a ride in the Row, with her whip
-and gloves in one hand, her gathered skirt in the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though neither bashful nor shy, her bright blue eyes
-glanced inquiringly at their military-looking visitor, to
-whom she merely bowed, and was, perhaps, about to
-withdraw, when Clare said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't you remember who this is, Captain Chute?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Turning more fully towards the young girl, whose beauty
-and charming grace in her riding-habit were undeniable, he
-said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think I do; you are&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Violet; you can't have forgotten Violet, Trevor? Oh,
-how well I remember you, though you are as brown as a
-berry now!' exclaimed Violet Collingwood, as she threw
-aside her gloves and whip, and took each of his hands in
-hers. 'I was thirteen when you saw me last; I am
-seventeen, quite a woman, now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Kindly he pressed the fairy fingers of Violet, whose merry
-blue eyes gazed with loving kindness into his, for the girl
-had suddenly struck a chord of great tenderness in his
-heart by so frankly calling him 'Trevor,' while another,
-who was wont to do so once, was now styling him
-ceremoniously 'Captain Chute.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare seemed sensible of the situation in which her
-somewhat girlish sister placed them; for a moment her
-face looked haughty and aristocratic, but the next its
-normal sweet expression of character, all that is womanly,
-beautiful, and tender, stole into it, and she fairly laughed
-when Violet twitched off her hat and veil, and, seating
-herself beside Trevor Chute, declared that the Row should
-not be honoured with her presence that day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though naturally playful, frank, and almost hoydenish&mdash;if
-such an expression could be applied to a girl of Violet's
-appearance, and one so highly bred, too&mdash;she gazed with
-something of wonder, curiosity, and undeniable interest on
-the handsome face, the tender eyes, and well-knit figure of
-this once lover of her elder sister, whose story, with all the
-romance of a young girl's nature, she so genuinely pitied,
-whom she remembered so well as being her particular
-friend when she was permitted to come home for the
-holidays, who had petted and toyed with her so often, as
-with a little sister, and of whom she had only heard a little
-from time to time as being absent with Beverley in a
-distant, and to her unknown, land; and now, girl-like, she
-began to blunder, to the confusion and annoyance of her
-more stately sister.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Trevor Chute here <i>after all</i>!' she exclaimed, with a
-merry burst of laughter. 'Why! it seems all like a story in
-one of Mudie's novels!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What does?' asked Clare, with a little asperity of tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can you ask?' persisted Violet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'His visit is a very melancholy one; and if Captain
-Chute will excuse me, I shall go and prepare poor Ida for
-it,' said Clare, rising.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What does it all mean?' asked Violet, again capturing
-the willing hands of their visitor, as Clare hastily, and not
-without some confusion, swept away through the outer
-drawing-room. 'Why doesn't she call you Trevor, as I
-do? <i>Captain</i> Chute sounds so formal! I am sure I have
-often heard her talk to Ida of you as "Trevor" when they
-thought I was asleep, yet was very much awake indeed.
-So you are Clare's first love, are you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am glad to find that I am not quite forgotten,' replied
-Chute, smiling in earnest now; 'you were quite a child
-when I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Left this for India.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Why</i> did you go?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To join my regiment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Leaving Clare behind you? I must have a long, long
-talk with you about this, and you shall be my escort in the
-Park the next time I ride with Evelyn Desmond, for her
-brother is perpetually dangling after Clare, eyeing her with
-his stupid china-blue eyes, and doing his dreary best to be
-pleasing, like a great booby as he is.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><br />
-IDA.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Preceded by Clare, and accompanied by Violet, Trevor
-Chute entered the apartment of Ida Beverley, a species of
-little drawing-room, appropriated to her own use, and where,
-when not driving in the Park, she spent most of the day,
-apart from everyone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere they entered, Clare again touched his arm lightly, and
-whispered,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Be careful in all you say.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Be assured that I shall.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks, for poor Ida looks as though she would never
-smile again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though warned by these words to expect some marked
-change in the beautiful coquette who had been the sun of
-Beverley's life, and who had taken nearly all the life out of
-the less luckless Jerry Vane, the visitor was greatly shocked
-by the appearance of Ida, who rose from her easy-chair to
-receive him with the saddest of smiles on one of the
-sweetest of faces&mdash;Ida, who had the richest and brightest
-auburn hair in London, and the 'most divine complexion
-in the same big village by the Thames,' as Beverley used to
-boast many a time and oft, when he and Trevor were far,
-far away from home and her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her beauty had become strangely ethereal; her
-complexion purer, even, and more waxen than ever; her eyes
-seemed larger, but clearer, more lustrous, and filled at times
-with a far-seeing expression, and they were long-lashed and
-heavily lidded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her hands seemed very thin and white, yet so pink in the
-palms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Trevor Chute she had the appearance of one in
-consumption; but strange to say, poor Jerry Vane, who still
-loved her so well, saw nothing of all this, even when meeting
-her at intervals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She received Trevor Chute with outstretched hands, and
-with an <i>empressement</i> which, perhaps, her elder sister envied;
-she invited him to sit close by her side, and to tell her all
-he knew, all he could remember, and every detail of
-Beverley's last hours; but to do this, after the warning he
-had received from Clare, required all the tact, ingenuity, and
-delicacy that Chute was master of.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had become composed and calm during the past
-months; but now the proffered relics brought so vividly and
-painfully before her the individuality of the dead, the
-handsome young husband she had lost, that a heavy outburst of
-anguish was the result, as all expected.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were rings, each of which had its own story; a
-miniature of herself, with a lock of her auburn hair behind
-it; there were his medals and his Victoria cross, gained by
-an act of bravery among the hills, his sword and sash: all
-were kissed with quivering lips, commented on, and wept
-over again and again, not noisily or obstreperously, but with
-a quiet, gentle, subdued, and ladylike grief that proved very
-touching, especially in one so young and so beautiful in her
-deep crape dress; and Trevor Chute, as he observed all this,
-began to think that even yet his friend Vane's chances
-of regaining the widow's heart were of the slightest kind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I knew, Trevor Chute,' said she, after a pause, 'that I
-should never, never see him again!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?' he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because in the dawn of that morning when&mdash;when he
-died, I dreamt of him, and he showed me the ring you have
-brought&mdash;the gipsy ring I gave him, broken in two, as it
-now is.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The tiger's teeth did that.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is true,' said Clare. 'She was sleeping with me, and
-started up in tears and agitation to tell me of her dream and
-of the ring.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute's mind went back to that time when the
-pale face of the dead man looked so sad in the half-darkened
-bungalow, while the drums beat merrily in the square without;
-the last words of Beverley came back to him, and could
-it be, as he had often said, that he and Ida were indeed
-<i>en rapport</i>, and had a spiritual and unseen link between
-them?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It began to seem so now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, fearing that his visit was somewhat protracted, he
-rose, yet lingeringly, to go.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dear Captain Chute&mdash;Trevor we all called you once,'
-said Ida, taking his hand in both of hers, while Clare drew
-a little way back, 'you will call again and see us?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is better that I should not,' replied Chute, in a voice
-that became agitated in spite of himself; 'you know all the
-circumstances, Ida, under which we parted,' he added, in a
-lower voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will surely come again and see <i>me</i>?' she urged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If the family were out of town,' Chute was beginning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Trevor,' said the widow, passionately, 'love me as if&mdash;as
-if I were your sister; for you were more than a
-friend&mdash;yes, a very brother&mdash;to my poor Beverley, and I must be as
-your sister.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare's eyes met those of Chute for an instant, and then
-were dropped on the carpet; but she did not blush, as
-another might have done, at all this speech implied or
-suggested, for her face grew very pale, and then, feeling the
-dire necessity of saying something, she muttered,
-falteringly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will surely call and see papa, after&mdash;after&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, Miss Collingwood?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your long absence from this country.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It has seemed somewhat of an eternity to me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She trembled as he added, in a gentle, yet cold manner:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Excuse me, but it were better to pay my first visit to
-him at his club.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute, who had been all tenderness to Ida, could not
-help this manner to Clare, for Violet's remarks about
-Desmond seemed to corroborate those of Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unstable of purpose, he held Clare's hand, and she
-permitted him to do so, with a slow, regretful clasp. Why
-should he not do so, and why should she withdraw her
-slender fingers?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he descended the staircase, he heard the name
-of the Honourable Harvey Desmond announced with his
-card, and the rivals passed each other in the marble
-vestibule, the former with the easy air of a daily, at least a
-frequent, visitor; the other with that of one whose mission
-was over.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'On what terms are he and Clare if the clubs link their
-names together?' thought Trevor, bitterly and sadly, as he
-came forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Did she, after all, love himself still?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was almost inclined to flatter himself that she did
-so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Worldly or monetary matters were unchanged between
-them, as at that cruel time when he lost her; so perhaps
-he had only returned to London to stand idly by and see
-her become the wife of Desmond!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After all that had passed between them, after all that
-seemed gone for ever, after the bitterness and mortification
-he had endured, the years of hopeless separation in a
-distant land, he could scarcely realize, while walking along
-the sunny and crowded pavement of Piccadilly, the assured
-fact that he had again seen and spoken with Clare Collingwood;
-and that the whole interview had not been one of
-those day-dreams in which, when in Beverley's society, he
-had been so often wont to indulge when quartered far up
-country in the burning East.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then he recalled the cold terms of that letter in which
-her father&mdash;a hard and heartless, frivolous and luxurious
-man of the world, with much of aristocratic snobbery in his
-composition&mdash;had bluntly informed him that the engagement
-between him and Clare was ended for ever, and <i>why</i>;
-and he resolved that neither at the baronet's club nor
-anywhere else would he waste a calling card upon him; and in
-this pleasant mood of mind he hailed a hansom and drove
-to the rooms of his friend Jerry Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V.
-<br /><br />
-HOW WILL IT END?
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-If Jerry Vane was not very contented in mind, his rooms,
-the windows of which overlooked a fashionable square,
-bore evidence that he was surrounded by every luxury, that
-he was behind the young fellows of his set in nothing;
-while the velvet and silk cases for cigars or vestas that littered
-the table and mantelpiece, even the slippers and smoking-cap
-he wore, all the work of feminine fingers, seemed to hint
-of the many fair ones who were ready to console him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Possessed of means ample enough to indulge in every
-whim and fancy, the mantelpiece and the tables about him
-were littered by the 'hundred and one' objects with which
-a young man like Jerry is apt to surround himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were pipes of all kinds, whips, spurs, fencing-foils,
-revolvers, Derringer pistols, Bohemian glass, and gold-mounted
-bottles full of essences, statuettes pell-mell with
-soiled kid gloves, soda-water bottles, pink notes, faded
-bouquets, and French novels in their yellow covers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The hangings and furniture were elegant and luxurious,
-on the walls were some crayons of very fair girls in rather
-<i>décolleté</i> dress, while on a marble console lay a gun-case,
-hunting-flasks, and many other things that were quite out
-of place in a drawing-room, and a Skye terrier and an
-enormous St. Bernard mastiff were gambolling together on
-a couple of great tiger-skins, the spoil of Trevor Chute's gun
-in some far Indian jungle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The day was far advanced, yet Jerry had not long breakfasted,
-and lay, not fully dressed, in a luxurious dressing-robe,
-tasselled and braided, on the softest of sofas, enjoying
-the inevitable cigar, when Chute was ushered in, and he
-sprang up to receive him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may easily be supposed that Vane was most impatient
-to hear all the details of his friend's remarkable visit to the
-Collingwoods&mdash;remarkable, at least, under all circumstances&mdash;but
-he could not fail to listen with emotions of a
-somewhat mingled cast to the account of Ida's undoubted grief
-for his supplanter&mdash;an account which he certainly, with
-that love of self-torment peculiar to some men, wrung from
-Trevor Chute by dint of much industrious cross-questioning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Could he blame her for it?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This sadness, of which all are cognizant,' said Chute,
-'is not unaccountable, you know, Jerry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I suppose so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is natural grief for Jack Beverley.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pleasant fact to thrust on me!' said Vane, grimly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me, old fellow, I did not thrust it on you. But
-take heart; a girl with such capacity for love and
-tenderness is worth the winning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I won her, man alive!' said Jerry, savagely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, such a fortune is worth winning again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is barrack slang, Trevor.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not at all,' said Chute, laughing at his friend's petulance.
-'Be assured that she must love something; and your turn
-will deservedly come in due time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If a cat or a monkey don't take my place.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Cynical again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can't help being so, Trevor, as well as being a simpleton.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, don't say so, Jerry,' said the soldier, kindly; 'I
-think this unchanging love you have for a girl who used
-you so does honour to your heart, especially in this age of
-ours, when we are much more addicted to pence than to
-poetry; and, as some one says, the <i>sauce piquante</i> of life is
-its glorious uncertainty.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And Clare&mdash;what were your thoughts and conclusions
-about <i>her</i>?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My thoughts you know; my conclusions&mdash;I have none,'
-replied Chute, who, since he had again seen and talked
-with Clare Collingwood, had felt his heart too full of her
-to confide, even to his friend, as yet, what hope or fear he
-had.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you saw Violet, too?' asked Vane, to fill up a
-pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, yes,' replied Chute, with animation; 'Violet, whilom
-the pretty little girl&mdash;the child with a wealth of golden hair
-flowing below her waist, and no end of mischief and fun in
-her bright blue eyes; she seems the same now as then.
-She actually spoke of Desmond being an admirer of
-Clare.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely that was bad form in the girl, to <i>you</i> especially.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She did so through pure inadvertence, Jerry; but I must
-own that, when coupled with your remarks, the circumstance
-stung me more than a week ago I could have anticipated.
-But I suppose such trials as those of ours,' he continued,
-helping himself to a bumper of sherry without waiting to be
-asked, 'are part and parcel of the ills that manhood has to
-encounter&mdash;"Manhood, with all its chances and changes,
-its wild revels and its dark regrets&mdash;its sparkling
-champagne-cup and its bitter aconite lying at the dregs."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Times there are when I blush at my own want of proper
-pride of heart in continuing to mourn after a girl who has
-quietly let me drop into the place of a mere friend.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, depend upon it, Jerry, you must be much more
-than any mere friend can be to Ida Beverley; and now, as
-far as her grief goes, my visit to-day will prove, I think, the
-turning point.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And so Violet actually blundered out with some remark
-about Desmond.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, and that which galled me more was to see him
-come lounging into the house to visit Clare just as I took
-my departure, so there <i>must</i> be some truth in what the
-clubs say.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry Vane did not reply, and his silence seemed to give
-a marked assent to the surmise, as he had been in London,
-for some time past, and must, as Chute thought bitterly,
-know all the <i>on dits</i> of the fashionable world, and he sat also
-silent, watching the ice in the sherry cobbler melt slowly
-away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though Trevor Chute had, with emotions of doubt,
-regret, and envy, seen Desmond lounging into the house of
-the Collingwoods on the eventful day of his visit thereto,
-it did not follow, he thought on reflection, that he visited
-there daily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nor was it so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the height of a crowded and brilliant London
-season, and the Brigade had to undergo what that branch of
-the service deem 'hard work.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were guards of honour for Royal drawing-rooms;
-escort duty; heavy morning drills at Wormwood Scrubs;
-the daily ride in the Lady's Mile; polo at Lillie Bridge;
-perhaps a match with the Coldstreams at Lord's; a
-Bacchanalian water party and a nine o'clock dinner at
-Richmond with some of the pets of the Opera; midnight
-receptions and later waltzes; at homes, and so forth: thus
-the time of Desmond was pretty well filled up; and yet at
-many of these places he had ample opportunities for
-meeting Clare, and being somewhat of a privileged dangler,
-without committing himself so far as a special visit might
-imply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All was over between Clare Collingwood and Trevor
-Chute; yet the interest of the latter in her and her future
-was irrepressible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two days passed, and he remained in great doubt what
-to do: whether to accept Ida's piteous and pressing invitation
-to call on <i>her</i>, heedless, of course, though not forgetting
-it, of Violet's proposal that he should escort her in
-the Park when Clare rode with Desmond.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now he began to think that to remain in London,
-where there would be daily chances of seeing Clare, would
-be but to trifle with his own happiness and that peace of
-mind which he had been gradually attaining in India, and
-that he and Jerry Vane should betake themselves to Paris
-or Brussels, and kill thought as best they could; to this
-conclusion they came as they sat far into the hours of a
-sultry summer night over cigars and iced drinks, and
-resolved that the morrow should see them leave 'the silver
-streak' behind them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And at that very time, when they were forming their
-plans, what was Clare about?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Could Trevor have seen her then, and known her secret
-thoughts, perhaps he might have been less decided in his
-views of foreign travel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Returning wearily and long before the usual time from a
-brilliant rout, greatly to the surprise of Violet, and not a
-little to the vexation of that young lady, Clare was seated
-alone in her own room, lost in thought and unwilling to
-consult poor sad Ida, who was now fast asleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was long past midnight; the throng of foot passengers
-was gone, but the rattle of carriages was incessant as if the
-time were mid-day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had unclasped her ornaments as if they oppressed
-her, and forgetful of her maid, who yawned fitfully and
-impatiently in an adjoining room, she sat with her rounded
-chin placed in the palm of a white hand, with her dark eyes
-fixed on vacancy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The soft air of the summer night&mdash;or morning, rather&mdash;came
-gently through the lace curtains of an open window,
-bringing with it the delicious perfume of flowers from the
-jardinière in the balcony; and perhaps the fragrance of
-these blossoms, and the half-hushed hum of the streets
-without, 'stole through the portals of the senses,'
-and lured her into waking dreams of the past and of the
-future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the ball she had quitted so early, her father, who had
-been making himself appear somewhat absurd by his senile
-attentions to Desmond's rather <i>passée</i> sister, Evelyn, had
-actually <i>spoken</i> to her of Trevor Chute, and in unwonted
-friendly terms; and the flood of thought this episode had
-called up within her, conflicting with the half-decided
-addresses of Desmond, partly drew her home, to think and
-ponder over her future, if a future she had that was worth
-considering now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So far as monetary matters were concerned, the same
-barriers existed still between her and poor Trevor Chute as
-when Sir Carnaby broke off the engagement as cruelly as he
-would have 'scratched' a horse; and then the settlements
-which the great, languid guardsman could make were
-known to be unexceptional.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These did not weigh much with gentle, yet proud, and
-unambitious Clare; but she knew that they had vast weight
-with her worldly-minded father, so why torment herself by
-thinking of Trevor Chute at all?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But thoughts came thick and fast in spite of reason and
-cool reflection, and the girl sank into a reverie that was far
-from being a pleasant one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But what if Trevor Chute had learned to love another!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She bit her lovely nether lip, which was like a scarlet
-camellia bud, for an instant; her dark eyes flashed, then
-drooped, and she smiled softly, confidently, and perhaps
-triumphantly, as she said, half audibly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, no&mdash;he loves me still; poor Trevor! I saw it in
-his eyes&mdash;I heard it in the cadence of his voice, and I never
-was mistaken! He loves me still&mdash;but to what purpose, <i>to
-what end</i>?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tears started to her eyes; but she crushed her emotion,
-and, with a quick, impatient little hand, rang for her
-waiting-maid.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><br />
-SIR CARNABY COLLINGWOOD.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Still intent upon his Continental scheme, and somewhat
-impatiently waiting the arrival of Jerry Vane, Trevor Chute
-was idling over a late breakfast, so full of thoughts&mdash;sweet,
-regretful, and angry thoughts&mdash;of Clare Collingwood that he
-seemed like one in a dream.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was nearly noon. The sun of May was bathing in light
-the leafy foliage of the Green Park, and throwing its shadows
-darkly and strongly on the green below; while the far
-extent of the lofty street seemed all aglow and quivering in
-the sunshine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How fair and fresh the world looked, and yet, since his
-last interview with Clare, everything seemed indistinct and
-unusual to his senses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Bah!' thought he; 'to-night Jerry and I shall be in
-France, and then&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What <i>then</i>, he scarcely knew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The current of his ideas changed, for times there were,
-and this became one of them, when he longed morbidly to
-go through all the luxury of grief and sentiment in taking
-that which he had never before taken, save by letter&mdash;a last
-farewell of her; to beg of her to let no hour of sorrow for
-him mar her peace, no regret for his loss of fortune, a loss
-that was no fault of his own; to think of him with no pain,
-but with a soft memory of their past love, or to forget him,
-though he never could, or should, forget <i>her</i>, but would ever
-treasure in his heart how dear she had been to him, etc.,
-etc.; and in this mood he was indulging, when his valet
-laid before him a note, the envelope of which caused him
-to feel a kind of electric shock.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It bore the Collingwood crest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With hands tremulous as those of an agitated girl, he tore
-it open, and found that it was from Sir Carnaby Collingwood&mdash;a
-brief invitation to dine with him at his club at eight
-to-morrow evening (if disengaged), 'that they might have a
-little talk over old times.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Old times,' he repeated; 'what does that phrase mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had read over the note for the fourth or fifth time
-when Jerry Vane arrived.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He, too, had a similar invitation, but in that there was
-nothing remarkable, as he had never ceased to be on terms
-of intimacy with Sir Carnaby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What <i>can</i> old Collingwood mean by this invitation to
-smoke the calumet of peace?' exclaimed Trevor Chute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Time will show.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'After the cutting tenor of the letter he sent me&mdash;that
-cold and formal letter of dismissal&mdash;I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Forget it, like the good fellow you are; and remember
-only that he is the father of Clare Collingwood.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'True.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You'll go, of course?' said Jerry, after a pause; but
-Chute was silent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His pride suggested that under all the circumstances,
-especially if what 'the clubs said' were true, he should decline
-the invitation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But why?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had already been at the Collingwoods', but on a special
-mission, certainly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then Sir Carnaby was proud, and it was impossible to
-forget that the first formal advance had come from him.
-More than all, as Jerry Vane had said, he was the father of
-Clare, of her who had never ceased to be the idol of all
-his thoughts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By Jove, I'll go&mdash;and you, Jerry,' he exclaimed. 'Of
-course.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each dashed off an acceptance, and they were despatched
-to Pall Mall in the care of Trevor's valet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a time, as if repenting of his sudden facility, Trevor
-Chute muttered:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He used barely to bow to me in the Row or in the
-streets after he gave me my <i>congé</i>. What the deuce can his
-object be? Is he&mdash;is he relenting?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The pulsation of Chute's heart quickened at the idea,
-and the colour deepened in his bronzed cheek.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How anomalous and singular is the position in which
-we both stand with this selfish old fellow and his daughters,'
-said he to Jerry as they ascended the stately marble staircase
-of the baronet's club next evening, and gave their cards
-to a giant in livery, with the small head and enormous calves
-and feet peculiar to the fraternity of the shoulder-knot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As they were ushered into a lofty and magnificent room,
-the great windows of which opened to Pall Mall, Sir
-Carnaby took their cards mechanically from the silver salver,
-but seemed chiefly intent on bowing out a tall and
-fashionable-looking man, whose leading characteristics were languor
-of gait and bearing, with insipid blue eyes, and a bushy,
-sandy-coloured moustache.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you won't dine with us, Desmond?' he was saying.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Impossible, thanks very much,' drawled the other. 'Then
-I have your full permission, Sir Carnaby?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With all my warmest wishes, my dear fellow,' responded
-the baronet cordially; and, hat in hand, the visitor bowed
-himself out, with a brief kind of stare at Trevor Chute,
-whose face, he thought, he somehow remembered, and a
-dry shake of the hand with Jerry Vane, whom he knew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was gone, 'with full permission,' to do what?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute's heart foreboded at that moment all the two words
-meant, and the next he found himself cordially greeted by
-the man whose son-in-law he had once so nearly been.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ha, Captain Chute, welcome back from India,' he
-exclaimed. 'By Jove, how brown you look&mdash;brown as a
-berry, Violet said&mdash;after potting tigers, and all that sort
-of thing; too much for Beverley, though. Poor Jack&mdash;good
-fellow, Beverley, but rash, I fear. Very glad to thank
-you in person for all your kindness to him and to poor
-Ida. Most kind of you both, I am sure, to come on so
-hurried an invitation.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of Beverley and Ida, with reference to the death of the
-first, and the grief of the second, he spoke in the same jaunty
-and smiling way that he did of the beauty of the weather,
-the brilliance of the London season, the topics before the
-House last night, or anything else, and laughingly he led
-the way to dinner, the courses of which were perfect, and
-included all manner of far-fetched luxuries, even to pigeons
-stewed in champagne, and other culinary absurdities.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Carnaby did not seem one day older than when Trevor
-Chute had seen him last, and yet he had attained to those
-years when most men age rapidly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had been a singularly handsome man in that time
-which he was exceedingly loath to convince himself had
-departed&mdash;his youth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His firm, though thin&mdash;very thin&mdash;figure was still erect,
-well-stayed, and padded, perhaps; his eyes were keen and
-bright, their smile as insincere, artificial, and hollow as it
-had been forty years Before. His cheek was not pale, for
-there was a suspicious dash of red about it, while his
-well-shaved hair and ragged moustache were dyed beyond a
-doubt, like his curled whiskers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His mouth was perhaps weak and rather sensual; he
-had thin white diaphanous hands, with carefully trimmed
-nails and sparkling diamond rings. In general accuracy of
-costume he might have passed for a tailor's model, while to
-Chute's eye his feet were as small, his boots as glazed, as
-ever; yet he had undergone the tortures of the gout, drunk
-colchicum with toast and water till he shuddered at the
-thoughts thereof, and talked surreptitiously of high and dry
-localities as being most suitable for his health.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had, as we have said, keen&mdash;others averred rather
-wicked&mdash;grey eyes, a long and thin aristocratic nose, on
-which, when ladies were <i>not</i> present, he sometimes perched
-a gold eyeglass. He was certainly wrinkled about the face;
-but his smooth white forehead showed no line of thought
-or care, as he had never known either, yet death had more
-than once darkened his threshold, and hung above it a
-scutcheon powdered with tears. He had still the appearance
-of what he was&mdash;a well-shaved, well-dressed, and well
-'got-up' old beau and man about town, and still flattered
-himself that he was not without interest in a pretty girl's
-eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had the reputation of being a courtly and well-bred
-man; and yet, in his present hilarity, or from some
-inexplicable cause, he had the bad taste to refer in his jaunty
-way to his past relations with Trevor Chute, and to mingle
-them with some praises of his recent visitor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good style of fellow, Desmond!&mdash;devilish good style,
-you know; has a nice place in Hants, and no end of coal-pits
-near the Ribble,' he continued, after the decanters had
-been replenished more than once. 'Wishes to stand well
-with Clare&mdash;<i>your</i> old flame, Chute; got over all that sort
-of thing long ago, of course, for, as a lady writer says,
-"nothing on earth is so pleasant as being a little in love,
-and nothing on earth so destructive as being too much
-so." Desmond has my best wishes&mdash;but, Chute, the decanters
-stand with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute exchanged one brief and lightning-like glance with
-Jerry Vane; he felt irrepressible disgust, and for this stinging
-tone to him would have hated the heartless old man but
-that he was the father of (as he now deemed her) his lost
-Clare Collingwood. But Jerry was made to wince too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your visit the other day, Chute, seems quite to have
-upset poor Ida,' said he, after an awkward pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So sorry to hear you say so, Sir Carnaby,' replied Chute,
-drily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't like girls to betray emotion on every frivolous
-occasion; it is bad form, you know.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frivolous occasion! thought Chute, receiving the last
-relics and mementoes of her husband from the comrade in
-whose arms he died, and who commanded the funeral party
-that fired over him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She has begun to mope more horribly than ever during
-the last few days; but if I take her down to the country,
-she becomes more dull than ever, or goes in for parochial
-work&mdash;bad style of things, I think&mdash;blankets and coals&mdash;Dorcas
-meetings&mdash;and helps the rector's wife in matters of
-soup and psalm-singing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, if the truth were known, Sir Carnaby Collingwood
-was not ill pleased by Beverley's death, all things
-considered. Ida's jointure was most ample&mdash;even splendid&mdash;and
-she had no little heir to attend to. To be the father
-of these grown-up girls was bad enough, he thought; but
-to have been a 'grandfather' would prove the culmination
-of horror to the would-be youthful beau of sixty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His own lover and romance, if he ever had any&mdash;which
-may be doubted&mdash;were put by and forgotten years ago, and
-he never dreamed that others might indulge in such dreams
-apart from the prose of life. From his school-days he had
-been petted, pampered, and caressed by wealth and fortune,
-so much so that he was actually ignorant of human wants,
-ailments, or sufferings. Hence his utter callousness and
-indifference in such a matter as Trevor Chute's love for
-Clare, or her love for Chute. Though his dead wife, a fair
-and gentle creature, who was the antitype of Ida, and had
-been quite as lovely, loved him well, he had married her
-without an atom of affection, to suit the views of his family
-and her own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hence it was that, as we have shown, he could talk in
-the manner he did to his two guests&mdash;men whose past
-relations with his own household were of a nature so
-delicate, and to be approached with difficulty; yet, had
-anyone accused Sir Carnaby of want of tact or taste, or
-more than all of ill-breeding, he would have been filled
-with astonishment. But the ill-breeding shown by Sir
-Carnaby simply resulted from a total want of feeling, good
-taste, and perception.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus it was that he could coolly expatiate to Chute on
-the good qualities of Desmond, adding, 'You'll be glad to
-hear of my girl's welfare and expectations; he'll be a peer,
-you know, some of these days; and to poor Jerry Vane
-upon Ida's grief for the loss of her husband, <i>his</i> rival.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, while smoothing his dyed moustache with a dainty
-girl-like handkerchief, all perfume and point, with a
-Collingwood crest in the corner thereof, he would continue in
-this fashion:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poverty is a nuisance. I have admired dowerless girls in
-my day&mdash;do so still&mdash;but never go farther than mere admiration;
-so no girl of mine shall ever marry any man who cannot
-keep her in the style to which she has been accustomed.
