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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76967 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ PRINCESS PUCK
+
+ BY
+ U. L. SILBERRAD
+
+ London
+ MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
+ 1902
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I. MISS BROWNLOW’S NIECES, 1
+
+ II. BILL, 12
+
+ III. ROBERT MORTON, 20
+
+ IV. HARBOROUGH OF CROWS’ FARM, 31
+
+ V. FOR BILL’S GOOD, 44
+
+ VI. THE RIGHT OF WAY, 57
+
+ VII. HARBOROUGH OF GURNETT, 72
+
+ VIII. THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF GURNETT, 88
+
+ IX. “RED IS THE ROSE,” 107
+
+ X. IN THE GARDEN, 124
+
+ XI. WILHELMINA I. AND II., 138
+
+ XII. NATURAL SELECTION, 150
+
+ XIII. CHASING A SHADOW, 156
+
+ XIV. THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF CROWS’ FARM, 171
+
+ XV. FAMILY HISTORY, 187
+
+ XVI. A GRANDFATHER, 198
+
+ XVII. THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF A GUARDIAN, 208
+
+ XVIII. THE PLUM HARVEST, 219
+
+ XIX. PETER HARBOROUGH: SHOT, 231
+
+ XX. HARBOROUGH OF BYBRIDGE, 248
+
+ XXI. THE ACQUISITIVE FACULTY, 266
+
+ XXII. POLLY SETTLES THINGS, 279
+
+ XXIII. PETER HARBOROUGH’S SHOE-BUCKLES, 285
+
+ XXIV. THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF BYBRIDGE, 303
+
+ XXV. GENERAL SERVANT, 317
+
+ XXVI. AN OLD WOUND, 337
+
+ XXVII. A CHIP OF THE OLD BLOCK, 346
+
+ XXVIII. THE OAK BOX GOES TO WRUGGLESBY, 364
+
+ XXIX. POLLY PROVES A TRUE PROPHET, 378
+
+ XXX. A RELISH WITH TEA, 392
+
+ XXXI. THE FULFILLING OF THE DREAM, 399
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+MISS BROWNLOW’S NIECES.
+
+
+It was in March that Bill Alardy went to Ashelton. She was sent there
+“to grow up,” Polly said, and added some sceptical remarks with regard
+to both place and person. “Poor little Wilhelmina,” said Miss Brownlow,
+“she has never had a fair chance among us all; the best possible thing
+for her would be to go to Ashelton with Theresa.” And Miss Brownlow
+should have known, for she was acquainted with Ashelton, and even
+better acquainted with Bill, having had the doubtful pleasure of her
+charge and company from early childhood. Polly did not know much about
+Ashelton; she had only been there once to spend the day with Theresa,
+which was a grievance in itself, for Theresa had lived there ever since
+her marriage last June. That, however, was beside the point; Polly did
+not so much base her doubts of the efficacy of the plan on Ashelton as
+on Bill, and she had known her as long as Miss Brownlow, for she was
+the eldest, as Bill was the youngest, of the four nieces Miss Brownlow
+had taken into her household. Polly’s opinion and Miss Brownlow’s were
+not identical on the subject of Bill; but when the matter of the going
+to Ashelton was being discussed Polly did not consider it necessary to
+give undue prominence to the difference, thinking Bill might as well go
+even if it did her no good.
+
+It was a Monday evening when the plan was first mentioned, and Miss
+Brownlow was making up her accounts at the time. She always made up
+her accounts on Monday evenings. In her opinion there was no other
+time half so satisfactory, because, as she said, there was Sunday just
+before, and it was so easy to remember forgotten things on a Sunday.
+Perhaps it was not right to think of such things then, and of course
+she never did so on purpose, only one cannot help things flashing
+across one’s mind. Occasionally the things flashed away again before
+she had time to secure them on Monday evening; occasionally also, the
+flashes were delusive and baseless; but on the other hand, sometimes
+they did chance to be correct, and then it was most satisfactory. This
+did not make any material difference to Miss Brownlow’s accounts, which
+never by any chance came right; they never had come right since she
+first began keeping them in her girlhood, more years ago than she ever
+mentioned.
+
+“My father always insisted on our keeping an account of our money, and
+how we spent it,” she used to say to her nieces. “It is an excellent
+plan, my dears, for then you know where you are and how you stand.”
+These desirable results did not always occur in her own case, though
+that did not deter her nieces from following the suggestion, each
+according to her nature,--Theresa with neatness and some success,
+Bella with results not unlike her aunt’s, Polly--there were commercial
+instincts in Polly’s blood and her untidy books were kept with an
+accuracy which might have savoured of sharp practice to any one who
+could comprehend them. Bill, of course, was too young to be considered,
+and too penniless to keep a record of her non-existent income;
+moreover, she was only “Poor little Bill--Wilhelmina”--Miss Brownlow
+invariably made the correction in mind and sometimes in speech. She
+sighed as she thought about the girl,--she had just come to the item
+_one shilling, a bottle of Stephens’s blue-black writing-ink_. Bill had
+on Thursday upset the last bottle on the schoolroom-floor, in class,
+too, with all the little girls looking on. How they giggled! Polly said
+afterwards that Bill made them, but Miss Brownlow did not think so.
+Bill was too old to do anything so wrong; she was seventeen now, though
+she seemed such a child. Polly, who was perhaps not without authority
+on the subject, was of opinion that age had little to do with iniquity,
+but Miss Brownlow was not convinced. In any case she had to pay the
+shilling for another bottle of ink. The column of figures she was now
+counting up did not come to the total she expected: “Now what have I
+forgotten?” she said.
+
+Bella and Theresa glanced up but did not hazard a suggestion; they
+knew the remark was not addressed to them, and they went on correcting
+French exercises in silence. These French exercises were really Bella’s
+work, but Theresa was helping her with them to-night. A year ago they
+were Theresa’s own, but when she married her sister had taken up that
+part of her work. Theresa was on a visit to Miss Brownlow, and finding
+herself back among the familiar surroundings it came quite natural to
+her to take up some part of the old duties; besides, she liked to help
+Bella.
+
+As the two tall sisters sat close together, sharing the same dictionary
+and sometimes bending over the same page, Miss Brownlow thought they
+made a beautiful picture; possibly even a less prejudiced observer
+might not have entirely disagreed. Polly was certainly not a prejudiced
+observer, yet even she admitted the sisters’ beauty in a general way.
+She did not look in their direction now, for she was busy with her
+needlework. She sat opposite to Miss Brownlow, close to the lamp, her
+dressmaking scattered around her. She possessed a perfect genius for
+what is technically known as “doing up” her clothes; consequently some
+of them were always undergoing alterations and repairs, and none of
+them kept the same appearance for long together.
+
+“I cannot account for sixpence,” Miss Brownlow said at last; “on what
+can I have spent sixpence?”
+
+“Cabbages,” Polly said briefly.
+
+“Cabbages! My dear Polly, one cannot buy cabbages at this time of year,
+nor hardly anything else either; vegetables are so dear and scarce, it
+is really quite dreadful.”
+
+“Sweep,” was Polly’s only comment.
+
+But it was not the sweep, Miss Brownlow said. “We have not had him this
+fortnight past,” she declared. “Don’t you remember, the last--”
+
+“Then we ought to have had.”
+
+“Oh, I am sure we do not need him yet, don’t you remember the last time
+he came--”
+
+Polly did not remember, and she showed no interest in the reminiscence;
+but Theresa, who did not like to hear Miss Brownlow treated so
+cavalierly, encouraged her aunt to describe the last coming of the
+sweep and the delinquencies of the maid-servant who overslept herself
+on that occasion. “And I really do believe he would never have got in
+at all if it had not been for Bill; she heard him ringing and went down
+and let him in,--in her nightdress too!”
+
+“That sixpence is for mending Bill’s boots.” This was Polly’s remark.
+
+“What a memory you have!” Miss Brownlow exclaimed, and Polly showed
+signs of remembering the incident of the sweep. “Bill did go down to
+him,” she said, “in her nightdress and _nothing else_. I should like to
+know how long she stopped down with him!”
+
+Polly had a habit of talking in italics; her treatment of the English
+language made it acquire an almost double value, her intonation giving
+the words an additional worth and meaning. Her last speech was an
+admirable example of her methods; there were many more things implied
+in it than were said. It was the implications which made Bella exclaim,
+“You are hard on the child.”
+
+“Oh, well!” And Polly shrugged her shoulders and bent over her work
+again.
+
+“Poor little Bill, poor little Wilhelmina!” Miss Brownlow sighed softly.
+
+Polly sniffed and Theresa asked: “How much longer are you going to let
+her be in the school?”
+
+“Oh, a long time,” Miss Brownlow answered readily; she had not begun
+to contemplate the problem of Bill’s future, nor even to admit its
+existence. Polly knew that and her small dark eyes showed that she knew
+it as she remarked: “I began to teach the little ones before I was
+seventeen.”
+
+Miss Brownlow looked distressed, but Bella said cheerfully: “That was
+long ago; Auntie wanted help then. Now it is quite different; if Bill
+were ever so able to teach there would not be the slightest need for
+her to do it; in fact I don’t see whom she would teach.”
+
+This speech, though perhaps hardly likely to fulfil its comforting
+intention, was unfortunately only too true. It was indisputable that
+Miss Brownlow’s school was not what it had been, that its best days
+lay behind it. At one time it had been almost an Establishment, the
+recognised school of Wrugglesby, the place to which the country
+clergymen and gentlemen-farmers of the surrounding districts sent their
+daughters. The boarders were so many then that it had been necessary
+to have a _mademoiselle_ and a visiting English governess. That was
+some time ago, but even when Theresa first began to help with the
+teaching, things were more prosperous than they were now. Gradually
+they had changed; times had changed, boarders had fallen off one by
+one, new ones did not come; girls went further now,--to Brighton, to
+Bournemouth, even to France and Germany. Mademoiselle left, and it
+hardly seemed necessary to fill her place, for Theresa was a very good
+French scholar. The English governess married, and Bella was found
+equal to doing all that was left of her work. Then, rather more than a
+year ago, Theresa married, and though Miss Brownlow talked of finding
+some nice well-educated girl to fill her place, nothing came of it.
+Theresa used to take the elder girls, and they were so few now that
+Bella could quite well help Miss Brownlow with them, especially as she
+was rather clever; she had passed the Cambridge Local Examination and
+attended some history lectures. Polly, of course, still taught the
+little ones; she always had done so, and had always contrived to drill
+a certain amount of information into them. It is to be feared that
+she did not know very much herself; even Miss Brownlow was obliged to
+admit that; yet she possessed a far greater faculty for teaching than
+did the more accomplished Bella. As the school was chiefly composed
+of little girls, it really was important that they should be well
+taught. Sometimes Miss Brownlow felt a passing regret when she saw them
+struggling for their overshoes in the lobby; they were not what her old
+pupils had been, not of the same social position, not of the same age;
+most of them were “reductions” on account of sisters past, present, or
+to come; none of them were likely to remain any length of time, none of
+them were even weekly boarders. There were only two boarders besides
+Wilhelmina, who could hardly be counted since she belonged to the
+household.
+
+Miss Wilson, the principal of the High School two stations up the line,
+thought of Miss Brownlow when, in her able paper on the education of
+girls, she had written of teachers of the past. Miss Brownlow was
+of the past, not highly educated, not clever, but kindly, simple,
+pleasant, well loved by those pupils of long ago, a gentle power for
+good in those past best days,--and in the present? Ah, well, the school
+was going; there were no boarders to be influenced one way or the
+other now, and the little girls who came daily did not trouble about
+Miss Brownlow. She was of a race of schoolmistresses fast disappearing
+from the earth, vanishing under the inexorable law of the survival of
+the fittest. She was not the fittest. Inefficient? Yes, that was it;
+inefficient for modern needs, modern wants; growing old, just a little
+past the work she once did, not at all fit for the work now to be
+done; never a very wise woman, thank God, not wise enough to know that
+she was a failure.
+
+“Wilhelmina will teach somewhere else,” Miss Brownlow said, after she
+had mentally reviewed the prospect called up by Bella’s words; and
+mercifully the prospect she reviewed was not quite that which other
+people saw.
+
+“Where?” Polly asked casually, as if the matter were of small moment.
+
+Miss Brownlow did not know. She had not thought, and the question was
+embarrassing.
+
+Bella came to the rescue. “Mrs. Caxton will want a governess if her
+little girls are leaving at Easter. They are leaving because they
+always catch colds from the other children, so she is sure to want a
+governess.”
+
+“Yes, of course,” Miss Brownlow said enthusiastically; “it would be the
+very thing for Bill; she never has a cold.”
+
+“H’m! What is she to teach? How not to catch cold? It is about the only
+thing she knows, and she does that by accident.”
+
+“They are so young,” Miss Brownlow went on, delighted with the plan and
+regardless of Polly’s interruption; “they will only want elementary
+teaching, reading and writing and spelling.”
+
+“Bill can’t spell, not that that matters so very much though”--Polly
+perhaps knew by experience that it was possible to teach a subject in
+which you were not very deeply learned. “It certainly would not matter
+to Bill, nothing would matter. If she could spell every word in the
+dictionary, do you suppose any one would have her for a governess?”
+
+“I don’t know why not,--when she is a little older of course. She is
+such a child yet; wait till she is grown up.”
+
+“We have been waiting,” Polly observed grimly.
+
+“She is very young for her age; I am sure I don’t know how it is.”
+
+“She was born without gumption,” said Polly with conviction, “and she
+has never been able to acquire any general knowledge.”
+
+“She is not clever,” Miss Brownlow admitted sadly.
+
+“Cleverness has nothing to do with it,” Polly retorted. “If you
+start in life lacking what Bill lacks, you must do what you can with
+common-sense. That will teach you a few things,--what not to say, and
+how to say it, and--and all that. Bill has no common-sense.”
+
+“We have always treated her like a child;” and here Miss Brownlow
+sighed again.
+
+It was then that Theresa suggested that Bill should come home with her
+to stay at Ashelton for a little while. Miss Brownlow was delighted
+with the suggestion; it was just the thing, she was sure. No doubt the
+girl would develop; Theresa would use her influence, and her young
+cousin had always been so fond of her, had always respected and admired
+her so much; such a visit would be the best possible thing. Theresa
+herself did not anticipate very great results, but she promised to do
+her best, and after some discussion of details regarding the proposed
+visit, Miss Brownlow returned to her accounts and the sisters to the
+exercises, interrupted only now and again by a repetition of the elder
+lady’s satisfaction with the plan. After the third interruption Polly
+yawned aggressively. When there was silence again she bit her cotton
+and looked thoughtfully across at Miss Brownlow, at the kindly face,
+the thin hair, the black stuff gown she knew so well. She did not
+approve of the whole effect; she thought it “snuffy,” and as such
+unlikely to create a favourable impression on the parents of possible
+scholars. She looked beyond Miss Brownlow to the wall behind,--to the
+pale-toned paper with faint gold lines and fainter grey flowers, to the
+old-fashioned water-colours in shabby gilt frames, the white marble
+mantelpiece with red glass candlesticks upon it, and to the rosewood
+chairs covered with green rep, standing one on either side of the
+fireplace. The room was no more attractive than Miss Brownlow’s dress,
+she thought; it was terribly old-fashioned in comparison with Miss
+Wilson’s flatted walls and artistic green cushions. Polly had a poor
+opinion of art-colours, but she seriously considered the advisability
+of draping some of the household gods with the best of the shades of
+yellow. She was, in her own mind, reckoning the quantity of material
+necessary, when Miss Brownlow again broke in on her reflections.
+
+“Are you sure Robert won’t mind?” she asked for the fourth time.
+
+“Quite sure,” was Theresa’s answer.
+
+“That’s all right; I should not like to put him about at all. You are
+quite certain?”
+
+Theresa was quite certain, and the subject was dismissed. Polly
+breathed a heavy sigh, and once more fell back on her own thoughts.
+These now turned from the art-materials to Robert Morton, Theresa’s
+husband. Polly had not a very high opinion of Robert Morton; she liked
+him well enough, but considered him a bad speculation. “He’ll die of
+apoplexy--poor Theresa--I’m sorry for that poor girl. He’ll certainly
+die of it, and I expect he’ll die young.” So she had once said to the
+indignant Bella, and she thought of the verdict again this evening as
+she glanced at the sisters and mentally dressed Theresa in widow’s
+weeds. She would make a handsome widow, though perhaps not so effective
+as Bella. Polly glanced meditatively at Bella; a widow’s cap would
+look well on that golden head. Theresa was darker and older too by
+nearly four years; she would be twenty-six in the summer and she looked
+her age; in fact, Theresa was almost too dignified. Bella was not
+dignified, though she was tall. They were both tall and graceful and
+clear-skinned; both had blue eyes, Theresa’s grave and sweet, Bella’s
+holy, innocent, suggesting a madonna’s eyes to the observer until he
+became aware of the turned-up nose between; “a flirt’s nose,” Polly
+called it. Theresa’s features were better, though less attractive; she
+had not a flirt’s nose, but also she had no tantalising dimple in her
+chin. Still they were both undeniably beauties, and Polly was nothing
+of the sort.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+BILL.
+
+
+Theresa and Bella Waring were beauties when they came to Miss
+Brownlow’s seven years ago, well-educated, well-informed, used to the
+ways of society (of small professional society), and possessed of sixty
+pounds a year between them. Their father had been dead some years then;
+it was their mother’s death which sent them and their sixty pounds to
+Langford House. Theresa came to help with the teaching, Bella to finish
+her education first, and afterwards to fill her sister’s place. Of
+course Miss Brownlow received them gladly, loved them warmly, mothered
+them to the best of her ability. She would have done that for any
+number of nieces, and she did it heartily for these four. Polly felt
+angry as she thought of their numbers, and thought contemptuously of
+the Brownlow family and its faculty for dying. There had been five Miss
+Brownlows originally; one died young, three married first and then
+died at their earliest convenience, leaving their children as a legacy
+to the remaining sister who neither married nor died. She, possessed
+of short views, a large heart, and an inexhaustible supply of hope,
+welcomed them with open arms. Two of them she had to adopt entirely;
+the other two, Theresa and Bella, came to her better endowed, better
+equipped, and at a more convenient age.
+
+And what had they done with their advantages? Polly put the case to
+herself with contemptuous irritation. Bella, so she summed it up, Bella
+at twenty-two had done nothing; Theresa at twenty-six had contrived to
+marry a small farmer. No doubt his family had originally been good,
+but one cannot live on a good family, especially if it is all but
+extinct; and the goodness did not prevent Robert from being a farmer
+in a small way, and an unsuccessful one too. He was undoubtedly a poor
+speculation; his tastes were expensive, his inclinations horsey, his
+income small, his tendencies apoplectic; he would soon, no doubt, die,
+and die suddenly, leaving Theresa no better off than she was a year
+ago. Really these two girls were stupid, as stupid as the Brownlow
+family. And yet their mother had been the best of the five sisters,
+according to all accounts; the strongest as well as the prettiest,
+for she had managed to live to quite a respectable age. Possibly her
+daughters were like her; they were sensible enough for any ordinary
+occasion but they were not, in Polly’s opinion, able to take advantage
+of adverse circumstances. “They would die off easily,” she thought,
+“and they haven’t an idea between them worth mentioning.”
+
+Polly was not like the Brownlow family. She took after her father,
+a dubious advantage, and she flattered herself that she had ideas
+worth,--well, something, although perhaps they were not always quite
+suitable for public mention. She also had an easy conscience, and
+in her youth some little acquaintance with social byways. She had a
+tenacious hold on life, and was not likely to follow her mother’s and
+aunts’ example and die easily. “So has Bill,” she thought; “she is
+silly and she is ugly, but she won’t fade out of the world in a hurry,
+though I can’t see what good she will ever be in it.”
+
+This last sentiment found something like an echo, albeit unexpressed,
+in the minds of two other inmates of Langford House, the two boarders
+Carrie and Alice. They were quiet, inoffensive girls, a year or two
+younger than Bill, and forced by circumstances to have more of her
+company than they desired. The greater part of the day the three were
+together, and for the night they shared one room so that the sisters’
+nocturnal confidences had to be held in common with their companion.
+It must be admitted that Carrie and Alice did not altogether like
+Bill, though they felt a sort of superior pity for her which was not
+all unpleasant. On the evening when Miss Brownlow and her nieces were
+planning Bill’s future good, Carrie and Alice were giving her a little
+advice while going to bed. It was on the subject of hairdressing,
+Carrie thinking it was time Bill coiled her hair on the top of her head.
+
+“It’s quite time,” she concluded. “Are you going to wait till you are
+eighteen? When are you going to do it up?”
+
+Bill considered: “To-morrow,” she said at last.
+
+“To-morrow?” Carrie repeated, and Alice added: “You can’t, you haven’t
+got any hairpins.”
+
+“I’ll get some of Bella’s.”
+
+“You can’t,” Carrie said again, and turning to the glass began to
+arrange her own hair.
+
+“Miss Waring has gold-coloured hairpins,” Alice remarked; “you could
+not use them.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Because it would look horrid to have brass hairpins sticking out of
+your hair.”
+
+“Is that all?” Bill did not seem impressed.
+
+Carrie turned away from the glass. “That is how I shall do my hair,”
+she said. “I shall do it up the day I leave school, the very day.”
+
+“I like plaits better,” Alice observed; but Bill examined the
+head-dress thoughtfully, and then asked: “And what else will you do
+when you leave school,--besides your hair, I mean?”
+
+“Besides my hair? How ridiculous you are!” Carrie did not seem
+displeased by the question. She condescended to answer it rather fully,
+and as she took off her shoes and stockings talked of the possibilities
+of evening parties, the certainty of afternoon calls, the charms of
+long dresses, and of the young men who stayed at the Rectory. Alice
+joined in this explanation, and in fact the sisters were soon talking
+to and for each other only, having almost forgotten Bill’s presence
+until she exclaimed suddenly: “Men! It’s all men! Why are they nicer
+than women?”
+
+She was sitting on her pillow in her favourite position, her knees
+drawn up, her elbows resting upon them, and her chin framed in her
+hands; she was looking straight in front of her and only turned her
+eyes on the sisters when she spoke. They objected to her method of
+looking round without turning her head; that, in addition to the
+impropriety of the remark, made Carrie answer severely: “Men are not
+nicer than women; nobody thinks so except those who are fast.”
+
+“Yes, they are nicer. You think so, Polly thinks so, Bella thinks so,
+every girl thinks so, though I don’t see why.”
+
+“You don’t know any men”; this was said with great contempt.
+
+“No, nor any girls either, except you two, and you are nice!” Bill had
+an enormous mouth and the beginning of a smile curved it as she spoke.
+
+“Then it is more than you are,” Alice retorted with irritation, “or you
+would not talk about men like that.”
+
+“Men aren’t half so amusing as women,” Bill went on, ignoring the last
+speech; “and women aren’t half so amusing when men are there. I can’t
+see where the attraction comes in with any of them--the rector, the
+curates, the masters at the grammar-school, Robert Morton, any of them.”
+
+“Of course they don’t take any notice of you,” Carrie said, and Alice
+added: “You only think about people being amusing; you like people whom
+you can imitate.”
+
+“That’s why I like you,” Bill said sweetly. “Why do you like
+people--men?”
+
+“I don’t like men; you have never heard me speak of them!”
+
+“Heard!” Bill laughed. “I have felt; I have felt you crinkle up for a
+boy!”
+
+“You haven’t! How dare you say such things!”
+
+“Why not? Where is the harm? You talk about men to each other, why not
+to me? You never have before, but I see no reason why you should not.
+Do you consider it wrong to like men? How queer it is; you all like men
+and you all pretend you do not. There is a deal of humbug about it.”
+
+“Some people,” Carrie said with severity, “have a sense of decency.”
+
+“A sense of decency? That’s what Adam and Eve had when they hid
+themselves; a sense of decency often seems to mean hiding something.”
+
+“You are very wicked!” Alice said scandalised, and would have nothing
+more to say to Bill for some time, though after the light was out and
+all three were in bed the sisters continued to talk to each other about
+the wonderful future, the first ball Carrie would attend, and the
+events that would follow.
+
+“And after that,” came the voice from Bill’s bed,--“what are you going
+to do after that?”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know,” Carrie answered; “marry I suppose. There is a use
+for your despised men; you can’t marry without them.”
+
+“Marry--h’m!--Yes, I expect you will marry.”
+
+“Do you really think so? I don’t know--and yet,--yes, I suppose I
+should rather like to; not yet of course, but by and by, to marry and
+to have several children.”
+
+“Oh, you are sure to; you are like the old white hen with feathers down
+her legs; you would make a splendid sitter.”
+
+“Bill!”
+
+“Now what’s the matter? Is it the sense of decency again?”
+
+But the sisters would not answer her question and, having told her so,
+went on to say that, as it was forbidden to talk after the light was
+out, they were not going to do it any more, especially to her. Then
+they went to sleep, leaving Bill to her own reflections. She, thus
+left, rolled over on her back and lay staring up into the darkness
+above her and thinking. At her age one does not always think with a
+definite coherent clearness; dreaming is more to the mind of seventeen.
+Bill dreamed, fancies and thoughts flitting to and fro in her mind.
+
+About marriage, for instance; last year Theresa had tried the great
+experiment to which Carrie looked forward. Carrie would try it by and
+by; she would become Mrs. Somebody and grow staid and stout and placid;
+she would talk about “my house” and “my husband”; she would bound the
+universe, almost the Kingdom of Heaven by those two; she would wear a
+black silk dress and a heavy gold chain like Mrs. Bodling; she would
+get fatter and fairer and calmer; she would entirely lose sight of her
+feet----
+
+Bill stretched out her own feet, and then lay still to listen. The wind
+crept in at the open window and stirred the curtains; the cloth on the
+toilet-table flapped idly, reminding her of quiet, slumberous summer
+afternoons, of a certain Thursday afternoon in June especially,--it
+was in June that Theresa had entered on the great experiment. In
+the first freshness of early summer she left the school and the old
+routine-work and the narrow, cosy, feminine life and went out to try
+a wider, fuller, new life. She was to have a house of her own and a
+servant; there had been a lot of talk about the house (here Bill built
+an ideal house for herself), a lot of things to be bought, a lot of
+new clothes for Theresa. Miss Brownlow and the girls had pinched and
+scraped and worked; Bill had been allowed to help a little, though her
+work was more strong than neat. Evening after evening Bella and Polly
+and Theresa had sat at work with Miss Brownlow--how they seemed to
+enjoy it! Theresa must have missed that when she went to her new home;
+Bill wondered what she did during those first evenings of the new life.
+Then the great day had come; Bill recalled every detail of it. There
+had been excitement and bustle and people and flowers, Theresa in her
+bridal gown, and everywhere the scent of the little white roses--the
+white roses which made Bill think of funerals, though she did not know
+why.
+
+Then Theresa had gone away. She kissed them all and cried, and smiled
+and cried again, and went. Robert Morton looked rather cross during the
+kissing and crying, but nobody seemed to mind. They were quite sure
+Theresa was happy, quite sure she had attained to all that she desired;
+only Bill thought she must be very lonely. She had also an inward
+conviction, founded on nothing, that Theresa would be desperately
+disappointed in her venture. There was no reason for these thoughts,
+and Theresa had said nothing to suggest them; she seemed happy, and
+they all thought her so except Bill, and Bill was so childish that she
+could not be expected to know anything about the matter. She had only
+once been to Theresa’s home at Ashelton. They had all driven there one
+September day and enjoyed it greatly. Bill could recall every detail of
+the expedition, her memory was vivid and her experiences few. She had
+never been again to Ashelton; she had never been on a visit--
+
+She was growing very sleepy now, and her thoughts became confused with
+the words of the cousins who were speaking just outside the door.
+
+“I shall be very glad to have her.”
+
+“You will be more glad to be rid of her; besides, she has no clothes.”
+
+At the Day of Judgment Polly would still be considering her
+clothes--she would probably want to let out her garment of
+righteousness if--but sleep mastered Bill here.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ROBERT MORTON.
+
+
+It was September,--rich September, with warm lights and red
+shadows--when Bill went first to Haylands, Robert Morton’s farm. It
+was March when she went again; a grey afternoon, level light, and
+dead stillness over the bare ploughed land and the low white house.
+She drove from Wrugglesby with Theresa, a tedious drive along winding
+lanes,--not that she found it tedious, for nothing was tedious to Bill.
+Theresa, too, had enjoyed her homeward journey more than usual. She
+had talked gaily all the way until they turned in at her own gateway;
+then somehow her spirits flagged, and in silence they drove up the
+long chase which meandered across a grassy field, passed a duck-pond
+where grey geese waded, and so on to the little gate which shut in
+the overgrown garden. Bill looked quickly at the garden. It had been
+a flowery, weedy wilderness when she was there in September; it was
+bare now, so dry that the earth rose in dust at the touch of Theresa’s
+skirts, so bare that the leafless raspberry-canes, still though they
+were, seemed to shiver in their nakedness.
+
+There was no one about; Robert, no doubt, was busy somewhere on the
+farm. For a moment Theresa hesitated with the reins in her hand, then a
+man appeared from the stables and took the pony away. Theresa led the
+way into the house, covertly casting an anxious glance at Bill.
+
+“It is very cold,” she said, as she pushed open the door of her
+favourite room and went to the fire.
+
+“Yes, I suppose it is,” Bill answered cheerfully. “I’m not cold though.
+What a jolly room! It is cubby, T.!”
+
+“Do you like it? You saw it when you were here before,” Theresa said,
+feeling somehow a little warmer and very glad that Bill was with
+her. If it had been Polly or Bella they might have thought Robert
+neglectful, but as it was only Bill it did not matter.
+
+By-and-bye Robert came in. He did not know that Bill was coming back
+with his wife, and when the guest was safely shut in her room he asked,
+“Why on earth did you bring her?”
+
+“Do you mind?” Theresa asked in distress. “I am sorry; I did not think
+you would mind; she won’t trouble you much.”
+
+“No, she won’t trouble me; still I don’t see what you wanted to have
+her for.”
+
+“We thought--I thought, it might do her good.”
+
+“Ill?” Morton asked, looking up sharply. “If she is ill, we certainly
+don’t want her here.”
+
+“She is not ill. She does not get on very well at school; I mean--”
+Theresa felt the matter was difficult of explanation--“I mean, she is
+very young for her age.”
+
+“She is very ugly,” Morton said, beginning to unlace his boots.
+
+Theresa flushed. “She is my cousin,” she said.
+
+“That don’t make her handsome, my dear,” he observed, without looking
+up.
+
+“I don’t think her at all ugly.” Theresa’s voice showed that she was
+hurt. “If she were, it would not be her fault. Do you wish me to send
+her home at the end of the week?”
+
+“I? No, please yourself as to that. Keep her as long as you like, as
+far as I am concerned.”
+
+And he left her to take his boots to the wash-house with no idea that
+there were tears in her eyes. She forced them back, turning to the
+fire as she did so. It was certainly cold, a dreary, dreary afternoon.
+She was still standing by the fire, standing stiffly with something of
+unapproachable dignity about her, when Bill came down a few minutes
+later; but Bill was not troubled by the dignity, and curled herself
+up in the big chair on the other side of the fire evidently quite
+satisfied. She spent the evening helping Robert to mend whips, quite
+satisfied with that too; possibly she found it an improvement on
+learning grammar with Carrie and Alice.
+
+Theresa was relieved to find that Bill and Robert showed so much
+inclination to friendliness; indeed, at the end of two days she came
+to the conclusion that they were better friends than ever Robert and
+Bella had been. It was a very good thing, she thought, as she watched
+Bill wandering about the cow-yard and investigating the pig-styes. Bill
+took the keenest interest in pigs and poultry, cows and butter; her
+interest extended to the dairy, the kitchen, and the store-room; she
+seemed anxious to do any work she could. Theresa gave her dusting and
+churning, and she worked with a will, though when the churning was done
+Theresa was rather horrified to find her young cousin scrubbing the
+dairy-floor.
+
+“Bill! What are you doing?”
+
+“Clearing up,--I upset some butter-milk.” Bill was kneeling on the
+bricks and she did not cease scrubbing to give the answer.
+
+“But, my dear child, there is no necessity,--get up.”
+
+“I like it, I like clearing up. I did the old fowls’ house just before
+I came in here; you should see it; it’s beautifully clean. This
+afternoon I am going to lime-wash it, and then I shall put in the
+biggest family of chickens. They have not half enough room where they
+are; Robert said I might move them if I liked.”
+
+“Yes, but,--surely you need not lime-wash the house yourself; one of
+the men can do it. You must not do it; you will make yourself in such a
+state.”
+
+“I am afraid I am rather a dirty worker.”
+
+Theresa glanced at Bill’s present condition and saw that the statement
+was only too true. “You must leave off,” she said: “the soapsuds are
+all up your sleeves; besides, I want to speak to you.”
+
+“All right, I can hear; you sit down on that wooden tub; I’m just done,
+and I can finish while you are talking.”
+
+Theresa sat down in spite of her protestations. “I want to talk to
+you about the prayer-meeting,” she said. “You know, during Lent Mr.
+Johnson holds meetings once a week, a kind of Bible-reading. We meet at
+different houses and read passages from the Bible, and he explains them
+and gives a little address. They are really rather nice, and not too
+long. We meet at seven and it is all over quite early; we usually have
+supper about half-past eight.”
+
+“Yes?” Bill was working industriously at the last corner.
+
+“I meant--do you think you would care to go?” Theresa asked this
+somewhat doubtfully. Bella and Polly had been amused by the idea of
+the Ashelton prayer-meetings, and Bill, according to Polly’s account,
+was not likely to treat them more respectfully. However, to Theresa’s
+satisfaction, Bill answered with enthusiasm: “I should like it
+tremendously; is it to-night?”
+
+“No, to-morrow. To-day is market-day at Wrugglesby, you know; nothing
+here is ever fixed on a market-day.”
+
+“I see,” Bill said, taking up her pail of water; “then it’s to-morrow?
+I’ll come if you will take me,” and she went away to empty the pail.
+
+Theresa watched her go, and then went into the house feeling that her
+guest was easy to entertain, and gave really very little trouble, in
+spite of Polly’s prognostications. Indeed she had been very glad of her
+company ever since her arrival, and especially so to-day as Robert had
+gone to market and was not likely to be back till late. The day seemed
+all the shorter for the girl’s presence in the house. The weather was
+gray and cloudy, and Theresa had a headache; she was very glad Bill was
+with her in the afternoon. Later on, in the evening, when her headache
+became bad, she was persuaded by her young cousin to go to bed and
+leave her to wait for Robert.
+
+“I hardly like to go; you don’t think it will seem unkind?” Theresa
+offered this last protest standing by the door, her candle in her hand.
+
+“No, of course not, I’ll explain.”
+
+Bill somehow knew, though Theresa did not, that Robert did not view
+things in the same light as his wife did; so she persuaded her to go to
+bed and settled herself by the fire until the servant was ready to go
+up-stairs. After that she went round the house and fastened the doors,
+standing a moment in the hall curiously impressed by the silence of
+the place. “I have never been up alone in a sleeping house before,”
+she meditated as she put out the light and stretched out her hands in
+the darkness as if to feel to the full the sense of solitary night. At
+that moment she remembered that she had fastened the back door which
+Theresa had told her particularly to leave unlocked, as Robert always
+let himself in that way.
+
+She went back and unfastened it, turned the handle to see if it were
+really unbolted, and stood a moment looking out. The night-breeze
+stirred her hair; the moist fragrance of the earth came to her; she
+drew her breath in deeply, slowly, turning her head from side to side,
+listening to the intense stillness; it seemed to her that she could
+almost hear things growing. Her heart began to beat faster; the blood
+in her veins stirred in unison with the moving sap in the hidden trees;
+some wild creature of the woods was waking in her, bidding her go forth
+into the darkness. A board creaked; it was only the timbers settling
+down for the night, but it recalled her to the house and to her task of
+waiting for its master’s return. With a last glance at the cloudy sky,
+she went in and shut the door.
+
+There was another that night who found it dark, so dark that more than
+once he missed his way in the deep lanes which lay between Sales Green
+and Ashelton. More than once he anathematised the business which led
+him to come home from Wrugglesby market by way of the little village;
+the cross-roads were intricate and in bad repair, and under the
+darkness of the trees it was impossible to see so much as the hedgerow
+elms on either side. At last he heard the sound of wheels away on the
+left; he was clear of the lanes and out on the high road now; just as
+he emerged a vehicle without lights passed, or rather, nearly collided
+with him.
+
+He pulled his horse up and demanded angrily: “Where the devil are you
+going? If you want the whole road you might at least carry lights so
+that one can see what you are doing!”
+
+“Where--going ’self?” a thick voice retorted. “Damn your clumsiness!
+Wha’--what ’yer mean by running a man down li’ that!”
+
+“Where are you trying to go?” The man was evidently too drunk to be
+argued with.
+
+“Home;--that’sh if--if can get there. Brute pulls li’--like the devil.”
+
+“You had better let me drive you home, Morton--it is Morton? I expect I
+can see better in the dark than you can.”
+
+Morton raised no objection and the other dismounted as he spoke and
+climbed up beside him. “Pleashed, I’m sure,” Robert muttered. “Been to
+market? Oh, forgot,--saw you there myself, but you lef’ early; very
+cred’able, Mr. Harborough, you’ shober young man.”
+
+He laughed in a maudlin way, and they started on a straight course in
+the darkness, Harborough’s horse, fastened by the bridle, trotting
+behind. A straight road lay before them, the ground rising clear from
+the shade of the trees, just showing paler against the blackness,
+then sloping gently downwards to deeper shadow until the turning by
+the village; there the road forked, now to the left, through the open
+gateway, up the chase, and so to the stables and home.
+
+“Come on, ol’ chap, come in and have a--a glass of whishky,--don’t b’
+unsociable.”
+
+Harborough hesitated and thought of Mrs. Morton. He glanced up at the
+house; there was a light in one of the lower windows, the rest were
+dark--was she sitting up for her husband? He thought of the young wife
+with her serene, unconscious face, waiting for this, and yielding to
+the affectionate pressure on his arm he went in.
+
+“There does not seem to be any one up,” he said, as he opened the door
+and paused on the threshold.
+
+“Oh, yes, sure to be, sure--confound--”
+
+As Morton stumbled, Harborough held him up, and then stood listening a
+moment. The house was very quiet except for the chirping of crickets
+in the kitchen. Guided more by instinct than by his companion he made
+his way to Mrs. Morton’s favourite sitting-room and opened the door,
+expecting yet dreading to meet the sweet face of the young wife. But
+she was not there; involuntarily he breathed a sigh of relief and
+braced himself to face her substitute. There was a substitute, someone
+curled up in the big chair by the fire, a slim young girl. She had been
+reading, and apparently had but just discovered their presence in the
+house, for she only looked up from her book as they entered.
+
+“Theresa has gone to bed,” she said, rising as she spoke. She did not
+seem at all surprised to see them both. Harborough wondered if she
+understood, or if Morton returned in this condition so often that she
+was prepared for it. “Poor Theresa’s head was so bad that I persuaded
+her to go, and to let me sit up,” she added.
+
+“That ’ch al’right, you’n I--quite happy without her,” Morton said
+thickly, smiling upon the girl.
+
+“You won’t want to disturb her to-night,” she went on. “Her head is
+ever so bad; you will sleep in the blue room, won’t you? That will do
+nicely.”
+
+“That’ll do--we won’t dish’turb her, poor--poor T.”
+
+“Is the room ready?” Harborough asked quickly.
+
+She shook her head, and flitted away with light noiseless feet. Morton
+stretched out a hand to detain her, but she passed him like a shadow
+and was gone.
+
+“Make her sing when ’comes back--sing to you,--cap’tal song.”
+
+Harborough turned away abruptly. Evidently she had not expected this
+sort of home-coming, or surely the room would have been ready. Probably
+it had not occurred before, to Mrs. Morton’s knowledge at least; if
+it had, she would never have left this child to face it alone; for a
+child she was, fifteen, sixteen perhaps, but a child certainly. A great
+anger rose in Harborough’s heart against the man who had brought his
+beastliness home here. He glanced round the room, which impressed him
+as daintily feminine, doubtless arranged by the bride nine months ago.
+Her work-basket stood on the table, a few spring flowers were on the
+mantelpiece; the whole place was pathetically eloquent of her presence.
+Harborough picked up a book which lay on the table and looked at the
+title--ROMANCES AND DROLLS OF THE WEST OF ENGLAND--an old book of
+West Country legends and folk-lore, fairy tales of a primitive order,
+the book that the girl, who had just left the room, had been reading.
+Pleasant to call a child from her fairy-stories to meet a drunkard!
+
+“Now come to bed.” She had returned as noiselessly as she had gone.
+
+“Bed? Not ’f I know it!”
+
+“Yes, come along.”
+
+“I will see Mr. Morton to bed,” Harborough said. “Which is the room?
+No, tell me, don’t trouble to come.”
+
+“Second door from the top of the stairs,” was the direction she
+gave, and Harborough, coercing his charge, went up-stairs. With the
+door safely shut on them he used more force than persuasion, feeling
+heartily sick of the whole business. When he came down again the girl
+was in her old position, reading her fairy-book as before.
+
+“Is he in bed?” she asked.
+
+“Yes. Are you alone here--I mean, are you going to shut the house up?”
+
+“Yes, all that is still open. I must, you see, there is no one else.
+You can’t do it when you are outside, and you won’t want to stop in to
+do it; it is not difficult.”
+
+“No. You are rather young to be left alone--I won’t keep you up;
+good-night.”
+
+She went to the door with him, the one opening on to the yard by
+which he and Morton had entered a little while before. On the step he
+hesitated; he was standing in shadow, she in the light of the lantern
+she had brought that she might see to fasten the door after him.
+
+“If I were you,” he said doubtfully, “I should not disturb Mr. Morton
+more than I could help. I would not pass his room unless it were
+necessary.”
+
+“No.”
+
+Nevertheless, after he had gone she stole noiselessly to the door
+and turned the key outside for fear the sleeper should awake and
+disturb Theresa in the night. But then that was quite necessary in her
+opinion, and no one was the wiser, for she unlocked it again between
+four and five in the morning.
+
+As for Harborough, having given the caution, he felt satisfied and
+after repeating “good-night” went down the yard. He looked back
+once before she closed the door. She was still standing in the same
+position, the lantern in her hand, an elfin thing in its glow against
+the brown shadows of the passage, herself all brown and red, skin and
+hair and eyes, colours such as Rembrandt loved. She moved, scattering
+splashes of light from her lantern, then shut the door; and Harborough
+mounted his horse and rode a good mile home to Crows’ Farm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+HARBOROUGH OF CROWS’ FARM.
+
+
+Nobody could make farming pay, at least no one about Wrugglesby.
+This was an axiom in the Ashelton district, which no one attempted
+to confute though each had an explanation for it, according to his
+political opinions and education, or want of education. But one and all
+believed it, though they continued to farm and to grumble, both the
+small men and the great. The small men were very small, little more
+than peasant tenants with neither the capital nor the ability to farm
+their small holdings with any show of justice to the starved land,
+living from hand to mouth, employing no labour, themselves and their
+families practically doing the work, and doing it indifferently. The
+great men were quite another class, a cross between a landed gentry
+and a yeoman squirearchy, socially ranking with the professional
+classes and for all practical purposes supplying the place of the
+county-families, now for the most part either impoverished or else
+removed to more congenial centres. The greater farm-owners undoubtedly
+did make some profit out of the land, or appeared to do something very
+like it, though possibly they might have done so more successfully had
+they inclined more towards the yeoman squirearchy and less towards the
+landed gentry in their tastes and habits.
+
+At least such was the opinion of one who, a little more than six months
+previous to Bill’s advent in the Morton household, had come to settle
+among the yeoman-farmers and to prove to himself and to them some of
+the theories he held with regard to farming. His theory-in-chief was a
+short one, and could be summed up in one word,--work. A working farmer
+could make it pay; there were one or two of the old-fashioned sort of
+large working farmers still left, who made it pay, even though they had
+no social position and wanted none. Their net profits were small, it
+is true, but then they had not the benefit of a modern education; they
+were also abnormally pig-headed, and, in spite of experience, would
+do as their fathers had done in the palmy days of Protection. Young
+Gilchrist Harborough was of opinion that, were it only possible to
+unite the work in detail of these men with the knowledge and capital of
+the gentleman-class, results of surprising grandeur could be obtained.
+
+He held this theory long ago, before ever he saw the English farmer
+at work; he held it still more firmly now that fate had given him
+an opportunity of putting it to the test. The opportunity had come
+unexpectedly in the shape of a legacy from a friend of his father’s,
+a man who had at one time stayed in the bush home where Gilchrist
+was reared, and who, half amused and half pleased by the young man’s
+earnestness, had left him Crows’ Farm and a sufficiency on which to try
+his theories on a small scale.
+
+An unpretentious, whitewashed building was the farm, not unlike two
+cottages knocked into one. For many years it had been inhabited by a
+bailiff who farmed the adjoining land, the owner, frequently absent
+abroad, only coming down for the partridge-shooting. Ashelton was fond
+of this man, and genuinely sorry to hear of his death; he was the kind
+of man those good folks understood, and was sadly missed at the social
+functions which always took place in September and in which he usually
+joined. But the new owner, the young Australian to whom he had left
+the farm, was something of a puzzle to them. Of course he had a right
+to his theories: everyone has in these highly educated days; but it
+is not everyone who tries to put his theories into practice, nor who,
+moreover, has such uncomfortable ones. Harborough lived the life of a
+working farmer in his little old house; lived, so report said, almost
+like Robinson Crusoe, doing his own cooking and cleaning, rising early
+and sharing even the most menial toil with his few labourers. This
+was not all strictly correct, but it was near enough to the truth
+to satisfy Ashelton, and the parish talked and wondered, and said
+dubiously that the experiment might answer, questioning for a while how
+Mr. Harborough would be received. But in the winter the question was
+settled by Mrs. Dawson, who, perhaps, alone was capable of settling it
+finally. She, under the influence of her son Jack, decided that Mr.
+Harborough was as one of themselves, notwithstanding his theory and his
+colonial origin,--a decision which scarcely did justice to Harborough,
+but gave great satisfaction to everyone, even including Mr. Dane, the
+old rector. He, indeed, had seemed particularly to appreciate it, and
+had even listened to Mrs. Dawson’s judgment on the case with a faint
+smile flickering in his grey eyes. It is true he made Harborough’s
+acquaintance without waiting for Mrs. Dawson’s decision, but then,
+as she said, the rector, of course, knew everybody. Mr. Johnson, the
+curate, being only a curate, had waited for her decision.
+
+But none of these matters troubled Harborough. He lived his life in
+his own way, working hard as long as he was able, smoking hard when
+work was done; reading sometimes, and the books had nothing to do with
+the theory, neither were they such as Jack Dawson would have chosen;
+dreaming sometimes in spite of the theory, in spite also of the pure
+reason with which he was still young enough to believe he governed his
+life. Of his neighbours he thought little; he was friendly when he came
+across them, but with the friendliness of the self-contained man who
+regards the rest of his kind as supernumeraries, necessary parts of
+the world-play, but as well filled by one set of actors as by another.
+He knew about his neighbours, of course, since he could not well live
+in Ashelton without doing so; but he did not care greatly about them,
+nor was there any reason to care; nothing to his knowledge had gone
+seriously wrong or seriously right in Ashelton until that night when he
+took Robert Morton home.
+
+That night there had been something seriously wrong, and the more
+he thought about Morton, the more wrong the whole matter seemed.
+Drunkenness looked such a beastly thing in this quiet little village,
+in that peaceful home with that fair young wife. “The man’s a brute,”
+was his disgusted verdict, “coming home to a wife like that! Lucky it
+wasn’t her. By the way, I wonder who the girl was, queer little thing.”
+
+But he did not wonder very much, for he was too sleepy that night
+and too busy the next day till the time when the girl revealed her
+identity to him. It was somewhere about noon when he saw her, as he was
+returning by a lane which bordered one side of the Haylands property.
+He had been that way once before during the morning, but was not aware
+that anyone had been watching him. As he came back, however, he met
+the girl of last night’s adventure evidently waiting for his return.
+The Morton’s orchard was here; an untidy orchard, with old stooping
+apple-trees, lichen-covered and unpruned, a thicket of nuts and pollard
+quinces and, beyond, a briery tangle of blackberries. As yet there was
+neither flower nor leaf, except for one plum-tree near the gate white
+as snow in its blossom.
+
+It was in the orchard that Harborough saw the girl. She was sitting on
+the gate deliberately waiting for him, and when he came in sight she
+made the fact known.
+
+“I want to speak to you,” she announced. “I have been waiting ever so
+long.”
+
+“I’m sorry,” he answered, in some surprise; “now I have come, what can
+I do for you?”
+
+“It is about Robert, Robert Morton--is he often drunk?”
+
+If Harborough had any delusions as to her not grasping the situation
+last night, they were now dispelled. “I don’t know,” he said; “I have
+never seen him so before.”
+
+“Do you think he often is?”
+
+“I really cannot tell you; I am only very slightly acquainted with him.”
+
+A little smile crept round the corners of the girl’s mouth. “I didn’t
+suppose you were great friends,” she said.
+
+Harborough bit his lip. His tone had not implied it, yet he was
+conscious that there had been a slight feeling of annoyance at the
+suggestion of intimacy conveyed by her words; there was now a second
+feeling of annoyance that she should have discovered the first.
+
+“I am a comparatively new comer in the place,” he said somewhat
+stiffly; “you would perhaps do better to ask someone who has lived here
+longer.”
+
+“Umph!” As she made the oracular answer she drew her legs up to the
+top bar of the gate and clasped her hands round them in a position
+Harborough considered most unsafe. As he watched her, fascinated,
+wondering which way she would fall, she turned a little towards him.
+
+“Take care!” he exclaimed.
+
+“Theresa does not know,” she said, answering her own thoughts. “She has
+no idea; but she will, you know.”
+
+Harborough thought it possible, but he only said: “I suppose her
+husband told her he did not wish to disturb her last night?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Then I do not see how she is to know, if you do not tell her.”
+
+“No, not this time; but next,--I may not be here then.”
+
+“How do you know there will be a next time?” he asked. “You have no
+reason to suppose this was anything but,--but an accident which might
+happen to any of us.”
+
+“You, for instance?”
+
+Her blandly innocent eyes were turned on him. “Any man,” he answered
+briefly. The eyes showed neither surprise nor disgust; in fact they did
+not seem much convinced, and he went on. “There is no reason to say it
+must occur again; why do you?”
+
+“Why do _you_?”
+
+“I do not,” he answered; “I should be very sorry to give such a
+definite opinion on the subject.”
+
+“Well, then,” she replied cheerfully, “that is the difference between
+us. I give the opinions, you only have them, but we mean the same
+thing.”
+
+“I have not formed any opinion.”
+
+“No, but you know him,--not very well, I dare say,--but you know other
+men. I don’t know him very well either, better than you do, of course,
+but not well. I came here on Tuesday, and to-day is Friday; before that
+I don’t think I saw him more than six times; but, all the same, I know
+he will get drunk again.”
+
+“Pray, did you expect him to be drunk last night?” Harborough asked.
+
+“No,” she answered; “I had never thought about it. Until I saw him last
+night I never thought about his drinking; now, of course, I know.”
+
+“I must say you took it very coolly,” he observed, “that is, if it was
+a revelation to you.”
+
+She shrugged her shoulders, till he thought she must inevitably fall
+off the gate; she did not, but turned to him, asking, “What would you
+have had me do?”
+
+“Nothing different from what you did. I meant that you did not seem at
+all upset.”
+
+“No, I don’t think I can be upset easily.” He unconsciously looked at
+the squirrel-like perch on the gate. “You see,” she went on, “there was
+a good deal to be done till you went; after that I thought.”
+
+“Yes?” He wondered what she thought, what sort of brain she had under
+that thatch of copper-brown hair.
+
+“It is about Theresa,” she went on to explain; “she does not know, and
+she must sooner or later; he is bound to let it out some time. He may
+have got drunk and hidden it in the past: he may do so in the future;
+but sooner or later there will come another time like last night, and
+she will find out.”
+
+He drove his stick into the ground thoughtfully. “Well,” he said at
+last, “if this is all as inevitable as you say, if this takes place, I
+suppose Mrs. Morton will have to bear it, as other women have borne it
+before. There is nothing else for it; we can’t help her; she will just
+have to bear it.”
+
+Harborough felt this was cold comfort. It was easy talking out here in
+the spring sunshine, easy adjusting the burden to the accompaniment of
+the thrushes’ love-songs; but to bear it was another matter, and the
+girl evidently thought so.
+
+“You don’t know Theresa,” she said. “She just can’t bear it; I think it
+would kill her.”
+
+Harborough repressed a smile. “I don’t think it would do anything of
+the kind,” he said, from his wider knowledge of mankind. “Mrs. Morton
+by this time knows, what you, too, will find out some day, that the
+world is peopled with men not heroes, and that you must take men, even
+husbands, as you find them, and not despair and die because they are
+not heroes of romance.”
+
+“That’s just what Theresa has not found out,” Theresa’s cousin
+persisted, “at least not properly. She and Robert don’t quite
+understand one another, I’m afraid. It’s an awful pity for people to
+get married; they can’t really know one another unless they have lived
+together for a long time first. You see, T. has lived such a different
+life. It was a kind of she-life, quiet and dainty and small, and nice
+as nice could be,--weak tea in old china and wash the cups up carefully
+afterwards--that is how we lived. The pity is she married Robert; it
+might have answered if she had married some other man, better, perhaps,
+or more,--more watered down, or something; I don’t know how to say it,
+but you understand how it is. They just belong to different kinds of
+people.”
+
+Harborough leaned against the gate-post, the one opposite to the end
+of the gate on which the girl sat; he was careful not to give her the
+least jar as he considered the connubial problem presented to him. “Of
+course you think Morton is to blame,” he said at last. “You would blame
+him far more than your sister--cousin is it?--your cousin then. He is,
+I suppose, a low hound, drunken and all the rest of it?”
+
+“Well,” she answered slowly, “it isn’t so much that; he has his good
+points of course, though I don’t altogether like him. It isn’t exactly
+a case of right and wrong; it’s how the thing seems to the other
+person, and it’ll seem bad to T. For myself, I don’t think I should
+like getting drunk, but I don’t so much mind about things; I can
+understand how it is in a way, and besides, it is not such a sin to his
+nature; it isn’t nice, but it is all of a piece with himself.”
+
+Harborough nodded. “That’s so,” he said and added: “To come home drunk
+is not, after all, such a dreadful thing from a man’s point of view;
+it is not nice, as you say, but it is not the most awful thing in the
+world. Life’s entire happiness does not cease because of it; it is not
+the end of all things.”
+
+“No,” she said thoughtfully looking past him into some fancy picture.
+“No, there is always the necessity to get up and have breakfast next
+morning, even after a big tragedy; things don’t end.”
+
+He laughed a little. “Naturally not, and a good thing too on the whole,
+though perhaps it is not dramatic. Why not induce Mrs. Morton to take
+your truly judicial view of the case?”
+
+“My view? It couldn’t be done.”
+
+“Why not? I think I understood you to say that she had lived in the
+same circumstances as yourself; if the view is possible to you, why not
+to her?”
+
+“I don’t know, but it is not.” Bill spoke with absolute conviction.
+“Besides, I can’t speak about it to her; I can’t even warn her what to
+expect. If she had been with me when you brought him home last night, I
+should have been obliged to pretend I did not know what was the matter,
+and I should have kept up the pretence afterwards.”
+
+“Would you?” he said, eyeing her curiously. “I suppose you would, and
+she would have helped you; women always try to hide the shortcomings of
+their loved ones. She won’t admit it when she finds him out; she will
+stand by him with a sort of proud deceit to the end.”
+
+“Of course,” Bill answered simply; “he is her family now, and you must
+stand by your family, right or wrong.”
+
+“I suppose that is what you call loyalty,” Harborough said with a
+laugh. “I was born in a land where we don’t think so much of our
+families, where we have not always reason to think much of them.”
+
+“Mine isn’t much to boast of,” Bill admitted. “But that has nothing to
+do with it; I must stand by them all the same,--why, I should bolster
+up Polly. But we are no nearer the settling of Theresa; I suppose we
+never shall be, so there is no more to be said. Thank you for telling
+me all you knew.”
+
+“All I didn’t know; that is what it amounts to.”
+
+She moved as if she were going to get off the gate, then stopped in the
+act and said suddenly: “Polly said Robert would die of apoplexy,--die
+young. What do you think?”
+
+“I think it is a solution of the difficulty I should not dwell on, if I
+were you.”
+
+“Why not? Isn’t it likely?”
+
+“I should say it was at least uncertain; also it is not usually
+considered decent to think about such things, at all events to talk
+about them.”
+
+“Oh, decent!” she said, and laughed softly as she remembered Carrie’s
+and Alice’s lecture. Then she dropped off the gate and was immediately
+lost among the orchard bushes. He stood for a moment, half-expecting
+her to come back, though he did not know why. As she did not, he went
+on, smiling a little.
+
+Gradually the smile died away. It was all very well to smile out there
+in the sunshine, all very well to talk under the apple-boughs, but the
+fact remained, the grim, stern fact. It was no concern of his, it is
+true, but he could not help thinking about it. Of course he knew that
+Morton drank, not desperately, nor enough to do any serious harm, not
+more than did plenty of other men, nothing more than occasionally a
+little too much; so serious an affair as last night’s occurrence would
+probably be an exception. It was not exactly a cardinal sin, it was
+just part of his nature, as the little brown girl had said, a kind of
+nature for which Harborough had a tolerant contempt when regarded as
+a detached specimen; as a personal acquaintance it naturally wore a
+different aspect. “If a man drinks, he drinks, and it is his affair.
+One can forgive lapses; we are none of us exactly bread-and-butter
+saints when we are nearing the thirties.” Harborough emphasised the
+words with his stick; he had almost said them aloud, not quite, but
+loud enough for the man, who that moment joined him, to guess part of
+the speech.
+
+“Who is not a saint when he is nearing the thirties?” he asked.
+“Forgive me for surprising your thoughts, Mr. Harborough; you really
+should not think so loud, you know.”
+
+“I will forgive you more easily than I fancy you would forgive me
+for thinking them.” So Harborough answered, for he had certain very
+definite notions as to what was and what was not acceptable to the
+clergy, and it was a clergyman who had accosted him, the rector of
+Ashelton on his way to the rectory by a field-path well known to at
+least one of his parishioners.
+
+Perhaps Harborough misjudged this clergyman; at all events he promised
+forgiveness for all sins of thought before they were expressed. “I give
+absolution beforehand,” he said; “now confess the whole.”
+
+“The whole? I am afraid I was speech-making to myself, a bad habit
+I have got from living so much alone; still you shall have it all.
+Here goes,--If a man drinks, he drinks, and it is his affair. One can
+forgive lapses; we are none of us bread-and-butter saints when we are
+nearing the thirties. But a man whom the divine wisdom has, it would
+seem, for its own purposes, made something of a beast, should keep
+his beastliness for suitable places. There is a lot done ‘somewhere
+east of Suez’ and in other places nearer at hand, which one does
+not blame a man for doing there; but when he does it in his wife’s
+drawing-room,--when he is such an egregious fool, such an unmitigated
+brute--why then he wants kicking, and he should be soundly kicked.”
+
+Mr. Dane laughed a little, but whether at the length of the speech or
+the unconscious earnestness of its delivery did not appear. “Yes,” he
+said, “yes, brutes want kicking; I’m not sure we don’t all want kicking
+sometimes. Poor little wife; God help the wife, whoever she is!”
+
+Harborough acquiesced. “And yet,” he said doubtfully, “if she
+understood, it would be easier, much easier; a good woman is a hard
+judge.”
+
+“Ay, possibly.” The rector’s cold gray eyes seemed to summon up the
+memory of some good woman who had judged hardly. “They were not made to
+understand some things.”
+
+“Not all women,” Harborough interposed.
+
+“Not all; are you sure she was a good woman, this exception of yours?
+But perhaps we had better not start a controversy now; it is too late.
+I suppose the good women will judge the bad men, and love them too, to
+the end of the story. Bad men? No, I beg pardon, average men, neither
+good nor bad, just human, no bread-and-butter saints--good-bye.”
+
+They parted at the rectory-gate. Just as it closed after Mr. Dane he
+turned to call after Harborough: “How about the beef and beer saints?
+What of them?”
+
+“Are there any?”
+
+“Yes, and they’re good for three-score years and ten.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+FOR BILL’S GOOD.
+
+
+Theresa was a conscientious person, and really had Bill’s welfare at
+heart. Miss Brownlow said she exercised a good influence over her young
+cousin. Theresa was rather doubtful on the subject herself, but she
+felt the responsibility of her aunt’s expectations, and determined to
+fulfil them if possible; only she did not quite know how to set about
+it. Bill proved so very mild; there seemed no occasion for a preventive
+and negative influence, and a positive one Theresa found difficult to
+compass. The only definite suggestion she had as yet made for Bill’s
+mental and moral benefit was the invitation to the prayer-meeting.
+That, both in its religious and social aspects, was good; the religious
+side, Theresa felt, must benefit her charge, though she did not stop
+to consider how, religion being to her much what charms were to her
+forebears, good and protective, though operating in methods neither
+understood nor questioned. The social side of the prayer-meeting was
+obviously beneficial, for it was in every way desirable that Bill
+should mix with her elders, it would help her to grow up. Altogether
+the prayer-meeting was a good thing, and to it, accordingly, Theresa
+took her cousin on Friday evening.
+
+They drove in the dog-cart: “We can walk home,” Theresa had said; “it
+is not far.”
+
+So Robert, who did not affect prayer-meetings, drove them and took
+the cart home again; and as Theresa disliked driving very much, this
+arrangement suited her better than any other. It suited Bill also, for
+she sat on the back seat, and was as entirely oblivious of the two in
+front as if she had been alone in her silent survey of the country.
+It was still very black and white, she found, though a day of showers
+and sunshine would alter the whole face of the land now. She was
+conscious of the coming change; there was a feeling of waiting in the
+air, as though the unconscious earth stood patient on the threshold
+of life. There were no leaves as yet among the elms, no blade in the
+dry, crumbling fields, no hint of green in the close-cut hedge, so
+black by contrast with the white road. So white the road was, so hard,
+stretching before them, stretching behind them; Bill looked at it and
+thought what a long way it could be seen in the pale strong light.
+Every thing could be seen, the heap of faggots, the pump by the road,
+the old man working in a cottage-garden,--she could even see what kind
+of belt he wore; she could see everything near and far,--truly a March
+evening was a beautiful thing. She drew in deep breaths of the thin
+air; it seemed like wine within her, making the young blood dance and
+throb in her veins. She felt, though she hardly knew it, that it was a
+splendid thing to be alive: “I should like to live as long as the world
+lasts,” she thought.
+
+Just then they turned in at a gateway. The short drive beyond sloped
+down rapidly and the dog-cart entered with a jerk which nearly
+unseated the back passenger, who, however, was examining the garden too
+intently to be troubled by that. There was a large raised flower-bed
+in the centre of the gravel sweep, the drive dividing right and left
+of it. It was a circular bed planted in a geometrical pattern with
+Dutch bulbs; as yet the hyacinths and tulips were only green shoots,
+but the crocuses were in full flower and wound like a coloured ribbon
+across the intricate design. Bill was wondering how it was that none
+of the crocuses had gone blind, when the cart stopped before a square,
+ivy-covered house.
+
+“T.,” she said, as she got down, “every single one of those crocuses
+has come up; they must be a good sort.”
+
+“I dare say. Mr. Perry is fond of his garden, and he has plenty of
+money.”
+
+Bill’s acquaintance with people possessing plenty of money was
+limited; indeed, she could not recall anyone she knew who was in that
+affluent state. She looked at the Perry’s house critically to see how
+“plenty of money” looked when it was translated into furniture and
+fittings. There were lots of white curtains, three or four at every
+window. “That is expensive,” she thought; “it means so much washing.”
+There were thick carpets on the floors, old-fashioned in design,
+excellent in preservation, and prodigiously ugly; the furniture in the
+drawing-room was rosewood, the chairs as like as peas in a pod and
+all neatly covered in chintz. “I shall tell Polly our things are all
+right,” Bill mentally determined as she sat down in a retired corner.
+She had been duly presented to the host and hostess, had duly made an
+inaudible answer to their polite remarks, and had then sunk into her
+corner, still safe under her cousin’s wing, as became one of her youth
+and shyness. No one in Mrs. Perry’s drawing-room expected anything
+different; indeed all would have been surprised if she had shown
+greater forwardness of demeanour. Her nearest neighbour, a little old
+lady with a cheerful countenance and a great mosaic brooch, spoke to
+her; but at first Bill could not catch what she said, for she lowered
+her voice out of deference to the more important persons present, until
+it was little more than a sigh in her listener’s ear. But after a word
+or two Bill became used to the sound and made out, as she might have
+guessed, that the subject of conversation was the weather.
+
+“Dry evening,” was the first she heard, and then “a nice walk from
+Ashelton.”
+
+Bill did not catch the connecting words, but she answered what she
+heard, although she did not know that she had come beyond the boundary
+of Ashelton that evening, and contented herself with saying that they
+had not walked.
+
+“Driven?” suggested the old lady. “I expect Mr. Morton drove you and
+took the pony home again; such a good arrangement, and much safer than
+for Mrs. Morton to drive those spirited horses herself. I’m sure I
+wonder she has never had an accident; I quite thought there would be
+one when I saw her go by on Tuesday afternoon.”
+
+“Did you see us then?” Bill asked, and her neighbour explained that
+she lived at the house at the corner where the roads divided. Then
+Bill knew that this must be Miss Minchin, the lady who, Theresa said,
+made ample use of the opportunities for observation offered by the
+commanding position of her house. At that moment the entrance of some
+fresh arrivals caused such a buzz of conversation that Miss Minchin
+ventured to inquire in quite a loud voice whether Bill herself could
+manage a horse.
+
+“I never tried until I came here,” she answered; “I only came on
+Tuesday, but I have done a little since then. I drove a waggon of straw
+home yesterday. Tom Griggs told me he thought I should soon be able to
+handle most things on four legs, but I don’t suppose he knows.”
+
+“You are learning to drive?” Miss Minchin asked, somewhat mystified.
+“Mr. Morton is teaching you? But, my dear, do be careful, he has
+such mettlesome horses; gentlemen seem all alike for that; there’s
+Mr. Harborough, now, he’s nearly as bad. You know Mr. Harborough?”
+Before Bill could answer the old lady went on: “Hush! Mr. Perry is
+going to speak. You must come with Mrs. Morton to see me to-morrow; I
+have a cat and a canary, and several things that will interest you.”
+The last words were spoken in a shrill whisper in Bill’s ear as the
+company settled themselves, and Mr. Perry, a trim little man some years
+retired from the grocery trade, called attention to the fact that the
+reading was about to begin. When he had made this announcement in a
+redundancy of words (for he was not averse to speech-making and had few
+opportunities), the proceedings commenced.
+
+The subject for the evening was faith. Mr. Johnson was giving a course
+of Christian virtues during that Lent, and faith happened to be the
+one under consideration on the evening when Bill was present. She was
+very much interested, though it was not a matter in which she had erred
+greatly hitherto; she believed largely, had much imagination, and as
+yet had thought little and felt less; consequently Mr. Johnson’s
+flowery periods slid harmlessly off her still unconscious mind. She
+was interested, at first a little in the words, afterwards entirely
+by the man. Mr. Johnson was a fair man with a tendency towards the
+sandy, smooth, slightly florid, and with more than a tendency towards
+plumpness. He had for many years been curate at Ashelton, and, though
+he was now past middle life, it seemed that he was likely to remain
+curate at Ashelton, for it appeared that the Church dignitaries had not
+the same opinion of his worth as had some other people who need not be
+named. After all, curate at the three Asheltons was on the whole well
+enough. There was not too much work in the big straggling parish, and
+there was much sociability of a sort well suited to a man who had a
+nice taste in tea and pale sherry, and more fancy for being a whale
+among minnows than a minnow among whales. At Ashelton, though perhaps
+not exactly a whale, he could pass as a very tolerably sized fish
+among others of congenial dimensions, at all events when the rector
+was not there. As for the rector--well, poor man, he was eccentric, he
+had had trouble--Mr. Johnson said so leniently without any idea as to
+what the trouble was. For the eccentricity he could vouch: the rector
+had a cousin who was a bishop, in a genuine, important bishopric,
+and another, it was hinted, who was a peer. What man, not eccentric,
+would have remained all these years in a little country parish when he
+possessed these advantages? Then there was his passion for music, and
+also his inability to appreciate Mr. Johnson. Mr. Johnson had at last
+come to the conclusion that this inability did exist; yet even now he
+was not sure that it was not partly the expression of a not unnatural
+jealousy of his own social and parochial triumphs.
+
+On that particular March evening Mr. Johnson knew that he had added
+one more to the long list of those triumphs. It was a small matter, of
+course, but, as he told his wife, trifles like that showed how easily
+he could have influenced a larger audience, had he been in command
+of one. The trifle in question was Bill Alardy, whose face showed
+how deeply interested she was in Mr. Johnson’s words. She had the
+most expressive face imaginable, and that evening it was alive with
+interest. She had never taken her eyes off the speaker; she listened
+to every word, the tell-tale face expressing the keenest enjoyment
+and appreciation. So marked was this that after supper, when all were
+leaving, Mr. Johnson came to Theresa and shook hands with her and Bill,
+telling the latter impressively that he was very glad to see her at the
+reading.
+
+To this Bill answered with equal impressiveness, “I am very glad I
+came.”
+
+Mr. Johnson smiled encouragingly. “I shall be happy if at any time I
+can be of help to you,” he said; “I am always pleased to help any one.”
+
+Bill thanked him vaguely and went out with Theresa. She did not know
+what he meant, but it did not matter, as she did not feel conscious
+of wanting his help. In her opinion he could not improve upon that
+evening’s performance, which had been perfectly delightful; so
+delightful that when she went to her room she thought about him until
+it became too much for her, and turning to the little wooden bed and
+the chair which stood beside it, she addressed them, inanimate though
+they were. “My brothers and sisters,” she said--and her flexible voice,
+far more flexible even than her face, rolled out in unctuous tones--“my
+brothers and sisters, faith is the substance of things hoped for, the
+only evidence we can present to our spiritual senses, the only evidence
+they need. It is the be-all and end-all, the beginning and the end of
+all things.” She rolled the words lovingly on her tongue, swelling
+her face until it became almost Johnsonian in size. “Everything is
+faith, faith is everything.” Here she stretched out a persuasive hand
+to the quaint little bed. “In it we live and move and have our being;
+being dead, we die not if in faith, being alive, we live not without
+it. Whatever is, is not, whatever is not, is, was and shall be, world
+without end, amen.”
+
+But Theresa did not hear this, and held to her first opinion as to the
+kind of spiritual good Bill derived from the prayer-meeting. Of the
+social good she was not so sure, until her young cousin came to her on
+Saturday morning and suggested that they should go and see Miss Minchin
+in the afternoon. “Let us go,” she said; “she promised to show me her
+cat and bird and other things.”
+
+Theresa acceded to the request, feeling that last night’s meeting was
+not without results since it had introduced Miss Minchin, and implanted
+a desire to visit in Bill’s mind.
+
+Miss Minchin’s house was set at the corner where the high road from
+Wrugglesby divided, the one way to go through Ashelton to the church,
+the other to the lanes and so to the more distant village of Sales
+Green. “It is a terribly public place,” Miss Gruet, Miss Minchin’s
+particular friend, always said with commiseration. Her own house
+was privacy itself, the lower windows looking solely on the laurel
+bushes tall and elderly, the upper as effectually screened by a great
+horse-chestnut tree. “It was most secluded,” Miss Gruet said, and, out
+of pity no doubt, she often left her seclusion to cheer her friend
+in the publicity which had fallen to her share. She did so on the
+afternoon when Theresa and Bill made their call, but did not arrive
+until Miss Minchin had duly shown her treasures. Bill was interested
+in them all,--in the cat asleep on the violet bed, only dislodged with
+the end of an umbrella, and the canary before the window in a green
+cage with a piece of grey paper neatly tacked round the lower part
+to keep the seeds in and the draughts out. This piece of paper was
+often changed, varying in colour with the Church festivals and other
+important events, always going into mourning on the death of royalty;
+at least, the cage did. Black paper Miss Minchin found difficult to
+obtain, as she explained to Bill.
+
+“When the poor dear Duke of Clarence died,” she said, “I could not get
+a scrap. I put a piece of black cashmere round the cage, but the little
+fellow (it was not this canary then but another one) did not like it a
+bit.”
+
+The subject of discussion here gave a short burst of song. When he
+ceased Miss Minchin encouraged him to continue. “Swee-e-t!” she said;
+“go on, my pretty, swee-e-t! He likes someone to whistle to him, but of
+course I can’t do that.”
+
+“I can,” said Bill, and gave a trilling imitation of the caged singer.
+
+“I declare,” exclaimed Miss Minchin, “it’s quite charming! I’m sure
+if girls had whistled like that in my young days no one would have
+thought it unladylike. They did think so, then, my dear, but now, to be
+sure, things are quite changed; everyone can do as they like, and more
+besides.”
+
+It was just then that Miss Gruet came in. “I thought you must be
+coming here,” Miss Minchin said briskly. “I said so to Mrs. Morton just
+now, when I saw you coming down the road.”
+
+“You can see everyone from your window,” Miss Gruet said with a touch
+of severity. “I do believe from your back bedroom you could almost see
+the field-path that leads to the rectory.”
+
+“Yes,” Miss Minchin admitted, “I can if I move the toilet-glass. Of
+course I never do move it, unless it happens that the blind goes wrong,
+as it does sometimes. It is such a tiresome blind; I remember I had to
+see to it the day Tom Davies went to put his banns up; he thought no
+one saw him go sneaking to the rectory, but I did, for I was mending my
+blind.”
+
+Miss Gruet professed herself properly shocked--and interested. “There
+is no telling what you might not see,” she said, “and Mr. Dane a
+bachelor too!”
+
+Miss Minchin hastened to assure the company that she had never seen
+anything bad; indeed, only yesterday morning, when the troublesome
+blind went wrong again, she had seen quite a pleasant sight--Mr. Dane
+and young Mr. Harborough in earnest conversation. “So nice,” she said,
+“for a young man like that to be such friends with the rector.”
+
+The others agreed with her, and talked over this item of intelligence
+in all its aspects. A little later, Theresa and Miss Gruet being at the
+time deep in a discussion of the difficulty of preventing mice from
+eating cheese-mats, Bill led the conversation back to Harborough.
+
+“The Harboroughs of Gurnett,” she said; “does this Mr. Harborough
+belong to them?”
+
+“No, indeed,” Miss Minchin answered, almost shocked at the idea. “The
+Harboroughs of Gurnett are the Harboroughs of Wood Hall, one of the
+oldest families of the county, just as Wood Hall is one of the finest
+places. At least, it used to be, but times are sadly changed from what
+they were. The Harboroughs are poor now and cannot afford to keep the
+place up; not but what it is fine still,--have you ever seen it?”
+
+“No, but I have heard about it,” Bill said eagerly. “There is a room
+there, the library I think, with a fireplace so big that a quadrille
+could be danced on the hearth; and the great hall is so wide that a
+coach and four could turn in it without touching the wall on either
+side.”
+
+“Yes, my dear, yes.” The old lady’s tone was sad, as of one who
+remembers departed greatness. “Yes; so they say; they say many things
+about the place. It is sad to think of the way in which it is being
+left, sad to think of the Harboroughs, a good old family.”
+
+“I thought they were bad,” Bill remarked, remembering the common report
+of the district.
+
+“So they were, bad and extravagant too; they nearly all were, and that
+is why they are so poor now.”
+
+Bill did not express any opinion on good old families which were also
+bad; she only remarked meditatively, “I think I shall go to Wood Hall.”
+
+“You can’t,” Miss Minchin said; “Mr. Harborough lives there now.”
+
+“Yes; but parts of the grounds are open, are they not? I could see
+them, as much as can be seen.”
+
+“I would not, if I were you.” Miss Minchin’s voice was a solemn warning.
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Because,--it does not seem exactly right for a young girl to go into
+those grounds.”
+
+“But why?”
+
+Miss Minchin dropped her voice half a tone lower. “Mr. Harborough is a
+bad old man,” she said, “a very wicked old man. It does not become me
+to speak ill of one in his station, belonging to this county too; still
+facts are facts and they are terrible.”
+
+“What has he done?”
+
+Bill showed, or Miss Minchin thought she showed, too much interest in
+the subject, and, either because she would not, or else because she
+could not, she gave no further information. Whereupon Bill, failing to
+hear anything about the one Mr. Harborough turned to the other.
+
+“Is he related to the Wood Hall people?” she asked.
+
+“No, oh dear, no,” Miss Minchin answered. “He is an Australian, or
+a New Zealander, or something American and colonial; I am rather
+uncertain about those places, but he comes from one of them. Besides,
+my dear, consider, he is a farmer, nothing but a farmer,--a very good
+profession; I am not saying anything against it,” she added, hastily
+remembering Theresa’s husband; “indeed, I should be very sorry to,
+seeing that all the patriarchs were farmers, so to say. Still, you must
+admit it is not quite suitable to a member of the county-families. I
+know old families are not respected as they used to be, but no one
+would think of classing them with farmers even now.”
+
+Bill acquiesced and then observed: “It is queer he should have the same
+name.”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know,” Miss Minchin said, bridling a little. “It is not
+such an uncommon name; besides the old families spread so. Long ago
+they were, no doubt, much larger than they now are; there is no telling
+where all the younger branches go.”
+
+“You think he is a younger branch? Then he should be as good as the
+others.”
+
+“Certainly not: for one reason he has not lived in the same place so
+long; he and his forebears have gone out from among the family; they
+have not kept up the family traditions. There are many traditions in
+a family like that, many, and much property too. Why, do you know the
+side chapel in our parish church is the property of the Harboroughs?”
+
+Bill did not know it, neither did she see the force of it as an
+argument; nevertheless she was interested. “The whole chapel?” she
+asked.
+
+“Yes, the little chapel and the little altar and all complete. Of
+course they never go there, for they are Catholics. I sometimes
+think perhaps if Mr. Harborough had not been a Catholic--but there!
+We mustn’t be uncharitable. Do you like reading? Yes? Then I should
+advise you to read the history of the county; you will find all about
+Wood Hall there and many other things you will like. I don’t think
+Mrs. Morton has a history, but Miss Gruet has a very nice book of
+Selections, which I have no doubt she will lend to you; I do believe I
+have it in the house now.” She had borrowed it when Harborough first
+came and had not yet returned it. “We can ask her to allow you to take
+it home with you; I’m sure she will.”
+
+This Miss Gruet expressed herself happy to do, and Bill carried the
+book away with her when she left with Theresa a few minutes later.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE RIGHT OF WAY.
+
+
+The parish church of Ashelton was very old. It was said in Miss Gruet’s
+selected history of the county to be of great antiquarian interest; but
+antiquaries did not abound in Ashelton, and neither the inhabitants nor
+their friends troubled their heads much about the stone-work of the
+fourteenth century, or any of the other commended points of interest.
+At one time there had been a couple of letters in a Wrugglesby paper
+about a little Last Judgment window of obscure meaning; but the letters
+had long been forgotten, and the rector’s new organ partly hid the
+window now.
+
+Bill paid particular attention to the window on the first Sunday that
+she went to Ashelton church; but she had just been reading about it and
+knew where to look for it. For the rest, that which chiefly pleased
+her were the grinning goblin faces which looked out from the capitals
+of pillars and the niches of windows,--from every place where the
+old builders could put them; there was even one carved at the end of
+Theresa’s pew. Everybody had a pew, and almost everybody went to church
+in Ashelton. The Morton’s pew was conveniently situated for keeping an
+eye on the rest of the congregation. There was only one better placed
+for that purpose, Miss Minchin’s; but she, as she always maintained,
+had not selected it herself, her dear mother having done so long before
+her time,--in which case, it is possible to conceive that Miss Minchin
+inherited her tastes, as well as her pew, from her mother. Bill, from
+her place of vantage, looked at everybody, and everybody, with even
+greater interest, looked at her. In fact so much did they look that
+she, though as a rule somewhat indifferent on the subject of clothes,
+was rather glad that Polly had furbished up her winter hat before she
+left Wrugglesby. She gave the hat a little pull forward as she thought
+of it, and looked across Mrs. Perry’s purple bonnet to the Harborough
+chapel. It was to the left of the chancel, a step higher than the main
+body of the church and in a measure cut off from it by a continuance
+of the slender oak screen which stood before the chancel itself. Bill
+looked at it thoughtfully, opining that there could never have been
+enough Harboroughs to fill it, unless they brought their servants with
+them. There was a small altar with a cross upon it, and above, an old
+window where fat cherubs smiled in starch-blue smoke. She wondered what
+its meaning was, as others had wondered before her, and came to the
+conclusion that it was a pity the starch clouds, if they were clouds,
+were not red instead of blue: “It could not possibly make the place
+darker than it now is,” she thought, “and it would look very much
+nicer.”
+
+It is to be feared that Bill did not pay very much attention to the
+sermon. She looked about her over much, but she could still say with
+truth, when asked by Miss Gruet afterwards, that she had enjoyed the
+service, for she had a keen ear for music, and the music at Ashelton
+church was very good. She listened with rapt attention to what Miss
+Minchin called “the set pieces,” and joined enthusiastically in the
+hymns, singing loud and sweet, for though her flexible voice was
+perhaps better suited to the mimicry of other sounds than anything
+else, it still possessed a rich sweetness in its many-noted variations.
+
+When Bella came home from visiting Theresa in the winter she confessed
+to Polly that she had found Sunday afternoon a little dull; that is to
+say the first Sunday afternoon; on the second she had gone for a walk
+and--Bill had not heard any more, so she did not know what prevented
+the second Sunday afternoon from being as dull as the first. She did
+not herself find the afternoon dull, as she went up to the garret to
+look over some books. Theresa in bringing away her girlish treasures
+from Miss Brownlow’s had accidentally brought a few things which were
+not hers.
+
+“I have been meaning to take them back several times,” she said, “but I
+keep forgetting. I really hardly know what they are now; there are one
+or two books belonging to Polly and to you, or your father. I put them
+in a box in the garret when I had to turn the spare room out; you might
+get them down some time and put them with your things, if you will.”
+
+Bill said she would, and chose Sunday afternoon to do it. She left
+Robert and Theresa reading and dozing by the fire with the port and
+oranges on the table beside them. “Don’t you want any dessert?” Theresa
+had said. But Bill did not care about port and oranges; she filled
+her pocket with nuts and went to the garret to eat them while she
+looked over the books. These she found in a lidless packing-case neatly
+covered over with brown paper. The one on the top was HOLY LIVING AND
+DYING. “That’s Auntie’s: Theresa must have got it from the top shelf
+in the dining-room; the books there were mostly hers; I suppose she
+thought they all were and took the lot.” The next was a small brown
+volume, PLAIN TRUTHS FOR PLAIN PEOPLE, in which she found Polly’s
+name--“That’s just the book for Polly; a plain person she certainly
+is, and the plain truth is a very good thing for her to start on,
+considering how she can trim it.” The two volumes were laid aside, and
+the next dive into the box brought out a book she was pleased to see
+but did not before know that they possessed, an old history of that
+part of the county. “Whose is this, I wonder?--why, it’s mine!” She had
+turned to the first page and seen her own name Wilhelmina Alardy.
+
+“That’s funny,”--she was cracking her nuts with her teeth as she
+looked. “At least, I don’t know that it is so funny after all; I expect
+it was stuck up at the top with the other old things, so I never knew
+about it. Of course I am not that Wilhelmina; that’s Grandmother.”
+
+Bill looked long at the book, for she had not many relics, or even
+tales, of her own grandmother, as she counted her father’s mother in
+distinction from her mother’s mother whom she shared equally with the
+cousins. There was not, to be sure, much of this lady to share; not
+one of the four cousins had even a memory of her, though of their own
+grandmothers the others each had something to tell. Polly had a good
+many tales about hers, with an ugly old portrait, too, and a heavy
+locket she used to wear. Bella and Theresa could remember theirs
+plainly; they had stayed with her when they were little girls, and
+still had the coral necklaces she gave them the last Christmas she was
+alive. But Bill had neither tales nor trinkets; her parents had both
+died when she was very young, and Miss Brownlow knew no traditions of
+the Alardys and few facts concerning them, except that Bill’s father
+was an only son, and that for relations the girl must depend on her; so
+it happened that Bill knew little about her grandmother, except that
+she herself was named after her. There was a little wooden box-ottoman
+in the spare bedroom at Langford House, which, she had been told,
+used to belong to this grandmother. She had looked inside it once and
+found nothing but papers, which did not prove very interesting; a few
+letters, not easy to decipher and not, so far as she had tried them,
+entertaining; half a dozen bills, part of an old account-book, some
+recipes for cough-mixture and tea-cakes, a few odd sheets of paper
+and manuscript music, and some legal-looking documents which were
+quite beyond her comprehension. The greater part of this miscellaneous
+collection seemed to have belonged to her mother; a few of the less
+intelligible were of an older date, and the music and some scraps of
+poetry were not dated at all. Bill had thought of carrying the poetry
+away, as the only thing there which interested her; but since she had
+gone to the box without Miss Brownlow’s permission, she decided that
+she had better not take anything out, and learned the lines by heart
+instead. Then she shut the box, and gave up any hope of boasting as
+intimate an acquaintance with her grandmother as the other cousins did
+with theirs.
+
+That was in the winter. She had not thought any more about it until
+this Sunday afternoon when she unexpectedly came upon the history
+of the county with her grandmother’s name on the fly-leaf. She was
+delighted with her discovery, partly because it was her grandmother’s,
+but chiefly because it was the very book she wanted. Settling herself
+comfortably on an empty tea-chest, she proceeded to study it and the
+old map of the district which she found folded inside. When at last she
+was called down-stairs for tea she was still full of her treasure, and
+told Robert and Theresa about it. They listened, amused by the interest
+she attached to it and the attraction she found in both book and map.
+
+“I believe the map must be a good one,” she said at last; “it is so
+clear, I think I could find my way anywhere by it.”
+
+“Where do you want to find your way?” Robert asked smiling.
+
+“Oh, to lots of places, to Gurnett for one. I think I shall walk to
+Gurnett to-morrow; may I, Theresa?”
+
+“It is rather a long way, but go if you like.” Theresa perhaps thought
+a long walk would be better for her young cousin than spending too much
+time with the animals in the yard.
+
+The next morning, accordingly, Bill, armed with her map and some
+sandwiches for refreshment by the way, started on her walk. The
+distance might be long, but she could not remember any time in her life
+when she had been really tired. It seemed to her that mere walking
+was not enough, and once fairly started in the lonely lanes and quiet
+fields, she broke into a run for pure lightness of heart and ecstasy
+of living. Soon she was out on a road again, and here she walked more
+soberly, looking to right and left, noting the veil of green that was
+spreading over the hedges, enjoying to the full the day and the walk
+and the solitude.
+
+And so Gurnett was reached, almost too soon, and the sandwiches eaten
+behind a grassy bank, very much too soon considering it was not yet
+twelve. After that the map was pulled out and considered thoughtfully.
+It was some time before she could find on it the exact spot where she
+now was, but at last she did. “Here I am, here--oh, yes, these must be
+the cross-roads; there is Wood Hall, over there, and here comes the
+lane between, the second turning after the cross-roads. The little
+path ought to cross just where the road joins the lane; I wonder if I
+shall find it; it seems to go straight from Corbycroft on one side of
+the lane to Wood Hall on the other, or rather to the little church in
+Wood Hall grounds. I don’t see what it can have been made for, but it
+must be a real path since it is marked; if anyone says anything to me I
+shall show him the map.”
+
+Having come to this satisfactory conclusion Bill folded up her map and
+went on. In due time she came to the junction of the road and lane, but
+there was no indication that a footpath existed in any direction. In
+fact, the country itself on the left-hand side had undergone something
+of a change, for whereas her map showed that there had been a sort of
+park, the property of the distant hall, Corbycroft, there now seemed
+to be nothing but pasture-fields. She climbed the steep bank, the lane
+here being considerably below the level of the fields, and looked
+round. There was nothing but pasture-land, green, curving, sloping
+gradually away from her. A clump of elms stood in the centre, beautiful
+trees, tawny with the catkins which hung from their black branches;
+but there was no park, only pasture-land sloping down to the farm in
+the distance. And the farm looked very much as if it were a farm and
+not a hall; perhaps it was the remains of the old hall patched up and
+serving as a farm-house; though, to be sure, her history had spoken of
+a hall, a small off-manor belonging to the Corbys, a family who seemed
+to have had their head-quarters and more important property away in the
+north of the county, in the direction of the coast. The map and history
+were alike old, and Bill was forced to admit that things might have
+changed since they were made.
+
+But if the left side of the lane was disappointing, the right more
+than fulfilled expectations. The ground sloped sharply up on that
+side; Wood Hall evidently stood on a hill and appeared to be hidden
+among trees, for the slope as far as Bill could see was covered with
+wood. It was not a trim park but a thicket, a wild young forest
+growing up as it could about the stumps of veteran oaks and beeches
+long since sacrificed to the axe. In some places the young trees
+almost choked each other with their crowded growth; in others they
+struggled for existence with the old pollards that still held their
+ground. Brambles and moss and last year’s fern covered the paths and
+choked the water-courses; here and there a tree, too lightly rooted to
+withstand the winters’ storms, or too old to bear the weight of its
+years, had fallen and lay as it fell. All was neglected, all growing,
+in crowded thicket or open glade, as only nature unassisted can grow;
+for it was genuine woodland, where the sunshine filtered through a
+close-woven roof of branches and chased dancing shadows over last
+year’s leaves; thickets of thorn breaking into leaf, primroses hiding
+in the moss at their feet; beeches, tall and straight as pillars of
+stone, a cathedral twilight in their shade; pollard oaks still brown in
+sheltered places; the glossy darkness of holly, the stately grace of
+slim young larches lightly tasselled in earliest green; silver birches,
+old trees, their white bark cracked and swelled, blackened by many
+years; young trees, a lace-work of branches, a tangle of supple stems
+and bursting buds.
+
+Bill was over the low boundary fence now. There was no evidence of a
+path, but there ought to have been; it was marked on her map and she
+was going to find it, so she began the ascent in the direction in which
+it should have been. Up she went, the ground soft and irregular, here
+the dead leaves of many years blown into hollows rustling about her
+feet, there the rich black earth patched with moss, emerald and gray
+and golden brown. An old pollard lay as it had fallen; about its head
+fungus had gathered, and under its side primroses grew. Higher up,
+where the leaves were fewer, in sheltered ledges, beneath the twisty
+coils of beech-roots there were more primroses, plenty of them, and
+everywhere anemones, fairy flowers that danced among the dead bracken.
+The sun, hidden by the hill, looked down through the forest aisles,
+threading the whole place with arrows of light so that all around there
+was a lattice of woven light and shadow, while, before, there lay a
+path golden as Jacob’s way to heaven.
+
+Involuntarily the girl stood still, clasping her hands tight on one
+another, while her breath came fast. All round stretched this living
+woodland, thrilling with its growing, stirring life; the bare trees,
+brown and purple and deep blue in their shadows, yet touched with the
+breath of spring, faintest green, or gold, or sparkling where the sun
+caught their yet unopened buds. The very earth was audible, alive, as
+it breathed forth its moist sweetness; and the birds sang their anthem
+of praise for the world’s eternal, ever recurring youth.
+
+She stood, a little brown figure in the lonely wood, her whole
+soul going out to the great mother Earth, her heart filled with a
+passionate, inarticulate gladness. “Oh, God!” she said, “how good, how
+good it all is!”
+
+She said it aloud because she had not outgrown that stage of savagedom
+which feels, with the Druids of old, that God is in the woods. A
+chaffinch on a crab-tree above her head looked down and to another hid
+in the catkinned branches of a hornbeam cried, “Come and see, what d’ye
+think! What d’ye think!” And the other replied with exactly the same
+words, or at least it seemed so to Bill; she listened a moment, then
+answered them with a call so like their own that they might well have
+been puzzled by it if she had not at that moment begun to sing and
+frightened them both to the safe distance of a higher bough--
+
+ “There’s laughter for the May-time,”--
+
+She sang and her voice was like a lark’s in its complete gladness--
+
+ “The morning of the year--the year”--
+
+and the singing was merged into ripples of sound neither song nor
+laughter and yet a wild sweet blending of both.
+
+“Well, young woman, I hope you are satisfied.”
+
+Bill stopped abruptly and faced the speaker, an old man on the higher
+ground just above her. He may have approached by some path hidden in
+the thicket on the right, or he may have been close at hand waiting
+till now to declare himself; she did not know which, neither did she
+know what was expected of her, so she only answered truthfully, “Yes.”
+
+“I am glad to hear it.” She looked puzzled, and he added abruptly: “You
+are trespassing,--do you know it?”
+
+The light began to dawn on Bill’s mind; she had forgotten all about
+the map and the footpath, but now she remembered and answered eagerly:
+“No, no, I am not really, at least I don’t think I can be; there is a
+footpath somewhere about here; I can’t have got far from it.”
+
+“There is no footpath.”
+
+“But it is marked on my map,” and Bill began to unfold the paper in
+which she had for greater security wrapped her treasure.
+
+“I can’t help your map; there is no footpath here and there never was.
+I think I should know considering that the place belongs to me.”
+
+“Are you Mr. Harborough?” Bill’s face beamed with satisfaction.
+
+“I am; the fact seems to afford you pleasure.”
+
+“I am pleased,” Bill admitted. Having once got herself into a
+difficulty she never had any hesitation about going through with it, in
+which course she was often helped by a serene unconsciousness of her
+position and offences, a quality Polly reckoned high in the list of her
+condemned exhibitions of no “gumption.” “I am pleased. I--I had heard
+about you.”
+
+“I am indeed gratified”; he spoke with a sarcastic courtesy somewhat
+wasted on his hearer. “Judging by your flattering anxiety to make my
+acquaintance, I must conclude that what you heard was to my credit.”
+
+“It was interesting,” Bill said doubtfully.
+
+Whereupon the old man laughed. “In that case,” he said, “I must
+conclude it was not to my credit.”
+
+Without replying Bill unfolded her map. “This is the footpath,” she
+said, and began tracing it with her finger.
+
+“I don’t want to see your map, child.” He was looking curiously at the
+small brown figure. “Look up,” he said, “I would rather see your face.
+Tell me where you learnt to sing and laugh and whistle to the birds all
+in a breath.”
+
+“I don’t know; I suppose I was made like that,” she still persistently
+spread out the map. “My cousin Polly,” she explained, without glancing
+up, “says my father was a singer, a poor one, you know, not anything
+much, but perhaps I inherited it from him. Sometimes, though, Polly
+says he was a ventriloquist or even a clown; I don’t think she really
+knows.--See, here is the footpath.”
+
+“Whose is this map?” Mr. Harborough asked; he had taken it from her and
+was examining it through a gold-rimmed glass.
+
+“Mine.”
+
+“But you did not mark that path; it was done years ago.”
+
+“Yes, when the map was made.”
+
+“No, certainly not; it was put in afterwards, that is easy to see. Even
+if I did not know that, as no such path exists, it could not have been
+printed then or at any other time.”
+
+He dropped his glass and handed the map back to Bill who, after looking
+at it a little, began to see that he was correct.
+
+“Then there is no path here after all,” she said in a tone of woful
+disappointment. “I should like to know who marked it on the map?”
+
+“So should I, so should I very much. Where did you get the thing?”
+
+“I found it in an old book of my grandmother’s.”
+
+“Your grandmother?” he said impatiently. “What was your grandmother,
+who was she, how did she come by the book and the map, whose were they
+before?”
+
+Bill could give him no information, and he held out his hand for the
+map again. She gave it to him and he examined it critically. “There
+were very few people who could have put that in,” he said thoughtfully.
+
+“Then there is a path!” Bill exclaimed.
+
+“No, there is not, and there never was. Come with me, just a few steps.
+There,--now look down, your path should pass the pond by that stream,
+do you see? That boggy place, that is where it is marked to go; that
+place has always been the same. What do you think of men who chose that
+way by preference,--is it likely they would do it? What should you
+think of them?”
+
+“I should think they were in a great hurry, and perhaps, that it was
+night,” and Bill looked down into the marshy, overgrown hollow, at a
+loss to understand.
+
+Her companion’s voice aroused her: “What about this grandmother of
+yours?” he asked abruptly.
+
+“I don’t know anything; she has been dead a long time, but I will find
+out if I can.”
+
+“Will you? Perhaps you think you will also find out about this
+mysterious path?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+Bill was a painfully persistent person. It may have been that Mr.
+Harborough thought so, or it may have been that he still wished to keep
+her to enliven the tedium of the day, for he said coolly: “I will tell
+you if you like. There is no path, it is true, but the way marked on
+your map was taken one night by men in a hurry to reach the chapel of
+ease further on in these grounds.”
+
+“They made a path for themselves!” Bill cried. “They were in a hurry
+and went the nearest way! What were they doing? Why did they want to go
+to the chapel?”
+
+Mr. Harborough laughed at her eagerness. “My dear young lady,” he said,
+“I will explain if you wish, only we must really walk on. I am sorry to
+say I can no longer stand an indefinite time even to discuss anything
+so romantic as you seem to think this tale. Let us go on,--this
+way. Now for the romance: to begin with, do you know a certain old
+tradition in connection with carrying a corpse? It may linger still,
+though I hardly think it, but at the time I am speaking of it was not
+infrequently believed that the way along which a body had been carried
+for burial became a path for ever, became what is called a right of
+way. Mind, this is tradition I am telling you, not fact; it is not fact
+and it never was. If twenty bodies were carried through my grounds
+for burial no right of way would be established, but at one time some
+people firmly believed such a thing to be the case.”
+
+“Then the men were carrying a body?” Bill’s face was flushed with
+excitement. “And the person who marked my map knew about it and
+believed the tradition?”
+
+“Yes. The question is, who marked your map?”
+
+“Did not many people know about carrying the body that way?”
+
+“Not many, and certainly very few could have marked your map with the
+accuracy with which I believe it to be marked.”
+
+“The burying was private, then?”
+
+Bill was anxious to make the most of her romance. Her companion watched
+her eagerness with an amused face, and as they came suddenly on to
+a gravel path, he said with an air of impenetrable mystery: “Very
+private, I should say, at that time, very private indeed.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+HARBOROUGH OF GURNETT.
+
+
+It was an axiom of Polly’s that if you can’t be clever, you had better
+be a fool. This, needless to state, was first said in reference to
+Bill who, Polly considered, fell into the last category and fell there
+comfortably. “Providence, or something else, helps fools,” was Polly’s
+opinion, “while it leaves moderately sensible people to shift for
+themselves. Things always turn out right for fools. Whatever muddle
+Bill blundered into, I believe she would blunder out of it again not
+one bit the worse.” The day that Bill went in search of the right of
+way at Wood Hall was possibly an illustration of this faculty; for on
+that occasion, though she had the ill-luck to blunder on the owner
+of the property, she was not ignominiously turned out of the place,
+threatened with prosecution and other penalties; on the contrary, she
+was--“Well, treated in a way in which I should not have been treated,”
+Polly said with an indignant sniff. Wherein she certainly spoke the
+truth, but then, as Bella pointed out, Bill was not Polly; though what
+Bill was that she should please the master of Wood Hall, neither could
+quite say. They did not know him.
+
+After all, there was not much to know, only a lonely old man who had
+outlived friends and health and amusements. He had come to Wood Hall
+to die, he said, for it was well fitting that he, the last of the
+family in a direct line, should die in the neglected home. Certainly
+he had never used it much as a home; perhaps he had not cared to do
+so in reduced state, perhaps, more likely, he had little interest in
+a country life. One autumn, a long time ago, he had spent a month or
+two at the old hall, which was only some five miles from the house
+where the high sheriff for the year was living. People said that
+this proximity had something to do with Mr. Harborough’s visit; and
+certainly there was some scandal about the sheriff’s wife which had the
+effect of closing the doors of the neighbouring gentry upon him for a
+time, at least of those who still cherished certain provincial notions
+of morality. But that was all a very old tale, a tale almost forgotten
+now. Miss Minchin and her compeers might recall it, but to the younger
+generation Mr. Harborough and his doings were little more than a
+name, for since that time Wood Hall had seen but very little of him.
+Indeed, he affected a cynical indifference for the old house, which
+was possibly genuine enough, though it had not prevented his coming
+to pass his last lonely days there. Lonely they were, and tedious he
+often found them; tedious when he was ill, more tedious still when he
+was well. It was to this tedium, and to the fact that he was moderately
+well that day, that Bill owed the interest she had for him; that and,
+perhaps, some little charm her youth had for the old rake.
+
+Whatever may have been the cause, certainly she did interest him,
+for when he led her through the wood and out on to the path he showed
+no inclination to let her go. The path was a weed-grown gravel sweep,
+dividing the wood on the one side from a shrubbery on the other. Here a
+man with a wheeled chair was waiting the arrival of his master.
+
+“Oh,” Bill exclaimed as she saw the path between the trees, “I have
+come out at the wrong place! I had better go back.”
+
+“And lose your way, and trespass still further on my property?”
+
+“I will be very careful.”
+
+“I dare say.” The old man seated himself in the chair as he spoke.
+“Don’t you think you have trespassed enough for one day?”
+
+Bill did not consider that she had exactly trespassed, but she was not
+sure that she could make anyone else, say a magistrate, take the same
+view; neither was she sure what the penalty for trespass might be, so
+she only said: “I am very sorry; I thought the map was right, though I
+certainly did not see a path.”
+
+“On the strength of the thought you went to look? Yes? Well, supposing
+I let you off this time--”
+
+“I will never do it again.”
+
+“--Let you off, I say, on a condition.”
+
+“What condition?” Bill asked cautiously.
+
+“That as a penance for coming here, you finish that song you began in
+the wood.”
+
+“Is that all? I’ll certainly do that. It is not a real song, only a
+verse of poetry and I don’t sing it quite right. The last line should
+be ‘In winter rest is sweet,’ only I like it best the other way. Shall
+I sing it now?” And receiving an answer in the affirmative, she sang
+without more ado:
+
+ “There’s laughter for the May-time,
+ The morning of the year;
+ There’s work for all the day-time,
+ When summer’s noon is here;
+ The victor’s crown of glory
+ The harvest home shall greet;
+ But after life’s long story
+ There’s the devil’s bill to meet!
+ The devil’s bill--”
+
+she sang till all the wood around her seemed full of laughing voices--
+
+ “The devil’s bill, the devil’s bill, the devil’s bill to meet!”
+
+Seeing that the condition laid upon her was a light one she felt bound
+to fulfil it to the uttermost and to do her best, using all the tricks
+of voice and tone that she knew. In this laudable endeavour her success
+was such that even the stoical attendant with the chair, who, it might
+have been presumed, had outlived astonishment in his master’s service,
+looked at her in surprise, while Mr. Harborough himself was delighted.
+
+“Bravo!” he exclaimed. “What a voice it is! They ought to put you on
+the stage, the variety-stage.”
+
+Bill was gratified, but not unduly moved. She had a tolerably clear
+idea that her vocal tricks had not much real value, and, as she wanted
+to get home, she did not care to stay for more compliments.
+
+“You see, I have got to get back to Ashelton,” so she concluded her
+explanation.
+
+“Ashelton?” Mr. Harborough exclaimed; “you cannot get there till after
+three o’clock. You surely do not mean to go fasting? You must not do
+that. You will perhaps give me the pleasure of your company at lunch?
+Yes? You had better; they will have eaten up everything by the time you
+get home. Come, you must not say no; that song deserves something more
+than a wander in the wood. Little Miss Tucker sang for her supper,--no,
+for her lunch. I promise that you shall not be late in getting home,
+the carriage can take you as far as you like on your return journey.”
+
+Bill was not troubled with many even rudimentary ideas of propriety.
+The sandwiches were little more than a memory, and, besides,--a reason
+which influenced her most of all--if she accepted the invitation she
+would see Wood Hall. Consequently she did accept and, walking beside
+the chair, accompanied Mr. Harborough to the house.
+
+What was it like? Bill sometimes tried to describe it, but she never
+succeeded, and always ended by saying: “If it were mine, I would never,
+never give it up; I would fight for every brick of it, every timber,
+every stone. I would sell everything to keep it; it would break my
+heart to let it go after it had belonged to my people for so many
+generations. It is a house that is just weighed down with years; I
+think it must be almost awful to have all those years behind you.”
+
+It was with a hushed sense of the awe belonging to a great house which
+had reached its declining days that Bill entered the wide arched
+doorway. She had said, as they came from the wood, how much she wanted
+to see the big hall of local fame, so, by Mr. Harborough’s orders,
+they went by the long west front of the house. It was a great pile,
+built of bricks which were neither purple nor red, the tint which
+only the centuries can mix, with rows of mullioned windows, set not
+too straight by the hands of Tudor builders, and pressed yet more
+aslant by the weight of time upon them. Above, was a roof high-gabled,
+many-peaked, running this way and that; below, stretching to right and
+left, a terraced walk led to gardens where yew hedges and pleached
+alleys recalled the days of hooped petticoats and powdered heads, or
+even of older times when the men of trunk-hose and mighty hand cast
+bowls on the smooth turfed green. But everywhere was decay; even the
+spring sunshine and the glad singing birds could not destroy the sense
+of death and decay,--blistered paint and lichened stone, sagging roof
+and darkened windows, grass on the terrace, weeds between the stones,
+unclipped hedges, and rose-walks a tangle of thorns; and the great,
+sad, grand old house looking down on it all.
+
+To this place Bill came, out of the spring sunshine and the living air
+into the great hall. It was not quite so great as tradition said, but
+still of size enough to tempt some mad Harborough of bygone days to try
+to turn his coach in its width. Vast it was, with its dark walls hung
+with tapestry rotten past repair, its polished floor, and its fireplace
+where a man might well share the hearth with the logs and not then be
+overnear the blaze. Above the mantelpiece were the arms of the house,
+the house that had seen its best days; the dragons’ heads, deep cut in
+polished wood, grinned down malignantly on the little intruder whom the
+Harborough of to-day had brought from his woods. She paused a moment,
+awed by the sense of past greatness, by the weight of the years that
+lay behind, by the thought of the stately women who had passed that way
+before her. Then she went on, and as she went her light step gained a
+stateliness, her figure a dignity which well became the place and made
+old Harborough ask himself if the child had not some good blood in her
+after all.
+
+He found himself pondering over the same question again later on, for
+Bill, like most born mimics, often unconsciously imitated those she
+was with, frequently, without being aware of it, catching her manner
+from theirs, sometimes shaping even her speech and accent according to
+those of the person to whom she spoke. Thus, as Mr. Harborough treated
+her with an almost exaggerated courtesy, she returned him the same,
+and, since she was keenly conscious of the dignity belonging to the old
+house, she shaped her behaviour in accordance with it. As for her host,
+he was half surprised, half amused, the amusement growing, however, as
+he led her to talk. Nobody had found her conversation amusing before;
+Carrie and Alice, though they sometimes laughed, more often professed
+a contempt for her and all her sayings, even while they half feared
+her many mocking voices. Certainly no one had laughed at her thoughts
+and replies; she could not herself always see a reason for her host’s
+laughter, but it was plain that he did. He was old, she thought, and
+therefore easily pleased, lonely and therefore not very critical; but
+his appreciation encouraged her, the wine (the first she had ever
+tasted) excited her, and she talked as she had never talked before, he
+leading her on till she had bewitched herself:
+
+“I tried to amuse him a little while, poor old man,” she told Polly
+meekly afterwards. “I really owed him something for the good food he
+gave me. Still, I think I did it more because I liked it than for
+anything else.”
+
+To which Polly, having but small opinion of Bill’s powers of amusing,
+only made reply, “I dare say.”
+
+Mr. Harborough, however, who had lived in seclusion so long now that a
+small thing entertained him, vowed, far on in the afternoon, that Bill
+was the best of good company. In acknowledgment of which compliment
+Bill swept him a curtsey, with three fingers on her lips in the fashion
+of the china ladies on Miss Minchin’s mantelpiece. Then she said she
+must go home, and in so saying, it is to be feared that the imp in her
+got the upper hand, prompting her to the character she loved, for the
+tone and manner of her words suggested Mr. Johnson.
+
+Carrie and Alice did not like Bill’s mimicry, but Mr. Harborough was
+otherwise, and he recognised the original almost before Bill was aware
+of it herself.
+
+“I must come and hear that parson of yours,” he laughed.
+
+“Why don’t you?” Bill suddenly became serious. “There is the Harborough
+chapel in Ashelton church; what is the good of having a chapel all to
+yourself if you never use it?”
+
+“I do not belong to the Church of England.”
+
+Bill remembered Miss Minchin’s words. “Oh,” she began apologetically,
+but then a magnificent idea occurred to her or to some spirit of
+mischief that possessed her. She cast a quick glance at Harborough, her
+eyes ablaze with light.
+
+“What is it now?” he asked.
+
+“Nothing; at least, you would not do it--I don’t believe you could.”
+
+“Try me,” he answered; “lay your commands upon me and they are obeyed.”
+
+“It is not a command; but it would be,--I should like to see what would
+happen.”
+
+“In what case?”
+
+“If you had a service in your chapel. I don’t know if you could, but I
+should almost think so; it is your own; you could have a Roman Catholic
+service there as well as we could have a Protestant one in our part,
+couldn’t you? I should like to see what would happen if you did!”
+
+“I should probably be prosecuted,” Harborough said; “that is what would
+most likely happen.”
+
+Bill sighed. “I never thought of that,” she said.
+
+“Did you not?” he answered. “Neither should I if I wanted the service,
+or rather, wanted to see what would happen.”
+
+“You would risk it?”
+
+“What will you give me if I do?”
+
+Harborough had little respect for either religion, less still for his
+neighbours’ feelings. As for Bill, neither thought occurred to her; the
+thing appealed to her as many an act, incomprehensible to a man for its
+folly or its wanton mischief, appeals to the superabundant energy of
+boyhood. It was simply a desire to see what would happen, a sporting
+appreciation of an explosion with no realisation of consequences
+painful to other people.
+
+“What would you give me?”
+
+“What do you want?”
+
+He hesitated a moment, and then said: “Come and see me again, and we
+will talk it over.”
+
+She agreed readily: “Yes, if Theresa will let me.”
+
+“Theresa must let you.”
+
+Bill thought it was probable that she would and said so, but Mr.
+Harborough, possibly judging from a wider experience, was not so sure
+and did not seem content with the arrangement.
+
+“Why ask?” he said.
+
+“Because I must; she won’t mind.”
+
+“But supposing she does?”
+
+“She won’t; I shall be able to come.”
+
+“You think so? Then let us make this bargain: if I do as you suggest,
+you will come once more to talk over the terms.”
+
+“Very well; I will come once, she is sure to let me; but when I come,
+supposing I don’t like your terms, supposing they don’t seem fair to
+me, what am I to do? Must I fulfil them?”
+
+He told her that she need not, laughing at her caution, as a servant
+announced that the carriage was waiting.
+
+So Bill took her leave and drove away in state, though she did not
+think it necessary to complete her journey in the Harborough carriage;
+in fact she dismissed it at the entrance of one of the lanes and went
+the rest of the way home on foot.
+
+“Did you have a nice walk?” Theresa asked her young cousin when she met
+her at the door.
+
+“Oh, yes, glorious! I have had such a good time. I went into Wood Hall,
+not the grounds only, but the house too. You never saw such a place; it
+is,--I can’t describe it.”
+
+“Into Wood Hall!” Theresa exclaimed in astonishment.
+
+“Yes, and I saw Mr. Harborough; he was ever so kind, not the least like
+what you would expect--”
+
+And then out came the story of Bill’s adventures, a brief and rather
+incoherent story with some things left out and some told twice,
+and, naturally, no mention of the surprise in store for the people
+of Ashelton. That was the only thing she intentionally suppressed,
+but unintentionally she suppressed many details and most of the
+conversation, though enough was told to puzzle and disturb Theresa.
+
+“Bill, I don’t know what to say. I am sure you ought not to have gone.
+I wish I had never let you go that walk.”
+
+Theresa, completely astonished by Bill’s tale, now for the first time
+realised the responsibility of her charge. The charge herself had no
+idea of the nature of her offence. “Ought not to have gone?” she said.
+“Why not?”
+
+“Because--because you ought not. I wonder you did not know; you should
+have known by instinct.”
+
+Theresa’s sense of the enormity of Bill’s conduct was increasing, but
+with it there was also increasing a recognition of the difficulty of
+making it clear to the offender; certainly if she depended on Bill’s
+instinct she was not likely to be successful, for, as Polly had rightly
+said, Bill possessed little of that in connection with matters of
+social behaviour.
+
+“Well, for a moment I did wonder if I ought, because, of course, I had
+on my old dress and the place is so splendid.”
+
+“That is not the reason at all. You ought not to have gone,--I mean, he
+should not have asked you. He would not have done so if he had been a
+nice man; he could not have done so properly.”
+
+“Oh, yes he did--”
+
+“I mean, he could not have asked you with propriety. You know he cannot
+think you--did not ask you as an equal; besides, you must have heard
+about him, the sort of man he is.”
+
+“About his being bad? Miss Minchin did say that, and certainly he did
+say himself that he had the devil’s bill to meet.”
+
+Bill did not think it wise to explain, in answer to Theresa’s
+exclamation, that she herself had supplied the expression. She let that
+pass and Theresa began: “If you thought him all that--”
+
+“But I am not sure he is bad exactly; and if he were, I don’t see what
+harm it would do. Besides, is he bad? Of course I shouldn’t say he
+was good in our sense of the word, but then there are so many senses.
+He gave me the idea of being like a person who had lost his taste for
+all except one kind of thing. You can’t blame a person for not liking
+strawberry jam when he can only properly taste peppers; I should think,
+in a way, he could only taste peppers; and I should not be surprised if
+he had tried them very hot.”
+
+“Don’t talk nonsense, Bill,” Theresa said severely; and Bill, acting
+on the suggestion, did not talk at all, except when she explained to
+her cousin that she had promised to go to Wood Hall once again. This
+Theresa naturally forbade, absolutely refusing to permit it on any
+condition whatever. Bill did not press the point, nor go into too many
+details, for, as she said to herself, “Perhaps he won’t do it, and
+then I sha’n’t have to go after all.” If he did, it would be then time
+enough to settle with Theresa, and arrange some satisfactory compromise
+between breaking her own word on the one hand and her cousin’s command
+on the other.
+
+But would he do it? Bill wondered about it once or twice during the
+week. Would he be able to get a priest to read the service for him?
+She had a very vague idea as to how he would set about it. He had said
+something about knowing a man, and had smiled when he said it, not a
+very nice smile, but it looked rather as if he thought the man would do
+as he was asked. So Bill wondered, and the week passed quietly.
+
+Sunday came, a still, peaceful spring day. April was fairly in now,
+every bush and tree was waking to the fact even in the grey weather.
+Sunday was grey, quiet and calm, but a Sunday long remembered in
+Ashelton. The congregation assembled in church at the usual time,
+wearing the usual clothes, for it was not yet Easter. There was nothing
+much to look at, but from force of habit the congregation looked at
+each other. Bill, from her corner seat, looked across the old pews to
+the Harborough chapel. Was he coming? The clock began to strike eleven.
+No, he was not coming after all, he--was he?--she watched. The small
+side door of the chapel was opened from without and into the fretted
+twilight an old man stepped--he had come!
+
+A great smile of satisfaction spread over Bill’s face; a pleasant
+sensation of excitement and expectancy took possession of her. To
+tell the truth, something like a thrill of excitement ran through the
+whole congregation, though they expected nothing, at least nothing
+definite. Miss Minchin said afterwards that she wondered what was going
+to happen when she saw him come in, but then the saying came after
+the event. At the time she certainly looked earnestly enough to have
+seen anything there was to see, though that did not amount to a great
+deal. Mr. Harborough, attended by his manservant, entered; the verger,
+who hastened forward for the purpose, disposed of the servant in a
+side seat and shut the master in the great front pew. The congregation
+stared intently; Mr. Harborough stared in return with the vacant stare
+of a superior being,--they had always said he was very haughty; his eye
+met Bill’s for a moment, and a faint smile of recognition passed over
+his face, but the general public did not notice it.
+
+The clock had ceased striking, and the first notes of the organ filled
+the church with a soft vibrating sound. Forth from the new vestry on
+the right came the choir and clergy; forth from the old vestry on the
+left, built originally for the sole use of the Harborough chapel, came
+a priest with shaven face set in a mask of stolid endurance. Bill,
+with the wanton cruelty of youth, saw the enduring face, but, not
+recognising its pain, felt no compunction, no pity for the man forced
+by some threat he feared to a task hateful to him. She felt nothing
+at all except a thrilling excitement. For a moment the event was
+all she had expected. All around her she could feel the mute horror
+and astonishment of the congregation; she could see it uncontrolled
+on their faces, so comical, she thought, in their blank, speechless
+amazement at this unparalleled conduct of the lord of the manor. At the
+end of the aisle was the verger, motionless, dumb; in their pews, the
+churchwardens, alike dumb, incapable of action, watching, fascinated,
+the rival clergy who, owing to the situation of the altar in the
+Harborough chapel, were hidden from each other’s sight by the wooden
+screen. No one in the chancel knew of those in the chapel; no one in
+the chapel showed any sign of knowledge of those in the chancel; all
+knelt in silence. But as the last choir-boy on the right rose from his
+knees, he leaned a little forward and saw the priest beyond the screen.
+His eyes grew round with astonishment; he almost fell forward on his
+head in his eagerness to be quite sure; then the situation struck him
+as it struck Bill, and doubled him up in spasms of suppressed laughter.
+
+“When the wicked man turneth away from his wickedness,”--Mr. Johnson
+began, at the same time becoming aware of an unusual rustle and
+movement among the hitherto spell-bound people.
+
+The priest should, no doubt, have begun to read at the same time, but
+he did not. Mr. Harborough apologised to Bill afterwards for the way in
+which he failed in his part, for he hesitated and waited a moment. In
+that moment the verger, a shrewd old brickmaker, hastened up the aisle,
+and, without waiting for orders from the churchwardens, delivered some
+whispered information to Mr. Dane.
+
+There was a breathless pause; then low but distinct came the voice of
+the priest,--“_Introibo ad altare Dei_--”
+
+Miss Minchin started violently and looked about her in an awed
+fashion. She had seen all that had passed, but she hardly thought, as
+she said afterwards, that he would really venture to hold a service
+in the parish church. Mr. Dane passed quietly between the slender
+pillars of the side screen and approached the priest. A second
+whispered conversation, a glance, possibly an appealing glance, at Mr.
+Harborough, and Mr. Dane went on to him. Mr. Johnson, in the absence
+of the rector, went on with the service, but when Mr. Dane returned to
+his place he silenced his curate with a glance, and the priest, either
+more courteous or more sure of a hearing, did not attempt to begin his
+reading anew.
+
+Mr. Dane turned to the congregation. “My brethren,” he said, “our
+neighbour, Mr. Harborough, has expressed a wish to hear the mass read
+in his chapel of St. Mary Magdalen. As the hour he has chosen for the
+reading coincides with that of our morning-service, and as both cannot
+be conducted simultaneously in a seemly manner, I ask you to wait with
+me while the reverend Father reads the mass, which may God bless both
+to him and his hearers.”
+
+No one left the church; to a man they stood by their rector, though
+there were those among them who had strong feelings and would have much
+liked to enter a protest. The priest turned back to his mass-book;
+his hands shook a little, for the rector’s words had distressed him
+curiously; but Mr. Dane composed himself to listen with quiet dignity.
+
+And deep hidden in the shadow of a high old pew was one whose grief
+and self-abasement knew no bounds. The event had not been what she had
+anticipated; things looked quite different now.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF GURNETT.
+
+
+There can be no doubt that few things are so well concealed as the
+perfectly obvious, no course of conduct so little observed as that
+which is open to all observation. If Bill had wished to conceal her
+doings on Sunday afternoon she would probably have been found out;
+since she was perfectly indifferent as to who knew what she did, no one
+discovered it. If she had been anxious for concealment she would have
+gone to the rectory by way of the field-path, and would inevitably have
+been seen by Miss Minchin and catechised by her in due season. But,
+since she was far too absorbed in other matters to care what any one
+thought, she went by the public way and no one knew it; no one, till
+Mr. Dane’s old housekeeper admitted her and took her to the study where
+Mr. Dane, but lately returned from a children’s service at Ashelton
+End, sat before his beloved piano.
+
+The rector of Ashelton knew every one in his parish and, to a certain
+extent, all about every one; consequently he knew of Mrs. Morton’s aunt
+and sister and cousins in Wrugglesby. To be sure, he knew about them
+before Theresa was Mrs. Morton, for Miss Brownlow was an institution of
+such long standing that he, being also an institution of long standing,
+could hardly fail to know of her. Still, this knowledge did not give
+him much information about Bill, of whom he only knew that she was a
+niece of Miss Brownlow and a cousin of Mrs. Morton. At one time he
+had tried to find out more about her, though not from any personal
+interest, for he did not know her even by sight then. It was on account
+of her name that he had made the enquiries, having good reason to
+remember the name of Alardy. However, he could discover nothing to
+couple her with the other Alardy, nor indeed had he been very hopeful
+of discovering anything. It was the familiarity of the name that had
+tempted him; and it was this familiarity which caused him an almost
+painful start when she was announced on that Sunday afternoon. He did
+not know her, nor her business, nor could he guess what it might be.
+
+Bill did not leave him long in doubt; her very face betrayed her; there
+was about her whole manner a contrition and self-abasement almost
+suggestive of a dog in disgrace. “I have come to tell you I did it,”
+she said, standing in the centre of the room; and the old rector at
+once perceived that he was to hear a confession, the enormity of which
+seemed terrible to the offender.
+
+“Sit down,” he said kindly. “There is something you want to tell me,
+something which seems very bad? Let us hear what is the matter, and we
+will see what can be done.”
+
+“Nothing can be done or undone.” She spoke with absolute conviction. “I
+want to tell you in case you should blame anyone else, and because I
+owe it to you,--that is the reason. The thing can’t be altered now.”
+And then she plunged straight into her confession. “It is about this
+morning’s service. It was all my fault; I got Mr. Harborough to have
+it.”
+
+Mr. Dane had known the owner of Wood Hall more years than he had
+known Ashelton. He was considerably surprised by Bill’s confession,
+considerably more surprised than he had been by the affair of the
+morning.
+
+“You induced Mr. Harborough to have the mass read?” he asked. “You? But
+why?--how?”
+
+“I thought of it,” she answered, “and,--he did it. This is how it
+happened. I was in the wood, and he found me and took me to the house
+to amuse him a little while, and I amused him as well as I could. It
+was rather like the daughter of Herodias dancing before Herod, though
+I did not dance, he did not ask me; but I sang and talked and pleased
+him. It is true he did not ask me at the end what I would like, but
+when I thought of this he half promised to do it; and now,--he has done
+it.”
+
+“Then it was your idea? He did it to please you, or rather because you
+asked him?”
+
+“Yes; it was my fault; he would not have done it if it had not been for
+me. I suppose,” she added doubtfully, “he hardly knew what it would be.”
+
+Mr. Dane had other opinions, but he only said: “Perhaps we had better
+not consider his action in the matter. I have known him long enough
+to be tempted to judge him as one man is sometimes tempted to judge
+another; but we will not do it. Let us talk about you; you persuaded
+him, or at least suggested the idea?”
+
+“Yes; I suggested,--I did not persuade, I only suggested; but I had
+pleased him first so that he was ready to do as I wished; it was almost
+as good as persuading.”
+
+Her eyes were honest, but the rector was perplexed. He could not quite
+understand the case; the nature of the offence and the manner of the
+committal were clear enough; but the nature of the offender puzzled
+him. “Tell me,” he said, “what made you suggest such a thing; why did
+you do it?”
+
+“I thought it would be--” Bill hesitated for a word,--“not exactly
+fun, though still funny,--it was, too, at first”; and in spite of her
+genuine penitence a smile stole over her face at the recollection. “I
+believe I wanted to see what would happen more than anything else,” she
+concluded after a pause.
+
+“Were you satisfied with what did happen?”
+
+“No; oh, no, no! If I had thought of that I would never have suggested
+it; I never thought about hurting you or the poor priest. When I saw
+how you took it, and how he hated what he had got to do, I felt as if
+I should like to get up and tell Mr. Harborough to stop. But it would
+have been no use, I am sure,--I had done it and I could not undo it.”
+
+“No,” he answered her very gravely, “no, you could not.”
+
+There was a moment’s silence, and Bill for the first time in her life
+faced the irrevocable. At last the old man spoke again. “And it never
+occurred to you,” he said, “that it would be painful to other people?
+Tell me, did another and a higher consideration never occur to you
+either?”
+
+“That it was irreverent? I did not think of it at the time; now, of
+course, I know it was; but I really did not mean to be, and I think God
+must know. That is the best of it; you need never pretend or explain
+to Him. He knows, but other people,--I am very, very sorry.”
+
+Mr. Dane pressed that point no further; perhaps the offender was
+beginning to explain herself to him a little, and so he judged it
+unwise. He led her to talk of the events which preceded her suggestion;
+she told him all readily, the walk to Gurnett, the ramble in the wood,
+even her own rapture when alone there.
+
+“And to think,” she concluded, “that I should have felt like that,--as
+if the whole world were holy--and then, a little later think of such a
+thing!”
+
+“I know,” he said, “I know. The human mind is a very strange thing, and
+evil thoughts, in spite of what some people say to the contrary, are
+perhaps the very strangest things which ever come there.”
+
+“Yes,”--and she drew a deep breath. “I was so glad to be alive that
+morning,” she went on; “I was glad about everything; I was fairly crazy
+with,--with life I think. I can’t explain, and I am afraid you don’t
+understand.”
+
+Did he not? It was a great many years ago, but he too knew what it
+meant--life and the joy of living, the wanton madness of youth. He
+understood so well that he said little more about the act she deplored
+but could not undo. Instead, he tried to prepare for the future, and
+he prepared by asking some few questions about the past, about life
+at Ashelton, life at Wrugglesby with Miss Brownlow, poor dear Miss
+Brownlow. And again she told him readily, but her answers only deepened
+the wrinkles in his forehead. She thought they were for her wrong
+doings, but she confessed them all bravely, including her enjoyment of
+the prayer-meeting.
+
+“I liked it,” she admitted, “because Mr. Johnson was so fine when he
+talked about faith, the evidence of the spirit, and the things which
+are not as they are, and all the rest of it. I suppose it is wrong? I
+have not imitated him very much yet; I will try not. That is the chief
+reason why I liked the prayer-meeting and why I went to the second
+one. There was another reason,--I liked driving there. It was such a
+splendid evening, one of those that make you feel as if you would like
+to live for ever.”
+
+He ruffled his hair thoughtfully, and looked at her with a still
+troubled brow.
+
+“You don’t understand?” she said, mistaking him. “I don’t mean eternal
+life that we--that Mr. Johnson talks about; but never to leave the
+world. It is so beautiful, so,--so dear! I can’t”--and there was almost
+a sob in her voice--“I can’t bear to think I shall have to die and lose
+sight of it all; that the thrushes will sing and I shall not hear them,
+the leaves come and go, the suns rise and set, and I never see them. It
+is sad to think how much I have lost already, though inside myself I
+always feel as if I had not really lost it, as if I had been there all
+the time from the beginning and seen all the changes. You know what I
+mean; you can learn lots about the past but nothing about the future;
+nothing helps you about that, and by-and-bye there will be, must be,
+more earth-history--it does not seem possible that I shall not know; I
+do not feel as if I could die!”
+
+She looked up, appealing almost passionately for mercy on this first
+time that her soul had been betrayed into words. Perhaps the old rector
+was a lenient judge; his eyes were almost wistful as he said half to
+himself: “And you are never ill, and never tired.”
+
+“I never have been.”
+
+“And you have not nearly enough to do--” he was speaking solely to
+himself now--“God help you!”
+
+It is possible Mr. Dane thought this was a case for man’s help also; at
+all events he did not dismiss it with some brief fatherly advice and a
+blessing. He talked to Bill as he had not talked before to anyone in
+Ashelton; he, who, as it were, kept all on the outskirts of his life,
+spoke of those things which were the innermost shrine of his faith,
+the things which, like the priests of old, he believed should be kept
+for the initiated. And Bill was not initiated. Possibly she did not
+quite understand him; but it did not matter, she would do so some day.
+Possibly he did not quite understand her; how should he with all the
+gap of years between them? Nevertheless he treated the girlish fancies
+delicately, almost as holy things.
+
+In the end he set her a penance, for, though a believer in spiritual
+repentance, he also held that work was very good for the soul; so for
+her wrong-doing he set her a task, at least he said it was for that.
+
+“What shall I do?” she asked eagerly.
+
+“You know that long bed at the bottom of Mrs. Morton’s garden? Dig it
+up. First pull up all the weeds and burn them, then dig it up, dig
+deep, put in manure and plant potatoes. I do not think Mrs. Morton will
+object; I fancy she would let you do what you like in her garden.”
+
+“Yes, oh yes, she won’t mind. I will begin to-morrow morning; is there
+nothing else? I shall like doing that.”
+
+“Do that first,” he said, and she promised, not questioning his right
+to set her a task nor the fitness of the one he set. In fact, so
+satisfied did she seem with his wisdom that, just as she was leaving,
+she told him of the promise to go to Wood Hall again and of the
+difficulties attending it.
+
+“I promised,” she said, “thinking Theresa would let me go, and now she
+won’t; but I must still go.”
+
+“You should not have promised;” and he looked very grave.
+
+“But I have; I thought Theresa would not mind.”
+
+“She is quite right; nevertheless one must keep a promise.”
+
+It is to be feared that here spoke the man dowered with family
+tradition, and not the clergyman and spiritual adviser. The sentiment,
+however, was one which Bill understood. “Yes,” she said, “I must go.”
+
+“But not alone,” he answered; “she must go with you.”
+
+This Bill did not understand; she was also very certain that Theresa
+would not agree, and proceeded to explain the difficulty.
+
+“She would take you, surely she would drive with you?” Mr. Dane
+persisted.
+
+But Bill shook her head. “She would say the promise was wrong and could
+not be kept, and she would think she was encouraging wrong by going;
+that is her way of looking at it.”
+
+Mr. Dane felt he was brought face to face with a difficulty, but he
+only repeated firmly, “You must not go alone.” Perhaps he could think
+of nothing else to say.
+
+Fortunately just then Bill thought of a possible way out of the
+trouble. “Do you think it would do if Polly were to drive with me?” she
+asked. “Polly is my eldest cousin. I should have to leave her outside
+the house, but I would not be many minutes gone.”
+
+Mr. Dane did not know Polly, but he thought she would do. He strongly
+recommended also that she should, if possible, accompany Bill into the
+house. Bill was not at all sure that Polly would do this, and she was
+very sure indeed that she did not want her to do it; however, she could
+not explain all this to Mr. Dane in the time now at her disposal, so
+she prepared to say good-bye.
+
+“There is one thing I should like to ask you before you go,” said Mr.
+Dane, looking at her thoughtfully as she stood by his chair. “It is
+about yourself.”
+
+“I will tell you if I can,” she answered, “but I think I have already
+told you all there is to tell.” Indeed, she had told him a great deal,
+far more than she was aware of, but it was not quite what he meant.
+
+“Your mother was Miss Brownlow’s sister?” he asked.
+
+“Yes, the youngest, Kate; but I do not remember her at all; she died
+when I was very little.”
+
+Mr. Dane looked at her thoughtfully. “I should doubt if you were like
+your mother,” he said; “you are not at all like your cousins, or Miss
+Brownlow either.”
+
+“No, I am not like them; sometimes Polly says I am like my father; but
+she did not know him, and she only says it when she is angry. I don’t
+think I can be like him really, except that I am dark. He was dark, but
+then he was very clever and fascinating; Auntie says he bewitched my
+mother, so that she would marry him in spite of what they all said. I
+believe they did not think him good enough for her. I don’t quite know
+what he was; he used to come sometimes to sing at the town where she
+lived, but he was not a grand professional singer. Some people said he
+was half a gipsy; he loved wandering about.”
+
+“Do you remember him?”
+
+“Not clearly; he did not live long after my mother; still I remember
+him better than I do her. I can just remember going about with him, or
+at least I think I can; it is difficult to tell which is memory and
+which fancy, it is all so long ago. I came to Auntie when I was very
+small.”
+
+“And remained there ever since?”
+
+“Yes, remained there ever since,” and she held out her hand to him.
+
+He took it. “Good-bye,” he said, “good-bye, little maiden. Do they call
+you Katie, too?”
+
+“No; Bill,--Wilhelmina.”
+
+“Wilhelmina!”
+
+Perhaps the other Alardy had been called Wilhelmina; the old man’s face
+almost looked as if it were so, or as if some ghost had sprung to life
+at the name. But Bill did not see his face; for a moment he stood in
+the shadow of the door, then turned and went stooping into the dimness
+of the passage; and she went onward down the road, thinking only how
+she could compass to-morrow’s visit.
+
+Polly was shrewd enough after her fashion, and if she saw Mr.
+Harborough would, Bill felt certain, find out more than was desirable
+concerning her cousin’s share in the reading of the mass. Therefore
+Polly must not set foot inside Wood Hall. Bill had some respect for
+her shrewdness, though she was depending on being able to outwit it
+when she said she would get her chaperonage for the intended call. “But
+I’ll get her,” Bill assured herself as she walked home that Sunday
+afternoon; and the chances were that she would, for she was a tenacious
+little person, and also, while much lacking in perception on some
+points, she had an instinctive comprehension of character which gave
+her a truer conception of the turns and twists of Polly’s nature than
+either of the other cousins possessed.
+
+On Monday morning Bill set to work to carry out her plan. Her newly
+acquired mastery over the reins was the first thing pressed into
+her service. She would drive the old pony over to Wrugglesby, pack
+some clothes she wanted, and bring Polly (Bella would be giving
+music-lessons) home to Haylands with her for the night. At first
+Theresa demurred, but Robert only laughed at her fears; and finally
+Bill was allowed to go, with Henry, the boot-boy, in attendance in case
+of accidents. Bill accepted Henry’s escort to Wrugglesby, but said he
+would have to walk back as she intended to take Polly for a drive by
+herself. Theresa demurred again, but Robert was on Bill’s side; and
+finally, as might have been foreseen, Henry walked back alone, while
+Bill and Polly went for their drive.
+
+Not, however, before Bill had encountered another obstacle, which
+presented itself in the attractive form of Bella. Bella wanted to make
+one of the party; she pointed out that there was room for her in the
+pony-carriage, and that Theresa was sure not to mind an extra guest for
+one night. Of course, in the ordinary way it would have been impossible
+for her to get out in the afternoon, but to-day it happened that nearly
+the whole school was going to a birthday party and there were only two
+music-lessons to give. These two lessons were Bill’s salvation: she and
+Polly would take their drive while Bella gave them; as soon as she had
+done she was to walk to Sales Cross Roads, where they would meet her
+with the pony-chaise at a quarter to four.
+
+The plan met with Polly’s entire approval; she did not at all wish to
+waste the early part of the afternoon waiting for Bella, and she was
+not troubled with many unselfish scruples. When Bella inconveniently
+said, “I think I could be at Sales Cross before that,” Polly answered
+decidedly, “But we cannot.” Whereupon the good-natured Bella gave way,
+and, with matters at last satisfactorily arranged, the other two drove
+away.
+
+Polly leaned back with great satisfaction; Bill had borrowed a cushion
+from Theresa for her and she appreciated it. “Really, Bill,” she said
+benignly, “I should never have thought you would learn to drive so
+well; you are quite getting on.”
+
+“Do you think I have grown up any more?” Bill asked.
+
+Polly looked at her thoughtfully. “I don’t think you have developed
+much,” she said, after consideration. Before she reached the end of her
+journey that day she changed her opinion and came to the conclusion
+that Bill had developed surprisingly, in one direction at least.
+
+“We are going to Gurnett,” Bill announced, and Polly, to whom one place
+was as good as another, acquiesced.
+
+“We can easily get from there to Sales Cross to meet Bella,” Bill went
+on to explain when they were nearing the village. “I want to see some
+one at Gurnett, or rather, just this side of it; we don’t go through
+the village.”
+
+“Whom are you going to see? I will hold the reins while you go in;
+I don’t care about going with messages to strange farms; there are
+always geese and cows about.”
+
+Bill entirely agreed with this suggestion. “Yes,” she said, “you must
+wait outside while I go in; I won’t be long, not more than ten minutes
+I expect. It is not to a farm we are going, though; it is to Wood Hall.”
+
+“Wood Hall? Whatever does Theresa want from there?”
+
+“Theresa does not want anything; I am going on my own business. She
+does not know I am going, and she would be very angry if she did.”
+
+“Well, Bill!”
+
+“But I have got to go all the same,” Bill continued, ignoring the
+exclamation.
+
+“What about me? Pray, why should I allow it if Theresa does not? I
+insist on hearing all about it at once.”
+
+Curiosity as well as indignation prompted this speech, which Bill
+proceeded to gratify to a certain extent. “I will tell you as much as
+there is time for,” she said, and there was not time for a great deal.
+Polly’s explosions of righteous wrath, not so judicial and certainly
+not so genuine as Theresa’s, helped to shorten the narrative.
+
+“Well, Bill, I could not have believed it of you! No, I could not, even
+if anyone had told me! I know a good deal about you, it is true, but I
+should never have expected--well--” Words failed, and Polly took refuge
+in a superlatively expressive sniff; she had brought the language of
+sniffs to a rare perfection.
+
+But Bill was not at all impressed, and when Polly asked with stern
+dignity, “Do you think I, any more than Theresa, will allow you to go
+to Wood Hall?” she answered, “You can’t help yourself.”
+
+“Can’t help myself, indeed!”
+
+“No, we are just there.” That was undeniably true; they were in the
+drive and must soon reach the house. “If you did not mean to come,”
+Bill went on composedly, “why did you not say so before we turned in?”
+
+“I did not notice.”
+
+Bill was politely doubtful. “Look here, Polly,” she said, “what is the
+good of pretending? It is not what things are that matters to you, it
+is how they look. I am sure that this is quite right; you are not; but
+that does not count, as you only want it to look right--”
+
+“Bill! You are a wicked girl. How dare you say such things?”
+
+“I dare say them, and you dare think them,” Bill retorted, vaguely
+aware that she must have outraged the sense of decency again. At that
+moment a sharp turn in the drive showed them the house just in front,
+the chaise swayed to one side, for the ground dipped suddenly down
+before it rose again for the last little ascent.
+
+“I shall come in with you,” Polly said heroically, as she gripped the
+sides of the chaise with a firm, though nervous, grasp. “I shall not
+leave you--Bill, do be careful how you drive!--not leave you in spite
+of your conduct to me.”
+
+“Yes, you will. You will wait outside, and think how it can be made to
+look best.”
+
+“I shall do nothing of the kind!”
+
+“Then I shall frighten the pony and make him run away. He won’t run
+far, but by the time you get back here I shall have gone inside.
+Good-bye for the present; I sha’n’t be long.”
+
+Bill jumped out as she spoke, and the indignant, though discreet,
+Polly took the reins and patiently waited in the pony-carriage. Bill
+certainly had developed, and developed, among other things, a painful
+plainness of speech. This hurt Polly more than anything else, for
+she believed in observing all the decencies of life, in saying and
+seeming all that was suitable to the occasion, even to a certain extent
+persuading herself to feel it too. She always acted, for herself if
+there was no other audience; she could not help it, and the fact
+that there was not the least chance of anyone being deceived did
+not deter her from taking a part. More often than not people were a
+little deceived; they believed in her more or less, as she believed
+in herself. Bill did not, which was her misfortune; but she said so
+baldly, and that was her fault, a fault Polly found it hard to forgive
+just then. “Yet,” Polly thought when she sat in the chaise waiting and
+meditating on Bill’s development, “she is proving to be rather as I
+expected; she has twenty times the go of the other two, if only one
+could make her sensible.” From which it may be seen that Polly had a
+keen eye to the main chance, and even in matters of personal affront
+sought first a possible advantage; afterwards, if expedient, she
+resented the annoyance. During the ten minutes that she waited for Bill
+she had serious thoughts of making common cause with that offender.
+
+Bill was as good as her word. Mindful of a limit to Polly’s patience,
+she came to the point as soon as possible, and asked what Mr.
+Harborough demanded in return for fulfilling her wish. But he, not
+aware of any urgent reason for haste, set the question aside and asked
+instead if she had been satisfied with Sunday’s comedy.
+
+She did not think it a comedy; indeed, to tell the truth, she was not
+quite sure what a comedy was; certainly she had not been satisfied,
+but, as she hastened to explain, that was not his fault. “It was my
+own,” she said.
+
+“Your own, daughter of Eve? Dissatisfied as soon as gratified? It’s the
+way with ’em all. Still I own this affair did not turn out as well as
+it might.”
+
+“You did not expect it to be like that? Neither did I; if I had
+thought--”
+
+“You would have chosen a day when the curate was in sole command? It
+certainly would have been better from a sporting point of view.”
+
+For a moment the vision of what might have occurred in those
+circumstances flitted through Bill’s mind, but she banished it and said
+gravely: “It would have been funnier, I dare say, but no better; worse,
+I think, for I should not then have found out that it was wrong.”