-It was, perhaps, a foolish match Ida made with Beverley,
-though he had that snug place in the Midlands&mdash;or rather,
-the reversion of it when his father died; but now she is a
-widow&mdash;ha! ha! bless my soul, that I should be the father
-of a widow!&mdash;and with her natural attractions, enhanced
-by a handsome dowry, may yet be a peeress&mdash;who knows?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry Vane, with silent rage swelling in his heart, glanced
-at Chute, as much as to say:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How intolerable&mdash;how detestable&mdash;all this is!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She is a widow,' continued Sir Carnaby, eyeing fondly
-the ruby wine in his glass, as he held it between him and
-the lustre, with one eye closed for a moment, 'but with all
-her attractions, may perhaps remain so if she continues this
-horrible folly of unfathomable grief, and all that sort of
-thing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It does honour to her heart!' sighed poor Jerry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She is becoming an enthusiast and a visionary. The
-girl's grief bores me, and times there are when I wish that
-you, friend Vane, may come to the rescue, after all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A little smile flitted across the face of Vane as he merely
-bowed to this remark, which he cared not to follow, as he
-was doubtful whether it was the baronet or his wine that
-was talking now; but he glanced at Trevor Chute, and both
-rose to depart, thinking they had now quite enough of Sir
-Carnaby's 'hospitality.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the latter, seized by a sudden access of friendship or
-familiarity, on finding that he could no longer prevail on
-them to remain, proposed, as the night was fine, and their
-ways lay together, to walk so far and enjoy a cigar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was impossible to decline this: the 'weeds' were lit;
-Sir Carnaby took an arm of each&mdash;perhaps his steps were a
-little unsteady&mdash;and as they turned away towards Piccadilly,
-he began anew to sing the praises of Desmond, with the
-pertinacity with which wine will sometimes make a man
-recur again and again to the same subject.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good style of fellow, and all that sort of thing, don't you
-know, Chute? Has a fortune&mdash;comfortable thing
-that&mdash;very!&mdash;but it has prevented&mdash;it has prevented&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, Sir Carnaby?' asked Trevor, wearily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The development of his genius.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute laughed aloud at this, and said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! there is nothing like a hand-to-hand free fight with
-the world for <i>that</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are a soldier, Chute, but the world is no longer a
-bivalve, which one may, like ancient Pistol, open by the
-sword. Desmond graduated at Oxford.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As stroke oar, Sir Carnaby, I presume.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He would have taken the highest honours, Chute, and
-all that sort of thing, don't you know, only&mdash;only&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He could not?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not at all,' replied Sir Carnaby, somewhat tartly. 'He
-preferred that they should be taken, Chute, by those who
-set their hearts on such things; yet for Clare's sake, I
-wish&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whatever it was he wished, Trevor Chute never learned,
-for now he lost all patience, and affecting suddenly to
-remember another engagement, bade farewell, curtly and
-hurriedly, to Sir Carnaby, who said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Must have you down at Carnaby Court when the event&mdash;perhaps
-the double event&mdash;comes off; good style of old
-place&mdash;the baronial, the mediæval, the picturesque, and all
-that sort of thing&mdash;bored by artists and tourists, don't you
-know, but, of course, you remember it&mdash;ta-ta!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And arresting skilfully an undeniable hiccup, the senile
-baronet trotted, or rather 'toddled,' away in the moonlight.
-Remember it!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Well and sadly did Trevor Chute remember it; for there,
-on a soft autumn night, when the music and the hum of the
-dancers' voices came through the ball-room oriels, when the
-moonlight steeped masses of the ancient pile in silver sheen
-or sunk them in shadow&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'When buttresses and buttresses alternately<br />
- Seem framed of ebon or ivory,'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-as he and Clare stole forth for one delicious moment from
-the conservatory, had he first told her how deeply and
-tenderly he loved her; and now again memories of the
-waltz they had just concluded, of the delicate perfume of
-her floating dress, of the scarlet flower in her dark hair, of
-the drooping, downcast eyes, and her lovely lips, near which
-his own were hovering, come vividly back to haunt him, as
-they had done many a time and oft when he had seen the
-same moon that lit up prosaic Piccadilly shining in its
-Orient splendour on the marble domes and towers of Delhi,
-on the waters of the Jumna or the Indus, and on the snow-clad
-peaks that look down, from afar, on the vast plains of
-Assam!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now that their old tormentor was gone, both Chute and
-Jerry Vane laughed, but with much of scornful bitterness in
-their merriment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hope you enjoyed your dinner, Jerry!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hereditary rank is very noble, according to Burke and
-Debrett,' replied Vane, cynically. 'He is a baronet, true;
-but I would rather win a title than succeed to one; and to
-meet a few more men like Sir Carnaby would make a
-down-right Republican of me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How such an empty fool ever had a daughter like Clare
-Collingwood is a riddle to me. He is so cool, so listless,
-so heartless&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet so thoroughbred, as it is deemed!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And so worldly&mdash;she, all heart!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps; but what does all this about Desmond mean,
-eh, friend Trevor?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A little time will show now,' said the other, bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><br />
-A PROPOSAL.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was the noon of the following day when Major Desmond
-ordered his mail phaeton, and drove to the mansion of the
-Collingwoods to avail himself of the 'permission' granted to
-him so fully by Sir Carnaby on the evening before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The hour was somewhat early for a usual call; but as an
-<i>ami de la maison</i>, and considering the errand on which he
-was come, Desmond thought he might venture to take the
-liberty, and he felt a kind of pleasure in the belief that he
-would surprise his intended, for he came with the full
-resolution of sacrificing himself at last, and making a
-proposal to Clare, and feeling apparently as cool in the
-matter as if he were going to buy a horse at Tattersall's.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Miss Collingwood was at home and disengaged; Miss
-Violet and Mrs. Beverley were out driving; so all seemed
-to favour the object he had in view, and he was ushered
-into the drawing-room. His name was announced; but
-Clare, who was seated at a writing-table, with a somewhat
-abstracted air, did not hear it, as she was intently perusing
-a tiny note she had just written. She seemed agitated, too,
-for her eyes bore unmistakable traces of tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Agitation was so unusual with her, and indeed with
-anyone Desmond met in society, that he paused with some
-surprise, standing irresolutely near her, hat in hand; and as
-he watched the contour of her head with a gleam of
-sunshine in her braided hair, the curve of her shoulders, the
-pure beauty of her profile, the grace of the tender white
-neck encircled by its frill of tulle, and the quick movement
-of the lovely little hand, as she rapidly closed and
-addressed the note, he thought what a creditable-looking
-wife she would be to show the world&mdash;aye, even the world
-of London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There seemed something of a sad expression on her
-usually serene face; but he knew not then that her heart
-was beating with a new joy&mdash;yea, that 'it throbbed like a
-bird's heart when it is wild with the first breath of spring.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly his figure caught her eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Major Desmond, pray pardon me; I did not hear you
-announced.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I fear, Miss Collingwood'&mdash;he could not at that moment
-trust himself to say 'Clare'&mdash;'that I intrude upon your
-privacy,' and the nearest approach to anger and surprise
-that the usually imperturbable and impassive Desmond
-could permit himself to manifest appeared in his face when
-he saw her, with a rapidity, and even with something of
-alarm, which she could not or cared not to conceal, thrust
-the recently addressed envelope into the Marguerite
-pouch&mdash;the same in which Trevor Chute had seen her place a
-note from Desmond on the coaching day; but that referred
-only to a bet of gloves and the coming Derby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All this seemed terribly unwonted, and the deduction
-instantly drawn by the tall guardsman was that a note thus
-concealed was not intended for one of her own sex.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You do not intrude,' said Clare, timidly, yet composedly.
-'I am, as you see, quite alone&mdash;my sisters have gone to
-the Park.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Desmond was too well bred to make any direct allusion
-either to Clare's emotion or the matter of the note, to which
-that emotion gave an importance it otherwise could not
-merit; but he was nevertheless anxious for some light on
-the episode.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You dined with papa yesterday?' said Clare, after a
-pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I had to deny myself that pleasure, being otherwise
-engaged; but he had an old <i>friend</i> with him,' replied
-Desmond, tugging his moustache as he accentuated the word;
-'and I have come here with his express permission,' he
-added; but instead of seating himself, he drew very near,
-and bent over her, with tenderness in his tone and
-manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Express permission?' repeated Clare, lifting her clear,
-bright eyes composedly to his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;to take you out for a ride; we may join Sir
-Carnaby and my sister, who&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He paused, for this was <i>not</i> what he came to say; but he
-felt an awkwardness in the situation, and the perfect
-coolness or apparent unconsciousness of Clare put him out, all
-the more so that now a smile stole over her face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vanity and admiration of her beauty had made him
-dangle so much about Clare, that he felt the time was
-come when 'something must be done.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had come to do that 'something'&mdash;to propose, in
-short; and now, with all his <i>insouciance</i>, he had a doubt
-that, if it did not give him pain, certainly piqued his pride;
-and he actually hoped that visitors might interrupt the
-<i>tête-à-tête</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But he hoped in vain; the hour was too early for
-callers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare's smile brightened; but there was an undeniable
-curl on her lovely lip.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had just enough of lazy tenderness in his manner,
-with something in his tone and eye which seemed to
-indicate what he had in view, and yet seemed unmistakably
-to say: 'I can't act the lover, so why the deuce do I come
-here to talk nonsense?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My mail phaeton is at the door; shall I send for my
-horse and ring for yours?' he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Excuse me&mdash;I have a headache this morning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So sorry; but, perhaps, you may be better amused at
-home.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How, Major?' asked Clare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With books, music, or&mdash;or correspondence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the last word she <i>did</i> colour, he saw, a very little.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ladies have a thousand ways of passing time that men
-don't possess,' he added, lapsing into his habitual bearing,
-which in his style of man some one describes as 'gentle
-and resigned weariness.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It actually seemed too much trouble to make love when
-the matter became serious.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a pause, after which, for a change of subject,
-Clare asked about the horse he was to run in the Derby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh! Crusader is in capital form,' said he with animation,
-as this was a subject to be approached with ease. 'Though
-neither a large nor a powerful horse, he is "blood" all over,
-and there is no better animal in the stud book!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know that he stands high in the betting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'From the racing column in the <i>Times</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, you take an interest in my horse, then!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course,' replied Clare, smiling, thinking of her bets in
-gloves; 'a very deep interest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Encouraged by this trivial remark, he thought to himself,
-'Hang it&mdash;here goes!' and while there occurred vaguely to
-his lazy mind recollections of all he had read of proposals,
-and seen of them on the stage, he took her hand in his, and
-said abruptly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Miss Collingwood&mdash;Clare&mdash;dearest Clare&mdash;will you be
-my wife? Will you marry me&mdash;love me&mdash;and all that,
-don't you know?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare withdrew her hand, and slightly elevated her proud
-eyebrows, which were dark and straight rather than arched,
-while something of a dangerous and then of a droll sparkle
-came into her dreamy and beautiful eyes, for neither the
-tone nor the mode of the proposal proved pleasing to her,
-in her then mood of mind especially.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Excuse me, Major Desmond,' said she, scarcely knowing
-how to frame her reply, 'you have done me an honour,
-which&mdash;which I must, however, decline.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Just now, perhaps; but&mdash;but in time, dearest Clare?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your sister may call me that; but to you I am Miss
-Collingwood.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shall I ever get beyond that?' he urged, in a soft
-tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not know,' murmured Clare, doubtfully; for she
-knew what her father wished and expected of her; 'but as
-yet let us be friends as we have been, and not talk of
-marriage, I implore you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Deuced odd!' thought the Major, who, perhaps, felt
-relieved in his mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare knew well the calm, half-passionless, and <i>insouciant</i>
-world of the Major and his 'set,' her own 'set' too; she
-was not surprised; she had ere now expected some such
-declaration or proposal as this from Desmond; but
-certainly, with all his inanity, and perhaps stupidity, she
-expected it to be made in other terms, and with more ardour
-and earnestness; and at the moment he spoke her memory
-flashed back to the same moonlight night of which Trevor
-Chute had thought and remembered so vividly when he
-parted from her father but a few hours before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While Desmond was considering what to say next, it
-chanced that Clare drew her handkerchief from the Marguerite
-pouch, and with it the note, which fell at the feet of her
-visitor. Ere she was aware, he had picked it up, and saw
-that it was addressed to <i>Trevor Chute</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a greater sense of irritation, pique, and even jealousy
-than he thought himself capable of feeling&mdash;certainly than
-ever he felt before&mdash;he presented it to her, saying blandly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have dropped a note, Miss Collingwood&mdash;addressed
-to some one at the "Rag," I think.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, thanks,' she replied in a voice with the slightest
-tinge of alarm and annoyance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have you many correspondents there?' he ventured to
-ask, with the slightest approach to a sneer, as he placed his
-glass in his eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Only one,' replied Clare, now thoroughly irritated. 'Captain
-Chute&mdash;Trevor Chute&mdash;perhaps you have heard of him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; does Sir Carnaby know of this correspondence?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' she replied, a little defiantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Major began to feel himself, as he would have phrased
-it, 'nowhere,' and to wish that he had <i>not</i> called that
-morning. There ensued a break in the conversation which was
-embarrassing to both, till Clare, who was the first to recover
-her equanimity, said with a smile, as she deemed some
-explanation due, if not to him, at least to herself:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is to Trevor&mdash;to Captain Chute&mdash;concerning poor Ida&mdash;not
-on any affair of mine, be assured; but,' she added,
-colouring a little, 'you will not mention this circumstance
-to&mdash;to papa?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have my word, Miss Collingwood; and now good-morning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He left her with coldness of manner, but only a little; for
-whatever he thought, he deemed it bad style to discover the
-least emotion. But he felt that even in a small way, in virtue of
-his promised secrecy, he and Clare had a secret understanding.
-Why had she been so afraid that he should know of her
-correspondence with this fellow Chute, who he understood
-had been a discarded admirer of hers in her first season;
-and why keep her father in ignorance of it, when Chute was
-the old man's guest but yesterday?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was, he thought, altogether one of those things 'no
-fellow can understand,' and drove off in his mail phaeton to
-visit Crusader in his loose box.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare remained full of thought after he had gone, and the
-note had been despatched to Trevor Chute; she felt none
-of the excitement a proposal might cause in another. She
-was, in fact, more annoyed than fluttered or flattered by it.
-Yet Clare felt a need for loving some one and being beloved
-in turn. It is a necessity in every female, perhaps every
-true human heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare had certainly many admirers, but she was always
-disposed to criticise them, and the woman who criticises a
-man rarely ends by loving him; so since that old time, to
-which we have already referred, she had gone through the
-world of gaiety heart-free; and though mingling much in
-society, she had somehow made a little world of her own&mdash;a
-species of independent existence, and even preferred the
-retirement of their country home, with a few pleasant visitors,
-of course, and weaving out schemes of benevolence to the
-tenantry, to the whirl of life in London, with its balls, drums,
-crushes, and at-homes, attending sometimes three in the
-same evening, as it was called, though the early morning was
-glittering on the silver harness as the carriage drove her home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though the proposal of Desmond had excited not the least
-emotion in the heart of Clare Collingwood, it caused some
-unpleasant and unwelcome thoughts to arise, and at such a
-time as this more than ever did she miss her mother, whose
-affection and counsel were never wanting. She had a dread
-of her father, and of his cold and cutting, yet withal courtly,
-way of addressing her, when in any way, however lightly,
-she displeased him, and now she feared intuitively that she
-would do so, or had done so, in a serious manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She knew how much he was under the influence of the
-Desmonds, and felt assured that something unpleasant
-would come out of that morning's episode; and apart from
-having such a husband as the Major, even with his great
-wealth and prospective title, too, Clare felt that she could
-not tolerate the close relationship of his sister, a <i>passé</i> belle,
-horsey in nature and style, who had been engaged in
-intrigues and flirtations that were unnumbered, and more
-than once had made a narrow escape from being a source
-of downright scandal, for the Honourable Evelyn Desmond
-was fast&mdash;undeniably very fast indeed for an unmarried
-lady, and the queen of a fast set, too&mdash;yet it never reached
-the ears of Clare, though the rumour went current that she
-had dined at Richmond and elsewhere with Sir Carnaby
-Collingwood and some of the fastest men in the Brigade,
-and without any other chaperon than her brother. But
-then the baronet was more than old enough to be her
-father, with whom a late conversation now recurred to
-Clare's memory. While talking of Desmond, she had
-remarked:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am surprised, papa, that, with all her opportunities,
-his sister does not get married.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?' he asked, curtly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She has now been out for seven or eight seasons&mdash;even
-more, I think&mdash;and is getting quite <i>passé</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet she is much admired; besides, Clare, it is not her
-place to make proposals.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nor is it every proposal she would accept, any more
-than yourself,' said the baronet, with a loftiness of manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She seems to dazzle without touching men's hearts.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Papa, how sententious you have become! But really I
-don't think Evelyn will ever be married at all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Time will show, Clare&mdash;time will show,' chuckled Sir
-Carnaby, showing all his brilliantly white Parisian teeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It will not be her fault if she is <i>not</i>, papa,' said Violet,
-who had a special dislike to the lady in question. 'I
-wonder how long she has studied the language of the
-flowers in the conservatory with old Colonel Rakes' son?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And never got <i>him</i> to propose, I mean, papa. Her eyes
-are handsome, yet they smiled exclusively, for the time, on
-young Rakes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Violet!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'One good flirtation, she told me, always led to
-another.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely that is not <i>her</i> style,' said Sir Carnaby, with some
-asperity; 'and I have to request, Miss Violet, that you will
-not speak in this rough manner of any lady in the position
-of Miss Desmond.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This and many similar conversations of the kind now
-recurred to Clare, and led her to dread her father's
-questions, and perhaps his lectures, on the subject, and she
-began to feel sadness and doubt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From these thoughts she was roused by the entrance of
-a servant, who said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Miss Collingwood, a jeweller's man is here with the
-jewels from Bond Street for your inspection.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>The</i> jewels! what jewels? I ordered none,' said Clare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He 'ave Sir Carnaby's card, miss,' replied the man,
-pulling his long whiskers, in imitation of Desmond and
-others.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man entered with a mincing step, and bowed very
-low, announcing the name of the firm he represented, and
-unlocking a handsome walnut and brass-bound box, took
-out the morocco cases, and unclasping them, displayed, to
-the surprise of Clare, three magnificent suites of diamond
-ornaments, all set in gold and blue enamel, reposing on the
-whitest of velvet. In each suite were a tiara, pendant
-ear-rings, and a necklace, each and all worth several thousand
-pounds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, such lovely jewels!' exclaimed Violet, who came in
-at the moment, and with a burst of girlish delight; 'these
-diamonds are fit for a prince or a maharajah! Clare!
-Clare! are they meant for you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are submitted for inspection and choice.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What can this mean? There is some mistake,' replied
-Clare, colouring with extreme annoyance. If they came by
-her father's order, they came as a bribe; if from Desmond,
-they could not be left for a moment! 'Did Sir Carnaby
-give his address?' she asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, miss; he simply ordered the three sets to be sent
-on approval, and I brought them here. This is Sir Carnaby's
-card.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are all too large&mdash;much too large for me,' said
-Clare, hastily. 'Take them away, please, and I shall ask
-Sir Carnaby about them when he returns.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man bowed, returned the jewels to their cases, and
-was ushered out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, papa, how kind of you!' exclaimed Violet, apostrophizing
-the absent. 'Are you sure, Clare, that these three
-lovely suites were not for us?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am sure of&mdash;nothing, Violet: I don't know what to
-think,' replied Clare, wearily, and with an unmistakable air
-of annoyance. 'The Collingwood jewels are enough for us
-all, Violet.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><br />
-'THE DESIRE OF THE MOTH FOR THE STAR.'
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Ignorant of the little scene that had passed in the
-Collingwoods' drawing-room, Trevor Chute felt only something
-very nearly amounting to transports of rage when he thought
-of all that had occurred overnight at Sir Carnaby's club.
-The callous remarks of the frivolous old man stung him to
-the heart. So Clare as well as her father had blotted him
-out of their selfish world, and Desmond was the man who
-took his place!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Love, doubt, indignation, and jealousy tormented him
-by turns, or all together at once: love for Clare&mdash;the dear
-old love that had never died within him, and that, seeing
-her again and hearing her voice, had roused in all its former
-strength and tenderness; doubt whether she were worthy of
-it, and whether he had a place yet in her heart; indignation
-at the underbred indifference of her father to whatever he
-might think or feel, and jealousy of the influence of Desmond
-with them both.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nor were the visions of hope and revenge absent. He
-pondered that if she loved him&mdash;if she still loved him&mdash;why
-leave it unknown? why should he trifle with himself
-and her? Why tamper with fate? Why not marry her in
-spite of her father and Desmond, too? In mere revenge
-he might make Clare his own, after all!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then second, and perhaps better, thoughts came anon;
-for Trevor Chute, though to his friends apparently but an
-ordinary good fellow in most respects, a mere captain of the
-line, and so forth, was in spirit as genuine a soldier and a
-knight as chivalrous as any that ever rode at Hastings with
-the bastard Conqueror, or at Bannockburn; and thus, on
-reflection, his heart recoiled from making any advances to
-his old love&mdash;to the girl that had been torn from him,
-unless he obtained that which he considered hopeless&mdash;the
-permission of her father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In India, why was it, when so many perished of jungle-fever
-and other pests, that he escaped with scarcely the
-illness of a day?&mdash;when among Nagas, Bhotanese, and
-Thibetians, matchlock balls and poisoned arrows whistled
-past him, and keen-edged swords crossed his, no missile or
-weapon had found a passage to his heart?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Amid these stirring scenes and episodes he had striven
-to forget everything&mdash;more than all, those days of his
-Guards' life in England; and now&mdash;now a lovely face&mdash;'only
-the face of a woman&mdash;only a woman's face, nothing
-more,' as the song has it, and a woman's voice, with all its
-subtle music, had summoned again all the half-buried
-memories of the past!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From day-dreams, tormenting thoughts, and weary speculative
-fancies, which were in some respects alien to his
-natural temperament, Chute was roused by his valet, Tom
-Travers, presenting him with a note on the inevitable silver
-salver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If, as we have related, he was startled before by seeing
-an envelope with the Collingwood crest thereon still more
-was he startled now on receiving another addressed in the
-well-remembered handwriting of Clare! How long, long it
-seemed since last he had looked upon it!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While his heart and hands trembled with surprise, he
-opened Clare's note, which stated briefly that she had heard
-from Mr. Vane of their intention of going abroad, and
-begged that he would not forget his promise of once more
-visiting Ida, by whose request she now wrote.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The pallor of her complexion and the lowness of her
-spirits alarm me greatly,' continued Clare. 'I can but hope
-that when the season is over, and we go to Carnaby Court,
-the quietness there and the pleasant shady groves in autumn
-may restore her to health; only papa always likes to have
-the house full of lively friends from town, as you know of
-old.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did her hand tremble when she referred to the past?'
-thought Chute, viciously. 'Was Desmond hanging over
-her chair when she penned this? Why does she and
-not Ida write to me? Is this angling or coquetry? But
-Clare needs not to angle with me, and she never was a
-coquette.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The truth was that poor Clare had written, but with the
-greatest reluctance, by desire of Ida, who, for secret and
-kind reasons of her own, wished her sister to address him;
-and the sight of her handwriting did not fail to produce
-much of the effect which the gentle Ida intended; for
-Chute, while resolving to pay a visit, meant it to be a
-farewell one; and if he saw Clare, to suppress all emotion, to
-seem 'as cool as a cucumber.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And yet, but for his promise given, and in accordance
-with Jack Beverley's dying request, he would, on visiting
-London, no more have gone near the Collingwood family
-than have faced a volcano in full flame; perhaps he would
-not have come to London at all till the season was over;
-and now he was preparing to pay a second visit, but as he
-meant, a farewell one, to Ida, after dining&mdash;actually dining,
-per express invitation&mdash;with the father, who, in a spirit of
-selfish policy, had broken his engagement with Clare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was an absurdly anomalous situation, and altogether
-strange.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With all Trevor Chute's regard for Jerry Vane, many of
-his deepest sympathies were with his brave comrade,
-Beverley, whose last moments he had soothed, and to
-whose last faint mutterings he had listened when life ebbed
-in that hot and distant bungalow&mdash;mutterings of his past
-years and absent love&mdash;of the beechen woods of his English
-home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute had a brotherly love for Ida, and had she not
-asked him to love <i>her</i> as a sister?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could remember a dainty, delicate little girl, with a
-rose-leaf complexion, a face of smiles and dimples, all gay
-with white lace and blue ribbon, and the floating masses of
-her auburn hair bound by a simple fillet of gold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the memory of these past times, with all their dear
-and deep associations, came strongly back to Trevor's heart
-when, within a short time of the receipt of Clare's note, he
-sat with Ida's thin white hand in his, gazing into the depths
-of her tender brown eyes, on her pale and delicate cheek,
-and confessing to himself how lovely she was, and how
-charming as a friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was every way more calm and composed than when
-he visited her before, and she seemed much inclined to talk
-of their first intercourse and relations in the years that were
-gone; and more than once she stirred the depths of
-Trevor's honest heart by a few words, dropped as if
-casually, yet so delicately, from which he was led to infer
-that he had frequently formed the topic of conversation
-between her and Clare, and that he was not without an
-interest in the breast of the latter still.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a pause he sighed, but with some little bitterness,
-as he thought of the formidable rival who had Sir Carnaby's
-'warmest wishes,' and said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Am I, then, to suppose that you have pleaded for me
-with Clare?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, dear Trevor,' she replied, as her slender fingers
-tightened upon his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There was a time when I did not require even you, Ida,
-to do so for me,' he replied, mistaking, perhaps, her
-meaning, for he was oversensitive. 'That is all past and gone
-now; but in the same kind spirit may I not plead with
-you for one who was very dear to you once&mdash;poor Jerry
-Vane?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She coloured deeply, and then grew very pale again, and
-while the long lashes of her soft eyes dropped, she said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not speak of this again, Trevor&mdash;my heart is in
-Beverley's grave.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet,' he urged gently, 'a time may come&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It will never come.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor Jerry&mdash;as he loved you once, he loves you still.
-I hope, dear Ida, you pardon me for speaking of this to
-you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do from my heart, Trevor; but tell me, in the time
-that you have seen me&mdash;I mean since your return&mdash;have
-you not been struck by a certain strangeness of action
-about me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I confess that I have.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am conscious of it repeatedly,' she continued with a
-strange and sad smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the midst of an animated conversation, I have all at
-once perceived your thoughts to wander, an expression of
-alarm to creep over your face, a kind of shudder through
-your frame, and your hand to tremble.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And this sudden emotion, Ida?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Comes when I think of Beverley&mdash;or, rather, this
-emotion, which I can neither avert nor control, makes
-<i>me</i> think of <i>him</i> even when my thoughts have been elsewhere.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is very strange,' said Trevor Chute, as some of
-what he deemed Beverley's 'wild speeches' came back to
-memory again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Strange indeed, Trevor; but morbid thoughts come
-over me, with the <i>thrill</i> you have remarked, even in the
-sunshine and when with others, but more especially when I
-am alone; and there seems to be&mdash;oh, Trevor Chute, I
-know not how to phrase it, lest you think me absurd or
-eccentric,' she continued, while a wild, sad earnestness
-stole into her eyes, 'that there hovers near me, and
-unknown to all, a spirit&mdash;a something that is unseen and
-intangible.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is but overheated fancy,' said Chute tenderly, and
-with commiseration; 'you should be alone as seldom as
-possible, and change of air and scene will cure you of all
-this gloom. On my return&mdash;if I should return to London&mdash;I
-shall hope to hear that you are, as you used to be, the
-bright and happy Ida of my own brighter and happier
-days.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And rising now, he lingered with Ida's hand in his, intent
-on departure, as his last orders to his valet had been to pack
-at once for France or Germany; and Tom Travers, a
-faithful fellow, whose discharge he had bought from the
-Guards, and who had been with him in India and everywhere
-else, was fully engaged on that duty by this time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, dear Ida,' he said, 'dismiss as soon as you can
-these gloomy ideas from your mind, and cease to imagine
-that anything so unnatural, so repugnant to the fixed laws
-of nature, as aught hovering near you <i>unseen</i>, forcing you
-to think of Beverley, could exist.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not require to be forced to think of Beverley,' said
-she, with tender sadness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me, I did not mean that,' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know; but that which seems to haunt me at times
-may exist; the world is full of mystery, and so is all nature.
-We know not how even a seed takes root, or a blade of
-grass springs from the earth.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ida, this is the cant of the spiritualists!' urged Trevor
-Chute; 'do not adopt it. What would Sir Carnaby think of
-such a theme?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She slightly shrugged her shoulders, and with a little
-laugh said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Papa's views of life are very different from mine, and his
-ideas of the superiority of mind over matter must be vague,
-if, indeed, he has any views on the subject at all. Do you
-go to the Continent alone?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Jerry Vane proposes to accompany me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Also leaving London in the height of the season!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'His reasons are nearly the same as mine,' replied Chute.
-'Have you any message to him?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'None,' said she, colouring and looking down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'None,' repeated Chute, in a half-reproachful tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save my kindest wishes. You know, Trevor, that I
-used Jerry very ill; I am well aware of that, but it is too
-late now to&mdash;to&mdash;&mdash;' She paused in confusion, and then
-said, 'Poor Jerry, I pity him with unspeakable pity.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I would that he heard you,' said Chute, caressing her
-pretty hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Does not Dryden tell us that pity melts the mind to
-love?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not repeat the admission I have made,' said Ida, as
-a shade of annoyance crossed her pallid face, adding
-firmly, 'Let him have no false hopes; my heart has a great
-tenderness, but no such love as he wishes, for him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And now farewell, Ida, for a long time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A pleasant journey to you,' said she, and tears started
-to her eyes, as he bowed himself out of her boudoir.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks&mdash;to-night may see me in Paris.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><br />
-DOUBTS DISPELLED.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'In Paris to-night?' said a voice that thrilled him, and he
-found himself face to face with Clare, who unexpectedly,
-and somewhat to her own confusion, appeared at the
-drawing-room door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I knew not that you were at home,' replied Chute, with
-some coldness of manner, as the memories of last night
-occurred to him, and he too became confused as he added,
-'I meant to have left a farewell card for Sir Carnaby.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mechanically they entered the drawing-room. For
-reasons of her own, Ida did not follow them, and feeling full
-of the awkwardness of the situation, Trevor Chute lingered,
-hat in hand, and Clare, amid the tremor and tumult of her
-thoughts, forgot to offer him a seat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was provoked now that she had yielded to Ida's
-urgency, and written personally to Chute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet wherefore, or why? She had loved him in the past
-time, and loved him still, as she whispered in her heart;
-and felt sure that he loved her; and yet&mdash;and yet she
-thought now that letter should have been written by Ida,
-not her, if written at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hope you enjoyed your evening with papa at the club,'
-she said; with polite frigidity of manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Far from it,' said he abruptly, as he felt piqued
-thereby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can scarcely tell you why.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do, if possible,' said she, with genuine surprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon the admission, Miss Collingwood, but all night
-long Sir Carnaby sang the praises of a certain Major
-Desmond.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare coloured deeply; her eyes darkened, and sparkled,
-yet softly, under the sweep of their long black lashes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was horrible taste in papa&mdash;to <i>you</i> especially! How
-could he act so strangely?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So cruelly, Clare,' said Trevor Chute, with a burst of
-honest emotion, born of the sudden line this conversation
-had taken.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fear not for Desmond,' said she, in a bitter, yet low
-tone, as she shook her graceful head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He was to&mdash;to propose for your hand.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He did so this morning,' was the calm reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you, Miss Collingwood, you&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Refused him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Clare!' exclaimed Trevor, and all the old love
-beamed in his eyes as he uttered her name.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Neither doubt nor misunderstand me,' said Clare,
-very calmly, and in a voice that was earnest, sweet,
-and low. 'Papa and others too' ('What others?' thought
-Chute) 'have tried hard to make me forget what you
-and I were to each other once, but he and they have
-failed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank God!' exclaimed Chute, so full of emotion that
-he clutched the back of a chair for support.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the seeming emptiness of my heart,' said Clare,
-speaking in a low tone and with downcast eyes, while the
-throbbing of her bosom was apparent beneath her dress,
-'I made for myself a life within a life, known to myself
-alone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And that life, darling?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Was full of <i>you</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He made a step towards her; but she drew back, and
-said, questioningly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you, Trevor, in the days of this long separation?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have never, never forgotten you, Clare!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet you must have seen many!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Many&mdash;yes, and lovely women, too; but never have I
-felt a touch of even the slightest passing pang or preference
-for any one out of the many.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare gazed at him softly and sweetly. She did not, she
-could not, tell him that in the intervals of a brilliant garden
-party she had rejected for the third time the passionate
-supplications and proposals of one who could have made
-her a marchioness; and those who knew of this thought her
-cold and proud, but they were wrong, for Clare was 'one
-of those women who, beneath the courtly negligence of a
-chill manner, are capable of infinite tenderness, infinite
-nobility, and infinite self-reproach,' and her heart was
-loving, tender, sweet, and warm as a summer rose to those
-who knew her, and whom she loved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The mist was dispelling fast now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again they were discovering, or recalling, all that was
-sympathetic in each other, and learning to understand each
-other by word, and hint, or glance, when soul seemed to
-speak to soul, and more than all, when hand met hand, did
-Clare feel that which she had never felt since their
-separation, how magnetic was the influence between them, and
-how no other hand had made the blood course through her
-veins as his had done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The situation was becoming perilous, and Sir Carnaby
-might at any moment come upon them, like the ogre of a
-fairy tale, or the irate father of a melodrama.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I must go, Clare,' said he, but yet he lingered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again he was calling her by her name&mdash;her Christian
-name&mdash;as of old, in the dear past time, and how sweetly it
-sounded in her ear!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Trevor,' said she, pressing a hand on her heart as if to
-soothe its throbbing, while she leant on a table with the
-other, 'stay yet a moment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare was with him again; he was conscious of nothing
-more; and the old love that had never passed out of his
-heart, or hers either, stronger now than it had ever been,
-made him linger in her presence, and made eye dwell on
-eye, tenderly, sadly, and passionately, till emotion got the
-better of all prudence, pride, and policy, and snatching the
-hand that was pressed upon her bosom, he besought her,
-in what terms, or with what words, he scarcely knew in
-the whirl of his thoughts, to be his wife at all risks and
-hazards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Clare drew her hand away, and mournfully shook
-her head, and then, with an effort, spoke calmly&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You know, Trevor, how I loved poor mamma, and how
-she loved me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do, my own Clare.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, on her death-bed she made me give her two
-solemn promises.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And these were?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'First, to be, so far as I could, a mother to Ida and
-Violet, and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The second? Oh, Clare, keep me not in suspense!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never to marry without the fullest consent of papa; and
-as he acted before, so will he act again, out of mere
-petulance and pride, perhaps, as he will never acknowledge
-himself in error. Oh, Trevor!' she added, pathetically, 'I
-would that we had never met, and almost wish that after
-being so cruelly parted we had never met more.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute was silent for a time, but a sense of
-irritation against her father gave him courage to hope.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Clare, Sir Carnaby is a somewhat gay man,' said he,
-'and he has hinted to Jerry Vane, to Colonel Rakes, and
-others, the chance&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of what?' asked Clare, as her lips became pale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me&mdash;his marrying again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With whom?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I heard no name.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Marrying again!' she exclaimed, with anger, as certain
-undefined suspicions occurred to her or came to memory.
-'If Sir Carnaby does aught so absurd, I shall consider
-myself absolved from my promise to await his permission,
-and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, dearest Clare?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Become that which I should have been three long years
-ago,' she replied, with tenderness and vehemence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My wife, darling?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your wife, Trevor.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Clare, God bless you for these words!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as his arms went round her, all the man's brave heart
-went out to her, and tears started to his eyes as he kissed
-her with a passionate warmth in which he had never
-indulged in the past days of their early and unclouded
-love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soft Clare in his arms again! Clare's tender lips touching
-his! Oh, which was a dream and which was the truth?
-The three years of excitement, sorrow, and disappointment
-in burning India; the marches under the fierce glaring sun;
-long days of drought and thirst, when facing death among
-the fierce hill tribes; nights, chill and bitter, among the
-Himalayan snows; the hard existence in barrack, tent, and
-bungalow, all so different from what his Guards life had
-been in London&mdash;the present or the past!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But to what would the present lead?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They knew too well that, so far as Sir Carnaby was
-concerned, his consent would never be given.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Heavens, Clare!' exclaimed Trevor, in this bitter
-conviction, 'to what a death in life does your father doom
-you!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Say <i>us</i>, Trevor,' said she, in a choking voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Bless you, dear girl, for saying so; but you it seems,
-and all for my sake!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last he had to retire&mdash;literally to tear himself away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So there was acted and there was ended, for the time,
-their bitter but sorrowful romance, in that most prosaic of
-all places a fashionable drawing-room, with all its mirrors,
-lounges, porcelains, and <i>objets d'art</i>, which seem so
-necessary to that apartment which Button Cook calls essentially
-'the British drawing-room,' and mentally over and over
-again did Trevor Chute react and recall every detail of that
-delicious, yet painful interview, which had come so
-unexpectedly about, while the swift tidal train bore him from
-Charing Cross; and her last words seemed to linger yet in
-his ear&mdash;her face before his eye, like the vision of a waking
-dream&mdash;as on the deck of the steam-packet he sat, apart
-from all, full of his own thoughts, and saw the lights of
-Harwich and Landguard Fort mingling with moonshine on
-the water, while the clang of the Bell Buoy came on the
-wind, and the Shipwash floating beacon was soon left astern,
-and Trevor Chute, careless of whither he went, changed his
-mind and resolved to go to Germany.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Happy thoughts banished sleep from his eyes, and on
-deck he stayed nearly the whole night through, till the
-muddy waters of the Maese were rippling against the bow
-of the Dutch steamer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare loved him still, as she had ever, ever done! New
-happiness grew with hope in his heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet the prospect was a hard one. He could only know
-that, though not his wife, Clare Collingwood should never
-be the wife of another, and tenderly he looked on a ring of
-sapphires and opals from her hand, on which he had slipped
-their old engagement ring of diamonds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was alone, we have said, for his friend Vane did not
-accompany him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had a card for Lady Rakes' 'at home;' Clare was
-going, and Ida too; so the former asked Trevor to get him
-to defer his journey and be present, adding:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is for Ida's sake; you know <i>all</i> I mean, and all I
-hope she wishes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do, Clare, and so will Jerry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But do not speak of her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hence Vane remained behind in London.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X.
-<br /><br />
-FOR WHOM THE JEWELS WERE INTENDED.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Clare was seated in a shady corner of the library, looking
-alternately at the German map in Murray's Guide and the
-diamond ring which she had first received from Trevor
-Chute on the eventful moonlight night at Carnaby Court.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How strange that it should be on her finger again after
-all!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And to think,' she muttered, 'that papa should so
-unkindly and, with bad taste have stung his tender and
-loving heart by speaking to <i>him</i> of me and that big
-butterfly soldier, Desmond! No wonder it is that Trevor
-seemed cold, constrained, and strange. Oh, my love,
-what must you have thought of me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the girl, as she uttered this aloud, pressed the ring
-to her lips, while her eyes filled with tears. Then she sank
-into one of her reveries, from which, after a time, she was
-roused by the entrance of her father. He was attired for a
-ride in the Row, had his whip in his hand, and was buttoning
-his faultlessly fitting gloves on his thin white aristocratic
-hands with the care that he usually exhibited; but Clare
-could perceive that his face wore an undoubtedly cloudy
-expression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Papa, for whom were those lovely jewels that came here
-for inspection yesterday?' she asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not for you, Miss Collingwood.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet they were sent here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A mistake of the shop-people.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare looked up with surprise in her sweet face, for his
-manner, though studiously polite in tone, was curt and
-strange.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps they were for Ida?' said Clare, gently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No.'&mdash;'Violet, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No.'&mdash;'For whom, then, papa?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The sister of him you rejected yesterday.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Evelyn Desmond!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Miss Collingwood; and thereby hangs a tale,'
-replied Sir Carnaby, giving a final touch to his stock in a
-mirror opposite. 'Did any silly fancy for this man who
-has just returned to India&mdash;this Captain Chute&mdash;influence
-you in this matter?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare coloured painfully, but said 'No.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Glad to hear it, Clare, as I thought all that stuff was
-forgotten long ago,' he continued, with the nearest
-approach to a frown that was ever seen on his usually
-impassible visage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You asked him to dine at your club, papa,' said Clare,
-evasively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, out of mere politeness, to thank him, as Beverley's
-friend, for visiting Ida, though I fear the visit may make
-her grief a greater bore than ever. But why did you
-decline an alliance that would be so advantageous as that
-with Desmond?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Simply because I cannot love him, and I don't wish to
-leave you, dearest papa; now that you are getting old.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Old!' He was frowning in earnest now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me, papa, I love no man sufficiently to make
-me leave your roof for his.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What stuff and nonsense is this, Clare Collingwood!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is neither, but truth, papa.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Though you have the bad taste to inform me that I am
-getting old, permit me to remind you that in many things
-you, Clare, are a mere child, though a woman in years.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A child, perhaps, compared with such women as
-Desmond's sister Evelyn,' replied Clare, with some
-annoyance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And as a woman in years, I, foreseeing the time when I
-could not have you always to reign over my table at
-Carnaby Court or in Piccadilly, have deemed it necessary to
-provide myself with a&mdash;a&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Papa!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, a substitute,' he added, giving a finishing adjust to
-his gloves, and then looking Clare steadily in the face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the person of Evelyn Desmond!' she exclaimed, in a
-breathless voice, and becoming very pale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Precisely, my dear Miss Collingwood. She has promised
-to fill up in my heart all the fearful void left there by
-the loss of your good mother. I meant to have told you
-this long ago, but&mdash;but it was an awkward subject to
-approach.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So I should think!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With one who comports herself like you; and&mdash;ah&mdash;in
-fact, now that we are about it, I may mention that the
-marriage has been postponed only in consequence of
-Beverley's death, Ida's mourning, illness, and all that sort
-of thing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So my sacrifice in declining poor Trevor Chute, after
-all his faith, love, and cruel treatment, was uncalled for,'
-thought Clare, as she stood like a marble statue, with scorn
-growing on her lovely lip, while endeavouring to realize the
-startling tidings now given to her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is <i>this</i> to be the end of Evelyn's endless manoeuvring
-and countless flirtations?' she exclaimed after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Miss Collingwood, I spoke of Miss Desmond,' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So did I,' replied Clare, with growing anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't be so impulsive&mdash;rude, I should say&mdash;it is bad
-form, bad style, very.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor mamma!' sighed Clare; 'she was a good and true
-gentlewoman.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That I grant you, but a trifle cold and stately.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When she died I thought it is only when angels leave
-us that we see the light of heaven on their wings.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now don't be melodramatic; it is absurd, and to be
-emotional is bad taste. As one cuckoo does not make a
-spring any more than one swallow a summer, so no more
-should one affair of the human heart make up the end of a
-human existence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are you really in earnest about this, papa?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course, though I am not much in earnest about
-anything usually; it is not worth one's while.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At a certain age, perhaps,' thought Clare; 'but you
-were earnest enough once, in dismissing poor Trevor
-Chute.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will break this matter to your sisters,' said he,
-preparing to leave her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My sisters!' said Clare, bitterly and sadly. 'Oh, papa! think
-of Violet's prospects with&mdash;with' (she feared to add
-such a chaperon)&mdash;'and of Ida, so sad, so delicate in health.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nonsense, Miss Collingwood, Ida will soon marry again;
-such absurd grief never lasts; and I am sure that Vane
-loves her still.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then <i>he</i> is not supposed to have got over "that stuff,"
-as you think Trevor Chute and I have done.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Miss Collingwood, I do not like my words repeated; so
-with your permission we shall cease the subject, and I shall
-bid you good-morning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whenever he was offended with any of his own family
-the tone he adopted was one of elaborate politeness; and
-twiddling his eyeglass, with a kind of Dundreary skip, this
-model father, this 'awful dad' of Clare, departed to the
-abode of his inamorata.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare remained for some time standing where he had left
-her as if turned to stone. The proud and sensitive girl's
-cheek burned with mingled shame and anger as she thought
-of the ridicule, the perhaps coarse gibes of the clubs, and
-general irony of society, which such an alliance was apt to
-excite; and with all the usual command of every emotion
-peculiar to her set and style, as this conviction came
-upon her, tears hot and swift rushed into her sweet dark
-eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Could Sir Carnaby have been so insane as to contemplate
-a double alliance with that fast family? she asked of
-herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It would have made us all more than ever ridiculous!'
-she muttered aloud; and then she thought with more
-pleasure of her re-engagement with Trevor Chute, the
-promise given, and which she would certainly redeem; yet
-she fairly wept for the price of its redemption, as she shrank
-with a species of horror from seeing that 'Parky party,' as
-she knew the men about town called the fair Evelyn,
-occupying the place of her dead mother at home and
-abroad, and presented at Court and elsewhere in the
-Collingwood jewels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vanity, perhaps, as much as anything else, was the cause
-of this new idea in the mind of the shallow Sir Carnaby.
-Though he felt perfectly conscious that his own day was
-past, he would not acknowledge it. He knew well, too,
-that though many enjoyed his dinners and wines, his
-crushes in Piccadilly, and his cover-shooting at Carnaby
-Court, and that many tolerated him for the sake of his
-rank, position, and charming daughters, they deemed him
-'no end of an old bore,' and this conviction galled and cut
-him to the quick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hence, if Evelyn Desmond became his wife, the fact
-would be a kind of protest against <i>Time</i> itself!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How society will laugh! it is intolerable!' exclaimed
-Ida, thoroughly rousing herself when she heard the startling
-tidings. 'You, Clare, were ever his favourite&mdash;the one
-who, as he said always, reminded him most of poor mamma
-'when she last folded her pale, thin hands so meekly, and
-after kissing us all, gave up her soul to God; yet he could
-tell you, in this jaunty way, that another was to take her
-place, and that other was such a woman as Evelyn Desmond!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Already the rumour of 'the coming event' must, they
-thought, be known in town, else wherefore the hint thrown
-out so vaguely by Trevor Chute? Already! The
-mortification of the girls was unspeakable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had the unwelcome announcement been made to her
-but a day sooner, at least before her chance interview with
-Trevor&mdash;that interview so full of deep and tender interest
-to them both&mdash;she might have been tempted to make a
-promise more distinct than she had given, for Clare's gentle
-heart was full of indignation now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute could not now make, as in the past time,
-such settlements as her father's ambition required and
-deemed necessary; yet his means were ample, and she had
-lands, riches, and position enough for both; so why should
-she not be his wife?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such are the idiosyncrasies of human nature, that her
-father, who once liked Trevor Chute, now disliked, and
-more than disliked him, because he felt quite sensible that
-he had done the frank but unfortunate soldier who had
-loved his daughter a wrong.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To stay in town with this engagement on the <i>tapis</i>, and
-this marriage in prospect, was more, however, than Clare
-cared to endure, or Ida either. When it was pressed upon
-the baronet that the three sisters should go to Carnaby
-Court or elsewhere, he affected much surprise, as they had
-barely reached the middle of the season, and the engagement
-list contained many affairs towards which Clare, and
-certainly Violet, had looked forward with interest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though he made a show of some opposition to all this,
-Sir Carnaby was not unwilling to be left in town alone at
-this time, where he had to be in frequent attendance upon
-his intended, where there were settlements to arrange, a
-<i>trousseau</i> to prepare, and jewels to select, so the plan of
-Clare and Ida was at once adopted.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><br />
-A ROMANCE OF THE DRAWING-ROOM.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'It is bitter,' says a powerful writer, 'to know those whom we
-love dead; but it is more bitter to be as dead to those who,
-once having loved us, have sunk our memory deep beneath
-an oblivion that is not the oblivion of the grave.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry Vane had experienced much of this bitterness in the
-past time; but new hopes were already dawning within him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had received Clare's message from Trevor Chute,
-who, for the life of him, in the fulness of his own joy, could
-not, nathless his promise to her, help telling Vane what she
-had said of Ida's probable wishes; thus, with a heart light
-as a bird's, on the evening of the 'at-home,' he betook
-himself to a part of Belgravia where at that season the great
-houses, rising floor above floor, have usually every window
-ablaze with light, and awnings of brilliant hues extending
-from the pillared portico to the kerb, with soft bright
-carpets stretched beneath for the tread of pretty feet in the
-daintiest of boots, while the carriages, with rich liveries and
-flashing harness, line the way, waiting to set down or take up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Countless carriages were there; those which had deposited
-their freights were drawn up on the opposite side of
-the square, wheel to wheel, like a park of artillery; others
-were setting down past the lighted portico, which was
-crowded by servants in livery. The bustle was great, nor
-were smart hansoms and even rickety 'growlers' wanting in
-the throng of more dashing vehicles, bringing bachelors, like
-Jerry, from their clubs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Full of one thought&mdash;Ida&mdash;he was betimes at Colonel
-Rakes' house&mdash;earlier, indeed, than was his wont&mdash;and
-piloted his way up the great staircase and through the great
-drawing-rooms, which were hung with stately family portraits
-of the Rakes of other times, and were already crowded with
-people of the best style, for the 'at-home' was usually a
-'crusher' in this house; a sea of velvets and silks, diamonds,
-and sapphires; and every other man wore a ribbon, star, or
-order of some kind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of his hostess Lady Rakes, a <i>fade</i> old woman of fashion,
-with her company smile and insipid remarks for all in
-succession, and her husband the Colonel, who, till Sir Carnaby
-came, was ever about Evelyn Desmond, with whom he
-fancied himself to have an incipient flirtation, we shall say
-no particular more, as they have no part in our story.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Collingwoods had not yet arrived. Vane could see
-nothing of them amid the throng while looking everywhere
-for Ida. Any very definite idea he had none; but love
-was the impulse that led him to seek her society so
-sedulously again&mdash;to see her, and hear her voice. How often
-had he said and thought, even while his whole heart yearned
-for her, 'I shall never torment myself by looking on her
-face again!' and now he was searching for her with a heart
-that was hungry and eager.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He heard carriage after carriage come up and deposit its
-occupants, name after name announced, and saw group
-after group stream up the staircase and glide through the
-doors. Would she come after all? He was beginning to
-fear not, when suddenly the name of 'Collingwood' caught
-his ear, and the well-saved old dandy, with an unusually
-bright smile on his thin aristocratic face, appeared with
-Clare leaning on one arm and Ida on the other. With all
-their beauty, we have said that he felt his daughters a bore;
-thus, so soon as he could, he made all haste to leave them
-in the care of others, while he mixed with the glittering
-throng.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So dense was the latter that a considerable time elapsed
-ere Vane could make his way to where the sisters stood,
-with more than one admirer near them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There, too, was Desmond, with his cross of the Bath,
-and a delicate waxen flower in his lapel. Clara's refusal
-had certainly piqued, but not pained, the tall, languid
-guardsman with the tawny hair; yet he did not think his
-chances of ultimate success, if he cared sufficiently to attain
-it, were over yet; but his love was of that easy nature&mdash;more
-like a listless flirtation than love&mdash;that he was in no
-haste to press his suit again; for if this affair, and 'a very
-absurd affair, by Jove!' he deemed it, between Sir Carnaby
-and his fast sister actually came off, he would find himself
-often enough in the charming society of Clare; but what a
-joke it would be to think that Evelyn might be his
-mother-in-law.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All things considered, the Honourable Major was not
-much in want of consolation, and if he had required it,
-there were plenty of lovely belles there and elsewhere 'who
-would gladly be bride,' not 'to young Lochinvar,' but to the
-future Lord Bayswater.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And what of Clare, so calm in aspect and aristocratically
-serene?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her thoughts were not with the gay yet empty throng
-that buzzed and glittered around her, but with her soldier-lover,
-browned and tanned by the fierce sun-glare of India,
-from whom she had been so long wantonly separated, and
-was now separated again, yet with the sweet memory of his
-last passionate kisses on her lip, that looked so proud to
-others, and who was not now, thank God! as before&mdash;facing
-the toils and terrors of an obscure mountain war in
-India, but simply self-banished to Germany till time should
-show what might be before them both. Where was he
-then? what doing, and with whom?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thinking, doubtless, of her! so thought and pondered
-Clare, when she could thrust aside the coming marriage of
-Sir Carnaby, with all its contingent ridicule; but it was in
-vain that she repelled it, for the fact took full and bitter
-possession of her, and could not be displaced; and her lip
-curled scornfully as she saw her father, with his bald head
-shining in the light like a billiard ball, his dyed moustache,
-and false teeth, his undoubtedly handsome and aristocratic
-figure, though thin and shrunken, clad in evening costume
-of the most perfect fashion, simpering and bending over
-Evelyn, of whom we shall have more to say anon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-None that looked on Clare, and saw the greatness of her
-beauty, the general sweetness of her smile, her tranquil air,
-and somewhat languid grace, could have dreamed that
-irritating or bitter thoughts were flitting through her mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh,' thought she, as she fanned herself, 'how vapid it
-all is, exchanging the same hackneyed commonplaces with
-dozens in succession.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet society compelled her to appear like other people,
-and she found herself listening to Desmond, who lisped
-away in his usual fashion of things in general: the debates
-in the House last night, the envious screen of the ladies'
-gallery, la crosse at Hurlingham, polo, tent-pegging, and
-lemon-slicing at Lillie Bridge, the coaching club and the
-teams, Colonel Rakes' greys, Bayswater's roans, the Scottish
-Duke of Chatelherault's snow-whites, the matching of
-wheelers and leaders; of this party and that rout; who
-were and were not at the Chiswick Garden Fete.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One circumstance pleased her. Nothing in the
-well-bred and impassive manner of Desmond, though he hung
-over her and tugged his long fair moustache, could have
-led anyone to suppose that he had actually made her a
-proposal the other morning, and as to his sister's intended
-'fiasco,' for such they both deemed it, the subject was not
-even hinted at; and now, as he moved on to speak to
-some one else, a gloved hand was laid on her arm, and
-Clare found herself beside Evelyn Desmond.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was perhaps about thirty, yet she had more
-experience of the world than Clare could ever have won in a
-lifetime. In girlhood she had been handsome; but her
-beauty&mdash;if real beauty she ever possessed&mdash;was already
-gone; bloom at least had departed. She was fair, blue-eyed,
-and not unlike her brother, with a proportionately
-tall figure, and a face rather aristocratic in contour, but
-with a keener, sharper, more haughty and defiant
-expression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One of the <i>three</i> suites of diamonds that Clare had seen
-was sparkling on her brow and bosom. She was attired in
-violet velvet, with priceless point lace, cut in the extreme
-mode: her neck and shoulders were bare, and her dress
-cut so absurdly low behind as to show rather too much of a
-certainly fair and snow-white back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare's chief objection to her, apart from the disparity of
-years, was that the Honourable Evelyn had the unpleasant
-reputation of having done more than one very fast thing in
-her life, though no one could precisely say what they were;
-and though she was the daughter of a peer and a sister of
-a major in the Guards, all men had a cool, <i>insouciant</i>, and
-even flippant or half 'chaffing' mode of addressing her,
-that they would never have dared to adopt to a girl like
-Clare Collingwood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your papa has told you about&mdash;you know what, Clare?'