+
+Mr. Harborough laughed, seeming to find a good deal of amusement in the
+idea of Bill’s tardy conscientious scruples; but on account, he said,
+of her disappointment he asked nothing further of her, saying that they
+would now cry quits to the bargain. Bill was relieved, having been
+afraid he would lay some fresh difficulty upon her; as it was, she felt
+she had escaped easily, and prepared to make her adieux with a light
+heart, explaining at the same time that, as Polly was waiting outside,
+she must go at once. The idea of Polly waiting outside also seemed to
+amuse Mr. Harborough.
+
+“Dear me, how they have been talking to you!” he said. “Bringing home
+the enormity of your conduct to you with a vengeance! They won’t
+leave me my unsophisticated little maiden long; good women are great
+teachers of the ways of this wicked world.”
+
+Bill scarcely understood him; still, she fancied he was insinuating
+something against her cousin whose words really had had no weight at
+all in determining her action. “It was not exactly Theresa’s doing,”
+she said.
+
+“Not Theresa?” He laughed. “Yet you have brought a dragon, a chaperone
+to watch over you. You need scarcely have taken the trouble; I should
+have done you no harm.”
+
+“They would not let me come alone.”
+
+“I wonder they let you come at all.”
+
+“Theresa would not; Polly could not help herself.” Bill did not explain
+Mr. Dane’s share in the matter, and Harborough did not ask it. “When
+are you coming again?” was all he said.
+
+“Never.”
+
+“Never? Are you going to leave me all alone in my desolate old age?”
+
+“They won’t let me come.”
+
+The old man’s tone had been but half serious, yet as he spoke the
+extreme silence of the house suddenly impressed Bill, the loneliness
+of the great room where they two made an oasis of humanity in a desert
+of shadowy memories. The polished floor stretched around her, only
+quivering into life when she moved and sent distorted reflections of
+herself along the boards; the mirrors on the wall never waking till she
+turned for them to cast back her brown face and ruddy hair. Away at the
+far end of the room there were chairs and cabinets, but they were too
+distant to reflect her on their polished wood, too far off to have any
+connection with this life. They belonged to the folks who looked down
+from the walls. It was a wondrous house, a wondrous lonely house for
+an old man who did not care for memories, whose taste, vitiated by the
+hot peppers of his manhood, could not appreciate the _pot-pourri_ of
+the centuries that were gone.
+
+“Could you not get someone else to come,” Bill said at last, “someone
+belonging to you? You haven’t got anyone?”--he had shaken his head and
+she felt the case was a bad one till a happy idea occurred to her. “Why
+not pay a girl?” she said. “You could, you know; you could get one that
+way.”
+
+“For what would you undertake the post?”
+
+The question was asked with all gravity, but she was not quite sure
+that he was in earnest. It would be a good thing if he were, for
+this was work she could do, and, since she had to earn her living,
+it seemed much better that she should do it in this way which fitted
+her small abilities. She glanced quickly at him, uncertain what to
+answer. “Twenty-five pounds a year,” she said at last, at a venture,
+naming a sum which seemed to her exorbitant considering his straitened
+circumstances.
+
+He smiled a little and shook his head. “Can’t be done,” he said, and
+she prepared to reduce her terms cautiously, but he explained the
+obstacles.
+
+“It is the aunts and cousins who are in the way, my dear; if you were
+alone in the world we would not quarrel as to terms.”
+
+“Oh, but I could easily explain to them.”
+
+Bill was confident, but Mr. Harborough reminded her of her confidence
+with regard to Theresa’s permission to repeat her visit. She was forced
+to admit his superior knowledge there, and to allow of its possibility
+again, although it seemed foolish to carry social objections into a
+purely commercial transaction.
+
+“Believe me,” he said, “there are no terms on which they would allow
+you to enter my service, except the cover of my name.” She did not
+understand. “If the salary were a marriage settlement,” he explained,
+“they would permit you to take it, and, under the name of Mrs.
+Harborough, they would raise no objection to your accepting the post of
+companion.”
+
+In spite of her disappointment at finding the offer not a genuine one
+after all, Bill burst out laughing; laughing principally at her own
+stupidity in taking him seriously. Then she said: “I must go; Polly
+will be tired of waiting.”
+
+“Laugh and go,” he said. “Do you laugh at Wood Hall? I could--by
+Heaven, it is almost worth doing!” he exclaimed with a sudden access of
+energy. “There are some who would not laugh then, my little brown elf.”
+
+He laughed himself at the idea, laughed softly with a bitter spite
+in his eyes. Afterwards it occurred to Bill vaguely that perhaps he
+really had been in earnest, and that she was to have played a part in
+some scheme of vengeance. But she never seriously thought so, and at
+the time it did not appear to her as anything but a jest. As such she
+laughed again so that her merriment rang in the great room; and she was
+still smiling when a minute later she came out to Polly waiting in the
+chaise.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+“RED IS THE ROSE.”
+
+
+The four roads which met at Sales Cross were the four which went
+everywhere in the district. “You can’t go anywhere without going by
+Sales Cross,” said Bella, basing her opinion on the number of people
+who had passed while she was waiting for Bill and Polly on that April
+afternoon. None of these travellers were mentioned by name except Mr.
+Jack Dawson, who could hardly be said to have passed since he was still
+there when the pony-chaise came in sight. He looked, too, as if he had
+meant to stay some time, seeing that he had dismounted from his horse
+and was standing, with the bridle over his arm, so deeply absorbed in
+conversation that he did not notice the approaching carriage. Bella
+explained later that he got down to help her free herself from the long
+bramble she had twisted round her ankles while gathering primroses a
+few minutes earlier. From the conversation which ensued between the two
+elder cousins Bill gathered that Jack Dawson had had something to do
+with Bella’s second Sunday afternoon at Ashelton being less dull than
+the first.
+
+But she did not listen very attentively; Polly’s eloquence had not much
+interest for her, especially since, during the drive from Gurnett,
+she had settled her own differences with her cousin, telling exactly
+what she pleased of the doings at Wood Hall. There had been a battle
+royal during that drive conducted with a good many words, and, it is
+to be feared, some vigour of expression on both sides. But it had its
+advantages, it was the first time that Bill and Polly had crossed
+swords as equals, and each understood the other the better for doing
+so; also it gave Polly a further indication that Bill was growing
+up,--“Though not in the way we should wish,” as she said to Bella with
+melancholy dignity. “No, Bella,” she went on as her listener showed no
+signs of distress at the news, “Bill is not a lady, and nothing will
+ever make her one.”
+
+To which Bill agreed, adding: “I don’t believe I have got all the
+instincts and so on, and I’m sure I don’t feel things the way I ought.
+I suppose I have got a little bad blood somewhere.”
+
+“Somewhere!” Polly’s sniff was impressive. “With your father--well! we
+need say no more.”
+
+“Considering what you have already said,” replied Bill, “I think you
+need not.”
+
+Bella wondered what had been said, but she did not hear, for soon
+afterwards they reached Haylands, where Theresa declared herself
+delighted to receive the two visitors instead of one. Later on, she
+heard of Bill’s other doings, and with them she was not so well
+pleased. She was distressed as well as angry when she was told about
+the visit to Wood Hall.
+
+Polly had been much opposed to telling her anything about it. “Leave it
+alone,” she counselled; “it can’t be altered now. There will only be a
+great fuss, and how shall I look for letting you go?”
+
+But Bill disagreed. It would not be honest, she said.
+
+“None of it was honest,” retorted Polly; and certainly the part she
+took upon herself was open to question, although, no doubt, it was
+the one best fitting the situation. “I thought it better to let her
+go to-day,”--so she concluded a most able explanation of affairs to
+Theresa. “You see, to-day I was with her; another day she might have
+been alone. She was certain to go, sooner or later, with or without
+me,--she is so dreadfully obstinate--and so I was determined that she
+should go under the most favourable circumstances.”
+
+Theresa agreed, and blamed Bill severely; but Bella remarked: “You
+stayed outside for her good, I suppose, Polly?”
+
+“I stayed outside,” Polly replied with dignity, “because she would not
+let me come in without a scene.”
+
+The truth of this statement was obvious and effective. Indeed Polly’s
+manner while at Haylands was altogether effective; more especially
+when, on their first arrival, they found Mrs. Dawson talking to
+Theresa on business connected with the Church Missionary Society. Mrs.
+Dawson had the cause of missions very much at heart; she attended many
+meetings and paid many visits in connection with it, with what exact
+result to the cause no one knew, but doubtless it was beneficial. The
+principal results of the call on Theresa was entirely unconnected with
+missions, being the postponement of Bill’s confession for half an hour
+and the social opportunity afforded Polly.
+
+Polly made such good use of the occasion that Mrs. Dawson, a rather
+imposing personage, unbent to quite a rare extent. She even hoped that
+Miss Hains would be able to come to her tea-party next day with her
+cousin, Miss Alardy. Polly regretted she could not do so, since she was
+unfortunately obliged to return to Wrugglesby in the morning.
+
+“And I really did regret it too,” she informed the others when they
+were discussing Mrs. Dawson late that evening; “I wish I had been
+staying on here.”
+
+“We could not both have gone,” said Bill, for whom the invitation had
+already been accepted; “there’s only the one skirt, you know.”
+
+“It is my skirt.”
+
+“But you have lent it to Bill,” Bella said; “besides she is the
+youngest, and has never been to anything yet.”
+
+Polly did not consider this a very valid argument, though, as she
+said, it really did not matter since she could not stay any longer at
+Ashelton.
+
+It was at bedtime that this discussion took place. Bella was to sleep
+with Bill, and Polly had come into their room to brush her hair and
+edify them with her views on several subjects. The fact that she did so
+in Bill’s presence showed plainly that she recognised her as something
+like an equal.
+
+“I will tell you all about the tea-party,” Bill said, feeling rather
+greedy in that the festivity had fallen to her share.
+
+“Yes, but you will not be able to do as I should,” Polly answered
+regretfully. “I made an impression on Mrs. Dawson this afternoon; I
+should go on making one if I were to see her again, a good impression.”
+
+Bill laughed irreverently.
+
+“Don’t be rude, Bill.” Polly’s manner was momentarily that of an elder
+and teacher, but almost immediately she dropped it and returned to the
+terms of familiar intercourse. She at least possessed the merit of
+adapting herself quickly to altered circumstances and relationships.
+
+“My dear girls,” she said, sitting down in the one easy-chair the room
+boasted, “one has to make good impressions, one never knows when they
+may be useful.”
+
+“You have no use for Mrs. Dawson,” Bella said quickly.
+
+“No, she does it to keep her hand in, for pure pleasure and practice,
+and because she can’t help it. She would try to make a good impression
+on us if there were no one else.”
+
+This was Bill’s opinion, but Polly only said, “You are a silly child,”
+and began to put her hair into curl-papers, and at the same time giving
+the cousins her views on many things, notably on matrimony. On this
+subject she had very decided opinions which she did not at all mind
+expressing with a degree of frankness which shocked Bella.
+
+“You are horrid, Polly!” she exclaimed at last.
+
+“I have the courage of my opinions,” Polly retorted; “I say what others
+think.”
+
+“They do not think such things.”
+
+Bill, who had hitherto paid small attention to the conversation,
+debated this point in her mind as she sat perched on the bed in her
+favourite position. “I don’t believe people think much at all,” was her
+conclusion.
+
+Polly told her that she knew nothing about it, but, nothing daunted,
+she went on to explain herself, “They don’t think; they do things
+because the things come along, do them by instinct, or impulse, or
+something; they don’t half know what will happen. I am nearly sure
+they don’t think about the before and after. Nobody can see the real
+beginnings and ends, and some people don’t seem able to see even a
+little bit to right and left,--I wonder why.”
+
+Neither of the elder cousins was prepared to go into the question,
+Bella possibly because she herself belonged to the class who cannot
+look before and after, Polly, certainly because she wished to discuss
+more practical matters. By way of putting an end to Bill’s speculations
+she introduced the topic, suggested by her previous remarks, of their
+own future.
+
+“Say that you, Bella,” she said, “marry money,--”
+
+“I sha’n’t do any such thing!”
+
+“Oh, well--” and then followed another exposition of Polly’s views
+which Bill lost little by not heeding. She had picked up the fairy-book
+which she had taken to bed with her a few nights ago, and had become
+too absorbed in its pages to hear what Polly said until the mention of
+her own name arrested her attention.
+
+“And what is to become of Bill?” said Polly, who had by this time
+settled the future for the rest of them.
+
+“There is the school she could help--”
+
+“The school!” said Polly disdainfully. “What good would Bill be, what
+can she do?”
+
+“Nothing,” the culprit answered, before Bella could speak in her
+defence. “It is quite true, I should be of no use. I don’t know what I
+could do, unless, perhaps, be a general servant; they are scarce now,
+and I can work like a steam-engine. I never get tired and I can get up
+ever so early--you should just see how I can scrub and iron, and I can
+cook a little too.”
+
+“You ridiculous child!” laughed Bella. “Do you suppose we should ever
+let you do that?”
+
+“She might do worse,” was Polly’s opinion.
+
+“She could not do that,” Bella replied emphatically; “neither Theresa
+nor I would allow it. And Polly, you might as well say good-night now;
+we want to go to sleep.”
+
+Polly took her candle, casting a grotesque shadow of herself and her
+curl-papers on the low ceiling. “Good-night,” she said with severity.
+“I am glad you can sleep; I don’t find it so easy when I look forward
+to what must happen.”
+
+“Don’t look,” Bill called after her, “except at your candle; look at
+that, and mind you don’t spill the grease.”
+
+None the less Bill lay awake a long time, thinking not only of the
+future but also of the post which might almost have been hers that
+day were it not for the aunts and cousins. Also she thought of Bella
+and her future, and from that she mentally went to Jack Dawson, who
+appeared a very pleasant sort of person, and to Mrs. Dawson, who did
+not, though in Bill’s opinion she was an entertaining one. At least she
+had thought so when she sat meekly silent during the lady’s call that
+afternoon.
+
+On the next day she had another opportunity of studying Mrs. Dawson,
+for that was the day of the state tea-party which Polly had so deeply
+regretted missing. Polly and Bella had gone back to Wrugglesby, and
+Bill was left in undisputed possession of the skirt. It was not
+new, neither was it in the latest fashion, but Bill thought it very
+beautiful, as she contemplated herself in her little mirror on Tuesday
+evening. Of course one needed the best clothes the family could
+muster for such an occasion as the present; the tea-party at Grays,
+Mrs. Dawson’s house, was really quite an important social function
+besides being the first which Bill had ever attended. She was somewhat
+impressed and tremendously interested by everything, the solemn
+mahogany grandeur of the bedroom where she and Theresa took off their
+wraps, the spotless whiteness of the linen covers of the stair-carpets,
+the giant hat-stand by which Robert waited for them in the hall.
+
+The drawing-room was large; the main part of the furniture dated from
+the Sixties, the wonderful blue of the upholstery being unmistakably
+of that era. But the sundry tides of fashion that have swept through
+the land since then had left a few deposits even in this conservative
+house: some peacock-feathers and a silk-covered palm-leaf, a present
+possibly in the decorative days; a small black table, a relic of
+æstheticism; a rococo photograph-screen of later date,--a few such
+things could be seen here and there. “They were given to her,” thought
+Bill gazing earnestly at the immovable black-silk dignity of Mrs.
+Dawson; “they were given by _her_.” This was Bill’s decision when her
+eye lighted on a girl standing near the hostess. The girl was tall
+and muscular, turned four and twenty, athletically built, and dressed
+in the fashion of the day, the fashion which obtains in Ealing and
+similar exclusive suburbs. Her face, it is true, did not express much,
+but then other people’s faces do not as a rule express much, and she
+naturally did not wish to do anything but what everyone else did. She
+was doubtless an expert at lawn-tennis and hockey, and an authority
+on the technique of golf. Probably she thought her aunt at Ashelton
+much behind the times, though, as she informed her friends, she liked
+staying with her: “It was such a deliciously unsophisticated place
+still.”
+
+Bill looked at her with interest and at first with some admiration,
+for to her inexperienced eyes Miss Gladys Dawson was a new and fine
+specimen of humanity. Miss Gladys Dawson looked at Bill only with a
+careless curiosity, she found her a little odd, and wondered why she
+had never seen her at Ashelton before. She also (and here came in the
+insult) looked at the skirt. A light blazed up in Bill’s eyes, a light
+that was almost like a red flame, and there rose in her heart a great
+wrath and a feminine desire to pay back the offence, to criticise
+in some way the offender and bring ridicule on her. Bill had never
+felt the sentiment before, being in the main indifferent to opinions
+of all sorts. Miss Dawson’s glance on herself would have passed
+unnoticed; she cared nothing for criticism and had a very poor opinion
+of herself,--but the skirt was another matter, Polly’s cherished
+skirt which she had made with so much labour out of two old silk
+dresses of Miss Brownlow’s! Bill felt that the look, half amused, half
+supercilious, wholly, indescribably feminine in its critical survey,
+was an insult to the absent Polly and cried aloud for vengeance. “I
+wish I could do something,” she thought vindictively. “I wonder what
+she would mind most.”
+
+It was now six o’clock, and there was a general move to the dining-room
+for tea. Mrs. Dawson had always dined at two and taken tea at six, and
+she always would do so as long as she was able to dine and take tea
+at all. She made no difference for visitors, except in the quantity
+of food prepared, and in that respect she certainly planned lavishly.
+The table that night was loaded with the dainties which have gone out
+of fashion with six o’clock teas. Bill noticed everything carefully,
+trying to remember all she could for the sake of her absent cousins.
+There was a wonderful table-cloth, she observed, of fine unbleached
+linen whereon drab dogs hunted drab stags over a greyish ground much
+interspersed with drab trees whose leafy branches met in the centre
+of the table and were hidden under the pot of a pink azalea. Arranged
+everywhere, almost crowding each other off, were cakes both hot and
+cold, so many of them that Bill could not taste them all. There were
+also several preserves, notably one of pineapple, very sticky, very
+difficult of manipulation, inspiring one (if that one were Bill) with a
+desire to take the pot and a spoon to the store-room and eat in comfort
+unobserved. “It wants practice,” Bill decided as she watched the ease
+with which Mr. Johnson, who might reasonably be expected to have had
+practice, managed the pineapple. “I expect he has been here heaps of
+times before,” she thought, and no doubt she was right for he seemed
+much at his ease. Mr. Perry, on the other hand, was never quite able to
+forget the grocer’s shop when he sat down with Mrs. Dawson; he talked
+nervously and rapidly all through the meal, forgetting his tea in his
+anxiety to be polite, and remembering that he wanted a third cup when
+everyone had finished and the tea-pot was dry. Bill felt sorry for Mrs.
+Dawson when she saw her pouring tepid water through the tea-pot so as
+to supply the late comer, sorrier still for Mr. Perry when he received
+his large shallow cup and made manful efforts to drink its contents
+while the guests waited for him.
+
+Bill sat next to Mrs. Johnson, a placid matron, not much given to
+general conversation; and as she returned becoming answers to the few
+remarks made to her, she was voted by her neighbour to be “a nicely
+brought-up girl.” Gladys Dawson, of course, was different; being
+older, and “from London,” she was expected to talk, and she did do so;
+in fact she took the lion’s share of the entertainment upon herself.
+Mrs. Dawson was not averse to this, but, as Bill noticed, neither was
+Gladys. “She likes it,” thought the silent watcher; and there came into
+Bill’s mind, by reason of the insult offered to Polly’s skirt, a desire
+which is a natural instinct in most of her more developed sisters,--the
+desire to outshine the other woman.
+
+“It would not be easy,” Bill thought, feeling that she did not know
+much about the subjects of greatest interest to the ladies present;
+but then, as she soon found, Miss Dawson did not either, and so wisely
+confined herself to entertaining the men. Bill did not feel very
+hopeful of her own powers in that direction, and before she could
+make any definite plans her thoughts were interrupted by Mr. Dane’s
+entrance into the drawing-room to which everyone had now returned.
+Mr. Dane never joined these parties till after tea, on the excuse of
+parish-work. After the little disturbance created by his entrance had
+subsided, and he had shaken hands with everybody, Bill found that he
+had taken the chair next to her. She knew that he wanted to hear if
+she had been to Wood Hall, and she was quite ready to tell him. It was
+easy enough to do this unnoticed in the buzz of general conversation;
+and accordingly she told him how she and Polly had driven to Wood
+Hall, how Polly had waited outside, and how Mr. Harborough had laid
+no fresh conditions upon her. This was all very well, but it was not
+so well when she went on to talk of Mr. Harborough’s loneliness, and
+so, incidentally, of her suggestion of a paid companion, and his offer
+of the post to herself. “Of course he did not mean it really,” she
+concluded; “it was only in fun, but for a moment I thought he meant
+it.”
+
+“What made you think he did not mean it?”
+
+“What he said afterwards;” and she related all that followed. “He meant
+he would have to marry me before they would let me come,” she said,
+laughing a little.
+
+But Mr. Dane did not laugh. “Yes, marry him,” he said, “marry him for
+Wood Hall, for his name and position,--would you do that?”
+
+“I did not have the chance; he did not ask me really; it was all fun.”
+
+“Have you told your cousins of the fun?”
+
+The old man was looking earnestly at her, waiting for her answer, and
+she hesitated before she gave it. She plainly heard Mrs. Perry saying,
+“I never had a sitting of eggs from the Possets turn out badly,” before
+she said, “No, I have not told them.” And she wondered why she had not,
+and why she never would, for she knew then that she never would.
+
+“If he had meant it, would you have taken him and Wood Hall and the
+name, and the little you know, and the infinitely more which you do not
+know?”
+
+“No,” she answered frankly. “I would like Wood Hall immensely; I would
+do a good deal for a place like that--I don’t believe I would be too
+particular what; but I could not marry him. I could not marry anyone; I
+could not possibly be cooped up with one person. I believe I would like
+more than anything else to be a gipsy and wander from place to place,
+mending chairs and stealing fowls.”
+
+Mr. Dane did not reprove the lax morality of this speech; all he said
+was: “Then I suppose you are never going to see Mr. Harborough again?”
+
+“No,” answered Bill, and as she did so Mr. Johnson, who had caught
+the name, tried to draw his rector into a discussion of Sunday’s
+enormities. But Mr. Dane would not be drawn; he was polite, but firm
+and most uncommunicative. The only opinion he would give was that he
+believed Mr. Harborough’s proceedings were not actionable, since he
+himself had given consent for the mass to be finished.
+
+“But I am sure we could prosecute,” Mr. Johnson persisted. “I was
+speaking to Stevens,--Stevens of Wrugglesby you know--about it; he
+says it is quite possible to prosecute for brawling and creating a
+disturbance in church during divine service, if for nothing else.”
+
+“No doubt he is right, but I do not think the churchwardens will wish
+to prosecute. The case would offer several nice points to a lawyer,
+for, though the mass was begun without our permission, and so was
+technically a disturbance, the offence was partly condoned by the
+permission to continue which was afterwards given. Moreover, though
+our church is of course a church of England as by law established,
+the Harborough chapel is held on a very old tenure which it would be
+necessary to understand clearly before any move could be made in the
+matter. I don’t mean to say we could not prosecute: I dare say we
+could; but I hardly think it is necessary. What do you think?”
+
+Mr. Johnson almost thought it was, on account of the precedent: “Solely
+on account of the precedent; it might occur again.”
+
+“I do not think it will,” Mr. Dane answered, just in time to prevent
+Bill declaring the same thing warmly. Then someone began to sing and
+they all listened, placidly or otherwise according to their natures.
+When the song was over, Bill, finding Mr. Johnson’s attention diverted
+elsewhere, turned to her neighbour for information on a subject which
+had puzzled her since her first visit to Wood Hall.
+
+“You know all about this part of the country,” she said. “Perhaps you
+can tell me if it is true that a good many years ago a body was carried
+by night from Corbycroft to the little church in Wood Hall park.”
+
+“Yes, certainly it is true; but what makes you ask? Who has told you of
+it?”
+
+“Mr. Harborough, but he did not say much; is it a secret?”
+
+“No, oh no; some of the old folks at Gurnett still tell the tale,
+though there are not many now who can tell much except from hearsay.
+It was not much talked about at the time, and is pretty well forgotten
+now.”
+
+He spoke as if the subject had long lost its interest for him, but to
+Bill it was all fresh; she felt that her romance was becoming exciting
+again. “Who was it?” she asked. “Who were they going to bury?”
+
+“Roger Corby, the old Squire he was called, though he was not squire
+of Gurnett. He died at Corbycroft, and he died very much in debt. His
+servants and--and some other people believed that his body would,
+according to a barbarous old practice, be arrested for debt, so they
+removed it by night to the church in Wood Hall park.”
+
+“And was it arrested?”
+
+“No, and I do not believe there was any likelihood that it would have
+been. Long ago bodies were sometimes arrested, legally or illegally,--I
+do not know which--but so late as that--it was in 1833--it was more
+than improbable.”
+
+“But they must have believed it,” Bill objected; “they must have
+thought it would happen.”
+
+“Yes, but the servants were ignorant, and the girl, the Squire’s
+granddaughter, was a child of thirteen, headstrong, daring,
+imaginative; she heard the servants’ chatter and believed it. The thing
+was practically her doing. She was fond of her grandfather, and there
+was no one to take charge at his death; her father was abroad and she
+and the old butler managed everything. She always did as she liked, and
+grew up as she pleased, with no one to thwart her.”
+
+Bill wondered if Mr. Dane had known the granddaughter, or if this too
+was only part of the local tale; she would have liked to ask him but
+thought that perhaps she ought not, as the last words scarcely seemed
+addressed to her. She contented herself with inquiring, “Did you live
+here then?”
+
+“No,” he roused himself with an effort. “No; I was not born in this
+part of the country and at that time I was a lad at school; a little
+lad I must have been, for I am younger than Harborough.”
+
+“And he? Did he know at the time? How old was he then?”
+
+“Yes, he knew; he must have known, for he was at home when the thing
+happened.”
+
+There were more questions Bill wanted to ask, but she was not able to
+do so for at that moment Miss Dawson’s well-trained soprano informed
+the company that she was “a monkey on a stick.”
+
+By the time she had reached the end of her song Mr. Perry had claimed
+the rector’s attention, and Bill was left to meditate on the half-told
+story until Mrs. Dawson asked her with awful politeness for a little
+music. Theresa had warned her that this would occur, telling her to
+bring her music in anticipation. Bill had obediently brought it,
+making up her mind to play one of her pieces if required, but now when
+the time came she did no such thing. She cast a quick glance at Miss
+Dawson, who was now talking to Gilchrist Harborough, and thinking
+of the covert sneer at Polly’s skirt, went to the piano in no very
+Christian frame of mind. “I can sing as well as you,” was the defiance
+she mentally hurled at the young lady as she sat down to the piano and
+began to play from memory, or, more correctly speaking, by ear from
+some half forgotten melody. It was curious music, at first compelling
+attention by its strangeness, afterwards holding it by a charm of its
+own,--a love-song of long ago, low, yet with an almost harsh refrain
+in it, vibrating with a passion at first suppressed, but afterwards
+breaking forth into a tumult of emotion likely to tingle strangely in
+the nerves of those who listened.
+
+ “Red is the rose thou hast bound in thy hair,
+ Redder thy lips, love.
+ Soft is thy breath, aye, the sweetest of air,
+ Incense to me, love;
+ E’en though it choketh the voice of my prayer,
+ (I pray not now, love.)
+ Stars are thine eyes,--ill stars some declare,
+ Beacons to me, love.
+ Oh, heart of my heart, I want nought but thy beauty,
+ Of here and hereafter, I ask only thee!
+ Sinner or saint, thou art God of my worship,
+ In time and eternity Heaven to me!”
+
+Silently Mr. Dane rose and went out of the room, closing the door
+noiselessly after him. At the time Bill’s astonished audience hardly
+noticed it; afterwards it was said by some of the more severe that he
+went out to mark his disapproval of the tone and tenor of the song,
+which was certainly most unbecoming in a young girl. This may have been
+the case; it obviously was not because his Christian forbearance and
+courtesy were tried beyond endurance, as sometimes happened, by false
+notes, for to a musician the rendering of this song left little to
+be desired. Whatever the reason, Mr. Dane left the drawing-room, and
+passing through the hall went out by the open garden-door, out into the
+sweet spring night where the song could not reach him. His lips moved
+once as he went:
+
+ “If God in His anger hath shut thee from Heaven,
+ Then closed on us both let its golden gates be.”
+
+And the strange thing was that these words did not occur in the first
+part of the song which he had heard, but in the second part which he
+did not hear, and of which Bill was now singing the last verses.
+
+ “Dark is the future, dark as despair,
+ Dark as thine eyes, love.
+ Cursed is our troth--for curse dost thou care?
+ Curse of the church, love?
+ Death and dishonour, e’en both we must dare,
+ Fearest with me, love?
+ Fearest to love me? Yet still thou’ll not tear
+ Thyself from my heart, love.
+ Now and henceforward, forever thou’rt there,
+ Nor can’st thou go, love.
+ Oh, soul of my soul, if damned is thy beauty,
+ Then damned be my spirit forever with thee!
+ If God in His anger hath shut thee from Heaven,
+ Then closed on us both let its golden gates be!
+ For thou, oh, beloved, art the God of my worship,
+ In time and eternity Heaven to me!”
+
+And between the box-edged borders, where drooping daffodils glimmered
+in the moonlight, an old man stood and murmured in the ghostly,
+tearless upheaval of some dead passion:
+
+ “Thou, oh beloved, art the God of my worship,
+ In time and eternity Heaven to me!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+IN THE GARDEN.
+
+
+Doubtless the ladies of Ashelton were right in saying that the song
+sung by Bill Alardy at Mrs. Dawson’s tea-party was most unsuitable and
+highly improper. It was not only the words, though, as was pointed
+out, they were reprehensible, but also the terrible earnestness with
+which they were sung. Ashelton was justly shocked, and Theresa,
+although agreeably surprised by the unexpected richness of her cousin’s
+voice, was overcome with shame. Even Gladys Dawson, who was naturally
+beyond old-fashioned prejudices, looked at Bill with something more
+intelligent than her previous stare. Gilchrist Harborough, sitting by
+Miss Dawson, remembered the words spoken by Morton that Thursday night;
+the “little girl” certainly could “sing a capital song” of a sort.
+
+But he did not remark on it to Miss Dawson; indeed he seemed to have
+forgotten all about her, and looked across to the singer, who had
+twisted round on the piano-stool and now sat uneasily regarding the
+company with a comical mixture of fear and defiance in her eyes. She
+was painfully conscious of their feelings, though not entirely able
+to understand them. She was both surprised and angry at the unexpected
+storm she had raised. Her eyes met Harborough’s; he at any rate was
+not shocked; he understood, he was even a little amused. Bill’s face
+began to clear, and the tantalising chameleon eyes changed. Miss Dawson
+addressed a remark to the young man, and receiving no reply, glanced in
+the direction where his interest obviously lay. Bill saw the glance and
+experienced a two-fold gratification; one person in the room sided with
+her, and another (she who had sneered at Polly’s skirt!) was annoyed
+thereby. Her face cleared entirely, and her eyes absolutely shone. The
+mischief was done.
+
+Somehow or other, Bill did not quite know how, she found herself soon
+afterwards talking to Harborough, about the song and about all manner
+of other things. It was quite easy to talk to him, though he seemed a
+grave sort of young man given to taking things seriously, so seriously
+that it was rather strange he should approve of the song. He asked her
+where she had learned to sing it, and she told him she did not quite
+know. “I found the verses written out,” she said, “and I think I must
+have heard them sung when I was young. Perhaps my father sang them; I
+don’t know.”
+
+“You sang as if you meant it,” he observed.
+
+“So they should be sung.”
+
+“But you have not felt that; you don’t know what you were talking
+about.”
+
+“Oh, no,” she agreed readily, “it is all pretending; but that does not
+matter; one can pretend anything. Almost it feels sometimes,” she went
+on thoughtfully, “as if one had felt it in another first life; don’t
+you think so? Or perhaps it is that those who went before--the mothers
+and fathers and grandfathers--felt it and passed the memory on.”
+
+Harborough shrugged his shoulders. “That is an old problem,” he said,
+“which does not trouble me much. I never think about my ancestry as you
+seem to; I find enough to do without seeking for the grip of the dead
+hand.”
+
+“Some people do not have to seek for it,” Bill answered. She was
+thinking of the Harboroughs of Gurnett. “Have you ever been to Wood
+Hall?” she asked abruptly.
+
+“No; I have ridden past it once or twice, but I have not had occasion
+to go in that direction often,--why?”
+
+“You know there are Harboroughs there,--people of your name?”
+
+“Yes, possibly distant connections; I have heard my father say that
+his people came originally from this part of the country. But I am not
+proud of the fact, if it is one; they appear to have been a pretty bad
+lot.”
+
+“Yes,” Bill admitted, “and they are poor, desperately poor for the
+position: at least, so it is said, and certainly the place looks like
+it. Still they have been there for hundreds of years.”
+
+“What the better are they for that? Nothing, I should say, seeing that
+each generation seems to have been worse than the previous one, till we
+come to the present, last and worst, bankrupt alike in means, morals
+and constitution, played out, worn out, done for,--and a good thing
+too.”
+
+“It is the grip of the dead hand,” Bill said with conviction, and when
+he looked at her, doubtful as to her meaning, she explained: “They have
+an awful lot against them; the fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the
+children have not much choice left them.”
+
+“Much income, you mean.”
+
+“No, I don’t, though they have not very much of that either. I believe
+the estate is mortgaged, but so are their natures and characters; they
+could hardly go straight if they would. Think what it must be to have
+all that weight of tradition and fathers’ sins pulling against you.”
+
+Harborough was not convinced. “Most of us have as many ancestors as
+have the great people of Gurnett,” he said, “yet some of us seem
+capable of independent action.”
+
+“We don’t know about them; that makes a difference. We have not got
+them, in a way, stored up as the Harboroughs have. If you had been into
+Wood Hall you would know what I mean.”
+
+“Then you think the next Harborough is bound to go and do likewise?”
+
+“I don’t know him,” Bill said; “but I think he has a bigger chance of
+doing likewise than you have.”
+
+“Yes; because if I believed I was doomed to be the same kind of
+blackguard as my ancestors I should blow my brains out.”
+
+Bill looked at him gravely. “You wouldn’t really,” she said; “because
+you would not be as you are now if you were one of them. I wonder how
+nearly you are related?”
+
+“What does it matter?”
+
+“Nothing,--unless you could claim Wood Hall.”
+
+“I am generations away from that,” he laughed; “and I don’t want to be
+any nearer.”
+
+“You are not a Catholic? No? I wonder if the owner of Wood Hall must
+be?”
+
+“Certainly not; a man’s conscience is his own.”
+
+Bill nodded. “And his family?” she said.
+
+“Have nothing to do with it; a man has a right to his own opinion.”
+
+Harborough spoke warmly: he almost looked as if he defied Bill to
+defend the position; but she only said: “A woman is better off then;
+she has a right to two opinions,--her own and that of the person she is
+with.”
+
+“That is scarcely the point,” Harborough said; but he did not get her
+back to the point, for she would have no more serious discussion;
+either her ability or her interest was exhausted. Harborough, whose
+bent of mind was habitually grave, tried in vain to bring the
+conversation back, and was half amused, half vexed by her evasions.
+He was certainly wholly vexed when Miss Dawson, from the ottoman,
+introduced the labour-problem as a subject likely to interest him.
+
+Bill perceived the vexation and was amused. If she had been truly
+feminine she would probably have been gratified; but her nature was
+lacking in some of these girlish characteristics, and though she was
+pleased by the annoyance of Gladys, her enjoyment partook more of the
+pleasure of vengeance than of a womanly appreciation of pre-eminence.
+She was glad to have avenged the insult offered to Polly’s skirt, but
+she had no other feeling about it. She certainly never thought of
+Gilchrist; by the next morning, when she set about her penance in the
+garden, she had forgotten all about him.
+
+She enjoyed the penance immensely. It was hard work in the open air
+and there was something to show for the labour; moreover, it appealed
+strongly to her, for it was a clearing up and setting straight with
+the prospect eventually of a productive yield. She had already made
+plans for the improvement of other parts of the garden when the long
+bed should be finished. There was plenty of room for improvement, for
+the garden seemed to be nobody’s business; Robert was not interested in
+it, and Theresa,--more because she had never been used to doing so than
+for any other reason--never thought of working in it.
+
+“She does not like digging and she hates worms,” Bill said. “You would
+not expect T. to grub out here; besides, she has work in the house.”
+
+This was said to Gilchrist, who apparently had not entirely forgotten
+her existence, whatever she may have done with regard to his. At all
+events, when he saw her from the footpath which crossed the field
+beyond the garden, he came to enquire how she was and what she was
+doing. She told him her intentions with regard to the plot of ground on
+which she was engaged, but she did not cease work to do so.
+
+He watched her half amused. “I wonder Morton did not set one of the men
+to dig this for you,” he said.
+
+“Why should he? I can do it well enough.”
+
+“Yes,” he admitted, “but it is hard work for you.”
+
+“Work,” she replied oracularly, “is an excellent thing. You yourself
+believe in the dignity of labour.”
+
+“Who told you that?” he asked reddening slightly.
+
+She had stooped down and was wrestling with a giant worm as yet but
+half above the soil. “Don’t you believe it?” she inquired. “Out you
+come--” this was addressed to the worm--“you’re not going to stop here,
+come along now!” It came, and she threw it over the iron fence to find
+a new home in the field. “This is the dignity of labour,” she said as
+she returned to her work.
+
+There was very little dignity about the small, hatless figure on the
+deeply dug plot. Bill had a great faculty for putting trade-marks of
+her occupation on herself and clothes; labour she might represent, but
+dignity never.
+
+Harborough laughed a little; it was impossible to know when the girl
+was in fun and when in earnest. “Mrs. Morton will have a lot of
+potatoes if your crop is a good one,” he observed.
+
+“Yes, but they’ll keep,--besides, she can bring them to Wrugglesby for
+us if she likes. There is an awful lot of waste in this garden; one
+could grow heaps of things--it does seem a pity. While I am here I am
+going to try what can be done with it.”
+
+“In the way of growing potatoes?”
+
+“All manner of things. I don’t know much about it, but I’ll find out;
+there is a book about gardening here, and Mr. Dane has got another, a
+big one, I saw it in his bookshelf. I expect you know a good lot.”
+
+She stopped work for a moment as the idea occurred to her, then went on
+again with it and her questions at the same time till Harborough soon
+found himself giving information on the subject of fruit and vegetable
+culture; flowers did not seem to enter into the girl’s consideration at
+all.
+
+“Some grow themselves,” she said of them, “and there are heaps of wild
+ones to be got. I would see about flowers afterwards; the other things
+must come first.”
+
+“But,” Harborough objected, “in such a garden as this it would be
+possible to grow many more eatables than Mrs. Morton could use; surely
+it would be better to devote the surplus time and room to flowers.
+Unless,” he added slily, “you think the other vegetables could be
+brought to Wrugglesby like the potatoes.”
+
+“Well, yes,” Bill admitted, “some could, and the rest could be sold.”
+
+“To whom? Believe me there is no profit attached to market-gardening on
+a small scale; your profits would not pay your freight to London.”
+
+“I should not send them to London.” Bill was at the end of the row now,
+and Harborough had moved farther along the fence to keep even with her.
+“I should take some in the light cart to Wrugglesby and sell to people
+who had no gardens, and some I should take to Darvel. It is rather a
+long distance off, but it is quite a big town with barracks and lots of
+houses without gardens. People with things to sell come to our house
+in Wrugglesby like that; at first we did not buy much, but now we have
+a good deal from them--that is how it would be with me. I should sell
+rabbits too, I think, and fowls and eggs; Theresa does not half make
+them pay.”
+
+“I fancy she would raise objections to your making them pay in that
+way.”
+
+Bill was forced to admit that such a thing was probable. “Still,” she
+said, “if it was really right I might do it all the same if I lived
+here; I could easily get round Robert. But I don’t live here, so I am
+afraid there is an end of the matter.”
+
+Harborough watched her curiously for a moment. “You don’t appear to
+suffer from any class-prejudices,” he observed.
+
+“What are they? Do you mean I don’t mind what I do? If that is it, I
+don’t; why should I? Do you?”
+
+“No.”
+
+The question was superfluous, he thought, for did not his manner of
+living demonstrate his theory to Bill as to everyone else?
+
+“You work your own farm,” she said, so she evidently knew, “and I
+should work my own cabbage garden. We should not make big profits, but
+we should make enough to live on with what we grew for ourselves, and
+we should enjoy ourselves at the same time.”
+
+“You would like it.”
+
+“Yes, very much. I do not mean I should do it if I were rich. I should
+find some other work then; there is sure to be some belonging to being
+rich; but if I were not rich, only rich enough to have a farm or a
+cabbage garden, I should work them like that.”
+
+“I wonder if you know what real work is?”
+
+The remark was more speculation than question, and seemed to emanate
+from a different and much older being. Bill was not piqued, for indeed
+she regarded him in the light of a different and older being.
+
+“I have not done much,” she said, “but I mean to get this garden a
+little straight before I go back to Wrugglesby.”
+
+“If you don’t get tired of it first.”
+
+“I sha’n’t do that; you can come every morning if you like, to see if I
+am at work or not.”
+
+This was something of a challenge. Harborough at first had not intended
+accepting it, yet, since on the next day circumstances caused him to
+come home at mid-day by the field-path, he thought he might as well see
+if the girl was really at work. The day was moist and close, and a warm
+fine rain, which fell at intervals, might have offered some excuse for
+remaining indoors. But she had not availed herself of the excuse; very
+likely, he thought, because she expected he would come, thinking which
+he wished he had not done so, and even for a moment meditated going
+away without betraying his presence. But it was too late for that; she
+had seen him and glanced up from her work to ask, “Are you going to
+market this afternoon?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I suppose you can’t see Robert off in good time? Theresa will be
+waiting for him.”
+
+“I will do what I can.”
+
+“Thank you.” She resumed her work, and he went on his way determined to
+keep his promise.
+
+And either he did keep it, or else some other circumstance brought
+about the desired results, for Robert came home early that night; and
+Bill, who was sitting with Theresa, was satisfied, trying to persuade
+herself that Harborough was right in saying that the one escapade was
+an accident not likely to be repeated.
+
+She did not see Harborough for the next few days, and so could not
+thank him for his good offices. She did not altogether expect to see
+him; indeed, to tell the truth, she had forgotten about him in the
+engrossing interest of her work. But after nearly a week he passed
+that way again and found her still very busy, though now at a spot
+some little way from the railing. She did not cease work to come to
+him, and as he did not jump the rail to come to her, they carried on
+their conversation in tones suitable to the distance that separated
+them,--an arrangement which struck Harborough as more practical than
+pleasant, though he would not take the initiative in improving upon
+it. The conversation itself was practical, strictly horticultural, and
+mostly concerned with the growing of lettuces, which, though it showed
+a laudable attention to business on Bill’s part, was uninteresting. She
+was attending very much to business and not very much to Harborough;
+she even once went unceremoniously away to fetch some water-cans,
+singing as she went.
+
+Harborough turned to go; the water-cans, it is true, were not far
+away, but she had gone for them without a word of apology. He was an
+extremely practical young man, believing in utility, in the importance
+of work above all things; but he did not quite appreciate seeing
+manners (and himself) sacrificed to some one else’s notion of work.
+
+“‘There’s work for all the day-time,’” Bill sang, repeating to herself
+fragments of the song she had sung to the other Harborough, and quite
+unconscious of having offended this one. “The rose of this can has
+rather big holes in it; I believe it will wash the seeds out of the
+ground--‘the victor’s crown of glory,--of glory, glory’--now, then, I
+have filled my shoes with water. ‘But after life’s long story there’s
+the devil’s bill to meet.’”
+
+“What are you singing?” Harborough stopped to ask.
+
+“Nothing,” and Bill stood on one foot while she emptied the water out
+of her shoe.
+
+“Yes, but what was it?”
+
+Bill recited the verse to him and began to water her seed-patch.
+
+“Why don’t you come nearer?” Harborough asked. “All the men in the yard
+will hear what you are saying.”
+
+“There are none there now, they are all eating their lunch in the barn;
+besides what does it matter if they do? It will do no harm.”
+
+“Oh, no; it might even do some good; it is almost a pity they should
+not be edified by your--hymn is it?”
+
+Bill looked up arrested by his tone. “It isn’t a hymn,” she said, “but
+it is true all the same, every bit of it, the laughter and the work and
+the bill, only I don’t think you always have to wait till the end of
+life’s long story for that. After all it is only fair; you must expect
+to pay a good price for a good thing,--and it is good!”
+
+“Which? The broken cucumber-frame or your own work? You are admiring
+both.”
+
+“Everything,--just being alive.”
+
+“Do you consider one is in the devil’s debt for life? It is a new idea.”
+
+“No, not exactly that. The debt you owe is the wrong you do. You have
+not half lived if you have done no wrong; you miss an awful lot if you
+never do any wrong,--don’t you think so?”
+
+She looked up as she spoke. Wrong so prefigured appeared wonderfully
+alluring, for there was an indescribable provocation in her face and
+figure, a fascination, nay, a temptation personified, which roused the
+youth in him, stirring the pulses usually so cool. Theory and reason
+are all very well, admirable in fact for ordinary use, but young blood
+will course in spite of them; the world’s spring will not always take
+_no_ for answer.
+
+Harborough went home that day vibrating with an emotion which was
+strange to him. Afterwards, when he was cool again, he was ashamed of
+it, for it did not seem exactly a good thing, and he vowed he would
+not go near the garden again. Yet how could he help himself? In a
+rash moment he had offered to mend the broken cucumber-frame for the
+girl, and she, serenely unconscious of his emotions, had accepted the
+offer. There had not been time then: Theresa wanted her in the house
+in five minutes; but he would come some other time. She had suggested
+to-morrow, or any day he liked. It did not matter when it was done, but
+it had to be done; he had left himself no choice.
+
+That same evening he met Theresa in the lane, and, acting on impulse,
+he told her of his offer to mend the frame. On the whole, he thought
+it better, even if she put a false construction on his actions, than
+jumping the fence some morning when Bill was alone in the garden. But
+Theresa did not put any construction whatever on his actions; she
+looked upon her young cousin as more of a child than she really was,
+and much more of one than Harborough thought her. “She told me you
+offered to do it,” Theresa said; “it is very kind of you, I’m sure. She
+has taken a great fancy to gardening, and I am glad of it, though I
+cannot give her much help myself, for I know so little about it, and am
+so busy besides.”
+
+Harborough assured her he was pleased to give any assistance he could,
+and Theresa thanked him again for sparing his valuable time, and
+invited him to do so to-morrow afternoon, and to have tea afterwards.
+
+This he did, he and Bill spending an hour in the garden before tea.
+That afternoon Bill did not arouse any sentiments, unholy or otherwise,
+in his breast, neither did she sing or whistle; she devoted herself to
+business, and Harborough, having of late worked with farm-labourers,
+found it a refreshing change to work with a person who understood what
+was wanted and did as she was told. “She has more common-sense than
+most of the men I know,” was the opinion he formed that day, both when
+they were at work before tea, and when they were at the table later
+on. Her intercourse with Robert Morton impressed him very much; she
+had gauged the man’s character to a nicety, and Harborough could not
+but see that she understood him better, blamed him less, and could do
+infinitely more with him than could his stately young wife. He was
+not sure that he liked her the better for that. “An odd girl,” was
+his opinion, when at last he had convinced himself that she was not
+really conscious of the part she was playing; “she simply reflects
+her surroundings, but--” His ideal of womanhood was not a changing
+elf, a will-o’-the-wisp, a creature who could in mind enter into all
+things, reflect all things, good, bad, and indifferent, without judging
+or condemning. Woman should be above man; she should not understand
+evil except when he taught her; she should be merciful, of course,
+with the mercy of love, the pity of superiority, but not tolerant
+with the liberality of good fellowship; she should have nothing in
+common with a man like Robert Morton; she should be something fairer,
+better--unconsciously he looked at Theresa.
+
+Yet Bill fascinated him. She was not fair, above, apart; she was of
+the earth earthy, a brownie by the hearth, not a goddess for a shrine.
+And yet the last thing in his waking thoughts that night was the dark
+glowing face watching him from the gate, the first thing that haunted
+his dreams was the small figure gliding into the green twilight of the
+nut-bushes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+WILHELMINA I. AND II.
+
+
+Polly always declared she foresaw the end from the very beginning of
+the affair, and certainly at the outset of Miss Brownlow’s illness she
+prophesied fatal results; but then she always did foretell the worst,
+and Bella said she did not believe her, though she sobbed as she said
+it. But it seemed so impossible: Miss Brownlow only slipped down the
+last four or five of the cellar-stairs; Jane was getting coals at the
+time, and declared she saw her and could swear it was not more than
+five steps. She must have struck her head on the corner at the bottom,
+for it was so long before she recovered consciousness, and she seemed
+to so wander in her mind when she did recover. This was before she
+became very ill; after that took place Polly did not prophesy anything;
+the cousins only looked at one another in silence.
+
+But before that time Theresa had come. Bella was so intensely relieved
+by her coming, that she did not for a moment dispute with Polly for
+the right of bringing her. She sat by Miss Brownlow’s side alone while
+Polly was away; the room was so dark, for the blinds were pulled down
+and the day was overcast, that she could barely see to correct the
+pile of exercise-books before her. As yet the school had not been
+broken up; but the noise of the children did not seem to disturb Miss
+Brownlow, hardly even to reach her as she lay in semi-stupor. Neither
+of the cousins felt it wise to dismiss their pupils lightly, and,
+notwithstanding Polly’s prophetic warnings, neither really anticipated
+the worst, or fully realised the serious nature of the accident.
+
+On account of the school Polly was not able to leave Wrugglesby till
+after four o’clock; but, seeing the grave nature of her errand, she
+ordered a fly from the Red Lion in spite of Bella’s demur at the
+extravagance, and drove away in becoming state and solemnity. Bill was
+working in the garden at the time of the arrival at Haylands; when she
+went to the pump for water to wash her hands before tea she saw the fly
+standing in the yard.
+
+“Whose is that?” she asked as she pumped water into a wooden bowl.
+
+Sam, with the milk-pails on his way to the dairy, stood contemplating
+the object.
+
+“Don’t roightly know,” he said.
+
+Bill carried her bowl to a wooden bench outside the dairy door, brought
+a large piece of yellow soap from the wash-house, rolled up her sleeves
+and proceeded to wash; the refinements of life did not at that time
+greatly trouble her. The man with the pails followed her to the dairy,
+went in and began pouring the milk into the pans.
+
+“Oi shouldn’t be s’proised if that b’longed to Wazzel,” he said
+glancing down the yard; “looks loike ’is shay, that do.”
+
+“Wazzel of the Red Lion? Who has come from Wrugglesby?”
+
+“Come fr’ Wrugglesby? Oh, it’s one o’ the Misses’s sisters as come, but
+I’m not sartin that is Wazzel’s--”
+
+“Which one? Bella, the pretty one?”
+
+“No, the old ’un. Wazzel--”
+
+But Bill had gone with still wet hands to see what had brought Polly to
+Ashelton. She knew, directly she looked into the room, that there was
+something wrong, or that Polly was persuading herself there was. There
+was an air of momentous gravity about Polly, of depressing, dignified
+solemnity which pervaded the whole room and infected all present. Even
+the frivolous young maid, who was setting out the tea-things, looked
+awed and spread the best cloth out of respect for the gravity of the
+visitor. Robert, who was also there, seemed glum and silent, and Polly
+was not attempting to entertain him according to her usual manner; she
+was acting up to the situation and enjoying it proportionately.
+
+“What’s the matter?” Bill asked.
+
+Theresa turned, and Bill knew when she saw her face that there was real
+trouble.
+
+“Aunt is very ill,” Polly answered, “and I have come for Theresa.”
+
+“Ill?”
+
+“Yes, but not dangerously,” Theresa hastily explained; “at least we
+hope not,--we are sure it cannot be,--she was quite well a day or two
+ago. She has had a tumble down-stairs which has shaken her a good deal.
+It is so difficult for Polly and Bella to nurse her and look after the
+school too, that they want me to go and help.”
+
+“I see.” Bill was greatly relieved.
+
+“How long has she been ill? How bad is she?”
+
+They told her, Polly characteristically painting the case black,
+Theresa white. Bill was left to draw her own conclusions, based on
+the one fact that Polly usually served the truth in the sauce she
+considered most fitting, and on the other that Theresa really knew very
+little of the state of the case. In the end she did not know what to
+think; her fears were half aroused, yet she could not believe matters
+really were serious; nothing serious had happened within her memory,
+and it did not seem possible that it could now. That which needed the
+most consideration, however, was not so much what had happened as
+the more immediate question of Theresa’s leaving home. This proved
+difficult to arrange; she hardly knew what to do.
+
+“The dairy needs a lot of management just now,” she said, “and Jessie
+really is very inexperienced; she has been with us such a little time
+too.”
+
+“Do you think I could do anything?” Bill asked.
+
+Theresa looked at her doubtfully, but Robert, who was tired of the
+discussion, said shortly: “Of course she could; there is not such a lot
+to do. You had better get your things together and go back at once;
+there’s no need for any more talk about it.”
+
+It was nice of Robert to give permission so readily, even if he did not
+give it graciously. No doubt Polly thought so, as she cast a quick,
+comprehending glance at him from the corner of her small dark eyes.
+“Thank you,” she said; “I’m sure it is very nice of you to spare her;
+we are so much obliged, so very much. Now, Theresa, you can come with a
+light heart,--as soon as we have had tea; we may as well wait for that.
+We must have tea somewhere, and it takes no longer in one place than
+another.”
+
+So Theresa drove away with Polly, leaving Bill for a day or two only,
+she said, though in her heart she thought it likely to be longer. Bill
+also thought it possible, and took over the charge of the house and
+dairy rather in anticipation of such an event. Taking over the charge
+was a serious matter in Bill’s opinion; Jessie also found it a serious
+matter, for with the cheerful and friendly Bill she found herself
+working as she had never worked before. Bill loved work in all its
+branches, and somehow those with her usually had to work too, either
+because they were infected by her energy, or because they could not
+avoid it; but for some reason they usually worked. Jessie worked now as
+she never did before or afterwards, until she got a house of her own
+and a husband to keep.
+
+It must be admitted Bill did a great deal more than there was any
+necessity to do, a great deal more than Theresa did or expected to be
+done; the only thing which prevented her from doing yet more was a
+desire to go on with her gardening. It was one morning when she was
+hurrying over the last of the butter-making so as to get out to her
+plants that Mr. Dane came and hindered her awhile. He came to ask if
+some of the skimmed milk could be sent to Mrs. Hutton, an old woman at
+Ashelton End. He was going to the front door in the orthodox manner
+but, hearing Bill singing gaily in the dairy, he went round the end
+of the house and came to seek her at her work. He knew Theresa had
+gone to Wrugglesby; all Ashelton knew that, for Miss Minchin, from the
+vantage-point of her corner window, had seen the fly from the Red Lion
+drive past. She had kept a careful watch on the road till the same
+vehicle drove back, even sitting at tea with one eye on the window and
+the other on the tea-pot, so as to have a really good look at it on
+its return journey and to see Mrs. Morton and another lady inside.
+
+On account of this sight, doubting that Mrs. Morton could have left her
+cousin alone at Haylands, thinking that, had she done so, the young
+creature might be lonely, or want a little help, Miss Minchin set off
+to see her the very next afternoon. Bill was in the garden at the time,
+fortunately out of sight of the drawing-room window, when Jessie came
+to tell her of the visitor.
+
+“What does she want?” Bill asked.
+
+“To see you, Miss. I expect she wants to find out about the Missis, if
+the truth were known.” Jessie knew Miss Minchin by reputation.
+
+“Well, you could have told her that,” said Bill, loth to leave her
+gardening.
+
+“But she didn’t ask me. Lor’, miss, she pretends she’s come to see you.”
+
+“To call?” Bill asked, and Jessie nodded.
+
+“Oh!” said Bill delighted, and ran to the pump. She made a back-door
+toilette and presented herself in the drawing-room quite unconscious
+of the quantity of loam on her short skirts. Miss Minchin found out
+all Bill could tell her, offered (and really meant it) any assistance
+she could give, and had, as she said, “a very nice little chat,” Bill
+playing hostess most successfully. She went away quite satisfied, told
+Miss Gruet all she had heard and all she surmised, and at the end of
+three days everyone in Ashelton and Ashelton End and Brook Ashelton,
+even including Mr. Dane, knew something of Mrs. Morton’s summons to
+Wrugglesby. Consequently, when on that sunny April morning the rector
+heard the vigorous young voice singing in the dairy, he knew that the
+lady of the house was to be found there.
+
+Bill was singing a perfectly irreproachable hymn, occasionally, when
+her work became very engrossing, leaving off or perhaps humming a bar
+or two; but just as Mr. Dane drew near she broke out at the top of her
+voice so that she did not hear his approach, nor did she know that he
+was there until he stopped in the doorway.
+
+“Good-morning,” he said.
+
+“Good-morning,” she replied, giving him a large smile of welcome. “Do
+you want me?”
+
+“Yes, but please don’t let me interrupt you; you look very busy.”
+
+Bill was making butter-pats, and apparently had been churning earlier,
+for the butter-milk still dripped from her bare elbows. She was
+standing on a small inverted wash-tub, for the shelves were high and
+she liked to be well above her work. “I am rather busy,” she said;
+“come in and sit down, won’t you? That pickle-tub is quite safe; the
+lid won’t give way.”
+
+The rector came in and sat down, making his request for milk at the
+same time.
+
+“She shall have some,” Bill said after a moment’s thought. “I will take
+her some by-and-bye, if that will do; or do you want her to have it
+earlier?”
+
+Mr. Dane said that would do, though on second thoughts he suggested
+that, if convenient, he would take the milk himself as he was going to
+Mrs. Hutton.
+
+Bill mentally rearranged the milk at her disposal and said he could
+have it now. Had she been Theresa, she would have insisted that the boy
+should carry the can to the cottage; being Bill she did no such thing,
+for she had set the boy some weeding which would take all his time. She
+volunteered to carry it herself as soon as the butter should be done,
+and would have been pleased to do so. It never occurred to her that the
+carrying of a milk-can could appear to Mr. Dane in a different light
+from that in which it did to her; and fortunately she was right.
+
+She went off to find a can, and it took her some few minutes to do so.
+As she searched, the old man heard her softly complete the interrupted
+verse of the hymn she had been singing, and the varied richness of her
+voice struck him forcibly.
+
+“You have a very remarkable voice, my child,” he said when she came
+back.
+
+Bill coloured a little with pleasure. “I believe I can imitate other
+sounds better than I can do anything else,” she said; and to illustrate
+her words she mimicked with rare perfection the liquid recurrent
+whistle of a thrush in the apple-tree outside the window. “Perhaps it
+is because I have got a correct ear,” she added, as if apologising for
+her own skill.
+
+“I think you must have,” he answered, “and a good memory too. You
+remember what you have once heard perhaps? Yes? Tell me, then, where
+did you hear the song you sang at Mrs. Dawson’s?”
+
+The old man was looking at her very keenly, almost eagerly. She gave
+the butter an unnecessary thump as she answered, “I don’t know,” and
+then added somewhat defiantly, “I never thought they would mind it.”
+
+“Mind it? Who minded it? How did you learn it? Think,--tell me whom you
+have heard sing it.”
+
+Bill saw that Mr. Dane had found no offence in the song, and being
+reassured she set herself to answer his question. “I cannot tell you
+how I came to know it,” she said; “I have never seen the music in
+print that I can remember. The greater part of the words I found with
+some letters and things which are kept in an old box at home. When I
+read them I seemed to recognise them, and remembered the part that was
+missing,--you know the way I mean, the way you grope things out of your
+mind. At first I thought I would take the paper away: then I thought
+I ought not to, so I just learned them by heart. As for the music, it
+seems to belong to the words--don’t you think so? I can only suppose my
+father used to sing the song, perhaps very often, and I have remembered
+it, though in that case it may not be quite right.”
+
+“There was one mistake; you did not repeat the refrain with sufficient
+accuracy in the latter part of the song.”
+
+“You have heard it before!” Bill exclaimed in astonishment. “You know
+it too!”
+
+“Yes, I have heard it--many years ago, very many; that is why I
+wondered how you came to know it; I did not think it had been sung
+lately.”
+
+He rose as he spoke, and held out his hand for the can. He looked
+old and weary, yet withal a very fine and courteous gentleman though
+standing among milk-pans talking to a little dairy-maid. Bill wondered
+if he had heard the song when he was young, and if it were very long
+ago. She gave him the milk-can saying, “I will send the same quantity
+to-morrow.”
+
+“Thank you, thank you, little Mistress Bill. Bill,--it’s a name to fit
+you.”
+
+She laughed. “Better than Wilhelmina,” she said. “That is ever so much
+too long; I was called Wilhelmina after my grandmother.”
+
+He stopped on the threshold. For a moment he leaned against the
+door-post; the lined face looked gray in the shaded light, though
+perhaps only by reason of it, for he merely said, “Yes, yes, of course,
+Wilhelmina Alardy,--good-bye,” and so went away with his milk-can.
+
+Wilhelmina Alardy! Of course she was Wilhelmina Alardy; he knew that
+before. And the other Wilhelmina was her grandmother; of course he
+had known that too, or at least he almost felt as if he had. Not that
+she was like, not like at all, not even in face; he could trace no
+resemblance to the first Wilhelmina, tall and slim and queenly, with
+her beautiful black hair. Bill’s hair was dark, it is true, but with a
+glowing, coppery darkness, brown shot with red, a colour of which a man
+was never sure even when he thought he saw it in her eyes. Wilhelmina’s
+eyes were different, dark, proud, passionate. Bill’s were not proud,
+nor were they passionate; but they took possession of a man’s mind;
+they held an indescribable charm not to be forgotten, they were,--they
+were other eyes, another face--
+
+Mr. Dane turned abruptly from the painting he was contemplating; he was
+at home now, his visit to Mrs. Hutton having been an unusually brief
+one. When he reached home he locked himself in his study so that he
+should not be disturbed. His housekeeper thought he was busy over his
+sermon; but if he was, his text was an old portrait taken from a locked
+drawer, and his subject a beautiful woman, young and proud, to whom
+the painter had given a milk-white skin and curling black hair. Her
+gown sloped away on the shoulders in the fashion of forty years ago,
+and her brow curved softly in that fashion too; but the painter, in
+spite of a laudable desire to bring the face within the then prevailing
+standard of beauty, had not been able to flatter the chin out of its
+imperious waywardness nor the eyes out of their proud unrest.
+
+There was no likeness to Bill in this face of the other Wilhelmina; and
+yet--this was but one of the looks she had worn--who should say there
+was not some of her sleeping undeveloped in the girl of to-day? Men
+know so little of the working of such things. Who could say how many
+of Wilhelmina’s reckless ancestors had gone to the making of Bill, had
+revived in Bill, gipsy Bill? Of course she was gipsy; Anthony Alardy
+was half a gipsy, dark-faced, lawless, part sinner, part saint, knight
+and churl in one; a child of nature alive with a glowing vitality,
+impregnated with a magnetism, a charm, a quality without a name, hard
+to define yet harder still to defy. To this day the man who sat with
+the old portrait in his hand could recall, ay, and acknowledge, the
+charm, even though he owed to it so much of sorrow and dishonour in
+the long ago. And the voice! He remembered the voice too; the musician
+in him could never forget it, for he would never hear such another. He
+might hate it,--he did hate it, all the man in him hated it--but the
+musician could not, and could never forget.
+
+ Red is the rose thou hast bound in thy hair.
+
+That night there were red roses in her hair, he remembered,--how he
+remembered! And the song--what music, what passion of melody! It was
+not art, it was nature, man’s nature, woman’s nature crying out,
+passion which swelled up and spoke, to be answered, to be satisfied.
+
+Mr. Dane put the portrait of his young wife away, put it away and, by
+degrees put away too the scenes and memories which had returned to him.
+Strange that after so many years the past should return thus, stranger
+still, since it did return, that pain should outweigh all other
+feelings now. Where had gone the sense of injury, the shame, the agony,
+the unforgiving hate? They were gone, all was only a pain now; thank
+God for it, and for the mercy of the years, the pity and the merciful
+wisdom learned of the long, patient years.
+
+He locked the drawer and put away the key. She was dead, dead long
+ago. And her grandchild was here, singing the old passionate song;
+looking out on the world with eager, unknowing eyes; containing in
+herself funded possibilities handed down from a dead past, acquired
+from circumstance, environment, a hundred things of which a man cannot
+judge, on which he cannot reason. Her grandchild! A little brown
+creature full of untold possibilities! Her grandchild? Almost she might
+have been his own--for a moment he fancied he hated her for it. Might
+have been? Had she been she would not have been such as she now was;
+and after all, that was the thing which concerned him, the thing which
+he had, if need be, to help.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+NATURAL SELECTION.
+
+
+Bill, of course, knew nothing of what was in the rector’s mind; she
+only wondered once or twice about the song, and decided to sing it
+no more in public since the greater number of her acquaintances
+disapproved of it, and the one whose opinion she most valued did not
+like it. Harborough liked it or had seemed to like it on the night
+she sang it at the Dawsons’. But she was not quite sure of him, for
+she had begun to think there were two separate persons in Gilchrist
+Harborough,--one a strong, cool, somewhat old young man whose only
+weakness was theories, and who was the normal and usual person in
+possession; the other a very different person, who only looked out now
+and then, by accident as it were. It was to this last that the song
+appealed, this last who waked once or twice under her influence. She
+was not sure, but she rather fancied Harborough despised this second
+self, even denied its existence. That was a pity, in her opinion, for
+the second self was the thing in him which played, which laughed, and
+enjoyed life and despised theories. For this reason, and also for pure
+mischief, Bill tried occasionally to rouse this other self.
+
+She had not many opportunities, for Harborough was very guarded, and
+by degrees, since she was much absorbed in her work, she forgot all
+about it, though she saw him often while Theresa was at Wrugglesby. It
+is true, if he passed when she was working in the garden he did not
+usually stop to say more than “good-afternoon”; indeed, had she only
+known it, his demeanour on those occasions suggested “lead us not into
+temptation” in a manner which was scarcely complimentary. However, as
+it happened, about this time business brought Harborough to Robert,
+and Robert brought him to Haylands, where of necessity he saw Bill.
+Even when he did not come to the house, he met her in the yard or barns
+or dairy, “looking diligently to the ways of her household.” There
+could be no doubt as to her capabilities and diligence as a housewife;
+Harborough never saw her now without being impressed with her ability
+and, indeed, with her great suitability for the post of mistress of a
+working-farm.
+
+Events, or rather his opinions, culminated on the afternoon when he
+invited her to take shelter from the rain in Crows’ Farm. It was very
+heavy rain and very sudden, and she had on her best hat; in ordinary
+circumstances she would have declined his hospitality and paddled
+cheerfully home, but the hat was not ordinary; so she accepted his
+offer and took shelter under his roof for the hour that the rain
+lasted. While there she made tea for him without disturbing the method
+of his arrangements; she washed the cups without splashing his scrubbed
+table, and she did not, even when asked for her opinion, say that his
+way of keeping kitchen utensils was wrong. Finally she sat by the
+smouldering fire with folded hands saying with unmistakable sincerity
+that his manner of living was one after her own heart.
+
+“You would like it?” he asked.
+
+“Yes, better than anything except gipsying.”
+
+“You would not like that,” he told her smiling. “At least when you came
+to know what it was really like, you would not.”
+
+“You think not? Perhaps so; I don’t know much about it: have you tried?”
+
+“Rather not,” he said; “I have tried bush-life though.”
+
+“Is that like it?”
+
+“No; not altogether. There are not so many fellow-gipsies in that; also
+there are not necessarily dirt and dishonesty.”
+
+“But there are sometimes?” Bill asked as if she were anxious there
+should be.
+
+“Occasionally you run against queer customers, men from the ends of the
+earth, who had very much better have stayed there, if they could not
+contrive to drop off altogether.”
+
+“I should think they were worse than fellow-gipsies,” Bill observed.
+
+“That’s a matter of opinion; besides, there is always plenty of room
+there, and you don’t come across them often. I think the thing which
+strikes me most of all here is the smallness; it is all so ‘preserved.’”
+
+Bill was interested. “I should like to see the bush,” she said.
+
+“It is not much to see,” he told her, but added, “station-life would
+suit you; I believe you would like that.”
+
+“Tell me about it.” And he told her what he thought would interest her,
+she listening with eager face.
+
+And thus they spent the time pleasantly enough until the rain ceased
+sufficiently for her to go home. He walked to the gate with her, and
+then went back to his barns and sheds revolving in his mind a theory he
+had not much considered before,--the theory of natural selection, which
+he interpreted to mean the wisdom of choosing your wife as you choose
+your horse, for general suitability to your purpose.
+
+She was young, it was true, and perhaps a little wild, but she could be
+trained; she would also sober down of herself, and she would probably
+never develop her latent possibilities for mischief if she married
+early. She was not what one would describe as tractable, though she was
+accommodating, far too accommodating not to be more or less submissive
+to superior experience. And she was all one could desire for practical
+purposes.
+
+Practical purposes! That was just it; in adopting a practical farmer’s
+life he found he needed a practical farmer’s wife; there was no room
+at his hearth for the stately lady whom fancy (not yet dead) had once
+painted in that position. There was something wrong with the present
+arrangement; a man either wanted to be something less or else to
+have something more than modern codes allowed. The patriarch Abraham
+supplied what must even then have been a long-felt want, in taking,
+besides the chief and lady wife, a humbler working partner.
+
+Harborough was not a man given to acting hastily, at least the
+paramount person in his character was not; concerning the other
+person he did not know much. He thought a long time of Bill and her
+suitability for his purpose, entirely oblivious for the moment of her
+curious attractions; but he could come to no conclusion either as to
+whether he wanted her or whether, if he did, she wanted him. However,
+he need not have wearied himself with the consideration that night,
+for, as it chanced, he had almost a month in which to think it over
+before he saw her again. That very evening she went to Wrugglesby and
+did not come back to Ashelton for some weeks.
+
+As she crossed the yard on her homeward way, Robert met her, his heavy
+face wearing a look of real concern.
+
+“Bear up, little girl!” was his greeting, for he saw that his face had
+already broken the bad news. “Cheer up! It hasn’t come to the worst
+yet, and we’re not going to be frightened into thinking it’s coming,
+either;--we’re just going to drive in to Wrugglesby and see.”
+
+“Have they sent for me?” she asked, her face whitening.
+
+“Yes,--you’re not going to cry, are you? It mayn’t be so bad as all
+that. There’s a brave girl! Run in and get a wrap or something, you’ll
+be cold before you get there. They’ll have Beauty in the cart in a
+twinkling, and you shall drive her if you like.”
+
+Bill smiled a little; he was trying to comfort her as well as he could
+and she was grateful for the intention. She even pretended to be
+pleased to drive the spirited mare hitherto forbidden to her; it might
+have hurt him if she had not. It might have hurt him if she had refused
+the sweets he kept popping in her mouth, and she ate them though each
+one seemed as if it would choke her.