-said Miss Desmond, looking not in the slightest degree
-abashed, though lowering her tone, certainly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said Clare, curtly and wearily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We must be better friends than ever, Clare.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Miss Collingwood fanned herself in silence, so Evelyn
-spoke again:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I suppose you know when the&mdash;the event takes place?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How monosyllabic you are,' said the other, while her
-lip quivered, and her eye lightened. 'Has Sir Carnaby not
-told you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I never asked him,' was the half-contemptuous response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was not aware that matters were in such a state of
-progression. A time is named, then, for&mdash;for this <i>affaire de
-fantasie</i>?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A month from to-day. Pray call it an <i>affaire du cœur</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A month!' repeated Clare, dreamily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He would have it, he was so impatient,' said Evelyn
-Desmond, with something of a smile; but whether it was a
-triumphant or malignant one, Clare cared not to analyze.
-She only feared that the 'impatience' had been elsewhere,
-as Evelyn had been on the point of marrying with more
-than one man already, but there was always a flaw
-somewhere, and the affairs ended. Perhaps, as some hinted,
-they were too easily begun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As she could neither express pleasure or congratulation,
-Clare fanned herself in silence, until Evelyn said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And so you have refused Harvey?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How exceedingly funny.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because on that same morning I finally accepted Sir
-Carnaby. By the way,' she added, with a glance that was
-not a pleasant one, 'I heard that your old admirer, Trevor
-Chute, once of the Guards, was in town again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; perhaps that accounts for poor Harvey's
-disappointment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Think so if you choose,' replied Clare, haughtily, as she
-turned away to conceal how her soft cheek coloured with
-the excess of her annoyance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time Vane, after being entangled by innumerable
-trains, had made his way to the side of Ida.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry Vane was popular in society, and could have had
-many a girl for the asking. Clare and Ida, too, had often
-wished&mdash;for he was still the dearest of their friends&mdash;that
-he should marry; but they had never suggested it to him,
-for under the circumstances it would have seemed bad
-taste, and though he had but one thought&mdash;Ida, and
-Ida only&mdash;Jerry Vane went everywhere, and was deemed
-the gayest of the gay; and now, when their eyes met, there
-was a kind, sad smile in hers&mdash;a smile of the olden time&mdash;that
-took a load off his heart, and still lighter did it grow
-when, rising, she took his arm&mdash;as a widow she could do so
-now, and said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Take me to a cool place; the heat here is stifling, especially
-in this dark dress; there is a cool seat just within the
-conservatory door. Thanks, that will do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many a picture&mdash;many a soft Gainsborough or softer
-Greuze&mdash;may suggest a face as delicate and beautiful as
-that which was turned up to his; but no picture ever
-painted by human hand had such a power of expression as
-that possessed by the face of Ida Beverley, as she sat there,
-slightly flushed by the heat of the crowded room, and
-feeling with pleasure the breeze from the great square without
-blowing on her cheek, and laden with perfumes of fresh
-flowers as it passed through the long conservatory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The broken ring, the gipsy ring of the dream, rent in
-two by the cruel tiger's fangs, was now on the marriage
-finger beside the wedding hoop, as Jerry could see when
-she drew off her glove, but he was glad to observe that her
-mourning was becoming lessened by trimmings of grey silk;
-yet the dark costume, by its contrast to the pallor and
-purity of her complexion, made Ida seem lovelier than
-ever, and his heart ached to think that those trappings of
-woe were worn for a rival.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Why did he seek her presence? he was asking himself
-again. Did some lingering hope inspire him? Without it
-Jerry felt that it would be madness to place himself within
-the sphere of her beauty, with their mutual past; yet he
-could not deny himself the joy of the present, in watching
-the tenderness of her soft grey-blue eye, the glory of her
-auburn hair, and the grace of all her actions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had been the wife of Beverley, true; but the wife of
-only a few months, and left behind in loneliness while yet
-a bride.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Worried by her sadness, and sick of her repining, selfish
-old Sir Carnaby had become, unknown to her, somewhat
-an adherent of her first lover. He was not disinclined to
-let his widowed daughter become the wife of this unappropriated
-man, whose good looks and style were as undeniable
-as his position and expectations. Thus he whispered to
-Evelyn Desmond that he was not ill-pleased to see them
-draw apart within the conservatory door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry's friends would have called him 'a muff,' to sigh as
-he did, and make himself 'a blighted being' for Ida, whose
-whole heart and soul seemed devoted to another, and who
-sorrowed as some women only sorrow over their dead,
-going through the world with one visionary yet formed
-fancy that floated drearily and vaguely in her memory.
-Yet, in spite of himself, Jerry Vane hovered near the sad
-one like a love-bird by the nest of its young.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was impossible that the love of this faithful, honest,
-and good-hearted fellow should fail to impress Ida. She
-was conscious that his fate was a cruel one, and of her own
-making; and she felt a great pity for him; for although she
-<i>had</i> been fickle once, her nature was generous and
-compassionate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A dead flirtation can seldom be revived, but an old love is
-often rekindled; yet Ida bore him none as yet; it was only
-pity, as we have said&mdash;compunction for what she had done&mdash;a
-tenderness, nothing more, save, perhaps, a sense of honour for
-him, that gave Jerry Vane an indefinable and, it may be,
-dangerous attraction to her; and now, as he spoke to her,
-bending over her as he used to do of old, her dark blue
-eyes changed and shadowed with the changing thoughts
-that passed quickly through her mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We are good friends as ever,' said she, smiling upward
-in reply to some remark of his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ida, some one has written that after love, mere friendship
-becomes more cruel than hate, and says it is the worst
-cruelty "when we seek love&mdash;as a stone proffered to us
-when we ask for bread in famine."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry felt that in this remark he had made somewhat of a
-'header;' but fanning herself, she said calmly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I <i>believe</i> in you, Mr. Vane; is not that the highest trust
-one creature can give another?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'May I not implore you to call me Jerry, as&mdash;as of old?'
-he asked, in a tremulous voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When alone&mdash;yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mr. Vane sounds so odiously formal after&mdash;after&mdash;&mdash;'
-his lip quivered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well&mdash;Jerry it shall be.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks, dear, dear Ida; I begin to hope again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Jerry did begin indeed to have fresh hope; and are
-we not told that its promises are sweeter than roses in the
-bud, and more flattering to expectation?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Combine love with friendship, Ida,' he urged, softly,
-with the tip of his moustache almost touching her ear, 'and
-its tranquillity will be great and happy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She could not, without growing interest and tenderness,
-see the mournful love-me look that his eyes wore; yet she
-said, over her bouquet of stephanotis, Beverley's favourite
-flower and perfume:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not talk thus, I implore you, Jerry Vane.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A gesture of impatience escaped Vane, yet he said, in a
-voice of tenderness:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Ida, <i>I do know it</i>&mdash;too well and bitterly; for as I
-loved you in the past time, so do I love you still!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me, Jerry; you are indeed a kind and faithful&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fool!' he interrupted her, bitterly. 'That is the word,
-Ida.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, nay, don't say so,' she urged, with tremulous lips
-and moistened eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The first love of a woman's heart is a holy thing,
-Ida&mdash;and yours was mine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let us be friends,' said she, in a painful tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can never, never be your&mdash;mere friend, Ida!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like that of Clare and Trevor Chute, but a few days
-before, it was another romance of the drawing-room, the
-strange intercourse and perilous friendship between these
-two.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She looked wistfully at Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We know not what God may have in store for us yet,'
-said she, colouring while she spoke, but only with the desire
-to soothe and not ignore the passion he was avowing. 'It
-may be&mdash;may be that we have only in our hearts been
-waiting for each other after all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere Vane could make a response to this speech, which
-she felt conscious was a rash one, she shivered and grew
-deadly pale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Does the night air chill you, Ida?' he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know not&mdash;surely no,' said she, in a strange voice:
-'it is close, rather; and yet&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, dear Ida?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I felt a strange shudder come over me as I spoke.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is nervousness, and will soon pass away.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a moment she sat with her eyes dropped and her
-heart palpitating. Whence came that strange, cold, and
-irrepressible tremor, like the shock of an electric battery, yet
-so chilly? What could it be? Could she have an affection
-of the heart?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She started from her seat with manifest uneasiness, and
-taking his arm, said, 'Let us return to the rooms.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now there occurred an episode which, however trivial
-then, Jerry Vane recalled with singular and very mingled
-emotions at a future time. As they came out of the
-conservatory, Colonel Rakes said, laughingly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who is your friend, Vane, that is so strangely dressed&mdash;at
-least, not in evening costume?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Friend! What friend?&mdash;where, Colonel?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the conservatory with you and Mrs. Beverley. Ah,
-Mrs. Beverley, too bad of you to appropriate our friend
-Vane when you know all the women are in love with him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Colonel&mdash;I?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You, my dear girl&mdash;for I am old enough to call you so.
-But about your friend&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There was no one but ourselves in the conservatory,'
-said Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh pardon me, Vane, you three were close together.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Impossible!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As you rose to retire, I saw him slide, as it were, behind
-the shelves of flowers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We saw no one,' urged Ida.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can it be a thief or an intruder? Let us see,' said the
-Colonel; and he and Vane searched all over the place,
-which was brilliantly lighted with gas, but without success.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You must be mistaken, Colonel,' said Jerry, 'as the only
-other door of the conservatory is locked, and on the inside.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Though a little short-sighted, I was not mistaken, Vane.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And this man&mdash;&mdash;?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stood close behind Mrs. Beverley's chair, within less
-than arm's-length of you both.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What was he like?' asked Vane, with genuine irritation
-and astonishment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That I can scarcely describe.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'His face?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Was singularly pale, with dark eyes and a dark, heavy
-moustache.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And he actually hung over Ida&mdash;Mrs. Beverley, I
-mean&mdash;unseen by me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; closer than good breeding warranted. You must
-have been very much absorbed not to have seen him,' said
-the Colonel, with a wicked smile in his old eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was indeed absorbed, Colonel.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't wonder at it; there are not many Ida Beverleys
-even in the world of London. But, egad, the butler must
-be told to have an eye upon the plate-chest&mdash;the
-racing-cups and silver spoons!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>Who</i> was this strange-looking man whom the Colonel
-could not describe, yet had so distinctly seen close by Ida's
-chair, listening, doubtless, to all their remarkable conversation?
-It was, to say the least of it, a most ungentlemanly
-proceeding; and Jerry, amid the clatter of tongues around
-him, strove to remember all they had said, and whether he
-had let fall anything that shed a light upon their past
-relations and his present hopes; with the pleasant conviction
-that the eavesdropper must have heard much that was
-intended for Ida's ear alone!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By Jove!' thought Jerry, 'if I had caught the fellow,
-there would have been an unseemly scene among the
-Colonel's majolica flower-pots, his orchids, and azaleas.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The interview in the conservatory, and the strange
-emotion that came over her, had somewhat wearied Ida;
-and like Clare, who had overheard some unmistakable
-remarks on the 'coming event'&mdash;remarks certainly not
-meant for her sensitive ear&mdash;she was anxious to be home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A game old fellah,' she heard Lord Brixton say&mdash;a peer
-whose only known ancestor was one of the cottonocracy&mdash;to
-another, whose adjusted eye-glass was focussed on Sir
-Carnaby; 'game indeed! but will live to repent his
-matrimonial folly. <i>She'll</i> lead him a dance, believe me,
-don't you know.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even the servants in the hall and at the portico had
-heard some rumour, for there fell upon Clare's ear, as they
-swept out to the carriage, something like this:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, yes! I knows 'em&mdash;the Honourable Miss Desmond,
-with her big mastiff, whip, and wissel, and only Sir Carnaby
-on dooty. I've seen 'em by the Serpentine many times.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, then, their names were linked together, even by the
-men in livery!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as they drove home in the carriage, leaving Sir
-Carnaby with his fair one, by the lighted windows of the far
-extent of streets and squares, Ida lay back in a corner,
-muffled in her gossamer-like Shetland shawl, soft as Dacca
-muslin, the 'woven wind,' very silent and sad.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was thinking very much of what Jerry had said, and
-the hopes she had, perhaps unwisely, awakened; but more
-of the strange cold thrill that came over her, for she had
-too often experienced that unwelcome emotion or sensation
-of late.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In another direction Jerry was 'tooling' home in a
-hansom, with a heart full of happiness. He had struck the
-vein; he had an interest, even though but a renewed
-interest, in the eyes and heart of his old love. Had she
-not admitted that they knew not what Fate had in store for
-them yet, and that their hearts might only have been
-waiting for each other after all!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Moreover, Sir Carnaby had given, and he had accepted,
-a formal invitation for the shooting and then for the
-Christmas festivities at Carnaby Court; and he drove on,
-sunk in happy waking dreams of all that the future might
-have in store for him yet.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><br />
-IN THE KONGENS NYTORV.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'Married, at St. George's Church, Hanover Square, on
-Saturday, Sir Carnaby Collingwood, Bart., of Carnaby
-Court, to the Hon. Evelyn Desmond, only daughter of the
-Right Hon. Lord Bayswater..... The bride wore a
-dress composed of rich ivory-white Duchesse satin, the
-skirt,' &amp;c., &amp;c.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the announcement which suddenly met the eye
-of startled Trevor Chute, as it was running leisurely and
-carelessly over the columns of a <i>Times</i>, nearly a fortnight
-old, as he lingered over his coffee one morning, when
-seated under the awning in front of the Hotel d'Angleterre,
-in the Kongens Nytorv of Copenhagen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whew!' whistled Chute, as he read and re-read the
-paragraph, with all its details of the bride's elaborate
-costume, the uniform of the bridesmaids, the presents, and
-so forth, down to the shower of satin slippers, and the
-departure of the happy couple by the Great Western
-Railway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This event was all the more startling to Chute, as he had
-been wandering from place to place, through Germany and
-the North of Europe, and thus few letters and no papers
-from England had reached him for some time past; and
-now it was the end of the first week of September, when
-the brown partridges would be learning to their cost that
-the tall waving wheat, amid which their little broods had
-thriven, was shorn on the uplands, and the sharp-bladed
-plough was turning up the barley-stubbles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may well be supposed that the contents of this
-paragraph among the fashionable intelligence gave our
-wanderer occasion for much thought; and from the bustle
-around him&mdash;for he had been taking his coffee at a little
-marble table placed literally on the pavement of the square,
-which, if not one of the handsomest places in Europe, is
-certainly the finest in the Danish capital, with its statue of
-Christian V., with its green plateau and flower-borders&mdash;he
-retired to the solitude of his own room; but even as he did
-so there were others, he found, who were near him, and
-took a gossiping interest in the paragraph.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were several English people in the hotel, of
-course, for one must travel a long way to find solitude in
-these our days of universal locomotion. Among others
-there was young Charley Rakes, at whose house we have
-lately seen the Collingwoods&mdash;a fast youth of Belgravian
-breed, whom Chute did not like; and he had rather a way
-of keeping at full arm's-length those whom he viewed thus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So, so,' he heard him say to a friend; 'the old fellow is
-married at last, and to the Desmond. What the little birds
-said proves right, after all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor Clare!' thought Chute, as a burst of laughter
-followed the reading of the paragraph, with great
-accentuation, aloud.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fancy Evelyn Desmond airing flannel bags for the gouty
-feet of old Collingwood, fomenting his bald pate&mdash;(he is
-bald, isn't he?)&mdash;putting his lovely teeth into a tumbler at
-night, unlacing his stays, and all that sort of thing, don't you
-know!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From this rough jesting with names in which he had an
-interest so vital now, Trevor Chute, we say, gladly sought
-the privacy of his own room, where, stretched upon a
-sofa, he gave himself tip to the luxury of lonely thinking,
-while watching the pale blue wreaths evoked from his
-meerschaum bowl floating upward into the lofty ceiling
-overhead, while the drowsy hum of the city came through the
-green jalousies of the windows, which opened to the Kongens
-Nytorv, and faced the Theatre Royal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Would this alliance mar for ever the chances of the Major,
-or redouble them, as he would be quite <i>en famille</i> at Carnaby
-Court and the town mansion in Piccadilly?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He recalled the parting words of Clare, and thrust the
-speculation aside as unworthy the consideration of a second.
-He could awaken in the morning now with other thoughts
-than the dull ache of the bitter olden time; for though
-their prospects were vague and undefined, he had her
-renewed promise, and now more than ever did he recall
-it, with the delicious threat that accompanied the renewal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Clare, Clare!' he muttered aloud; and with all the
-passionate longing of a lad of twenty, the man's heart went out
-to her, the absent one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was his in spirit only; but oh, for Surrey's magic
-mirror, to bring her before him once again, that he might
-revel on the calm poses of her statuesque figure, her soft,
-yet aristocratic face, and the curve of her lips, that were
-exquisite as those of a Greuze&mdash;even as Surrey revelled
-on the beauties of Geraldine when conjured up by Cornelius
-Agrippa!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again he was sunk in thoughts of her, as when far away
-amid the awful and undisturbed solitude of the Himalayan
-forests, where the pines that rose to the height of two
-hundred feet were tipped with sunshine, while all was night
-below; and where the torrents, with their ceaseless roar,
-that wearied the ear, when, swollen by the winter rains, they
-tore past the lonely cantonment of Landour, where the last
-home of Beverley and many more lie, rolling on and on to
-the plains and tea-gardens of Assam.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But his prospects were brighter now, and thus he had
-thought of her happily when idling from place to place, in
-the glittering Kursaal at Hamburg, the many gaieties of
-Berlin, and of more domestic Copenhagen; when among
-the lonely woods of Norway, and the countless isles of the
-Christiana Fiord, which the Norse packet had traversed
-when its waters were moonlit and luminous, when the dark
-violet-tinted waves of eve rolled on the green shores of the
-Jungfrau land, when he had seen the gorgeous sun setting
-redly beyond the bronze-like forests of Sweden, and flushing
-alike the sky above and the waters of the Sound below&mdash;her
-face was ever before him, and he had remembered its
-expressions and the tone of her voice in every hour he spent,
-especially when alone, by land and sea, in city, wood, or
-wilderness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have Clare's promise and assurance that she loves me
-still,' he would think; 'but how long am I to drag on this
-absurd life, this separate existence? Surely we are not
-so hopeless now as in that time when I was broiling up
-country.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With reference to her promise, he pondered, would she
-write to him? Scarcely. Should he write to her, and
-remind her of it&mdash;not that for a moment he ever believed it to
-be forgotten; but of, this policy he was doubtful, and so
-resolved to wait a little, as he would be certain to hear from
-Jerry Vane or some other friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But while waiting, Clare might be cast into the attractive
-influence of some one else, and he knew that she was
-surrounded by all the charms and allurements of rank and of
-wealth. Then he deemed himself a wretch to think of such
-things. Anon he became terrified lest she should be ill, as
-he knew how much this marriage would mortify, fret, and
-worry her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From his reverie he was roused by the appearance of his
-valet, Tom Travers, standing close by at 'attention,' by pure
-force of old habit. He had neither heard him knock nor
-enter; neither had he heard his tread on the polished floor,
-which as usual in these countries, was uncarpeted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Letter for you, sir,' said he, presenting one on a salver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks, Tom.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He tore it open; it was from Jerry Vane, and dated from
-'Carnaby Court.' This made Trevor's heart leap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jerry must have been making his innings,' thought he,
-'to be there. He has surely been seized with a most unusual
-<i>cacoethes scribendi</i>. I have not heard from the fellow
-for months, and now he sends me nearly sixteen pages.
-What can they all be about? Perhaps the marriage, but
-more likely that alluring <i>ignis fatuus</i>, Ida.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And once more filling his pipe, he composed himself
-to peruse the letter of his old chum, Jerry, who ran on
-thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I suppose you have long since heard how Sir Carnaby
-Collingwood made a fool of himself at St. George's. He
-has now gone on his wedding tour, and I am thankful he is
-out of the way. It is ungracious to write these lines of one's
-host, and still more so of one I would fain be more nearly
-connected with; but it is the old story of Doctor Fell, and
-you know I never liked Sir Carnaby. How difficult it is to
-analyse sympathy. By Jove, Trevor, it is a thing that no
-fellow can understand, for it takes possession of us whether
-we will or no; hence it is that we are unconsciously
-attracted or repelled by some of those we meet at first sight.
-And why? No one can tell. Hence, a magnetic influence
-draws us sometimes even to those we should shun, or
-compels us to shun sometimes those whom, from policy, we
-should attract, and in whom we should confide.' ('Has
-Jerry had a sunstroke?' thought Trevor; 'what <i>is</i> all this
-about?') 'And thus it was that a magnetic influence led
-me to love Ida at first sight, and at the same time to dislike
-Sir Carnaby, and I fear the feeling will never pass away, so
-far as he is concerned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know not where this may find you; but any place is
-better than London at this season. You know what it is in
-August and September, with its pavement fit only for a
-salamander or a fireman. After Ascot, the Collingwoods&mdash;the
-three ladies, at least&mdash;left London in the height of the
-season, and went to Carnaby Court. I was with them&mdash;Ida
-and Clare, I mean&mdash;on Rakes' drag on the Royal Heath on
-the Cup day. Don't you envy me, old fellow? I am sure
-you do. We spoke much of you among ourselves, anyhow,
-and Clare looked her brightest and her best when we did so.
-By not starting early, we were delayed waiting for the young
-engaged couple; we lost the first two races, but that was
-nothing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was with quiet anger the girls saw the half-concealed
-billing and cooing of the old baronet and the <i>fiancée</i>, and
-with what excellent grace he lost some heavy bets to her
-brother, the Guardsman, and others to the lady herself,
-which she entered in a dainty little book with a jewelled
-pencil, and laughing girlishly as she buried her pretty
-nose in a hot-house bouquet of the colours affected by Sir
-Carnaby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Desmond's animal was nowhere; but, perhaps, you
-won't be sorry for that. Some say he has lost a pot of
-money, and may have to leave the Brigade; anyway, it did
-not prevent him from returning with some dolls in his
-hat-band. For some reason&mdash;gout, it was whispered&mdash;the
-baronet did not go to the Derby, so the fair Evelyn agreed
-with him that it was only fit for boys, and declined to go
-either. Why should a gentleman go, to have his clothes
-covered by dust or flour, his hat, perhaps, banished by a
-cocoa-nut; and why a lady, to see and hear all the horrid
-things that were said or done? Yet, in times past, she had
-gone and faced all these things and more, so it suited her to
-play propriety on that Derby Day; but when Ascot came,
-she was there making bets, even 'ponies,' in full swing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I came here at first to have a shot or two at the birds for
-a week, by express invitation, as I told you, and then I may,
-perhaps, join you on the Continent after all. Ida
-matronises the household, and a lovely matron she makes, with
-her sweet, sad grace. Sir John and Lady Oriel are here, old
-Colonel Rakes and his wife, and that titled <i>parvenu</i>, Lord
-Brixton, with some others, to await the return of the "young
-couple" from Germany, whither they have gone to hide
-their blushes; and the tenantry are getting up an enormous
-triumphal archway at the avenue gate; the public-house at
-the village is getting a new signboard; the ringers are
-practising chimes in the old Saxon spire; the schoolmaster
-is composing an epithalamium, and the Carnaby volunteer
-artillery are to fire a salute on the lawn. But I wonder how
-I can write so frivolously, for something occurred on the
-third day after I came that has caused me much discomfort
-and perplexity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is an arbour in the garden, one of many, but
-before this I mean there stands a marble Psyche.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(How well Trevor Chute could remember that arbour&mdash;a
-kiosk&mdash;with all its iron lattice-work and gilded knobs, and
-the masses of roses and clematis, Virginia creeper and ivy,
-all matted and woven in profusion over it. Many a time
-had he sat there with Clare, and often in a silence that was
-not without its eloquence. 'Well; and what of the arbour?'
-thought he, turning again to the letter of Jerry.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When passing among the shrubberies, I saw Ida seated in
-that arbour, with a book in her lap, and, to all appearance,
-lost in thought. A flood of amber light, shed by the
-evening sun, poured aslant through an opening in the
-greenery upon her white neck and lustrous auburn hair,
-which shone like gold, as her hat was off and lay beside her.
-A great joy filled my heart as I thought of the hopes given
-me during the meeting at Rakes' house, and after watching
-her beauty for a minute or so in silence I was about to join
-her, when she looked upward, and then there appeared,
-what I had not before perceived, so absorbed had I been in
-her, a man, unknown to me, looking down upon her&mdash;a
-man with whom she seemed to be in close conversation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Some huge branches of roses concealed his figure from
-me, but his face was distinct enough, in closer proximity to
-hers than good breeding generally warrants. It was pale,
-very, with dark eyes and a black moustache&mdash;in detail, by
-Jove, Chute, the same fellow whom Colonel Rakes found
-eavesdropping in the conservatory!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Startled, alarmed, and scarcely knowing what to think, I
-still resolved to join her. I could scarcely deem myself an
-intruder, considering the terms we had been on, and are
-on now, and approached the arbour, but in doing so had to
-make a circuit among the shrubberies. Half a minute had
-not elapsed when I reached the arbour; no one passed me
-on the walk, not a footfall was heard on the gravel, at least
-by me; but when I joined her she was alone, with her head
-stooped forward, her face buried in her hands, and when she
-looked up its pallor startled me; yet her grey-blue, changeful,
-and lustrous eyes looked, and with a smile, into mine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Have I disturbed you?" I asked, scarcely knowing
-what to say.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Disturbed me? Oh, no; I was done reading."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"But some one was with you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"When?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Just now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Impossible!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"I thought that some one was here," I said, in great
-perplexity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Oh no&mdash;but sit down and let us talk," said she, frankly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I thought of the face I had just seen so near her own.