+
+He talked a little during the first part of the drive and she tried to
+answer him, but after a while he felt the wisdom of silence, and they
+both became quiet until just as he handed her out at Langford House
+he said awkwardly: “You shall never want for anything while I live, I
+swear you sha’n’t! Theresa and I will always have a home for you,--mind
+that, little girl.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+CHASING A SHADOW.
+
+
+Mr. James Brownlow was a busy man; a hard-working solicitor, partner
+in an old firm, and a good firm though scarcely a rich one. He was
+not rich himself; he had worked hard all his life to attain moderate
+comfort, and he continued to work hard, though he was now past
+middle-age, partly to maintain the same standard of comfort, and partly
+because he cherished a delusion that nothing in the firm could go on
+without him. But, in spite of his business and its importance, he felt
+bound to devote a certain amount of time to the affairs of the late
+Miss Isabella Brownlow. It is true she was not a very near relation,
+but he had been legal adviser as well as relation, and moreover, the
+nieces she left seemed to be in a particularly solitary condition.
+
+“But one is married, I thought,” Mrs. Brownlow objected from the
+further end of the dinner-table. The train from Wrugglesby had
+been late, and made the dinner late too; accordingly the lamb was
+overcooked, and the clockwork regularity of the household disturbed.
+Mrs. Brownlow felt slightly annoyed; also she considered that if one of
+the nieces was married her husband should have taken over the affairs
+of the family, instead of troubling somebody else’s husband,--and,
+incidentally, somebody else’s excellent cook.
+
+Mr. Brownlow probably knew these sentiments, but he was not disturbed
+by them that night for the importance of business was great in his
+eyes; moreover, he had been discreetly handled earlier in the day.
+“Yes,” he said, “yes, one is married, comfortably married, I should
+say; but a man is not bound to take over his wife’s family. He has
+professed himself quite ready to give a home to the youngest girl; the
+others will carry on the school.”
+
+“A wise plan, I should think,” Mrs. Brownlow said, with a sigh. She
+was always sadly affected by the delinquencies of the present age,
+which she possessed great abilities for discovering. “It is liberal of
+him,” she went on. “I suppose he will be repaid by the girl finding out
+one day that she is unable to bear a dependent position and must make
+her own way in the world, after having had a long training for it at
+somebody else’s expense. Girls usually get such ideas nowadays.”
+
+Mr. Brownlow agreed with the general sentiment, but defended this
+particular girl. “I don’t think she is that sort at all,” he said. “She
+is very young, a plain, quiet little thing; she looked docile; Miss
+Hains spoke of her as if she were a child.”
+
+“There is no family?” Mrs. Brownlow asked. “I mean the married
+one,--Mrs. Morton, didn’t you say the name was--has no family?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“But if she has by-and-bye, what will become of this girl? Can they
+afford to keep her? Is it wise, do you think?”
+
+“I have talked it all over with Miss Hains who really is a sensible
+woman. She is five and thirty, I dare say, and a sensible, clever
+woman.” Polly might have been considered clever in some senses of the
+word; that she had certain claims to ability was proved by the opinion
+she had produced in Mr. Brownlow’s mind. “She and I,” went on the
+worthy gentleman unconsciously placing the persons in their right order
+of importance, “she and I have decided that her cousin Wilhelmina had
+better return home with Mrs. Morton for the present. The school is
+not larger than she herself, with the assistance of Miss Waring, can
+manage. In the course of time they hope to increase it, when Wilhelmina
+can come back to help them with the younger pupils.”
+
+Mrs. Brownlow thought this an excellent arrangement and asked for
+personal details of its originator.
+
+“Miss Hains? No, she is not handsome,” her husband said in answer to
+her question, “but a sensible, practical woman. Really it is quite
+surprising how business-like she is when you come to think that she
+has lived so long in that little country town,--how business-like
+and yet how very womanly, how essentially feminine, not in the least
+self-assertive and opinionated.”
+
+Such were the golden opinions Polly had won from Mr. Brownlow. Hardly
+so flattering was her opinion of him, which she was at that same time
+expressing to Bella and Bill as they sat together in the twilight.
+
+The first shock of their grief was now over. It is true there was an
+aching blank left in their lives by the death of this kindly, not
+over-wise aunt, but the first sharpness was over, the first ache a
+little dulled. Bella and Theresa had lost their own mother not so many
+years ago, and though they had dearly loved their aunt, the loss of her
+was not what the earlier grief had been, nor yet what it was to Bill
+who could remember no mother. Bill’s loss was greatest, and greatest
+also to her was the shock, for this was the first time real sorrow had
+touched her life. She had, too, more time and opportunity to think
+about it, having, as the youngest, but little to do with all the plans
+and work consequent upon Miss Brownlow’s death. Polly, of course, was
+very busy: mourning alone offered a large field for her energies, for
+the cousins could not afford to employ even the local milliner and
+dressmaker.
+
+“We must let them dress us for the funeral,” Polly had said, but added,
+“I hardly think we need get Bill’s hat there; I will do that myself,
+for we must save wherever we can. As for other clothes, we must manage
+somehow; one good dress apiece is all we can afford.”
+
+And she had sighed; extensive mourning would have compensated her
+somewhat for a much heavier bereavement. Not but that she did mourn for
+Miss Brownlow; her grief was real, though perhaps not quite so deep
+as theirs, thought Bella and Theresa. As for Bill, when she had cried
+herself sick with the abandonment of childhood, she felt an hysterical
+inclination to laugh as she watched the perfection of Polly’s sorrow.
+It was real, as real as any other of Polly’s feelings; she felt it
+after her fashion, but principally because it was the fashion to feel
+it.
+
+By the May evening when Mr. Brownlow so much commended Polly, that
+“sensible and practical woman” considered it time to abate the first
+intensity of her grief. She had been abating it by degrees, and during
+Mr. Brownlow’s visit had shown a demeanour of subdued sorrow blent
+with practical common-sense. After his departure she subdued her
+sorrow still more, and when the cousins sat together that evening she
+discussed matters with the air of one who, having paid off the funeral
+_cortège_, now opens the shutters and prepares to return to the normal
+condition of things. Theresa had gone home to Haylands; she had been
+obliged to go back there some time before, but had driven to Wrugglesby
+with Robert that day so as to be present during Mr. Brownlow’s visit.
+The school was to re-open at the beginning of the next week, the
+holidays on account of Miss Brownlow’s death being deducted from the
+midsummer vacation; an unavoidable arrangement not much to Polly’s
+taste.
+
+“We are too poor to afford sorrow,” she observed; “at least comfortable
+sorrow.”
+
+“As if comfort mattered at such a time!” Bella replied with scorn.
+She was leaning with her elbows on the sill, looking through the open
+window into the street.
+
+Polly was of opinion that it did matter, but she did not explain her
+views at length, for she wanted to talk over Mr. Brownlow’s suggestion.
+
+“You and I,” she said to Bella, “are to keep on this school for the
+rest of our lives. We must move into a smaller house to do it when the
+lease of this one is up. How would Chestnut Villa do? It is empty now,
+and I don’t expect anyone will take it before then; it is too mouldy.”
+
+“Yes,” acquiesced Bella in a spiritless voice. She looked across the
+empty, darkening street to the doctor’s prim house opposite; the
+scent of the laburnums came to her from his garden, the sound of a
+wheel-barrow from a neighbour’s close by. It was all very dull and
+narrow and small--and the prospect offered? It is hard to be young and
+fair and told at two-and-twenty that to live at Chestnut Villa (too
+mouldy for anyone else) and teach small girls is one’s fate beyond
+redemption.
+
+“We are to keep on with the school,” Polly was saying.
+
+“I suppose so.” Bella did not look round.
+
+“Do you?” Polly retorted. “I don’t then! For one thing, I don’t suppose
+the school will keep on with us.”
+
+Bella did look round now. “It will, it must!” she exclaimed. “What else
+are we to do?”
+
+“It won’t,” Polly affirmed with confidence. “Look how it has gone down
+even while poor Aunt, whom everyone knew, was here. If she,--and people
+sent their children to her out of friendship or because their cousins
+or someone used to come--if she could not keep it together, what are we
+likely to do? You can teach, but you have not passed many examinations,
+and you are young and not at all imposing; as for me, I have no
+certificates at all.”
+
+“But, Polly, you are clever in your own way; surely you could get
+pupils?”
+
+Polly did not think so, and she proceeded to make a statement of the
+case,--which girls were leaving, which likely to leave, and which among
+those living in the district were likely to come to Langford House, the
+last appearing to be very few. The case as set forth by her was not
+inspiriting.
+
+“But,” said Bella at last, “why did you not tell Mr. Brownlow this? You
+seemed to think it all satisfactory when you were talking to him.”
+
+“Mr. Brownlow!” Polly replied contemptuously. “What would be the good
+of telling a person like that?”
+
+“We have no one else to advise or help us, no one at all; Robert does
+not know and I am sure you don’t think much of his opinion.”
+
+Seeing Bella in real consternation, Bill shut her book. It was A
+MIDSUMMER-NIGHT’S DREAM, recommended by Mr. Dane, and she had found a
+great delight in it during those days. “What is your plan?” she asked
+Polly, as she put the book away and seated herself on the table.
+
+“I cannot say I have a plan,” Polly answered slowly, “not exactly a
+plan,--I may not do it; it depends on several things.”
+
+“Several persons?” Bill suggested; “persons or a person?” Polly did not
+answer, and Bill followed up her suspicions: “A person who you are not
+sure will do what you want?”
+
+Polly shifted uneasily; she seldom reckoned persons as obstacles to her
+plans, but in this case Bill was right, for she herself was the person
+in question, and Polly was not at all sure of the worth of her own
+authority over her ward--she and Theresa had been appointed guardians.
+
+“It is all very perplexing,” she said with a sigh. “I hardly know what
+will be best to do for you and me. It principally concerns you and me,
+as poor Aunt said, for Bella has a little money of her own, and, even
+if she does not marry, she is never likely to want a home with Theresa
+living so near.”
+
+“Neither is Bill,” Bella said. “Robert has offered it to Bill; I don’t
+see how you can expect him to take us both. I am very glad he has
+offered it to her; she wants it much more than I do.”
+
+Polly agreed. “But,” she added, “I should not think Bill would like to
+quarter herself on Robert and Theresa for the rest of her life; that is
+what it would amount to, for she could never be a governess and come
+and go as you could. It was very kind of them to offer it, but I should
+not think Bill would take it, except, of course, just for the present.
+I know I should not.”
+
+“You will mostly take all you can get,” Bill observed not without
+truth. Before Polly could deny the charge she asked: “On whom does your
+plan depend? Not on Bella; she evidently has nothing to do with it;
+have I?”
+
+“Yes, Bill,” Polly said severely; “it is for your good as well as
+mine. You don’t deserve to be considered, but I have a sense of
+responsibility.”
+
+“What can I do that is any good to you?” Bill speculated. “What is it,
+Polly? Something you hardly expect me to do?”
+
+“Nothing of the sort! I should always expect you to do as I wished,
+especially as I am your guardian.”
+
+An audience of two was quite sufficient for Polly, who even when alone
+could hardly refrain from taking a part. Bill knew the value of her
+efforts. “What is your plan?” she asked simply, and Polly, after a few
+more preliminary flourishes, set it forth. Briefly it was this: to let
+things remain as arranged with Mr. Brownlow until Christmas, when the
+lease of the house expired; then to give up the school,--sell it if
+there was anything to sell--Bella to obtain a situation as resident
+governess, making Haylands her home in the holidays; Polly and Bill to
+move to London or the suburbs--
+
+“And take lodgers!” cried Bill.
+
+“Yes, probably,” Polly said; “we should not have enough to live on
+without doing something, and that would be the best we could do. I have
+thought about boarders, but that won’t do; you want more capital for a
+boarding house; besides boarders are a nuisance, nor do they really pay
+so well as lodgers, though of course they sound much better. We need
+not tell people about here that we are letting lodgings; we can say we
+are taking a few paying guests, because we could not get a house small
+enough for just our two selves.”
+
+This plan, except for the unnecessary deception, met with Bella’s
+entire approval. Bill, to Polly’s annoyance, did not give an opinion,
+but sat thinking, probably of what part she was to play and why she,
+rather than Bella, had been chosen for the venture. The same question
+occurred to Bella. “Why should not you and I do this?” she asked.
+“I should do just as well as Bill, and besides, we should have more
+capital as I could put my money into it. And then there would be no
+need to upset Robert’s arrangement; I am sure he really meant Bill to
+make Haylands her home.”
+
+“My dear Bella”--Polly was motherly--“there are two or three reasons
+why it should not be you. To begin with, you are too pretty; our
+lodgers will probably be men, very likely young city men,--you
+understand? To go on with, why should not Bill be independent? If she
+puts her share of the money in and helps me she would be independent in
+a measure, and I certainly know of no other way in which she could be.”
+
+Bella was not altogether satisfied; but Bill was, for she had solved
+the problem on her own account. “There is going to be no servant kept
+in that house!” she exclaimed.
+
+“What nonsense!” Bella said, and Polly explained that she should
+have a girl. Then they talked the plan over afresh, Bill remaining
+aggravatingly silent. At last, Bella going into the kitchen to speak to
+the maid, Polly turned angrily to the table where the small figure was
+almost lost in the darkness. “I suppose,” she said sharply, “you are
+going to oppose me?”
+
+Bill laughed softly. “Fancy you being afraid of me and my opposition,”
+she said half to herself.
+
+Polly did not attempt to deny the fact. “You are the most obstinate,
+contrary, silly little creature in the world,” was her only answer.
+
+Bill seemed still more amused. “Why did you let me know you were
+afraid?” she asked.
+
+“What is the good of pretending?” was Polly’s only answer, and Bill
+quoted some past words of her cousin’s in reply. “‘Truth is a luxury
+poor people cannot always afford;’ I have heard you give that to
+somebody as an excuse for your pretending. I don’t think it a very good
+one myself, but I have heard you make it. I suppose you can afford to
+be truthful with me?”
+
+“I am not going to pretend with you,” Polly said. “Look here, Bill, you
+are only a child and you are very ignorant and not at all clever,--I
+hope you don’t mind me saying these things, I am only telling the plain
+truth--you are all this, but in some respects you have much more sense
+than Bella and Theresa; you have more vitality, more--I don’t know
+what--but more backbone; you are not so much a Brownlow, not a Brownlow
+at all.”
+
+“Thank you.” Bill did not seem overwhelmed with the flattery.
+
+“What is your objection?” Polly asked after a pause: “I suppose you
+think you would have to work too hard.”
+
+“No I don’t. Oh, no I don’t at all; we should share the work out
+fairly, Polly, very fairly.”
+
+Just then Bella came back, and the discussion was dropped, but Polly
+was not altogether dissatisfied, concluding from Bill’s manner then,
+and later, that she would probably fall in with the plan when the time
+came. As for Bill there was no hesitation in her mind about accepting
+the proposition; there was nothing else she could do, for she could not
+live with Robert and Theresa permanently, unless they would let her
+work their garden for a profit and look upon the proceeds as payment
+from her. They would not let her do this, so, though she would have
+preferred the garden to the lodgings, she was quite willing to accept
+the latter, since the former was unattainable. Live with Theresa
+without the garden she would not, for she had discovered, or rather she
+had gradually come to know of certain things which led her to believe
+that Theresa and Robert could not afford to offer her a permanent home.
+“I don’t believe Theresa knows,” she said to herself, “or if she does,
+she does not realise how things are. I wonder if Robert does? He was
+always telling me separate bits; I wonder if he looks at things whole;
+but he must, of course he must do so.”
+
+These thoughts occupied Bill’s mind a good deal, and another was added
+to them at this time, surprise at her own power over Polly. Either
+openly or covertly Polly’s will had been supreme at Langford House;
+she had always planned and decided for them all; it was a strange and
+wonderful thing that she should have considered Bill in this plan,
+feared her opposition even while she sought her help--strange yet
+perhaps not altogether unreasonable. Bill felt a childish amusement
+in the novelty of the situation, and also a sense of responsibility.
+But of course she had, and she knew she had, a certain compelling
+power over Polly, else why had she taken her to Wood Hall? Shrewd,
+unprincipled Polly! To be sure, Bill did not call her that: she did
+not think about her principles, but, true to her nature, accepted her
+cousin as she found her, and never judged her at all.
+
+What with one thing and another Bill seemed to be fast growing older:
+when she went back to Ashelton at the end of May she felt that years
+instead of weeks had elapsed since she had left it. A month makes a
+difference to the country in the spring-time, and she noticed many
+changes during the drive to Haylands. The grass had grown: in some of
+the fields it had come up into little billows, where a patch of more
+fertile soil had caused some part to rise above the rest; in other
+fields it was all long and soft, spiked here and there with the shafts
+of its unopened flowers. Everywhere there were butter-cups, a golden
+cloth of butter-cups; everywhere hawthorn, each hedge snow-powdered
+with its blossom, each thorn-bush a bride in its white veil. The earth
+had been busy, Bill felt, very busy; the early fruit was set in the
+orchard, the blossom was off the apples, the oaks fully in leaf, the
+cow-parsley, waist-high, made every ditch a fairy-land.
+
+It had all changed very much, and Bill felt that she had changed too;
+then she turned to the garden, and in a sudden rebound from the trouble
+of the past weeks forgot about herself and her changes. There was so
+much, so very much to be done, to have lost a month at this time of
+year was a sad thing. She worked desperately, enthusiastically, to make
+up for it; and at dusk she struck work and forgot all about her age
+and her responsibilities, wandering forth with Shakespeare’s fairies
+(she knew them all by heart now) into the orchard and the fields and
+the deep, grass-grown ditches almost as if she expected to find the
+fairy-folk there.
+
+And thus it was that Gilchrist Harborough found her. During her absence
+at Wrugglesby he had debated his problem of natural selection more than
+once, and had at last decided to let matters drift. He did not phrase
+his decision thus; he put it that, since he was not likely to see her
+again for a long time, it was not worth thinking about it any more. So
+he did not think; indeed, he thought so little that, when he saw Bill
+again, he forgot the problem and never for an instant thought of her as
+an integral part of it, or as a practical farmer’s wife, or anything
+else practical. He himself on that occasion could hardly be regarded
+as a practical person seeking a wife in a cool and reasonable manner.
+There was no suggestion of a carefully thought out plan about it; it
+was just man and woman, and the dewy fragrance of trodden grass in the
+dusk of an evening when May and June meet to make it neither spring nor
+summer but a mid-heaven between.
+
+He heard Bill’s curious many-noted voice as he passed down the lane
+where he had talked with her on the day they first spoke of Robert
+Morton. She had been in the orchard then, as she was now. She had
+discovered an echo in the orchard,--the back of some barns, the end of
+an old wall, something caused it; it pleased her, and she sang softly,
+pausing to hear the repeated sound. “Fearest to love me”--and “love
+me” came the echo distinctly. “Love me,” she cried again to the clear
+repetition, “love me--me!” answering the sound as it answered her, till
+the twilight seemed filled with passionate whispering melody.
+
+Harborough stopped abruptly. If he had been wise he would have gone
+on, but he forgot to be wise; we are none of us always wise. The old
+love-song had wooed another on a summer night long ago; it held him
+now, it roused something in him, and he could not go. The singer
+ceased; she must have felt his presence, for she turned where she stood
+knee-deep in the coarse grasses and white-flowered weeds, and saw him
+leaning against the gate.
+
+“Go on,” he said; “finish it.”
+
+It was perhaps not a polite form of greeting after her weeks of absence
+and trouble, but he had forgotten that; he had forgotten everything in
+his desire to hear the words that he knew should follow. The natural
+man in him was urging him to leap the gate, to stand beside her, and to
+make her say those words for him.
+
+She hesitated in silence for a moment. In the dusk she could not see
+his face very clearly, yet she must have known that the self in him to
+which she appealed was in the ascendant; she wanted to play and to make
+him play, yet she was half afraid. “No,” she said standing still among
+the grasses.
+
+“Yes,” he answered, “yes--I will come and make you!”
+
+Then the witchcraft of the night took possession of her, and the
+unnamed, irresistible impulses, thought of our simple ancestry to be
+born of the elfin-folk, came upon her. “Come then!” she cried.
+
+In an instant he was over the gate, under the green twilight of the
+apple-trees, among the grasses where she stood. But she, now wild as a
+kitten at evening, had fled; from the denser shadow of the nut-bushes
+she called to him, yet when he reached their shade her voice came from
+a far corner of the orchard--“Fearest to love me--fearest”--and because
+she was now in the best possible position for her echo the answer came
+back “Fearest,” “fearest!” till it was hard to say which was the fickle
+varying voice and which the repeated sound.
+
+It was like hunting a shadow, about as easy, about as wise, but--but
+he was young and she was younger still, and the earth redecked was
+young too, young with eternal youth. The fragrance of its breath was
+like wine to them, the scent of the falling laburnum and lilac in the
+garden, the smell of the hawthorn in the hedge, the trodden grass under
+foot, the dew that was upon the ground, the wind that whispered in the
+darkness of the trees. He was intoxicated with it, intoxicated with
+the chase; an instinct of the days when man wooed maid with swiftness
+of foot and strength of arm was upon him. He was--ah, well, it did not
+matter, there was no explanation; only when suddenly he startled her
+all unawares among the tall weeds, he completed the line which surprise
+had stayed on her lips. “Fearest,” she had called thinking him far
+away; and “To love me?” he finished, crushing her to silence in his
+arms.
+
+For a moment she was still in his arms; it might have been her will, it
+might not;--then, with a sudden effort she wrenched herself free, and
+he was alone in the darkening orchard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF CROWS’ FARM.
+
+
+Man is a triple development; call him, body, soul and spirit, or
+mind, matter and extension,--he is, however regarded, a trinity. A
+man who recognises his three natures (which fortunately all do not),
+and who in his wife or work gratifies two of the three, is asking
+much of Providence when he complains that the third is unsatisfied.
+Yet this was Gilchrist Harborough’s case. Mind had counselled him to
+seek Wilhelmina Alardy as his wife; reason pointed out her unique
+suitability to his requirements; common-sense told him that she was
+exactly and precisely the person for all practical purposes. Yet he
+had hesitated, perhaps because he had an intuitive, if unexpressed,
+idea that such excellent logic was not always the best foundation for
+domestic happiness. That was a month ago; but then, last night in the
+twilight came Matter, and, forgetting Mind’s cool selection, discovered
+that the girl was desirable, sought and made her captive in a somewhat
+savage fashion, asking no better reason than her voice, no stronger
+proof than her contact when his arms held her.
+
+Yet in the morning the man was not satisfied with this double choice.
+To begin with, he despised himself because he had allowed Matter to
+get the upper hand; as a consequence he--well, no, he did not exactly
+despise the cause--but at least he did not altogether respect her just
+then. “The woman tempted me,”--it was a coward’s excuse and he would
+not make it. She was not to blame, at least not much; he would do her
+justice. And he honestly tried, though he did not altogether succeed,
+for he did not understand the childish folly which had prompted her to
+the game in the orchard. Sheer folly it had been, and nothing more; she
+knew nothing of his sensations and emotions, and his capture of her at
+the end had come like a thunderclap in its stunning suddenness and left
+her even now not fully aware of the true state of the case.
+
+So Harborough in his mind did her justice so far as he could; and in
+his actions he determined without delay to explain his equivocal words
+of last night and make her a formal offer of marriage. And when he
+felt not altogether glad about this decision, he reminded himself how
+entirely reason had chosen her before impulse had dictated last night’s
+words. As for the ideal, the fair and stately woman, a queen with holy
+face and ways of gentle dignity,--there was not room at his hearth for
+her. She could not rise early to milk his cows; she could not toil and
+work and stand beside him in the dirt and drudgery of his daily round;
+at least his queen could not, for so she would not be queen. There is
+doubtless a dignity in labour, but it is not easily discernible when
+labour is translated into soap and water, mud and ashes, red hands and
+tumbled hair. He could not afford an ideal: he did not need a woman
+to worship, but one to live with, human, likeable, one to work with,
+strong, capable,--and he went to look for Bill.
+
+But Bill was not easy to find; she should have been working in
+the garden at this time, but from the field-path he could not see
+her. He retraced his steps, and from another point sought her as
+unsuccessfully. He climbed a little hill and looked down upon the
+garden, but she was not there. Then he went back, by way of the lane,
+to the orchard, but she was not there either; she must have gone on
+some message for Theresa: he would come again in the afternoon, and
+find her then. But he did not find her, for then, as earlier, she saw
+him coming and ran away to hide. She did not exactly know why; she
+was afraid of what he would say, of what he had said; she did not
+altogether understand herself or him or anything; only she was afraid.
+She longed to tell someone,--Mr. Dane--her world held no one else who
+was likely to be of any use. She would have liked to tell him as she
+told him of Harborough of Gurnett, but, for some reason that she could
+not fathom, she was ashamed; so she only worked hard and tried not to
+think, and when she saw her lover coming (if lover he was) she hid
+herself.
+
+But Gilchrist Harborough was not to be turned from his purpose like
+this, and, having sought her in vain the next day, he presented himself
+at the house in the evening and asked Jessie for Miss Alardy. It was
+raining, a fine soft rain, which rejoiced the heart and made things
+almost grow before the eyes. Bill would be indoors now, for the rain
+clouds had closed the evening in early, and in the drawing-room, where
+he waited, it seemed already dark.
+
+Jessie went to find Bill. “She has just gone to the attic for a sieve,”
+Theresa said, and Jessie went up the attic-stairs. “Miss Bill!” she
+called, standing at the top and looking down the long passage from
+the right of which the three attics opened. The place looked ghostly
+in the grey twilight; there was a spot of wet on the low ceiling, the
+roof leaked by the chimney where the starlings had built last year,
+there was a great hole in the floor under the window, and there were
+rats in the attic. Jessie gathered her skirts about her, and, after a
+preliminary _sh-oo!_ to frighten any chance creatures that might be
+about, came into the passage. “Miss Bill,” she called again, “you’re
+wanted; Mr. Harborough wants to see you.”
+
+Now that was precisely the information for which Bill was waiting.
+She had heard the door-bell ring as she looked over some tools in the
+back attic, but she had not associated the sound with herself until
+Jessie began to ascend the stairs. Then she had guessed that the
+visitor was Gilchrist Harborough, and that he had come to see her. She
+fully intended to go down and see him; it was, of course, what she
+must do, and there certainly was no reason why she should not; yet
+when she heard Jessie’s voice an uncontrollable impulse to escape took
+possession of her. She looked round; there was no escape, no way out
+but the door by which Jessie would enter. The door of a big cupboard,
+however, stood ajar behind her; quick as thought she opened it, pulled
+it to after her and stood pressed against the wall within, holding the
+door close by its rough planking.
+
+Jessie peeped into each of the attics in turn, and then muttering, “She
+ain’t here after all,” went down-stairs again; but Bill remained in the
+cupboard till she heard the front door shut after Harborough. It was
+some time, for they looked thoroughly for her before he went away. Her
+prison was cramped, dark, and very close, and there was a warm smell
+of old hops about it which afterwards she always associated with that
+evening and her folly. It was folly, and as such she regretted it when
+it was too late and would have gladly undone it if she could.
+
+Later, when she came down-stairs, Theresa told her of Harborough’s
+visit and asked her where she was when they called her. She did not
+tell and her reply, guardedly given, left only a vague impression on
+her cousin’s mind. Theresa, believing she must have gone to the barn
+with her tools, thought no more about it until the next afternoon when
+Harborough presented himself again. This time he asked for Theresa,
+having learned from Robert that his wife and Polly were left guardians
+of their young cousin.
+
+It was Sunday, and by Theresa’s invitation Bella and Polly had walked
+from Wrugglesby that morning to spend the day at Haylands; they had
+come early and would stay till the evening, when Robert was going to
+drive them home. Polly was dozing placidly on the dining-room sofa
+when Harborough came, and Bill was curled up in the orchard with a
+book, oblivious alike of impending events and the dampness of the
+grass. Harborough might almost have caught her now had he tried; but
+he did not, for he decided that his best plan would be to apply in the
+old-fashioned way to Mrs. Morton for permission to address her cousin.
+
+Accordingly he did so, and he did it with some self-possession, for the
+whole thing was now very clear in his own mind and he wished to get it
+settled. It was, after all, to him a very simple and straightforward
+matter now.
+
+But to Theresa it was very different, very overwhelming, it might
+almost be said, in its unexpectedness. She gazed at him blankly for
+a moment, too much astonished for speech. “Bill?” she said at last,
+“Bill? She is a child!”
+
+“She is young,” Harborough admitted, “but she must be nearly eighteen;
+that is not so very young, you know.”
+
+“She is not eighteen till the winter; we have always looked upon her as
+a child. You must forgive my astonishment, she seems such a child to
+us.”
+
+Harborough said he could easily understand her feelings; indeed, he
+allowed, in some respects Bill seemed a child to him, though in others
+the very reverse.
+
+“She is very capable,” Theresa said, “but I am afraid when you come to
+speak to her on this subject you will find her very childish,--I mean,
+she will be so unprepared for it, it will be difficult.”
+
+Harborough smiled slightly. “I do not think it will be an entire
+surprise to her,” he said. “I do not mean that I know how she will
+receive me, but that I should come will not, I fancy, altogether
+astonish her.”
+
+Theresa felt more and more bewildered. “I think you must be mistaken,”
+was all she could say; but he was persistent in his opinion, and
+certainly, whether he was right or wrong, there was no valid reason why
+he should not speak to Bill. Theresa, however, still believing in the
+girl’s complete ignorance, stipulated for one thing: Bill’s decision,
+whatever it was, should not be considered final. “For,” Theresa said,
+“I am very much afraid she will not really know her own mind.”
+
+Harborough acquiesced to this, and also to the suggestion that Polly
+should be consulted. “She is here now,” Theresa told him; “perhaps it
+would be better if you were to see her, as Bill is really more her
+charge than mine.”
+
+Harborough had no particular wish to consult the unknown Polly, but
+he could not do less than agree, so Theresa went to find her. She was
+still dozing on the sofa in the dining-room, and there was no one else
+there. Theresa roused her and told her the news briefly, wishing the
+while that Polly had not slept so soundly, and fearing lest she should
+not fully understand. But she need have had no fears; Polly grasped the
+situation completely. “Has he any money?” she asked.
+
+“Yes, oh yes, some, not a great deal, of course; he has a little farm.
+But, Polly, Bill--”
+
+“A farm? Oh, he is the man who lives by himself and does his own work
+to prove something, I remember. That will just suit Bill.”
+
+Polly got up, went to the glass above the mantelpiece and began to
+arrange her front hair.
+
+“It is impossible to think of that child marrying him, of her marrying
+anyone yet,” Theresa protested.
+
+Polly did not think so. “I don’t see why she should not,” she said
+coolly; “you may be pretty sure she has given him encouragement, or he
+would not come here like this.”
+
+“That proves nothing,” said Theresa. “He does not know in the least
+whether she will have him or not; he spoke to me first because she is
+so very young.”
+
+“Possibly, but she knows what is coming; he as good as told you so.”
+
+“He is mistaken; I am sure he is.”
+
+“I’ll tell you whether I think so or not after I have seen him. I don’t
+much expect he is; and knowing Bill as well as I do, well--” Polly
+broke off and with an impressive silence conveyed more than words could.
+
+Theresa did not altogether believe her, but she felt that she herself
+was far from understanding Bill. “At all events,” she said, “I told him
+he could speak to her. There is nothing against him as far as I know,
+and whatever she says now is not to be considered absolutely binding.”
+
+“What do you mean?” Polly stopped abruptly to ask the question as she
+was opening the door.
+
+“I mean,” Theresa answered, “that if she accepts him she is not to be
+considered engaged; she shall be free to change her mind if she likes,
+for I am sure she cannot really know anything about it.”
+
+“Not to be engaged?” Polly repeated. “Is it to be kept private? No one
+is to be told, we are to have no hold over him?”
+
+“I will not have her bound; it is not right,--you can’t think it right.”
+
+Theresa was surprised at Polly’s manner, and still more surprised when
+she turned upon her in low-voiced wrath,--“You idiot!” she said.
+
+“Polly!” Theresa exclaimed reddening, and then added: “I will not have
+it; mind, I will not have her bound!”
+
+And then the two passed into the drawing-room. Polly was affability
+itself; she spoke of “dear little Wilhelmina’s” youth, and of her own
+surprise, but held out some hopes of success to Harborough, who did not
+altogether trust her, though owing to her skill he did not distrust her
+as much as might have been expected. Nothing was said about Theresa’s
+condition, except that as Harborough was leaving she repeated it, and
+Polly, unable to do anything else, seconded her.
+
+“I expect he wanted to see Bill this afternoon,” Theresa said when he
+had gone.
+
+“I expect he did,” Polly replied; “but I want to see her first. I mean
+to know what she has been doing.”
+
+“What she intends to do,” was also part of Polly’s meaning, and she set
+off at once to the orchard, feeling the remainder of the afternoon was
+all too short for her investigations.
+
+“Bill,” she said, sitting down beside her cousin on a cushion she had
+brought for the purpose, “Bill, what about Mr. Harborough?” Polly
+wasted no time over preliminaries. “The Mr. Harborough who lives here,
+I mean.”
+
+“What about him?” Bill inquired, looking up from her book.
+
+Polly closed the book for her. “Yes, what?” she said. “When and where
+have you seen him?”
+
+“Oh in lots of places,--why? He does not belong to Wood Hall.”
+
+“I know that. Bill,” she added suddenly, “has he been making love to
+you?”
+
+Then the time had come; Bill felt it intuitively and braced herself to
+meet it. But for the life of her she would have found it hard to say
+whether he had or had not committed the offence in question. She would
+not permit herself to do more than ask cautiously, “Why?”
+
+“He has!” Polly exclaimed.
+
+“Well, I’m not sure;” and Bill so evidently meant what she said that
+Polly for a moment was nonplussed. “He has been here this afternoon,”
+she said.
+
+“To see me?” Bill asked, and Polly felt that was something of an
+admission. “No,” she answered, “to see Theresa and me about you.”
+
+“Whatever for?”
+
+“To ask our permission--”
+
+“To make love to me?” At first the idea struck Bill as comical, but its
+gravity soon came home to her.
+
+“I suppose you think that absurd,” Polly said, “since he has already
+done it without our permission; and he has done it, Bill, or something
+very like it. It is no use denying it; something must have happened,
+something fairly pronounced, before a man of his stamp would come to
+Theresa and me as he came this afternoon. You must have given him very
+direct encouragement.”
+
+Polly paused for Bill to deny the charge, but the denial did not come;
+the girl sat silently considering the matter, tearing a leaf to pieces
+as she did so.
+
+“Well?” Polly said at last interrogatively.
+
+“Did he tell you I had encouraged him? I mean, did he absolutely say
+so? I shall ask him myself if I think you are deceiving me.”
+
+Polly thought it very likely that she would do so, and accordingly
+made answer: “No, of course he did not say so in so many words, but
+his coming to us showed it; besides he told Theresa, when she said you
+would be astonished, that he did not think you would be, that he had
+reason to believe you expected him.” _Not be surprised to see him_ and
+_expected him_ were convertible, if not synonymous, terms.
+
+“Oh!” was Bill’s only answer.
+
+“Did you expect him?” Polly demanded.
+
+“I suppose I did; I don’t know.”
+
+“You must know what you expect if you are not absolutely stupid, and
+you might as well be honest about it; some people would have a good
+deal to say about your underhand dealings.”
+
+Bill suggested that her cousin should say all she wished on the
+subject, but Polly, regarding it as a waste of time, went on to observe
+with dignity: “I don’t want to inquire into your actions nor yet your
+intentions, but all I can say is that you have made an honourable
+man,--a good man, Bill--believe you care for him; and if you do not, if
+you mean nothing, you must settle the matter with him.”
+
+“I don’t believe you!” Bill exclaimed. “I ran away from him, though I
+did tell him to come--I was only in fun--he hardly held--”
+
+She broke off, feeling that she could not lay the matter bare to her
+cousin. Polly was disappointed at the confession ending so abruptly,
+but she only said: “Tell him you were only in fun. If he knew you
+as well as I do he might not be surprised at such a questionable
+proceeding; but as he loves you, I am afraid it will be rather a shock
+to him.”
+
+“Loves me!--he loves me!” Bill repeated the words gently, her whole
+face softening. She had not thought of this before. She had such high,
+idyllic notions of love, hardly definite notions at all, only a feeling
+that it was very great and supreme and far removed from her own life.
+
+“Of course he does,” Polly said, surprised at having touched an
+answering chord here, “else why should he want to marry you? You have
+nothing to recommend you.”
+
+“No,” Bill admitted, “no, I have not. How strange that he should want
+to marry me,--how strange and wonderful!”
+
+She sat looking across the orchard, her eyes filled with a great
+shining, her heart thrilled with gratitude to one who could love her.
+For herself, she did not know; his emotion would arouse an answering
+emotion in her; if he loved her she could not choose but love him, just
+as when he held her she could not choose but stay for just a moment.
+She was very humble and submissive in heart just then.
+
+On the whole Polly was well satisfied with her talk. Bill would accept
+Harborough. Two things were in his favour, the girl’s joy and pride
+in this, the first love offered to her, her innocence of life and all
+it held, and also her curious, one-sided sense of honour. The first,
+aided by her oddly sympathetic, almost reflective, nature, would make
+her wish to accept the lover; the second, aided by Polly’s statement of
+the case, would make it impossible for her to refuse the man. So Polly
+was satisfied that Bill would marry Harborough; probably next summer,
+as Theresa would not allow it before then, and Polly herself did not
+wish it. She wanted to begin her lodging-venture in the winter, and,
+though she would take Bella into partnership when Bill was married,
+she would prefer to have the younger cousin at the beginning of the
+enterprise. She considered that Bill was now settled for life, her
+future assured in a most unexpected fashion. Harborough, she judged,
+was the sort of man she could depend upon to do his duty by his wife,
+and in spite of Theresa’s words, she would take care that at least a
+little of the arrangement was known to a few mutual friends. In this
+laudable intention, however, she was eventually frustrated by Bill.
+She had reckoned that Bill would see no reason for secrecy; being sure
+of herself, whatever motives ruled her decision now would rule it in
+a year’s time, and so she would oppose Theresa. But she did no such
+thing, not because she objected to publicity or saw any reason against
+it, but because Polly was in favour of it and Theresa against it.
+
+“It may be wise,” she said to Polly, “if you urge it, but if Theresa
+does it is right; in this I would rather do what is right than wise.”
+
+In vain Polly pointed out the wisdom, and explained that publicity was
+the only hold they had. Bill retorted haughtily that she wished for no
+hold, and went on to add that, if any rumour of her affairs should get
+about, she should consider Polly the culprit, and behave accordingly.
+And Polly, having an inward conviction that she would keep her word in
+some unpleasant way, was obliged to remain silent.
+
+On that same Sunday evening, when Harborough spoke to the cousins, came
+Theresa to Bill’s room after she had gone to bed, and kissed her and
+cried over her and asked her if she really loved him. And Bill flung
+her arms round the young wife’s neck, almost suffocating her in the
+wealth of her hair, and said she did not know, feeling vaguely sorry
+for Theresa, and wondering if loving and being loved always brought
+tears.
+
+All the next day she was quiet and subdued, and in the evening the time
+came. She went into the orchard, thinking it likely that he would come
+down the lane to her. He did come; he saw her, and jumped the gate and
+came to her as she stood in the soft grass, her heart beating, a shy
+fearing happiness in her half-awakened soul. He came to her striding
+over the grass in the twilight of the apple-trees; but he did not
+know the tumult in her breast, did not recognise the half-awakened
+womanhood. He was not to-night, as once before, the strong man wooing
+the maid, nor was he the lover come to claim a girl’s heart. He came
+to ask her to be his wife because he believed it right to do so,
+because he believed it wise, because he thought for all practical
+purposes she was the woman best suited to his needs. He had desired
+her, it is true, but to-night it was not desire, not impulse; it was
+a deliberate plan, the wise performance of a wise act. But it lacked
+fire, lacked it woefully. And she, who shyly lifted shining eyes to
+those of the sober lover, could not kindle it; nay, she herself was not
+the same as the alluring shadow of the other night. He did not love the
+woman; the elf-child fascinated him, the housewife pleased him, but
+the woman he did not recognise. The best of his nature was untouched
+by her; he knew that he did not in the highest sense love her, and he
+did not pretend that he did. But, the pity was she thought he did; they
+had told her so, and, after all, as _to love_ is often translated into
+daily life, perhaps they were right, though in her idyllic, almost
+childish rendering of the word, they were entirely and hopelessly wrong.
+
+So the question was asked and answered under the lichen-covered
+branches; coolly, dispassionately, yet withal gently he asked; shyly
+she answered, not yet aware of the lack in it all. She was so ignorant,
+what should she know of love’s ways? So awed, she could not criticise
+his words, so subdued and humble she could not doubt him. Thus she
+gave her word not knowing, stood awhile under the trees a little
+disappointed but not yet aware, and bade him good-bye with only a
+half-wakened doubt.
+
+He left her, thinking perhaps she would prefer to see her cousin alone
+first, refusing her invitation to come to the house from a sense of
+delicacy. She did not know his reason, but she was vaguely glad
+he refused. They walked together to the gate, talking ordinarily,
+rationally, his manner as usual, hers as calm as it was reflective
+of his. There was no passion, no shyness; it would not have been
+embarrassing to meet Theresa, though she was glad they were not going
+to meet her. Glad, too, she was, consciously glad that he was going;
+she wanted him to go,--she hated to have him there--she was beginning
+to realise the lack in it all.
+
+They parted at the orchard-gate; the first wild roses were opening,
+their fragrance filled the air, a spray showed faintly pink against
+the girl’s hair as she leaned over the gate. Something in the scent
+and the face, half seen in the twilight, stirred Harborough; he made
+an impulsive movement, but he had himself well in hand that night, and
+the impulse ended in nothing more than stooping to kiss her without
+any demonstration of emotion. So he bade her good-bye and went, she
+standing to watch him till he was lost in the dusk of the summer night,
+standing to watch him quite calmly though her breast heaved, until he
+was out of sight; then with a movement of passionate rage she wiped the
+kiss from her face and flung the handkerchief into the hedge.
+
+“He did not make love to me a little bit!” she wailed. “‘Will you marry
+me?’ ‘Will you scrub the floor?’ It might as well have been one as the
+other. ‘Can you make butter?’ ‘Can you love me?’ Can I? I could hate
+you! How I shall hate you, if you don’t take care!”
+
+There was someone talking in the garden, Theresa and Robert perhaps;
+she almost thought it was, and fearful of discovery crept into the
+deep dry ditch and lay hid among the tall stalks of the cow-parsley.
+In that green darkness she sobbed out her grief for the loss of her
+dream, the dream of loving and being loved which comes to all women
+at some time. It had come to her only yesterday; it had died unborn
+to-day,--unborn, for she did not love the man; had he loved her, or
+had he wooed her with the passion of the other night, her responsive
+nature might have replied, or at least she would have thought it did.
+But he had not done so, and the thing was only a dream; loving and
+being loved,--both must be mourned as never known, both buried together
+in the twilight of the white-flowered weeds. Nevertheless she was in
+honour bound to the man, that curious, distorted, inviolable law of
+honour which she had from some ancestry and could not break. The spoken
+word must be fulfilled, the unspoken pledge redeemed, the unconscious
+encouragement, of which Polly had made so much, justified. Polly had
+done well to trust to this other bond.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+FAMILY HISTORY.
+
+
+Mr. Wagnall was an antiquary, avowedly an antiquary. A man of means and
+leisure, he had ample time to devote to his subject, and so well had
+he devoted it that there was unknown to him little that was strange in
+family tradition and village history throughout the Eastern Counties,
+which, as his birthplace and home, were the principal scenes of his
+research. He never studied architecture or building to any great
+extent; churches, Druidical stones, and Roman remains had little charm
+for him; the land and those who owned it chiefly claimed his attention.
+He had at one time intended to follow the profession of the law, and
+had spent his earlier days in a solicitor’s office; it was this early
+training, possibly, which gave him his taste for family histories and
+involved land tenures. One other thing he owed to it,--and that was of
+more obvious value than his love of land-lore--a friend, in the person
+of a former fellow-student now developed into Stevens, solicitor of
+Wrugglesby, consulted by Mr. Johnson on the subject of the Harborough
+chapel and the service held therein.
+
+Now and again Mr. Wagnall visited his friend at Wrugglesby, and it
+happened that this very subject of the Harborough chapel and service
+brought him there at the time that Gilchrist Harborough was arranging
+his matrimonial affairs at Ashelton. About this time Mr. Stevens,
+remembering that he had not seen his friend lately, wrote to invite
+him to the little town, at the same time mentioning such affairs of
+interest as had recently taken place. The Harborough service was not a
+recent event, but he had not written since it occurred, and, knowing
+his friend’s love of such things, he used it, and the chance of
+investigating it, as an inducement to his friend to visit Wrugglesby.
+Events justified his expectations; Mr. Wagnall accepted his invitation,
+came to Wrugglesby at the earliest possible date, and plagued his
+host with questions, seeking information about “this most interesting
+revival.”
+
+Mr. Stevens was obliged to confess himself not very well informed on
+the subject, but in a happy moment Mrs. Stevens thought of inviting
+Mr. and Mrs. Johnson to meet the antiquary. She had no notion of
+satisfying his thirst for information, her idea being solely to give
+an entertainment. She was a lady of aspiring mind, and longed for
+society on other lines than those obtainable at the solemn dinners and
+more humble teas which were in vogue in Wrugglesby. Mr. Johnson was
+particularly flattered by the pointed way in which Mr. Wagnall singled
+him out for conversation, and the interest with which he listened to
+all he had to say about the Harborough chapel and service. Considering
+the warmth his feelings still retained on these subjects, he was
+a little disappointed to find his patient listener of the opinion
+that the family had a right to hold a service in their own chapel,
+according to their professed religion, even during the time of morning
+prayer.
+
+“Mind, I do not say they have a legal right,” the antiquary said,
+“though I am of opinion it would be difficult to get a decision
+against them; but whatever their legal right, they have a moral right,
+most decidedly a moral right. I think your rector was wise in his
+determination to take no steps in the matter; it is not an occurrence
+likely to be repeated. It has not been done within anyone’s memory
+until this time; it has not been repeated since then, and take my word
+for it, sir, it never will be. It was done to revive an old right, my
+dear sir, that is what it was done for, to revive an old right and
+establish a claim; an old family does not like to let its traditions
+lapse entirely.”
+
+Mr. Johnson thought this was a very probable explanation of the
+“outrage,” though, as he pointed out, there was no necessity for the
+mass to have been said during morning-service; the claim could have
+been established without that.
+
+“Well, yes, yes,” Mr. Wagnall admitted; “still it would hardly have
+been so emphatic; no, under those circumstances, it would not have been
+so emphatic.”
+
+Mr. Johnson again agreed with him. He also asked Mr. Wagnall if he
+would care to walk over some day and have a look at the Harborough
+chapel, offering to act as cicerone should he do so. Mr. Wagnall
+accepted the offer with pleasure, and from that they got to talking
+about the Harboroughs and their family history, with which Mr. Wagnall
+was very well acquainted, though he did not attempt to set the
+clergyman right even when he gave sundry strange pieces of information
+about them. There was, however, one piece of information given
+which was both new and interesting to Mr. Wagnall,--the existence of
+Gilchrist Harborough of Crows’ Farm.
+
+“A member of the family he--” “may be,” Mr. Johnson was going to say,
+preparatory to enlarging upon his nature and pursuits, but Mr. Wagnall
+cut him short.
+
+“Of course he is a member of the family,” he said; “Gilchrist is a
+family name, the next heir to the property is a Gilchrist. You would
+not get Gilchrist and Harborough in combination without some connection
+with the old stock.”
+
+“Just so,” said Mr. Johnson, “just so, a member of the family, although
+he comes from Australia; a younger branch, I have heard it suggested,
+though he claims no connection with the Harboroughs of Gurnett.”
+
+“_Not_ a younger branch,” Mr. Wagnall’s tone was emphatic; “_not_ a
+younger branch, or he could claim something more than a connection.”
+
+Unfortunately for Mr. Johnson’s further enlightenment the conversation
+was interrupted here, not to be resumed again that evening, and he had
+to content himself with waiting to hear more until Mr. Wagnall should
+come to Ashelton. But Mr. Wagnall did not have to wait so long for his
+enlightenment, for he questioned his host at the earliest opportunity.
+From him he learnt little, for Mr. Stevens was not professionally
+connected with Harborough of Gurnett, although he had sometimes done
+a little legal work for the agent during the master’s long absences
+abroad. Owing to this he knew something of the affairs of the estate,
+and, like most people in the neighbourhood, he also knew the name,
+age, and whereabouts of the next heir, and sundry of the reports
+concerning Mr. Harborough besides. But of Harborough of Crows’ Farm he
+knew little, except that he was an Australian with a theory, that he
+worked his own farm, and that he himself had been favourably impressed
+by the young man on the occasion when he had personally come across
+him. “But,” he concluded, “I shouldn’t wonder if he was in at the
+office to-morrow as it is market-day. He is thinking of buying a bit
+of meadow which cuts into his land, and I should not wonder if he were
+to look in during the afternoon to see me about it. You might drop in
+and meet him if you like; but I tell you beforehand that he won’t repay
+investigation or appreciate it either, and he certainly won’t know
+anything about the affair of the mass.”
+
+Mr. Wagnall was by no means discouraged, and determined to look in at
+the office on Thursday afternoon in case the lawyer’s anticipation
+proved correct. It did so: Harborough presented himself somewhere
+about four o’clock, and almost before his business was discussed, Mr.
+Wagnall also presented himself and was duly introduced to the younger
+man as one interested in antiquities in general and family histories
+in particular. Harborough himself had small interest in such things,
+but he was quite willing to sympathise with another, and obligingly
+gave all the information he could concerning himself and his family.
+Of the Harboroughs of Gurnett, their history and chapel, he knew even
+less than Mr. Johnson, but of himself and his own people he told all he
+could.
+
+“But,” he asked, “what purpose does it serve? We are a long way from
+this part of the family, a younger branch who emigrated years ago.”
+
+“If you are a younger branch in direct line, if you can prove such a
+thing,--and I cannot help saying I think it would be difficult--it
+would be--very interesting.”
+
+“Why? Is there no younger branch? You mean to say you think we come of
+bastard stock?”
+
+“No, oh dear no, not at all, not necessarily. Only the Harboroughs used
+to hold their estates according to an old tenure by which the property
+goes to the youngest instead of the eldest son, and if you really were
+the representative of a younger branch than those in possession--”
+
+“I could claim?”
+
+“Nonsense,” the lawyer here broke in, “the Harboroughs have given up
+that manner of succession for several generations.”
+
+“It could be revived,” Mr. Wagnall suggested; “it would be interesting
+to revive it, as interesting as reviving the right to hold service in
+the chapel.”
+
+“Interesting from an antiquarian point of view it might be,” Mr.
+Stevens observed drily; “but Mr. Harborough here would find it an
+expensive form of amusement. Old Mr. Harborough has been in possession
+at Wood Hall for over fifty years, and it would take something
+considerable to turn him out now. Why, bless you, my friend, if I had
+squatted unmolested at Wood Hall for all those years you would find
+it difficult to turn me out, though I had not a shadow of right to
+the place originally. Possession is rather more than nine points of
+the law if you only have it long enough; whatever the weakness of old
+Harborough’s original claim you would find it a tough and expensive job
+to make your own good now.”
+
+Gilchrist Harborough laughed at the lawyer’s warmth. “I was not
+thinking of making a claim,” he said; “I would rather invest my surplus
+cash in other and more profitable ways than fighting for encumbered
+estates.”
+
+Mr. Stevens applauded such a decision. “Quite right,” he said, “quite
+right, though the estate is hardly so much encumbered as people think;
+of late years old Harborough has lived carefully, and things are not
+so bad as they are made out to be. I don’t mean to say the place is
+free; it is not, and no doubt the next man will get into a worse state
+than ever, for they are all alike, an extravagant lot. But I believe a
+careful man with a little capital and reasonable ideas, in fact not a
+Harborough--beg pardon, I was not thinking of you--might do a good deal
+towards getting things straight.”
+
+“You think so?” Harborough asked. “They have got to get their
+reasonable man first, and they don’t seem great at producing such
+articles. As for me, I don’t belong to them; and if I did I don’t
+know that I can lay claim to all your requirements, small capital and
+reasonable ideas as well. At any rate, I don’t think I am the man for
+the job; it does not seem that I am within measurable distance of the
+base of operations.”
+
+He turned to Mr. Wagnall as he spoke, but the lawyer answered for him.
+“No, no, certainly not,” he said; but Mr. Wagnall asked: “Are you
+sure that your family is a younger branch? May it not be an elder,
+but, owing to the fact that the idea of disqualification is usually
+associated with the younger ones, you have in the course of time come
+to consider yourself as such?”
+
+Harborough allowed this to be possible, though he hardly thought it
+the case. Mr. Wagnall hardly thought it likely either. “So far as I
+know anything about the family,” he said, “it is not very likely, the
+Harboroughs have not been such a prolific family that the elder and
+younger ones need be confused. There never have been many of them;
+the heads of the house, as a rule, lived hard and died young, their
+legitimate children have been few in number. Indeed,” the antiquary
+went on turning to Stevens, “when you say the old manner of succession
+has fallen into disuse you are hardly doing them justice, for there has
+not been much choice lately. The family is practically extinct when
+the old man dies; he has no children living; the heir is the grandson
+of his only sister, not a Harborough at all except that he has been
+given the name. He is an only son, too, the sole representative of
+the younger generation,--strange how these old families seem to wear
+themselves out.”
+
+Gilchrist Harborough did not think it strange at all, neither did he
+think it to be regretted; the only thing which surprised him in the
+matter was the interest felt in them and the detailed record kept of
+their history. “It is not as if they were anything much,” he said,
+“or had done anything much; they are only twopenny-halfpenny country
+squires who have never done anything worth remembering; in fact, the
+only thing which can be said about them is that they have been a
+little more rich and a good deal less respectable than their yeoman
+neighbours.”
+
+Such a view was not likely to commend itself to the antiquary, but
+as he was unable to make his own view any more commendable to young
+Harborough, he had to content himself with admitting the family under
+discussion to be country squires, and to have been country squires so
+long that they counted themselves at least the equals of the newer
+nobility; and moreover to have kept their own records and traditions
+with jealous care from the days when their manor was first granted to
+them, at which time, doubtless, they were far other than they now were
+in the days of their decadence.
+
+“If the records are kept with such care,” Harborough observed, “it
+should be easy to see where I come in, if come in I do.”
+
+“Yes,” Mr. Wagnall agreed; “I can put my finger on the only spot where
+at all recently we can expect to find that your people joined the
+common stock. I know something about the Harborough history; I was
+enabled through the good offices of a friend to study it at the time
+that I was writing my little volume on EAST ANGLIAN HEIRSHIPS. You have
+perhaps seen the book? It was noticed in several of the papers.”
+
+Harborough had not seen it, and it is to be feared he was less
+interested in it than in the family history. Mr. Stevens, seeing that
+his friend was now well mounted on his hobby, suggested that he and his
+listener should go into the private room, and leave the office clear
+for other visitors.
+
+He half regretted being obliged to do so, for he felt he was giving
+the elder man an admirable opportunity for firing the imagination and
+ambition of the younger. Still, as the kind-hearted lawyer reflected,
+the young Australian was a cool and well-balanced individual, with
+a not too exalted opinion of the value of landed property and old
+families to depreciate his idea of the prize at stake. “He won’t take
+fire like a young fellow from about here,” thought the lawyer, “but if
+he does he’ll fight and fight to the end.” And again he wished he could
+have prevented this unearthing of family history. But it was too late,
+as he found when, after the young man had gone, he asked the elder one
+what had passed.
+
+“He was very interested, very interested indeed,” Mr. Wagnall said. “He
+seems to think it highly probable that he derives from the Gilchrist
+Harborough who turned Protestant and left England in 1843.”
+
+“In 1843,” the lawyer said raising his eyebrows; “that brings it very
+near.”
+
+“Very near indeed,” Mr. Wagnall replied with satisfaction; “but so he
+seems to think.”
+
+“Seems to think,” Stevens repeated; “that is not worth much.”
+
+“To think that he is legitimately derived I should have said; he is
+positive that he is derived, he has excellent reasons for thinking so;
+it is a mere question of legitimacy.”
+
+“It often is with these respectable old families,” Stevens observed
+drily. “What did you want to put all these ideas in his head for? You
+had much better have left him alone.”
+
+Mr. Wagnall did not think so; he considered the whole subject most
+interesting, and, as he pointed out, there was a good deal of
+information he could not have obtained without this talk with young
+Harborough.
+
+“Who,” Mr. Stevens said, “naturally does not regard the matter in the
+same placid way in which you do, seeing that he has a personal interest
+in it. By Jove, though, if it is as you say, and he can prove the
+legitimacy, he would have a good case, a very good case indeed. But he
+won’t be able to prove it, sure not,--he would have an infernally good
+case if he could!”
+
+From a purely legal point of view the subject had less interest for Mr.
+Wagnall, who had no particular desire that the right man should come
+to his own; and in spite of a genial nature, he felt small compunction
+about the trouble which might possibly arise from his investigations.
+
+“A nice hornet’s nest you are likely to have routed out,” said Mr.
+Stevens, who was differently constituted, “and a nice squabble there
+will be! If Harborough of Crows’ Farm waits till the old man dies (and
+the chances are he won’t last another winter), I should say it will be
+a bad look-out for young Kit Harborough. Not that the place is worth
+such a great deal, and I dare say he would muddle it if he got it; but
+it is hard to lose what you have always looked upon as your own. The
+Australian--” the lawyer laughed a little--“he’s the man I described
+after all, the man with a little capital and reasonable ideas. He might
+pull the place round, cut down the timber, put some of the park-land
+under cultivation, drive the plough--”
+
+But Mr. Wagnall cried out in dismay at such impossible barbarity.
+Nevertheless it was exactly what Gilchrist Harborough was thinking as
+he drove home by way of Gurnett, and looked thoughtfully at the woods
+and broad park-lands which surrounded the hall. It was exactly too what
+he said to Bill in the orchard on the next Sunday afternoon.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+A GRANDFATHER.
+
+
+It was now three weeks since the day when Gilchrist Harborough came
+to see Theresa and Polly, three weeks since they told Bill he loved
+her, almost three weeks since she found out what they meant by love
+and buried her dream among the tall weeds in the orchard-ditch. The
+grass was long in the orchard now, its flowers were covered in seed,
+brown and yellow and purple dust blowing off at the lightest breath.
+The leaves on the trees were thick, so thick that when one looked up it
+seemed an unbroken roof of green. The year had grown older, much older,
+it was the first maturity of summer; the light was the warmer light
+of summer, the shadows the slow-moving shadows of summer; the scents,
+richer, fuller, were the scents of summer,--the pink briar-roses in the
+hedge, the wreath of honeysuckle from the tree, the hay half cut in the
+field beyond the lane. Spring had gone, and even if its indescribable
+freshness and youth were missing one could hardly ask for anything more
+than summer.
+
+Bill’s was a supremely contented disposition; after her one outburst on
+the night when Harborough did not make love to her she accepted fate
+resignedly. There was, as she herself had said, always to get up and
+have breakfast next morning even after a tragedy, and she was herself
+what in domestic parlance is called “a good getter up.” So in the early
+morning after Harborough’s formal offer of marriage, she thought the
+matter out and put it on a reasonable basis.
+
+It is true he did not love her in the superlative and ideal way she had
+imagined, but then neither did other people seem to love in that way.
+She thought over the married couples of her acquaintance, and came to
+the conclusion that they loved each other after a fashion. Harborough
+must have loved her in a fashion, too, or else why had he sought to
+marry her, seeing how little she had to commend her? Yes, he must
+have loved her, even though he did not make love to her that night.
+There were two of him, she knew, and she also knew that she sometimes
+appealed to one of the two, the one that made love, the lesser and
+weaker part of his nature. Under these circumstances she had reason to
+be glad that the other part, the cleverer, more dominant part, liked
+her well enough to ask her to be his wife. On the whole she did not
+find the situation impossible. Why should she? Her limited experience
+showed her no better things; her sunny philosophy led her to take the
+world as she found it, teaching her to judge it according to a more
+lenient and elastic standard than any ideal one. It is true that she
+did not in the present case quite extend this tolerance to Harborough;
+perhaps she unconsciously gauged his nature, and, measuring it by his
+own standards, found his love wanting.
+
+But on the whole she was moderately content, and certainly there was no
+possibility of avoiding the contract; honour demanded its fulfilment,
+and since it was unavoidable Bill was not likely to dwell on the dark
+side. She was pre-eminently of that nature which, when its hopes
+are wrecked, makes a fire of the drift-wood to warm itself and its
+friends. Moreover, let it be remembered, to supreme ignorance and a
+sunny temperament the life marked out did not seem an unendurable one.
+“Besides,” so she had concluded her reflections that morning when she
+faced facts, “there will be the farm and the dairy and heaps to do.”
+
+So Bill accepted matters, and she and Harborough established themselves
+on an easy and friendly footing in which love-making played but a
+small part. Theresa thought them an extraordinarily prosaic and
+matter-of-fact couple, but it suited Harborough well enough; he did
+not, as a rule, want to make love to Bill, and she did not now want
+him to make love to her; in fact, she would not now meet any of his
+overtures, and had a curiously wayward but uncompromising way of
+receiving his occasional tendernesses. Even in these early days he
+found there was a tantalising, untamed trait in her nature with which
+it would be hard to deal, and yet which constantly attracted while it
+annoyed him. He felt once or twice that he should like to come to close
+quarters with and understand it, even as he had come to close quarters
+on the night when he chased her like a shadow; but the moment for that
+was passed, and he could not recapture it; the shadow always eluded
+him now. This feeling occasionally troubled him, but not often, and in
+other respects he was satisfied. It was as a matter of course that he
+turned his steps to the orchard that Sunday afternoon, and as a matter
+of course he told Bill of Mr. Wagnall’s words and the extraordinary
+possibilities they presented.
+
+Bill listened with absorbed attention. Wood Hall, and all that
+concerned it, had a great fascination for her, but she could hardly
+realise that his words contained a bare chance of its coming within her
+own reach.
+
+“You don’t mean to say,” she said at last, “that there is any way by
+which you could claim?”
+
+“I am not sure,” Harborough answered cautiously, anxious not to
+encourage the building of any castles in the air.
+
+“Tell me what you mean then,” she said, and he explained the case as
+clearly as he could.
+
+“My grandfather,” he said, “is the nearest we can get to the
+Harboroughs of Gurnett; he was called Gilchrist as I am, and was the
+middle one of three brothers. About the year 1843 he quarrelled with
+his family and left England; I think he turned Protestant.”
+
+“He must have had convictions; I wonder if he was like you,” Bill
+observed under her breath with a particularly provoking look; but
+Harborough ignored the remark and went on with his history.
+
+“Part of this,” he said, “I heard from Mr. Wagnall on Thursday, part I
+knew before. I have always been told that my grandfather left England
+on account of a quarrel; the story was usually told me as a warning
+against quarrelling, but I don’t know that it made much impression.
+What he did after he left England I do not know, travelled a bit I
+think at first, and then the next year he married in Paris. But his
+wife’s family, though they were living in France, were English; indeed
+it was from my grandmother, who knew this part of the country, that we
+had the tradition of our people. She does not seem to have known much
+about them; my father always said she was vague in her tales, and never
+knew anything personally of her husband’s relations. My grandfather
+died the same year that he married and before his son was born; my
+grandmother continued to live on in Paris with her own people, teaching
+English, I think, for she must have been poor from what my father said.”
+
+“And he?” Bill asked.
+
+“Lived in Paris too till he was about nineteen when, my grandmother
+being dead, he emigrated to Australia with a notion of gold-mining. At
+first he was unlucky; then he married when he was only twenty-two, and
+after that his luck changed, but as soon as he had made enough he cut
+the mining and bought a share in a sheep-run. I don’t know if he would
+have made anything more at the mining, but he was not very successful
+with the sheep; still there was always enough to live on as far back
+as I can remember. I am the second of his three sons; my elder brother
+died when he was a boy, my younger in 1882.”
+
+“And your mother and father?”
+
+“Yes, they died some while ago.”
+
+“You are the only one left?”
+
+“Yes, the only son of an only son. The family curse seems to have
+fallen upon us inoffensive colonists too; we are near dying out.”
+
+Bill looked at him thoughtfully. “You are a long way from dead,” she
+remarked and then enquired as to the fate of the brothers of the elder
+Gilchrist.
+
+“The younger,” Harborough answered, “died in 1845, so Mr. Wagnall told
+me, that is the year after my grandfather’s death; the elder came
+into the property and has it still. He is the man at Wood Hall now,
+a childless widower with no one nearer than a sister’s grandson to
+succeed him. He was two years older than my grandfather, I think, born
+in 1820.”
+
+“In 1820,” Bill repeated thoughtfully; “then he was thirteen in 1833.
+Of course he remembered about the old Squire’s body; why he was the
+same age as the granddaughter who planned it!”
+
+“Planned what? Whose granddaughter? What are you talking about?”
+
+“Only a tale that is told in Gurnett,” Bill made answer; “I will tell
+you some other time; finish your family history first.”
+
+He knew nothing as yet about her visit to Wood Hall. She would tell
+him of course, as she saw no reason why he should object to it; but it
+was a pity to interrupt his narrative, so she asked him to go on and
+explain the way in which all this family history bore on his connection
+with Wood Hall. Accordingly he told her of the custom of the succession
+of the youngest. “And it appears,” he concluded, “that, as the
+Harboroughs inherited according to this custom, the youngest son should
+always have succeeded to the estates.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“I don’t know why,” he answered, feeling the question to be entirely
+beside the point. “It does not matter why; it was so, that is all. It
+is a tenure called Borough English by which some estates are held, and
+apparently the Harboroughs’ originally was so held.”
+
+“I see,” Bill cried; “until the time of your grandfather Gilchrist it
+was so, and then, owing to his going away before his son was born and
+the other man not knowing he had a son at all, the elder brother got
+it.”
+
+“Something of the sort.” Harborough was not inclined so entirely to
+attribute the chain of events to the ignorance of those in possession,
+but that did not matter to Bill.
+
+“And you are going to claim through your grandfather?” she said.
+
+“Yes, I expect so, in time,” Gilchrist answered. “But you are in too
+much of a hurry; wait a bit, and I will explain. Most likely I shall
+not claim in the present owner’s lifetime, that is if I ever do it at
+all; he is an old man in bad health, and they say he is not likely to
+outlast the year; I think I should wait till after his death.”
+
+“It would be kinder,” said Bill.
+
+But that was not Harborough’s reason, and though he did not say so, he
+made his real motive fairly clear. “It is a very difficult thing,” he
+said, “to turn out a man who has been in possession such a long time;
+indeed, it is just possible that if I could not prove that neither I
+nor my father knew that we had the right to claim for all those years,
+I should not be able to do it at all. If we had known it, and had for
+some reason left Mr. Harborough in possession, I don’t believe we could
+turn him out; but as we did not know I ought to be able to do it,
+though I don’t think I shall try unless he shows signs of living longer
+than now seems likely.”
+
+“I see; then he will never know you have a claim?”
+
+“No, not if I can prevent it. I will tell you why. He does not care
+much for the heir, it is said, though he wishes him to have the
+property for family reasons; he is altogether rather an eccentric old
+man”--Bill knew that--“and it is possible that if he is left to himself
+he will make no will. Now, I don’t want him to make a will, which
+would only complicate the case. If he has no right to the property he
+can’t bequeath it; but the existence of a will, bequeathing it to the
+recognised heir, would give him a show of right which he would not
+otherwise have. So, you see, I do not want a will made, and I do not
+want to give Mr. Harborough any reason for making one by hinting at my
+claim yet.”
+
+“Is that fair?” Bill asked.
+
+“Of course it is fair. What do you mean?”
+
+“I don’t know, I am not quite sure,” she answered thoughtfully; “I
+shall have to think about it. But don’t let’s bother now; tell me about
+your case.”
+
+“I don’t know what you mean by fairness,” Harborough said somewhat
+severely. “If there is anything unfair it is the way in which my people
+have been kept out all these years. As to my case, there is very little
+more to tell about it, except, of course, that I shall have to prove my
+legitimate descent from Gilchrist Harborough, that my grandmother was
+legally married to him, and all that.”
+
+“How could she be anything else?” Bill asked wondering.
+
+“He could have had another wife living at the same time, or he could
+have been married before, or something of the sort.”
+
+This was a new but impossible difficulty to Bill. “Oh, but he
+wouldn’t,--at least, seeing that he was a Harborough--” She paused and
+then added demurely: “I thought you did not wish to belong to that
+played-out family, and had a poor opinion of their mortgaged property.”
+
+“I can’t help my ancestors,” Harborough replied, “and besides, they are
+some way back; we have been honest working men for two generations. As
+for the property, it is not so much encumbered as is usually thought,
+so Stevens, the lawyer at Wrugglesby, says; it is his opinion that a
+practical man with a small capital and reasonable notions could pull
+the place together yet.”
+
+“You!” Bill cried. “‘Thou art the man’!” and she made the best
+obeisance to him that she could without getting down from her perch on
+the low branch of an apple-tree.
+
+“I don’t know about the reasonable notions,” Harborough said seriously,
+“and as for the small capital, what I have is not large for such
+a job; still, since I made the lucky speculation which emboldened
+me to ask you to be my wife, I suppose I can lay claim to a little
+capital. Something could be done with the place I am sure; I drove
+past the other day and made observations; there is a lot of fine
+timber still among all the rubbish in the wood and more in the open
+park-land--that’s worth something; then a good lot of that park could
+be cultivated profitably; it would take time, but I believe it could be
+done.”
+
+“And the house,” Bill added, “is big too. If we lived there we could
+take boarders in the summer; if we advertised among the seaside and
+farm-house lodgings in the time-table, we should be sure to get some
+answers.”
+
+Harborough never was quite sure whether she was in fun or in earnest;
+he was not sure now, but in either case he was annoyed and felt his
+annoyance to be justifiable. “That would be impossible,” he said
+severely, though had he given expression to what was in his mind he
+would have requested her not to be absurd. However, for politeness
+sake he contented himself with the milder speech, rising as he uttered
+it.
+
+“Why?” Bill asked jumping down from her perch.
+
+“Why? Because it would be out of the question. As Mrs. Harborough of
+Wood Hall how could you receive boarders? It may be all very well for
+you and Miss Hains to do it in London, though, as you know, I don’t
+altogether approve of the plan, but here--here it would be impossible.”
+
+“Why impossible? You don’t explain.”
+
+He was holding the gate open for her, and jerked it with annoyance as
+he answered. “To begin with, in that position--”
+
+“Oh, but there wouldn’t be one,” Bill interrupted; “there would be no
+position. The stiff-necked county would hardly recognise you on the
+strength of your grandfather if you ploughed your park; and as for
+me--even if I were Madame La Princesse your wife I should still be
+‘only Bill.’”
+
+She uttered the name with the wealth of contempt and annoyance which
+Polly, at times of extreme irritation, could concentrate into its one
+syllable. Harborough felt irritated too; no man who has all his life
+assumed an indifference to position likes to be shown that he too has a
+trace of the universal respect for it.
+
+“If you think,” he said coldly, “that I care for the county you are
+very much mistaken. Other people’s opinion is not of the slightest
+importance to me as you should know, and though I care a good deal
+what manner of woman my wife is, it is for myself I care, not for my
+neighbours.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF A GUARDIAN.
+
+
+“It is my belief,” said Miss Minchin to Miss Gruet, when the sultry
+days of August had reduced the two ladies to visiting one another in
+the cool of the evening only, “it’s my belief that Mr. Harborough is
+courting Mrs. Morton’s cousin; he goes to Haylands so very regularly
+now.”
+
+“Very likely,” Miss Gruet made answer, “although I should hardly have
+thought so poorly of him.”
+
+“So poorly?” Miss Minchin repeated.
+
+“Yes, so poorly, for she is little more than a child.”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know.” Miss Minchin bridled at some recollection. “I had
+an offer before I was her age.”
+
+That was true, although, since the suitor was still younger it could
+hardly be regarded as eligible. Miss Gruet, having no such testimony
+to bring forward, contented herself with saying, “Girls don’t marry so
+young nowadays.”
+
+“No,” Miss Minchin was forced to admit, “no, perhaps you are right.
+But what takes Mr. Harborough so often to Haylands? He must go to see
+someone; who is it?”
+
+Now, oddly enough, that was exactly the question Polly was propounding
+to herself, and seeing how entirely she considered the engagement
+(except for the secrecy) her own arrangement, it was strange.
+Fortunately about this time she had ample opportunities for studying
+the question, for she and Bella came to Ashelton as often as they could
+during the summer months. They usually walked from Wrugglesby, nearly
+a six miles’ tramp along dusty country roads; but as compensation they
+always drove home with a certain quantity of spoil stowed under the
+seat. Sometimes it was butter they brought back packed in a damp cloth,
+or eggs carefully held in Bella’s lap, or chickens showing under the
+back seat; sometimes it was only vegetables, or a basket of fruit, or a
+pigeon pie, or a basin of dripping, or some equally humble subscription
+to the larder. Polly despised nothing and refused nothing. When Theresa
+hardly liked to offer such trifles to the elder housekeeper, Bill
+relieved her of any difficulties by putting various small articles in
+the old safe which stood in the corner of the wash-house, and which
+came in the course of time to be kept for Polly’s sole use. “That’ll do
+for Polly,” she would say when Theresa debated how to use this or that;
+and if Theresa demurred saying, “I can’t offer her such things,” Bill
+assured her: “You can offer her anything you don’t mind her having; the
+only thing you can’t offer her is anything you don’t want her to have
+and only offer out of politeness. Put it in her cupboard; she’ll take
+it.”
+
+And take it she always did. So, partly because this collecting of odds
+and ends suited her near, but effective, style of housekeeping, and
+partly from a sense of responsibility which prompted her to see how
+things went on at Haylands, Polly came often to Ashelton that summer.
+And what she saw there led her to ask herself the question which Miss
+Minchin asked: “Whom did Gilchrist Harborough come to see?” And the
+answer she gave herself was the one which with great truthfulness she
+gave in different words to Miss Minchin, “I don’t know.”
+
+Miss Minchin asked the question, or rather, by less bald methods
+sought the answer, when Polly came to stay at Haylands in August. It
+was the middle of the month when she and Bella came; they had had to
+continue school during the earlier part of the month to compensate the
+pupils for the time lost at Miss Brownlow’s death, but by the middle
+they came to Ashelton to stay for a fortnight. For the first week
+Theresa would be there; for the second the three cousins would be left
+in charge as she and Robert were going away. It was a busy time for
+a farmer to leave, but Robert did not seem to mind; as he said that
+he would much rather leave now than in September, partridge-shooting
+possibly had more to do with his decision than farming. However that
+might be, he decided to go, and Polly and Bella came to Haylands with
+the understanding that they would look after Bill and the house during
+Theresa’s absence. It was a few days after their arrival that Polly met
+Miss Minchin in the lane. As they were going the same way they walked
+on together, Miss Minchin making many enquiries as to the health and
+general welfare of the cousins. Polly gave all suitable answers, and
+talked in her best style, with perhaps more regard for effect than
+accuracy. What she said in reference to Harborough, however, was mainly
+true, more true than she herself liked under the circumstances.
+
+Of course, so she told herself, Harborough came to see Bill, and
+since, being a busy man with no spare time, his visits were paid at
+fixed hours, he usually did see Bill. It sometimes happened, though
+not often, that the time of his coming varied a little, and also it
+sometimes happened, even when he was regular, that Bill was busy or not
+to be found for a few minutes. On these occasions Theresa entertained
+him until Bill appeared, when she would have been quite willing to
+leave them to enjoy each other’s society undisturbed. But they did not
+show the least wish for such a thing. “We haven’t got anything private
+to say,” Bill told her once when Theresa remonstrated with her. So
+by degrees it came about that if the cousins were indoors Harborough
+joined them, and if they were out of doors he sat under the elm-tree
+with them, helping Bill to shell peas or string currants, or whatever
+peaceful occupation she might be engaged upon that evening. Theresa
+would willingly have taken such work from her on the evenings when
+Harborough came, but if she did Bill only got something else to do, and
+that possibly of a less suitable nature. Theresa could not understand
+the girl at all; she never seemed shy or eager to see her lover; she
+was never anxious to put on her best frock for his coming; and yet she
+appeared happy in the engagement. Of course Harborough himself was not
+demonstrative; he was always grave and serious when Theresa saw him,
+but no doubt, so she thought, he was different in her absence, thinking
+which she went away. Whereupon, the currants being done, the pair took
+to watering the garden with a silent industry and a strict attention to
+business.
+
+Polly saw all this and more still with her shrewd little eyes, and
+before Theresa went away she spoke to her on the subject.
+
+“You have noticed it too?” Theresa said, as if relieved to find it not
+all her own fancy. “Do you think Bill is really fond of him?”
+
+“Yes, I do, and I think it is very hard on her that you should take so
+much of his attention.”
+
+“I!” exclaimed Theresa flushing. “I! How can you say such a thing,
+Polly?”
+
+Polly both could and did say such a thing, and she said it with the
+repetitions and variations she so well knew how to use, until Theresa,
+hurt and angry and mortified by turns, first denied the charge and then
+defended the action.
+
+“Somebody must be civil to him,” she said at last. “Bill never wants to
+see him alone; she makes him work in the garden if I leave them; she
+won’t be nice to him or put her best dress on, or anything.”
+
+“Bill is a little goose, and the chances are she does all that out of
+pride and contradiction because she is jealous of you.”
+
+“She can’t be jealous of me, it is impossible,” Theresa said, and the
+next moment added, “and if she is, why does she not try to please
+him? When he wants her to talk seriously she won’t; she says the most
+ridiculous things in the gravest manner, and the gravest in the most
+ridiculous, till he never knows how to take her, and that’s annoying to
+a man, you know. And then she will persist in calling him Theo. For a
+long time she did not call him anything, at least not when I was there,
+always beginning, ‘I say,’ just as if that was his name; it was so
+rude, I told her about it. She said she did not like Gilchrist, there
+had been too many of them. I told her to settle that with him, but I’m
+sure I don’t know what she said, for now she calls him Theo which she
+says is short for theory, and I know he can’t bear it.”
+
+To this recital of Bill’s misdeeds Polly only said: “I must have a good
+talk with Bill, I think she minds me more than you; only, you know, my
+dear Theresa, your being nice to Gilchrist will hardly compensate for
+Bill being nasty. I am sure you don’t mean anything but the very best,
+still, quite unintentionally of course, you sometimes make it a little
+hard for her.”
+
+Theresa was truly grieved as Polly meant her to be, and determined to
+be very careful of her conversation with Harborough in the future. It
+must be admitted that she could not disguise from herself the fact that
+she really did enjoy talking to him, and he could not disguise from her
+woman’s wit the respectful and quite impersonal admiration he had for
+her.
+
+Theresa was easy enough to deal with; Bill was the real difficulty, as
+Polly knew, a difficulty she did not feel at all sure of being able to
+tackle successfully. She thought over the subject for some time, and
+finally decided to leave it for the present. Theresa was going away
+in a day or two, and when she returned Bill herself was to leave with
+Polly and Bella. In these circumstances it hardly seemed necessary to
+open the question now, and Polly determined to study the matter for the
+present and speak of it while they were away together.
+
+Theresa was only away for a week, but the three cousins left behind
+contrived to get a certain amount of excitement into the week. It was
+really Bill’s fault, Polly said, Bill and her plums. Plums were very
+scarce that year, not only in Ashelton but in all that part of the
+country. There had been every promise of a good yield in the spring,
+but a few late frosts had terribly damaged the crop; many trees were
+quite bare and many others had but little fruit; those in the Haylands
+orchard had escaped. The plums were decidedly the best of the trees in
+the orchard; they were younger and in better condition than the apples
+or pears, and they were, moreover, very good kinds. In the spring they
+had shown every promise of abundance of fruit, and when the late frosts
+came, damaging the neighbouring trees, they did not suffer much owing
+to good luck and a sheltered position. Bill was delighted by their
+escape, and during the summer took great interest in the health of the
+trees, propping up the overloaded branches and regretfully thinning the
+too abundant crop. By the end of August the fruit was ripe and a source
+of great satisfaction to her.
+
+“I don’t see what you are going to do with them,” Polly said one
+morning as she looked at the trees from which Bill was filling Bella’s
+pudding-basin.
+
+“We can’t eat them all,” Bella said, biting one as she spoke, “nor make
+jam, nor pies, nor give them away; there are far too many; they have
+all got ripe together. What a pity Theresa is not here; I wonder what
+she does with the fruit.”
+
+“Sells it,” said Bill as she went on to look at the next tree.
+
+“To whom?”
+
+“I don’t know. The apples used to go away last year; I have seen some
+of the baskets about. These plums ought to be picked; they are quite
+ripe and the wasps are getting at them.”
+
+“Yes,” Polly said judicially, “they ought to be picked to-day. I think,
+Bill, you had better get what we want for jam and perhaps you might
+get a basketful for Mrs. Dawson. Mr. Dawson was saying the other day
+that they had none at all. You had better gather all we can use this
+morning.”
+
+“I mean to,” Bill replied, “but you have got to help. Oh, yes you have;
+they must be all, or at least the greater part picked to-day; you will
+have to help.”
+
+“Bill,” Polly began with dignity, but Bella, disturbed about her
+sister’s property, interposed. “It does seem a pity not to sell them: I
+do think it is silly of Theresa not to have left any orders about them;
+can’t we write to her?”
+
+“Not in time,” Bill answered. “I expect she left no orders because she
+did not think; she and Robert always call these my trees, because I
+take such an interest in them. Robert said I should keep anything I
+could make out of them; I don’t want to do that, but I mean to make
+something.”
+
+“I don’t see how you are going to sell them,” Polly called from the
+gate as she was leaving the orchard.
+
+“Don’t you? I have seen for several days. Don’t go, Polly, you must
+help to pick; it is going to be a busy day and you will have to help;
+you might begin at once while I find the baskets.”
+
+“I’ll come too as soon as I have taken this to Jessie,” and Bella went
+away with the basin as she spoke, leaving Bill and Polly in animated
+conversation. When she came back to begin her share of the plum-picking
+she found Polly at work; Bill had coerced her into it somehow, and,
+what was more remarkable still, kept her at it. They all three worked
+steadily, finding it decidedly more tiring than they had anticipated.
+Not only did they gather the fruit, but they also packed it in the
+baskets in which it was to travel. In time the baskets gave out, and
+Bill proposed to borrow some from Mr. Dane. “I know he has got some,”
+she said; “I saw them round by his back door the last time I went for
+books. It won’t take me long to go and borrow them.”
+
+“You can’t,” Polly said; “besides we have done enough; it is nearly
+four o’clock.”
+
+“We sha’n’t have done enough,” Bill observed, descending her ladder,
+“until we have done all we can.”
+
+“It would be a great pity to waste any,” Bella added; “there are heaps
+more just perfect, and this weather they won’t hang.”
+
+“Do you intend to keep on till dark?” Polly demanded. “How absurd! Have
+you forgotten that Gilchrist Harborough is coming this evening?”
+
+“All the better,--he can help,” was the only answer, and the gate
+closed after Bill as she went in quest of the rector’s baskets.
+
+“It is perfect nonsense,” Polly said wrathfully; “why couldn’t she have
+got one of the men about the farm to do this work?”
+
+“They are busy,” Bella answered; “I expect she does not want to take
+their time, more especially as Robert said she could have the profits.”
+
+“There won’t be any; and if there are I see no reason why I should work
+for her profit.”
+
+“It is not bad work. I wonder how she found out where to sell them; I
+expect she made Theo tell her. Do you like him, Polly? I think I do.”
+
+“I don’t like this work,” was Polly’s only answer, “and I am not going
+to do any more of it at present; I shall lie down for half an hour.”
+
+And away she went, calculating that Bill could not be less than half
+an hour in borrowing the baskets, and in any case she would hear
+her return through the open window. Bella, left to herself, went on
+industriously with her work until the sound of footsteps in the lane
+arrested her attention. She was standing on a high rung of the ladder,
+and peering through the plum-branches, she looked to see who might be
+passing, secure that she herself was unseen. In this belief she was,
+however, mistaken, for the passer by glancing up at that moment had
+the vision of a flushed face and a frame of golden hair, the curls all
+loosened and caught by the tiresome interwoven branches, the whole
+surrounded by those same branches in a way which he found almost
+bewildering.
+
+“Good-afternoon, Miss Waring,” he said. “I was just on my way to
+Haylands about the bees,--is any one at home?”
+
+Polly was at home, but Polly might not like to be disturbed; still of
+course the bees were a matter of business, so Bella looked out again,
+or rather, partly looked out, having in the moment’s retirement given
+some infinitesimal but effective touches to her tie and hair. Jack
+Dawson found her irresistible, but he had found her that before. Mrs.
+Dawson could hardly have selected a more momentous time for acquiring
+a hive of bees than the one she did, for her son Jack discovered that
+the Mortons’ bees were the best, in fact the only really good bees to
+be had, and even these he found needed a great deal of investigation
+before purchase. At least such must have been the case to judge by the
+number of calls of inquiry he paid and the length of time he spent
+looking at the hives with Bella. Mrs. Dawson is reported to have said
+at the end of the month that that hive cost her more than anything she
+ever bought, but eventually she came to a gentler way of thinking; for
+after all, though it undoubtedly is a criminal offence for only sons to
+marry, it is an offence they will commit, and Jack’s partner in guilt,
+or rather promised partner, won her way into Mrs. Dawson’s heart in
+time.
+
+But that was all in the future; in the present, Jack, on his mother’s
+behalf, was industriously following up his quest for bees, and Bella,
+on her sister’s behalf, was helping him. It is to be presumed that
+these were their motives, though a casual observer might have thought
+their interests, though mutual, were more circumscribed on the occasion
+when they helped each other to gather Bill’s plums. Bella said she
+could not leave off till Bill came back; it would be so unkind if both
+she and Polly went away without a word of explanation. Jack agreed,
+saying that there was no hurry and he could wait any time, and while he
+waited he helped to make up for Polly’s desertion. Polly, meanwhile,
+slept peacefully, and Bill went by way of the rector’s back door into
+the rector’s presence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE PLUM HARVEST.
+
+
+Bill was a privileged intruder at the rectory now, coming and going as
+she chose, saying and doing what she chose, with no one to hinder her.
+
+At first the old rector had not known whether he hated or loved this
+grandchild of the dead past, this creature who was Wilhelmina, and
+Gipsy Alardy, and a score of other things half bitter and half sweet.
+But after a time he forgot to think of hatred or love; he never thought
+now of that dead past, for she was not Wilhelmina, nor Gipsy Alardy,
+nor anything but her untutored, half-developed self. So he buried
+the past again, and, accepting the present as he found it, turned to
+the work in hand. In that work he included Bill, and the queerest,
+pleasantest, most incomprehensible work he found her. So to the rectory
+she came for all manner of things and to the rector for all manner
+of information; he seldom refused her, never repulsed her, listened
+to her plans and fancies, never condemned nor ridiculed, lending a
+sympathetic ear to all things, even including those which some would
+have had him condemn. From her heart Bill longed to tell him of her
+promise to Harborough, feeling it almost a breach of confidence to
+shut him out of this secret; but when she asked Theresa if she might
+speak, Theresa said she had better not. She knew Mr. Dane was kind to
+her young cousin, but she did not understand the odd friendship there
+was between them, and, as she no doubt wisely said, should Bill tell
+one person, Harborough could justly claim the right to tell one on
+his side, and the secret would be a secret no longer; it must either
+remain among themselves or else be public to all the world. Bill saw
+no reason why it should be a secret, but as Polly advised her to say
+just what she thought best to Mr. Dane, she let the matter drop; she
+did not know Polly’s motives, but she would not in this follow her
+advice in opposition to Theresa’s. So Mr. Dane knew nothing about
+the arrangement, knowing only, as all Ashelton knew, that Gilchrist
+Harborough went to Haylands, but, owing to what he himself knew of
+Bill, he attached little importance to that.
+
+On the day when Bill came to borrow the baskets the rector was busy, so
+busy that he was not disturbed by her light footstep nor aware of her
+presence until she was by his chair making her request.
+
+“Baskets, Princess Puck?” he said; “of course, take what you like.”
+
+And she had gone again before the ink in his pen was dry.
+
+“Away already?” he said, looking up as the handle rattled when she
+closed the door after her.
+
+“Yes, I’m very busy, and so are you.” She opened the door again an inch
+or two to say it.
+
+“Ah, I see; you’re always busy.”
+
+“I’m gathering plums. We have all three been doing it most of the day,
+and we shall keep on till dark; there are heaps to be gathered, the
+whole lot are ripe together. Would you like some? I’ll send some this
+evening.”
+
+“Thank you, thank you, you are very kind. I dare say I shall be down
+your lane this evening, and if I am perhaps I can take them away with
+me; that will save your time and let me see you busy people at work.”
+
+“You will come?” Bill opened the door wider to put the question
+joyously. “Monseigneur, you shall have the biggest and best, and as
+many as you can carry!”
+
+Harborough’s visit had passed entirely out of her mind, and when it
+came back to her on her way home with the baskets she did not regret
+the rector’s promise to come. She went to the orchard with a light
+heart, and an ungainly appearance, having slung the two biggest hampers
+across her shoulders, to facilitate their transport, while she carried
+the smaller baskets in her hands. She went by way of the fields, and
+as Miss Minchin was engaged in chasing the course of the sun with her
+window-blinds on the other side of the house, she reached the orchard
+unobserved.
+
+Jack Dawson and Bella were on the same ladder, and in the heart of the
+same plum-tree. They did not see Bill until she, having unburdened
+herself and discovered Polly’s absence, announced herself by the
+question, “Where is Polly?”
+
+A ripe plum fell heavily from the branch above as Bella started at the
+voice. “I,--she’s gone in,--Mr. Dawson is helping me while she rests.”
+
+“How long has she been resting?”
+
+“Ever since you went away,--but, Bill--”
+
+“Don’t disturb her,” entreated a masculine voice from the branches, and
+the masculine legs descended the ladder a little way. “I can stay and
+take her place; she must be awfully tired, you know.”
+
+“She isn’t,” announced the inexorable Bill; “she’s lazy, that’s all. It
+is very good of you to offer to take her place, but if you really will
+help, you had much better take Bella’s; she has worked hard, as hard as
+possible.”
+
+“If Miss Waring will allow me to help her?” Jack suggested persuasively.
+
+“You will, won’t you, Bella?” Bill said; “and I’ll go and fetch Polly.”
+And she suited the action to the word.
+
+“It is a pity to disturb Miss Hains,” Jack said and Bella agreed with
+him, sincerely hoping Bill would not succeed in the difficult task of
+uprooting the reposeful Polly.
+
+However she was disappointed; in a very short time Polly, gracious and
+serene, accompanied Bill to the orchard. But the indefatigable couple
+were not disturbed in their industry, Polly, after polite greeting,
+going to work on a distant tree and taking Bill with her.
+
+Jack Dawson helped them all the remainder of the afternoon, and
+Harborough found him still hard at work when he arrived in the
+evening. Polly, in her position of chaperone, regarded the two pairs
+with a judicial eye and felt dissatisfied. Jack and Bella were well
+enough, and their relative output of work and conversation was more
+calculated to satisfy her than the amateur market-gardener; it was the
+market-gardener herself and Gilchrist Harborough who displeased Polly.
+
+“That young man is a splendid agricultural implement,” was her opinion
+as she watched him. “He might as well be Darby’s digger or somebody’s
+steam-plough, and Bill--well.” Here Polly sniffed aloud, but whether
+from contempt for Bill or sympathy with her own difficulties one could
+not say. At that moment her attention was arrested by Bill’s voice.
+
+“You have come then, Monseigneur! You shall have the very best.”
+
+Polly looked round sharply; the tone of the girl’s voice was so unlike
+that in which she usually spoke to Harborough, there was something of
+caress in it, of the frank familiarity of assured welcome and response.
+It was not wonderful that Polly looked to see if Theo answered to this
+new nickname, and when it was evident he did not, that she looked still
+more eagerly to see who did.
+
+Mr. Dane, the courteous but somewhat exclusive rector of Ashelton! He
+was Monseigneur, it was for him Bill was opening the rickety gate, he
+whom she welcomed so gladly! It was surprising, Polly felt, but safe.
+Perhaps Harborough felt the same, for he did not seem to resent Bill’s
+evident satisfaction in Mr. Dane’s presence, and he did not, as Polly
+did, lecture Bill afterwards on the impropriety of addressing elderly
+gentlemen in so free and easy a fashion.
+
+Of course Bill did not in the least mind what was said, and went to
+bed as indifferent to Polly’s remarks as Mr. Dane himself would have
+been. He went home thinking kindly of the young folks under the orchard
+trees, pretty Bella and her suitors, as he took both young men to be,
+the favoured and the unfavoured one. The favoured one,--and in judging
+Jack Dawson to be such the rector was right--did not retire to rest in
+the peaceful manner of the other plum-gatherers, having first had to
+endure an extremely stormy interview with his mother.
+
+Perhaps Bella had some idea of what might be taking place, for she lay
+awake long that night, though Bill, with whom she shared the room,
+did not know it. The younger girl slept soundly and dreamlessly, not
+troubling at all about Jack or Harborough, nor yet about her own plans
+for the morrow. Those same plans necessitated getting up at a very
+early hour the next morning; fortunately Bella was sleeping quietly at
+the time, so without challenge Bill dressed and went out.
+
+It was cold out of doors, everything drenched with dew; everything
+still, almost awfully still,--the dead world, the motionless air, the
+opaque sky, dark except where at the horizon’s rim it showed faintly
+grey like the ashes of yesterday. It was not really dark; Bill wondered
+why all things were so clear in this ghostly, shadowless twilight. “It
+is as if the world were dead,” she thought, “burned out and finished,
+resurrection and judgment over, and just me left behind forgotten.”
+
+Then she unlocked the stable-door and, putting fancies aside, set
+seriously to work, first harnessing the old roan horse to the roomy
+light cart, and afterwards climbing in beside the hampers of plums
+placed there over-night. She had told Polly and Bella that she herself
+would take the plums away, and that she would have to start before
+breakfast to do it. Bella was too much disturbed about her own concerns
+to feel much interest, and Polly saw no reason to object, as had
+Theresa been at home she possibly might have done. As it was, the two
+remaining cousins had breakfast without Bill, though Polly was much
+annoyed by a note the girl had left saying she would not be back till
+the afternoon. All thoughts of Bill, however, were soon driven out of
+her head by the confidence Bella could withhold no longer.
+
+And thus it was that Bill drove away with her plums in the grey
+dawn, not to Wrugglesby and the railway-station, but to Darvel, the
+regimental town, a far longer distance but a bigger town with richer
+inhabitants, military and civil. The strawberry roan was a good old
+horse though terribly ugly: he would trot well along the winding lanes
+and empty highways on the journey, and at the journey’s end stand
+patiently beside the curb while Bill went to the back doors to sell her
+plums. That was her notion of doing business; untroubled by any idea of
+license, and fortunately remaining untaught by painful experience, she
+went from house to house selling her fruit by the pound, having taken
+the dairy scales with her for the purpose. And a very good trade she
+did, for plums were scarce and hers were beyond reproach; she asked a
+fair price and gave good weight, dealing as an honest and humble trader
+should.
+
+It was with a clear conscience and satisfied mind that she drove home,
+light in load and heavy in pocket. She came back by the Wrugglesby
+road, which was further but better going now that dry weather had
+loosened the roads. The afternoon was far advanced and the shadows
+stretched long on the cropped grass fields and matted seed-clover. In
+the distance the air still quivered with heat, and the red-roofed farms
+glowed warmly in it. Now and again came the whirl of machinery, some
+stack in process of erection or a reaper in a wheat-field near at hand.
+Bill looked around her, at the dusty hedgerows, the deep green trees,
+the poppies by the road, it was all very good in the drowsy afternoon;
+the whole world was so good, she could have sung aloud for joy.
+
+Propriety, however, demanded that she should not, and moreover some
+one accosted her at that moment, a stranger asking the way to Sales
+Cross. She pulled up to tell him and then, as she was passing that way
+herself, offered him a lift. He accepted, glancing at her curiously;
+the voice and manner were not quite what he had expected from the
+general appearance of herself and her equipage. However, he seated
+himself beside her and began to speak of the harvest-prospects and
+the weather, equally popular topics of conversation just then. A
+small farmer or bailiff’s daughter, he thought her, concluding that
+latter-day education must in some way be responsible for her unusual
+manner.
+
+So he talked to her on various topics, incidentally learning a little
+about herself, among other things that she had been to Darvel to sell
+fruit. In this way, Bill making no effort to learn anything of him and
+his business, they reached Sales Cross and there for the first time she
+asked him of his concerns, inquiring which way he wanted to go.
+
+“There is a footpath leading off from the road on the left, I am told,”
+he said, and when she pointed it out to him he got down and bidding her
+good-afternoon went on his way.
+
+“I wonder where he is going,” she thought. “He could get to part of
+Ashelton that way, but I don’t suppose he is going there, and he could
+get to several other places equally well.” Then she drove on dismissing
+the subject from her mind.
+
+Now, Polly, though she had talked and thought principally about Bella
+that day, had found time, as the afternoon wore on, to wonder a little
+what mischief Bill had in hand, and to wonder a great deal more as to
+who would find her out. Polly’s morals were of a strictly utilitarian
+character, and being a great believer in the eleventh commandment
+_Thou shalt not be found out_, she was prepared to measure her wrath
+with Bill’s misdoings in proportion to the publicity of their nature.
+Therefore when, at about five o’clock in the afternoon the offender
+came to her on the lawn, she proceeded to catechise her in a brief and
+business-like way, reserving her most important question till the last.
+
+“And whom did you meet? Who knows about this?”
+
+“Who? Why, of course, all the people I sold plums to, and--”
+
+“No, no, the people about here I mean, people whom we know.”
+
+“Oh, no one.”
+
+“No one in Ashelton or Wrugglesby? Didn’t you see anyone to speak to?”
+
+“Yes; I gave a lift to a stranger who wanted to find the way to Sales
+Cross. He asked me if I had been to Wrugglesby market, and I told him
+that it was not market-day, and that I had been to Darvel with fruit.”
+
+Polly was extremely angry at this indiscretion, and said so in no
+measured terms. She reflected, however, that, the man being a stranger,
+no harm had been done unless he happened to be visiting any of their
+acquaintances in the neighbourhood, in which case he might perhaps
+recognise Bill on some future occasion.
+
+“But I don’t see what harm I have done,” Bill objected. “I dare say T.
+won’t like it when I tell her, she is rather particular, but you are
+not proud and it is no good saying you are; there is no reason why you
+should object any more than Theo will when I tell him.”
+
+But Polly was not at all sure that Theo would approve of Bill’s
+performance, and she said so, without convincing Bill; she also
+reproved her sharply without showing her wherein lay the wrong. Bill,
+who did not at all believe in Polly, was entirely unimpressed, and
+Bella just then came out from the house.
+
+“Have you told her?” she asked, and Bill noticed that she looked
+troubled and excited.
+
+“No,” Polly said, “I have not; I had enough to do thinking about her
+behaviour.”
+
+“Told me what?” Bill asked. “What is it?”
+
+And because they felt the news they had to tell was of greater
+importance than her own comparatively obscure misdoings, they told
+her. Soon even Polly had forgotten about Bill in the greater news; as
+for Bill herself, she thought no more of anything but Bella and her
+happiness in Jack’s love and her fear of Jack’s mother. Bill could
+not quite understand the fear; if you were sure of the love, in her
+opinion, you could not be afraid, for nothing would matter. And the
+love,--she looked rather wistfully at Bella, wondering why she could
+not feel as this cousin did. But she said nothing of these things,
+forgetting them for the time being in the engrossing talk which was
+only closed when they all went indoors, Bill saying as they went: “But,
+Polly, how about your lodgings now? By next summer you will have no one
+to help you.”
+
+“I shall go on alone,” Polly answered magnanimously. “I shall be able
+to do it, and even if I could not, I should not dream of standing in
+the way of either of you.”
+
+“But you seem to want us both to get married,” Bill said.
+
+“I do, if you marry well. I am sure that neither of you would forget
+all I have done for you, and I am sure you will both remember how
+valuable even trifles are to me.”
+
+There was something faintly suggestive of the beggar’s whine in Polly’s
+tone, which made both the younger cousins laugh as they went into the
+house completely forgetful of Bill’s doings.
+
+But there was one who did not forget them, who felt he had good reason
+to be angry with them, and that one was Gilchrist Harborough. It was
+to him that the stranger Bill met was going. He was a Sydney lawyer
+and the fortunate possessor of private means; he had been a friend of
+Harborough’s in the new country, and now that he was home for a holiday
+in the old, Harborough had thought it worth while to tell him the story
+of his claim to the Gurnett estates, asking his opinion rather than
+his help. The lawyer, however, was so much impressed with the strength
+of the case when he first heard the story in June, that he immediately
+set to work on his own account to verify one or two necessary points.
+Having by this week’s mail received from Australia the information he
+wanted, he came to tell Harborough of his success. At first he intended
+to write, but as he was going to stay a week or two with some friends
+further down the line, he broke his journey at Wrugglesby and spent a
+couple of hours discussing the situation with Harborough.
+
+Unfortunately, he did not confine himself entirely to business during
+that couple of hours, for he casually mentioned the little fruit-seller
+who gave him a lift in her empty cart. “The queerest little oddity
+I have ever seen,” he said. “I wonder if you know who she is; let’s
+see if I can describe her. She was small, dark, shabby, shabbier
+than any cottage-girl I have yet come across in this well-favoured
+old country--untidy, simple, though ’cute I should say, frank as an
+American, brown as a berry, hair dark but reddish, face,--I don’t know,
+a provoking little face, and perfectly irresistible eyes.”
+
+Harborough knew who she was though he did not say; a slighter
+description would have served him. There were not two such about; two
+brown girls who spoke good English and sold fruit by the pound in
+Darvel, who wore their right boots laced with string (Harborough knew
+that boot well) and had brown eyes with the sunshine in them; who made
+friends with all comers, who whistled to the birds in the hedges, who
+was, in fact,--Bill, his promised wife.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+PETER HARBOROUGH: SHOT.
+
+
+Bella was not proud, neither was she exacting in any particular; but
+there are times when even the least proud is tried by his family. Bella
+was so tried on the day that she went with Polly and Bill to Bymouth.
+
+Bymouth was the place selected by the three for the change which Polly
+said they needed after all their trouble. They could not afford a
+change, it is true; but as Polly also said: “It is no good waiting till
+you can afford a thing; by that time you will probably not want it.”
+Bella agreed with Polly; Bill’s cautious vote on the opposite side was
+overruled, and to Bymouth they went. Bymouth, being four miles from a
+railway-station, had the merit of being a cheap place; a railway-line
+was indeed on its way there, but had not yet got very far. Visitors who
+wished to go to Bymouth drove from Bybridge, or walked, sending their
+luggage by the carrier’s cart. The cousins walked, and as the carrier
+charged threepence for each package Polly said, “We must not take too
+much.”
+
+Bella agreed: it was easy to agree, for they had not much to take, and
+they were only going for a week; but Polly’s notion of luggage and
+Bella’s were not identical. This was the first of Bella’s trials; the
+matter of provisions was another question which needed settlement.
+Polly said they had better take all they could with them, for
+Bymouth (she had never been there) was a very out-of-the-way place
+where everything would be difficult to get: also (she added as an
+afterthought) what they took with them they would have free, while
+what they bought there they would have to pay for. Bella did not see
+the necessity of provisioning themselves as if they were going to a
+desert-island; however, she gave way to a certain extent, and Polly put
+a cold fowl in her hat-box (Bella would not have it in hers), three
+large lettuces rolled up in Bill’s bathing-dress, and a neat packet
+of fat ham in slices securely wedged among the same obliging cousin’s
+underwear.
+
+“You can take the tea,” Polly said, handing Bella a large paper bag.
+
+Bella took it in so pleasant a manner that Polly was induced to try her
+with some plum turnovers which she was anxious not to leave behind,
+because she said, “they would be so nice to eat in the train.”
+
+“You can’t eat things in the train,” Bella exclaimed scandalised,
+“least of all plum turnovers. Besides, do you think I am going to open
+my luggage in the train to get them out? Why, it will be in the van!”
+
+“So it will,” Polly agreed; “I forgot that. Still, they will be nice to
+eat when we get there; we shall be hungry then, for we must dine very
+early to leave in time.”
+
+But Bella was obdurate; she would not take the turnovers, which she was
+sure would not be wanted.
+
+“Oh, well, please yourself,” Polly said good-humouredly, and packed
+them in the crown of Bill’s hat. “She will have to wear her best one,”
+she said; “this is much easier to pack.” And she crammed in hat and
+turnovers together.
+
+Bella, not seeing what she was doing, raised no objections, but on
+the subject of apples she was firm. There were a certain number of
+windfall apples Polly wanted to bring, because, she said, fruit was
+always dear at the seaside; but she could not get them in among her
+things or Bill’s, and Bella absolutely declined to have them. Polly
+was annoyed, but at last gave it up, leaving the apples scattered over
+the dressing-table, while she turned her attention to strapping up
+waterproofs. Bill had begun to do this, putting in with them an extra
+petticoat; Polly added the subscription of a dressing-jacket, but she
+was called down-stairs just then and Bella took the straps from Bill
+and persuaded her to give up the idea of taking the additions. “You
+don’t want them,” she said, “and we can’t go about looking as if we
+were bringing home the family washing in a mackintosh.”
+
+“Why does Bella want to look so respectable?” Bill asked Polly, when
+they were alone later on.
+
+“Because,” Polly answered severely, “she is a lady.”
+
+Bill, not at all impressed, smiled her derision, and enquired: “Why
+was she so cross when she found out too late that my best boots were
+packed?”
+
+“Because Jack Dawson will be at the station. Just as if”--Polly was
+contemptuous--“he would look at your boots! It is market-day, so he
+is going to Wrugglesby; he is going to drive Bella--you and I and the
+luggage will go in the chaise with Sam.”
+
+“I see,” Bill said, and began to make various odds and ends, refused
+accommodation elsewhere, into a parcel. She had no idea of annoying
+Bella, but she had two different pieces of brown paper, both too small,
+and no genius for making parcels.
+
+Polly glanced round to see if there was anything forgotten; her eye
+fell on the apples. “It does seem a pity to leave them,” she sighed.
+Then an idea occurred to her and her face brightened. “I know what I
+will do,” she said.
+
+She turned to an open drawer and stirred it over till she found a
+small calico bag. She had many such,--Bill called them nosebags--which
+she used to hold all manner of odds and ends collected from various
+people. The one she brought out now contained scraps of ribbon, the
+accumulation of many years. She emptied it, finding a home for most of
+its contents in a smaller bag already used to hold some fifteen pieces
+of pencil. Then she put the best of the apples into the empty bag and
+forced it some way up the centre of Bella’s neat roll of waterproofs.
+“It is a pity to unfasten them,” she said; “they are so nicely done up.
+I am sure the bag won’t fall out, and it hardly shows at all.”
+
+That may have been, but the first thing Bella saw when she came on the
+platform at Wrugglesby was the bag, mouth-end foremost, sticking out of
+the roll which Bill held under her arm.
+
+“Are they here?” Jack asked as he came out of the booking-office with
+her ticket. They were here, very much here; poor Bella almost wished
+they were not.
+
+“I don’t see them,” Jack went on, looking down the crowded platform:
+the train stopped everywhere and was always full. “Oh yes,” he said at
+last, “there’s Miss Hains, but I don’t see the luggage.”
+
+Bella could hardly see anything else, she was so painfully conscious
+of it--Polly’s round tin hat-box, packed to bursting, with the white
+string of some garment shut in the hinge; the little hair-trunk with a
+broken handle (the property of the late Mr. Hains), Bill’s paper parcel
+resting on the top; Bill herself, with her old boots very much in
+evidence, standing beside.
+
+Polly caught sight of Bella and smiled pleasantly as they approached;
+Jack took charge of the luggage and the train came in.
+
+“Jump in, and I’ll hand the things to you,” he said. “Are you going to
+have this in the carriage?” and he lifted the tin hat-box which would
+neither go under a seat nor in a rack.
+
+“Yes, yes, please!” Polly cried, and took it from him.
+
+He picked up Bill’s parcel; the two ends drooped in a dangerous
+manner, but he handed it to its owner without mishap, while Polly
+tried to force the unwieldy hat-box under a seat. It would not go, and
+after disturbing efforts Polly left it among the legs of the other
+passengers, straightening herself just in time to see Bill drop her
+parcel in Bella’s lap and take the roll which Jack handed to her, the
+bag of apples falling out with a thud as he did so.
+
+“Hullo!” said Jack; “what have I dropped?”
+
+Bella grew scarlet, and prayed that the bag might have fallen down on
+the line. No such thing,--it lay on the platform, one of the apples
+shaken out by the fall beside it. Jack picked it up and gave it to
+Bill. “Here you are, Miss Bill,” he said; “wait a moment, here’s
+another one,--you nearly lost your refreshment that time.”
+
+Fortunately the train started almost immediately and so prevented Bill
+from explaining that the apples were Polly’s and not hers. Bella leaned
+back in the carriage overcome with shame, while Bill serenely restored
+the apple to the bag, and then tried in vain to get it back into its
+original hiding-place. “It won’t go,” she said at last; “we shall
+either have to undo the straps or carry it separately: which would you
+rather, Bella?”
+
+“I don’t care; it does not matter.” Bella felt that to be asked which
+she preferred now was adding insult to injury.
+
+“Let us undo the straps,” Polly said; “then we can put your parcel in
+too; it does not look very strong.”
+
+Bill unfastened the straps, and finding the parcel too broad to
+go inside comfortably, she unfastened that too and rearranged its
+miscellaneous contents. Then she packed it and the apples into a
+waterproof; one of the apples rolled on to the floor and was pounced
+upon by a small fellow-traveller.
+
+“Mustn’t, mustn’t,” the mother said; “it belongs to the ladies; give it
+to the ladies.”
+
+But the ladies, as represented by Polly, were benign and made a present
+of the apple, afterwards entering into conversation with the mother on
+the subject of the age and habits of the child. Bella took no part, and
+Bill applied herself to the refastening of the straps. When that was
+done she listened to what was being said, for the talk by this time had
+worked round to Bymouth, which, it seemed, the mother knew well.
+
+Now Bymouth had been Bill’s own choice; she did not know much about
+it, nor did the others, except that the journey there was a cheap
+one and that, after all, was an important piece of knowledge. The
+thing, however, which attracted Bill was the fact that the recognised
+heir to Wood Hall had been spoken of in her presence as Harborough of
+Bybridge. She did not exactly expect to come across him while passing
+through the small town on her way to Bymouth, but she had a vague idea
+that she might see him, and she was anxious to know what he was like.
+Yet another reason for her interest in the place was that her history
+of the county had told her that it was the home of the Corby family,
+they who had also owned the small manor of Corbycroft whence the old
+Squire’s body had been carried to the Chapel at Wood Hall. Somewhere
+between Bybridge and Sandover, a place somewhat higher up the coast
+than Bymouth, had been their ancestral home. It had been pulled down
+long ago, and the family had died out, probably in great poverty from
+the story of the old squire’s body being in danger of arrest for debt.
+But in their day the Corbys had been rich: all the ground on which the
+now fashionable watering-place of Sandover stood had been theirs; and
+though as agricultural land it had not been worth much, its annual
+rental now was more than enough to reinstate the family fortunes twice
+over.
+
+Bill asked many questions of their talkative travelling-companion when
+she found that, besides being born at Bymouth, she had lived since
+her marriage at Sandover. However, she could tell little of what Bill
+wanted to know; she could speak of the extravagant price of lodgings
+at Sandover, the beauty of the pier, the number of the grocers’
+shops,--her husband owned one, the very best in the town. There were
+tombs, she said, lots of old tombs in St. Clement’s churchyard; people
+often came to see them. “Old gentlemen come with spades and things,”
+she went on, becoming somewhat mixed in her ideas, “and poke about and
+read inscriptions and find no end--why, the cliffs are full of queer
+things, fossils as big as your hand and little tiny shells. Sandover is
+a very interesting place.”
+
+“I dare say,” Polly said with vacant affability; “we must try to go
+there one day.”
+
+She had not the least intention of going, but Bill, who did not say so,
+had, and she brought their loquacious informant back to St. Clement’s
+and the tombs. After some time she learned that the interesting
+churchyard was situated on the outskirts of Sandover, on the landward
+side. The particular attraction of the tombs she could not learn, her
+informant having only been there once: “When my Joey was nine months
+old, and it was a hot day too, I carried him all the way; my sister,
+she did offer to help me but--”
+
+Here she addressed herself to Polly, who sympathised on the subject of
+heat and the weight of nine months old babies until the tombs seemed
+forgotten. But Bill, patient and persistent, was at last rewarded by
+hearing that the charm of one lay in the fact that it commemorated a
+man who shot himself nearly a hundred years ago.
+
+“They say,” continued Joey’s mother, taking the core of the apple from
+the disappointed Joey, to the great relief of a maiden lady in a light
+gown, “they do say he didn’t ought to’ve been buried there at all,
+for they were very particular in those days about burying suicides at
+the cross-roads. However, some thought he hadn’t really shot himself,
+but that his friend, who he’d been gambling with, murdered him or
+something. They didn’t rightly know, so they put him in the churchyard
+on the chance, as the nearest cross-roads had already been took up for
+a farmer who cut his throat with a sickle.”
+
+Bill, who had handled one, wondered how he did it, but contented
+herself with asking the name of the other suicide.
+
+“I can’t call to my mind,” was the answer she received, “but he was one
+of the gentlefolks. I’ve heard my good man say he was squire, but of
+course it was long before his time; there’s none of the name about now;
+but my husband, he’s a great one for finding out things, he’s--”
+
+And there followed a detailed account of his peculiarities and
+accomplishments, at the conclusion of which Bill suggested that the
+forgotten name might be Corby.
+
+“That’s it!” the voluble lady exclaimed with delight. “Fancy you
+remembering it and me not! I have got a head! Corby, that’s it--or is
+it Harborough? There are both there, but I think it’s Corby; they were
+the great people hereabouts; my man says they used to own all the land,
+but they are dead and gone now, every one of them.”
+
+“Who owns the land now?” asked Bill.
+
+“A Mr. Briant, a rich man living in London; he comes to Bymouth for
+shooting, but he don’t trouble Sandover much. He’s made a good thing
+of it, a fine man of business he’s called, though I should call him
+precious close myself.”
+
+A list of Mr. Briant’s delinquencies followed, with an account of the
+way in which he was bringing other seaside places into fashion, a form
+of speculation to which he seemed addicted. Bill did not listen very
+much, she was thinking of the long dead Corbys and Harboroughs. She
+thought of them a good deal both then and later, determining to pay
+their graves a visit at the first opportunity. But she did not put this
+determination into practice at once, for she forgot all about it during
+the first two days at Bymouth. The cousins arrived there on a Thursday
+evening; Friday and Saturday were two golden, never-to-be-forgotten
+days to Bill, in which she cannot be said to have thought of anyone
+or anything. She did precisely what she pleased, and, according to
+Polly, undid all the little good she had gained during the past months.
+“She is five years younger, and ten times worse than she ever was,”
+said that remorseless critic, and debated how best she could speak to
+the offender about Gilchrist and her behaviour to him. Bill did not
+trouble herself much about Gilchrist at this time; Polly told her that
+she ought to write to him every day as Bella did to Jack, but this she
+entirely declined to do, and only under great pressure could she be
+induced to write every other day, considering even that a great waste
+of time and stamps as she had nothing to say to him.
+
+While Polly was still pondering on the subject of Gilchrist Harborough,
+Bill’s thoughts returned to the other and older members of the family.
+On Sunday she recalled her intention of visiting their graves, and went
+to St. Clement’s, Sandover, for the afternoon service. She walked in
+the heat of the day (thereby losing her dinner), reached the church
+in time for the _Magnificat_, and heard the dreariest music and the
+most unedifying sermon in the world. But it did not matter; she was
+seventeen, sound in wind and limb, body and soul, and consequently
+quite unconscious of herself mentally, morally and physically. The
+womanhood, which had timidly tried to assert itself during the early
+summer, had slipped away; the thoughts and cares, the hopes and fancies
+which had begun to grow in the past months were lulled to sleep now by
+the sea and the sunshine, playmates which had called her irresistibly
+during these last days. She was a child still though she was not
+conscious of it; afterwards, in looking back, she knew those three
+perfect days were the last of her childhood.
+
+When the service was over she went out into the churchyard to examine
+the gravestones, which did not prove so numerous or so interesting as
+she had expected. A fair proportion of the older ones were in memory
+of the Corbys, who also, as she had seen during the service, had two
+tablets within the church inscribed to them. One she could not read;
+the other was to the honour and glory of a lady named Jane, wife of
+one Richard Corby, and evidently the pattern and model of what a wife
+should be; she possessed so many virtues that Bill felt, when she saw
+how young she had died, that, though sad, it was but natural.
+
+“She must have been the mother of the granddaughter who managed the old
+Squire’s burial,” she thought as she craned her neck to see the date.
+“I expect Jane would have objected to that business. I wonder what
+became of the granddaughter; perhaps she is buried outside.”
+
+But she was not; there were no more recent tombs to the family outside.
+Jane’s husband had died and been buried abroad some years after his
+wife, the event being announced briefly at the foot of the encomium of
+that lady’s virtues. The old Squire, who must have died later still,
+was not buried in this part of the country; the few graves in St.
+Clement’s churchyard which bore the Corby name were all of older date,
+the inscriptions of some half effaced, none in their briefness telling
+a story, romantic or tragic, of that forgotten past. The stone slab in
+memory of the suicide was hardly an exception to this rule, and the man
+whose brief record it bore was not a Corby at all. _Peter Harborough,
+died at Corby Dean in this parish. March 12th, 1799. Shot._ That was
+all; of the history of his life and the tragedy of his death there had
+been found nothing to say but the one word, _shot_. To Bill it seemed
+almost terrible in its uncompromising briefness. As she stood looking
+at the stone, a brown-winged butterfly rested for a moment on the
+moss-grown lettering. “Who did it?” She asked herself. “Who and why?”
+But there was no answer; she did not know who, nor yet why some unknown
+hand had left this single record of the tragedy.
+
+She turned away at last, and unfolding the cheap little map of the
+district she had borrowed to help her on the way to St. Clement’s,
+she spread it on a flat tombstone and searched for Corby Dean. It
+used to be the seat of the Corby family, she knew; now that the house
+was pulled down the name seemed to have passed to a small farm and a
+handful of cottages built, apparently, on the spot where the house once
+stood.
+
+“Corby Dean meant the house where Peter Harborough was shot,” Bill
+said with her finger on the map. “He was with the Corbys then. What
+happened? What were they doing?”
+
+She clasped her hands round her knee and gave herself up to dreams.
+All round her was the peace of earliest September, rich in its haze of
+tender warmth, summer still except for the opalescence of its lights,
+the coolness of its lengthening shadows. But Bill did not see it; she
+was building in her mind a history of the past, reconstructing the
+life which had been, groping in her memory, feeling that there, if she
+could but find it, was a picture of this old tragedy; a tale, nay, more
+than a tale, an actual experience if she could but recall it. A robin
+chirped shrilly in the churchyard yew; she started at the sound and the
+half-awakened memory was gone from her, the ghosts crept back to their
+graves, the past was merged in shadows again. Here was nothing but the
+stillness of Sunday afternoon, the peace of the earth’s sabbaths of
+September. Such golden restful days had been before these men lived,
+and still were though they were gone.
+
+She rose, and folding her map, went out of the churchyard shutting the
+gate behind her. Dead; that generation was dead, gone, forgotten, that
+generation--and the next? That too was lost in mist--and the next? The
+Corbys were ended, exhausted, but the Harboroughs? This brought her to
+the present day and to Harborough of Bybridge. She remembered that as
+yet she had heard nothing of him, and so remembering, she determined
+if possible to find out what manner of man he was--a determination she
+need hardly have troubled to make, for the next day, without effort on
+her own part, she knew.
+
+Monday did not seem a propitious day for discoveries; the weather was
+unsettled in the morning and the afternoon was one of ceaseless rain.
+Polly, seeing the state of affairs, prepared to spend three pleasant
+hours over her wardrobe; she pulled the table to the window, brought
+out her Sunday hat, took off the trimming, and proceeded to rearrange
+it with the bows behind instead of before. Bella retired to the bedroom
+(they only had one between the three) to write a letter, and Bill found
+a delightful occupation down-stairs. Their rooms were over the village
+shop which was also the post-office for a wide district. The rain
+seemed to make very little difference to the business done there; in
+fact it appeared to rather increase the number of customers, those who
+were not obliged to come finding some excuse to spend ten minutes or so
+in this cheerful little centre of gossip.
+
+Mrs. Rose, the landlady and post-mistress, was short-handed just
+at present, her assistant having gone home to nurse a sick mother.
+The girl who helped with the housework came in to lend a hand, but
+she was not clever, and the drawing-room lodgers had an elaborate
+tea at five o’clock which seemed to require much preparation in the
+afternoon. Thus it was without much trouble that Bill persuaded Mrs.
+Rose to let her help in the shop that day. The permission once given
+she set to work with great satisfaction, and soon found out something
+of the whereabouts of the articles most in demand. The stock was a
+very miscellaneous one, ranging from boots and twine through strange
+specimens of crockery and many-coloured cottons to Gregory’s Powder
+and treacle. Occasionally it took some little while to find the
+thing required, but the customers were in no hurry; indeed, most of
+them seemed more inclined to talk than to buy, Mrs. Rose seconding
+them when she was not despatching a telegram or otherwise conducting
+State-affairs through the medium of her post-office. Bill talked a good
+deal and listened even more; her parcels, it is to be feared, were not
+of the neatest, but her conversation was admirable and the customers
+seemed satisfied.
+
+These customers were a representative lot. Some were visitors who
+found the afternoon tedious and came to while away the time by buying
+sweetmeats or papers or strange little penny dolls, according to their
+age and tastes; some were neighbours from near by come for a pound of
+marmalade and a gossip; others were from the next village, genuine
+customers really anxious to transact business. The landlady from the
+house next door came once, being in trouble because her lodgers would
+have curry that night, and “she without a mite of curry-powder in the
+house.” A man from the coastguard station came asking for a species of
+tobacco that Bill took ten minutes to find, during which time he gave
+limitless information about the prospects of the weather. One of the
+customers was an anxious mother who wanted to buy castor-oil, but Bill,
+discovering that there was none, induced her to have Gregory’s Powder
+instead. “It will do just as well if he is five years old,” she said
+putting up a small dose. “Now, my dear, what for you?” This was said to
+a little girl with eyes just level with the top of the high counter.
+
+“Treacle, half cup,” was the answer, and the cup, with the coppers
+wrapped in paper reposing inside it, was handed up.
+
+Bill turned to the green barrel-shaped tin canister with the label
+_golden syrup_ and the spigot-tap she had been itching to turn all the
+afternoon. As the purchaser of Gregory’s Powder left the shop, another
+customer came in, a young fellow in splashed gaiters and streaming
+mackintosh. Bill did not notice him much, being engaged in a struggle
+with the tap grown stiff by reason of age and treacle. He held a paper
+in his hand, perhaps a telegram, but he waited patiently enough while
+an animated conversation went on between Mrs. Rose and an elderly lady
+whom she had just served. The tap moved a little, and the treacle began
+to run, slowly, it must be admitted, but still it ran, in the course of
+time doubtless the cup would be half filled. Bill glanced at the last
+comer; “a member of the surrounding aristocracy” she thought, noticing
+an indefinable something about his clothes and bearing and clear-cut
+profile. When he turned the accuracy of the profile was lost, but the
+eyes, very grave young eyes, met hers and--
+
+Her heart began to beat very fast, though she could not in the least
+tell why. She ought to have lowered her eyes, but she did not; they
+were fixed; she could not look away, and he did not look away either.
+She could hear the beating of her heart plainly, almost as if some
+giant hand were clutching it. She was afraid, she knew not of what,
+afraid to look, afraid to look away, most terribly afraid of herself,
+ashamed, yet foolishly, triumphantly glad. Her hands grew very cold and
+moist, her breath came short, she lost consciousness of what was going
+on around her; the little dim shop vanished, the pile of boots and pans
+and seaside pails, the child who peered at her over the counter, the
+women who talked by the desk. They two were alone, he and she, alone in
+all the world.
+
+“Cup’s runnin’ ower.”
+
+Bill started like one waking from a deep sleep; the dark, greenish
+fluid was slowly running over the sides of the cup. She forced the
+tap back; her hands seemed so weak it was difficult to move it, and
+they trembled till she could hardly hold the cup. She gave it to the
+child,--one cannot put surplus treacle back into a tightly closed
+canister--she gave it, full as it was, and the child took it, carefully
+licking the edges to prevent any running to waste, and walked sedately
+out of the shop. Bill sat down on a little high stool behind the
+counter; her face was very pale and she was shaking all over. Mrs.
+Rose, who had disposed of her last customer, saw her. “Why Missie,” she
+said, “you’re tired out. I oughtn’t of kep’ you here all this blessed
+afternoon.”
+
+“I am not tired, thank you,” Bill protested mechanically.
+
+But Mrs. Rose was unconvinced. “That I’m sure you are; I never saw
+such a lot of folks as we had this afternoon, a gossipin’ lot too. As
+for that Mrs. Randal, I thought she’d never go, taking up the room
+like that! I’m sure that gentleman was going to send a telegram and he
+never did; he walked out of the shop without sayin’ a word, a loss of
+sixpence to the Government.”
+
+“Who is he, do you know?” Bill’s voice sounded curiously stifled in her
+own ears; she looked down as she spoke, but she could feel the colour
+rising to her forehead.
+
+“Who? Why, young Mr. Harborough of Bybridge.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+HARBOROUGH OF BYBRIDGE.
+
+
+Kit Harborough paced the lane restlessly. The rain had ceased but he
+still wore his long mackintosh, and in one pocket the unsent telegram
+was crushed forgotten. For a moment he stood, then walked his five
+yard beat of wet road again. A church-bell sounded on the moist
+air,--curfew, they still tolled curfew at Bymouth; it was eight o’clock
+and nearly dark in the deep lane. On either hand rose high banks
+luxuriant with unclipped nuts and dogwood and sharp-thorned sloes,
+the late rain still dripping from every spray; the pleasant scent of
+wet ferns filled the air, the pungent flavour of the fungus on some
+tree-stump in the hedge mingling with the smell of the drenched grass
+growing tall and rank beside the road. The fragrance of the refreshed
+earth reached Kit but he hardly knew it, hardly heard the creak of the
+hidden grasshoppers in the moist darkness of the banks, hardly saw the
+wild flowers glimmering in the roadside grass.
+
+He leaned against a gate and looked across the darkening land,
+across the stubble-field whence the corn had been carried, over the
+slope of the hill to the village in the hollow, a huddle of roofs
+in the gathering gloom, the chimneys sharp against the sky and the
+smoke-wreaths hanging low in the wet air. Lights were beginning to
+twinkle here and there, one in the house at the corner, the little shop
+where he had seen her.
+
+He settled himself against the gate-post and watched. He was
+two-and-twenty and had never looked consciously at a woman before.
+Two and twenty, and now he had found, among the mouse-traps and
+string-balls and miscellaneous gear of a village shop, a little brown
+witch with the spell of a dead man’s charm in her eyes, the passion of
+a dead woman’s love in her blood!
+
+A partridge rose suddenly on the further side of the stubble-field;
+there was a whirr of wings, and then silence again and the soft drip of
+the wet trees. Then he heard a swift, light footfall, and saw a little
+figure speeding up the lane, perhaps to reach the high ground near the
+gate whence to look at the surrounding country in the beauty of this
+tearful twilight.
+
+Kit Harborough stepped out of the shadow by the gate to the centre of
+the road: the girl stopped abruptly with a little cry.
+
+“I knew you would come,” he said.
+
+He did not know how he knew, or if he really knew; he did not stop to
+consider and she did not ask him. “You!” was all she said, “You!”
+
+“Yes,” he answered.
+
+“Oh,” and it seemed almost as if she were distressed. “I--I wanted to
+speak to you; I have something I must tell you.”
+
+“Me? I am very glad.”
+
+He was astonished at himself, being a curiously diffident boy in
+some respects; so inexperienced, too, that had he stopped to think he
+would never have known what to say. But he did not think, he spoke on
+impulse, and the words came naturally enough; his only fear was lest
+she should escape and he should lose her in the gloom, but even that
+was not a real fear; he felt as if he could prevent her.
+
+She was standing in the middle of the road now. “You are glad?” she
+said. “That is because you do not know.”
+
+She looked up at him as she spoke and he, because he could not help it,
+or because he willed it, or for some other reason, or the want of one,
+looked down at her.
+
+Ah the smell of the rain-washed earth and the wood-smoke from the
+cottage below the hill, the chirp of hidden grasshoppers, the drip,
+drip, drip from the nut-boughs near the gate! Ah youth and ignorance
+and the first sweet taste of love and life!
+
+The partridge, disturbed by the girl’s coming, returned to rest
+chuckling softly. Kit looked round but did not move; he was not very
+close to her; it seemed almost as if he thought the place whereon she
+stood was holy ground.
+
+“Bill!”--Polly’s voice rang shrilly--“Bill! Are you up the lane? Come
+in at once!” For an instant even the grasshoppers ceased, then--“Bill!
+Bill!” came again, but no nearer, Polly did not wish to brave the mud
+of the lane needlessly.
+
+“I must go,” Bill said; “and oh,”--with sudden remorse for the lost
+moments--“I have not told you!”
+
+“Tell me to-morrow.” He was surprised at his own boldness. “I am
+staying here, at the River House, and you--”
+
+“We are staying at the shop--you know.” Bill grew rosy in the darkness.
+
+“Yes, I know,” he answered very softly.
+
+“We go away on Thursday, and I must tell you.”
+
+“Thursday!”
+
+“Bill!” Polly could not make up her mind whether Bill was in the lane
+or not.
+
+But the culprit, who was thinking solely of the news she had to tell
+Kit Harborough, did not heed Polly. “I must tell you,” she said, “you
+must hear, it is so unfair! But when? How?--oh, it is hard!”
+
+“Hard?”
+
+“Bi-ill!”
+
+“I must go!”
+
+“Yes, but first, when shall I see you? When will you tell me?”
+
+“To-morrow early.” Bill instinctively fixed her clandestine affairs
+for the time when the less energetic cousins were not awake to their
+responsibilities or her proceedings. “Early,--I’ll bathe before
+breakfast.”
+
+“So will I; I often go for a swim first thing, and afterwards--”
+
+“I will meet you,”--she finished for him--“about seven; I will tell you
+then.”
+
+“Bill! I can hear you talking! You are in the lane!”
+
+“Yes, Polly, and I am going back across the field so I shall be home
+before you.” And she was over the gate and down the field almost before
+Kit realised she was gone.
+
+Polly turned round and went home; she had never ventured further than
+the mouth of the lane, neither was she certain that she heard Bill’s
+voice in conversation, but she was exceedingly annoyed with Bill
+for having kept her standing there so long in the damp. She was also
+slightly annoyed with herself for being kept. “As if it mattered what
+Bill did!” Only, as she was out (Bella had a romantic idea that she
+wanted to look at the sea by night) she thought she might as well see
+what Bill was doing. She had an instinctive feeling, based on her
+general distrust of humanity, that Bill was sure to be doing something
+wrong.
+
+For the sake of her own satisfaction--Polly not possessing the
+disposition which “rejoiceth not in iniquity”--it is a pity she did
+not penetrate a little way up the lane, for she certainly would have
+seen Kit Harborough had she done so. He stood where he was for a full
+minute after Bill had left him, absolutely still in the middle of the
+road. It did not matter; he was already so hopelessly late for dinner
+at the River House that a minute either way could make no difference.
+If he changed very quickly there was a chance that he would be in time
+for the cheese; earlier than that he could not expect to appear. Dinner
+and such mundane matters did not occur to him till after Bill had gone,
+and when they did he wondered what excuse he was to give to his host.
+On this subject he need not have troubled himself, for his elaborate
+explanations were thrown away, Mr. Briant not being deceived by them
+for a moment.
+
+“Petticoat,” he observed briefly in answer to all Kit had to say. He
+was a man of some experience, and there was something in the boy’s
+manner, in his very indifference to dinner, which betrayed him to his
+elders.
+
+He flushed hotly; it was desecration even to think of Bill and the
+meeting in the lane here.
+
+“Hullo! It seems a serious case,” some one observed, and a man at Kit’s
+elbow inquired: “First, isn’t it, Harborough? Lucky young dog, he’s
+never met a divinity before; he has got it all to come.”
+
+Kit’s eyes flashed. “You are entirely mistaken,” he said coldly.
+
+“All right,” his host said with great good-humour. “Did you send my
+telegram?”
+
+Until that moment he had not thought of it; “I--I forgot it,” he was
+obliged to answer confusedly.
+
+“What a deuce of a time she kept you!”
+
+“She did not! She did no such thing.”
+
+There was a roar of laughter, and Kit, realising his blunder, had the
+good sense to leave it and apologise for the neglect of the telegram.
+This being of but slight importance was forgotten by the party far more
+quickly than his unfortunate admission.
+
+In the meantime Bill was also taking the consequences of her wanderings
+in the lane. Polly was severely reprimanding her for going out after
+dark, for keeping other people waiting about in the damp, and for
+gossiping with farm-labourers and other persons. To all of which Bill
+listened with the tolerant indifference with which she often treated
+Polly’s harangues. “Let’s have supper,” she said at last. “I have told
+you I went out because I felt as if--as if I should burst if I stopped
+in any longer. I had to go out, to get away; it was a pure accident
+that I met any one.”
+
+Polly said, “Oh, I dare say,” and repeated several of her previous
+remarks with variations. Then they had supper, Polly still a little
+difficult in temper; the drawing-room lodgers had had steak and onions
+for tea, and she being one who dearly loved what she called “a relish
+with her tea,” had not yet got over the appetising odour which had not
+served as a relish to her own bread and jam.
+
+Never before in her life had Bill so longed to be alone--to be
+absolutely by herself, if it were only for half an hour. But it was
+out of the question; even when they went to bed the only solitude
+possible was the compromise of companionship offered when the cousins
+were asleep. She thought once of stealing softly down to the darkened
+sitting-room to spend an hour there in the starlight, but the bedroom
+door rattled so terribly that she was certain in opening it to awaken
+Bella if not Polly. She was afraid of facing their curious inquiries,
+she who so seldom had been afraid before, who never knew when her
+conduct was strange or worthy to invite inquiry until the fact was
+plainly shown her; there was some subtle change in her.
+
+She lay still on the outer edge of the wide low bed she shared with
+Polly, and tried to think. The room was very dark and quiet, yet she
+could not think. There was neither Kit nor Gilchrist in her mind,
+neither past, present, nor future; it was all a whirl, with for
+paramount feeling the thought of that unmade claim to the Harborough
+estates.
+
+“It is not fair,” she thought. “He shall know; they shall fight fairly;
+I will tell, whether it makes a difference or not.” Then the picture
+of Wood Hall came into her mind, the stately house in the autumn of
+its days, the great hall, the solemn rooms, “Theo’s, all Theo’s! Theo
+there, Theo and the boarders!” She laughed softly, half hysterically,
+at the idea. “He thought I meant it,” she said.
+
+Polly muttered indistinctly in her sleep. Wood Hall and the gardens,
+the tangled rose-walk and the lawns, how green the grass would be
+now! The wood on the slope of the hill--there would be yellow leaves
+here and there, and the bracken would be golden--how very beautiful
+it all would be! September suited the place, but October would suit
+it even better, the long west front in the afternoon glow, the great
+arched doorway, all of it. And so on and on, a hundred vague ideas, a
+tangle of emotions, but never Kit; she never once faced the thought of
+him. At last she slept and dreamed--our dreams are our own; we are not
+accountable for them. In the morning things looked clearer and emotions
+fainter. Sleep blots out some of the fancies and brings facts into a
+better working perspective. When in the morning Bill rose early to keep
+her appointment she had a distinct notion of what she was going to do.
+She got up and dressed quietly: for the first time in her life she was
+troubled because her gown was shabby; but she did not know why, for she
+had not consciously considered the question of Kit Harborough at all.
+She was going to meet him, it is true, but that was solely to warn him
+of the danger which threatened him. Still she was sorry her frock was
+shabby, and her old straw hat a little the worse for the plum turnovers
+and a good deal the worse for wear.
+
+But she did not trouble herself much. By the time she had finished
+her bath she had forgotten about appearances; also to a certain
+extent she had forgotten her troubles, washed them away in the kindly
+sea or evaporated them in the sunny air: there was not, up to the
+present, anything so very much amiss in her world that still September
+morning. She was whistling softly when Kit found her, wringing her wet
+bathing-dress the while.
+
+“Let me do that for you,” he said.
+
+She held the dress a moment. “You had better not,” she said, “it will
+make your hands blue; the dye comes out like anything. The first time
+it got wet I was like an ancient Briton; it is not so bad now, but it
+still makes one a bit stripy.”
+
+Kit protested that he did not mind the dye and took the dress while
+she gathered up her towels and hung them in festoons about the tent,
+whistling when she was on the far side.
+
+“Is that you?” he asked.
+
+“Yes,” she admitted, wondering if he thought it unladylike.
+
+He did not; he seemed to think it clever. “What a mimic you are!” he
+said. “It was just like a chaffinch.”
+
+“I can imitate some things,--birds.” Bill forgot her mockery of her
+fellow-men; she forgot all those things, for there was a curious holy
+feeling about her just then.
+
+Kit had finished wringing the dress and was carrying it now as they
+walked slowly along the shore. “Not all birds?” he was saying; “not a
+lark!”
+
+“No, not a lark, I have never tried to do that; I don’t think I could.
+I don’t think there is anything quite like a lark’s song; it is so
+completely, absolutely happy; I don’t believe anyone could imitate
+that.”
+
+He agreed with her and then asked if she knew Shelley’s Ode to the
+Skylark. They were not approaching the business of their interview very
+rapidly.
+
+Bill shook her head. “I don’t know any of his poetry,” she said,
+“except a piece about the moon which we had to analyse in our
+grammar-class last Christmas. It was beautiful poetry, though I never
+could find the principal sentence.”
+
+“What a shame to give you Shelley for that!”
+
+Bill thought it was too, and then Kit told her he believed she would
+like the Ode to the Skylark.
+
+“Tell me some,” she said.
+
+He obeyed and repeated the greater part. Business was receding even
+further into the distance.
+
+His was somewhat of a studious nature, and he had, moreover, the
+musician’s ear for harmonious sound and the unspoiled heart to delight
+in beautiful thought. She was a greedy listener, her mind an empty well
+in its ignorance, in its insatiable desire to be filled; she, too, had
+the love of melody, though never till that moment had she felt the
+need of the universe and of her own soul to be expressed in rhythm.
+But now the whole world somehow became one pulsing harmony, and they
+two wandered along the lonely shore in that dream which comes twice to
+no man. The air around them was delicate and crisp, fresh yet tenderly
+soft, the sunlight chastened and mild, threading with sloping bars the
+mist on the land, gleaming bright and pale on the wet sand and the
+incoming tide and the great white gulls that played in the creeping
+waves.
+
+Business and the purpose of their meeting receded further and further;
+indeed, it might almost have been forgotten entirely had it not been
+reached by a most circuitous route through Byron and Heine. They had
+been speaking of the sea’s place in poetry and concluded with the
+opinion that none of the poets had quite expressed their sentiments on
+the subject.
+
+“They don’t seem to get at the sort of mother-feeling,” Bill said at
+last; “at least none of those we know do. I mean the kind of feeling
+of going home that you get when you come near the sea--you know what
+I mean? It seems sometimes as if it stretched out its arms to you and
+called you,--don’t you hear?”
+
+She listened and he listened too, for of course he understood what she
+was trying to say for both. He had felt it as she had, and neither had
+said it before, and both were certain of an understanding now, wherein
+lay the delight and the danger.
+
+“Once,” Bill said, “I saw four lines which were a little about the
+feeling I mean; do you know them?
+
+ ‘Hail to thee, oh thou Ocean eterne!
+ Like voices of home thy waters are rushing,
+ Like visions of childhood saw I a glimmering
+ Over thy heaving billowy realm.’”
+
+Kit said he did not know the lines and asked whose they were; but she
+could only tell him that she had found them quoted in a book of Mr.
+Dane’s. “I’ll ask him,” she said; “I dare say he will know, and he
+is sure to tell me. He is my great friend, you know, the rector of
+Ashelton.”
+
+“Ashelton!” Kit exclaimed. “Do you know Ashelton?”
+
+“Yes,” and then Bill remembered, and the mutual acquaintance with
+Ashelton and the surrounding district, which seemed so very delightful
+to her companion, wore quite another aspect to her. “I had almost
+forgotten,” she went on; “I mean, forgotten what I had come to say; but
+I must tell you, I will tell you about it.”
+
+And forgetting the poets and the seductive calling of the sea she told
+him all,--of the Australian and his claim, of its strength, and of his
+decision to be silent until after old Mr. Harborough’s death; she told
+him exactly how it stood, and how she thought it unfair he should not
+know what threatened him. He listened quietly as she talked, coldly,
+unconsciously demonstrating to her one good gift that an old family
+bestows upon its children, the power to receive a blow unmoved, to
+hear with the silence of pride and to speak with the indifference of
+studied self-control. Kit Harborough had not much for which to thank
+his ancestors; the dead hand of the past was heavy upon him and the
+weight of tradition but little in his favour; nevertheless his birth
+and breeding helped him to receive Bill’s blow with a proud composure,
+almost an indifference which roused her deepest admiration, though at
+the same time it touched her curiously.