-I was rendered dumb, as I felt my tenure of favour was too
-slight to risk offending her by further remark on a subject
-so singular; but I was pained, grieved, and bewildered to a
-degree beyond what words can express. I looked at her
-earnestly, and seeing her so pale, said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Are you not well, Ida?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Only in so far that one of those mysterious shudders
-which I feel at times came over me a minute ago."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am aware that she has complained of this emotion or
-sensation before, and that the best medical skill in town has
-failed to make anything of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"The odour of those flowers has perhaps affected you,"
-said I, somewhat pettishly thrusting aside a bouquet tied by
-a white ribbon which lay near her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Oh no," she replied, "their perfume has always been a
-favourite of mine."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They were stephanotis, and I have often heard it was a
-favourite flower with Beverley.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"From whom did you receive the bouquet?" I asked,
-but something indefinable in my tone attracted her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Vane&mdash;Jerry!" she exclaimed. "It was brought me by
-the gardener," she added, and her calm face and serene eye all
-spoke of one to whom doubt or further question would have
-been intolerable, and the fear of anything unknown. Did
-she know what I had seen, or suspect what was passing in
-my mind? It would seem not; and still more was I perplexed
-and startled on perceiving, as we rose to join Clare,
-Violet, and others who were proceeding laughingly to the
-croquet lawn, a gentleman's glove lying on the seat which she
-had just quitted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Some one has dropped this," said I, taking it up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"I never observed it," she replied, quietly; "is it not
-your own?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"No," said I, curtly, as I tossed it into the arbour, with
-the fear, the crushing conviction, that some fellow <i>had</i> been
-there after all How he had effected his exit from the
-arbour unseen by me was a mystery; but how I enjoyed our
-croquet that afternoon you may imagine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the course of our game I casually discovered that the
-lost glove belonged to Sir John Oriel, but you know that his
-personal appearance scarcely answers to that of the man I
-have described to you.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am loath to admit myself to be jealous; but there is a
-mystery in all this I cannot fathom. My visit here
-terminates at the end of a week, when I shall return to town
-more miserable in mind than I ever did before. I am to
-be at Carnaby Court for the Christmas festivities, but have
-a vague fear of what may happen in the meantime. <i>This
-fellow</i>&mdash;&mdash;' (Jerry had drawn his pen through words,
-evidently as if checking some ebullition, and then continued).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was, perhaps, with the naturally kind and womanly
-desire to soothe the sorrow she had caused, and the wound
-she had inflicted, that when next day we met by chance in
-the same arbour&mdash;in fact, I followed her to it&mdash;she was
-more than usually affable and sweet with me, and I ventured
-in the plainest terms to speak of the subject that was nearest
-my heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Confident in my own unchanging love for you, Ida,"
-said I, "honour for your feelings, tenderness and kindness
-have made me silent for long; but I think the better time
-has come when I might openly speak to you of love again,
-dear Ida."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Do not urge that subject on me now," she replied,
-with undisguised agitation. "You are a dear good and
-kind fellow&mdash;dear and good as&mdash;as&mdash;as when I first knew
-you; but I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;" She paused and trembled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"What?" I whispered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"My heart is in the grave!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"This is absurd; it is morbid&mdash;it is irreligious!" I
-exclaimed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Do not say so, Jerry Vane."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I thought to myself, bitterly (excuse me, Chute), could
-not this confounded fellow Beverley die without bothering
-her with all his gloomy messages and mementoes?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"If you do not marry me, I shall die an old bachelor.
-Let not the one love of my life be utterly hopeless&mdash;you,
-my first and last!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Poor Jerry, what <i>can</i> I say?" she exclaimed,
-interlacing her white, slender fingers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"That you will love me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"In time, perhaps&mdash;I will try&mdash;but cease to urge me
-now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Bless you for those words, Ida."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"I am glad to make you happy, Jerry," said she, with a
-bright smile in her beautiful eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"You do indeed cause my heart to swell with
-happiness&mdash;but&mdash;but why do you <i>shudder</i>?" I exclaimed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Did I shudder?" she asked, growing very pale, and
-withdrawing her hand from mine. "Oh, let us cease this
-subject, Jerry, and&mdash;and excuse me leaving you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She glided away from my sight down the garden walk,
-quitting me with an abruptness unusual to her, which I
-observed on more than one occasion, and the cause of
-which I was unable to discover, or reconcile even with the
-rules of common politeness; but now she returned with a
-sad yet smiling and somewhat confused expression of face,
-and showed me the book she had been perusing on the
-preceding day. It was the Baron von Reichenbach's work
-on magnetism and vital force, and pointing to a passage
-wherein he details the effect produced on a girl of highly
-sensitive organization when influenced by a magnet, she
-said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"I feel when I start and leave you exactly what this
-girl describes her sensation to be, drawn from you by an
-irresistible attraction which I am compelled to follow
-unconditionally and involuntarily, and which, while the power
-lasts, I am obliged to obey, even against my own will. So
-do pardon me, Jerry; I am powerless, and not to blame."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She spoke with quiet sweetness&mdash;with an infinite gentleness
-and sadness, but I saw the man's glove yet lying in the
-arbour&mdash;the tangible glove&mdash;and thought: "Good heavens! is
-all this acting&mdash;insanity, or what?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Anyway, I was filled with keen anxiety and deep sorrow
-to find that she whom I loved so tenderly was under
-influences so strange and accountable&mdash;so far beyond one's
-grasp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Could the figure of the man I had seen so near her, with
-his odious face so close&mdash;so very close&mdash;to hers, have been
-an illusion&mdash;a hallucination&mdash;a thing born of my own heated
-fancy, and the shifting lights and shadows of the arbour and
-its foliage?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If so, it seemed very odd indeed that an appearance
-exactly similar should have been seen in his conservatory
-by such a sentimental and matter-of-fact old fellow as
-Colonel Rakes!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here ended Jerry's long and rambling letter, many items
-in which gave Trevor Chute food for long thought and
-reverie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for Ida's nervous illness, for such he deemed it beyond
-a doubt to be&mdash;an illness born of her grief for Beverley, and
-annoyance at her father's marriage&mdash;he believed the bracing
-country air would cure all that; and as for her magnetic
-fancies, he thought that the less she read of such far-fetched
-philosophy as that of the Baron the better.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two stories of the man who had been seen were odd,
-certainly, and to some minds the bouquet, though alleged
-to be given by the gardener, and the glove might have
-seemed suspicious; but Ida, though she had jilted Jerry in
-time that was past, was not by nature a coquette; and
-knowing this, Trevor Chute, as a man of the world,
-dismissed the whole affair as some fancy or coincidence, and
-then his ideas went direct to Clare and Carnaby Court, and
-he envied Jerry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The strange medley of foreign sounds in the vast space of
-the Kongens Nytorv were forgotten and unheard, for Chute's
-mind was revelling amid other scenes and places now. He
-was even thinking over the Derby to which Vane had
-alluded, and he recalled the days when he had been a
-species of pet in 'the Brigade,' when he looked forward to
-the Derby as the great event of the year, and his own delight
-when he first drove the regimental drag, the selection of the
-horses, the ordering of the luncheon, the colour of the veils,
-and the road along which all the world of London seemed
-pouring, the golden laburnums at Balham in all their glory,
-the hawthorn hedges at Ewell, the beeches and chestnuts
-that shaded the dusty way, the myriads on the course, the
-wonderful bird's-eye view from the grand-stand, the excitement
-of the races, the stakes and the bets, from thousands
-to pretty boxes of delicate gloves for Clare and others; all
-of which he should never enjoy as he had enjoyed them
-once. And now impatience made him peripatetic, so he
-rang for his valet, Travers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pack up, Tom,' said he; 'we leave Copenhagen to-morrow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All right, sir&mdash;for where?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Lubeck. Have a droski ready at ten; I shall take the
-morning train.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Travers saluted and withdrew, without thinking or caring
-whether Lubeck was in Hanover, Hindostan, or the island
-of Laputa.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the merest whim or chance in the world that led to
-the selection of Lubeck as a place to be visited; but Trevor
-Chute could little foresee whom he was to meet there, or all
-that meeting led to.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><br />
-BY THE EXPRESS FOR LUBECK.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Though Trevor Chute's old habits of decision and activity
-remained, a new kind of life had come upon him of late;
-thus he who had found the greatest pleasure in his military
-duties and attending to the wants of his men, in the saddle
-hunting, enjoying the day-dawn gallop, or with his rifle and
-hog-spear, watching under the fierce sun-glare for the red-eyed
-tiger or the bristly boar, as they came to drink in some
-secluded nullah, had now changed into one of the veriest
-day-dreamers that ever let the slow hours steal past him
-uselessly in succession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So that time were got through, he cared little how.
-Would Vane join him? He rather fancied that he would
-not.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nor did he wish it, though Jerry was the friend he valued
-most in the world, for the urgent reason that through him
-alone could he hear aught of her to whom he could not
-write, and who would not write to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus Chute lived in a little world of his own, lighted up
-by the remembered face of Clare and the hopes she had
-bade him cherish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He marvelled much how Jerry's love affair was progressing,
-and whether Ida would yet forget his other friend,
-Jack Beverley.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He thought not, by all he knew of her, yet wished that
-she should do so, for Jerry's sake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was much of humility in the latter, and he held
-himself of small account with her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though proud enough with his own sex, even to hauteur
-at times, his love for Ida made him her very slave; and
-now how often came back to Vane's memory, with regret
-and reproach, the bygone scoffs and silly ironies he had
-often cast on his friends, who, when he was heart-whole,
-were suffering from the lost smile of those they had loved,
-perhaps more truly than wisely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Recollections of his own laughter, his gibes and his quips,
-came back to him as if in mockery now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute and Clare were separated again; but not
-as before: now he did not feel, as in the old time, that he
-had lost her, and he looked back to his last interview with
-joy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Long though the time seemed since then, it was but
-recently that her dark eyes had smiled lovingly into his;
-that all the nameless charms of her presence had been with
-him, that she had spoken with him, and that he had listened
-to her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When would all this come to pass again?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Till then what mattered it how he killed the time, or
-whither he went?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet pleasure and amusement palled on him; the sea
-breeze had lost its charm, and the sparkling waves their
-beauty; flowers seemed to be without fragrance; the fertile
-green pastures of Germany and Denmark, in all their
-summer glory, and the woods with the first tints of autumn,
-were without interest to his eye; for he was, more than
-ever, a man of one thought, and that thought was Clare
-Collingwood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this mood of mind, without thinking how or why, he
-started for the famous old Hans town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The train took him to Korsor, in Zealand; there he
-crossed the Great Belt, and from the deck of the <i>Maid of
-Norway</i> steamer could see the Danish Isles steeped in the
-noon-day heat, when every sandy holm and green headland
-seemed to vibrate in the sunshine that glistened on the blue
-waves which roll round Nyeborg and picturesque old
-Odensee; and after running through Sleswig and Holstein
-on a pleasant afternoon in autumn, he found himself at
-Hamburg, in the train for Lubeck, 'the Carthage of the
-North.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tom Travers had seen to the luggage and the inspection
-thereof; procured the tickets for himself and his master,
-and the latter had just lit his cigar, and composed himself
-for his journey, pleased to find himself the sole occupant of
-a carriage, when he suddenly observed a lady, undoubtedly
-an Englishwoman, procuring a bouquet of rose-buds from a
-Vierlander <i>fleuriste</i>, one of those picturesquely costumed
-girls who wear a bodice that is a mass of spangles and
-embroidery, a straw hat shaped like a Spanish sombrero, and
-thick, bunchy skirts, such as we may see in an old picture
-of Teniers, and who come from that district which lies
-between the Elbe and the Bille, where the whole population
-are market-gardeners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was some delay, during which the train was shifted
-a little, and amid the bustle of the platform the lady looked
-about in confusion, uncertain which was her carriage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Already the starting bell had been rung and the shrill
-steam-whistle had sent up its preparatory shriek.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dritte klasse, zweite klasse!' the bearded German guard
-was shouting, while waving his little flag of the North
-Germanic colours. 'Hierher&mdash;nach hinten&mdash;nach vorn&mdash;Bitte,
-steigen sie ein, madame!' ('Pray get in,' etc.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mechanically, Chute, in mere politeness, opened the
-carriage door, and she was half handed, half pushed in by
-the hasty guard, for already the train was in motion, and she
-found herself, it would seem, separated from her friends,
-and swept away by the express in companionship with a
-total stranger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How awkward,' she said in German; 'I have been
-put&mdash;almost thrust, I may say&mdash;into the wrong carriage.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You can change at Buchen, the only place where the
-express stops,' replied Chute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! you are English,' said she, her countenance
-languidly lighted up. 'So glad; for though I speak
-German pretty well, I don't understand the patois of the
-people hereabouts, on the borders of Holstein.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute merely made an inclination of his head, and was
-about to throw his cigar out of the window, when she
-begged he would not do so; smoking never incommoded
-her&mdash;indeed, she rather liked it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He thanked her, and they slid into the usual little
-commonplaces about the weather, the scenery, and so forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though handsome, she was <i>passée</i>, and Trevor Chute
-could detect that she had in her manner much of the
-polished <i>insouciance</i>, the cultivated, yet apparently careless
-fascination of a woman of the world; and it soon became
-evident that she knew it, and the world of London too, in
-many phases.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Apart from the rank that was indicated by a coronet and
-monogram that were among the silver ornaments on her
-blue velvet Marguerite pouch, he felt certain that she was
-an Englishwoman of undoubted position, and was quite
-<i>aplomb</i>&mdash;even a little 'fast'&mdash;in her manner; but that
-amused Chute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could perceive that she was married, as a wedding
-hoop was among the gemmed rings that sparkled on
-her left hand&mdash;a very lovely one in shape and whiteness;
-moreover, she spoke of her husband, and said they were
-to take the branch line at Buchen for the Elbe, adding:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you go so far?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Farther; to Lubeck&mdash;a place few people go to, and few
-come from.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! And you travel&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To kill time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Most people do so. <i>We</i> came here to be out of the
-way of people one knows and is sure to meet everywhere in
-more beaten tracks; also to get rid of the tedium of visiting
-ambassadors, and undergoing their receptions&mdash;one of the
-greatest bores when abroad.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She evidently knew London well. In the course of
-conversation they discovered that several of their
-acquaintances were mutual, and Chute began to wonder who she
-was, and became interested in her, in spite of his general
-indifference.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She seemed to be 'up to' a good deal, too; acknowledged
-that she made quite a little book on the Derby and Ascot&mdash;was
-above taking a bet on a favourite in kid gloves only;
-and told in the prettiest way how skilfully, and with a little
-spice of naughtiness, she had, on more than one occasion,
-learned the secrets of the stables, and of the trials in the
-early morning gallops; and actually how she had persuaded
-people to lay five to one, when the printed lists said 'evens,'
-to square herself in the end; and then she laughed, and
-said it was so odd to have her husband travelling in the
-next carriage, and thus quite separated from her; but at
-Buchen she would rejoin him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you travel much?' she asked, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well; yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who does not nowadays!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My profession&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The army?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; I have just returned from India.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To one who has seen all the wonders and marvels there&mdash;the
-rock-hewn temples, the marble palaces and mosques,
-the vast plains and mighty mountains of India&mdash;how tame
-you must think these level landscapes and little German
-villages!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are peaceful scenes, and most English in aspect.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But all this part of Europe is quite like the midland
-counties. You were, of course, with the Line in India;
-but&mdash;you have been in the Guards?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' replied Chute, becoming thoroughly interested
-now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! I discovered that from a slight remark you made
-about the Derby.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who the deuce can this woman be, who picks all my
-past life out of me?' thought Chute, as they mutually
-recalled the names of many men of 'the Brigade.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you know Major Desmond?' she asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Slightly,' replied Chute, while a shade crossed his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was quick enough to perceive it, so the subject was
-not pursued; and now the train glided into the station.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She bowed politely to Chute, who endeavoured to open
-the door for her; but it was locked fast, and the guard was
-at the other end of the train.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sound was heard, like the clanking of a heavy chain,
-as some carriages were uncoupled; and the train again
-began to move. Chute called and gesticulated to some
-men on the platform.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sitzen sie ruhig!' was the only response. 'Sit still! the
-train is in motion!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And once more they were sweeping with increased speed,
-through the open country. The carriages for the branch
-line had been left behind, with the lady's husband, suite
-and baggage; and she borne helplessly off by the express
-for Lubeck.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She became very much discomposed on learning this,
-and that she would be carried on fifty-six English miles in a
-wrong direction before she could telegraph to or communicate
-with her friends in any way; but after a time she
-laughed at it as being quite a little adventure, and to amuse
-her, Chute, by the aid of his Continental guide, indicated the
-various places of interest through which they swept with a
-mighty rush; now it was Ahrensburg or Bargtehude, and
-after traversing a flat, stupid, and uninteresting district,
-Oldeslohe with its salt mines and lime pits, and then
-Reinfeldt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anon the scenery became more and more English in
-aspect, and enclosed with hedges in English fashion, and all
-so homelike, that one could not but remember that not far
-off lies the nook which still bears the name of England,
-which was transferred by the emigrant Saxons to South
-Britain. The rich meadows, the well-tilled corn-lands, the
-farmhouses and villages, all looking as clean and as pretty
-as red brick, white plaster, green paint and flowers could
-make them, all seem there to remind one of the most
-beautiful parts in England; while in the distance, more than
-once could be had glimpses of the Baltic, with its dark blue
-waters sparkling in the evening sun. Lakes and groves add
-then to the beauty of the scenery, and wood-covered hills
-that slope gently upward from the bordering sea, or smooth
-sheets of inland water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute's companion seemed really to enjoy her journey;
-and her first annoyance over, she relapsed into her
-occasional air of nonchalance and languid carelessness, that
-seemed born of Tyburnia and the West-end of London;
-and soon the tall red spires of Lubeck, which had been
-long in sight above the greenness of the level land, were
-close by, as the train ran into the station, near the
-magnificent and picturesque double towers and deep dark archways
-of the Holstein Thor, which stands among the long and
-shady avenues of the Linden-platz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though small, beautiful indeed looked the ancient Hans
-city rising on its ridge, with its twelve great earthen bastions
-covered by luxuriant foliage, all steeped in the glorious
-crimson of the after-glow from the set sun that blended with
-amber and blue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute handed out his fair companion. There
-was no train for Buchen that night, nor would there be one
-till nearly noon on the morrow. The lady knew that her
-husband would be taken on to Lauenberg, but as she did
-not know where to telegraph to him there, she could but do
-so to the station-master at Buchen, and on this being done,
-she turned to Chute, for, traveller though she was, she was
-perplexed to find herself in a strange place, without servants
-or escort, and surrounded by unceremonious German touts
-bawling out, 'Stadt Hamburg,' 'Hotel du Nord,' 'Funf
-Thurme,' and the names of other hotels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Permit me to be your guide,' said he, as Travers
-procured an open droski; 'the Stadt Hamburg is the chief
-hotel. I shall have the honour to escort you there.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks, very much indeed,' said she, bowing, and for
-the first time colouring slightly; 'when' (he did not catch
-the name amid the hubbub around them) 'my husband
-arrives he will be most grateful to you for all this.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, as they drove through the Holstein Thor
-towards the hotel, Chute was provoked to see in the face
-of his man, Travers, a comical and perplexed expression.
-He had never seen his master escorting an apparent
-stranger thus before, and hence knew not what to make of
-the situation.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><br />
-AN IMBROGLIO.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The great dining-hall of the hotel, where the <i>table d'hôte</i>
-was daily served, was empty; all the visitors had gone to
-the theatres, the Tivoli gardens, and so forth, so Trevor
-Chute and the lady found themselves seated at a long table
-alone, to partake of a meal that was of course deemed
-supper there, where people dine at 2 p.m.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>salle</i> was elegant; at one end a great console glass,
-with all its curved branches, lit up the gilded cornices, the
-tall mirrors, the long extent of damask table-cloth, the rich
-fruit, the silver epergnes, and the wines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Without, through the open windows, could be seen, on
-one side, the partially-lighted streets of quaint gable-ended
-houses, all of the middle ages; on the other, the dark and
-silent woods, where the Trave and the Wakenitz wandered
-towards the Baltic, showing here and there amid the
-shadows 'the phosphor crests of star-lit waves,' while
-overhead was a cloudless sky, the constellations of which had a
-brilliance and a clearness all unknown in England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All was very still without, and perhaps&mdash;for all are abed
-betimes in these northern cities&mdash;the only sounds that
-stirred the air were the murmur of the Trave, with the
-music of a band in a distant Tivoli garden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, that Clare were with me here!' thought Chute,
-while endeavouring to make himself agreeable to a woman
-of whom he knew nothing, and for whom he cared nothing;
-and Chute had a natural turn and capacity for doing it
-with all, but with a lady more especially; and she, to all
-appearance naturally fast and coquettish, could not help
-giving Chute, even amid her dilemma, what she deemed
-one of her most effective side-glances; but, though they
-were not unperceived, they were wholly wasted upon him,
-save as a little source of amusement; and after a time her
-face and manner seemed to express a wish to know who
-this man was who seemed so politely insensible to her
-powers&mdash;to those of all women, perhaps. He was quite
-unlike, she thought, anything she had ever met in <i>her</i>
-world, and she was, consequently, somewhat piqued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the other side of the table Chute, while toying with
-the fruit and drinking with her the golden moselle, was
-wondering who his fair <i>compagnon de voyage</i> was; and felt
-that it might be bad taste to inquire her name, as she had
-not asked for his; yet she knew many of his old friends in
-the Brigade&mdash;men who were well up in the service when he
-joined, and long before he left it for India.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She seemed fond of questioning about the latter, and led
-him to speak more of himself, and of wild adventures in the
-dark jungle, where daylight scarcely came, than was his
-wont. She asked him what his regiment was, and on his
-telling her, the expression of her face brightened; and
-laughingly tapping his hand with her perfumed fan, she
-said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then you must know well a friend of mine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Very probably; was he of ours?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If not quite a friend, one at least in whom I have an
-interest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And his name?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Chute&mdash;Captain Trevor Chute.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am he you speak of,' replied the other, feeling
-considerably mystified.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You!' exclaimed the lady, colouring.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is no other so named in the regiment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You the Trevor Chute who was engaged to&mdash;to Clare
-Collingwood!' she exclaimed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was Chute's turn to colour now at this blunt remark,
-and with some surprise and annoyance he said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I knew not that our engagement was such a common
-topic as to be known to every chance stranger.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But I am no stranger to all this,' she replied, with
-something of a haughty smile; 'I have heard much of your love
-and devotion&mdash;a love quite like that of a romance rather
-than of everyday life; but I fear greatly that in the present
-instance your chances of success&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are rather small,' said a voice, and Sir Carnaby
-Collingwood, looking somewhat flurried and weary, but yet
-endeavouring to cover his annoyance by his perpetual
-smile, suddenly appeared beside them. 'Got your telegram
-at Buchen just in time to catch the last train for this place,
-and so am here; and so I find you, Evelyn, <i>tête-à-tête</i> with
-Captain Chute!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Evelyn!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the lady was the sister of Desmond, and the newly
-married bride of Sir Carnaby. The words he had casually
-overheard, without understanding their exact application,
-had filled him with a secret annoyance that almost amounted
-to rage and jealousy. The old baronet was aware of Chute's
-great personal attractions, his popularity with women, his
-charms of manner and handsome person, and of the disparity
-in years between them; he was fully aware also of
-the name Lady Evelyn had for scientific flirtation, and for
-a time he almost feared that, perhaps in revenge, Chute
-might have been overattentive, or tempted to improve the
-occasion, so little did he understand the real nature of the
-man at whom he was gazing now with a cold stare, while
-his lips attempted a smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is a doubly unexpected pleasure, Sir Carnaby,'
-said Chute, presenting his hand, which the other seemed
-not to perceive; 'I am so glad to have been of service to
-Lady Evelyn, and permit me to congratulate&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks, that will do,' replied the baronet, abruptly
-interrupting him; 'you are too apt, sir, to thrust yourself
-upon members of my family, and at times, too, when you
-are neither wanted nor wished for.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sir, this is most unwarrantable!' exclaimed Chute,
-who grew very pale with mortification and bitterness of
-heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sir Carnaby!' urged the lady.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am astonished, Lady Evelyn, that you could so far
-forget the proprieties as to sit down and sup at a common
-<i>table d'hôte</i>, and with a stranger!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A stranger!' said Lady Evelyn, with much of hauteur
-in her manner, for never in her life had she been
-reprehended before; 'he has been most kind to me, and seems
-to know many of my friends.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By name, doubtless,' sneered Sir Carnaby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sir,' said Chute, 'you are offensive&mdash;unnecessarily
-so; and, after my past relations with your family, your
-manner is unjustifiable. Were you not the father of
-Clare Collingwood, whom I love better than my own life,'
-he added, with a tremulous voice, 'I would here, in Lubeck,
-teach you&mdash;even at your years&mdash;Sir Carnaby, the peril of
-insulting me thus!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My years! my years! impertinence!' muttered the
-other, who, we have said, had conceived an unwarrantable
-and unjust dislike of Trevor Chute, and now was
-disposed to give full swing to the emotion. Chute's faith
-to Clare, like that of Vane to Ida, was a sentiment utterly
-beyond Sir Carnaby's comprehension; and, indeed, was
-perhaps beyond 'the present unheroic, unadventurous,
-unmoved, and unadmiring age,' as it has, perhaps justly, been
-described.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like all persons of her order, Lady Evelyn had a
-horror of everything that bordered on a scene. For a
-moment her calm <i>insouciance</i> left her, and she darted an
-angry glance at her husband, but was silent. She had
-lived amidst luxury, splendour, and pleasure, power and,
-at times, triumph, but now 'the perfume and effervescence
-of the wine were much evaporated, and there was
-bitterness in the cup and a canker in the roses that crowned
-its brim.' At that moment she felt, perhaps, ashamed of
-herself, and of him to whom she was bound, for thus
-insulting an unoffending man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Sir Carnaby,' continued Chute, 'your age and
-relationship to Clare, together with the presence of
-Lady Evelyn, alone protect you in daring to sneer
-at me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Feeling intuitively, with all his anger, that there was
-something grotesque in the situation, and that in it he
-was forgetting the rules he prescribed for himself, and was
-in 'bad form,' he looked at Chute for a moment with a
-languid but impertinent stare, and after ringing the
-hand-bell, said to the head waiter:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Desire my valet to select rooms for us on the first <i>étage</i>,
-if unoccupied. Lady Evelyn, your maid will attend you at
-once.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They left the <i>salle</i> together, she alone bowing to Chute,
-who, though swelling with passion, returned it, but with
-frigid politeness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank Heaven,' thought he, as he tossed over a bumper
-of moselle, 'poor Clare knows nothing of a scene like this,
-and never shall from me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He then thought with mad bitterness of the glory that
-had departed amid the monetary misfortunes of the old
-general, his father; of all that would have been, and once
-was, his by right to lay at the feet of the beautiful girl
-that returned his love so tenderly; and his heart seemed
-to shrink up within him at the tone assumed by Sir
-Carnaby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dislike of that personage towards the man he had
-injured in the past years, and openly insulted now, was at
-this time as great as though the injury and the insult had
-been received by himself. He was one of whom it might
-be said that 'he never went out of his way in wrath, but,
-all the same, he never missed his way to revenge. He had
-a good deal of ice in his nature; but it was, perhaps, the
-most dangerous of ice&mdash;that which smiles in the sun, and
-breaks to drop you into the grave.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Disquietude of any kind, or mental tumult, were usually
-all unknown to Sir Carnaby, and were, he thought, as
-unbeseeming as any exhibition of temper; hence he was
-intensely provoked by the manner in which, through his own
-fault, the adventures of the day had wound up, as by means
-of their servants or others&mdash;perhaps Trevor Chute himself&mdash;the
-affair might be noised abroad till it assumed the absurd
-form of some genuine fiasco.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Could the old man have been inflamed by the bad wine
-of the railway buffets,' thought Chute. It almost seemed
-so; and he began to hope that when the morrow came,
-and with it temper and reflection, some approach to a
-reconciliation might&mdash;especially if Lady Evelyn acted the
-part of peacemaker&mdash;be made by her husband; and if
-anything like an apology came, Chute felt that he would with
-joy take the hand of his cold-hearted insulter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But in the artificial life she had led since girlhood
-Lady Evelyn had never found much use for a heart, and
-was not disposed to take upon herself the task of pouring
-oil upon troubled waters. At first she had been inclined,
-in her own insipid way, to like Chute very much, as who
-did not? But afterwards she conceived a pique to him, as
-the lover of Clare, for she remembered how the latter had
-called her marriage 'an affaire de fantasie;' and there had
-been other passages of arms between them, in which
-such as women, especially well-bred ones, with a singular
-subtlety of the tongue, can gibe and goad each other to
-the core; so, perhaps, she was not ill-pleased, after all, that
-an affront had been put upon Trevor Chute as the known
-lover of Clare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Feeling himself galled, insulted, and outraged by the whole
-affair, he resolved to quit Lubeck&mdash;or the hotel, certainly&mdash;the
-next day, if no apology came, but it so happened that he
-had reason to change his mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The treatment he had received at the hands of <i>her</i> father
-was, to a man of Chute's sensitive nature, a source of
-intense pain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This sudden and insulting hostility to himself made the
-love of him and of Clare seem more than ever hopeless,
-unless&mdash;unless what? in revenge he eloped with her,
-but that Clare would never consent to; and now,
-despite all that had passed between them at their last
-interview, the old dull ache of the heart had come back to him
-again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From what did the old baronet's indignation spring?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What were we saying when he came so suddenly
-upon us?' thought Chute; 'we were speaking of love,
-but it was mine for Clare. Could he have dreamed
-for a moment that I meant for Lady&mdash;oh, absurd! absurd!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet perhaps it was not so much so as Chute deemed it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So long after darkness had sunk over Lubeck, he sat at
-his window thinking, and smoking a favourite pipe given
-him by Beverley in India, and many times he filled and
-emptied it without seeing his way very clear in the future,
-while the clear northern moon flooded the sky with a light
-against which the taper church spires of the little city stood
-up in sharp and dark outlines, and the bells of the cathedral
-tolled the hours in succession, and the sunshine, or at least
-the grey dawn, began to steal over the woodlands that
-surround Lubeck; and with it came the odour of peat, as the
-fires were lighted&mdash;an odour as strong as there is in any
-Irish village, or a Scottish clachan in the wilds of Lorne or
-Lochabar; and he strove to court sleep, thinking that it
-would be better were he sleeping as Jack Beverley did,
-under the shadowy shelter of the Indian palms and the
-fragrance of the baubul trees.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><br />
-'LOVE IS STRONG AS DEATH.'