+
+She talked on fast to hide her own feelings. “They seem to think,” she
+said, though she had said it before and the whole case was painfully
+clear now, “they seem to think that if Mr. Harborough is left to
+himself he will not make a will; I don’t know why.”
+
+“Because he does not like me,” Kit told her.
+
+“He wishes me to have the property simply on account of the name. I am
+called Harborough because of the property, and I am,--was to have had
+it because of the name; but he wishes it so little that since he is
+sure I should have it, he would not set it down.”
+
+“But if he knew of Theo--of the other one?”
+
+“He still would not make a will, or if he did it would not be in
+my favour; the other man is a Harborough and so fulfils his only
+condition. I have told you he dislikes me.”
+
+“He would dislike Theo a good deal more if he knew him,” Bill said
+warmly; “he is going to cut down the wood if he gets the estate, and
+plough the land, and grow turnips in the park.”
+
+“I don’t think you could make my uncle believe that.” Kit’s composure
+belied his feelings. “And if one could, if one could induce him to make
+a will, I don’t believe I should care to do it, and, besides, you know,
+it might not make much difference after all. Thank you, thank you very
+much for telling me,”--the composure was not nearly so marked; stoicism
+is not perfect at two-and-twenty; “it was very good of you to do it.
+I’m glad to know; it’s much easier when one knows what’s coming, but I
+can’t exactly take advantage of it; you didn’t really mean me to, you
+know.”
+
+“But the house,” Bill pleaded, “the beautiful, beautiful house! Think
+of it, the long west front with the sunset on it,--the great hall with
+the dragons on the mantelpiece--the rooms where all your people were
+born and died!”
+
+“I know.”
+
+They were sitting on a pebbly ridge now; Kit ground his stick into the
+shingles and answered in a muffled voice, not looking at her. “But the
+thing is not settled yet,” he went on after a pause. “He will have to
+fight for it whether there is a will or not; he may not win, and,--and
+if he does, they are his people too; he is more really Harborough than
+I am.”
+
+“He does not care for them,” Bill said; “he despises old families and
+he does not care for tradition; he would like the position but he does
+not really care for anything else; he would not love nor understand the
+place a little bit. He would save money, I dare say, perhaps make it,
+and in time build up a new family on the old foundation. He is just
+fitted to found a new family; he would do it splendidly, he has the
+right kind of brains and opinions; but he is not in the least fitted to
+carry on an old name,--he has not been bred up to it or educated for
+it. You don’t know him or else you would understand.”
+
+“I understand very well indeed. But what is the use? Why do you talk
+about it?”
+
+“Because,” Bill answered vehemently, “the place is what it is; because
+of the house and the wood--think of cutting down the wood! Because it
+seems so likely he will get it, and if it were mine I would never let
+it go. If it had belonged to my people, as it has to yours, I would do
+anything--I should not care what--to get it and keep it.”
+
+The shingles rattled sharply against one another as Kit moved. “Do
+you think I don’t care?” he asked almost savagely. “But if it is that
+business of the will you mean, I can’t do it. I don’t suppose it would
+make a difference, and anyhow I can’t do it; you know I can’t.”
+
+“Then I will,” Bill said. “I will see Mr. Harborough and explain. I
+will get him to make a will; I believe I could.”
+
+“No,” Kit exclaimed, “no, you must not do that. It would be no better
+than if I did; it would be taking an unfair advantage of the other
+man,--promise me you will not do it.”
+
+Bill hesitated. “I have taken an advantage of him already in telling
+you,” she said.
+
+“That is different; it was only warning, preparing me for what is to
+come; you were not using your knowledge against the other man; you
+would not do that.”
+
+Bill was not so sure; though, true to her reflective nature, she felt
+at the moment that perhaps he was right. “Then you will give it up,”
+she said at last, “you will let a man who does not understand have the
+house and everything?”
+
+“Not unless I am compelled.”
+
+“And will you be compelled? What do you think?”
+
+“I don’t know; it sounds pretty bad as you have told it, of course. It
+may not be; I can’t tell.”
+
+Bill looked hopelessly out to sea. “It is my fault,” she said, more to
+herself than to him, “all my fault.”
+
+“Your fault?” he asked. “How? What have you to do with it?”
+
+“It was through me that Theo knew of his claim, through the mass in the
+Harborough chapel, and it was I who got the mass to be read. Yes, you
+have heard about it, of course, but you did not know it was my doing;
+nobody does except one person, but it was, all the same. Mr. Harborough
+had it said to please me, or at least because I suggested it; it was my
+idea, and it was all through that service that Theo heard of his claim
+to Wood Hall. A man, an antiquary, one of those interfering people who
+are always digging in ancestral dust-heaps and finding things which had
+much better not be found, heard about the service and came to enquire
+into it. He came and he inquired, and poked about, and found out a lot
+about the chapel and the Harboroughs; then he met Theo, and talked to
+him, and found out all about him too. Before that nobody knew anything
+of Theo, and he did not know anything of the claim; he never troubled
+about his relationship to you other Harboroughs; but between them he
+and Mr. Wagnall pieced it all out, and there you are; that is how he
+found out he had a claim. If it had not been for that mass bringing Mr.
+Wagnall to Wrugglesby it would never have been discovered; it is all
+my fault.”
+
+Kit did not share this opinion. “It is not your fault,” he said
+decidedly; “not a bit in the world; you never knew what would come of
+it.”
+
+“I did it, all the same.”
+
+“But you are not to blame; you are not responsible because the truth,
+if it is the truth, has been found out, and no one would blame you for
+it if you were. I don’t think you to blame, and I am the person most
+concerned, after this Theo.”
+
+“Oh, he doesn’t think I have had anything to do with it,” Bill said,
+smiling a little at the idea.
+
+“Very well then, that is settled,” Kit said more lightly; “you are
+not to blame; nobody thinks so, neither you, nor I, nor Theo. By the
+way, you seem to be very intimate with Theo,--great friends or great
+enemies, which is it?”
+
+“Both,” said Bill smiling; “I am going to marry him.”
+
+Then suddenly the smile died out of her eyes, out of her heart, out
+of sea and sky and world, and for the first time in her life she was
+afraid to think.
+
+Kit turned and looked at her full, his well-bred, stoical face
+expressing nothing, only his grave eyes very grave as he said slowly:
+“You are going to marry him?”
+
+She nodded, meeting his eyes for a minute; and then she looked out to
+sea, driving her palms deep among the small pebbles as she sat, one
+hand on either side, staring rigidly before her.
+
+The gulls dipped down to the breaking waves and circled above in the
+pale-toned sky; sea and sky alike were as tinted silver, the whole day
+delicate, tender-hued, like the colours found in a pearl. A great
+peace, a great silence everywhere; no sound but the ripple of the waves
+that crept up the sand, crept till they reached the shingle where the
+girl sat, and broke with tiny spray almost at her feet.
+
+“We had better move; the tide is coming up.”
+
+The voice of the man beside her aroused her. He suddenly seemed a man
+to her, a boy no longer: it seemed too as though there was a great gulf
+between them. She rose automatically and they walked along the shore in
+the direction of the village. He was very kind and polite; there was an
+indefinable difference between his manners and those of the people she
+usually met, but it only made her the more conscious of the difference
+between herself and him. He talked as they went, easily and well, on
+indifferent topics, the cliffs, the shore, the places of interest
+about, the peculiarity of the stones on the beach. Once he picked one
+up, dark grey and heavy, a flint sea-urchin, he told her it was, rather
+an uncommon fossil, he said, as he gave it to her. She took it, and
+talked about it and a dozen other things, in spite of her consciousness
+of the gulf, as easy and as self-possessed as he. Why not? Was she not
+Bill, the mimic, the player’s child? She was sure just then that he had
+been a player, a strolling mummer, a singer ever on tour, perhaps even
+the circus-clown Polly called him. And she,--she was a clown too, a
+buffoon, a fool, for all that she wore no motley, to make old men laugh
+with her songs and quips, to charm young men for a moment with her
+hundred changes,--“all things by turn and nothing long”--nothing except
+the little gipsy creature that was under all and that was miles and
+miles away from Kit Harborough of Bybridge, from him and the women of
+his class. She knew those women, tall, fair, white-skinned, serenely
+unconscious. She was a long way from them, from everyone in the
+universe, farthest of all from this boy with his considerate courtesy,
+his polite speech, his accurate clothes. She was painfully conscious
+of his clothes and even more so of her own, of her work-stained hands,
+her too rapid movements. She was conscious of it all, but more than all
+of a passionate desire to run away and hide with the wild things which
+were her kin, to run away not from him alone but from all her world, to
+run right away into the woods and hide even from herself, if it could
+be.
+
+But she did not run away, as she would have done some months earlier;
+pride held her back and crushed the wild nature down, helping her to
+politeness and teaching her to give her little brown hand at parting
+much as Kit Harborough did. So with some formality they said good-bye,
+and parted at the top of the cliff-path, he to the left to the River
+House, she to the right to the little shop where Bella was waiting
+breakfast and Polly finishing a belated toilet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE ACQUISITIVE FACULTY.
+
+
+Polly may have been a clever woman, as Mr. James Brownlow had said
+she was, but in his catalogue of her abilities he omitted to mention
+her one great gift, her undeniable talent for getting things. She
+was a true collector and picker-up of trifles; she had brought this
+too little appreciated art to a rare perfection, and she never went
+anywhere without acquiring something, never came home completely
+empty-handed, never declined or passed by a single article or
+opportunity however trivial or cumbersome. Her motto was _It might be
+useful._ “If she went to the Sahara,” Bill said, “she would bring home
+sand for the chickens’ run.” But besides the collectors’ art Polly
+possessed the true genius for getting, not begging nor demanding,
+but annexing calmly as by right divine, or acquiring gracefully as
+bestowing a favour in accepting one. “I don’t ask for things,” she used
+to say; “people always offer them to me. I am sure I don’t know how it
+is, but they do, and it looks so rude to refuse.”
+
+So she never refused, and seldom went anywhere or met anyone without
+directly or indirectly turning the occasion to profit. Bymouth did not
+promise a very likely field for her abilities, but even here she found
+and seized an opportunity. It was late in the visit certainly, not till
+after their fellow-lodgers had gone. This took place on Tuesday, the
+day on which Bill told Kit Harborough of the claim.
+
+The drawing-room family left at one o’clock, the cousins watching them
+go. They drove to Bybridge in a small wagonette, and it was interesting
+to see them getting into it, for the family was large, far too large
+for the wagonette.
+
+“They will never do it,” Bella said as she watched them.
+
+“After the way in which they packed into that bedroom,” Polly remarked
+severely, “I should say they could go anywhere or anyhow.”
+
+“They had two bedrooms,” Bill said; “there was another up the yard.”
+
+“I call it positively indecent,” was Polly’s opinion, but Bill asked:
+“Where is the indecency? The girls were in one and the boys in the
+other. Mrs. looked after the girls and Mr. after the boys; they had
+more space apiece than we three have, and I am sure we are all right.”
+
+Polly explained that their own arrangement was quite different and much
+better, but Bill, who had now joined Bella at the window, did not pay
+any attention to her.
+
+“Oh, do come and look, Polly,” she said; “they have nearly done it.
+They would do it easily if it were not for the luggage; they ought to
+have a cart for that.”
+
+“They are far too stingy,” Polly observed contemptuously.
+
+“The mother will nurse the baby,” Bill went on, “and the father the
+next-sized one, and the little girl that big bundle. They have left one
+box out.”
+
+“Where will they put it?” Bella said.
+
+“They can’t get it in front,” was Bill’s opinion; “the coachman can
+hardly see round the rampart of luggage as it is. They are going to try
+though. If they would put it inside it could be managed. There it goes!
+I knew it would fall off the front! If you were to put it--”
+
+“Come in, Bill!” Polly seized Bill’s arm. “Come in at once! It is no
+business of yours; let people manage their own concerns. I am ashamed
+of you!”
+
+But Bill was not ashamed of herself; she was far too much absorbed in
+the difficulties of the family to care for Polly, and when someone in
+the wagonette below having heard her voice called up to know what she
+had said, she leaned out of the window again and told them. “Put it
+inside; I believe you could do it then,--not that way, small end down.
+You don’t mind me suggesting it, do you? It would have been such a
+pity” (“Bill!”) “if you couldn’t all get in. That’s right; now” (“Bill!
+Shut that window, Bella.”) “if the two little boys sit on it and the
+biggest one stands on the step--that’s splendid!”
+
+“Shut that window, Bella!”
+
+Bella shut the window almost on to Bill’s neck, leaving her no choice
+but to draw her head in. The family, who did not appear to resent her
+interference, shouted their thanks to where she had been, while Bella,
+who had been as much annoyed as Polly by Bill’s behaviour, joined the
+elder cousin in telling the culprit so.
+
+But Bill did not mind much. “It would have been such a pity if they had
+not managed it,” she said, “and I don’t believe they could any other
+way.”
+
+“It was no affair of yours,” Bella said; “I don’t see why you wanted
+to make such an exhibition of yourself. There were people passing too,
+one of those shooting men from the River House had just come out of the
+post-office; he did stare at you, and no wonder!”
+
+Bill said she did not care, which was true; but she did not know that
+the man described the incident, inclusive of her and her directions,
+in Kit Harborough’s hearing that evening. Kit recognised her from the
+description, as Gilchrist had done when his lawyer-friend Ferguson
+described her, and Kit, like Gilchrist, did not betray her identity.
+He said even less about her than did Gilchrist, though he experienced
+a youthful desire to knock the informant down when he announced an
+intention of finding out who the girl was. But the pugilistic wish was
+restrained, Kit reflecting that, as Bill was leaving the day after
+to-morrow, it was most unlikely the fellow would find out anything
+about her; and, after all, that he should wish to do so was, in Kit’s
+opinion, quite natural and only what was to be expected. It was also,
+in the same opinion, quite natural that Bill should assist the family
+in the wagonette with her advice, quite natural and quite right;
+indeed, so right that Kit never questioned its propriety at all,
+possibly because she did it; though in his defence it must be said that
+he troubled less about the correctness of an action than did Gilchrist,
+thinking not at all of “how it looked.” He had been brought up among
+people who, being quite sure of themselves and their public, never
+troubled as to how a thing might look.
+
+Polly had not been so brought up, and, conscious that her actions would
+not always bear investigation, she was most anxious that appearances
+should, when possible, be beyond reproach. She lectured Bill
+proportionately, and was, as usual, listened to with indifference; but
+when at last Polly brought her remarks to a close with, “It was like
+everything else you do, most unladylike,” Bill said rather wistfully:
+“I suppose I am unladylike, Polly?”
+
+“Hopelessly,” was the crushing answer.
+
+“I should like to be better,” the voice was a shade more wistful; “I
+would try if I knew what to do.”
+
+“Don’t lean out of the window to give advice to strangers,” Polly
+said, and Bill making no reply, she began to perceive that her young
+cousin was in an unusually pliant mood. Seeing this she seized the
+opportunity, the first that had offered, of speaking to her on her
+behaviour to Gilchrist. As a preliminary she heaved a deep sigh, and,
+after a quick glance at the girl, began with chastened mildness.
+
+“After all,” she said, “to lean out of the window like that is only a
+small thing, but it is an illustration of your ways. Your ways often
+trouble me, Bill, do you know that? Sometimes I feel as if I shall
+give you up entirely, and then again sometimes I think you really are
+ignorant and would try to do better if you only knew how your behaviour
+looked.”
+
+Bill twisted restively, Polly’s voice having taken on the melancholy
+semi-nasal drawl which belonged to her part of the grieved guardian.
+Bill did not believe in her at any time, and that afternoon the manner
+irritated instead of amusing. But she was sincerely convinced of her
+own shortcomings, and though she had no great opinion of Polly, there
+was no one else to whom she could go; so she said: “Tell me what I do
+wrong; you need not put in all that about being sorry and the rest; I
+know how that goes, and can fill it in for myself.”
+
+“Thank you, Bill,” Polly said with dignity; but quickly seeing the
+girl’s attitude of mind and the precariousness of her own opportunity,
+she shortened her part and, after a brief remark on her cousin’s
+impoliteness and her own forbearance, got to business without further
+delay.
+
+“You want to know where I think you wrong? I will tell you one or two
+things,”--she spoke as one who has a wide range of examples from which
+to choose. “There is your behaviour to Gilchrist to begin with; you do
+not behave at all nicely to him.”
+
+“To Theo!” Bill exclaimed in astonishment, “to him! What do I do wrong
+to him?”
+
+“You call him Theo for one thing; he objects to it and it is
+ridiculous; all nicknames are ridiculous.”
+
+“All?”
+
+“Yes, all; and abbreviations of names are almost as bad.--I don’t see
+why you should not be called Wilhelmina instead of Bill. It does not
+suit you, it is true, but I am sure he would prefer it, besides Bill is
+vulgar; don’t you think so yourself?”
+
+“He can call me Wilhelmina if he likes,” Bill said in a subdued voice.
+“And as for Theo, that is easily altered; He can be Gilchrist if he
+wishes it, though I think it is quite as unsuitable as Wilhelmina for
+me.”
+
+“My dear Bill,”--Polly was delighted to have made so much
+impression--“it is not a question of what you think but of what he
+wishes. You ought to consider his wishes; you ought to try to please
+him and consult his tastes; remember, he is proposing to give you a
+great deal, and as you can give him nothing in return except a little
+consideration, it is hardly right to withhold that as you do.”
+
+“What do you mean?” Bill’s voice, quiet and cold, was almost like that
+of one who faces an unexpected shock.
+
+Polly, really in her element now, enumerated a list of the things
+Bill had done wrong, or might have done right, concluding her remarks
+with,--“Try to be pleasant to him, talk seriously when he wants you to,
+be cheerful and lively when he is in the humour for it, put on your
+best dress and try to make yourself nice when he comes. It is your
+duty, you know, you owe it to him. Make the most of yourself; don’t set
+him to water the garden and so on, but talk to him and be pleasant.”
+
+“Always, do you mean?”
+
+There was something very like consternation in Bill’s tone, but Polly
+did not know it, and answered readily,--“Yes, of course.”
+
+“Always?” Bill dropped her hands on the table. “I can’t do it,” she
+said vehemently; “it is simply no use, Polly, I can’t do it; I shall
+have to throw it up.”
+
+“Throw what up? What do you mean?”
+
+“I can’t be respectable always; it is no use trying; he would be sure
+to find me out after we were married, if not before. He knew the sort
+of person I was when he asked me to marry him; if he did not like it
+why did he ask me?”
+
+“You did not call him Theo before you were engaged,” Polly said, wisely
+attacking the details and not the mass of Bill’s protest. “And of
+course,” she went on, “people usually expect their _fiancées_ will be
+nice to them. The average girl does it as a matter of course because
+she wishes to; it is because you do not seem to know what is expected
+of you, and never wish to do what is right, that I have had to speak to
+you.”
+
+“It is part of the contract, you think?” Bill asked.
+
+“Certainly not; there is no contract in the matter.”
+
+So Polly said, but Bill took her meaning otherwise, as it was intended
+she should, and there was a long silence. Polly, feeling the subject
+was closed, rose and moved about the room, while Bill sat lost in
+thought. At last the younger cousin spoke. “I will try to do what is
+right,” she said, “I will really. I’ll write to Theo--to Gilchrist this
+afternoon, though I did write yesterday. I’ll take the letter out on
+the sands with me.”
+
+Polly was very much pleased; here was an obvious sign of repentance,
+and one moreover which would keep Bill from wading for shrimps, an
+occupation she herself strongly disapproved of. She set off for the
+shore that afternoon with a really happy mind; she had settled Bill’s
+affairs, she had arranged for a good tea when she should come in, and
+the drawing-room family, a great source of annoyance to her, were gone.
+She felt very well pleased with the world in general and herself in
+particular as she sat watching Bill writing her letter, a grotesquely
+and pathetically polite letter it was too, if only she had known it.
+Polly felt that the stay at Bymouth had been most successful; before
+she finally left she was even more convinced of this, for while at
+the little seaside resort she achieved a piece of business which
+even astonished herself. “Fancy,” she used to say with complacency
+afterwards, “fancy meeting my future landlord at a little place like
+that!”
+
+But this she did in the person of the old gentleman who came to the
+drawing-room floor on Tuesday evening. He only arrived on Tuesday, and
+Polly left on Thursday; but she made good use of her time and struck
+up a great friendship with him and his wife, sympathising with their
+ailments, recommending a butcher, telling them in the course of time
+something of her own difficulties. They were interested, pleased,
+favourably impressed. They gave her a good deal of advice,--this she
+asked for but did not necessarily take; they also eventually gave her
+a little help,--this she did not ask for but, true to her rule, took
+without hesitation.
+
+The old gentleman had some house property in London, small
+houses Bayswater way, “a shrewd investment,”--Polly was sure of
+it. The tenants had been giving a great deal of trouble lately,
+“disgraceful,”--Polly was sympathetic. It was a capital place for
+apartments, and Polly could not do better than settle in that part when
+she made her “plucky venture;” that was the old gentleman’s advice. One
+of the houses was empty now, and before Polly left on Thursday, she was
+warmly pressed to take it on the most advantageous terms; that was the
+old gentleman’s offer.
+
+Polly thanked him in her very best manner, saying she doubly
+appreciated his kindness since she was so much alone in the world.
+Mr. Brownlow had died during the summer, and Polly said at the time
+that it was convenient as they were already in mourning; she said it
+was convenient now, since she was consequently free to conduct her
+affairs without his advice and criticism. She did not say this to the
+old gentleman, but told him, after thanking him for his offer, that
+she must talk it over with her cousins before finally accepting it;
+adding that she was nearly sure of their approval, quite sure of their
+obligation on her behalf and their own for his kindness,--and so forth.
+
+Polly was vastly pleased with herself and detailed the whole affair
+with much satisfaction to the two younger girls as they had a hurried
+lunch before starting on their walk to Bybridge station. Bella was
+not at all congratulatory; she did not like having the family affairs
+discussed with strangers, neither did she like posing as part of
+Polly’s responsibilities.
+
+“I am not,” she said, “and I don’t see why you should say I am. I
+am only your cousin and that is no responsibility, and not such a
+wonderfully near relationship either.”
+
+“No,” Polly retorted, “not when you are married to a rich man like Jack
+Dawson and I let lodgings in town for a bare living; the relationship
+will not be near then, I admit,” and Polly sniffed.
+
+“I didn’t mean that!” Bella cried; “Oh, you are unkind! I don’t look
+down on you and I never shall; it is with your cadging ways that I hate
+to be mixed up.”
+
+“Polly is a born cadger,” Bill said resignedly, “and we are part of her
+stock in trade. She is like a beggar-woman singing in the street and
+never asking for pennies, but always getting them. I am her hired baby
+and you are her imitation cough; she would not get on nearly so well
+without us.”
+
+“Well, at all events you reap the benefit of what I get,” Polly said.
+
+“Oh, yes,” Bill agreed readily.
+
+“And I don’t think, Bill, that you will ever despise me.” Polly’s tone
+was becoming highly moral. “It is a great comfort to me to think that
+when you leave me and marry you will never look down on or ignore me.
+It is true you will never have Bella’s temptation, but I am sure you
+would not do it.”
+
+“You are unkind!” Bella repeated. But Bill’s face had suddenly
+hardened; she was thinking of Gilchrist and Wood Hall and the county
+who were going to be compelled to recognise him and his wife,--his wife
+who would have to reform and perhaps forget.
+
+“No,” she said suddenly, almost passionately; “I will never forget you,
+Polly, never look down on you, never, no matter where I am, nor what I
+become. If I lived in a palace you should come and stay with me; if I
+married a king he should receive you and take you in to dinner, and all
+the silly courtiers should bow down to you because you were mine. You
+are an old fraud, Polly, and a cadger, and a bit of a humbug too, but I
+am fond of you all the same. We are not swells, you and I, but we will
+stand by each other, and I will never, never forget!”
+
+“That is a very nice spirit,” Polly said impressively and very much
+through her nose.
+
+“Do you think I would forget?” Bella asked rather hurt. “You seem to
+think I am a horrid creature.”
+
+“No, we don’t,” Bill answered her, “of course we don’t; we know really
+that you never would be ashamed of your grubby relations. Don’t let us
+talk any more nonsense about it.”
+
+So peace was restored, and Polly began cutting slices of the cold
+shoulder of mutton while the younger girls finished their lunch.
+
+“If you married a king,” Bella said to Bill laughing, “he might object
+to Polly walking up to the palace with a nosebag of apples sticking out
+of the middle of her mackintosh.”
+
+“Not if he had married me; he would have got used to that sort of
+thing.”
+
+Bella laughed again. “It is a good thing your Theo is not very
+particular about appearances.”
+
+“You don’t know very much about Theo,” Bill answered quietly.
+
+“I know this much,” Bella replied; “he will not let you do just as you
+like if it happens to be something he does not like and has good reason
+to think wrong.”
+
+“There may be difficulties,” Bill admitted with the glimmer of a smile,
+her war-smile which Polly knew to her cost.
+
+“Bill is very easy to manage when you understand her,” that lady said
+as she sharpened her knife. “Gilchrist will find out how to do it in
+time; at least he may.”
+
+She added the last words under her breath, neither of the others
+hearing her, for Bella was asking in astonishment: “You would never
+really oppose a man you loved, would you, Bill?”
+
+Bill debated the question for a moment looking straight before her.
+“No,” she said at last, “I suppose I should not.” Then she changed the
+subject abruptly: “What is that meat for, Polly?”
+
+“To take home with us. I am not going to leave all that good meat
+behind; there is quite enough now on the bone to look decent, and it
+would be a great pity to leave all this.”
+
+Bella did not approve of this proceeding, but Polly, untroubled by her
+objections, packed the meat up. “There,” she said, giving the parcel
+a final pat, “it will come in very nicely for our supper when we get
+home, and I am sure there is quite a lot on the joint still.”
+
+Bill examined it gravely. “There is enough for our cat here,” she said:
+“it seems a pity to leave that. Let’s take it; we haven’t time to
+scrape it off, but you might put the bone in your hat-box; it would go
+in if I broke it in half.”
+
+“Don’t be ridiculous, Bill,” Polly said with dignity, “ridiculous and
+mean. I don’t see anything to laugh at, Bella.”
+
+Apparently Bella did, but Polly never minded being laughed at, and it
+was in a friendly fashion that the three cousins started for home.
+In the main the three agreed admirably; Bella seldom opposed Polly,
+and Bill, since she had developed an opposing individuality, had been
+little with them; moreover, she was of a nature with which it was not
+easy to quarrel. Polly, however, having a respect for her ability to
+give trouble on occasions, sent her back to Theresa at Ashelton two
+days after their return to Wrugglesby. “I have got a lot of things to
+settle,” she explained to Bella, “and I can do them better without her.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+POLLY SETTLES THINGS.
+
+
+So Bill was packed off to Ashelton, and then Polly proceeded to settle
+things to her own complete satisfaction. She saw the house in Bayswater
+and settled that; she saw the parents of the few pupils remaining
+to her and settled them very completely; and then she wound up her
+connection with Wrugglesby with but few difficulties and not a single
+regret.
+
+“Well, I cannot say I ever cared for it,” she said when Bella expressed
+some natural sorrow at leaving the town which had been her home for
+nearly seven years. “I never was fitted for a pokey little place like
+this; I need a wider life.”
+
+“It may be pokey,” Bella declared with tears in her eyes, “but I like
+it, and I am sorry to leave it, and to leave the shabby old house and
+the shabby old furniture.”
+
+“We are not leaving the furniture,” Polly said quickly. “We are taking
+all we want with us, and only selling what is of no use to any of us.
+You and Theresa have each chosen what you wanted; one can’t keep all
+the rubbish.”
+
+The last was added very decidedly, for there had been some discussion
+about the furniture. Bella had fallen in quietly enough with Polly’s
+judicious arrangements, but Bill, who cherished ridiculous sentiments
+about old and cumbersome articles of furniture, had disputed Polly’s
+decision article by article, winning sometimes, losing sometimes, and
+only desisting when it was obvious that the little house at Bayswater
+could hold no more. All this had taken place during the visits she and
+Theresa occasionally paid the cousins at Wrugglesby during the time
+of the settlement. It was all over now, arranged finally some days
+ago; Polly was only afraid of reopening the question. The three were
+assembled for the last time at Langford House, Robert having driven
+Bill to Wrugglesby that afternoon to see the last of the old place
+and the old associations. There was nothing at all to be done, it
+was really nonsense for her to come, Polly said, and was not at all
+surprised that Bill did not arrive till almost dark.
+
+Robert had been delayed in starting, and when Wrugglesby was reached
+Bill would not be driven to the house, but got down from the dog-cart
+at the stables and walked, with something clinking forgotten in her
+pocket, down the familiar streets, saying a silent good-bye. It was a
+grey, gusty afternoon, the first of October. There were dead leaves
+in the quiet corners,--all the corners were quiet here--and the wind
+came now and then whirling them about her feet. It was a good wind,
+fresh and sweet for all its strength, and the girl felt she loved it;
+it was the home-wind to her, the wind of the Eastern Counties. And the
+greyness and the peace and the great sense of space and abundant room
+were home to her, the land of the Eastern Counties, not grand at all,
+but still and wide, and very, very dear.
+
+She stood a moment on the outskirts of the little town looking across
+the well remembered country. Then she turned and walked home through
+the small, ill-paved streets, past the familiar shops,--those with
+the new fronts, those with the old many-paned windows; past the
+police-station, the Georgian house with the legend _County Police_ set
+over the door; past the church with its ancient burying-ground where,
+five steps above the town, Aunt Isabel slept under the dark green grass
+and fluttering sycamore leaves; past genteel houses with small gardens
+where sunflowers lingered with hollyhocks and dahlias still unhurt by
+frost; past each familiar thing until at last, just as the lamps in the
+town were being lighted, Langford House was reached.
+
+But the cousins who received her knew nothing of Bill’s lonely walk,
+nor yet of the something which clinked in her pocket. Indeed, she
+herself did not think of the last immediately; she did not think of
+it until after Bella had made the remark on her regret at leaving
+Wrugglesby. Bill did not speak of her regret, and as for Polly, she had
+none of which to speak. “As we have got to go some time,” she said, “it
+may as well be now as later; better in fact, for though the lease is
+not up till Christmas, we could not expect to get such another chance
+of a house as the one now offered.”
+
+To which wisdom Bella assented; after all, leaving the house now did
+not concern her so very much, for in any circumstances she would have
+had to leave before the spring, as Jack insisted that they should be
+married in February. Mrs. Dawson, though she had at first objected
+to this arrangement, finally came to the conclusion that since it
+was inevitable it might as well be soon as late. Indeed after a time
+she came to accept it with so much meekness (other people called it
+pleasure) that she invited Bella to come to Greys when Polly left
+Wrugglesby and stay there till the winter set in. Therefore Bella,
+though she assented to them, cannot be said to have had a very personal
+interest in Polly’s plans.
+
+As for Bill, on this particular afternoon she said nothing even with
+regard to the furniture, except that in reply to Polly’s emphatic
+remark to the effect that they could not take all the rubbish with
+them, she said she hoped it would get a good home and be well treated.
+Polly considered such sentiments foolish in the extreme and, having
+said so, dismissed the subject from her mind and remarked: “I flatter
+myself that we have done very well on the whole.”
+
+Bella agreed, but Bill corrected. “It is not we but you who have done
+it. It was you who cadged the house in London on very low terms, you
+who first impressed Mrs. Dawson with the fact that we are a nice
+family,--oh yes, she likes Bella for herself now, but she began by
+liking you, or rather what she takes you to be. You arranged that, just
+as you arranged the contract for the repairs of this house at the end
+of the lease. You are a champion cadger, Polly, whatever else you are.”
+
+Polly was not certain whether to be pleased or offended by this
+tribute. “I think you have a great deal to thank me for,” she said
+complacently; “I am glad you appreciate it, though I object to the word
+_cadger_.”
+
+“What shall I say?” Bill asked, “If you don’t cadge things what do you
+do? Acquire them?”
+
+“Well, yes, perhaps I do,” Polly admitted; “yes, I suppose I have the
+acquisitive faculty.”
+
+“I should say you have.”
+
+“So have you,”--Polly did not like Bill’s tone. “I am sure you have it;
+people give you things and you don’t refuse them.”
+
+Bill laughed and went over to the fireplace, the something in her
+pocket clinking audibly as she moved.
+
+“What is that?” asked the inquisitive Polly.
+
+“Oh, I had forgotten.” Bill put her hand into her pocket. “It is
+something I brought to show you,” she said, and drew out first a piece
+of crumpled paper in which the articles had been wrapped and then two
+large old-fashioned shoe-buckles.
+
+“What are they?” Polly made a pounce on one.
+
+“Where did you get them?” Bella took the other from the table where
+Bill had put them. “What are they?”
+
+They gleamed in the fading light as the cousins held them, gleamed
+and shimmered with wonderful changing splendour, flashing when the
+firelight touched them and found a dozen answering tongues of flame.
+
+“Paste,” Polly said, “old paste; they must be worth a lot of money.”
+
+“Diamonds,” Bill corrected.
+
+“Diamonds? Nonsense! They might be worth as much as a hundred pounds
+apiece if they were!”
+
+“They are diamonds,” Bill persisted, “though they can’t be worth that.
+They are mine.”
+
+“Yours?” Polly almost screamed. “Diamonds--and yours? Talk about the
+acquisitive faculty!”
+
+Bill flushed. “I did not acquire them,” she said rather illogically;
+“at least, I hated to have them, and I have promised to give them
+to somebody as a wedding-present, not yet, some day, when there is a
+wedding. I will give them back,--I don’t care what you say,--you need
+not think about selling them,--they are not going to be sold.”
+
+“Don’t talk nonsense to me,” was Polly’s answer. “If they are diamonds
+they shall be sold, that is, if you have any right to them, which I am
+sure you have not. They must be paste!”
+
+Bill took the buckle out of her hand, Bella placing the fellow on the
+table beside it: “Are they really diamonds?” she asked. “How did you
+come by them, and whose were they?”
+
+Bill stood looking at them a moment as they flashed in the firelight.
+“They were Peter Harborough’s shoe-buckles,” she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+PETER HARBOROUGH’S SHOE-BUCKLES.
+
+
+Polly had no doubt done wisely in sending Bill to Ashelton while she
+herself was settling affairs at Wrugglesby. Not only was she thus freed
+from Bill’s interference, but also Bill had an opportunity for putting
+into practice her good resolutions regarding Gilchrist Harborough.
+Polly was sure she would make use of the opportunity, for Bill could
+always be relied on to keep her word. In the main she fulfilled Polly’s
+expectations; she certainly tried to do so. Theresa found her curiously
+subdued on her return to Ashelton, and found also that she herself was
+watched and sometimes imitated with an embarrassing closeness. Bill was
+trying to be a lady.
+
+She obeyed to the letter Polly’s instructions concerning Gilchrist,
+always putting on her best dress for his coming, never calling him
+Theo now, never baffling him by tantalising moods and goblin mockery
+and playful defiance. Indeed so circumspect was her behaviour that
+Gilchrist not unnaturally concluded that the lecture he had given
+her after the affair of the plums had taken effect. Of course he was
+humanly gratified to find that his words had not been wasted, but it
+is to be feared that he found Bill in her new character of lady, as
+copied from Theresa, something of a disappointment; she did not always
+compare favourably with her model.
+
+Bill did not know how her efforts impressed Gilchrist, neither did she
+greatly care, for his opinion was not her highest standard. But she was
+herself by no means satisfied, and one day, soon after her return to
+Ashelton, she took her difficulties to her friend the rector. He, by
+right of his office and reason of his experience, had been consulted
+on many points in his time, some rather peculiar ones since his
+acquaintance with Bill; but even she had never faced him with anything
+quite so unexpected as on the day when she brought him the problem of
+her own behaviour. She was examining the high shelves of his book-case
+at the time, standing on the back of an arm-chair to do so, having
+first weighted the seat with encyclopaedias.
+
+“THE DIARY OF A LADY,” she read the title of one of the books, then
+stood a moment looking at it thoughtfully. “Monseigneur,” she said,
+“you know I told you I was trying to behave better? Well, I am not
+getting on a bit.”
+
+Mr. Dane was busy with his parish accounts; as a rule the girl’s
+presence did not disturb him at all, but now he looked up, arrested by
+her tone.
+
+“What is it?” he asked, putting down his pen. “What have you been
+doing?”
+
+“Nothing; I haven’t done anything wrong and I do all the right things I
+can find to do. Theresa thinks I am much improved, but I’m not really.”
+As she reached up to replace the book, the chair tilted a little.
+“Would you mind kneeling on the seat?” she said. “The chair tips when I
+reach up. Thank you.”
+
+She jumped to the ground and drawing a chair to the writing-table faced
+the rector. “What is your notion of a lady?” she asked abruptly.
+
+Mr. Dane considered a moment, before hazarding an opinion, knowing that
+his answer would be taken literally and perhaps translated into action.
+“One,” he said at length, “who considers others, who never by word
+or deed causes unnecessary pain, who listens sympathetically, talks
+pleasantly, never says a great deal even when she feels much or knows
+more. One who does her mental and moral washing in private, but is not
+afraid to do her duty in public; who respects the secrets of others,
+the honour of her family, and her own self more than all. One who
+speaks with tact, acts with discretion, and places God before fashion
+without needlessly advertising the fact to the annoyance of the rest of
+the world.”
+
+“Thank you,” said Bill, and a long silence followed; perhaps she was
+learning the definition for her own benefit. At last she spoke again.
+“You think I could be a lady if I learned to control myself and,--and
+did not run away when I wanted to, and all those sorts of things?”
+
+Mr. Dane did think so; possibly he did not regard her as so hopeless a
+case as did Polly. Then there was another silence during which there
+came the sound of wheels on the drive at the other side of the house.
+Neither noticed it, and Bill, thinking of Polly’s lectures on her
+disreputable appearance, asked a second question. “I suppose a lady
+always wants to look right? It matters very much how she looks, how she
+is dressed?”
+
+“It matters very much for some,” the rector answered; “but others--”
+he was only a man after all, and though old not altogether wise--“with
+others,” he said, “you are so busy wondering what colour their eyes
+are that you never notice their gowns; so much perplexed as to what
+they are, Princess Puck, that you never know what they wear--”
+
+He broke off smiling as the housekeeper opened the door: “A gentleman
+to see Miss Alardy,” she announced.
+
+“Me?” Bill exclaimed.
+
+“Yes, miss; he has been to Haylands, he says, and they told him you
+were here; he’s waiting in the hall now,--young Mr. Harborough.”
+
+“Mr. Harborough?” Bill repeated rising. “Whatever can he want?”
+
+“Not Mr. Harborough from Crows’ Farm,” the housekeeper explained;
+“young Mr. Harborough from Wood Hall.”
+
+“Oh!--I’ll come and speak to him.”
+
+Ladies controlled themselves; they said nothing even when they felt
+much; they respected themselves, the honour of their family, the
+secrets of their friends. Bill was going to be a lady, and she would
+not even allow herself to feel surprised.
+
+Mr. Dane took up his pen again. Old Mr. Harborough was worse no doubt;
+he had been ill all the week, and that it was a mere question of days
+everyone knew. Probably it was a question of hours now, and for that
+reason they had summoned the heir. And for what reason had the heir
+come for Bill? If old Mr. Harborough had a fancy for seeing her again
+before he died Mr. Dane was not the man to gainsay him. Bill knew that,
+the instant he came into the hall where she stood with Kit Harborough.
+
+“Go, by all means,” was his advice, “go at once; I will explain to Mrs.
+Morton.”
+
+So Bill fetched her hat from the study where it lay on the
+encyclopaedias, and without another word drove away with Kit to Wood
+Hall. And Mr. Dane had time to finish his accounts and then explain
+matters to Theresa before lunch.
+
+Theresa was very much surprised to hear of Bill’s going, but since the
+rector approved she was quite willing to do the same. As the afternoon
+wore on and Bill did not return, she began to wonder a little what the
+girl was doing; and when in the evening Gilchrist called and Bill was
+still absent, she found the situation rather awkward. Gilchrist showed
+such an unreasonable displeasure at her absence that Theresa wished
+Mr. Dane could have explained to the impatient lover the propriety
+and justice of Bill’s going. To tell the truth, Gilchrist was both
+displeased and anxious, for he did not feel at all sure what Bill might
+be saying with regard to the Wood Hall estate. She had told him how
+she had met and warned Kit Harborough at Bymouth; and though it is
+true that she had listened with commendable humility to his natural
+explosion of anger, and at the end had assured him (with the shadow of
+contempt in her voice) that the heir had declined to take advantage
+of the warning, what guarantee was there that she might not, for some
+reason of her own, think fit to warn the old man in time to create
+unnecessary complications? Gilchrist was very uneasy indeed, not at all
+sure what Bill would do.
+
+But Kit had no doubts at all. He was perfectly sure she would say
+nothing; and, as certain of her as he was of himself, he never once
+during the drive to Gurnett reopened the question of the claim. He
+never even mentioned it when he helped her to alight at the great door,
+never spoke of it or referred to it as he led her across the echoing
+hall to the wide stairs and the rooms above.
+
+Old Harborough was dying, but dying elegantly, almost as if with a
+subtle and unconscious recollection of what was due to the traditions
+of his family. He was powerless in body but terribly alert in mind,
+keenly conscious of the situation and accepting the inevitable with the
+cynicism he had shown to so many of the happenings of his life, neither
+curious nor afraid, politely indifferent, almost politely sceptical.
+Bill, the many-sided, the sympathetic, felt something like a touch of
+admiration for this survival of a passing type. He, on his part, feeble
+as he was, still received her with something of his former mocking
+courtesy, thanked her for troubling to come to him, apologised for the
+manner of her reception, and prayed her to be seated.
+
+There was a nurse present when Bill entered the room, a tall, quiet
+woman who looked curiously at the girl. The man who had met Mr.
+Harborough with the chair that April day in the woods was also present;
+but he did not look curiously at Bill, either because he thought it
+bad manners, or else because he understood her claim to his master’s
+interest. Both of them, however, withdrew to a more distant part of the
+large room. Kit remained standing near the bed, but Mr. Harborough took
+no notice of him, only once indirectly acknowledging his presence and
+then in no pleasant manner; it was when he himself apologised to Bill
+for not handing her to a chair.
+
+“You must take the will for the deed,” he said, “since I cannot do
+it; it is clear such trifling attentions will not survive the old
+generation.”
+
+He did not look at Kit, nevertheless the lad coloured hotly. Bill
+sat down, wondering a little how the old manners would suit the
+new generation; but she did not say so and in a minute she dropped
+the thought out of her mind, turning her entire attention on Mr.
+Harborough. She did not find it difficult to talk to him, though Kit
+was a listener, even when the old man referred to her last visit and
+the offer then made she felt little embarrassment.
+
+“Are you not sorry you did not take it?” he asked her. “I’d have left
+you Wood Hall for as long as you remained a Harborough. Pity it was
+not done! It might have saved the old place; an heiress isn’t always
+the only thing or the best thing to mend a broken family.” He seemed
+almost to be speaking to himself, but he addressed her directly when he
+asked abruptly: “Are you not sorry you did not take it? By this time
+to-morrow it would all have been yours.”
+
+“I don’t want it,” she answered him vehemently. “I don’t want it; I
+would hate to have it!”
+
+“Hate to have it? Why, I thought you liked it?”
+
+“I do, so much that I would hate to have it.”
+
+A priest had come quietly into the room, but, seeing Mr. Harborough
+engaged in conversation, he went to a distant window and opened a book
+he carried. Bill recognised him at once for the same man who had read
+the mass at Ashelton Church. Mr. Harborough followed her eyes but, not
+being aware that she recognised him, thought she was only wondering as
+to the reason of his presence.
+
+“The last relic of the Catholic faith here,” he explained in his weak
+harsh voice. “I have to be dressed for the next world, the last of us
+who ever will be. Kit is not a Catholic; he is a Purist or a Deist
+or something sincere and modern. He troubles about his soul and his
+Creator like any other mental dyspeptic, and believes something on his
+own account. When I was young it was thought ill-bred to interfere with
+the concerns of the Almighty, and the minding of souls was left to
+those who were paid to do it. We were not tied down by a Sunday-school
+morality in those days, and we had the courage of our convictions.”
+
+Bill nodded. “I know,” she said.
+
+“How do you know?” he asked sharply.
+
+“By you,” she answered.
+
+“By me? What have I said to you? What do you know?”
+
+“I can’t exactly explain,” she said doubtfully; “only the world was
+different then. One can’t measure you by the people of to-day, nor the
+people of to-day by you.”
+
+He fixed her with eyes which were still keen. “How do you know that?”
+he persisted.
+
+“I don’t know; I suppose I feel it.”
+
+“You are a lenient judge,” he said almost softly, “about the most
+lenient judge I have ever had, you odd child. What an odd child! I did
+not know how odd the day I found you in the wood, the day you found God
+in the wood; you did find Him, did you not?”
+
+“Yes,” she answered simply. “He seemed very close; but then I think the
+devil was too.”
+
+“God and the devil at your right elbow and your left. A survival of
+Puritan days,--to find God in the woods now!”
+
+The tone was not wholly mocking; there was a touch of wistfulness
+in it, and Bill hearing it answered it from the depth of her own
+convictions. “Everywhere it is beautiful one feels God,” she said
+softly, “in forest and sea and sky.” She raised her eyes and met Kit’s.
+He may have been guilty of a Sunday-school morality; he certainly was
+guilty of a belief, and he betrayed its existence then to one who
+shared it.
+
+But Mr. Harborough did not know it; he was not thinking of Kit at all
+as he lay looking curiously at the girl. His lips moved once: “Shall
+see God,” he said as if to himself, then raising his voice slightly he
+asked: “Who is it that shall see God, Father Clement?”
+
+The priest turned. “‘Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see
+God,’” he answered drawing nearer.
+
+“The pure in heart,” Mr. Harborough repeated, “that is it; I had
+forgotten. Well, little witch, you have seen something that I, for
+all my years and experience, have not; something that I--I suppose
+because of those years and experience--cannot see. But now I must ask
+you to go; there is a heavenly toilet to be made. Go down and get some
+lunch, but come back by-and-bye. Kit must take you; I apologise for him
+beforehand.”
+
+Bill rose. “Kit does not need anyone’s apology,” she said hotly; then
+she followed the young man out of the room feeling ashamed. Kit that
+day was like the Kit of Bymouth, the Kit she had met in the lane; there
+did not seem such a gulf between them as when they parted, nor yet such
+terrible courtesy. They were boy and girl in the great house together,
+boy and girl watching together, by an odd chain of circumstances, for
+the coming of the great shadow. They went to the solemn old dining-room
+and lunched in state as Bill had once lunched with Mr. Harborough.
+During the meal Kit did not mention to his guest the subject which
+had never really been absent from his mind since she herself first
+put it there that morning on the sands at Bymouth. A little while
+back he had had some talk with a solicitor of his acquaintance, and
+without betraying a personal interest in the test-case he described,
+had learned the very serious position of the man placed as he was. But
+he did not speak of it to Bill then, although, in spite of the still
+intangible nature of it all, he felt the shadow of this man from the
+new country spread over the stately old house, filling its most secret
+corners, taking possession of its most sacred spots. And Bill, though
+he did not speak of it, knew the thought that was in her companion’s
+mind, and felt with him this haunting presence.
+
+After lunch the doctor and nurse agreed in forbidding either Kit or his
+guest to see the patient before four o’clock, saying that they should
+be summoned then unless some unexpected change made their presence
+necessary earlier. There were nearly two hours before them, two hours
+for Kit to play host in the house which might soon pass to another.
+With an effort he tried to banish the thought from his mind as he asked
+Bill to come to the library.
+
+“This is the room I like best,” he said when they stood in the great
+low room where some past Harborough had gathered a store of books.
+Mercifully the later comers, not thinking them of sufficient value to
+sell, had left them intact, even, indeed, adding a volume now and then,
+each man according to his taste, for there was no lack of intellect
+even among the wildest of them. The September sunlight slanted
+through the broad low windows where weedy sunflowers and uncut trails
+of late-blooming roses looked in on a big room, irregular in shape,
+full of angles, with bookshelves jutting out in unexpected places,
+and a silence in it which was a luxury of the brain. The light was a
+warm brown gloom cast back from book-lined shelves; the smell was the
+wonderful, indescribable smell of an old library, Russia leather, and
+oak shelves, and book-dust blended into one, a perfume never to be
+forgotten. For, as the rose on his mistress’s bosom to a lover, or the
+breath of the clover which filled the air when he pledged his vows, so
+is the smell of such a library to the man of books, and above all, to
+the man who has been reared to it, the man who has learned by common
+use and childish association to love the outside of the volumes before
+ever he could read them within.
+
+Bill felt her breast heave suddenly, and a great lump came in her
+throat. She had never been in such a library before, never to her
+knowledge smelt its sweet familiar smell, yet her breast heaved and she
+could not speak. It was absurd, of course; it was nothing to her, the
+books were not her friends, and as an alien she could claim no kinship
+with them; yet she felt for them, felt so that she could not speak. As
+for Kit, he had followed her into the room and stretched out a hand to
+set straight a book on a lower shelf, but he did not touch it; his hand
+dropped and he turned abruptly to a window, and for a long minute both
+stood silent, not regarding one another. Then Bill mastered herself
+with an effort.
+
+“What is this?” she asked, taking a book at random.
+
+It was Sir Thomas Brown’s VULGAR ERRORS, an old folio edition with
+wonderful woodcuts. Kit looked at it for a moment, though he knew it
+well enough, and then recovering himself he told her. They took the
+book to the broad window-sill and together turned its pages, looking
+at the curious pictures. After that he took down another book and then
+another; Bill was sitting on the window-sill now, the books piled
+beside her, while Kit drew a great wooden chair in front. In this way
+he showed her a Chaucer massively bound and clamped with brass, a Pope
+of 1717, a PILGRIM’S PROGRESS grotesquely illustrated,--the books he
+loved, wonderful old German prints, poets of a later date, and stout
+old sermon-writers with whose solid works he had built houses in
+childish days.
+
+So the afternoon passed with strange pleasure to both, though neither
+quite forgot the shadow that hung over the house, nor the even deeper
+shadow not only of death, that brooded over the library and in some
+unexplained way touched every book they looked at and every passage
+they read. Once Kit took down a Milton, old and shabby and unopened,
+except by himself, for many years, and began to read a passage from IL
+PENSEROSO.
+
+ “Oft on a plat of rising ground
+ I hear the far-off curfew sound,
+ Over some well watered shore,
+ Swinging slow--”
+
+He stopped abruptly; each heard the curfew as on that night, each smelt
+the scent of the wet grass in the lane. There was a pause when neither
+looked at the other; then he went on hurriedly, a little lower down the
+page:
+
+ “Some still removèd place will fit,
+ Where glowing embers through the room
+ Teach light to counterfeit a gloom--”
+
+Kit shut the book sharply and gave it up. All round him lay the heaped
+up volumes as they used to lie on the winter afternoons when he had
+built towers with the works of the divines in that same glowing gloom.
+He glanced at the wide fireplace; Bill had glanced at it before him,
+because she too had thought of it, though she had never seen it when
+the fire burned low at twilight. So they each looked, and then each
+looked at the other and neither, for all their resolutions, hid the
+thought nor pretended to hide it. Bill’s throat began to swell again. A
+volume of Hooker, balanced on the window-sill, fell with a thud to the
+floor. Kit took a long time in picking it up, and when at last he put
+it in a place of safety with Marcus Aurelius on the top, he said: “He
+would love the books.”
+
+It was perfectly unnecessary to explain who _he_ was; Bill knew and
+thought of Gilchrist’s tastes and bookshelf before she answered: “Yes,
+I think he would.” She picked up the MEDITATIONS. “He has got this,”
+she said; “his is in English, though, bound in green cloth, and cost
+one and sixpence. I believe he would like his own edition better; it is
+cheaper and clearer.”
+
+Kit silently took the imperial philosopher from the girl’s hand, as
+she got down from the window-seat and helped him to put the books back
+in their places. Neither spoke of Gilchrist again; and a little later
+someone came to fetch them to Mr. Harborough.
+
+They went up-stairs together and quietly into the old man’s room. Bill
+noticed a difference directly she entered; she needed no one to tell
+her that she had been called to say good-bye to the eccentric old man
+she had so little known.
+
+“Come here,” he said hoarsely when he saw her hesitate near the door.
+
+She came and stood close to him, Kit standing on the other side of the
+bed.
+
+“Here’s a keepsake for you,” he whispered, trying to raise his
+nerveless hand. “I give it you in the presence of witnesses,” he
+glanced at the nurse as he spoke, “so there will be no dispute
+afterwards. It is not an heirloom, and I can do with it as I like. Put
+your hand on mine, take it, here.”
+
+Bill put her hand in his as requested and the cold powerless fingers
+beneath her warm touch fumbled feebly before the two glittering buckles
+fell into her hand.
+
+“There,” he said triumphantly, “they are for you; that is, if you will
+do me the favour of accepting them.”
+
+“For me?” she said gazing half bewildered, half fascinated by the
+brilliancy of the stones.
+
+“Yes, for you,” Mr. Harborough told her. “They are yours now, the gift
+is witnessed,” he went on, for she hardly seemed to realise the fact.
+Then she stooped and kissed the hand that gave them.
+
+“They were Peter Harborough’s shoe-buckles,” he whispered, “about the
+only thing he did not lose at cards; he lost everything else even
+including--” there was a little cough for breath--“including his life.
+My father left them to me; they are my own; I can do with them as I
+like, and I like to give them to you. They are all the diamonds we have
+now and,” addressing Kit with a sudden access of spite, “no wife of
+yours can have them now.”
+
+Bill dropped the buckles as if they had burnt her; they fell with a
+clink on the counterpane and lay there, a sparkle of light. “I can’t
+take them,” she said. “I won’t have them; you--you don’t understand.”
+
+Kit leaned across and, picking them up, gently gave the buckles back to
+her. He did not speak, but there was something in his manner she could
+not resist.
+
+“That’s right,” the old man muttered as if he had not fully understood.
+“They are yours, little witch; he can’t take them; I have given them to
+you.”
+
+Bill grasped them in silence, pressing the sharp stones into her flesh.
+
+“Now good-bye,” Harborough said more clearly, “good-bye, or shall
+we say _au revoir_?” His breath failed him for a moment but he
+recovered himself and went on cynically, “I have to go through with
+this business, and being new to it I may bungle. In case I do not die
+decently I would rather not disgrace myself in the presence of a lady.”
+
+So Bill said good-bye and went out. Kit opened the door for her, and
+shutting it after her, left her standing alone outside. So she stood
+a moment, like one in a dream, the diamonds still pressed into her
+flesh; then she turned and went with slow steps down the stairs, with
+quickening steps across the hall to the open door, and so out into the
+garden where the afternoon shadows were long and the tender warmth of
+September lay over everything. She followed the terraced path awhile,
+and then, her steps still quickening, crossed the lawn where the grass
+was emerald green and the elm leaves lay scattered here and there. She
+was almost running now, quite running when she came to the shrubbery,
+running at full speed, running blindly, wildly, faster and faster
+until she reached the wood and flung herself down in the waist-deep
+bracken and sobbed as if her heart would break.
+
+It was much later when Kit found her, knowing perhaps where to look
+for her. She had told him of her first ramble in the wood; at any rate
+when all was over, he found her under the yellowing beeches half hidden
+among the ferns. She started when she heard his step beside her, and
+at first was minded to pretend she had not been crying and practise
+a belated self-control. But she did not, chiefly because he did not
+pretend; he made no pretence of anything, nor yet behaved in the manner
+expected of him and worthy of his breeding. He sat down beside her
+without speaking, whereupon she obstinately buried her face in the
+bracken and would not so much as look up though the stiff fern-stalks
+pricked her neck. She moved her head uneasily and he gently broke a
+stalk away; in doing so his hand came in contact with her hair, a
+little curl of which, having become loosened, had contrived to get wet
+with tears. The contact with it, and the recognition that it was wet
+with tears, were things Kit did not soon forget; but he drew his hand
+away and only said stupidly: “Don’t cry, please don’t cry; I didn’t
+know you cared about him like that.”
+
+“He was good to me”--Bill’s voice was muffled by the ferns--“but it
+isn’t exactly that.”
+
+He had not been good to Kit, yet Kit felt vaguely grieved and shocked
+by his death; he looked in some perplexity at the girl beside him.
+“What is it then?” he asked, but she did not answer, so he fell back on
+his first remark and entreated her not to cry any more.
+
+“I shall,” she answered without looking up. “I have not cried half
+enough yet,--there are so many things.--I haven’t nearly done.”
+
+Kit glanced rather hopelessly at the half-buried figure. “Are you going
+to cry for them in order?” he asked attempting to smile.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+Nevertheless Bill, with the sunny lights coming back to her eyes, sat
+up, rustling the dead leaves as she did so. “I wonder if the wood will
+be cut down,” she said wistfully, as she glanced up at the interwoven
+branches above her.
+
+“No,” Kit told her, “for neither you nor I would allow it.”
+
+“I?”
+
+“Yes; if it is not mine it will be yours, or as good as yours.”
+
+“Mine?”
+
+“Yes; if it is Theo’s--you said you were going to marry him--it will be
+yours too, and I am glad.”
+
+“Glad! I am not.”
+
+Her voice was passionate, almost vindictive, and Kit went on quickly:
+“I am glad, and you ought to be too. You said once that, were you in my
+place, you would do anything to get Wood Hall; surely you ought not to
+mind if you have it.”
+
+“I’m not in your place,” Bill said, “and I don’t want it a bit. Do
+anything to get it! A woman can’t do anything but be married. I don’t
+want Theo to have it, and I don’t want to come here.”
+
+She buried her face in the ferns again, but now she did not cry. Kit
+broke the stiff fern-stalk into little pieces, and as he threw them
+away caught sight of the buckles shining among the ferns near the
+girl’s arm. Bill heard them clink as he picked them up, and sat up
+again, facing him now with a calm determination. “I am not going to
+have them,” she said quietly.
+
+“You must; you can’t help yourself. They were given to you, and you
+must have them,” and he dropped them into her lap.
+
+“I am not going to have them,” she repeated; “had he known, he would
+not have given them to me.”
+
+“No, because very probably they would have come to you in any case; I
+don’t know how such things go, but it is likely they would have come to
+you. At all events they are yours beyond dispute now.”
+
+“Mine, not my husband’s?”
+
+“Certainly, yours absolutely.”
+
+“Mine to do with as I like?” The sense of ownership seemed to please
+the girl. Kit wondered why a little, but he did not ask and her next
+words explained. “Then I can give them to whom I please? I shall give
+them to your wife on her wedding-day.”
+
+Bill put the rejected buckles in her pocket, but Kit said quietly:
+“That you will never do, for I shall never marry.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF BYBRIDGE.
+
+
+Polly said it was quite unnecessary for Bill to go to old Mr.
+Harborough’s funeral, though the wish to do so showed a nice feeling
+on her part; and since she did wish it (and had a black dress) there
+really was no reason why she should not go, more especially as she was
+leaving for London the next day and would thus escape Miss Minchin’s
+cross-questioning. But Gilchrist had other opinions; he strongly
+disapproved of Bill’s going, seeing no reason for it and a great many
+against it. He himself had never claimed any connection with the
+Harboroughs during the old man’s life and did not intend to do so at
+his death, except through the medium of the law. He said he should
+consider it an impertinence on his own part to go to the funeral. Bill
+agreed with him as to the propriety of his staying away, but persisted
+in going herself. Gilchrist became really angry, and told her it was
+absurd to go simply because Mr. Harborough had given her the diamond
+shoe-buckles; people who did not know the circumstances might put
+another construction on her actions. Bill said she did not mind that,
+and also that the shoe-buckles were only part of her reason for going.
+
+“What other reason is there?” he asked.
+
+“I want to speak--” she began and then broke off. “Oh, I can’t tell
+you,” she said impatiently. “I don’t mind your knowing if only I had
+not the bother of explaining; as it is, I really can’t go into it. You
+say so much about things, ask so many questions, see so many motives,
+and foresee so many consequences, that I really shall be obliged to
+give up telling you. I don’t mind your knowing, and up till now I have
+told you things; but I am afraid I shall have to begin taking you in to
+save trouble.”
+
+“Do you know what you are saying?” was the beginning of Gilchrist’s not
+unnaturally severe answer: the end was less pacific. However, there was
+no quarrel between them, but he was exceedingly angry with her sayings
+then, and even more so with her doings later on, for she went to the
+funeral in spite of him. It was not easy to quarrel with Bill, as she
+did not retaliate and did not mind; but also, as Polly knew, she could
+not be moved, quietly taking her own course unless you could convince
+her it was wrong; “and Gilchrist can’t convince her,” Polly said after
+the affair of the funeral. She herself advised Bill not to go when she
+found how strong was Gilchrist’s opposition; but it did not make the
+slightest difference. Bill had promised Kit she would go, and she went.
+
+It was soon after five on the afternoon when old Mr. Harborough died
+that Kit found the girl in the wood; yet it was nearly nine when she
+reached Haylands. The intervening time was not entirely occupied in
+the drive home, nor yet in the conversation concerning the reason for
+Bill’s tears. Most of that conversation was carried on while she was
+half buried in the ferns; but there was another and a longer one when
+she faced the facts of the case in the old library. Indeed, after a
+while her position and Kit’s were to a certain extent reversed; it was
+she who comforted and planned, arraying the future in its best colours,
+he who at first declined to see hope anywhere, even though he faced
+that future with much apparent indifference.
+
+Truly, as Bill was forced to admit, the future did not look promising.
+Both from what she had learned from Gilchrist--and she had made many
+inquiries of late--and from what Kit had heard from the solicitor and
+confided to her now, she could not help seeing that the case looked bad
+against him. Even if a will existed--and Kit seemed to think that by no
+means likely--it would do little more than complicate the case without
+giving him a title to the estates, unless he could make good his
+uncle’s title first. He told her all he knew about it, and she returned
+the compliment; but they cannot be said to have advanced matters very
+much or come to any resolution. Of course, Kit was going to win the
+lawsuit,--that was a foregone conclusion--but Bill, whose universe was
+always constructed with a convenient back door for use when foregone
+conclusions failed, strongly recommended him to consider how he would
+stand if the impossible were to happen. And it must be admitted that,
+if the catastrophe really took place, he would not stand very well,
+for with Wood Hall and all it entailed gone there was not a great deal
+left; briefly, a hundred a year inherited from his mother, a liberal
+education and studious tastes which together had enabled him to take a
+good classical degree at Oxford in the previous summer, and had further
+allowed him to study modern languages and literature with rather more
+than usual thoroughness. These, besides youth and health, were the only
+passably serviceable possessions he could claim. There was a taste for
+writing poetry and an aptitude for translating Greek verse, but neither
+was any use; there were several other tastes which were no use, and yet
+others which were positively detrimental.
+
+“I am afraid you would find it awfully hard,” Bill said once. She felt
+a compassion which was almost motherly for him in his ignorance of the
+shifts and turns of the genteel poverty in which she had been reared.
+
+“No harder than other people,” he answered rather curtly.
+
+Bill knew better. A hundred a year would have been wealth to her
+and Polly; sixty between Bella and Theresa seemed almost a fortune;
+however, she did not say so, but talked of small privations instead.
+
+“You would not be able to have a clean shirt every day,” she said, and
+Kit winced at the mention of such sordid trifles. “Washing costs such
+a lot,” the girl went on; “besides it wears things out. You would not
+be able to have an evening paper if you had a morning one, and you
+certainly would not be able to have many new books; you would have to
+have your boots mended over and over again, and think what tips you
+would give the porters. Saving in big things is not so hard; it is the
+little things you would hate, filing the edges,--you have to file the
+edges when you are making money or saving it either--it would set your
+teeth on edge horribly, I’m afraid.”
+
+“Not more than it does yours,” Kit retorted.
+
+But Bill did not agree with him. “It does not hurt me,” she said; “I’m
+used to it and my people have been used to it; we have been poor long
+enough not to mind about these things. Besides, I love work; I don’t
+care much what it is; I like to do things, and I don’t care what I do.
+I am afraid, too, I am not so very refined; things that would hurt you
+don’t hurt me; I don’t believe I have got very ladylike tastes.”
+
+But Kit turned on her here: in his opinion she was the most perfect
+lady living, not even she herself should question it in his hearing;
+and for a time the conversation became personal, but eventually it
+returned to the original subject. Bill learned a good deal of Kit’s
+history that day,--of his mother, dead rather more than a year, but
+beloved and tenderly revered, as indeed she deserved to be seeing
+that he owed to her all the better part of himself,--of the quiet
+life at Bybridge, the red Queen Anne house, with the walled garden,
+the pleasant homecomings there to the widowed mother,--the student’s
+days at Oxford, the travels in continental cities, tales of times and
+sights which fired Bill’s ready imagination and set her gipsy blood
+aflame to be free to wander and to see and learn. In their interest in
+these tales both listener and narrator almost forgot the graver matters
+before them. But there were other things, memories of still earlier
+days which brought them back, the recollection of boyish days spent
+at Wood Hall, holidays when the parents were abroad and silently and
+unconsciously there grew in the young mind that love of the old place
+which is as an entail binding one generation to the next.
+
+Bill listened greedily, forgetting all about home and Gilchrist who was
+waiting for her there. At last, however, she did remember and somewhat
+hastily departed, feeling that in this talk of the past they had rather
+neglected considerations of the future. Before she went she promised
+she would come to the funeral, partly to remedy the omission of that
+evening and partly to do honour to the old man who would not have many
+real mourners.
+
+In one respect, however, Bill made something of a mistake, for
+she had that day without knowing it helped Kit Harborough for the
+future. Unconsciously she had preached to him the gospel which was so
+completely incorporated into her own nature that she did not even know
+she believed it,--the gospel of work;--the delight and satisfaction in
+work for its own sake irrespective of kind or place, just doing for
+the sake of doing, and doing now, not waiting the time and opportunity
+for a great work, but setting to at once on the nearest thing that
+offered. Not lamenting because the beautiful edifice of faith or hope
+has tottered and fallen, but taking, instead, stones from the ruin to
+build a shelter while the plans for some greater work are maturing.
+
+Bill did not think these things; she did not even know she believed
+them; only she unconsciously translated them into action, and as
+unconsciously, by her words and by her attitude of mind, preached them
+to Kit.
+
+She went to the funeral and stood respectfully on the outskirts of the
+group which gathered in the little churchyard in Wood Hall park. She
+did not attach herself to the party, feeling herself an alien, but
+Kit, who as recognised heir was chief mourner, saw her though he could
+not come to her till a good deal later in the afternoon. She had said
+she would wait for him among the beeches, and she did wait, for a
+time almost forgetting him in the exquisite perfection of the silent
+October wood. When at last he came they finished the conversation begun
+the other day, and they did not hurry over it unduly. Bill knew that
+Gilchrist and the cousins would be angry with her late return, but so
+angry that half an hour one way or the other would make no difference.
+
+Before the interrupted conversation was resumed Kit told her a piece
+of news which at first seemed of great importance to her, though
+afterwards she was obliged to agree with him in not attaching too much
+value to it. It appeared that old Mr. Harborough had made a will after
+all, and by the terms of it Kit would, were it not for the Australian,
+succeed to the property exactly as he used to anticipate.
+
+Bill clasped her hands with excitement. “Oh, I am so glad,” she said.
+
+“So am I, although I don’t think it will make much difference to the
+case.”
+
+“You don’t?”
+
+He shook his head but repeated that he was glad, and there was a few
+moments’ silence before Bill said softly: “I am so glad you did not
+speak about the will; it has happened without your speaking; you were
+right and I was wrong.”
+
+Kit did not agree with her there, thinking they had been of one mind on
+the subject of the will: but they did not discuss the point at length,
+turning instead to the consideration of Kit’s future, should the case
+be decided against him.
+
+Doubtless if this really occurred his friends and relations would find
+or do something for him but he and Bill planned, curiously though
+practically, without considering the relations at all. Bill’s plans
+seldom depended on outside help, and usually, however absurd, had the
+merit of being such that they could start working at once. She was
+rather anxious that Kit should start at once, for, as she said, if he
+could earn anything the money would be no disadvantage should the case
+go in his favour, and a decided advantage should it go against him.
+The only difficulty was, to find anything he could do in his present
+circumstances and with his modest talents.
+
+“You could teach,” Bill said doubtfully, having but a poor opinion
+of that refuge of the destitute; “with your degree you could get a
+mastership, but then I suppose your people would not like it; besides
+it would be rather awkward for other reasons. You might get some
+translating to do, as you know languages pretty well. I believe it is
+awfully hard to get, and not well paid; still it would be better than
+nothing, and if it is really so difficult to get, it would be just as
+well to see after it before the need comes; you would be ready then
+if it did come. You said it might take as long as two years to settle
+about Wood Hall? In two years you ought to be able to get a little
+translating, I should think.”
+
+Kit thought so too, and they talked over ways and means, he telling
+her sundry youthful dreams, she listening with admiring sympathy
+not untouched with practical common-sense. Eventually he did make a
+start as she suggested, and finding, as they feared, that such work
+as he could do was almost impossible to obtain, he turned, till it
+came, to one of the youthful dreams and translated some of the lesser
+known dialogues of Lucian into scholarly English. And though even his
+inexperience could not but tell him that the work, when done, would
+not be a marketable commodity, the doing of it was a great satisfaction
+to him. Later, through the good offices of a college friend, he got
+a German book on botany to translate, and very uninteresting work he
+found it. Nevertheless, because it was the first work he had ever been
+paid for, he was pleased with it, and so pleased with the small sum he
+received for it that he invested the whole in a large crystal of rough
+amethyst, remembering how rapturous Bill had been in her admiration of
+the small crystal he had shown her in the collection of such specimens
+at Wood Hall. When, however, it came to the point of sending his
+crystal to the girl his courage failed; afraid of displeasing her he
+put the amethyst away, and no one knew of its existence for a long time.
+
+But all this happened later and had no part in the conversation on
+that October afternoon. It must be admitted, however, that if the
+conversation had entirely confined itself to plans for the future, Bill
+would have reached home earlier than she did. Some chance reference
+to the shoe-buckles and the value Polly put upon them brought Peter
+Harborough to her mind, and with him the recollection of the gravestone
+at Sandover and its record of his tragic death. Who Peter Harborough
+was, and how he died, were questions which perplexed her on the Sunday
+afternoon when she saw his grave; they returned to her with redoubled
+interest now that his buckles had come into her possession; and she
+sought information of Kit.
+
+He could tell her little more than that the man was the younger brother
+of old Mr. Harborough’s grandfather, and as such should have succeeded
+to the property if death had not intervened. “He was great friends
+with the Corbys; it was at Corby Dean he was shot,” Kit concluded.
+
+“I know, but who shot him? Was it one of the Corbys, or did he do it
+himself?”
+
+“No one knows, but his brother apparently was satisfied that it was all
+right; he asked no questions, took the property, and said nothing.”
+
+Bill pondered the matter for a minute. “Which Corby was it?” she asked.
+“I mean with which one was he friendly and played cards? What relation
+was he to Roger Corby, the old Squire?”
+
+“It was Roger Corby himself,” Kit told her; “Roger, the last of them.”
+
+“Roger Corby, himself,” Bill repeated. It was curious how she seemed to
+stumble upon fragments of this man’s history. She tried vainly to piece
+out his life, but she had so little to go on. At length she said: “But
+he was not the last of them; he had a granddaughter who outlived him.”
+
+“She can hardly be counted.”
+
+“But why? I suppose she could have taken the property if there was any,
+even if she did marry and change her name.”
+
+“There was nothing to take; in fact the old squire was so much in
+debt at his death that, although they sold all that was left of the
+property, it was little more than enough to pay everything off. Of
+course there was not much to sell then; there was little about here;
+Corby Dean, the house near Bybridge, was heavily mortgaged and nearly
+tumbling down, and most of the land near Sandover and Bybridge had
+already been disposed of.”
+
+“You mean where Sandover now stands? It belongs to Mr. Briant now,
+doesn’t it? By the way, you must have been staying with him at Bymouth,
+for you were staying at the River House and that is where he lives.
+Polly found out; she always asks about the people who live in the big
+houses.”
+
+Kit said he had been staying with Mr. Briant and added: “It was the
+grandfather of that man who first had the land from Roger Corby. It was
+not worth much then, the present owner being the one who has developed
+it so tremendously; still even at that time it was a good lot for a man
+with the old squire’s income to give to his steward.”
+
+“His steward? Was Mr. Briant’s grandfather Roger Corby’s steward?”
+
+“Yes; steward or bailiff or something of the sort; at least he was at
+one time, but he left his service and went abroad, I think soon after
+Peter Harborough was shot.”
+
+Bill considered the matter a moment. “And Roger gave him the land?” she
+asked at length.
+
+“Something very like it; he granted it to him absolutely, subject
+only to some nominal rental payable if demanded, and that practically
+amounts to a gift, at least to the first owner if not to his children.”
+
+“Roger Corby must have had some reason,” Bill said with conviction.
+
+Kit agreed with her, though he could not say for certain what it may
+have been. “Briant was steward at Corby Dean when Peter Harborough was
+shot,” he said; “that may have had something to do with it. But whether
+he knew something about it and threatened to speak, or whether he did
+not know and only threatened to make a charge which Roger Corby could
+not disprove because of the secrecy of the affair I could never find
+out. Of course it is all very long ago now, and people do not seem to
+take much interest in such things as a rule.”
+
+This was said almost apologetically, as if the speaker were ashamed
+of his own interest; but he need not have apologised to Bill, who was
+herself more fascinated by these tales of the past than he was.
+
+“It was an awful lot to give,” she said at last, “but I suppose he had
+no choice. I wonder why he put in the nominal rental; has it ever been
+demanded, do you know?”
+
+“I should not think so; there has been no one to demand it. I expect
+that it was put in so that it might be possible for the Corbys
+eventually to recover the land at the end of the time for which it was
+granted. But it does not matter much now, for there are no more Corbys.”
+
+“But the granddaughter,” Bill asked, “what became of her? Did she not
+marry and have children?”
+
+“She married but had no children; I don’t think anybody knows what
+became of her.”
+
+“Did she run away?” Bill thought it just possible, considering what was
+told of her childhood, that this last of the Corbys might have run away
+if her fate demanded that solution of a difficulty.
+
+“Yes, that is it,” Kit said; “she ran away from her husband. I don’t
+know the name of the man she went with, but they say she was never
+very fond of her husband, and I should think she must have been rather
+difficult to deal with; my uncle knew her, and he always spoke as if
+she were. The man she married was younger than she, a clergyman--but
+you know him, I expect you know all this; at least you must have heard
+something of Mr. Dane’s wife?”
+
+“Mr. Dane!” Bill exclaimed, her eyes growing wide. “Was she his wife?
+His wife--and he would have loved her so! Oh, Monseigneur, poor
+Monseigneur,” and her voice took the almost tender wail of a primitive
+woman who mourns her loved ones.
+
+“Did you not know?” Kit asked, trying to remember if she had expressed
+pity for his troubles in that tone.
+
+She shook her head. “I knew he had been married,” she said, “though
+people at Ashelton usually speak as if he had not; perhaps they don’t
+know. He never speaks about his wife, so I thought she must have died
+very long ago.”
+
+“She did, or rather she left him long ago, forty years or more. I am
+surprised you did not know, though now I come to think of it, people
+about here hardly would; it did not happen here, and Mr. Dane did not
+come to Ashelton till some time afterwards. Wilhelmina Corby had not
+lived here since she was quite a young girl, and there was nothing to
+connect Mr. Dane with her in people’s minds.”
+
+“Was her name Wilhelmina? Then I wonder he puts up with me! I am
+Wilhelmina; he ought to hate me. He ought to do that for several
+things; I asked him something yesterday I would never have asked had I
+known this.”
+
+“What was it? Will you tell me?”
+
+Bill hesitated a moment before she said: “Yes, if you like. I asked him
+what he did when things went utterly wrong with his life, when”--the
+girl’s tone had taken a passionate ring as if the occasion were not
+entirely impersonal--“when he felt like Job’s wife and wanted to curse
+God and die because things were so hopelessly, incurably wrong.”
+
+“Why did you ask?”
+
+The words were uttered almost before Kit knew what he said. When they
+were once spoken, he would sooner have bitten his tongue through than
+that they should have been said.
+
+She sat silent for a long moment pulling the fern to pieces in her
+hands; when at last she did speak it was to repeat to him, with a
+curious quietness, Mr. Dane’s words to herself.
+
+“He said,” so she told him, “on such a day as you speak of I shut
+a door in my mind and went away without speaking or looking back;
+afterwards I played cricket at the school-treat, and I think I played
+as well as usual.”
+
+That was all she said; after she had spoken there was a great silence
+in the yellow wood, except when the beech-nuts fell pattering on the
+dead leaves, and the robins, the year’s grandchildren, sang shrill and
+sweet in the branches.
+
+At last she spoke again, scarcely above a whisper now: “I think I am
+going to try to do that.”
+
+Kit turned and faced her; there was a faint flush on his cheek, but his
+eyes met hers unflinchingly--“And I too,” he said; and then they walked
+on in silence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+GENERAL SERVANT.
+
+
+It is an old saying, and doubtless a good one, that two is company and
+three none; yet the presence of a third person who stands somewhat
+apart from the other two is frequently a great assistance to domestic
+happiness and a great preventive of domestic friction. Polly took Bill
+to London during the first week in October and Theresa missed her at
+every turn. There was no one to play bézique with Robert in the long
+dull evenings; Theresa hated cards, and though she tried to play from a
+sense of duty her skill was so small that her efforts were a failure.
+There was no one to talk and amuse him when he came in at odd times;
+Theresa was somewhat silent by nature, and she did not seem to have
+grasped the details of his work. She could not remember the points
+of his horses or the names of his dogs; it all came natural to Bill
+who, Theresa reflected, had less on her mind and so of course might be
+expected to remember better. She missed the girl herself, too, in the
+dairy and store-room, in the house and orchard and garden. She missed
+her when the late apples fell, and when the dead leaves gathered thick
+in the garden; she missed the all-pervading sunshine of her nature,
+and she missed the regular visits Gilchrist Harborough used to pay on
+Bill’s account.
+
+Of course she had nothing but the most impersonal interest in
+Gilchrist,--no one, not even Polly had suggested otherwise, though
+Theresa flushed as she remembered what Polly had suggested--still it
+was pleasanter when he used to come. If Bill had been here he would
+have come to-night; it was one of his evenings. Robert had gone to a
+political meeting at Wrugglesby and would not be home till late, and
+Theresa sighed a little, to think of the weary number of hours before
+her. She wondered a little, over her sewing, if Gilchrist had gone too.
+
+But Gilchrist had not gone to the political meeting; he did not even
+know Robert had gone, for he came to Haylands that evening to speak
+to him, and finding he was not at home, came in to leave a message
+with Theresa. She was sincerely glad to see him, and he, to judge from
+his manner, was sincerely glad to be there again. To tell the truth
+he too missed those pleasant evenings at Haylands, the refinement and
+indescribable femininity of the house appealing to him in a way that
+surprised even himself.
+
+“One needs a woman about a place,” he reflected that evening when he
+went once more to the house and found that though Bill was gone, the
+femininity remained,--flowers, needlework, delicate womanly atmosphere,
+all as before, all as attractive. It must be admitted that he did
+not expect otherwise, for to him Bill did not suggest such things;
+she could arrange flowers as well as grow them, and she often sat at
+needlework when he saw her, sewing very strongly, very intently; yet to
+him there was something unfeminine in the very energy with which she
+did the smallest things. Theresa,--he did not think much about Theresa,
+except to decide that it was an advantage to be sure what a woman
+meant, and sometimes what she thought, advantages he did not feel he
+possessed with regard to Bill.
+
+She, it is true, had been surprisingly docile of late, but her docility
+was flat and uninteresting, and there was besides an uneasy feeling
+in Gilchrist’s mind that he did not know what lay behind. He did not
+feel that he had grasped Bill at all. He had been exceedingly angry
+on the occasion of Mr. Harborough’s funeral, and there had followed
+an interview with Bill which should have been stormy. It was not,
+however; Bill was truly sorry for having annoyed him so much, confessed
+her sins, and promised more respect for his wishes in future. She was
+honestly trying to do her duty now, and to behave in the way she ought.
+Gilchrist did not altogether believe in her repentance, which was
+perhaps not unnatural; and when she confessed herself wrong, he agreed
+with her and accepted her self-accusations as a matter of course. It is
+sometimes a pity to accept another’s self-accusations so readily; just
+it may be, but it is not always encouraging. Fortunately it mattered
+less to Bill than to most people and peace was patched up between
+them, though things were not perhaps in the most satisfactory state
+when she left for London. Had the engagement not rested on something
+more reliable than mutual affection it would hardly have been wise of
+Polly to take the girl to London, for in spite of her faults, she had a
+species of fascination for Gilchrist when she was present, and when she
+was absent there was Theresa to consider.
+
+However, about that time Gilchrist did not give much attention to
+either Theresa or Bill, for the opening of the Harborough lawsuit
+occupied most of his thoughts. It also occupied the thoughts of his
+neighbours, and was looked upon as a matter of tremendous local
+interest; Ashelton even split into factions over the question of the
+justice or injustice of the claim, of which, by the way, very little
+was generally known. Mr. Stevens was much pressed for information, or
+at least for his opinion as to the probable issue, but though he had
+no professional connection with either party he maintained a discreet
+silence. He once went so far as to say that a lot of good money would
+be wasted by two young men who could ill afford it, and that without
+knowing a great deal more than he now knew he should be sorry to bet on
+either. This discreet opinion was more moderate than those held by most
+of his neighbours.
+
+Theresa knew little more than the rest of the village on the great
+subject of the Harborough claim, for Gilchrist had not had time to
+explain it to her since the case opened, and before that time he had
+thought it wiser to keep silence even with members of Bill’s family.
+
+“Not that I minded you knowing,” he said to Theresa the night Robert
+went to the political meeting. “I had not the least objection to that,
+only I was afraid if Bill told you she would also tell Miss Hains, and
+she, you know, is perhaps not quite so discreet. I am sure she would
+not mean to betray a confidence, but she talks a good deal, and people
+who do that often say more than they intend.”
+
+In this he scarcely did Polly justice, for though she might betray a
+secret it was not by accident or through foolishness. But Theresa said
+she understood, and led him to talk of his chances of success. He was
+very cautious and would not commit himself at all, but she persisted in
+speaking as if a favourable issue were certain.
+
+“Fancy little Bill mistress of such a place as Wood Hall!” she said,
+when at last she had in her own mind brought all to a satisfactory
+conclusion. She was evidently delighted with the idea, but this
+particular side of the termination was exactly what Gilchrist did not
+fancy; however, he only replied to Theresa by saying with a smile:
+“Things have not quite reached that point yet, and I almost doubt if
+Bill expects them to do so; she hardly seems to quite realise what the
+position would be if they did.”
+
+“I expect not. She little thought when once or twice she went to see
+old Mr. Harborough that she herself might one day live at Wood Hall. It
+will take her a long time to get used to the idea; she is such a child.”
+
+That was not her worst complaint in Gilchrist’s eyes, but he only said,
+“Time will cure that.”
+
+It was just then that there came the sound of a stumble in the passage.
+Theresa started from her chair. “I did not hear Robert’s horse,” she
+exclaimed. “I--you--I’m afraid--”
+
+Gilchrist had heard that heavy stumble, that muttered oath before; he
+had reached the door as soon as she and put out his hand to open it
+first.
+
+“I am afraid Robert is not well;” she faced him unflinchingly with the
+lie. “Will you excuse me? I must go to him--good-night;” and she passed
+out leaving him alone.
+
+Bill had been right; she had found him out, and she stood between him
+and all the world, hiding his fall with her pitiful little pretence.
+And he--Gilchrist ground his teeth in impotent rage as he walked home
+through the darkness that night--what was he to receive such loyalty,
+such service!
+
+It was perhaps fortunate for Gilchrist Harborough that he had a good
+deal to think of just now; the lawsuit absorbed a large proportion
+of his time and interests, and it was just as well that it did, for,
+although it prevented him from paying much attention to Bill, it also
+prevented him from paying much to other subjects which were better
+let alone. After the evening when he saw Theresa he devoted himself
+more assiduously than ever to the matter of the suit, and so really
+absorbing did he find it that, though he was in town pretty often that
+autumn, he was not once able to spare an hour to go to Bayswater to see
+Bill. However, about the beginning of December he fancied he should be
+able to manage it, and wrote to tell her that he hoped to come.
+
+Bill and Polly had been well established now for some time, for they
+did not take long settling down, though the process had not been all
+that Polly had anticipated. If the truth must be known, her position
+now was not altogether unlike that of the old magician who, having
+raised a spirit to help him in his schemes, finds the obliging goblin
+to be of such unexpected magnitude that it proves not only embarrassing
+but likely to constitute itself master instead of servant. Polly’s
+spirit, very obliging, very hard-working and even-tempered, presented
+one serious drawback,--it would rule. It was useless for Polly to
+attempt any of the little shifts dear to her heart; Bill, who knew
+her, was equal to them all, and forestalled her in the pleasantest
+but completest way possible. Once or twice at the beginning of the
+partnership Polly threatened to turn her all too active partner out,
+but she never did it. Probably she never seriously thought of it, for
+Bill was very useful; there was no need to employ a girl with Bill in
+the house, no need to have either a boot-boy or a charwoman; no need
+for Polly herself to do more than a very moderate share of the work.
+Bill also got on well with the lodgers and with the tradespeople, and,
+when once they two had got to understand their relative positions,
+excellently well with Polly herself.
+
+Bill had altered in several ways besides in this development of the
+ruling spirit. Polly found her quieter than she used to be, on the
+whole more a woman and less a child, though she occasionally lapsed
+into her old ways. She had shut a door in her mind, and was trying
+hard to do well the thing which came next. It was easy enough when it
+was housework or cooking; she did them to the best of her ability, too
+well, in fact, according to Polly, who was no advocate for superfluous
+thoroughness. But there were other things she tried to do which were
+not easy; she was trying under somewhat adverse circumstances to be
+more of a lady, more like Theresa to please Gilchrist, more like the
+gentlewoman of Mr. Dane’s definition to please herself.
+
+On the whole the cousins lived happily and let their rooms with a fair
+amount of success. Polly’s lot was occasionally brightened by a hamper
+from Haylands, or shaded by the loss of a paying lodger or the all too
+previous departure of one who had not paid. But in the beginning of
+December when Gilchrist came to town things were not very prosperous;
+the rooms had been empty some time, the cold weather had set in early,
+and the fog, which preceded and sometimes accompanied the frost, was
+both depressing and likely to be expensive in gas. Polly economised in
+candle-ends, bemoaning her fate, and then indulged in buttered muffins
+“to cheer us up.” It was on the occasion of the muffins that Bill
+received Gilchrist’s letter.
+
+“I wonder if he is going home again the same night,” Polly speculated.
+“He had much better stay here,--there is plenty of room. I shall ask
+him; it will be more correct for me to do it than for you.”
+
+Bill did not know why it was more correct, but knowing Polly liked
+these small details she raised no objection, and in due time the
+invitation was given and accepted. Polly was much pleased, being
+genuinely hospitable and moreover very proud of her dingy little house;
+she also thought a great deal of Gilchrist since the matter of Wood
+Hall had come to her knowledge, and she prepared for his reception
+accordingly. The best bedroom was made ready, the best sitting-room
+set in order. Bill did most of that, but Polly, with an eye to effect,
+brought their work-baskets and books from the kitchen, where they were
+usually kept.
+
+“We must make it look as if we sat here always,” she said, as she put a
+reel of cotton on the mantelpiece.
+
+“Then we must bring the cat,” Bill replied, “for he always sits with
+us. But it is rather nonsense; why should not Gilchrist know we live
+in the kitchen? He knows that somebody must do the work, and he won’t
+think the worse of us for doing it.”
+
+But Polly thought otherwise. “It was different when he was only a
+working farmer,” she said. “Now, since all this about Wood Hall has
+happened, he won’t look at it in quite the same way.”
+
+“I don’t see any reason for pretending, when he knows that we work.”
+
+“He knows it in a general way, but it is one thing to know it and quite
+another to see it being done.”
+
+With which incontestable opinion Polly closed her remarks and carried
+her point, and when Gilchrist came soon after six o’clock the best
+sitting-room looked as snug as though it were the family’s habitual
+living-room. Bill had on her best frock and her best manners, and
+everything was as pleasant as possible. Polly was delighted; she had
+been a little afraid that Gilchrist, in his position of claimant to
+the Wood Hall estate, might wish to make a more advantageous marriage
+than the one in prospect. She was very much afraid that he might
+use the private and not very binding nature of the engagement as an
+excuse to repudiate it, or to induce Bill to release him. But on that
+December evening she was perfectly satisfied, he and Bill evidently
+understanding one another, and Bill was behaving beautifully; she was
+so gentle and submissive, she might almost have been anybody.
+
+Polly, in spite of her low financial ebb, had prepared what she called
+a “tasty supper” in honour of the guest. It was not altogether unlike
+her millinery--an ingenious “do-up” finished off with a few new
+trimmings, but it was undeniably successful. She was very gratified
+by its success and by things in general, and it was with a cheerful
+countenance that she withdrew after the meal.
+
+“I know you must have a lot to talk about,” she said, beaming upon the
+other two; “and as I have some letters to write, I think I will go and
+do them down-stairs.”
+
+So she went, though the letters resolved themselves into the
+supper-things which she washed, while up-stairs Gilchrist told Bill
+all about Wood Hall and the progress of the case, which was not rapid,
+and his opinion of the rival claimant, which was not enthusiastic. Bill
+listened and answered as sympathetically as she could, though it is
+possible she would rather have been washing dishes in the kitchen.
+Still she did her share in the conversation admirably, and when they
+spoke of things other than those concerning Wood Hall she was really
+splendid in her efforts to be like Theresa. Nevertheless Gilchrist did
+not commend her improvement; perhaps he was not satisfied with it, nor
+with the submissive girl, who was trying so hard to please him.
+
+Bill felt the failure when she went to bed that night. “I expect it did
+not ring true,” she thought; “I must try to feel like Theresa as well
+as behave like her. I’ll do it in time; I believe I could be anything
+if I tried long enough.” And so she fell asleep, resolutely trying to
+school herself to what she conceived to be Theresa’s attitude of mind.
+She woke next morning with the same thought uppermost and continued her
+practice of what she called “Theresaing” her mind while she cleaned the
+guest’s boots in the basement.
+
+At breakfast that morning Gilchrist said he should not leave for
+Wrugglesby until the six o’clock train. Bill felt a pleasurable
+expectancy; perhaps he would suggest that they two should go for a walk
+somewhere; she knew where they would go, the British Museum was free to
+all comers and they would go there and look at all the mummies. There
+was so little work to do now, Polly would not mind, and it would be
+very nice.
+
+Gilchrist said he had business which would occupy him during the
+morning. That was natural, but the afternoon--Polly supposed, with
+an affable smile, that he “would want her to spare Bill part of the
+afternoon.” But Gilchrist, looking out of the window, said it did not
+promise to be a very nice day, adding that he probably would not be
+back before four, when it would be quite dark.
+
+“Just as if it is not possible to go out after dark and enjoy it too!”
+Polly observed indignantly later on in the day. The cousins were
+clearing up after their mid-day dinner and Polly slammed the plates
+into the rack in a dangerous manner as she spoke, her disgust with
+Gilchrist having been simmering all the morning.
+
+But Bill hardly glanced round. “I don’t care,” she said indifferently;
+“I did not want to go so very much.”
+
+“Oh, I dare say!” Polly snorted indignantly. “He ought to have taken
+you all the same; I don’t think it is at all nice behaviour on his
+part. He has not brought you a present or anything, in spite of all his
+fuss about Wood Hall.”
+
+“I don’t want presents. He is no richer than he was, and he has no time
+to think of it, and--and--I don’t want things.”
+
+Bill’s face was rosy and her tone hurt, but Polly went on volubly:
+“Look at Jack Dawson; besides a lovely engagement-ring (which you have
+not got through Theresa’s nonsense) he has given Bella--”
+
+“I tell you, Polly, I don’t want presents; I won’t have you say any
+more about it!”
+
+“Oh, well, of course I can quite understand you don’t like to have it
+mentioned, but I must say I don’t think it is at all nice of him. You
+haven’t cost him much, in fact nothing at all; I suppose he thought,
+as he could have you for the asking, he need not trouble, but it isn’t
+very flattering. I do think he might have taken you out--might have
+taken us both out--after all the trouble we have had too, that lovely
+supper last night, and fried bacon for breakfast this morning, and all.”
+
+Bill laughed. “A truly commercial mind!” she said. “But perhaps
+Gilchrist will leave a tip for our invisible servant; if so, you could
+take that in payment for the supper.”
+
+But Polly was much annoyed with the guest, more than was just, for he
+was really too busy to think of anything at present, and he certainly
+had not intended to slight or wound either of the cousins. Nevertheless
+he had wounded Polly’s pride; as for Bill, no one knew what she
+thought, for which reason, if for no other, Polly reflected that she
+had done very foolishly to speak as she had done. She was herself
+dressing to go out now because she “felt so upset that she could not
+stay in.” While she dressed she came to the conclusion that she had
+been most indiscreet, for if it were true that Gilchrist had been
+neglectful it was her place to pour balm on Bill’s wounds, not to point
+out Gilchrist’s misdemeanours. She had certainly been foolish, and
+accordingly, before going out, she went to the kitchen and apologised
+for what she had said.
+
+“I didn’t mean anything,” she explained. “I was annoyed by that butcher
+sending in his bill as he did, and I was put out and cross altogether.
+Of course I would not say a word against Gilchrist. You know what a lot
+I think of him; he’s worth twenty of Jack Dawson; nobody would expect
+him to waste his money on silly presents.”
+
+Bill said it was “all right,” and Polly went out leaving her young
+cousin cleaning the kitchen-hearth. And possibly it would have been all
+right but for what followed. Bill had not thought of receiving presents
+from Gilchrist, nor yet of going out with him; she did not expect
+either, and though she was disappointed about the mummies, she did not
+regard his actions as an index of his affections.
+
+It was when she had almost finished the hearth that there came a ring
+at the front door. It was not much after three yet, and Polly had said
+she would be home at half-past so as to be ready by the time Gilchrist
+returned at four. Bill came to the conclusion that it must be the
+baker who rang, and since the summons sounded peremptory, she went
+up-stairs without waiting to take off the sacking apron she had put
+on for cleaning the hearth. She wore her oldest frock, which she had
+put on as soon as their visitor went out; it was short as well as old,
+and her disreputable shoes showed well below it. It was not wonderful
+that Gilchrist looked at her blankly for a moment when she opened the
+door to him and his friend Ferguson. Only for a moment he looked, and
+then Bill, withdrawing herself behind the door after the manner of
+maids-of-all-work, spoke: “Miss ’Ains is out,” she said; “but walk in,
+won’t yer, sir?”
+
+Gilchrist walked in, half paused, and then went on without speaking.
+It was impossible to present her to Ferguson as his future wife, more
+especially impossible in the light of her stupidly unrecognising look;
+she herself made the introduction impossible by the very perfection
+with which she had assumed her part. So the introduction was not made,
+and the two men went up to the sitting-room to examine a document
+Gilchrist had left there, while Bill, with a clatter of ill-shod feet,
+went back to the kitchen.
+
+By-and-bye the street door was closed, and soon after, the work being
+done, Bill went up-stairs to change her dress. She thought Gilchrist
+had gone out with his friend, but she was mistaken. As she passed the
+half-open door of the sitting-room she saw him standing before the
+fireplace, where, for economy’s sake, the fire had been allowed to go
+out after he had left that morning. Bill paused: Polly had told her to
+re-light the fire before half-past three. It must be done; moreover,
+she in her own character never hesitated about going through with any
+difficulty into which she might have blundered; in the character of
+Theresa it was impossible to know how to act, for Theresa never got
+into these difficulties. Consequently the character of Theresa was
+forgotten, and it was the original Bill who walked into the room with
+genuine regret for what had occurred, but not entirely without a little
+amusement too.
+
+“I’ll light the fire,” she said, turning back the hearth-rug before
+she knelt down and beginning to arrange paper in the grate. “I am very
+sorry, Gilchrist,” she went on penitently as she glanced up at the
+young man’s gloomy face. “I never expected you back so early; I thought
+it was the baker.”
+
+“Are you in the habit of going to the baker like that?”
+
+“Oh, yes, sometimes, if I am in a hurry or he is. I thought the ring
+sounded like a hurry. I really am sorry, but Mr. Ferguson didn’t know
+me, so there’s not much harm done.”
+
+“I think there is a great deal of harm done.” Gilchrist’s face did not
+relax. “Don’t trouble about the fire just now, I want to talk to you.
+Tell me, is it necessary for you to get in this condition?”
+
+Bill obediently left laying the fire and answered apologetically: “I am
+afraid I am a dirty worker.”
+
+“But surely it is hardly necessary to do this work. What have you been
+doing? What do you do?”
+
+“I was cleaning the kitchen-stove when you rang,” Bill answered meekly,
+though something in the masterfulness of his tone was rousing the old
+Bill whom it was not easy to drive. “Perhaps,” she went on with a spark
+of fun in her eyes, “it was hardly necessary to do the stove, but I
+don’t know; it is a point open to discussion; the same with the knives
+which I have cleaned since; but your boots, which I did earlier in the
+day, really were necessary, don’t you think so?”
+
+“Did you clean my boots?”
+
+“I cleaned your honour’s noble boots,” and she swept him a courtesy and
+then looked up with a dawning smile.
+
+But he did not smile. “You ought not to have done it,” he said.
+
+“Why? I did not mind.”
+
+“I mind.”
+
+Yet his tone somehow told her that he minded because she was his future
+wife and the possible mistress of Wood Hall, rather than because she
+was herself.
+
+“I told you I should be a general servant,” she said. “Do you remember
+that night we went to the Dawsons and Miss Dawson was so contemptuous?”
+and she set her mobile face into Miss Dawson’s supercilious stare. But
+Gilchrist did not seem pleased by the recollection, and the imp in Bill
+getting the upper hand, she went on somewhat recklessly. “Well, I am
+a general servant now, though not a very good one. What a queer little
+slavey you’ve got here, Harborough,” and her change of tone made the
+man start, and for a moment almost think Ferguson was back. “Who the
+devil is she? I believe I know her face--by Jove, she’s like the plum
+girl I met near your place last summer. But I don’t think Gilchrist
+told her name.”
+
+“No”--his tone was cold with suppressed anger--“I did not tell your
+name; I was not exactly proud of my future wife.”
+
+The smile died out of her face. “I am very sorry,” she said penitently,
+and the penitence was genuine, but Gilchrist was not mollified.
+
+“You do not show it,” he said; “mimicking my friends and making fun
+of what you have done hardly suggests regret. I think under the
+circumstances it would be as well if we said no more about it. Perhaps
+you had better go and change your dress; talking will not make matters
+any better.”
+
+She began to move towards the door humbled by his words, but half
+turned before she opened it. “Are matters very bad?” she asked
+wistfully.
+
+“Can you think them very good? Do you think your life, or ways, or,--or
+anything at all fitting to the position you may have to occupy? I don’t
+mean to blame you, but things do not promise to be quite the same as
+they were, and I wish you would try to remember the difference.”
+
+She turned fully now, and unconsciously both tone and manner had
+changed, becoming quiet and firm. “You mean,” she said, “that what was
+fitting for your wife when you were only Harborough of Crows’ Farm is
+not fitting now? You are quite right; I agree with you.”
+
+“Then I wish you would act upon it.”
+
+“I cannot, the unfitness goes too deep, for it is I myself who was fit
+to be your wife then but am not now.”
+
+“Bill! What nonsense is this? I am no different from what I was: the
+case is not decided, may never be decided in my favour; and if it were
+it would make no difference. I have never suggested such a thing and I
+never meant it.”
+
+“You did not say it, but I do; it is true. Listen a minute--I have
+tried to be ladylike, as I thought you would wish me to be, and
+sometimes I think I succeed a little,--this afternoon doesn’t count, it
+was an accident--but my ladylikeness, even if it were more successful,
+is not what is wanted. It is I, my real self, who am unfit to be your
+wife under the present circumstances.”
+
+“I don’t know what right you have to say such a thing; I suppose you
+are angry because of what I said this afternoon.” If she were angry the
+young man could not help thinking she had a strange way of showing it,
+for her whole manner suggested clear-sighted calmness; the excitement
+was his. “I own I spoke sharply,” he went on, “and I am sorry for it,
+but I was annoyed.”
+
+“You had a right to be,” she told him; “I deserved it and I am not
+angry at all. It is not what you said just now that makes me say this,
+it is the whole thing; I cannot help seeing I am not fit for you now.”
+
+“Yes, you are; the position has not altered, and if it did you are as
+fit for the new as the old if you choose to be.”
+
+But the girl shook her head. “No,” she said, “I am not. I was fit for
+Crows’ Farm; that life would have drawn out a good side of me, just as
+it drew out a side of you which wanted me. Wood Hall acts differently.
+Oh, I know you have not got it yet, may never have it; but the fact
+that you have claimed it, that you have a close acknowledged connection
+with the other Harboroughs has altered your position, has altered you
+and your ideas. No matter what happens now you cannot be only the
+working farmer of Crows’ Farm who wants a working wife.”
+
+“You mean to say you believe I don’t think you good enough?”
+
+“No, oh no; it is not that exactly; I think it is that we don’t fit
+now.”
+
+“Do you want to fit?” Gilchrist eyed her sternly as he asked the
+question.
+
+“I did want to,” she told him. “I tried hard to be what you would like
+while I thought you wanted to marry me--”
+
+“You think I don’t want to marry you now?”
+
+“Yes,” she answered simply, and her school companions Carrie and Alice
+would have told her that she had not yet acquired a sense of decency,
+for she certainly did not know how to mince matters. “You did want
+to marry me,” she said, “and I would have married you; but the new
+position makes you and your wants different and would make me different
+too. The whole thing had better end.”
+
+“In plain terms, you won’t marry me now?”
+
+“Yes, I will,” she said meeting his eyes bravely. “I will marry you if
+you can truthfully say you still wish it.”
+
+He hesitated a moment. “Of course I do,” he answered.
+
+But that was not what Bill meant and she said so.
+
+“You don’t believe me?” he said rather stiffly. “You must please
+yourself about that, but if you wish to be free of course you can be;
+our engagement was on those terms; you are not bound.”
+
+“I am bound by my own word,” she answered; “so long as you want me I am
+bound. But you don’t really want me. Look at me; am I suited to be your
+wife? Tell me--you know me now--do you wish it?”
+
+She stood at the end of the room, the murky light of the winter dusk
+falling upon her, intensifying not concealing the faults in her dress,
+her shoes, her sacking apron. A small, odd, shabby figure she looked
+in that cheerless little parlour with its empty grate, small and odd,
+not alluring at all in the gloom. The man saw each detail, and seeing,
+wondered how she had ever bewitched him.
+
+He could not but look at her, and as he looked he moved slightly. “You
+are talking nonsense,” he said, turning to the empty grate; “to-morrow
+you will think better of all this.”
+
+He glanced at her as he ceased speaking, but it was too late. He should
+have met her eyes before if he wished to convince her.
+
+“Thank you,” she said simply; “now you have told me.”
+
+“I--told you?”
+
+“Yes; you need not mind, you did it quite honourably. Don’t mind. See
+here, I will square it with Polly and Theresa; it will be better so;
+they will only think I have changed my mind. Theresa will be sorry and
+Polly angry, but they won’t say anything to you; they won’t know about
+you: they will think it is all me.”
+
+“Do you mean to tell me you consider our engagement at an end and you
+will tell your cousins so?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“You shall do no such thing!”
+
+“I shall tell Polly to-day; she is not in yet, but she will be soon. I
+shall tell her as soon as she comes.”
+
+“Then you do it against my will.”
+
+“Yes,”--Bill spoke doubtfully--“telling is against the grain I dare
+say, but the breaking off is not. It is no good, Theo; don’t let us
+pretend any more. I know you would have honourably gone through with it
+because you gave your word, and I would have honourably done the same
+because I gave mine and believed you wished it; and we should have both
+done what we could to make the best of it afterwards. But all through
+me getting so grubby this afternoon I have found out the truth, and you
+are freed from your word, and it is all over; so let us say so, and be
+friends.”
+
+Five minutes later Polly found the street door ajar and entered the
+house mentally abusing Bill’s carelessness. She went up-stairs and
+seeing the sitting-room door open, she looked into the room. Neither
+fire nor gas was lighted; in the cold twilight she saw the small figure
+by the window.
+
+“Bill,” she exclaimed, “not dressed yet! And the fire not laid, nothing
+done and Gilchrist will be here directly. This is nice!”
+
+“Gilchrist is not coming; he has gone away altogether.”
+
+“Not coming! Not coming back, do you mean? And I have bought two lovely
+tea-cakes and half-a-pound of fresh butter!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+AN OLD WOUND.
+
+
+“Do come here for Christmas,” wrote Bella to Bill from Haylands about
+the middle of December. “You must come, if it is only for a week. It is
+nonsense for Polly to say she can’t spare you; she simply must. Theresa
+thinks that it will do you good. She won’t believe what Polly says
+about the way in which you have taken this breaking off with Gilchrist;
+she thinks you must be upset, and that to come here might do you good.
+I enclose a postal order for six shillings for the fare. Polly is sure
+to say you can’t afford it; Theresa and I can, and we want you to come.”
+
+And in spite of Polly’s protestations and objections Bill went. Polly
+could not go; she had one lodger now and could not shut the house up.
+But seeing that he was only one, and one who did not require much
+waiting on, and seeing also that Bella and Theresa had paid Bill’s
+fare, there was no reason why she should not go. So Bill went to
+Wrugglesby, and Bella and Theresa, who had driven from Ashelton for
+some shopping, met her and brought her home.
+
+Bella was glad Bill was coming, although, she reflected, if the girl
+was really as disturbed as Theresa imagined about her broken engagement
+she would be but poor company and not much relief from the dulness of
+Haylands. For some reason or other it had been dull there that autumn,
+at least on the days when Jack did not come. Theresa, who had always
+been quiet, was more quiet than ever now; she seemed to have aged
+during the past months, or else Bella, used to associating with the
+livelier if more unprincipled Polly, thought so. “Marriage does alter
+people,” thought Bella, and fell to speculating about herself and Jack.
+There really was very little to think about at Haylands, very little
+to talk about in all Ashelton. Even Miss Minchin, at the fortnightly
+working-parties, had nothing fresh to say, and so went untiringly over
+the nine days’ wonder of Gilchrist Harborough’s claim to Wood Hall.
+
+Miss Minchin might not be tired of that, but Bella was, and by the
+beginning of December she had heard quite enough of that and most
+other subjects of Ashelton conversation. But about that time she
+and Theresa found a fresh subject in the letter Bill wrote to them
+after Gilchrist’s visit to London. She wrote by one post, and by the
+next Polly wrote a good two ounces of lamentation, indignation, and
+abuse, the last both of Theresa and her “ridiculous secrecy,” and
+also, in a far larger degree, of Bill and her obstinacy. Theresa was
+much perplexed; neither she nor Bella could understand how it had
+come about; there was no explanation, except that Bill had availed
+herself of their permission to change her mind, and that somehow seemed
+unlikely. Bella was inclined to blame Gilchrist, and cited several
+instances when his devotion had fallen short of Jack’s. Theresa, on
+the other hand, was for putting the change down to girlish caprice.
+She made a point of talking to Gilchrist on the subject, but without
+enlightening herself to any great extent. “Of course I could not
+cross-question him,” she wrote to Polly, and was naturally not aware of
+that lady’s wrathful exclamation,--“I know I could then!”
+
+Although Theresa did not hear this, or any other of Polly’s remarks,
+she could guess their nature, and her invitation to Bill was given
+partly with a view of saving the girl from the ceaseless bombardment
+of the elder cousin’s wrath. As it happened, however, Polly was
+comparatively merciful in her indignation; she knew when words were a
+waste of breath, and understood with some precision when she could,
+and when she could not, move her partner. Consequently Bill was let
+off easily, and for that, or for some other reason, she did not seem
+at all unhappy when she stepped out on the platform at Wrugglesby
+station. The sisters, who met her, recognised the fact at once, and
+Bella at least was glad of it as she helped to carry Polly’s hat-box
+to the pony-carriage. Bill talked a good deal on the homeward way,
+seeming anything but depressed. Once when they were clear of the town
+she looked round and said softly: “How beautiful it is! How very, very
+beautiful it is out here!”
+
+Bella thought the girl must be expressing her delight at leaving
+London and all her troubles behind her. She could see no beauty in the
+landscape,--bare fields spread wide beneath the winter sky; gaunt,
+black-limbed elms and leafless hedgerows where the twilight crept
+mysteriously; a pale flare of sunset breaking through the ashen clouds
+to make the level land luminous and show near objects with a wonderful
+distinctness; stacks and barns and low-roofed cottages whence the
+smoke in thin spirals went straightly up into the evening air.
+
+Robert came out to meet the pony-carriage with quite a cheerful smile
+of welcome.
+
+“Here, brother-in-law Laziness,” Bill said, filling his arms with
+Theresa’s parcels; “take some more, you can have these. I’ve got the
+sugar, T.”
+
+And they went indoors, Robert’s setter slobbering over Bill,--she
+never had a dress that could be hurt by a dog’s caress--and sheepishly
+following them into the forbidden precincts of the house.
+
+“You are jolly cold, I expect,” Robert said as he poked the fire into a
+blaze. “Get your boots off and warm your feet. Where are your slippers?
+In this thing? Is this the key tied on outside?”
+
+Bill said it was; in her opinion to tie its key to the handle of an
+article was a sure way of having the key when you wanted it. Robert
+unfastened the box and rummaged over the contents with clumsy hands
+till he found the shoes; afterwards he put the things back anyhow, so
+that the box had to be carried up-stairs with the lid open.
+
+How they talked that evening! Bella and Robert, even Theresa as well as
+Bill. Bill wanted to know everything, about the horses and dogs, the
+cows and pigs; what that stack had yielded when it was threshed, how
+the potatoes were keeping, why the long meadow was ploughed. She wanted
+to know all about everybody in the place, how they were and what new
+clothes they had; she wanted to know when Jack came last and when he
+was coming next, what quantity of butter Theresa was getting now, and
+the pattern of the lace Bella had bought for her petticoats.
+
+Somehow or other the commonplaces of life, the veriest trivialities
+assumed a vivid interest with Bill; the life which had seemed rather
+dull in the living became full of humour and incident when told to her.
+Her own life in London, when she told them about it, seemed almost
+fascinating. Bella found herself wishing that she had insisted on
+joining the lodging-venture; she did not realise that the life, like
+the flat wintry landscape, required to be looked at through the lens of
+a particular kind of mind to assume the aspect it did for Bill.
+
+One could not help being conscious of Bill’s presence in the house. By
+the next afternoon Theresa was beginning to be aware of the difference
+she made. Bill had been in the attic that morning and looked over the
+nuts and apples that she herself had put there; she had brought down
+the rotten ones and brought down also the rose-leaves, put away to dry
+and forgotten. She had been round the barns and stables and out into
+the frozen garden, round the orchard to look for broken branches and
+dead wood for burning, into the icy dairy to help Jessie and hear about
+her love-affairs.
+
+“It’s like openin’ the winders on a summer mornin’,” Jessie said, when
+just before dinner Bill passed the kitchen-door with some Christmas
+roses she had found in a sheltered corner of the garden. She had gone
+to the pantry to arrange them in a glass, singing as she did so.
+Strangely enough she had not sung or whistled since that September
+morning at Bymouth when she mimicked the birds while Kit Harborough
+wrung out her wet bathing-dress. But she did not know this, neither
+did Jessie, though she heard the singing appreciatively now. Still, it
+was not that which caused her remark when Bill, now quiet, passed the
+kitchen-door.
+
+“It do freshen the house up wonderfully to have you here again, miss;
+it’s for all the world like openin’ the winders on a sunny mornin’.”
+
+But Bill scarcely understood the allusion any more than Theresa did the
+fact. Theresa certainly did not understand; she was glad to have the
+girl back again, but she felt that she was more incomprehensible than
+ever. Her whole attitude towards Gilchrist and the broken engagement
+was extraordinary to Theresa. She questioned Bill of course, and
+learned practically nothing, though her questions were answered freely
+enough. Bill was glad when the questioning was over; she was very tired
+of the subject and she wanted to hear about Bella’s _trousseau_; also
+she wanted to go and see Mr. Dane.
+
+Mr. Dane knew nothing about the engagement; there was no reason now
+why Bill should tell him, yet that afternoon, as she knelt on his
+hearth-rug in the twilight, she suddenly determined to do so and to
+ask his opinion on her own course of action. It was after one of those
+pleasant, companionable silences which often fell between them that she
+approached the subject, entirely without introduction, as was her way.
+“Monseigneur,” she said abruptly, “do you think it is ever right to
+break a promise,--a promise to marry someone, I mean?”
+
+“To marry someone?” Mr. Dane repeated, and though his tone was only
+surprised there was a gravity in his manner as if he feared trouble in
+the near future. “Yes,” he said after a moment’s consideration, “in
+some circumstances I do think it right to break such a promise.”
+
+“What circumstances?”
+
+“If the person giving the promise finds out afterwards that he or she
+does not love the one to whom it is given.”
+
+“If one of the two finds that out?” Bill said in surprise. “You do not
+really think that is enough? You would not break a promise for that,
+you would not think it honourable; it would not be either--neither
+honourable nor right.”
+
+“It would not be right for some people,” Mr. Dane admitted; “but for
+others--” he broke off abruptly, and after a pause turned to her with
+an almost terrible earnestness. “Child,” he said, “do not think I am
+trifling with right and wrong; indeed I am not. Yet still I say that,
+though it might not be honourable for some to break such a promise, for
+you it would not be a question of honour or dishonour but of absolute
+necessity.”
+
+“I did not think so.”
+
+“You?” he exclaimed with an excitement which astonished her; “you did
+not think so?”
+
+“No,” she said, “I did not. I promised to marry Gilchrist Harborough,
+but I did not love him.”
+
+“Then, in God’s name, do not marry him! You don’t know what you are
+doing. Do you think it worse to break your promise and dishonour your
+word, or to break a man’s heart and dishonour him, yourself, and God’s
+law, all that is most holy and most binding on earth?”
+
+And then Bill realised what she had done, and how her words had wounded
+her friend. Had he not married a woman who did not love? Had he not
+suffered to the full the uttermost bitterness of which he spoke? As
+she realised how she had reopened the tragedy of his life the girl
+was struck dumb with remorse, too grieved for the moment to think of
+explaining the circumstances of her own affairs.
+
+But Mr. Dane did not know the reason of her silence, and he went on,
+his face drawn and stern. “You do not know your own history nor the
+danger which may threaten you. I do; and knowing, I say you must not,
+cannot marry a man you do not truly love. It is a mockery to pray ‘lead
+us not into temptation’ and then to put yourself in temptation’s way.
+There is a passion which is stronger than you; it may sleep now but it
+will not always sleep, believe me, it will not always sleep. Listen
+now: first concerning your mother. You did not know her, neither did I,
+but you yourself told me she married in defiance of her parents; she
+loved the man and counted them well lost for him. And he,--he loved
+her, bewitched her, desired her,--she had no will but to go,--I know
+how it was done.”
+
+“You knew my father!”
+
+“No, I knew his father. I saw the spell at work; I know the will of
+those Alardys and the power of their love; I have good reason to know.
+Your grandmother, the first Wilhelmina, I knew her too. She was another
+man’s wife; she married him though she did not love him; she thought it
+was safe; she did not know--then came this other--”
+
+He stopped abruptly. He was pacing the far side of the room with
+the restlessness almost of a young man; he stood in the shadow now,
+but she sat regarding him wide-eyed, something almost of horror in
+her face. That he should tear open these old wounds for her, his
+wife’s grandchild, Wilhelmina’s grandchild! Wilhelmina! Yes, she knew
+now, the links in the chain were joined and she knew, although she
+murmured,--“My grandmother, Wilhelmina Corby?”
+
+“Yes,” he said, and then he came into the firelight and his face was
+very pitiful. “Child, child,” he said sadly, “there are passions of
+which you know nothing; pray God you never may!”
+
+The girl’s eyes suddenly filled with tears: “Do you not hate me?” she
+whispered.
+
+But he did not hate her. The blessed years which had taught him not to
+hate, taught him to be merciful as well as just. “No, Princess Puck,”
+he said, smiling gently, “I do not think I hate you.”
+
+She crept dog-like to his side of the fire. “Shall I tell you
+something,” he said, reaching a hand down to touch her hair, “something
+which I do not count the least of my blessings this year?--God’s
+goodness in sending to me, whom He has denied wife or child, a little
+brown elf for a granddaughter.”
+
+Bill could not speak. She only mutely pressed against his chair, and
+for a long time they sat silent while he softly stroked her hair and
+the ashes fell quietly on the hearth. At last the old man spoke again;
+he had been thinking of the girl’s half-made confidence and it troubled
+him greatly. “This promise of which you spoke,” he said,--“is it to be
+kept or broken?”
+
+Bill started like one awakening. “Broken,” she said, “I have broken
+it”; and she told him the whole story, always, of course, excepting
+that which was said, or rather was not said, when she and Kit
+Harborough met under the beeches on a day when a dream proved to be a
+dream no longer. But perhaps Mr. Dane discovered a little of that for
+himself, for when he said good-bye to her that night he realised that
+his Princess Puck was a child no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+A CHIP OF THE OLD BLOCK.
+
+
+It was towards the end of January that Bella came to town to finish
+buying her _trousseau_. A _trousseau_ is a really momentous affair,
+and Bella, feeling that the shops at Wrugglesby were not equal to the
+occasion, came to Bayswater, where Polly gave her limitless advice and
+all the help in her power. Polly really enjoyed Bella’s visit, and
+Bill, who knew Polly’s weakness, did all the housework so that the
+elder cousin should be free to go shopping or help with the needlework
+according as opportunity offered. During the time Bella was in London
+it seemed to Bill that they thought of, talked of, and considered very
+little beyond clothes, except perhaps once or twice in the evenings
+when Bella told them a little about Ashelton. Such conversations did
+not interest Polly, but as Bill liked them Bella talked to her. Once
+indeed Polly showed some interest, when Bella spoke of the change in
+Theresa and Robert.
+
+“They both have altered a good deal,” she concluded,--“especially
+Robert. You saw him at Christmas, Bill; don’t you think he is changing?”
+
+“Not changing exactly,” Bill said, “he is,--I think he is developing,
+growing to what you would expect. Some kinds of people are bound to
+grow in particular kinds of ways; they can hardly help themselves.”
+
+“I don’t like Robert’s kind of way, then. I think he has changed a good
+deal, and for the worse; so would you if you had stayed at Haylands as
+long as I have.”
+
+Bill did not explain that what Bella called “a change for the worse”
+and she “a natural growing” were one and the same thing; she did not
+say anything about it, though she felt a good deal, and knew that she
+could not help Theresa now any more than she could have helped her last
+spring.
+
+Bella had gone on to speak of the change in Theresa and of the quiet
+of Haylands. “Hardly a soul comes there now,” she said; “Theresa
+keeps them all at arm’s length. I expect that is why Miss Minchin and
+Mrs. Johnson and the rest of them never come now. Of course Gilchrist
+Harborough would not come.”
+
+Polly heaved a sigh. “I expect Bill’s breaking with Gilchrist troubled
+Theresa a good deal,” she said.
+
+But Bella laughed at such an idea, and afterwards went on to speak of
+Gilchrist and the lawsuit. “He has so little spare time just now,”
+she said, “that I don’t believe he would go to see anyone except on
+business. Jack sees him sometimes, and that is how I get to hear about
+him and his case. He is rather disgusted with it just now, Jack says,
+abuses the lawyers, and professes a great contempt for the slowness of
+the law.”
+
+Bill opened her eyes. “Why,” she said, “he has only just begun! It will
+be two years before it is over. What did he expect?”
+
+“How do you know?” demanded Polly.
+
+“I was told,” Bill answered, and Bella saved her further explanation by
+remarking: “That is what Mr. Stevens says; he told Jack so, and Jack
+told Gilchrist.”
+
+“What did he say?” Bill inquired.
+
+“Oh, that he did not see how they were going to make the time out, but
+he supposed they would do it somehow. Jack said he seemed disgusted
+with everything that day, and vowed he would not mind selling his
+chances for a good sum down.”
+
+“Did he say that?” Bill asked quickly. “He told Jack that? But he
+couldn’t do it, he couldn’t sell his chances; they would be no good to
+anyone else.”
+
+“He could sell them to the other side,” Bella said with the pride of
+recently acquired knowledge. “Jack told me that if the Harboroughs were
+rich they would probably by the autumn, if his claim seemed pretty
+good, try to compromise,--pay him to withdraw, you know. But then they
+are not rich; they have no spare money at all, and Jack says he does
+not think they could raise any. It seems rather a pity, for Jack says
+he believes Gilchrist would agree to a reasonable arrangement; he
+does not care a bit about Wood Hall now and only wants to go back to
+Australia.”
+
+“We all know why that is,” Polly said with pious conviction. “Bill has
+only herself to thank if he does leave England like that.”
+
+“I don’t suppose it would make any difference to Bill if he did go,”
+Bella retorted; “and she certainly has nothing to do with his wanting
+to go. Jack says he is disgusted with people in general, with the
+lawyers and the other claimant much more than with Bill.”
+
+“Poor Gilchrist!” Polly said with commiseration, and continued to look
+in a meaning manner at Bill, who, however, was far too absorbed in the
+thoughts suggested to her by Bella’s words to heed her.
+
+Long that night she lay thinking of these new ideas, her brain full
+of conflicting thoughts, impossible plans, crazy fancies. Money,
+money,--she had never felt the want of it before, never, for all her
+poverty, felt any desire to be rich. She had always been poor and she
+had never minded; she had never been tempted by girlish superfluities,
+had never cared for ribbons and lace and nice food. But now,--now she
+wanted money desperately, not a few shillings, or a few pounds as
+Polly, who did mind being poor, wanted it; but money in the big sense
+of the word, in the sense in which Polly never wanted it, in which she
+herself had hardly contemplated it before. Not that it mattered whether
+she wanted much or little, shillings or pounds or hundreds of pounds;
+one seemed about as attainable as the other.
+
+It was always part of Bill’s work to get up and clean the boots and
+light the fires before breakfast; it was no very great effort to her,
+and seemed moreover to fall naturally to her share. On the morning
+after she had lain so long thinking over the problem of ways and means,
+she got up as usual, cleaned the lodgers’ boots, lighted the fires,
+washed her hands, and then, taking a candle from the kitchen-dresser,
+climbed on the back of a chair that stood against the wall. Moving
+an almanack hanging high above it, a hole became visible from which
+she drew out, wrapped in paper, Peter Harborough’s shoe-buckles. For
+a long time she stood looking at them. Once she rubbed them on the
+corner of her apron; once she held them close to the candle so that the
+brilliant, refracted light flashed back from the gems and scattered
+sparks of white fire over her face and hands. She could not tell what
+they were worth, perhaps a hundred pounds, perhaps two hundred,--Polly
+had said two; diamonds were very valuable she knew, but how valuable
+she could not tell. At last she wrapped the buckles up again, put them
+back in their hiding-place and went about her work with a thoughtful
+face.
+
+She wore a thoughtful face all that day, for she was revolving a plan
+in her mind. In the afternoon she went to her bedroom and there opened
+the little oak box which used to stand in the spare room at Langford
+House. She had only been to it once since last winter, but now she
+turned over its contents carefully. She was not much the wiser for her
+examination; the only papers old enough to interest her conveyed little
+to her mind, beyond the indisputable fact that the name Corby appeared
+in them. However, her failure to find anything important in the little
+chest did not alter her plans, and in the evening, when the elder
+cousins were at leisure, she spoke to Polly about them. Bella and Polly
+had been busy with the _trousseau_ all day, but by the evening they
+were able to listen to Bill when she informed them that she was going
+to Wrugglesby the next day.
+
+“To Wrugglesby!” Bella exclaimed. “What on earth are you going there
+for?”
+
+But this Bill was not prepared to say; she expected to be asked
+the question and several others, and to give much annoyance by not
+answering them, but it could not be avoided. She felt that she could
+not explain matters yet. Things fell out exactly as she anticipated;
+Bella was only curious, but Polly was decidedly angry; she felt that
+she had a right to inquire, and she exercised it,--with no good
+results, for when, on Bill’s refusing to assign any reasons, she
+forbade her going to Wrugglesby, the girl showed every intention of
+going in spite of her. Whereupon Polly, who by this time knew she
+could not always drive the stubborn Bill, became very dignified,
+retreating from her post of dictator behind a manner of superior and
+chilling indifference, after which she climbed down from her pinnacle
+of outraged authority and informed the offender that she should not pay
+her fare.
+
+“No, of course not,” Bill said readily; “I have some money.”
+
+And she had; for it so happened that after a battle royal with Polly
+one day she had succeeded in arranging for wages of a pound a month,
+the same as any other little servant. Polly had vowed that she should
+not have it, that she was a partner in the firm and not a paid servant,
+but Bill stood to her guns, foregoing any future profits but insisting
+on present wages; and as she struck work when they were not paid she
+contrived to get them regularly, and so to have a little money for an
+emergency. Remembering which Polly said ungraciously: “At any rate you
+can’t go until the one o’clock train.”
+
+The one o’clock train was a very slow one, but it suited Bill
+admirably, and by it she went the next day.
+
+It was nearly three when the one clerk who looked out on Wrugglesby
+High Street from Mr. Stevens’s office-window saw the small figure cross
+the road and come towards the door.
+
+“A lady to see you, sir,--Miss Alardy.”
+
+The clerk announced this to his employer, although he thought Miss
+Alardy an exceedingly young lady to consult a lawyer on her own
+account. Mr. Stevens thought so too; he had a hazy recollection on
+hearing the name that she must be one of Miss Brownlow’s nieces, but
+he was not sure of the relationship until he saw the girl. Then he
+remembered her as the youngest of the nieces, the one whom, it seemed
+only the other day, he used to see walking beside the governess with a
+dusky mane of hair hanging about her shoulders and a general appearance
+suggestive of a tendency to turn restive on provocation.
+
+“Well, and what has brought you to Wrugglesby?” he said when he had
+asked after the other cousins. No one treated Bill in a business-like
+way; even the grocer at Bayswater regarded her as a man and a brother.
+Mr. Stevens certainly had no idea of being professionally consulted by
+this slip of a girl.
+
+“I have come to see you,” she answered simply. “I want to ask you a
+question, a law question.”
+
+She had her purse in her hand and looked somehow as if she were
+prepared to pay six-and-eightpence, cash down, for his opinion.
+
+“I will try to answer you,” he said with as much gravity as he could
+contrive. “What is this question?”
+
+“It begins in the year 1799,” she said without more ado. “In that
+year a man, Roger Corby,--perhaps you have heard of him? But that
+does not matter--in the year 1799 he gave a piece of land to another
+man--Briant. He gave it for ninety-nine years, but no rent was to be
+paid.”
+
+“A lease, that is,” the lawyer said, “and the rental probably one
+peppercorn payable if demanded. Yes, proceed.”
+
+“This year,” Bill said, “the time will be up, and I imagine Roger Corby
+would get his land back if he were alive?”
+
+“Naturally.”
+
+“But he is not alive, so I suppose his descendants would get it?”
+
+“Yes, that is what is usually expected to take place.”
+
+“He has only got one descendant; she comes like this,” and Bill took
+up some books which lay on the table. “Roger Corby’s only son died a
+year after him,”--she put a thin black book down,--“he is dead, you
+see”--pushing the book away--“and so does not count. The son’s only
+child, a daughter, is dead too, but she married when she was fairly
+young and she married twice. She ran away from her first husband and
+he divorced her; then she married the other man and had one son, the
+only child she had. Well, the son is dead too and the only person left
+is his daughter. Would she be able to get the land at the end of the
+ninety-nine years?”
+
+“Most probably, if she has the necessary documents and can prove she is
+legally descended from Roger Corby.”
+
+Bill said “Thank you,” and sat thinking a minute. The lawyer watched
+her curiously, feeling sure there must be something behind all this,
+and wondering a little what it could be.
+
+“Mr. Briant,” Bill said at last,--“I mean the Mr. Briant who now has
+the land--does not think it will be claimed, at least I believe not; he
+probably does not know of the second marriage of Wilhelmina Corby, and
+the son and the granddaughter.”
+
+“Which means,” Stevens observed, “that he will very strongly object to
+acknowledging their existence and will do his best to keep what he has
+got. Were I the granddaughter, I think I should first make quite sure
+that the thing in question is worth fighting for, and also I should be
+very clear that Wilhelmina Corby was divorced from her first husband
+and legally married to her second; can you tell me these things?”
+
+Bill could tell him one of the things. “Do you know Sandover?” she
+asked. “Yes? A good part of Sandover now stands on the land; of course
+at the time it was given it was only corn fields and grass, but now it
+must be valuable.”
+
+Mr. Stevens whistled, although it was supposed to be a business
+interview. “It is worth something, I admit. Now for Wilhelmina
+Corby,--how about her?”
+
+“It would have to be found out,” Bill said, “but I believe it is all
+right. But tell me, what did you mean by necessary documents?”
+
+“First and principally the counterpart of the lease. You don’t know
+what that is? It is an exact copy of the deed, the lease which is in
+possession of the man who now has the land and by right of which he has
+it. There is certain to have been such a deed; this man, Briant, is
+sure to have his lease, and unless the granddaughter can produce her
+counterpart she would find it well-nigh impossible to prove her case.
+Has she got it, do you think?”
+
+Bill did not know, and Mr. Stevens went on to say:--“In the first
+instance it would probably have been among Roger Corby’s papers, and
+so it may have passed into his granddaughter’s keeping; if it did,
+the question is what became of it when she changed husbands? And if
+she kept it in her possession, has her granddaughter got it still, or
+failing that, is it possible to trace it?”
+
+Bill considered a while; she was thinking of the little oak box and her
+search in it. “There is an oak box,” she said at last; “it is used
+as an ottoman in my bedroom, but I have heard that it belonged to my
+grandmother. It is full of papers, mostly letters and recipes of my
+mother’s, but there are a few which are older, one or two very large,
+tough, yellowish ones, not written in the ordinary way. I looked at
+them yesterday but I could not make them out, except that the name
+Corby occurs in them, and that at least one has the date 1799. Do you
+think the thing we want is there?”
+
+“I think it is just possible.” Mr. Stevens was not altogether surprised
+at this dropping of the impersonal. “So you are the granddaughter of
+Wilhelmina Corby, are you?”
+
+“Yes. I did not bring the box with me, but I wish I had now.”
+
+“Perhaps there is nothing of value in it. What are these old papers
+like? Can you describe them to me?”
+
+Bill did as well as she could, and though the description was not very
+detailed Mr. Stevens seemed satisfied. “I do not know,” he said, “if
+you have the counterpart, but I should say from what you tell me that
+you must have one or two of the old Corby documents. Don’t think that
+I mean they are of any pecuniary value, as the chances are all against
+it; the counterpart, if we could find it, might be, but the others are
+just so much legal lumber.”
+
+Bill did not seem troubled by this discouraging remark, nor yet by the
+lawyer’s next words: “If it is not a rude question, may I ask how much
+of all this does your cousin’s solicitor know?”
+
+“We have not got a solicitor,” Bill answered readily. “Mr. Brownlow
+made Aunt Isabel’s will, but he is dead now, and when he was alive we
+did not see anything of him. Polly thought him very stupid.”
+
+“Polly? That’s Miss Hains, is it not? Has your coming to me her
+sanction?”
+
+It had not, for the very good reason that Bill had not consulted her
+on the subject, or even informed her that any such subject existed;
+accordingly she told Mr. Stevens so, and explained that the affair was
+her own entirely.
+
+“Am I to understand,” the puzzled man enquired, “that she knows nothing
+at all about this?”
+
+“No,” Bill told him, “she doesn’t even know my grandmother was a Corby.
+I did not know much myself before Christmas, and when I did know, it
+hardly seemed worth while telling her. I did not realise then that it
+might be valuable; I did not realise that till the night before last.”
+
+“The night before last? What happened then?”
+
+“I wanted money desperately, and I thought and thought of ways of
+getting it.”
+
+Mr. Stevens repressed an inclination to smile. “You have by no means
+got it yet in spite of your interesting story,” he said. “Let me
+enumerate some of the difficulties in the way. Supposing you have
+the counterpart of the lease and it is all correct, you have got to
+be sure of several things,--that none of all these people between
+yourself and Roger Corby were bankrupt, that they made no awkward
+marriage-settlements, and, if they died intestate, left no more than
+one child apiece to survive them.”
+
+“These things will have to be found out,” Bill said calmly.
+“Marriage-settlements I don’t know anything about; children I do. There
+were no more than I have said, or at least none that lived to grow up;
+I have no relations at all on my father’s side. As for bankrupt, I
+believe it is all right, but I am not sure; Roger Corby died in debt,
+though I think it was all paid off after his death. But I know he was
+in debt when he died, that is why Wilhelmina, my grandmother, had his
+body carried away by night.”
+
+Mr. Stevens had heard something of this story, but always believed it
+to be a mere local tradition. “I had no idea it really happened,” he
+said.
+
+Bill assured him that she had excellent reasons for believing that
+it did; then she returned to the subject of more direct interest to
+herself. “Supposing,” she said, “that all these things of which you
+spoke were right, what then?”
+
+“Then, if you can get over the difficulty of the divorce and remarriage
+and subsequent birth of a son, you should have a very good case and
+ought, if all goes well, eventually to get the money you so much need;
+or rather certain persons in authority would get it to hold in trust
+for you.”
+
+“In trust for me?” Bill said with rather an anxious look.
+
+“Certainly; you are not of age yet, are you? Eighteen! The law does
+not consider you of age till you are twenty-one. Until that time the
+money, if you get it, will be in the hands of guardians who will manage
+it entirely and only allow you the use of a moderate and reasonable
+proportion.”
+
+“Polly and Theresa are called my guardians; would they have to look
+after the money?”
+
+“That depends,” Mr. Stevens said. “If they are only ‘called’ your
+guardians, the court, if the case were decided in your favour, would
+appoint some one to look after you and your money, you would be a
+ward of the court, and the court takes very great care of its wards
+and looks after them in a manner not always permitted to parents
+nowadays. If, on the other hand, your cousins are legally appointed
+your guardians, they would, until you were twenty-one, have the control
+of your property, applying it solely for your benefit and allowing you
+a certain amount for your use. But, remember, they could not do as
+they chose with it, for they could be called upon to give a very exact
+account of their proceedings.”
+
+Bill breathed a sigh of relief. “That’s all right,” she said. “Polly
+and Theresa, more especially Polly, are set down in Aunt Isabel’s will
+as my guardians; I should be able to manage if I got the money.”
+
+“They would not allow you more than a comparatively small sum; you
+could not touch any great amount. I don’t fancy you would be much
+better off than under the court if you wanted to do anything foolish,
+unless of course, the folly took the form of an unwise marriage, when
+you certainly would have more liberty if you were not a ward of the
+court.”
+
+Bill laughed softly. “I will tell you what I will do if I get the
+money,” she said. “I shall give Polly so much a year for the rest of
+her life; she deserves it and I would give her as much as I could
+afford; and with the rest I should do what I liked. We should arrange
+it somehow; Polly would do as I told her. There is time at least to try
+to find some way of doing it legally, but if I could not find one I
+don’t see that it would so very much matter, because Polly would be the
+person who did wrong according to the law and I should be the person
+who suffered wrong, and consequently the one who ought to have her
+up when I was old enough. As the case would really be the other way
+round, I should not have her up, and she could not have me up, so it
+would be all right.”
+
+“Oh,” Mr. Stevens remarked drily, “that is how you think you will
+arrange matters, is it? It strikes me you are a worthy granddaughter of
+Wilhelmina the wilful. I fancy, though, you will find more obstacles
+than you bargain for in this little game; where, for instance, does the
+other cousin and guardian come in?”
+
+“I should have to explain to Theresa that it was right. You would think
+it so if you knew. Theresa will always do what she thinks right, and
+Polly will do what she is made to do. To get your own way is mostly a
+matter of time.”
+
+“This time I should not be surprised if it took you till
+one-and-twenty. Law is not so easy to play with as you think; and cases
+of this sort are not so easy to win either, neither are they settled in
+a hurry.”
+
+Bill was prepared for that. “How long do you think it would take?” she
+asked. “A year?”
+
+“Probably; it might be longer, or it might, if you have very good luck
+and few difficulties, be a little shorter.”
+
+“Would it cost a great deal?”
+
+“It could not be done for nothing.”
+
+“Would a hundred pounds be any good to start with?”
+
+“It would be excellent.”
+
+Bill put her hand into her pocket and drew out the diamond buckles: “I
+don’t know what they are worth,” she said as she placed them before the
+astonished lawyer, “but at least a hundred pounds; more than that, I
+expect.”
+
+“Where did you get them?” Mr. Stevens had taken one to the window, and
+glanced from it to the girl.
+
+“Old Mr. Harborough gave them to me before he died.”
+
+“What!” The lawyer lost all interest in the buckles and stood staring
+at their owner, wondering what new surprise this granddaughter of the
+Corbys was going to develop.
+
+“Mr. Harborough gave them to me,” she repeated. “They are my very own;
+young Mr. Harborough was there at the time they were given, and he said
+they were my own and no one could take them away. I did mean to keep
+them for another purpose, but I believe it would be more right to use
+them for this.”
+
+“Have you any idea what these buckles are worth?”
+
+“More than a hundred pounds,” Bill said readily; “they will do to begin
+the case, won’t they?”
+
+“It is altogether extraordinary,” the lawyer muttered, and began to
+wrap the buckles in paper with the resigned air of one who gives up a
+problem.
+
+He offered the parcel to Bill, but she put her hands behind her back;
+“I want you to keep them,” she said, “and begin at once.”
+
+It was perhaps as well that Mr. Stevens was not busy that afternoon,
+for he found there were several more points to be explained to his
+young client, among others that she herself could not bring an
+action or give directions for legal proceedings. This difficulty she
+disposed of by undertaking to arrange matters with Polly within two
+days. Another point the good man had to explain was that no one would
+undertake the case without first knowing a great deal more about
+it. This the indefatigable Bill met with a promise to send the oak
+box to him by an early train the next morning, and to set to work at
+once to find out any and every detail she could concerning the first
+Wilhelmina. When at last Mr. Stevens, again handing her the buckles,
+told her that her method of payment was not according to custom, she
+was still not nonplussed. “Shall I get them sold,” she asked, “and give
+you the money?”
+
+“Certainly not; don’t attempt to sell them. And listen to me: I should
+not in any circumstances undertake this business for you; I will
+examine the contents of the box if you like, and tell you how I think
+you stand; but I would not undertake the case, which is completely out
+of my range. I am a country lawyer with quite as much country work as I
+can do; I am not a very young man, not a very poor one, and not at all
+an ambitious one. I have neither the time nor the inclination for such
+a piece of work as this.”
+
+“But you could find someone who would do it?” Bill asked, not in the
+least impressed by the gravity of his manner.
+
+“I suppose I could,” he said, smiling in spite of himself. “But even if
+I were to find someone, and there really was something for that someone
+to do, you must see that there are a good many things to settle before
+it comes to terms. When, and if, it does your cousin is the proper
+person to be consulted.”
+
+But Bill did not agree with him there. She pointed out that the affair
+was hers and the buckles hers; still she conceded that Polly could be
+talked to, and, since he wished it, she would take the buckles back to
+town. She put them in her pocket again, to the no small uneasiness of
+Mr. Stevens, although, as she herself said, they were too big to drop
+out, and no one would expect to find anything of value in her pocket.
+
+She was about to leave, by no means dissatisfied with the interview,
+when Mr. Stevens made a remark which caused her to pause. After saying
+that she must not make sure of her position, and that he himself could
+give her no hope until he had examined the contents of the oak box,
+he concluded: “And even if everything else proves satisfactory, it is
+quite possible you will come to grief over the matter of the divorce;
+the other side would be sure to make the most of that; it will have to
+be gone into very thoroughly.”
+
+Bill stopped on the threshold. “Do you mean,” she asked, “that you
+will have to go into it thoroughly, or that it will have to be done in
+public?”
+
+“I should not have much to do with it, but both your lawyers and those
+on the opposite side would have plenty; it is a point on which a good
+deal might turn.”
+
+“I had not thought of that,” and Bill’s face clouded.
+
+“You had better think of it,” the lawyer said, “for it will certainly
+arise. You must be sure, and the other side would insist on being sure,
+that there was a divorce; they would want the date of it and the date
+of the second marriage and the date of the birth of the child.”
+
+“Will they want the name of the first husband?”
+
+“Certainly.”
+
+“Will it be published in the papers?”
+
+“It would probably figure in the reports of the case.”
+
+“Then I am not at all sure the case can ever come off,” Bill said, to
+Mr. Stevens’s great astonishment.
+
+“Why not?” he asked.
+
+“Because the first husband is alive, and I would not hurt him for all
+the world.”