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Jerry Vane did not leave Carnaby Court at the time he
-intended to do; with ulterior views in her kind heart, Clare
-pressed him to lengthen his visit, and enjoy a few days'
-more shooting. She found but little pressing requisite to
-influence Jerry's actions; yet ere long he had cause greatly
-to deplore that he had not taken his departure earlier, and
-he was again doomed to experience a bitter shock concerning
-his rival&mdash;if rival, indeed, he had.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Daily and hourly intercourse afforded him all the facilities
-he could wish for now; but it seemed as though Ida would
-never again receive him or accept him as her lover, yet
-would permit him to be the slave of her fascinations, and
-without the slightest symptoms of vanity or coquetry. She
-knew all the simple and single-hearted fellow's love, and yet,
-apparently, would not yield him hers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, she had more than once hinted or said, he scarcely
-knew which, as he declined to accept the proposition, that
-she wished his regard for her to die away in silence. If so,
-why did she permit her sister to urge that she should remain
-at Carnaby Court, where, in virtue of her widowhood, she
-yet presided as matron, though some change would assuredly
-take place on the return of Lady Evelyn to England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whatever were her motives, he could not but give himself
-up blindly and helplessly to the intoxication of the present
-time, to gaze upon her face, to hear her voice, and conjure
-up the hope that a time would come when she would love
-him better than ever. Besides, her society was full of many
-charms. As in Clare, there was in Ida a wonderful
-attraction to a companion. She had, though young, travelled
-much in Europe, and seen all that was worth seeing. She
-was thus familiar with many countries; and so far as their
-histories and traditions went, together with a knowledge of
-literature that was classic, refined, abstruse, and even mystic,
-as we have shown, she was far beyond an everyday young
-Englishman like Jerry Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am neither a boy nor a madman, yet I dream like both
-in hanging on here as I do!' he would sometimes say in
-bitterness; and then he would recall her remarkable words
-on that evening in town&mdash;'It may be that we have only been
-in our hearts waiting for each other after all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From what did these hopeful words spring?&mdash;coquetry,
-mockery, reality, or what?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was never known to coquet; she was too genuine a
-creature for mockery; hence, they must have been reality,
-and, full of this conviction, he resolved once more to put it
-to the issue on the first opportunity, and one was secured
-on the very afternoon he made the resolution.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had not, that day, gone to shoot; the men were all
-abroad; nearly all the ladies were out driving or riding,
-save Ida, whom he found in the curtained oriel of the inner
-drawing-room, where she was standing alone and gazing out
-on the far-stretching landscape, that was steeped in the
-evening sunshine; the square spire of the village church,
-the tossing arms of an old windmill, the yellow-thatched
-roofs of white-walled cottages stood out strongly against the
-dark green of the woodlands at the end of a long vista of
-the chase, and made a charming picture. In the middle
-distance was some pasture land, where several of Sir Carnaby's
-fierce little Highland cattle and great fat brindled
-Alderneys stood knee-deep amid the rich grass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps she was thinking of how often she had ridden
-there with Beverley, and loved to hear him compliment her
-on the daring grace and ease with which she topped her
-fences, and the lightness of hand with which she lifted her
-bay cob's head; and Jerry feared that some such thoughts
-might be passing through her mind as he paused irresolutely
-and thought how beautiful was the outline and pose of her
-darkly dressed figure against the flood of light that poured
-through the painted oriel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dark shadow had been less upon her to-day than
-usual, and on hearing his footstep on the soft carpet she
-turned and welcomed him with a bright smile. Would that
-smile ever change again to coldness and gloom? Would
-his hand ever again wander lovingly and half fatuously
-among the richness of her auburn hair, that shone like
-plaits of golden sheen in the light? Heaven alone knew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dear Ida,' said he, longing, but not venturing to take
-her hand (he had been on the point of saying 'darling'&mdash;had
-he not been privileged once to do so?), 'I am so glad
-to find you thus alone, for I have much to say, too, that
-cannot brook interruption.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Say on, then, Jerry,' said she, knowing too surely it
-would be 'the old, old story,' while his devotion seemed to
-touch and pain her, for she did honour and pity him, as she
-had already admitted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ida, save on that night in the conservatory, I have
-hitherto, from motives that you must be well aware
-of&mdash;motives most pure and honourable&mdash;never spoken to you of
-the love that my heart has never, never ceased to feel for
-you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Love is no word for me to listen to now, Jerry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not from&mdash;from <i>me</i>?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Even from you, Jerry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I implore you to be mine, Ida. Do not weep&mdash;do not
-turn away&mdash;you stand alone now; this recent marriage has
-made your home a broken one; I, too, am alone, and each
-needs the love of the other. Do not trifle with me, Ida!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Trifle&mdash;I&mdash;oh, Jerry Vane.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You loved me once!' he urged, drawing very near.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;I loved you once,' she said, vaguely and wearily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>Once!</i> How cruel the speech sounded, though she did
-not mean it to be so, of course; for as she turned to him,
-an infinite tenderness filled her sparkling eyes of grey or
-violet blue&mdash;for times there were when they seemed both;
-and his met them with something wistful and pathetic in
-their gaze as he said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ida, dearest Ida, time and separation&mdash;separation that
-seemed as if it would be lifelong, have but strengthened the
-regard I bear you; and now&mdash;now&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That I am free, you would say?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I entreat you to be mine. Your father would wish it,
-and I know that dear Clare does. All my brightest hopes
-and associations, all my fondest memories are of you; and
-all have been bound up now in the hope that we might yet
-be so happy, beloved Ida.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not address me thus,' said she, imploringly, as she
-covered her eyes with her slender fingers tightly interlaced.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah&mdash;why?' he asked, entreatingly, and venturing to put
-a hand lightly on each side of her little waist; but she
-stepped back, and said in a low and concentrated voice:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because&mdash;how shall I say it? Each time you speak
-thus the strange thrill I spoke of passes through me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A thrill?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A shudder!' she answered,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What causes it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot, cannot tell'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My poor Ida! your nerves are all unstrung, and that
-absurd book of Reichenbach's has made you worse.
-Promise to marry me, Ida, and we will go to Switzerland, to
-Scotland, or anywhere that the breezes of mountains or the
-sea may restore you to what you once were, even as fate has
-restored you to me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the lovely head was shaken sadly, and the pale face
-was turned to the distant landscape. The passion with
-which he loved her was of a quality certainly very rare in
-the world of 'society,' she knew that.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your wants are very simple, as your tastes are, Ida, and
-my fortune is more than equal to your own&mdash;in worldly
-matters there can be nothing wanting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know, Jerry, that a devotion such as yours deserves all
-the love I could and ought to give it; and yet&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She paused, and permitted him to retain her hand. Was
-she, in spite of her asseverations to the contrary, about to
-love him after all? The heart of Vane beat wildly amid
-the dawn of fresh hope.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Many men have loved, Ida,' he urged, in a soft, low,
-passionate tone; 'but it seems to me that I love you as few
-men have ever loved before. From the first moment I met
-you I loved you&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;surely circumstances have
-tested and tried that love to the uttermost.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Most true, Jerry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I ask not of what your&mdash;your regard has been for
-another since we parted; I ask you only to love me as you
-did before that time, if you can.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The words that Vane spoke came from the depth of the
-honest fellow's heart, in the full tide of emotion, and Ida
-could not fail to be touched; and as she gave him one of
-her profound yet indefinable glances of pity, the light in her
-beautiful eyes seemed to brighten as her lashes drooped, and
-Jerry read in them an expression he had not seen there since
-the happy time that was past.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In fact, Ida seemed to be trembling in her heart to think
-how dear&mdash;was it indeed so?&mdash;how dear Jerry Vane was
-becoming to her again, and how necessary to her his society
-was daily becoming, and how like the old time it was&mdash;more
-like than, with all her past love for Jack Beverley and her
-strange dreams and hauntings, she dared to acknowledge to
-herself!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Say, Ida, that the gap in my life is to be forgotten&mdash;filled
-up it can never be!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jerry, Jerry,' she urged, 'do not press me so&mdash;at present,
-at least!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was yielding after all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'May I hope that you will accept me yet?' he said,
-pressing her hand caressingly between both of his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A heart is not worth having, Jerry, that accords to pity
-only what it should accord to love. You have all my
-esteem, and, perhaps, in time, Jerry&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She paused and shuddered visibly, and sank back
-with eyes half closed and a hand pressed on her bosom
-as if about to faint or fall, but Jerry's arm supported
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good heavens, that sensation again!' he exclaimed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I must struggle against it, or it will conquer me,' she
-said, suddenly regaining her firmness and striving to crush
-or shake off the nervous emotion that shook her fragile form
-and gentle spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My darling, I am to blame; oh, pardon me, if I, at a
-time when your health&mdash;your nervous system, at least&mdash;so
-selfishly urge my claim upon your heart, for a strong and
-tender claim I have, indeed, Ida.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was in this an eloquence greater than more florid
-phrases could express, as he spoke, for it seemed as if Jerry's
-very soul was spent in what he said. After a pause, he
-said, with an arm still round her:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I will not press you to answer me now, dearest Ida; you
-are pale and seem so weary. I will go, but ere I do so,
-give me one kiss in memory of the past, if not to encourage
-hope for the future.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She lifted her sweet face to his, and there was infinite
-tenderness, but no passion in the kiss she accorded him so
-frankly; and Vane was but too sensible of that; while a
-sound like a deep sigh fell at the same moment on the ears
-of both.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who sighed?' she asked, startled, in the fear that they
-were overseen or overheard; 'did you, Jerry?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; yourself, perhaps, darling.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay&mdash;I sigh often enough, but I did not do so now,
-Jerry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Most strange! We must have deceived ourselves, for
-here are people coming,' he added, as steps were heard in
-the outer drawing-room. 'You will give me a final answer,
-then?' he urged, in a deep, soft whisper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This evening.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Bless you, darling Ida. Where?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'After dinner&mdash;we dine at six&mdash;say eight o'clock, in the
-rhododendron walk.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as she left him, on her pouting lip and in her grey-blue
-eyes&mdash;eyes that seemed black at night&mdash;Jerry thought that
-the sadness was gone, and replaced by the beautiful smile of
-old. Unheard by both, the dressing-bell for dinner had
-already rung, and several of the sportsmen, Sir John Oriel,
-Colonel Rakes, and others, entered the room. Among
-them was Major Desmond, the languid, irrepressible, and
-imperturbable Desmond&mdash;who, en route from town, had
-turned up for a single day's cover shooting at Carnaby
-Court.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Overcome by the new tide of his own thoughts, Jerry Vane
-hurriedly left them to talk over their hits, misses, experiences,
-and exploits of the day, the results of which had filled a
-small-sized pony cart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He retired to his room to dress, and threw open the
-window to admit the autumn breeze, that it might cool his
-flushed cheeks and throbbing temples. The kiss of that
-beloved lip&mdash;albeit one so coldly given&mdash;yet seemed to
-linger on his, and all nature around him seemed to grow
-lighter now that hope had swelled in his heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lit by the evening sun, the leaves of the masses of wild
-roses and other creepers that clambered round the mullioned
-window of his room, seemed to murmur pleasantly on the
-passing breeze, that brought also the chimes of the village
-spire, the voices of the exulting birds, and the pleasant
-rustle of the old oak trees in the chase. To the ear of Jerry
-Vane there seemed to be a melody in all the voices of
-nature now, for his own heart was all aglow with joy.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI.
-<br /><br />
-'JEALOUSY CRUEL AS THE GRAVE.'
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-He could gather from the manner of Ida nothing of what
-was passing in her mind during dinner. He observed, however,
-that she wore on this occasion a flower in her auburn
-hair, the first with which she had appeared since the time of
-her mourning&mdash;a simple white rose. He remembered that
-he had admired the simple decoration long ago, and that she
-had been wont to wear it to please him ere she had worn
-flowers to please another, so hope grew stronger in the heart
-of Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She chatted away with Desmond and joined in the general
-conversation with more gaiety than usual, but not without
-showing a little abstraction at times, as if her thoughts
-wandered. She accorded little more than an occasional
-glance to Vane, with a soft smile on her sweet face, though
-there was the old languor in all her actions and manner,
-while she gave a programme of the forthcoming Christmas
-festivities at Carnaby Court, to which he, and some of the
-others present, were invited.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last the ladies left the room, and the last glance, as she
-retired, rested on <i>him</i>. Jerry's heart beat like lightning.
-The hands of the clock above the mantel-piece were close
-upon the hour of eight when&mdash;after having to linger over a
-glass or two of wine&mdash;he quitted the table, and the house
-unperceived, and hastening through the garden, where the
-few flowers of autumn were lingering yet, he reached the
-appointed place, the long vista of which he could see in the
-twilight, bordered by gigantic rhododendron bushes,
-intermingled with lilac trees and Portugal laurels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had not yet come, and with a heart in which much of
-joyous happiness was blended with hope and anxiety, Jerry
-walked slowly to and fro, as he knew not at which end of
-the alley she might appear. The sun had set more than an
-hour and a half; there was a deep crimson flush in the west,
-against which the great trees of the chase stood up still,
-motionless, and dark as bronze, for the night was calm,
-without a breath of wind, and the garden was so lonely and
-still, that Jerry thought he could actually hear the beating of
-his heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Time stole on; the twilight passed away, and the shadows
-and shapes became lost and blended in darkness. The
-clock in the central gable of the court struck quarter after
-quarter, till Jerry, peevish with impatience now, and alone,
-too, found the hour of nine was nigh, and that Ida had not
-appeared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Could he have mistaken the place, or she the time?
-Had sudden illness come upon her, as her health was so
-uncertain now? Had she been interrupted by some of their
-numerous guests? To forget, or omit to come, were surely
-impossible!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A distant step on the ground made his pulses quicken.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At last, dearest, dearest Ida!' he muttered aloud.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But no; that could not be the step of Ida, hastening
-lightly and quickly to keep her appointment. It was a slow
-and heavy one&mdash;that of a man; and Major Desmond came
-sauntering along, in full evening costume, with his hands in
-his coat-pockets, and the red glowing end of a cigar
-projecting from his bushy moustache. He was chuckling,
-laughing to himself, and evidently much amused by something.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vane would gladly have avoided him and quitted the
-rhododendron walk, but to do so might be to lose the last
-chance of seeing whether Ida kept her appointment; while,
-if she came, it might indicate that one had been made.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could but hope that the tall guardsman would pass
-and leave him; but it was not to be so. He had partaken
-freely of wine, and he was disposed to be jocular, confidential,
-and particularly friendly, so he passed his arm through
-Vane's, saying:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As I passed into the garden a few minutes ago, just to
-enjoy a soothing weed, I made the funniest discovery in the
-world&mdash;by Jove I did!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You discovered what?' asked Vane, intensely annoyed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well&mdash;ah&mdash;that, with all her grief for our friend Beverley,
-I don't think the fair Ida is quite beyond being consoled.
-Do you take?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not in the least,' was the curt response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She has an admirer.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Many, I should think,' replied Jerry, becoming more and
-more amazed and nettled by the tone and laughter of the
-guardsman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But she has one in particular, I tell you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who do you mean?' asked Vane, colouring, as he thought
-the reference was to himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By Jove, that is more than I can tell you!' said Desmond,
-with another quiet laugh, as he tossed his cigar away; 'I
-only know that as I lounged slowly past the arbour where
-the marble statue stands, about ten minutes ago, I saw her
-in close proximity&mdash;quite a confabulation&mdash;with a fellow,
-though I did not hear their voices; doubtless they were
-"low and sweet," like that of Annie Laurie.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was this assertion a piece of Desmond's impudence, or
-the result of the baronet's champagne? his idea of wit, fun,
-or what?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry Vane felt his face first redden and then grow pale
-with fury in the dark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You must be mistaken,' he said, sternly&mdash;almost imperiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not at all, Vane,' replied the other; 'I passed on without
-affecting to perceive them; but I could make out that
-the fellow who hung over her as she sat at the table was not
-one of the guests&mdash;very pale, with a black, lanky moustache.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, it is impossible!' urged Vane in a very strange
-voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not at all, I tell you,' replied Desmond, in a somewhat
-nettled tone. 'I simply amused myself with the fun of the
-thing. I heard a sound, and on looking up saw her start
-up, look at her watch, and then hurry&mdash;almost rush&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This way?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, no!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whither, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Straight into the house by the back drawing-room
-window.' And the tall dandy stroked his long moustache,
-and uttered one of his quiet laughs again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vane, past making any comment, remained silent and in
-utter bewilderment. His heart seemed to stand still; and
-he felt a more deadly jealousy, a more sickening and
-permanent pang in it, than he had ever endured before. He
-remembered what he himself had seen in that bower, and
-recalled the eavesdropper in the conservatory, who was
-seen by another, and whose personal appearance tallied
-exactly with what Desmond had said, and an emotion of
-heart-sick misery&mdash;of bitter, bitter disappointment and
-hopeless desolation, came upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Great was the mental torture he endured for some
-moments. While he had been awaiting her in that walk,
-with such emotions in his soul as were known only to
-heaven and himself, she had been in dalliance with
-another&mdash;an unknown man&mdash;in that accursed bower <i>again</i>!
-'Violent passions,' he knew, 'are formed in solitude. In
-the bustle of the world no object has time to make deep
-impression.' So are deep emotions formed in solitude; but
-where had she learned to love this unknown, if love she
-did? and if she did not, what was the object of their secret
-meetings, and whence the power he seemed to have over her?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All these ideas and many more flashed through the mind
-of Jerry Vane, whose lips became dry as dust. His tongue,
-though parched, seemed cleaving to the roof of his mouth,
-whilst a rush of blood seemed mounting to his brain, and a
-giddiness came upon him. He heard the drawling and
-'chaffing' remarks upon the arbour scene, which Desmond
-had resumed, but knew not a word he said, while arm-and-arm
-he mechanically promenaded to and fro with him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had but one idea&mdash;Ida false, and <i>thus</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knew not what to think, in whom to believe, or in
-whom to trust now, if it were so. Heaven, could such
-falsehood be, and within a few brief hours! he thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then for the first time there began to creep into the heart
-of Vane something of that hatred which in the end becomes
-so fierce, cruel, and bitter&mdash;the hate that is born of baffled
-or unrequited love!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anon, his heart wavered again; the unwonted emotion
-began to die away; it seemed too strange and unnatural
-and the passion he had for Ida vanquished him once more,
-by suggestions of utter unbelief, or there being an
-unexplainable, but dreadful, mistake somewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It could not be that all along she had been deceiving him
-and others by playing a double game of dissimulation, while
-acting outwardly such gravity and grief! The soft and sad
-expression of the chaste and sweetly pretty face that seemed
-before him even then forbade the idea, yet the galling fear,
-the stinging suspicion, remained behind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She refused Jerningham, of ours, who was foolish
-enough to propose in the first flush of her widowhood, and
-she refused Jack Rakes of the Coldstreams last month, and
-sent him off to the Continent to console himself,' Desmond
-was saying; 'she has vowed, they say, that she would never,
-never marry, after the death of that fellow in the
-line&mdash;what's his name?&mdash;Beverley, don't you know, and here I
-find her billing and cooing most picturesquely in an arbour!
-It is right good fun, by Jove! I only wonder who the
-party is that was receiving "the outpouring of an enamoured
-heart, secluded in moral widowhood;" and I might have
-discovered, if I had only pretended to blunder into the
-arbour; but then I hate to make a scene, and it's deuced
-bad form to spoil sport.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vane felt it in his heart to knock the laughing plunger
-down, when hearing him run on thus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It began to seem painfully evident that all this episode
-could not be falsification. Major Desmond had no particular
-interest in Ida, though piqued, as much as it was in
-his lazy nature to be, at Clare, for refusing the lounging
-offer he had made her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the other he had neither liking nor disliking; but, in
-all he told Vane, he seemed inspired only by that love of
-gossipy chit-chat in which even men of the best position
-will indulge by the hour at their club or elsewhere, together,
-perhaps, with the desire, so invariable, to quiz the grief of
-a widow, especially if she is young and handsome.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is,' says a writer, 'no weakness of which men are
-so ashamed of being convicted as credulity, and there is
-none so natural to an honest nature.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But to the storm that gathered in the honest heart of
-Jerry were added rage, astonishment, and an overwhelming
-sense of utter disappointment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Where had this unknown come from, and whither did he
-go? Where had she met him, and how long had this
-mysterious, and, to all appearance, secret intimacy lasted?
-What manner of man was he, that she was ashamed to have
-him introduced to her family? He had heard&mdash;he had
-certainly <i>read</i>&mdash;of ladies, even of the highest, most delicate
-nurture and tender culture, by some madness, inversion of
-the mind, or by temptation of the devil, taking wild fancies
-for valets and grooms, and even marrying them in secret,
-and thus at times all manner of horrible speculations
-crowded into the now giddy brain of Jerry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ida! wildly as he loved her he would rather she were
-dead than less or not what he supposed and believed her to
-be; but he thought bitterly, 'Alas! where was there ever
-man or woman who reached the spiritualised standard of
-idealistic love?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, in spite of himself&mdash;it was not in human nature that
-it could be otherwise&mdash;his old jealousy, that barbarous yet
-just leaven which he had felt in the past time, when she
-preferred Jack Beverley to himself, grew in his heart again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He marvelled much how she would look when he joined
-her among other guests in the drawing-room; but the face
-he had looked for so anxiously was not there when he and
-Desmond entered it; and he was actually somewhat relieved
-when he was informed by Clare that Ida was unable to appear,
-and had retired to her room 'with a crushing headache.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He expressed some well-bred sorrow to hear this, very
-mechanically and quietly, adding that he was the more sorry
-to hear it as he believed he would have to leave for town
-early on the morrow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare heard this sudden announcement with surprise, and
-regarded Jerry's face earnestly.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII.
-<br /><br />
-A QUARREL.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-But one idea or conviction, prevailed in the mind of Jerry
-Vane:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She who was so readily false to me before, may easily be
-so again!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If he slept at all that night, his sleep was but a succession
-of nightmares, with dreams such as might spring from a
-slumber procured by the mandragora; one aching thought
-ever recurring amid the darkness of the waking hours, and
-all the more keenly when morning came, and he knew that
-he must inexorably see and talk with Ida in the usual
-commonplace way before others, ere he left her for ever, and
-quitted Carnaby Court to return no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The tortures he had endured he resolved never to endure
-again. It should never be in the power of Ida or any other
-woman to place her heel upon his heart and crush it, as she
-had crushed it twice!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet when he saw her at the breakfast-table, in all her
-fresh morning loveliness, and in the most becoming
-demi-toilette, with her gorgeous hair so skilfully manipulated by
-her maid, and her grave, chastely beautiful face rippling
-with a kind&mdash;almost fond&mdash;smile, as if greeting him and
-asking his forgiveness too, he knew not what to think, but
-strove to steel himself against her for the future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had a newly gathered white rose&mdash;his flower, she was
-wont to call it&mdash;in her bosom; and that rose was not whiter
-than the slender neck round which the frills of tulle were
-clasped by a tiny coral brooch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At times, when he looked on her, and heard the steadiness
-of her musical voice and sweet silvery little laugh, and
-beheld the perfect ease of her manner and the candour of
-her eyes, he could have imagined the affair in the garden to
-have been a dream, but for the strange and conscious smile
-that hovered in the face of Desmond when he addressed
-Ida, while making a hurried breakfast before his departure
-for London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I would take the same train with you, Desmond,' said
-Vane, 'but that my things are not packed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you leave us so soon?' asked Ida, who overheard him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I must,' said Vane, for whom there had been no letters
-that morning, much to his annoyance, as he wished to plead
-something like a genuine excuse to Clare for taking an
-abrupt departure. 'I mean to leave England&mdash;perhaps
-even Europe, if I can.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For where?' asked Ida, growing very pale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I scarcely know,' replied Vane, with a laugh that
-certainly had no merriment in it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you really mean this?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' he replied, curtly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was silent, but looked at him pleadingly, and even
-upbraidingly across the table, while Jerry, becoming, as he
-thought, grim as Ajax, busied himself with a piece of
-partridge pie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, no,' thought he; 'I shall not again begin that
-hazardous play with love, which some one truly calls "the
-deadly gambling of heart and thought and sense, which
-casts all stakes in faith upon the venture of another's life."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had hoped that by the mere force of his own passionate
-love for her some tenderness might be reawakened in
-her heart for him; and now&mdash;now, after all, she was actually
-fooling him&mdash;vulgarly fooling him!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By a glance that was exchanged between them they
-tacitly quitted the room when breakfast was over, and
-passed together&mdash;he following with undisguised reluctance&mdash;into
-the garden, through a window which opened like a
-folding-door on the back terrace of the mansion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is the meaning of this sudden departure, Jerry?'
-she asked, when they reached a part of the garden near the
-very bower Desmond had referred to. 'Do you mean it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How strange you are in your manner, Jerry! Look at
-me! why, you are quite pale!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He dared not tell her the cause at first; he felt ashamed
-of his own folly&mdash;ashamed of her and of the accusation he
-had to make.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was in the rhododendron walk last night. You did not
-come, as you promised.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I&mdash;I could not,' said she, her pallor increasing, as she
-cast down her eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My heart was wrung by your absence, Ida; but still
-more wrung&mdash;ay, tortured nigh unto death&mdash;by the cause!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Cause?</i>' said she, trembling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' he replied, sharply and bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, you know not the cause,' she said sadly, as she
-shook her head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do know, and so do others; but I have no right to
-question your actions or control your movements&mdash;no
-warrant for&mdash;God help me, Ida, I scarcely know what I say.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So it seems,' said she, a little haughtily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Ida, what is this man to you?' he asked, huskily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To me&mdash;who&mdash;what man?' she asked, with a bewildered
-air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He who is always hanging about you&mdash;he who detained
-you in that arbour last night, when you promised to meet
-me, and give me the answer I prayed for in yonder oriel.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Astonishment, alarm, and anxiety pervaded the delicate
-coldness of her pure, pale face, and then a flush&mdash;the hectic
-of unwonted anger&mdash;crossed it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jerry&mdash;Mr. Vane&mdash;are you mad?' she exclaimed. 'How
-dare you address me thus?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mad&mdash;I fear so; but for the love of pity, Ida&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, sir.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tell me, what am I to think?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Enough,' said she coldly; 'the words we have exchanged
-are most painful to us both.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are agony to me, Ida. But say, were you in that
-arbour last night?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'On the way to meet you, <i>I was</i>,' she replied, but with
-hesitation in her manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And there you remained?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, thrice I endeavoured to leave the arbour and keep
-my appointment with you, and then&mdash;then&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She paused, and her voice died away upon her quivering
-lip.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What? Speak, dearest Ida.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That strange magnetic influence, which I told you
-impels my actions and controls my movements, came over
-me like a species of drowsy sleep, and I remained till the
-time to meet you was long since past.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And <i>he</i> who had this influence over you&mdash;he who
-detained you,' said Vane, bitterly and incredulously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jerry! this to <i>me</i>!' she exclaimed, her eyes expressive
-now of sad reproach. 'Think of me as you will, I can
-explain no more.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her eyes closed, her little white hands were clenched and
-pressed upon her bosom, and again, as yesterday in the
-oriel, she seemed on the point of sinking. She had
-suddenly become bewildered and confused, and this bewilderment
-and confusion were but too painfully apparent to the
-sorrowing and exasperated Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was she thinking it possible that <i>that</i> of which she had
-spoken in a moment of confidence to Trevor Chute&mdash;the
-thing or being unseen, but which she felt conscious of being
-near her&mdash;could have been by her side in that dark arbour
-then, or what caused her emotion? Did a memory of the
-icy and irrepressible shudder she felt at times, when that
-dread pang occurred to her, come over her then?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps so, for the nameless dread that paralysed her
-tongue made her more tolerant to Jerry. Anon she
-recovered herself, and pride of heart, dignity of position,
-and a sense of insult came to her rescue and restored her
-strength, and she looked Vane steadily, even haughtily, in
-the face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You put my faith to a hard test, Ida,' said he; 'God
-alone knows how hard.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If I could spare you a pang, Mr. Vane, He knows I
-would,' she replied; 'but when last you spoke to me about
-a strange gentleman being with me in the arbour, I thought
-your manner odd and unwarrantable, and now I think it
-more so. I trust this is the last time the subject will be
-referred to&mdash;and, and&mdash;now I wish you good-morning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And bowing with gravity and grace, not unmingled with
-hauteur, she swept away towards the house and left him.
-Great was the shock this event, and this most unanticipated
-interview or explanation, gave the heart of Vane, who made
-not the slightest attempt to detain her, or soothe the
-indignation he had apparently kindled; but he stood rooted to
-the spot, motionless as the marble Psyche on its pedestal
-close by.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If perfidy rendered her unworthy of him, why regret her?
-Yet it was so hard, so bitter, and so unnatural to deem her
-so. With all his pride, we have said that Jerry had none
-with Ida, and the moment the accusation against her
-escaped him, he repented of it. With all her tenderness
-and gentleness, he knew how dignified and resolute Ida
-could be. He recalled all the varying expressions he had
-seen in her sweet face, great amazement, pain, alarm, and
-sorrow, culminating in indignation and pride; and though
-she left him in undisguised anger, he still seemed to hear
-the pathos of her voice, which seemed filled with unshed
-tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was he yielding her up in anger now, and not in sorrow
-as before, to another who would revel in all the spells of
-her beauty and sweetness, and thus ruining all for himself
-again?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then he said through his clenched teeth:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What matters it? If she is so perfidious, let her go.
-But I have been too long here playing the moonstruck fool.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet with a pitiful desperation he clung to the faint hope
-that ere he left, some explanation, other than he had
-received, might be given him; that another interview might
-pass between them which would change the present gloomy
-aspect of their affairs, and place them even on their former
-vague and unsatisfactory basis. But Major Desmond had
-taken his departure during the interview in the garden;
-thus Vane had no opportunity of recurring to what he had
-related overnight in the garden; and Ida remained
-studiously aloof, sequestered in her own room, and he saw
-no more till the moment of his departure, and even then
-not a word passed between them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare Collingwood heard with genuine concern the
-announcement of Vane's sudden departure that day; he was
-the sole link between her and Trevor Chute, and the
-medium through which she heard of all the wanderer's
-movements.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was long past mid-day ere he could leave the Court,
-and as he passed through the hall he saw the ladies taking
-their afternoon tea in the morning room, and amid that
-brilliant group, with their shining silks and rich laces, their
-perfumed hair and glittering ornaments, he saw only the
-bright Aurora tresses and sombre dress of Ida, her jet
-ear-rings and necklet contrasting so powerfully with the paleness
-of her blonde beauty&mdash;the wondrous whiteness of her skin.
-She was smiling lightly now at Violet, who was coquetting
-with, or quizzing, old Colonel Rakes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Why should not Ida smile when the eyes of 'Society'
-were upon her?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It fretted Vane, however, that she should be doing so on
-the eve of his departure, and added fuel to the fire that
-consumed him. He was just in the humour to quarrel with
-trifles. He simply bade her adieu as he did all the rest, and
-bowed himself out; but he could not resist making some
-explanation to Clare, who followed him to the porch, and
-whose expressive eyes seemed to ask it, for she had detected
-in a moment that something unusual had passed between
-him and Ida.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She heard him with pain and bewilderment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All this must, and shall, be fully explained,' said Clare,
-with her dark eyes swimming in tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I doubt it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Doubt not!' said she, firmly, 'and, dear Jerry, promise
-me that you will forget your quarrel with Ida, and visit us
-again at Christmas; papa and&mdash;and Lady Evelyn will be
-home long before that. Do you promise?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I promise you, Clare&mdash;dear Clare, you were ever my
-friend,' said he, in a broken voice, as he kissed her hand,
-and would have kissed her cheek, perhaps, but for the
-servants who stood by; and in half an hour afterwards the
-train was sweeping him onward to London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I had hoped, Ida, that Jerry Vane's visit would have had
-a different termination than this,' said Clare, the moment
-she got her sister alone. 'Why, you have actually
-quarrelled.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, not quarrelled,' urged Ida.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Parted coldly, certainly.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why did you not keep your appointment with him?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again the expression that Vane had seen on her face&mdash;pain
-and embarrassment, sorrow and bewilderment, were all
-visible to Clare, who had to repeat the question three times;
-then Ida said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As he himself has told you, he accused me&mdash;me&mdash;of
-meeting another, and I was almost bluntly accused thus,
-Clare, when&mdash;when I was certainly beginning to feel that I
-might love him with the emotion that I deemed dead in my
-heart and impossible to resuscitate.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All this seems most inexplicable to me!' said Clare,
-with the smallest expression of irritation in her tone. 'Poor
-Jerry! he loves you very truly, Ida, and sorely indeed has
-that love been tested.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He loved me because he believed in me; that regard
-will cease when he ceases to believe, as he has done, through
-some insulting suspicion, the source or cause of which is
-utterly beyond my conception,' said Ida, wearily and sadly.
-Then she threw an arm round the waist of Clare, and
-lying on her sister's breast, said in a low voice, 'Another
-seems to hold me by bonds that will never be unloosed,
-Clare.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Another</i>, Ida!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Beverley.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What madness is this?' asked Clare, regarding her
-sister's face with great and deep anxiety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I loved Beverley as I never loved Jerry; it was,
-indeed, the passion which Scott describes as given by God
-alone:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- '"It is the secret sympathy,<br />
- The silver link, the silken tie,<br />
- Which heart to heart and mind to mind<br />
- <i>In body and in soul can bind</i>."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Beverley's last words were that we should meet again;
-and we have met again&mdash;nay, seem to be always meeting in
-my thoughts by day and dreams by night; but always the
-memory of him was most vivid when Jerry Vane was near
-me or in my mind.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How will all this end?' said Clare, in a voice of sorrow.
-'I would that papa were here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He had never much sympathy with, or toleration for,
-my grief, and now that it is passing away, he would have
-still less with these secret thoughts or strange impressions I
-have told to you, dear Clare, and even hinted at to Trevor
-Chute.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is a disease of the mind, Ida; but all this seems so
-incomprehensible to me. Surely we have power and will
-over our own acts, and even in these days, when so much is
-said, thought, written&mdash;yes, and practised too, about
-spiritualism, mysticism, etc., there is the danger of adopting that
-as an <i>inevitable law</i> to which we must conform, but which
-we should with all our power resist as the vilest of
-superstition.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ida only shook her head mournfully, and poor Clare's
-motherly and sisterly heart was stirred within her. She
-knew not what to think; but she clung to the hope that
-ultimately a marriage with Jerry Vane would dissipate these
-morbid impressions with which the mind of Ida had become
-so singularly and so strongly imbued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now, after this, rumours began to spread&mdash;though the
-strange man, if man he was, had disappeared, and was seen
-no more, but seemed to have taken his departure with Jerry
-Vane&mdash;rumours born of chance, remarks overheard by listening
-servants, and taken to the still-room, the kitchen, the
-stable court and gamekeeper's lodge, of spectral appearances
-in the rhododendron walk, in the arbour where the
-Psyche stood, and elsewhere about the ancient mansion, till
-at last, through Major Desmond, they actually reached the
-ears of Sir Carnaby Collingwood abroad, and though they
-excited the merriment and languid curiosity of Lady Evelyn,
-they caused him anger and annoyance, and not a little
-contempt: 'Such stories are such deuced bad form&mdash;get
-into the local papers, and all that sort of thing, don't you
-know.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One fact became pleasantly apparent to Clare ere long,
-that though Ida regretted the departure of Vane, and still
-more the inexplicable cause of their mutual coldness, her
-health for a time improved rapidly: the colour came back
-to her cheek, and the brightness to her eyes; she loved as
-of old to take her share in pleasures and amusements; and
-the chill shiver she had been wont to experience affected
-her less and less&mdash;but for a time only.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-<br /><br />
-THE EMEUTE AT LUBECK.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-At the Stadt Hamburg Sir Carnaby and his bride probably
-secluded themselves in their own apartments on the day
-after the unpleasant rencontre related in Chapter XIV.; at
-least Trevor Chute saw nothing of them at the <i>table d'hôte</i>,
-which was filled by its usual frequenters, officers of the
-garrison, German Jews and Jewesses, and those whose
-names inevitably figure on the board in the hall as 'Grafs,
-Herrs, Rentiers, and Privatiers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Avoiding the hotel&mdash;on consideration, Chute saw no
-reason why <i>he</i> should change his quarters&mdash;he had 'done'
-all Lubeck, seen the Dom or Cathedral, a huge red-brick
-edifice of the twelfth century, with its wonderful screen,
-stone pulpit, and brass font; the Marien Kirche, with its
-astronomical clock, where daily the figures of the seven
-Electors pass in review, and bow before the Emperor; the
-wonderful old Rathhaus; and the stone in the marketplace
-whereon 'the Byng' of Lubeck, Admiral Mark Meyer,
-was judicially murdered for not fighting a Danish fleet; the
-wood carvings in the Schusselbuden Strasse; and the
-famous letter of Sir William Wallace to the Hans cities&mdash;the
-first 'free trade' document the world ever saw; and
-when evening was come again he found himself seated,
-somewhat weary and almost alone, at the long board of the
-<i>table d'hôte</i> in the great dining-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A tempestuous sun was setting in the west, against the
-crimson glow of which the black kites, like flies amid wine,
-seemed to float above the trees of the Linden Platz; and
-the waters of the Trave and the Wakenitz were reddened,
-as they flowed past the timber-clothed ramparts, the copse
-woods and turfy moors, towards the sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Something portentous seemed in the air, the sky, and even
-in the manner of the people of Lubeck that evening. Trevor
-Chute observed that the Prussian officers who were at the
-table, or smoking under the verandah outside the windows,
-all talked confidentially of something that was expected&mdash;he
-could not make out what, and the military eye of Chute
-observed that, since noon, double sentinels had been posted
-at the Burg Thor, the Rathhaus, and elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The thoughts of Trevor Chute went back over the many
-stirring events of his past life since he had known Clare and
-been rent from her&mdash;events full of sporting excitement, of
-military peril, and Indian adventures, of rapid change by
-land and sea, of aimless wanderings like the present, of wet
-night marches and wild gallops, amid the scorching heats
-of the Punjaub, when men fell by the wayside, stricken and
-foaming at the mouth with sunstroke, or writhing with the
-deadlier cholera, and he knew not why all this retrospect
-occurred to him. Was he on the eve of any great danger?
-It almost seemed so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The evening closed in dark and gloomy, and though the
-atmosphere was stifling, Chute perceived that the lower
-windows of the hotel were being all closed and barricaded.
-He was then informed by the <i>Ober Kellner</i> that a serious
-riot was expected by 'His High Wisdom, the Senior
-Burgomaster,' among the tradesmen and working population, who
-were all 'on strike,' and hence the doubling of the guards
-on the town house and at the city gates.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sounds of alarm from time to time, shouts and other
-noises, were heard in the echoing streets, then followed the
-tolling of an alarm bell, and the beating of the Prussian
-drums, while flames began to redden the sky in one quarter,
-thus indicating that the houses of some persons obnoxious
-to the rabble had been set on fire outside the Holstein
-Thor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Despite the advice of the landlord and the waiters, Trevor
-Chute remained on the steps at the hotel door, enjoying a
-cigar, and determined to see what was going on, though but
-little was visible, as in the streets the rioters had turned off
-the gas. Ere long he could make out something like the
-head of a great column debouching over the open space
-before the hotel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a moment nothing could be distinguished but that it
-was a crowd, shadows moving in the shade, but accompanied
-by a roar of sounds, cheers, hoarse hurrahs, oaths and
-imprecations in German, with the patois of Schleswig and of
-Holstein. The rabble, consisting of many thousands, were
-in readiness to commit outrage on anyone or anything that
-came in their way, and were now in fierce pursuit of an open
-droski that was brought at a gallop up to the door of the
-hotel, and out of which there sprang, looking very pale and
-bewildered, Sir Carnaby Collingwood and Lady Evelyn,
-whom the crowd had overtaken when returning from a visit
-to one of the three Syndics. Above the heads of the grimy
-rabble seven or eight torches were shaking like tufts of
-flame, and by their uncertain glare added much to the
-terror of the scene, for a madly infuriated mob has terrors
-that are peculiarly its own, and the simple circumstance
-that Sir Carnaby and Lady Evelyn were the occupants of a
-hired vehicle was sufficient to make all these half-starved
-and tipsified boors&mdash;tipsy with beer and fiery
-corn-brandy&mdash;turn their vengeance on them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even while rushing alongside the fast-flying wheels&mdash;for
-the driver lashed his horses to a gallop&mdash;they could see that
-Sir Carnaby was an aristocrat, an <i>hochgeboren</i>, or well-born
-man; that was enough to ensure insult and ridicule, or worse,
-and all the more when they discovered that he was an
-Englishman&mdash;and, like a true Englishman, the baronet, with
-all his folly and shortcomings in many ways, did not want a
-proper amount of pluck.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All that passed now seemed to do so with the quickness
-of lightning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Carnaby, highly exasperated by what he had undergone,
-and the terror of Lady Evelyn, instead of retiring at
-once into the hotel, unwisely turned and struck the foremost
-man in the crowd a sharp blow across the face with his
-cane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The voices of the crowd now burst into one united roar
-of senseless rage, and a piercing and agonising shriek
-escaped Lady Evelyn, as she saw him seized by many hands,
-torn from her side, and dragged violently along the streets,
-amid shouts of 'To the Trave!&mdash;to the Trave!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She did not and could not love this old man&mdash;she was,
-perhaps, incapable of loving anyone&mdash;but she loved well the
-position her marriage gave her, though a viscount's daughter,
-with the luxury and splendour in which she was cradled
-when at home. She had been used since childhood to
-obedience; to be followed and caressed; to have every
-wish gratified, every caprice supplied; to see every doubt
-and difficulty cleared away; to feel neither pain nor illness,
-not even the least excitement about anything; and now&mdash;now,
-the man with whom she had linked her fate was at the
-mercy of an infamous and brutal foreign mob; and with
-her shriek there came a cry to Chute to save him; but
-Trevor never heard her, for the moment hands were laid on
-Sir Carnaby, followed by Tom Travers, his servant, he had
-plunged into the moving and shouting mass, which went
-surging down the street; then Lady Evelyn saw the three
-disappear in the obscurity; out of which there came the
-roar of mingling shouts, the gleam of cutlasses as the
-night-watch attacked the rioters; and then followed the red
-flashes and the report of musketry, as the Prussian guard
-at the Rathhaus opened fire upon them; and Lady Evelyn,
-unused, as we have said, to any excitement, especially the
-sudden and unwonted horrors of an episode like this, fainted,
-and was borne senseless into the hotel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile, amid the wild whirl of that seething mob, how
-fared it with Trevor Chute and him whom he sought to save
-or rescue?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In all his service in India&mdash;service so different from the
-silk and velvet dawdling tenor of life in the Guards&mdash;dread
-of death had been unknown to Trevor Chute, and never
-felt by him, even when he knew that he was supposed to be
-dying of fever or a wound, or when he lay in the dark
-jungle, where the thick and rank vegetation ran riot, as it
-were; where the Brahminese cobra had its lair, the tiger
-and the cheetah, too; where, heavy, hot, and oppressive,
-the vapour rose like steamy clouds about the stems of the
-trees, while his life-blood ebbed away, and he had the
-knowledge that, if undiscovered, he might die of thirst, of
-weakness, under the kuttack dagger of a mountain robber,
-or by the feet of a wild elephant, for oblivion thus clouded
-the end of many a comrade who was reported 'missing,'
-and no more was known; so Chute was not to recoil before
-a German rabble now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knocked down by main strength of arm and sheer
-weight of hand the two who had hold of Sir Carnaby, and
-were dragging him helplessly along the street; and then,
-with the aid of Travers, he assisted him towards an archway
-which opened off the street, while the rabble closed in
-upon them, showering blows and execrations, but impeding
-each other in their mad efforts; thus man after man of
-them, uttering groans and shouts, went down before the
-regular facers, dealt straight out from the shoulder by
-Chute and Travers into the eyes and jaws of their
-assailants, who had a wholesome Continental terror of 'the
-art de box,' as the French name it, while breathless,
-bewildered, and certainly appalled to find himself so suddenly
-become the sole victim of a dreadful mob, Sir Carnaby
-stood between his two defenders, his polite and deprecatory
-gestures (for voice he had none), and the elegance of
-his delicate white hands, as seen in the torchlight, exciting
-only the ridicule of the unwashed rabble.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Through the archway, which was narrow, they conveyed
-Sir Carnaby, and by their united strength succeeded in
-closing the door, and by an iron bar that was behind it
-completely excluding the crowd, who continued to shout
-and rave without as they surged against it and beat upon it
-with sticks and stones. Anon the crash of glass was heard,
-and then the cries of women, as the house itself was assailed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Infuriated to find that their victim or victims, whom
-many of them now supposed to be some of their wealthy
-and oppressive monopolists, had escaped them, the blows
-upon the door were redoubled, but its strength baffled them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is me they want, Chute, because I struck that rascal
-at the hotel,' said Sir Carnaby: 'leave me&mdash;they will tear
-you to pieces to get at me, the German brutes!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Leave you, Sir Carnaby! Never! If, even were you a
-stranger, I should stand by you, how much more am I
-bound to do so when you are the father of Clare Collingwood!
-And if I cannot by main strength save, I shall die
-with you&mdash;game, an Englishman to the last!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were in a court which had no outlet. From it an
-open stair led to a species of ancient gallery overlooking
-the street; it was a species of balcony, with pillars and
-arches carved of stone, like those in front of the wonderfully
-quaint Rathhaus, which was not far from it, and was
-built in the middle of the fifteenth century.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their appearance in this place elicited a roar from the
-mob some fifteen feet below them, and hundreds of dirty
-hands were shaken clenched towards them, and hundreds
-of excited and upturned faces were visible in the red,
-uncertain glare of the torches that were held still by five or
-six of the rioters. But matters now began to look very
-serious; for the crowd was seen to part like the waves of
-the sea as a ladder was borne through it and planted
-against the wall. Then five or six men began to mount at
-once, while others pressed forward to follow, determined to
-visit the fugitives by escalade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Travers looked bewildered, and Sir Carnaby still more
-so; but Trevor Chute, by habit, profession, and nature,
-had all that coolness in front of immediate peril, and utter
-indifference of personal risk, which made him renowned
-in his regiment and the idol of the soldiers, and he had
-been in many critical situations, where caution and decision
-had to be combined with instant action.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The head and shoulders of the uppermost man on the
-ladder had barely appeared above the front of the balcony
-when Chute seized the former by its two uprights, and
-thrust it fairly outward from the wall. For a moment it
-oscillated, or seemed to balance itself, and then, describing
-a radius of about thirty feet or more, fell back among the
-crowd with its load of ruffians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then shrieks and the rattle of musketry were heard, as
-the Prussian guard arrived from the Rathhaus, and by
-orders of a burgomaster poured in a volley of some twenty
-muskets or so, on which the mob took to flight, and
-dispersed in all directions, leaving behind two or three dead
-men and the maimed wretches who had been on the upper
-portion of the ladder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So ended this episode of excitement and peril, after which
-the three Englishmen, to whom every species of apology
-was tendered&mdash;after due explanation given&mdash;were conducted
-by the armed night watch back to their hotel, and
-once more quietness settled over the little city of Lubeck.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX.
-<br /><br />
-SIR CARNABY'S GRATITUDE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Save that he had got a terrible shaking, a few blows, and
-considerable fright, Sir Carnaby Collingwood, thanks to
-Trevor Chute and his servant, was not much the worse
-and between his draughts of iced seltzer and brandy, he
-sputtered and threatened the whole city of Lubeck with
-our ambassador at Berlin, and to have the outrage of the
-night brought 'before the House' as soon as he returned to
-town; while Lady Evelyn, filled with genuine admiration
-of the pluck shown by Chute, his manly and generous
-bearing, and with gratitude for the manner in which he had
-assuredly saved the life of her <i>caro sposo</i>, became his most
-ardent ally; but as he and Sir Carnaby lingered over their
-wine that night he felt&mdash;and still more next day&mdash;the
-weight of the many blows and buffets of which he had been
-quite unconscious at the time they were so freely bestowed
-upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Egad, Chute,' chuckled Sir Carnaby, 'didn't think you
-and I should ever figure like two heroes in a melodrama;
-by Jove&mdash;absurd, don't you know&mdash;but those Germans <i>are</i>
-beastly fellows. The moselle stands with you. We have
-had nothing here,' he continued, laughing with more
-genuine heartiness than was usual to him, for his feelings
-had undergone a revulsion&mdash;'we have had nothing here but
-mistakes and scenes&mdash;actually scenes. I refused you Clare,
-and you make off, per train, with Lady Evelyn. I was
-most unkind to you, and you act generously by returning
-good for exceeding evil.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor was so unused to this tone from Sir Carnaby that
-his heart swelled with mingled hope and anticipation, joy
-and sadness, as he said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am only thankful to Heaven that I was here to-night,
-and able to be of service to you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Service&mdash;egad, my dear fellow, you have saved my life!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The consciousness of that rewards me for more than one
-past misfortune.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, you mean those which caused you to leave the
-Guards?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To leave England, and&mdash;lost me Clare!' said Chute,
-falteringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, well, it was all no fault of yours. It was a thousand
-pities that your father, the old General&mdash;an extravagant dog
-he was&mdash;could touch the entail. That is all over now; and
-believe me, Trevor Chute, if you forgive me the past, you
-shall not go without your <i>reward</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the two shook hands in silence. The heart of
-the younger man beat tumultuously, for well did he
-know the glorious 'reward' that was referred to. He
-knew that Sir Carnaby would keep to his word, and he had,
-we have said, an ardent admirer and adherent in Lady
-Evelyn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Captain Chute,' said she, 'do give up this peregrimania
-of yours, and spend Christmas with us at Carnaby Court.
-Promise me,' she added, taking his hands in hers; 'I will
-take no denial, and am always used to have my way in
-everything.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Chute, without much difficulty, accepted an invitation
-in which kindness was perhaps mingled with some desire to
-get Clare off her hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chute, with Sir Carnaby's permission, wrote to Clare
-next day, saying that he had been so happy as to be of
-service to her father, and had saved him&mdash;'saved his life, in
-fact'&mdash;during a row among the Germans; that they were
-the best of friends now that all barriers were removed,
-and how happy he and she would yet be in the time to
-come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Clare was extremely bewildered by all this, till
-the letter was supplemented by a more descriptive and
-effusive epistle from the, sometime to her, obnoxious
-Lady Evelyn, describing in glowing colours the terrors of
-the affair at Lubeck, Chute's bravery, and Sir Carnaby's
-rescue, and the heart of the girl leaped in her breast with
-gratitude to Heaven for this sudden change in the feelings
-of her father, and gratitude to Trevor for saving
-the selfish old man from injury, insult, and, too
-probably, a sudden and dreadful death; and amid this
-new-born happiness grew a longing to behold that of her sister
-and Jerry Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latter, when in London, more than once, when
-with Desmond; contrived to draw on the subject of the
-male figure he had seen in the arbour with Ida, and
-found that he still adhered to it in all its somewhat vague
-details.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the other hand, he had a long private letter from
-Clare, impressing upon him that it must have been a
-delusion; that no such person had been seen by Ida; and
-dwelling delicately on the health of the latter, and the
-strange fancies which haunted her. Perplexed, he knew
-not what to think, and would mutter:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Delusion! Were Colonel Rakes, Desmond, and I all
-deluded alike? It is an impossibility!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He actually doubted her, and bitter as the doubt must be
-of that one loves, deep must be the love that struggles against
-it, and his was of that kind. Clare reminded him of his
-promised visit at Christmas-time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shall I go, to be snared again by the witchery of Ida's
-violet eyes and the golden gleam of her auburn hair?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most rankling and bitter wounds are those of the
-heart; because they are unseen, and, too often, untellable;
-so Vane, amid the bitterness of his doubt, consoled, or
-strove to console himself with the remark of a Scottish
-writer, who says, 'How humbling it is to think that the
-strongest affections which have perplexed, or agitated, or
-delighted us from our birth, will, in a few years, cease to
-have an existence on the earth; and that all the ardour
-which they have kindled will be as completely extinguished
-and forgotten as if they had never been!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Love for him certainly seemed to have been dawning in
-her heart again; else whence that kiss&mdash;somewhat too
-sisterly, perhaps&mdash;which she accorded to him so frankly in
-the oriel window, filling his bosom with the old joy? Across
-the sunshine that was brightening his path why should this
-marring shadow have fallen, giving a pain that was only
-equalled in intensity by his love? hence it was simply horrid
-to hear a man like Desmond say, mockingly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You ask me about that fellow in the arbour so often
-that, by Jove, Vane, you are becoming spoony on her
-again&mdash;heard you were so once, don't you know&mdash;threw you over
-for Beverley, and all that sort of thing. Fact is, my dear
-fellow, women always betray those who love them too much.
-Never throw your heart further away than just so far that
-you can easily recover it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And with his thoughts elsewhere, Jerry, spoiled as
-women of the world will spoil a drawing-room pet, lingered
-on amid a gay circle in London, endowed with a vague
-flirting commission, and coquetted a little with the languid,
-the soft, and the lovely, to hide or heal the wound that
-Ida had inflicted; while it was with regret, and a sense of
-as much irritation and hauteur as her gentle nature was
-capable of feeling, Ida heard that Vane was to accompany
-Chute (after all that had passed between them, and his
-suspicions) to Carnaby Court, where now the beeches and elms
-were all yellow or brown with the last tints of autumn, and
-the tall trees in the chase showed flushes of crimson, purple,
-and orange when the sun was sinking beyond the uplands in
-the west.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On very different terms were Clare and <i>her</i> lover;
-and in their letters they wrote freely and confidently of
-their future&mdash;a happy time that seemed certain now&mdash;the
-future that had once been but as the mirage that Chute
-had often beheld on the march in the sandy deserts of
-Aijmere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Clare&mdash;I shall see her again!' he muttered to himself;
-it was a great thought, a bright conviction, that to him she
-was no longer a dream but a reality; thus in his heart he
-felt 'that riot of hope, joy, and belief which is too
-tumultuous and impatient for happiness, but yet <i>is</i> happy beyond
-all that the world holds.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Objectless till he saw her again, after Sir Carnaby and
-Lady Evelyn had left him for England, he lingered in
-Northern Germany; but Jerry Vane had accepted Lady
-Evelyn's written and actually reiterated invitation for
-Christmas with very mingled feelings indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Since the day he had left Carnaby Court so abruptly he
-had never exchanged a word, verbally or in writing, with
-Ida.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In going there now he would do so with a deadened
-sense of sorrow, disappointment, and bitterness in his heart
-and the wretched doubt as to whether he was wise to throw
-himself into the lure&mdash;was it snare?&mdash;of her society again;
-even with the intention of showing, as he thought, poor
-goose, how bravely he could resist it, and seek to convince
-her that he had effaced the past and forgotten to view her
-amid the halo in which he had once enshrined her. Were
-they, then, to meet in a state of antagonism?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute's brave rescue of Sir Carnaby Collingwood
-had, as a story, preceded his return to town, with many
-exaggerations; the clubs rang with it, and it actually stirred
-the blood in what 'Ouida' calls 'the languid, <i>nil admirari</i>,
-egotistic, listless pulses of high-bred society.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But time was creeping on now, and the Christmas of the
-year drew near at hand.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX.
-<br /><br />
-CARNABY COURT.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The baronet's country seat was popular among his 'set,'
-and in the county generally. The ladies were attractive, Sir
-Carnaby was fond of society, and was undeniably hospitable:
-the preserves were good, the corn-fed pheasants were among
-the best in the land, and partridges abounded in the coverts
-and thickets; the stud and cellar were good, and his French
-cook was a genius. The oak-studded chase, where the deer
-lay deep amid the fern, showed trees that were of vast
-antiquity&mdash;remnants, perhaps, of the days when Bucks was
-all a forest, as old historians tell us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Collingwoods had been lords of Collingwood ever
-since tradition could tell of them. They were, it was said,
-old as the chalky Chiltern Hills and the woods of Whaddon
-Chase, and stories of their prowess had been rife among the
-people since the days when Edward was murdered at
-Tewkesbury, when 'bluff King Hal' burnt Catholics and
-Protestants together with perfect impartiality at Smithfield,
-when Mary spent her maudlin love on Philip, and Queen
-Bess boxed the ears of her courtiers: all had figured in
-history somehow; and everywhere, over the gateway half
-hidden by ivy, in the painted oriels, on the gables, and on
-the buttons of the livery servants, were three eels wavy on a
-bend, indicating a heraldic portion of the tenure by which
-they held their land, like the lord of Aylesbury in the same
-county&mdash;'By the sergentry of finding straw for the bed of
-the Defender of the Faith, with three eels for his supper,
-when he should travel that way.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Built, patched, and repaired in various ages, the Court is
-one of the most picturesque old mansions in the county.
-In one portion, chiefly inhabited by crows and bats, there
-was a half-ruined remnant left by the Wars of the Roses, on
-which the present Tudor, or, rather, Elizabethan mansion,
-with its peaked gables, oriel windows, and clustered
-chimney-stacks&mdash;square, twisted, or fluted&mdash;had been
-engrafted. Hawthorn, holly, and ivy grew out of the clefts of
-the ruinous portion; and there in childhood had Clare and
-Ida made baby houses; and there they had devoured in
-secret many a fairy and ghost story, and thrilled with joy
-over that of the 'Ugly Duckling.' The terrace balustrades
-were mossy and green, and though Carnaby Court had an
-old and decayed aspect, there was a lingering grandeur
-about it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The plate in the dining-hall was famous in the county for
-its value and antiquity, though many a goblet and salver had
-gone to the melting-pot when King Charles unfurled his
-standard at Nottingham.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have said that stories had been rumoured about of a
-figure seen in the garden and elsewhere; and Sir Carnaby,
-who loathed scenes, excitement, worry, 'and all that sort of
-thing,' as he phrased it (though he had undergone enough
-and to spare), was intensely provoked when the old butler
-gave him some hint of the shadowy addition to the family
-at the Court.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A ghost!' he exclaimed, with his gold glasses on his
-long, thin nose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, sir&mdash;so they say.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They&mdash;who? Stuff! If this absurd story gets abroad,
-we shall find ourselves a subject for the speculation of the
-vulgar here and the spiritualists everywhere; and the house
-may be beset by all manner of intruders. And what is it
-like?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nobody knows; a tall man in black, I have heard,'
-replied the butler.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Black! How do ghosts or spirits get clothes?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't know, Sir Carnaby.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course you don't, how should you? <i>Your</i> spirits are
-in wood,' chuckled the baronet. 'I have heard of tables
-spinning about, of bells ringing, banjos playing, of sticks
-beating on a drum-head by unseen hands, and even of
-people flying through the air at <i>séances</i>, but I'll have none of
-that nonsense at Carnaby Court. It's bad style&mdash;vulgar&mdash;very!
-We'll send for the disembodied police, and have
-your ghost taken up as a rogue and impostor.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quite a gay party had assembled for the Christmas
-festivities at the old Court; there were Major Desmond,
-and two of his brother officers, with his intended, one of
-the belles of the last season at Tyburnia, Colonel and Lady
-Rakes, Lord Brixton, and many more, including old Lord
-Bayswater and Charley Rakes, a mere lad, steeped already
-in folly or worse, yet very much disposed to lionise and
-patronise the pretty Violet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Trevor Chute and Vane first arrived they were both
-shocked&mdash;the latter particularly so&mdash;to find a great and fatal
-change had come over Ida, and it had come suddenly too, as
-Clare asserted. Jerry had begun to feel the sweetness of
-cheated hope, but this was fading now. She seemed in a
-decline apparently; large dark circles were under her eyes,
-and their old soft sweetness of gaze was blended with a weird
-and weary look of infinite melancholy at times; and when
-Clare had expressed to Sir Carnaby a hope that she might
-yet wed Jerry out of pity&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let her wed him for anything, for&mdash;by Jove, this sort of
-thing is great boredom,' sighed or grumbled the baronet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The idea of you, Captain Chute, eloping with our new
-mamma,' said Violet, when she met him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That led to my being of service to your father, Violet&mdash;to
-my being here to-night,' he added, in a tender whisper to
-Clare, as the ladies left the dining-table, and Sir Carnaby
-changed his seat to the head of the table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ugh!' said he, in a low voice, 'unless poor Ida brightens
-up a little, a doleful Christmas we are likely to have of it;
-but I am glad to see you, Vane&mdash;the wine stands with you&mdash;pass
-the bottles, and don't insult my butler by neglecting
-to fill your glass.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With all his affected breeze of manner, his desire to
-appear juvenile before Lady Evelyn, and all his inborn
-selfishness, both Vane and Chute could perceive that the
-failing health of his favourite daughter had affected him.
-The unwelcome crow's-feet were deeper about his eyes; his
-general 'get-up' was less elaborate; his whiskers were out
-of curl, and like what remained of his hair, showed, by an
-occasional patch of grey, that dye was sometimes forgotten.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first quiet stolen interview of Clare and Trevor
-Chute was one of inexpressible happiness and joy. They
-were again in the recess of that oriel near which he had
-first said he loved her, and she had accepted him. The
-moon shone as bright now as then, but in the clear and
-frosty sky of a winter night, and the flakes of light threw
-down many a crimson, golden, and blue ray of colour on
-the snowy skin and white dress of Clare, as she nestled her
-face on Trevor's breast, while his arm went round her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clare loved well the woods of the old Court&mdash;the lovely,
-leafy woods&mdash;with trees round and vast as the pillars of a
-Saxon cathedral&mdash;loved them in their vernal greenery, their
-summer foliage, and their varied autumnal tints of russet,
-brown, and gold, for there had Trevor told her again and
-again the old, old story, the story of both their hearts, hand
-locked in hand; and there she had first learned how sweet
-and good our earthly life may be, how full of hope, of
-sunshine, and glory to the loving and the loved; but never did
-she love them as when she saw them now, though standing
-black and leafless amid the far-stretching waste of snow
-that gleamed in the distance far away under the glare of
-the moon, for Trevor was with her once more, and never
-to be separated from her again!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Trevor, Trevor! I thank kind Heaven,' she whispered
-for the twentieth time, 'that you and papa are friends
-now&mdash;and such friends! Lady Evelyn has told me again
-and again all the debt we owe. If the poor old man had
-perished&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Had I saved a nation, Clare, my reward is in you,' said
-he, arresting effectually further thanks or praises.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had dreamed by day of Clare, and loved her as much
-as ever man loved woman; he had undergone all the
-misery of separation, of hopelessness, doubt, and even of
-groundless jealousy; and now, after all, she was his own!
-For the most tranquil time of all his past life he would not
-have exchanged the tumultuous and brilliant joy of the
-present; yet that joy was not without a cloud, and that
-cloud was the regret and perplexity caused by Ida, for whom
-he had all the tenderness of a brother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the day after his arrival he was writing in the library,
-and had been so for some time, before he discovered that
-Ida was lying fast asleep in an easy-chair near the fire, her
-slumber being induced either by weariness and languor, or
-the cosy heat of the room, with its warmth of colour and
-its heavy draperies, which partly hid the snowy scene
-without. For a few moments he watched the singular
-beauty of the girl's upturned face, the purity of her profile,
-and the sweetness of her parted lips, as her graceful head
-reclined against the back of the softly cushioned chair, over
-which, as they had become undone, bright masses of her
-auburn hair were rippling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly she seemed to shiver in her sleep, and to
-mutter, as terror and sorrow hardened the lines of her
-face. She was dreaming; and starting with a low cry, she
-awoke, and sprang almost into the arms of Chute. Her
-lips were white and parched&mdash;white as the teeth within
-them; her eyes, with a wild, hysterical, and overstrained
-expression, were fixed on the empty air, while the veins in
-her delicate throat were swollen; and then she turned to
-Chute, who kissed her forehead, caressed her hands, and
-besought her to be calm. She drew a long, gasping sigh,
-and said, while swaying forward, as if about to fall:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Trevor, Trevor! I have had a dream of Beverley&mdash;and
-such a dream! Hold me up, or I shall fall!' she
-added, pressing her tremulous hands upon her thin white
-temples. 'In this dream, Beverley said&mdash;said&mdash;&mdash;' Tears
-choked her utterance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>What</i> did you think he said?' asked Chute, tenderly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Think? I heard him as plainly as I hear you!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, do speak, Ida.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He said, "We are never to be parted, Ida, even by
-death. Fate has linked my soul to yours for ever; and
-though unseen, I am ever near you." Then a cry escaped
-me, and I awoke. Had you not been here, I should have
-fainted.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is&mdash;heavens! what shall I call it&mdash;morbid!'
-exclaimed Chute. 'Such dreams&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come to me unbidden&mdash;uncontrolled,' continued Ida,
-sobbing heavily. 'There seems to be a strange, half sad
-and sweet, half fearful and subtle, influence at work around
-me! I am sure that there is a world beyond the grave&mdash;an
-unseen world that is close, close to us all, Trevor.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As she spoke, Chute, who was regarding her with the
-tenderest sympathy, became deeply pained to see the grey,
-death-like hue that stole over her lovely face, and the
-droop that came into her&mdash;for the moment&mdash;lustreless
-eyes; and as he gazed he almost began to imbibe some
-of her wild convictions. 'It is a matter of knowledge,'
-says a writer, 'that there are persons whose yearning
-conceptions&mdash;nay, travelled conclusions&mdash;continually take the
-form of images which have a foreshadowing power: the
-deed they do starts up before them in complete shape,
-making a coercive type; the event they hunger for or
-dread rises into vision with a seed-like growth, feeding
-itself fast on unnumbered impressions. They are not
-always the less capable of argumentative process, nor less
-sane than the commonplace calculators of the market.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whenever I <i>think</i> of Beverley, I seem to feel that he is,
-unseen, beside me; and this startling and oppressive
-emotion I can neither control, analyze, or conquer,' said Ida,
-wearily, as Chute led her to another room.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXI.
-<br /><br />
-CHRISTMAS EVE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was not in the heart of honest Jerry Vane to harbour
-much of doubt when pity was wanted; and, so far as Ida
-was concerned, it fully seemed wanted now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The change that came over her health had been rapid and
-unexplainable. Her nerves were evidently hopelessly
-unstrung; she seemed to be pining and passing away in the
-midst of them all. Her temperament was entirely changed;
-she could see the light emitted by a magnet in the dark, and
-always shuddered at the touch of one. The doctors shook
-their heads, and could only speak of change of air when the
-season opened, and so forth; while poor Jerry Vane hung
-about her in an agony of love and anxiety, hoping against
-hope that she might yet recover and be his dear little wife
-after all; but when Clare hinted at this, the ailing girl only
-shook her head and smiled sadly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was just shortly before Christmas Eve, however, that
-Jerry felt himself lured and tempted, with his heart full of
-great pity for the feeble condition in which he saw the
-once brilliant Ida, to speak to her again of the love he bore
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The jealous shame that he had a rival&mdash;another who might
-have won her when he had failed&mdash;the lurker whom
-Desmond and himself had seen&mdash;was all forgotten now; and
-though her bloom was gone, her complexion had become
-waxen, her beautiful hands almost transparent, her eyes
-unnaturally large and bright, he seemed to see in her only the
-same Ida whom he had loved in the first flush of her beauty
-ere it budded, and whom he had wooed and won in happier
-and unclouded times, in the same old English home where
-they were all gathered together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She approached the subject herself, by saying to him,
-when they were alone:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Forgive me, Jerry, if I spoke hastily to you when last
-we parted.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Forgive you!' he exclaimed, in a low voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; surely that is not impossible.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Ida! forgiveness is no word to pass between you
-and me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Especially now, Jerry; but though I treated you
-ill&mdash;very, very ill&mdash;in the past time&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let us not talk of that, Ida.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of what, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Our future,' he whispered, while, drawing near, he took
-her passive hand in his, and longed to kiss, but dared not
-touch her, while great love and compassion filled his
-heart&mdash;the love that had never died; but as he held her hand
-she shivered like an aspen leaf.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Future&mdash;oh, Jerry, I would that I were at rest beside
-mamma in yonder church!' she said, looking to where the
-square tower of the village fane, mantled in ivy and snow,
-stood darkly up in purple shade against the crimson flush of
-the evening sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can it be that your illness is such&mdash;your weakness&mdash;oh,
-what shall I term it!&mdash;is such that you are indeed tired of
-life, Ida?' he asked, with an anxiety that was not unmixed
-with fear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Life is only a delusion. What is it that we should desire it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are very strange this evening, dearest Ida,' he urged
-softly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My health is shattered, Jerry&mdash;my spirit gone! hence,
-though you love me, no comfort or joy would ever come to
-you through me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were tears in the man's eyes as he listened to her.
-She was pressing his hand kindly between hers, but there
-was a weary wistfulness in the gaze of Ida which bewildered
-him, and he thought how unlike was this sad love-making to
-that of the past time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor Jerry!' she resumed, after a long pause, 'I don't
-think I shall live very long; a little time, I fear, and I shall
-only be a dream to you, but a dream full of disappointment
-and pain.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not say so, Ida&mdash;my own beloved Ida!' he exclaimed,
-as the last vestige of mistrust in her was forgotten, and
-sorrow, love, and perplexity took its place. 'Ida,' he
-continued, in a voice that was touching, passionate, and
-appealing, 'young, beautiful, and rich, you shall yet be well and
-strong; your own gay spirit will return with the renewed
-health which we shall find you in another and a sunnier
-land than ours. Oh, for the love I bear you, darling, do
-thrust aside these thoughts of gloom and death!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But she answered him slowly and deliberately, in a voice
-that was without tremor, though her eyes were full of
-melancholy, and with something of love, too, but not earthly
-loving, for that passion had long since departed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The thoughts of gloom come over me unsought, and
-will not be thrust aside; and to dread or avoid death is
-folly, and to fear it is also folly; for that which is so
-universal must be for our general good; hence, to fear that
-which we cannot understand, and is for our good, is greater
-folly. Moreover, it puts an end to all earthly suffering and
-to all earthly sorrow. But leave me, dear Jerry, now; I am
-weary&mdash;<i>so</i> weary.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then Vane, with his eyes full of tears, pressed his lips to
-her pale forehead as she sank back in her chair and closed
-her eyes as if to court sleep; and he left her slowly and
-reluctantly, and with a heart torn by many emotions, and
-not the least of these was the aching and clamorous sense of
-a coming calamity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was Christmas-tide, when, from all parts of the British
-Isles, the trains are pouring London-ward, laden with turkeys,
-game, and geese, and all manner of good things; when the
-post-bags are filled with dainty Christmas cards that express
-good and kind thoughts; when the warmest wishes of the
-jocund season are exchanged by all who meet, even to those
-whose hands they do not clasp, though eye looks kindly to
-eye; when the sparrows, finches, and robins flock about the
-farmyards, and the poor little blue tomtits feel cold and hungry
-in the leafless woods and orchards; Christmas Eve&mdash;'whose
-red signal fires shall glow through gloom and darkness till
-all the years be done'&mdash;the season of plum-pudding and
-holly, mistletoe and carolling, and of kind-hearted generosity,
-when the traditional stocking is filled, and the green branches
-of the festive tree are loaded with every species of 'goodies,'
-for excited and expectant little folks; and 'once a year,' the
-eve that, of all others, makes the place of those whom death
-has taken seem doubly vacant, and when the baby that
-came since last Christmas is hailed with a new joy; the eve
-that is distinguished by the solemnity of the mighty mission
-with which if is associated; and when over all God's
-Christian world, the bells ring out the chimes in memory of the
-star that shone over Bethlehem; and even now they were
-jingling merrily in the old square English tower of
-Collingwood church, from whence the cadence of the sweet
-even-song, in which the voices of Clare and Violet mingled with
-others, came on the clear frosty breeze to the old Court, the
-painted oriels of which were all aflame with ruddy light, that
-fell far in flakes across the snow-covered chase.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One voice alone was wanting there&mdash;the soft and tender
-one of Ida, who was unable to leave the house and face the
-keen, cold winter air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She alone, of all the gay party assembled at the Court,
-remained behind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anxious to rejoin her, the moment the service was over
-in the little village church&mdash;the altar and pillars of which
-Clare and her friends, with the assistance of the gardener,
-had elaborately decorated: with bays and glistening
-hollies&mdash;Jerry Vane slipped out of his pew and hastened away
-through the snow-covered fields to where the picturesque
-masses of the ancient Court, with all its traceried and tinted
-windows gaily lighted up, stood darkly against the starry
-sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unusual anxiety agitated the breast of Jerry Vane on this
-night; the strange words and stranger manner of Ida had
-made a great impression upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That she respected him deeply he saw plainly enough;
-but her regard for him, if it existed at all, which he often
-doubted, at least, such regard as he wished, seemed merely
-that of a sister; and every way the altered terms on which
-they now were seemed singular and perplexing; and yet he
-loved her fondly, truly, and, when he thought of her
-shattered health, most compassionately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On entering the drawing-room, which was brilliantly
-lighted, he saw Ida within an arched and curtained alcove
-that opened out of it; the blue silk hangings were festooned
-on each side by silver tassels and cords. The recess was
-thus partly in shadow, and, within, Ida reclined on a couch,
-near which lay a book, that had apparently dropped from
-her hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her attitude, expressive of great excitement or of great
-grief, made Vane pause for a moment. Her figure was in
-shadow, but her lovely auburn hair glittered in light as she
-lay back on the couch, with her white hands covering her
-eyes, pressing, to all appearance, hard upon them, while
-heavy sobs convulsed her bosom and throat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vane was about to approach and question her as to this
-excessive grief, when his blood ran cold on perceiving the
-figure of a gentleman bending tenderly and caressingly over
-her&mdash;the man of the arbour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His form was in shadow, but his face was most distinct;
-it was handsome in contour, though very pale; his eyes,
-that were cast fondly down on Ida, were dark, as Vane could
-perceive, and his thick moustache was jetty in hue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What could he have to say to Ida that agitated her thus?
-And who was this stranger who seemed to avail himself of
-every conceivable moment she was alone to thrust himself
-upon her?&mdash;if, indeed, he were not, as Jerry's jealousy began
-to hint, but too welcome!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How many times had he been with her, unknown to all? was
-the next bitter thought that flashed upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He resolved to bring Chute to the spot, for Chute had
-never believed the stories of Ida and her mysterious friend
-or admirer; so, instead of boldly advancing and intruding
-upon them, he softly quitted the room, and met the Captain
-in the entrance hall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where is Clare?' he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gone to take off her wraps,' replied Chute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Quick!' said Jerry, in an agitated voice; 'come this way.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is the matter?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You shall see. The honour&mdash;oh, that I should speak of
-it!&mdash;the honour of Ida is dearer to me than life,' said Vane,
-in a voice which indicated great mental pain; 'yet what am
-I to think, unless her brain is turned?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He leaned for a moment against a console table, as if a
-giddiness or a weakness had come over him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jerry, are you unwell?' asked Chute, anxiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't know what the devil is up, or whether Ida&mdash;with
-her face lovely as it is, and pure as that of a saint in some
-old cathedral window&mdash;is playing false to me and to us all!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'False!' exclaimed Chute, astonished by this outburst,
-which was made with great bitterness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, false.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ida&mdash;why&mdash;how?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because that mysterious fellow is with her now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the arched alcove off the drawing-room. I know not
-what he has been saying to her, but the effect of his presence
-is to fill her with grief and agitation; these are manifest
-enough, whatever may be the secret tie or sympathy between
-them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were for the present alone, Chute and Vane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The gentlemen had all gone unanimously to the smoking-room,
-and the voices of the ladies were heard merrily talking
-in the upper corridors, in anticipation of a ball on the
-morrow, for which the gayest and richest of toilettes that
-Paris and Regent Street could produce were spread on more
-than one bed to be exultingly contemplated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevor Chute gave Jerry a grave and inquiring glance,
-and with soldierlike promptitude stepped quickly towards
-the drawing-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She declined to go with us to the evensong, and <i>this</i> is
-the reason why!' resumed Vane, bitterly. 'There&mdash;he is
-beside her still!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ida now reclined with her face upward, and the pure
-outline of her profile could be distinctly seen against the dark
-background of the alcove, as also the dazzling whiteness of
-her hands, which were crossed upon her bosom. Over her
-hung the stranger, with his face so closely bowed to hers
-that his features could not be seen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She is asleep or in a faint,' said Jerry, as they paused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This man's figure is familiar to me&mdash;quite,' said Chute;
-'<i>where</i> have I seen him before?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he spoke, the stranger raised his head, and turning to
-them his pale, now ghastly, face, gazed at them for a
-moment with eyes that were dark, singularly piercing, and
-intensely melancholy; there was something in their
-expression which chilled the blood of Vane; but for a
-moment only did he so look, and then the face and figure
-melted, and in that moment a thrill of unnatural horror ran
-through the heart of Trevor Chute, who stood rooted to the
-spot, and next, as a wild cry escaped him, fell senseless on
-the carpet, for he had beheld the visual realization of that
-which he had begun to fear was Ida's haunting spirit&mdash;the
-face and form of Beverley, or of a demon in his shape.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And ere he sank down where he lay, even when the eyes
-of this dread thing had turned upon him, there stole over
-his passing senses, quickly, the memory of the hot air of
-that breathless Indian morning, when the notes of the
-réveille seemed to mingle with the last dying words of his
-comrade&mdash;his farewell message to Ida!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All this passed in the vibration of a pendulum.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vane was in equal terror and perplexity, all the more so that
-the name of 'Beverley' had mingled with the cry of Trevor
-Chute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Beverley!' he thought. 'My God! can we look upon
-such things and live!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like Chute and many others, he had ever prided himself
-on his superiority to all thoughts of superstition and vulgar
-fears; he had ever scoffed at all manner of warnings,
-dreams, visitations, and spiritual influences, believing that
-the laws of nature were fixed and immutable; and here,
-amid the blaze of light, he had been face to face with the
-usually unseen world! He was face to face with more&mdash;death!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His beloved Ida was found to have been dead for many
-minutes. Her heart was cold, her pulses still, and when
-the cry of Chute brought, by its strange and unnatural
-sound, all the household thronging to the room in alarm
-and amazement, Vane was found hanging over her, and
-weeping as only women weep, and with all the wild and
-passionate abandonment he had never felt since childhood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had she seen, as they had at last, this haunting figure,
-whose vicinity caused that mysterious icy chill and tremor
-which nevermore would shock her delicate system and
-lovely form? Had the&mdash;to her&mdash;long unseen been visible
-at last&mdash;that pale, solemn face with its sad, dark eyes and
-black moustache?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It almost seemed so, for terror dwelt on her still features
-for a time, then repose, sadness, and sweetness stole over
-her beautiful face&mdash;still most beautiful in death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had she died of terror, of grief, or of both, inducing
-perhaps a rupture of the heart? The pressure of her hands
-upon her breast would seem to say the latter, but all was
-wild and sad conjecture now in the startled and sorrowing
-household.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So ended the <i>haunted life</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the doctors discussed the subject learnedly, and her
-nervous thrills or involuntary tremors were accounted for
-by one who asserted 'that such an emotion was producible
-in persons of a certain nervous <i>diathesis</i> by the approach
-alike of an unseen spirit or the impingement of an electric
-fluid evolved by the superior will of another.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was urged by some that anything supernatural could
-only be seen by a person who was under an extraordinary
-exaltation of the sensuous perceptions, and certainly this
-was not the case with either Desmond, Vane, or Chute;
-thus it was deemed doubly strange that such men as they
-should have seen this singular and terrible presence, when
-she, whose system was of the most refined and delicate
-nature, and rendered more spiritual by her sinking health,
-should only have felt that something unseen was near her,
-until, perhaps, that fatal night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What miracle, <i>diablerie</i>, or spiritualistic horror was
-this? speculated all, when the story came to be sifted around the
-couch whereon the dead Ida lay, like a marble statue, with
-her skin soft and pale as a white camellia leaf.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Can it be, they asked, that 'his solicitude cannot rest
-with his bones,' far away in that Indian grave where Trevor
-Chute had laid him? Was that grave not deep enough to
-hide him, that his spiritual essence&mdash;if essence it is&mdash;comes
-here?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a dark and sorrowful Christmas Eve at Carnaby
-Court; guests who came to be gay, and to rejoice in the
-festivities of the joyous season, departed in quick succession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry Vane never quite recovered the death of Ida or the
-manner of it, and some time elapsed before the gallant
-heart of Trevor Chute got the better of the shock of that
-night; but he could never forget the expression of the dead
-eyes that seemed to have looked again into his!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could recall the fierce and sudden excitement of
-finding himself face to face with his first tiger in India, and
-putting the contents of both barrels into him, just as the
-monster was in the act of tearing down the shrieking mahout
-from his perch behind the ears of his shikaree elephant in a
-jungle where the twisted branches had to be torn aside at
-every step; and the nearly similar emotion with which
-he speared his first wild hog&mdash;an old boar, but too likely to
-turn like an envenomed devil when hard pressed and the
-pace grew hot; he could recall its glistening bristles that
-were like blue steel, its red eyes, and its fierce white tusks,
-as he whetted them in his dying wrath against a peepul
-tree; he could recall, too, the shock of the first bullet that
-took him in the arm, the vague terror of a barbed arrow
-that pierced his thigh, and which, for all he knew, might be
-poisoned; but never was mortal shock or emotion equal to
-the horror that burst upon him that night in the
-drawing-room of Carnaby Court, when a grasp of iron seemed to
-tighten round his heart, 'when the hair of his flesh stood
-up,' the light went out of his eyes, and he sank into oblivion.
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Brighter times come anon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-None can sorrow for ever; though that of the inmates of
-Carnaby Court did not pass away with the snows of winter&mdash;nay,
-nor with the sweet buds of spring or the roses of
-summer, when they climbed round the oriels and gables of
-the grand old mansion. Thus it was not for many months
-after that night of dread and dismay&mdash;that most mournful
-Christmas Eve&mdash;that the merry chimes were heard to ring
-in the old square tower of the Saxon church for the marriage
-of Clare and Trevor Chute, who passed, with chastened
-looks and much of tender sorrow, amid their long-deferred
-happiness, the now flower-covered garden of the gentle
-sister who had been indirectly the good angel who brought
-that happiness to pass.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE END.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD AND LONDON.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
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