+
+Mr. Stevens regarded this as a matter of sentiment, but a sentiment he
+could honour, though he hardly knew how to advise. “Well,” he said at
+last, “you need not, and indeed cannot, do anything for a long time. I
+will look over your papers and tell you how I think you stand, and by
+that time you will have been able to decide what you wish to do.”
+
+But this was not Bill’s manner of going to work at all. “Thank you very
+much,” she said, “but I think I must decide sooner than that. When does
+the last up-train leave for London? Eight o’clock, is it? Thank you, I
+will decide before that. Perhaps I had better not come to see you so
+late; I will write from town.”
+
+“My dear young lady,” the lawyer said, moved by the gravity of her face
+and manner, “there is no need to take the matter so seriously, or to do
+anything in such a hurry. Send me the box, and afterwards we will talk
+over what can be done.”
+
+But though Bill again thanked him, not disagreeing with him this time,
+he was not at all sure that he had convinced her.
+
+“It’s a pity if she drops it,” he meditated as he watched her go down
+the street. “She would win if she went in, somehow--and probably do
+precisely what she pleased with her fortune when she got it. She is the
+kind that does; she would bamboozle the Court of Chancery and dance
+through an Act of Parliament.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+THE OAK BOX GOES TO WRUGGLESBY.
+
+
+The waiting-room of a railway-station is not usually selected as the
+best place in which to think seriously over a matter of perplexity.
+But if the waiting-room be attached to the station at a very small
+country town where trains are infrequent and passengers few, a worse
+place might be chosen; it has at least the merit of freedom from
+friendly advice. Moreover the fact of a person sitting there doing
+absolutely nothing for an hour or more creates no surprise, as it is
+to be presumed he is only waiting for the next train. On the January
+afternoon of Bill’s visit to Wrugglesby she found the waiting-room an
+admirable place for quiet thought. When she left Mr. Stevens’s office
+she went straight to the station and, sitting down with her back to the
+window, tried to think over the difficulties suggested by the lawyer’s
+words.
+
+The difficulties resolved themselves into one and one only,--Mr. Dane.
+The other obstacles to the success of her undertaking might or might
+not prove insurmountable; at any rate Bill would face them undauntedly
+with a light heart and a clear conscience. But Mr. Dane was another
+matter; she could not wilfully, and with her eyes open, do what she
+felt sure would give him pain; and yet,--how could she give up this
+enterprise?
+
+At this point two stout women entered the waiting-room. They were
+going to Darvel by the next down train in some twenty minutes’ time,
+and had walked in three miles from a neighbouring village; when
+one walks three miles the balance of a spare half-hour is not much
+to allow for catching a train. They were in “nice time,” they told
+each other, though they seemed flustered and annoyed when they found
+the booking-office still closed. Bill heard what they said without
+understanding, just as she saw them without perceiving; she sat looking
+straight before her though her true gaze was inwards. They glanced at
+her once or twice. “A natural, poor thing,” was the conclusion they
+came to. “They didn’t oughter let her be about alone like that,” was
+their final opinion as she rose from her seat and walked out of the
+waiting-room.
+
+Bill left the station, turned out of the main street, and took the
+road to Ashelton. She had decided what to do: she would go to Mr.
+Dane, not to ask his permission to claim her connection with the Corby
+family and consequently to drag him and his past before the eyes of his
+neighbours, but to tell him her story and ask his advice. She loved him
+so well that she felt sure he would give his advice without prejudice;
+she was absolutely certain that he would not misunderstand or misjudge.
+She started on her walk with a comparatively quiet mind, not an
+absolutely quiet one, for she knew she must give a full confidence or
+none at all. She must tell all, even including that which concerned
+Kit Harborough, and the dream which was a dream no more.
+
+At first Bill thought of nothing but what she had to tell, but bit
+by bit the solitude of the road and the exhilaration of the exercise
+soothed her so that she thought no more. Six miles of lonely road, a
+level country wide spread and bare on either hand, a silent wintry
+afternoon with the suggestion of twilight gathering before the village
+was reached,--what more could one ask to minister to a mind diseased?
+Nothing in Bill’s opinion, as she walked the six miles in something
+under an hour and a half, without a single doubt of her ability to walk
+them back again after dark and her pleasure in doing it.
+
+But she did not walk those six miles back; the proprietor of the White
+Horse at Ashelton received a request during the evening for the little
+cart and old pony for Mr. Dane. And it is to be presumed he drove Bill
+to Wrugglesby in time for the eight o’clock train, for some sort of
+vehicle brought her to the station in time for that train, and a little
+after eight o’clock Mr. Dane rang at the private house of Stevens the
+lawyer.
+
+Mrs. Stevens wanted very much to know what had brought Mr. Dane to see
+her husband at that time in the evening. She had a great opinion of
+Mr. Dane, of whom she knew little, and of his Family (with a capital
+F), of which she knew less. She and Mr. Johnson had conferred more
+than once on the subject of the relative who was a lord and the other
+relative who was a bishop, and the mystery why Mr. Dane himself was--if
+not a bishop or a lord--at least something more than a country parson.
+On that particular evening, after Mr. Dane had left, Mrs. Stevens
+naturally wished to know the reason of his visit; first she sought
+indirectly for information and learned nothing; then she asked boldly
+what had brought him there that night.
+
+“A small pony-cart, my dear,” Mr. Stevens said amiably; “and the same
+vehicle has taken him away again. I hope he will reach his destination
+safely, for he is not as young as he was and the night is dark, though
+the pony, I must admit, looks a safe beast.”
+
+Mrs. Stevens, being somewhat annoyed by this answer, condescended to
+no more questions and maintained a dignified silence for the rest of
+the evening,--a proceeding which it is to be feared did not greatly
+trouble Mr. Stevens, since he was so completely engrossed in his own
+meditations that he was not aware of it. After Mrs. Stevens had gone to
+bed he poked the fire into a blaze and observed to the crackling coals:
+“You were a fool, Wilhelmina the first, a fool! You threw away a very
+fine and noble gentleman for your gipsy lover.” And being a country
+lawyer of somewhat prosaic practice, and being also a man of genial
+sympathies, he once more gave himself up to meditations on the story
+which had been told him that night.
+
+And Mr. Dane, having reached home in safety, also thought a little
+of the story which had been revived that night. But not for long; he
+resolutely put it away from him as he put away the diamond buckles
+Bill had left. She had left them on purpose and with a definite
+understanding. “You must keep them, Monseigneur,” she said. “I can
+reclaim them, if I ever have the money, and if you do not sell them
+before. I cannot have you undertake this great thing for me unless you
+will have them as a sort of guarantee; I would rather you kept them;
+it is better so.” So he kept them, for after he had seen how she
+carried them loose in her pocket and heard how she kept them in a hole
+in the kitchen-wall, he also thought that it was better so.
+
+Bill went back to London without her buckles, but Polly was not aware
+of the fact. Indeed Polly did not hear anything much about the visit
+to Wrugglesby that evening, for Bill did not reach home till late, too
+late to tell all about it, she said, and put off the explanation till
+the next day, when she promised to tell Polly everything. Bella was
+rather disappointed by this arrangement for she would be out then,--at
+the dressmaker’s in the morning and at Mrs. James Brownlow’s in the
+afternoon. It must be admitted that, fond as Bill was of her cousin,
+Bella’s absence suited her well, for she wanted to have a long and
+somewhat difficult talk with Polly.
+
+Bella went out early, and early also went the little oak box by rail
+to Wrugglesby, carefully addressed and properly insured as Mr. Stevens
+had impressed upon Bill it must be. Before it went she pulled off the
+chintz cover from the top and took one thing from the inside; not a
+document or deed, or even one of her mother’s recipes, only a fossil
+sea-urchin found on the beach at Bymouth on a sweet September morning.
+She hid it away among her linen; then she nailed down the lid of the
+box, tied a rope round it, and sent it away.
+
+Polly did not know it had gone until later when Bill told her in the
+course of their talk. This talk did not prove so difficult as Bill had
+anticipated, for Polly was quick to grasp the possibilities of the
+case. It was true, Bill had acted without her consent and in a measure
+outraged her in her part of guardian; but Polly was not always playing
+that part, and she was, as the late Mr. Brownlow had said, a capital
+woman of business; when it came to plain facts apart from appearances,
+Bill’s conduct and communication wore a very different aspect. As
+Polly said: “You risk nothing; even if you lose you are no worse off
+than you were except for those diamond buckles--” (here, in spite of a
+previous and very eloquent statement of her opinion of Bill’s giving
+them up, Polly could not forbear from making a short digression and
+recapitulation of her sentiments)--“except for those buckles, you lose
+nothing since Mr. Dane is going to advance the money and take all the
+trouble. You are quite sure he means you only to pay if you win? You
+lose nothing if you fail and if you succeed--well!”
+
+The prospect seemed almost too much for Polly, and Bill forbore to
+mention any of her own plans regarding the money, should she win it.
+Polly, of course, had something to say about the way in which she had
+not been consulted, though not much, for, as she admitted, Bill “had
+done very well”; moreover, she was somewhat mollified by the nominal
+share in future transactions which Bill assured her would be hers. Bill
+explained matters as clearly as she could to Polly’s great satisfaction
+and sufficient enlightenment. In a matter of this sort Polly was quick
+to grasp the essential points, and in a matter of any sort even quicker
+to accommodate herself to the part she was to play. There was one
+thing, however, which Polly did not understand, and which Bill would
+not explain,--the reason that had induced Mr. Dane to follow such an
+extraordinary course as he had, and not only to give his sanction to
+the proceedings but also to lend active and financial assistance.
+
+“I can’t tell you,” was all Bill would say; “you would not understand.
+I hardly know myself and I certainly can’t explain. I can’t talk about
+him, he is,--he is too good.”
+
+Polly was not satisfied, but she could get no other explanation,
+and when Bill left her after some rather able though unsuccessful
+cross-examination, she hurled after her as a parting shot: “It is a
+very peculiar thing, Bill, very peculiar indeed, the way in which
+elderly gentlemen do things for you. One gives you a pair of diamond
+buckles, and another is undertaking a law-case for you. It is most
+peculiar, not to put too fine a point upon it,--most peculiar!”
+
+And though Polly went to the kitchen-door and raised her voice so that
+Bill, who had gone up-stairs, should not lose any of the remark, she
+still contrived to throw a vast deal of meaning into the last words and
+the sniff which followed them. But Bill, if she heard, did not answer,
+which was wise; and Polly, who was too satisfied with the results of
+Bill’s “peculiarity” to trouble very much about explanations, went back
+to her work and asked no more unanswerable questions.
+
+Bella and Theresa had to be taken into confidence of course, but
+neither of them thought the matter so important as Bill and Polly did.
+It was interesting to know all about Bill’s people, but the substantial
+benefits to be reaped from it seemed uncertain and shadowy. “It was all
+rather improbable and unwise,” Theresa said, while Bella, being full of
+her own concerns, hardly understood what was being discussed; and both
+sisters entirely failed to realise the value of success should it ever
+be attained.
+
+“They are so stupid,” Polly once said impatiently; “they don’t grasp
+anything out of their own groove. I’ve no patience with either of
+them; they are thorough Brownlows, without an ounce of vitality
+between them. They’re all right so long as you put them in ordinary
+circumstances,--a decent house with a decent servant, decent meals at
+regular hours, and a decent husband to come home at regular times and
+provide the money. But as for striking out a line for themselves, or
+saving a situation, or doing or even understanding anything which is
+out of their ordinary rut or wants a small amount of enterprise, they
+simply can’t do it!”
+
+Bill laughed a little, though she could not deny the truth of at least
+part of the indictment. She could not deny to herself either that this
+same characteristic of the sisters made it easier for her to carry
+through, unquestioned and undisturbed, the enterprises which they
+could neither undertake nor understand. However, she did not remark on
+this to Polly, but merely said: “I think Bella and T. are both rather
+occupied with their own concerns just now.”
+
+Polly would not allow this excuse to Theresa, though she admitted it
+might hold good for Bella, whose wedding-day was so near. Bella’s
+wedding occupied all their minds about this time, Polly being
+determined that it should be of suitable though quiet magnificence.
+“Of course we are still in mourning,” she said, “or at least we can
+reckon we are; Aunt was almost like a mother to us, besides an out of
+mourning wedding would cost so much. As it is, we can make a very good
+show indeed at a reasonable price. And I mean to do it too, Bill; we
+are quite as good as the Dawsons, and I’m not going to let them think
+we are not.” And Polly made all the preparations in her power; her
+chief cause of trouble being that, since Bella was to be married at
+Ashelton, she herself could not be at the base of operations very long
+beforehand.
+
+Bella left town early in February, in the company of Jack, who had come
+to town on business. When Polly heard of his coming she regretted that
+she could not offer him the hospitality she had offered Gilchrist, but
+her house was too full now to allow of it. However, Jack came to see
+them and stopped some time, and was, as Polly said, “as pleasant as
+possible and quite different from Mr. Gilchrist Harborough.” Indeed,
+Jack, instead of disapproving of Bill’s working, insisted on helping
+her to clear the table, making much fun over it. He always seemed to
+regard Bill as a jolly little school-girl not to be taken seriously;
+that day he teased her about the apples she took to eat in the train
+on her journey to Bymouth. Bill told him they were Polly’s, but he
+would not believe her, and they laughed over it for some time. Later
+on, however, she became serious and asked him some questions about the
+Harborough lawsuit. Of late Jack had become somewhat intimate with
+Gilchrist; Bill had gathered this from Bella’s talk, and thinking that,
+if anyone could tell her of the present condition of the Harborough
+case, Jack could, she questioned him on it.
+
+“Why, Lady of Law,” he exclaimed when he found out how much she knew of
+the original claim, “you seem to know a good deal about it already!”
+
+“Yes, I heard all about that part,” she told him; and he remembered
+that Gilchrist had been very often to Haylands during the summer, so
+often that he had once thought there was some sort of an understanding
+between Bill and the Australian, though latterly he had begun to doubt
+it. “I am afraid,” he said, thinking her interest in the case was on
+Gilchrist’s account, “I am afraid your friend won’t get this affair
+settled in a hurry; there seem to be a hundred and one things to prove.”
+
+“Yes? What? Tell me.”
+
+He smiled at her earnestness. “Let me see,” he said, “what shall I tell
+you? I have heard about it no end of times, but I am not so very much
+the wiser and I’m sure you won’t be; still here goes. The lawyers now,
+I believe, are busy trying to find out whether this precious rule of
+the youngest son inheriting applies to sons only, or whether it can be
+extended to other relations when the sons give out.”
+
+“Can’t it? I should have thought it could.”
+
+“Ah, but you’re not a lawyer; lawyers don’t think, they prove. They
+say sometimes the extension is allowed and sometimes it is not,
+according to early arrangement or tradition or something; they have
+got to find out how the first Harborough had his affairs arranged.
+Then another question they are busy about is how much old Harborough
+knew of the existence of another claimant, and I don’t see how they
+are ever to discover that under the circumstances. Things are rather
+mixed altogether; for instance, your friend’s father was born in 1845,
+old Harborough came into the property that same year, and that year
+also there died his youngest brother, the one who should have had
+the property,--that is what I call indecently crowding events to no
+purpose. Then the old man’s will seems likely to prove another bone of
+contention,--whether he had a right to make a will, why he made it,
+whether he believed his position insecure and made it to strengthen
+it, or whether he thought it secure and made it in good faith,--oh,
+it is a lovely tangle I can tell you! Harborough has talked to me
+about it till I have completely forgotten which party wants to prove
+what, and have got so mixed myself that I have gone home deciding to
+sow estates-tail in the home-field, drain the pond and turn it into an
+estate in fee simple to settle on my bonny bride.”
+
+He drew Bella’s hand into his own as he spoke, and it was easy to
+see from their faces that there would be no more discussion of the
+Harborough case for the present. But Bill could not forbear asking one
+last question: “I suppose it will take a long time to settle?”
+
+“Years! You’ll have time to grow up twice over before they are done
+squabbling, and Bella will be a staid and sober matron by the time the
+decision is given.”
+
+Bella combated this opinion, not because she doubted the length of the
+Harborough lawsuit but because she vowed she would never be staid and
+sober. A conversation natural to the circumstances ensued, and lasted
+until Jack and Bella left the house together.
+
+It was of course quite out of the question for both Bill and Polly to
+attend Bella’s wedding, as they could not leave the house to take care
+of itself, so it had been arranged for Bill to stay and Polly to go. It
+was really important that she should be present at the function, if for
+no other reason than her own belief that Bella and Theresa would not
+be equal to the situation and the Dawson family in its strength. “They
+would never manage without me,” Polly said with conviction. “I shall go
+down a day or two beforehand,--I really must, to see after things. You
+can do here quite as well as I can, and no one need know you are alone;
+I am not afraid to trust you, as I know you can take very good care of
+yourself and the house.”
+
+To this Bill agreed. “Of course I shall be all right,” she said. “You
+had better stay as long as Bella and Theresa want you.”
+
+But Polly had decided not to remain after the wedding. “There will be
+no need for me to do that,” she said. “I shall go several days before
+to see that everything is arranged properly and I shall come back
+directly after. Or,--no, on second thoughts, I think it had better
+be the day after; it would perhaps be nicer if I waited till the day
+after, as there will be such a lot of clearing up to do.”
+
+Bill heard this last decision with a smile, she knew that Polly’s
+“clearing up” would mean a substantial hamper-shaped addition to her
+luggage. But she said nothing, as she knew Theresa would not mind,
+and Polly fulfilled her plan exactly. She went to Wrugglesby three
+days before the wedding with the most wonderful costume that even her
+ingenuity had ever compassed, safely packed in a cardboard box and
+placed on the seat beside her.
+
+Polly’s work, and she certainly did work during those three days,
+was not in vain. Bella’s wedding was in every way successful. The
+Dawson family was properly impressed with the desirability of the
+new connection; Mrs. Dawson was almost satisfied, and Miss Gladys
+Dawson charmingly (and unpleasantly) put in her place by the presiding
+genius. Polly really was in her element that day and showed to the best
+advantage. Mrs. Stevens was warm in her praises, and even Gilchrist
+Harborough, who was there more as the bridegroom’s friend than the
+bride’s, thought that his former opinion of Miss Hains had been unjust.
+
+“It really was as nice a wedding as I have ever seen,” was Miss Gruet’s
+opinion, and in the main Ashelton agreed with her, finding in the event
+a delightful subject of conversation during the lengthening days.
+
+“It is quite _the_ event of the spring,” Miss Minchin said gaily. So it
+was in Ashelton, and beyond Ashelton the ladies did not take very much
+account.
+
+Beyond Ashelton, at the little house at Bayswater, there was another
+event, and one of such interest to those concerned that even Polly
+for a time regarded Bella’s wedding as of secondary importance. Mr.
+Stevens had examined the contents of Bill’s box and found that the deed
+dated 1799 was indeed the counterpart of the lease granted by Roger
+Corby in the year that Peter Harborough was shot. Mr. Dane, acting
+upon this information, had been to a certain old established firm of
+solicitors in London and had seen the senior partner. He was not the
+man who, something more than forty years ago, had helped to cut the
+bond Wilhelmina Corby had tried to break for herself; nevertheless
+he soon knew all about it, for it was recorded in the annals of the
+firm and only needed to be looked up. Looked up it accordingly was,
+together with other events, dates, and certificates; and the lease and
+the information and everything else there was to place were placed in
+the hands of this lawyer who, at Mr. Dane’s request, undertook the case
+Mr. Stevens had refused. Altogether, what with one thing and another,
+things were progressing surprisingly well, and Polly and Bill had good
+reason to congratulate themselves.
+
+Before the spring was over Mr. Briant of Sandover felt the consequences
+of the energy and inquiry Bill had provoked, for he received the most
+unwelcome intelligence that a descendant of the Corbys existed and
+claimed, in a purely legal and formal manner, a large piece of his
+valuable Sandover estate. He did not believe the claim genuine; and
+then he did not believe it could be substantiated; and in any case he
+was, if possible, going to contest it, for he had always believed there
+were no legitimate descendants of the Corbys left.
+
+“It rains lawsuits,” he grumbled once; “before Kit Harborough is
+through with his trouble I am let in for one. Although,” so he added to
+a friend, “between you and me, I should be glad to see the boy clear of
+his business half as well as I shall be of Mary Ann Hains, guardian of
+somebody Corby’s granddaughter.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+POLLY PROVES A TRUE PROPHET.
+
+
+It was in June that the accident happened, early June, but the season
+was warm that year and already the little white roses were in bloom.
+They were in bloom the year of Theresa’s marriage,--white roses for the
+wedding, and now, with but one other June to intervene, white roses for
+the burying. It was Bill who thought of this, not Theresa, although
+Theresa, smelling the scent of the flowers under the window, thought of
+her wedding-day as she sat waiting that night.
+
+She shivered a little as she recollected; it may have been at her
+thoughts, it may have been with cold, for the air was chilly. It was
+very late; she rose, and going to the window closed it, shutting out the
+sweet scents of the night. Then she glanced at the clock,--how late
+it was!--past twelve,--Robert had never been so late before. Surely
+nothing could have happened to him? Nothing ever happened; he was late,
+that was all, and she sat down again with a set look on her face.
+
+There was a letter in her work-basket; she had read it once, but
+something made her put her sewing down and take it from its envelope
+to read again. It was from Bella, who had gone to spend a few days
+with some relations of her husband’s at Kensington. How happy Bella
+seemed! How delighted that Jack was going to join her that day! It was
+such a pleasant letter, though it told little. Theresa read it and
+folded it, smiling as she did so; then for a moment she sat listening,
+thinking she heard the sound of a horse’s feet. The road was not
+near, but the night was so still that she could almost have heard in
+her present state of tension. She might be mistaken, but there was
+certainly a sound of some kind. Wheels,--someone driving home--then
+she was mistaken, for Robert was riding to-night; this must be some
+other wayfarer, perhaps Gilchrist Harborough come down by the mail from
+London. She set herself to watch again; the sound of the wheels had
+passed now, the vehicle may have driven out of earshot, or it may have
+paused by the gate where the road was dark. The last must have been the
+case for, after a moment, she caught the sound again; perhaps the horse
+started suddenly, for the noise was much plainer now. It was coming
+nearer--surely there was not some one driving up to the house?
+
+She rose quickly, a nameless dread at her heart, and went into the
+hall. There she paused a moment listening; the noise of wheels came
+nearer, then ceased, and through the closed door she heard, or her
+over-wrought senses told her she heard, the sound of a horse breathing.
+A man came up the steps; she heard him as she stood there, her hand
+upon the door, nerving herself to meet she knew not what. He stopped,
+and she opened the door to find herself face to face with Gilchrist
+Harborough.
+
+For a second he shrank from her, and in the starlight she saw it.
+
+“What is it?” she asked with lips that seemed too dry to speak.
+
+“Robert has been hurt,” he answered, avoiding her eyes. “I--I have
+brought him home.”
+
+“Hurt?”
+
+Her voice rang distinct, almost sharp, and Harborough knew the question
+she was asking herself, although she was too loyal to put it to him.
+
+“Yes,” he answered, meeting her eyes now; “he has been hurt, badly
+hurt, I am afraid.”
+
+“Badly? How badly?” Fear was whitening her face and quickening her
+perceptions. “You don’t mean--oh Robert!--Why, I can see him out there!
+Robert!”
+
+She passed Harborough and would have gone down the steps but he stopped
+her. “That is Dr. Bolton,” he said gently; “I brought him with me.
+Robert is there,--but,--you can’t see him.”
+
+She leaned against the door-post and caught her breath, searching his
+face with questioning eyes. “He is dead?”
+
+He felt the words were spoken, though he hardly heard them. “Come in
+here,” he said gently. He led her to the room she had just left, and
+put her unresisting in a chair.
+
+“Dead,” she whispered, “dead?” Her breath was coming in gasps; she
+shook a little, but she did not weep or faint. For some reason
+Gilchrist was afraid to look at her; he moved to the door. “Are you
+going to bring him in?” she asked in that same low, breathless voice.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Up-stairs?”
+
+“It would be better.” That was the doctor’s voice outside; both the
+doors were open and he had heard what was said.
+
+“You will want a light; there is none in the room.”
+
+She had risen as she spoke, but the doctor, seeing her white strained
+face, said: “No, no, wait here; Harborough will go up first, and set a
+light.”
+
+She paid no heed to him, but tried to light a little hand-lamp.
+Gilchrist took the matches from her trembling fingers and, lighting it
+for her, put it into her hand. She gave him a look of thanks and then
+went slowly up-stairs.
+
+It was early the next morning when Bill received the telegram that
+summoned her to Ashelton. That Bill should be summoned both annoyed and
+surprised Polly; she objected to parting with her for one reason, and
+for another she considered that she herself was the right person to be
+sent for in an emergency. “I don’t see what good you can do,” she said.
+
+But Bill did not argue the point; she looked at the time-table, and
+then went up-stairs to dress for the journey. Polly picked up the
+telegram and having read it again followed Bill. “‘Come at once, Mrs.
+Morton wants you. Harborough.’” She read the message aloud to Bill when
+she reached her room. “What has Gilchrist got to do with it, I should
+like to know?”
+
+“Robert is ill, I expect,” Bill said. “If it were Theresa, Robert would
+have sent the telegram; but as neither of them did, I expect Robert is
+ill.”
+
+“Robert ill!” Polly sniffed contemptuously, then with the air of a
+prophet who sees his evil prognostications fulfilled, she added: “It is
+very likely you are right; he never was much good. Still I don’t see
+why Gilchrist Harborough should telegraph for you; he has no connection
+with the matter, neither have you.”
+
+“Jack and Bella are away. I expect Gilchrist is looking after things;
+he would be very good in an emergency.”
+
+Bill got her dress out of the cupboard as she spoke, and Polly looked
+at the telegram again. “Robert’s not ill,” she said with sudden
+conviction; “he’s dead!” Bill, from the wording of the telegram,
+thought it just possible too; still she did not say so, and Polly went
+on: “I always said he would die young and die suddenly; now he has done
+it and probably left Theresa very badly off.”
+
+Bill was used to seeing Polly in moral undress by this time; the elder
+cousin did not always think it necessary to keep up appearances with
+the younger now that she knew how little the girl appreciated or was
+deceived by them. Bill had so often been treated to Polly’s unvarnished
+opinion of late that she was not much surprised by her way of regarding
+the possible death of Theresa’s husband.
+
+“Really I never saw anyone so unlucky as we are,” Polly was saying;
+“no sooner do we get Bella settled than we have Theresa thrown back
+on our hands. It is hard, just as we are beginning to get on a little
+too, and make things pay. You and I have worked things up and managed
+splendidly, and this is our reward! It seems to me that, manage as we
+may, we shall never reap any benefit from it. We can work and it seems
+we always may. As for those Warings, I have no patience with them!”
+
+“So it seems, since you won’t wait to hear how Robert is before
+deciding not only his death, but his widow’s future as well.”
+
+“Oh, I know he is dead,” Polly said irritably as she followed the
+younger girl down-stairs. And Bill felt nearly sure of it too, even
+before she got to Wrugglesby station and saw Sam, who had been sent to
+meet her. When she saw him there was room for doubt no longer.
+
+On the homeward drive he told her all he knew about the accident. The
+master had gone to Wrugglesby yesterday and returned late; he was
+riding a skittish young horse and must have been thrown and probably
+killed on the spot. Mr. Harborough, who had come from London by the
+mail-train, drove home along the same road and found him, but it was
+thought he must have been lying there for several hours. Dr. Bolton had
+been called up and came with Mr. Harborough to Haylands; but it was
+quite useless, the master was beyond help when he was found; “and the
+missus”--so Sam concluded--“was somethin’ terrible, quite stunned, not
+sheddin’ so much as a tear.”
+
+Bill could believe that; it seemed to her quite natural that Theresa
+should be stunned. But when she reached Haylands it seemed just as
+natural that Theresa, when she met her and put her arms round her,
+should burst into a paroxysm of weeping. Bill wept with her of course;
+it was her nature; but she wept for the pity of life’s tangle, while
+Theresa wept for the husband dead last night and the lover dead months
+ago, for the widowhood of name which had fallen upon her now and the
+widowhood of heart which had fallen long before; wept for her grief and
+her loss and her double grief that the loss and grief were not greater,
+and for all combined till thought was vague and her heart was eased.
+
+So she wept, and no longer dreaded that the world, seeing her grief,
+should also see that which lay behind. She had feared lest the secret
+she had guarded during Robert’s life should be revealed after his
+death. It was for this reason she would not have Polly or Bella or
+anyone but Bill,--Bill whose eyes were not quick to mark anything
+amiss. The others might discover or think, but Bill--no one minded
+Bill. And then, when Bill came with her sympathy and her pliant
+changing nature, there suddenly seemed no secret to hide, nothing amiss
+which could be marked--all was melted in a gush of tears.
+
+Thus Theresa became widow indeed, and though she sorrowed as such she
+was all the better for the sorrowing. Quite unconsciously she turned to
+the girl, whom she still persisted in regarding as a child, for comfort
+and help. Bill gave all the comfort she could, listened when Theresa
+told her how Robert went out yesterday and she had not said good-bye;
+wept when Theresa wept over this omission and over the hundred trifles
+which seemed to speak of his presence still near,--his pipe on the
+mantelpiece, his whip behind the door, his dog waiting wistfully in the
+hall. Bill listened, but she also worked, for that suited her best.
+Theresa was really prostrate with grief; so Bill assumed, by the quiet
+right of the one who can, the management of the household, and the
+management so assumed remained with her some time.
+
+It was during the days which followed that Gilchrist Harborough found
+himself thinking that Bill, viewed in a light other than that of
+prospective wife, had something to recommend her. He had not seen her
+since the December day when she cancelled their engagement; but in the
+time that followed Robert’s death he saw her often, for she stayed at
+Ashelton till the summer was well advanced. Polly wanted her back in
+town, but she was obliged to allow that Theresa needed her more at
+Haylands. Very reluctantly she gave permission for Bill to remain; very
+reluctantly, with the wages Bill forfeited by absence, she hired a girl
+to help with the work. And Bill spent a second June at Haylands, very
+unlike the first, excepting only that she saw Gilchrist Harborough
+often, though even in seeing him there was one great and essential
+difference, for they met now on a new footing, a footing much nearer
+equality.
+
+Jack was a good brother-in-law, but Greys was some way from Haylands,
+and he, being but recently married, and having besides a great deal
+of land to look after, found it somewhat difficult to give Theresa’s
+farm the supervision it required. Harborough lived much nearer, had
+more time and possibly more inclination, for the lawsuit did not
+occupy so much of his attention just now, therefore he came often to
+Haylands that summer, and in coming, met Bill often, but always in her
+working capacity; a capacity, he thought, which suited her so well
+that he wondered how he had ever come to think of her,--the most able
+collaborator man could wish,--as wife.
+
+But Theresa’s domestic arrangement, admirable as she found it, did
+not suit Polly at all. To begin with she did not find the girl at all
+an efficient substitute for Bill, and to go on with she “wanted to
+know how it was all going to end.” Bill also wanted to know that, not
+because she found the arrangement any less pleasant than did Theresa,
+but because it was her custom to plan several miles in advance of the
+elder cousin’s range of vision. So, before Theresa had contemplated the
+future as a working possibility, Bill had answered Polly’s enquiries.
+
+“I’m afraid,” so she wrote, “things are not much better than you
+expected; Theresa will be left very badly off. Still, I think she will
+most likely have a little, so there is a certain amount of choice as to
+what is to be done; I have not properly talked it over with her so I do
+not know if she has any wishes. As far as I can see we three (she and
+you and I) must live together; we can’t afford two houses, but together
+I believe we might live here or in town. If we stop here we should have
+to give up most of the land, only keeping enough for a certain amount
+of dairy work. The dairy, with pigs, poultry, and vegetable growing, I
+reckon would keep us in food and pretty well pay the rent--I believe
+this could be made to answer. We could have a boarder in the summer if
+you liked. Of course the other choice is for you and me to go on as
+before and take Theresa in; I don’t know what else can be done, unless
+she goes to Jack and Bella, which seems hardly fair.”
+
+Polly read this letter and digested it thoughtfully, and her thoughts,
+it is to be feared, were not so much for the common good as for her
+own personal comfort, and that did not incline her towards going to
+Ashelton. She preferred town to country; she liked her present life in
+many respects, and she certainly did not relish the idea of making pigs
+and poultry pay with Bill’s assistance, not because she thought they
+would not pay but because she knew quite well that the assistance would
+be on the wrong side in such a venture. Theresa she did not consider
+in the matter, and fortunately for her, Theresa had no very strong
+wishes; she did not greatly care whether she remained at Haylands or
+went to London; it seemed to her that her life had been snapped and
+could go on as well, or as ill, in one place as another. Jack was in
+favour of giving up the farm, pronouncing Bill’s scheme to be a mad
+one. Gilchrist, who knew Bill better, was not so sure of that; but he
+saw that it would entail much hard work on all, on Theresa, who in his
+opinion was not fit for it, as well as on Bill who was. Therefore, as
+the general voice was with Polly, she carried the day, to her own great
+satisfaction, and at Michaelmas the farm was given up.
+
+It is not to be supposed that Bill remained undisturbed at Haylands all
+the summer. She was merely keeping Theresa company, and when Bella’s
+husband spared her to do that for a time, Bill, very reluctantly,
+returned to town, to Polly and her domestic difficulties. It is hard,
+when one can do work and has half done it, that it should be taken away
+and given to another, who not only cannot do it but does not recognise
+that it exists to be done. Bill did not want her work recognised, but
+she did want to finish it; but since that was impossible there was no
+choice but to silently resign it half-finished, without a hope of its
+being anything but wasted by the one who came after. So she went back
+to town, and Bella, it is to be feared, fulfilled her anticipations;
+the seed plants died, the vegetables languished, the ducks laid away,
+and the poultry intermarried disastrously. Later on Polly went down
+to Haylands, for a rest, she said; and Bill did not ask her to look
+after any of her pet projects, thinking perhaps that it would only be
+useless. When Polly returned she did enquire how the fruit was that
+year, and was told that the trees were breaking with the weight of
+plums.
+
+“Does no one pick them?” Bill asked.
+
+“Some of them,” Polly told her; “but fruit fetches so little this year;
+it is not worth a man’s time to pick it, at least so Gilchrist says,
+and he is managing everything, you know.”
+
+Bill was not thinking of Gilchrist’s management but of private
+enterprise; Polly was thinking of something quite different and it
+was she who spoke first. “Did it strike you, Bill,” she said, “that
+Gilchrist takes a great interest in Theresa and her affairs?”
+
+“Yes, of course; he likes managing, and he does it thoroughly.”
+
+But this was not what Polly meant at all and she said so. “What I want
+to know,” she concluded, “is, why did he begin it? Why does he do it?”
+
+“Because it wanted doing, and because he can do it. Somehow or other
+the people who can do things always have to do them whether it is their
+business or not; they have a sort of right to the jobs that want doing.”
+
+This was not Polly’s opinion. “It’s my belief,” she said, “that he has
+an interest in what he does.”
+
+“An interest? He does not get the profits.”
+
+“No,” Polly retorted impatiently, “but Theresa does; that’s his
+interest.”
+
+“Do you mean he is fond of Theresa?” Bill asked in astonishment.
+
+Polly did, and explained herself at some length, without convincing
+Bill who, when she had come to the conclusion that this was only one of
+Polly’s fancies, went back to the subject of the plums. Polly was not
+interested in plums, and when Bill asked if she and Theresa picked any,
+answered snappishly, “No, we did not; we did not choose to spend our
+days up ladders.”
+
+A recollection of last year lent viciousness to this remark; Bill
+remembered last year too and sighed. Had she been at Ashelton
+early enough very likely there would have been a repetition of the
+plum-selling. But she was not there in time to do anything, for, though
+she did go down to Haylands to help Theresa to pack at the last, the
+fruit was practically over. It was a bad year for apples; there were
+hardly any in the orchard at Haylands, and Bill saw at once, when she
+went to look round, that there was nothing to be done with them. As for
+the plums, they were a real grief to her when she saw them lying rotten
+on the grass beside the branches which the heavy fruit had broken down.
+
+“Gilchrist could not look after everything,” she told herself, “and
+Theresa would not know.”
+
+After all, the waste of the plums did not trouble her so much
+as did the sight of the withered plants in the garden, and the
+raspberry-canes, still loaded with shrivelled fruit, dried up for want
+of water. But bad as the garden was, it was not the worst, for in one
+short tour of the stackyard she found, besides the feathers of many
+untimely victims of stray cats, five lots of addled eggs laid and lost
+in the summer months. She had her last find of eggs in a basket on the
+Saturday afternoon when she went to the orchard to look for fallen
+apples. There were not many, but she picked up what there were and took
+the eggs to the ditch to throw them away to make room for the apples.
+
+It was just then that Mr. Stevens came by. He was a busy man, but he
+sometimes allowed himself a little holiday on Saturdays in September to
+shoot a friend’s partridges; he had been shooting partridges that day
+and very good sport he had had to judge from the beaming good-humour
+he was carrying back to Wrugglesby.
+
+When he saw Bill he pulled up. “Good-afternoon,” he cried; “I didn’t
+know you were back. You haven’t been over to see me; don’t you want to
+have a talk about your affairs?”
+
+Bill came to the gate. “There isn’t much to say about them, is there?”
+she asked. “I thought nothing much could be done at this time of year.”
+
+“Well, no, not much certainly; everybody is out of town now. Still, if
+you’d like to have a chat, you might look in when you’re in Wrugglesby;
+I’m not very busy just now.”
+
+“Thank you, I will if I have time; I am only here for a few days just
+to help Theresa to pack.”
+
+“Ah, of course, she is leaving soon, poor thing. Going to live in
+London with you, isn’t she?”
+
+Mr. Stevens felt very sorry for Theresa, of whose affairs he knew all
+that was commonly reported and a little more besides. He felt sorry for
+Bill, too, that afternoon; she did not seem to be so cheerfully and
+completely satisfied with life as usual.
+
+“We must make the best of a bad job,” he said encouragingly, “and look
+for better times. Let’s hope your business will be through before
+Christmas,” and he shook his reins as if he were going on.
+
+“Do you think it could be done so soon as that?” Bill asked with
+animation.
+
+“I dare say; I don’t see why not, or at the latest early in the
+new year. Woa, my beauty!” and he pulled up again. “Mr. Briant
+is a rich man and can afford to fight as a poorer could not; but
+you’re too strong for him, and since the business of the divorce and
+remarriage was settled he knows it. It’s my belief--though as I’m not
+professionally connected with the case perhaps you will say I have no
+right to an opinion--it’s my belief Briant never suspected a second
+marriage. But owing to the rector’s help you have incontestable proofs,
+and the other side haven’t a case worth mentioning.”
+
+“Then you think it will be settled soon?” Bill asked. “I am very glad;
+and I am glad, too, that Mr. Briant is so rich that one need not much
+mind taking money from him; even if I win he will still have plenty
+left.”
+
+Mr. Stevens, though he was amused by her scruples, assured her that
+she might be quite easy on that score. “He’ll have plenty,” he said,
+“plenty, seeing that he has neither son nor daughter to take it after
+him. Bless my soul, he ought to be quite pleased to make provision for
+a young lady in that way!”
+
+The lawyer laughed as he spoke and Bill laughed too. “I am afraid he
+won’t see it in that light,” she said.
+
+“I’m afraid not either. No; I think if you win your case you will have
+to thank your good aunt’s care in keeping old bills and letters and
+recipes for herb-tea. That is what will have the most to do with it,
+since she managed to keep with them several of old Roger’s useless
+documents, and one valuable one. Yes, you will have to thank her for
+her care and Mr. Dane for his generosity. Good-bye, and a speedy
+success to you.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+A RELISH WITH TEA.
+
+
+Bella’s baby was born in January, and Theresa went to Greys’ for the
+event. Indeed she went there a good deal before the event, for, if
+the truth must be known, life in London with Bill and Polly was not
+entirely successful. Two women who have each had a home of their own
+do not always get on when they come to share one between them. Bella
+wrote in November inviting Theresa to come to her, and Polly urged the
+acceptance of the invitation with unnecessary warmth. Theresa hesitated
+a while as to her duty and then finally accepted it and went. “And a
+good thing too,” Polly said frankly.
+
+She said this to Bill when they were at tea on the afternoon Theresa
+left. Polly sat at her ease with her feet on the fender and her tea-cup
+on the hob; she liked this position, and she liked the table drawn
+on to the hearth-rug so that she could sit between it and the fire.
+Theresa did not approve of such things; she did not exactly say so, but
+she looked it, and when she set the tea-things she never pulled the
+table up.
+
+“It’s all very well, Bill,” Polly went on to say. “Theresa may be a
+very nice person,--I dare say she is, but she does not do here, and if
+she is going to live here she will have to alter a good deal.”
+
+“She will settle down in time.”
+
+Polly had her doubts about that and expressed them; she also expressed
+a hope that Theresa would stay with Bella while the settling process
+went on. “The longer she stays there the better,” she concluded.
+“Perhaps if she is there long enough and Gilchrist Harborough sees her
+often enough, he may marry her and take her to Wood Hall where she
+could be as elegant as she pleased without interfering with me.”
+
+Bill laughed. “You are in rather a hurry,” she observed. “Theresa has
+only been a widow six months, and Gilchrist has not by any means got
+Wood Hall yet. You finish things off rather too quickly.”
+
+“I wish somebody else would,” and Polly turned up her gown to preserve
+it from the fire.
+
+“Don’t be too hard on T.,” Bill said rather sadly. “I don’t believe she
+is more particular than she used to be; she always was,--well, you used
+to call it ladylike.”
+
+Polly ignored her own past attitude with regard to Theresa and only
+remarked: “I could be ladylike if someone else did the dirty work. I
+should like to be ladylike; but some people can’t have what they wish
+in this world; they have to work that others may.”
+
+“Poor old Polly! I’m so sorry you have had to do the stoves lately.
+That place on my finger is nearly well, and I believe I shall be able
+to do them again to-morrow.”
+
+“I’m not grumbling about you,” Polly said magnanimously.
+
+“What is the use of grumbling about anything?” Bill asked. “It may let
+off steam, but I believe it rusts the pipes. Don’t let’s talk about
+Theresa; let us talk about hats.”
+
+Millinery was a subject of perennial interest to Polly, but to-night
+she refused to discuss it. “I don’t know anything about hats,” she
+said; “how should I? I haven’t seen anything but these four walls since
+I don’t know when.”
+
+“Why not go to Regent Street to-morrow afternoon?” Bill suggested. “My
+finger is really quite well, so I can do the work and you have not been
+out for ages; take an omnibus to Oxford Circus and go and look at all
+the shops.”
+
+This was Polly’s favourite recreation and invariable panacea for
+dulness, but she still refused to be cheered. “What is the use?” she
+said. “I shall only see a hat I want and can’t afford.”
+
+“You will see some new way of trimming up your old one,” Bill assured
+her; and though Polly persisted that she would not go, when the
+afternoon came she changed her mind and went.
+
+It was during Polly’s absence that the great news came to Bill. Mr.
+Dane brought it; he had come to town for a few days on business, he
+said, probably on her business. At all events it was fortunate that
+his coming to town was at this time, for he was able to bring the
+news to Bill in person. Of course Polly received a formal intimation;
+Polly always received formal intimations and requests from the lawyers
+as did Mr. Dane; she was the guardian of the plaintiff, a person of
+importance, and he was a great factor in the case, more especially as
+the lawyers were his lawyers and the money his money. But Bill was only
+the “infant,” so she was not greatly troubled with intimations and
+consultations; and she, in the first instance, was not the person to be
+formally acquainted with the decision of the court. Nevertheless she
+was the person to whom Mr. Dane came, even before Polly had received
+her legal information and while that lady was out looking at the
+bonnet-shops in Regent Street.
+
+It was four o’clock when Mr. Dane came. Bill had no idea of seeing him
+when she went to answer his knock; and the sight of him standing on the
+doorstep in the November dusk was so unexpected that she forgot in her
+delight to wonder why he had come. She led him to the kitchen, their
+living-room now, and gave him Polly’s shabby old arm-chair. She never
+thought of apologising; it was the best she had to offer and so needed
+no apology; moreover he was her friend and would expect none.
+
+“Well, Princess,” he said at last,--at first it had not seemed possible
+to speak of his errand--“what do you think brings me here to-day?”
+
+Bill looked at him doubtfully for a moment. “I have something to tell
+you,” he went on, and then her whole face became illuminated with
+understanding. “Oh, Monseigneur!” she said, clasping her hands with an
+eagerness begotten half of hope, half of fear.
+
+“Yes, my child,” he said gently, “yes, you have won. That which Roger
+Corby gave as a price for wrong is paid back a hundred fold; and you,
+you little Bill, are an heiress in your own right.”
+
+Bill gave a great gasp. “Thank God,” she said, “it is in time! Thank
+God, thank Him, very, very much!” And there followed a pause; perhaps
+she thanked the God who always seemed so close to her. When she spoke
+again it was in hushed tones. “It seems very wonderful,” she said.
+“And,--and I owe it to you!”
+
+But Mr. Dane did not think she owed it all to him; perhaps he shared
+Mr. Stevens’s opinion and thought she was the stuff that wins under any
+circumstances. As for the particular circumstances of this case he set
+them aside, and when she persisted, her voice quivering with emotion
+as she recounted all he had done, he still set them aside. “It seems
+a great thing to do, does it?” he said at last. “Ah, you are young;
+things look different when you are young. I am old and I have lived
+much and loved much, and outlived much too perhaps, and to me,”--and
+he put a tender hand on the glowing hair--“to me it does not seem such
+a very great thing to do for the child of my past, the daughter of
+consolation to me.”
+
+Then she said no more, but she kissed him with tears in her eyes.
+Afterwards they talked of this fortune, and what it would mean,
+and the debt that Bill thought she owed to the Harboroughs--to
+Peter Harborough, shot, to hide whose death the price which was the
+foundation of her fortune had been paid--to Kit Harborough, whose rival
+through an act of hers had learned the claim that he had made,--and
+to the old man, last of the Harboroughs of Gurnett, who slept in the
+little churchyard among the ferns where Roger Corby lay.
+
+It was past five o’clock before Polly returned. Mr. Dane had left only
+a little while before, and she must have almost passed him at the end
+of the street, though, if she did, she failed to recognise him. She
+did not notice anything particularly until she reached her own house,
+and was surprised to see there were no lights at any of the windows.
+Miss Scrivens, who now occupied the drawing-room, must have fallen
+asleep and forgotten to ring for the lamp; and Polly decided with some
+satisfaction that Bill for once had followed her instructions and not
+taken the light until it was rung for. With a gratified feeling at this
+unusual display of obedience she let herself in and went up-stairs;
+while she was up-stairs the drawing-room bell rang sharply and Bill
+went to answer it. She was still attending to the lamp, or the lady,
+when Polly entered the kitchen and found to her surprise that the
+tea-tray was not set.
+
+“What has the girl been doing?” she muttered as she went to the
+dresser. She was reaching up to get a jug from a high hook when there
+came a dancing step behind her and, before she could look round, Bill’s
+arms were thrown round her neck from behind and Bill’s strong hands
+took hers prisoner.
+
+“Polly!” she exclaimed, possessing herself of the jug and then twisting
+Polly round. “Polly, dear old Polly! It has come at last! You shall
+have the finest hat in all Regent Street even if it’s a salad of roses
+with a cockatoo rampant on the top! You shall have it and we will drive
+all the way in a hansom cab to buy it!”
+
+“Bill! What is the matter with the girl? Bill, put down that jug and
+tell me what you mean!”
+
+“I mean,”--but Bill did not put down the jug, she filled it with milk
+instead--“I am going to get Miss Scrivens’s tea,” she said. “I ought to
+have got it before only I have been hindered this afternoon, and I’m
+crazy I think. But, oh, Polly! I’ve got it, got it at last; the money I
+mean, or at least as good as got it, it is going to be mine. I expect
+you will have to do things and sign things first, but the case is
+decided for us and it is all as good as mine already!”
+
+“My dear Bill!” Polly was momentarily overwhelmed by the news, then she
+recovered herself and fetched a tin of sardines from the cupboard. “Oh,
+well,” she said, “if that’s the case we can afford to have a relish
+with our tea.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+THE FULFILLING OF THE DREAM.
+
+
+In the opinion of certain members of the Chancery bar the conclusion
+of the Harborough case was disappointing, for from a legal point of
+view, there was no conclusion. In spite of all that had been said on
+both sides, all the facts and traditions and curious crooks that had
+come to light, the case was in the end as far from a legal decision as
+ever; it was merely withdrawn. This was the best thing possible for the
+litigants and certainly the wisest; still, it was to be deplored, for
+a decision would have been interesting. Apart from the legal aspect
+the conclusion could not be regretted; the buying of the claimant
+was undeniably wise, and at the same time almost romantic, for there
+was something of mystery about it. Nobody, not even the Harboroughs,
+knew who paid for it. Someone, whose name was not mentioned and who
+apparently had no personal interest in the case, found the money, which
+Gilchrist accepted in lieu of his chance of the Gurnett estates, and
+for the consideration of which he duly undertook that neither he nor
+his should ever raise the claim again.
+
+Thus it happened, when the case was well on in its second year, that
+all ended and came to nothing, and Kit Harborough found himself very
+much where he used to expect he would be; but with an addition he did
+not expect in those days,--a certain price to pay for having defended
+his right to be there. Gilchrist had something to pay too, but it
+did not so much matter to him, for he had thought of the costs when
+he bargained for the price of his withdrawal. On the whole he was
+satisfied with the terms; they were not so high as he had tried to get,
+but they were all his chance was worth to him, and all, apparently,
+that the benevolent person unknown was willing to pay.
+
+There was one man, in no way connected with the case, who took a keen
+interest in that benevolent person unknown; not so much at the time,
+but a little later. In the light of subsequent events Mr. Stevens chose
+to find that individual most interesting. “Unless I am much mistaken,”
+he once said, though wisely in no one’s hearing but his own, “there
+is stuff for a good Chancery suit in that buying off of Gilchrist
+Harborough. Certain persons have been juggling with the law, or I’m a
+Dutchman; persons, too, who should have been above suspicion. Mistress
+Wilhelmina has a deal to answer for, bless her wicked little heart!
+I wonder how it was done? I’d give something to know.” But he never
+did know; only, in later years, he used sometimes to doubt if there
+had been much juggling with the law after all; if rather a certain
+childless old man, who was so much richer than most people knew, had
+not chosen secretly to serve a girl in his life instead of benefiting
+her after his death. But of this fancy Mr. Stevens never spoke, for he
+knew, if it were true, that it was a secret hidden even from the girl
+herself, and he, though only a country lawyer, was a man possessed of
+that best wisdom, the knowledge when to keep silent.
+
+But all this was long after; at the time when the Harboroughs’ suit
+was concluded no one even suspected who their benefactor might be. The
+Harboroughs themselves puzzled over it for some time and then, as is
+the nature of man, turned to the consideration of their own affairs.
+Those affairs were identical for both of them in one particular
+at least,--the question of Gilchrist’s return to Australia. It was
+generally understood among those whom it concerned that Gilchrist was
+going back to Australia; he had said he should go so soon as the case
+was settled, but now when it came to the point he did not seem so sure
+about it. Kit took a most surprising interest in his rival’s departure,
+and he noticed his hesitation directly the subject was introduced.
+There was only one occasion when the two Harboroughs spoke of the
+matter, the only occasion on which they met on purely social terms,
+the day they lunched together at Wood Hall. Kit had invited Gilchrist
+there as it were to shake hands after the fight, possibly feeling
+it his duty to do so. Gilchrist accepted the invitation, partly for
+similar reasons, and partly because he had never been inside Wood Hall
+and thought he would rather like to see the old house for which he had
+been fighting; coming with this motive, there is no doubt he also came
+prepared to observe critically and to put a market-value on all he saw.
+
+“I think I have the best of the bargain,” he told Theresa afterwards;
+“the place is in bad repair and at the best of times would take a lot
+of keeping up. Still, I admit it has a charm of its own, a charm
+which cannot be bought or exchanged, and would not, I believe, stand a
+change of ownership. If the house were mine, I should do it up, and, I
+suppose, change its nature; since it is his, he will let things remain
+as they are; he can’t afford to do anything else, poor beggar! But he
+will keep the charm and a few absurd, inimitable, medieval prejudices
+which even an enlightened education cannot make us altogether despise.”
+
+It is to be feared that Gilchrist was not far from the truth in his
+estimate of the poverty likely to reign at Wood Hall. The estate,
+crippled before, could ill afford the money spent in defence of its
+owner’s claim to it. Kit knew this, and knew that the Australian was
+quick to mark signs of prosperity or decay.
+
+The two Harboroughs did not lunch in the big dining-room where Kit
+had sat with Bill on the day that old Mr. Harborough died, but in
+a smaller, more modern room where neither length of possession nor
+shortness of means stood out so plainly. There was little here to
+suggest that evil days had fallen upon the old place, excepting only
+the view from the windows. Gilchrist glanced out once; the pale
+February sunlight was wan on the crack in the stone-work of the
+terrace, on the unswept leaves of the autumn and the untouched borders
+by the wall. Unconsciously he looked towards his host and observed
+him curiously--the well-bred, stoical face, the grave eyes, the
+well-finished hands--the whole man which told so little.
+
+“Are you going to live here?” he asked suddenly.
+
+“Probably not.”
+
+There was a moment’s silence. Kit was evidently not communicative on
+that subject, and Gilchrist looked out of the window again before
+giving expression to the thoughts in his mind. “Pity the old place
+should go to pieces!” he said at last. “I could have saved it--spoiled
+it, perhaps you would have said--still, saved its life after a fashion,
+but you--”
+
+“I shall probably go abroad for the next twenty years; after which, if
+I am not an inveterate wanderer by that time, I shall come home and
+think about getting some bricks and mortar to mend the hole in the
+terrace which we can see so well from here.”
+
+Gilchrist laughed, although he was a little annoyed; he had felt
+vaguely sorry for Kit and the decline of the house of Harborough. But
+Kit kept him well at arm’s length, and the house of Harborough was
+plainly not his concern, so he withdrew his sympathy from the end he
+had himself hastened, and the subject was pursued no further.
+
+It was then that Kit enquired concerning the return to Australia, and
+learned that there was a good deal of uncertainty connected with the
+date of Gilchrist’s departure; indeed, it seemed almost possible that
+he would not leave England at all that year. Kit did not ask why;
+he knew that it was a woman’s will and a woman’s preparations that
+ruled the time of the Australian’s going. Herein he was quite right,
+though he was not right in thinking that woman Bill Alardy. Bill’s
+preparations, like her will, were never long in making; but the woman
+for whom Gilchrist waited was different; who is to hurry a nine months’
+widow, and who make love to the wife of a man whose grave has not long
+been green?
+
+But of this difficulty Kit knew nothing, and since he was very well
+aware that Bill’s betrothal was of a private nature, he could not make
+any remark upon it even had he wished. So he was still unenlightened as
+to the name of the woman whose pleasure Gilchrist waited when a little
+later the Australian took his leave.
+
+Kit went to the door with him, stood on the step looking after him even
+when he was out of sight, stood there until the sound of his horse’s
+feet had died away in the distance. The sun was gone now; ashy clouds
+had crept over the sky, and all the world was still and grey with the
+soft, tired look of endless afternoon. Kit went down the steps and
+walked slowly past the west front of the house; once he glanced up at
+the crooked windows and the sloping, many-peaked roof, but he looked
+away again quickly as if the sight hurt him. He reached the end of the
+terrace but he did not go back; instead he wandered aimlessly across
+the lawn, down the rose-walk, past the box-edged beds and the yew
+trees once trimly clipped into quaint devices. The devices were lost
+now, the clipping had not been done for many years. Bill had once said
+that, were the trees hers, she would learn to clip them herself rather
+than that they should be left. So she would, too; she would clip the
+trees and weed the paths and save the house from its approaching decay!
+Gilchrist had said that day he would have saved it; how could he fail
+to save it with her for wife? Old Harborough himself had testified that
+she, and such as she, penniless though they might be, alone could save
+an exhausted family, a proud, poor, played-out race.
+
+Kit had come to the outskirts of the wood now; he stopped for a moment,
+not from indecision as to which path to follow, but because he wished
+to call a halt in his mind and force himself to face the truth. Why
+should he pretend to look upon Bill as the saviour of his family, the
+prop of his house? It is true she could have been all that, but it was
+also true that she was something else to him; not prop nor saviour, but
+the only woman the world held. He had been but a boy eighteen months
+ago when he first looked into her eyes; he had grown to manhood in
+those eighteen months, but it did not matter, the look thrilled him
+still. He had not seen her since that October day when they pledged
+each other to duty, but he had not forgotten; he would never forget;
+there are some it is not easy to forget.
+
+He had been following the footpath that led from the gardens to the
+little church, but he turned away before he reached the low boundary
+wall and wandered on through the waste of dead bracken till he struck
+the public footpath which gave upon the lane by a swing-gate. There
+was someone standing by the gate, someone with arms resting upon the
+topmost bar, and eyes fixed, not upon the path with its approaching
+figure, but upon the leafless tree-tops of the wood.
+
+For half a second Kit paused, a sensation almost of fear at his
+heart--how could she be here in the flesh? Then, at a bound he had
+reached the gate; flesh or phantom, he must see her, must touch her
+hand once again.
+
+“Bill!”
+
+He had put his hand on the hands on the gate. They were warm, living
+hands; he held them fast and there was no effort made to draw them
+away. She did not start nor cry out; she did not move at all; she only
+looked up at him, silent yet with throbbing breast. So they stood, the
+gate between them, for the space of a full minute, and the world seemed
+to hold but them alone.
+
+From the main road there came the sound of horse’s feet, steady,
+slow-going, some farm-horse on its way to the blacksmith’s in the
+village. The sound of hoofs recalled to Kit the last time he had heard
+it and recalled also the thought of the man who rode away from his
+house not an hour ago. He dropped the hands he held almost as if they
+burnt him.
+
+“He cannot--shall not have you!” The words were hardly spoken; they
+seemed wrung from him against his will.
+
+The discarded hands pulled a splinter off the gate. “He,--he doesn’t
+want me”--their owner seemed much interested in the splinter.
+
+“Not want you? You--”
+
+The gate was between them no longer.
+
+A while later the farm-horse, having been to the blacksmith’s, was
+led home by way of the lane; the man who led him saw no one about the
+lonely spot; there was no one by the swing-gate or on the footpath
+going to the church, no one visible at all. In the shelter of the
+leafless wood, however, there were two who explained many things. There
+were many things which needed explanation they found,--the mystery of
+Bill’s freedom, for one, and Kit’s ignorance of it, for another. The
+first was easy to recount; the second Bill found harder to explain.
+
+“I could not tell you,” she said at last; “of course I could not tell
+you. Do you know the feeling, the consciousness almost, that you can
+have and get whatever you make up your mind to have? That has been my
+feeling so long; but I was afraid to seek for this; I wanted it to be
+the free gift of God to me; I wanted it an unsought gift, or not at
+all. Do you understand what I mean?” And in case he did not, she went
+on to give another reason. “I have been getting so much lately,” she
+said, flashing a shy smile at him, “getting and willing and taking that
+I think I wanted someone to take me.”
+
+And it is to be presumed that Kit understood the art of taking her,
+for the next explanation did not follow immediately. When it did come
+it had reference to Bill’s unexpected appearance at the gate that
+afternoon.
+
+“There is no mystery about that,” Bill said. “I came to look at a
+house at Sales Green. We are thinking of moving in the spring or
+early summer, and we are looking out for a house with a large garden
+somewhere in this part--the garden is for me, the house for Polly, the
+part for Theresa who wants to be near Bella. However, the Sales Green
+house is no good at all; we shall have to look out for another.”
+
+“Did you come from town to-day?”
+
+“Yes; Bella met me at Wrugglesby and drove me to look at the house
+and then home with her to lunch. Afterwards I started to walk to the
+rectory, having promised to go to tea with Mr. Dane; he is going to
+drive me to the station this evening.”
+
+“You do not seem to have chosen a very direct route to the rectory.”
+
+“No,” Bill was obliged to admit; “but I thought I would like to go down
+the lane once more and,--and I did not know you were at home.”
+
+Kit showed the utmost satisfaction in having been at home on this
+occasion, and they passed on to the next explanation which was of a
+different nature and was given by Kit. It had to do with his prospects
+and the narrow means he had to offer; the thought of them made him
+remember now it was too late that he had but small right to ask her to
+share his lot.
+
+“Don’t you know?” Bill exclaimed eagerly almost before she had heard
+him out. “Haven’t you heard? I have got money now,--oh, I am so glad!
+I thought perhaps Mr. Briant would have told you, but I suppose he
+thought you had worries enough of your own.”
+
+Perhaps this was the case; at all events, as Mr. Briant had not told
+the tale in full, Bill told it now, and with it the name of the unknown
+benefactor who had put an end to the Harborough suit. Possibly she
+did not tell it well, certainly Kit was astonished almost beyond
+comprehension.
+
+“You?” he said and he stood to look at her. “You did it?”
+
+“Yes,” and she stood still too, twisting a dry twig she held. She
+snapped the brown thing nervously. “I’m sorry, Kit,” she said humbly.
+She knew that it is not always easy to receive a favour. “I’m sorry,
+but there did not seem anyone else to settle it, and it had to be done.
+I know it is hard to take things from a woman but,--do you mind so very
+much from me?”
+
+Kit’s throat swelled painfully. After all, he was very much a boy
+still; but he took the favour and the giver of the favour all in one.
+
+Later, as they went up the forest path together, he asked her what
+she would have done had he not met her at the gate that day. “It is
+all very well,” he said, “to say that you have saved Wood Hall for
+yourself as well as for me, but supposing I had not met you to-day,
+supposing I had never learned you were free?”
+
+“Then I should have gone to live in a house with a big garden and grown
+tons of cabbages.”
+
+Kit laughed. “But tell me,” he persisted, “would you have never let me
+know?”
+
+She shook her head. “I made up my mind to tell no one,” she said,
+“only Polly assured me that if ever I married I would have to tell
+my husband; for one reason because he might find out if I did not,
+for another because it would be wrong to hide things from him. For
+the first reason I do not care, I would have risked that; but for the
+second it is different. I am not afraid that you will misunderstand and
+it seems a pity to begin with secrets.”
+
+“Yes;”--Kit had possessed himself of the small strong hand,--“a great
+pity since we are to have all things in common.”
+
+And so they passed through the silent wood where the shadows lay,
+brown and purple and deepest blue; they followed the wet path still
+studded with the autumn’s funguses, crossed the deep hollows where last
+year’s leaves glowed in the even light, under the old trees, twisted
+pollards and stately beeches, and so on, up the hill. Once a startled
+jay flashed from the covert of a thorn-bush low down across their path;
+once a rabbit looked out from among the beech-roots; nothing else
+moved, and in the stillness of a holy world they came to the gardens
+and to the house.
+
+Together they went by the western front to the great door still open as
+Kit had left it; together they entered the wide, dim hall. Kit turned
+as he stood on the threshold and looked up at the old house. “Not
+yours nor mine,” he said, “but ours, sweetheart.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the diamond buckles came to Kit Harborough’s wife after all, for
+they were given to her on her wedding-day by one who still called her
+“Princess Puck, child of the Lord’s consolation.”
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+GLASGOW: PRINTED AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS BY ROBERT MACLEHOSE AND CO.
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
+
+
+ Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
+
+ Perceived typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
+
+ Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76967 ***
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76967 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt=""></div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="titlepage">
+<h1>PRINCESS PUCK</h1>
+
+<p>BY<br>
+<span class="large">U. L. SILBERRAD</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="antiqua">London</span><br>
+<span class="large">MACMILLAN AND CO., <span class="smcap">Limited</span></span><br>
+1902</p>
+
+<p><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">CHAPTER</span></td><td class="tdr" colspan="2"><span class="allsmcap">PAGE</span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td> MISS BROWNLOW’S NIECES,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td> BILL,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_12"> 12</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td> ROBERT MORTON,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_20"> 20</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td> HARBOROUGH OF CROWS’ FARM,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_31"> 31</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td> FOR BILL’S GOOD,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_44"> 44</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td>THE RIGHT OF WAY,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_57"> 57</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td> HARBOROUGH OF GURNETT,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_72"> 72</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td> THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF GURNETT,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_88"> 88</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td> “RED IS THE ROSE,”</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_107"> 107</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td> IN THE GARDEN,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_124"> 124</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td> WILHELMINA I. AND II.,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_138"> 138</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td> NATURAL SELECTION,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_150"> 150</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XIII.</td><td> CHASING A SHADOW,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_156"> 156</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XIV.</td><td> THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF CROWS’ FARM,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_171"> 171</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XV.</td><td> FAMILY HISTORY,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_187"> 187</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XVI.</td><td> A GRANDFATHER,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_198"> 198</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XVII.</td><td> THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF A GUARDIAN,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_208"> 208</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XVIII.</td><td> THE PLUM HARVEST,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_219"> 219</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XIX.</td><td> PETER HARBOROUGH: SHOT,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_231"> 231</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XX.</td><td> HARBOROUGH OF BYBRIDGE,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_248"> 248</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXI.</td><td> THE ACQUISITIVE FACULTY,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_266"> 266</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXII.</td><td> POLLY SETTLES THINGS,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_279"> 279</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXIII.</td><td> PETER HARBOROUGH’S SHOE-BUCKLES,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_285"> 285</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXIV.</td><td> THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF BYBRIDGE,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_303"> 303</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXV.</td><td> GENERAL SERVANT,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_317"> 317</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXVI.</td><td> AN OLD WOUND,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_337"> 337</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXVII.</td><td> A CHIP OF THE OLD BLOCK,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_346"> 346</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXVIII.</td><td> THE OAK BOX GOES TO WRUGGLESBY,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_364"> 364</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXIX.</td><td> POLLY PROVES A TRUE PROPHET,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_378"> 378</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXX.</td><td> A RELISH WITH TEA,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_392"> 392</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXXI.</td><td> THE FULFILLING OF THE DREAM,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_399"> 399</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I.<br>
+<small>MISS BROWNLOW’S NIECES.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was in March that Bill Alardy went to Ashelton.
+She was sent there “to grow up,” Polly said, and
+added some sceptical remarks with regard to both
+place and person. “Poor little Wilhelmina,” said
+Miss Brownlow, “she has never had a fair chance
+among us all; the best possible thing for her would
+be to go to Ashelton with Theresa.” And Miss
+Brownlow should have known, for she was acquainted
+with Ashelton, and even better acquainted
+with Bill, having had the doubtful pleasure of her
+charge and company from early childhood. Polly
+did not know much about Ashelton; she had only
+been there once to spend the day with Theresa,
+which was a grievance in itself, for Theresa had lived
+there ever since her marriage last June. That,
+however, was beside the point; Polly did not so
+much base her doubts of the efficacy of the plan on
+Ashelton as on Bill, and she had known her as long
+as Miss Brownlow, for she was the eldest, as Bill
+was the youngest, of the four nieces Miss Brownlow
+had taken into her household. Polly’s opinion and
+Miss Brownlow’s were not identical on the subject
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>of Bill; but when the matter of the going to
+Ashelton was being discussed Polly did not consider
+it necessary to give undue prominence to the difference,
+thinking Bill might as well go even if it did
+her no good.</p>
+
+<p>It was a Monday evening when the plan was first
+mentioned, and Miss Brownlow was making up her
+accounts at the time. She always made up her
+accounts on Monday evenings. In her opinion
+there was no other time half so satisfactory, because,
+as she said, there was Sunday just before, and it was
+so easy to remember forgotten things on a Sunday.
+Perhaps it was not right to think of such things
+then, and of course she never did so on purpose,
+only one cannot help things flashing across one’s
+mind. Occasionally the things flashed away again
+before she had time to secure them on Monday
+evening; occasionally also, the flashes were delusive
+and baseless; but on the other hand, sometimes
+they did chance to be correct, and then it was most
+satisfactory. This did not make any material
+difference to Miss Brownlow’s accounts, which never
+by any chance came right; they never had come
+right since she first began keeping them in her girlhood,
+more years ago than she ever mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>“My father always insisted on our keeping an
+account of our money, and how we spent it,” she
+used to say to her nieces. “It is an excellent plan,
+my dears, for then you know where you are and
+how you stand.” These desirable results did not
+always occur in her own case, though that did not
+deter her nieces from following the suggestion, each
+according to her nature,—Theresa with neatness and
+some success, Bella with results not unlike her aunt’s,
+Polly—there were commercial instincts in Polly’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>blood and her untidy books were kept with an
+accuracy which might have savoured of sharp
+practice to any one who could comprehend them.
+Bill, of course, was too young to be considered, and
+too penniless to keep a record of her non-existent
+income; moreover, she was only “Poor little Bill—Wilhelmina”—Miss
+Brownlow invariably made the
+correction in mind and sometimes in speech. She
+sighed as she thought about the girl,—she had just
+come to the item <i>one shilling, a bottle of Stephens’s blue-black
+writing-ink</i>. Bill had on Thursday upset the
+last bottle on the schoolroom-floor, in class, too,
+with all the little girls looking on. How they
+giggled! Polly said afterwards that Bill made
+them, but Miss Brownlow did not think so. Bill
+was too old to do anything so wrong; she was
+seventeen now, though she seemed such a child.
+Polly, who was perhaps not without authority on
+the subject, was of opinion that age had little to do
+with iniquity, but Miss Brownlow was not convinced.
+In any case she had to pay the shilling
+for another bottle of ink. The column of figures
+she was now counting up did not come to the total
+she expected: “Now what have I forgotten?” she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Bella and Theresa glanced up but did not hazard a
+suggestion; they knew the remark was not addressed
+to them, and they went on correcting French
+exercises in silence. These French exercises were
+really Bella’s work, but Theresa was helping her
+with them to-night. A year ago they were Theresa’s
+own, but when she married her sister had taken up
+that part of her work. Theresa was on a visit to
+Miss Brownlow, and finding herself back among the
+familiar surroundings it came quite natural to her to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>take up some part of the old duties; besides, she
+liked to help Bella.</p>
+
+<p>As the two tall sisters sat close together, sharing
+the same dictionary and sometimes bending over the
+same page, Miss Brownlow thought they made a
+beautiful picture; possibly even a less prejudiced
+observer might not have entirely disagreed. Polly
+was certainly not a prejudiced observer, yet even she
+admitted the sisters’ beauty in a general way. She
+did not look in their direction now, for she was busy
+with her needlework. She sat opposite to Miss
+Brownlow, close to the lamp, her dressmaking
+scattered around her. She possessed a perfect
+genius for what is technically known as “doing up”
+her clothes; consequently some of them were always
+undergoing alterations and repairs, and none of them
+kept the same appearance for long together.</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot account for sixpence,” Miss Brownlow
+said at last; “on what can I have spent sixpence?”</p>
+
+<p>“Cabbages,” Polly said briefly.</p>
+
+<p>“Cabbages! My dear Polly, one cannot buy
+cabbages at this time of year, nor hardly anything
+else either; vegetables are so dear and scarce, it is
+really quite dreadful.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sweep,” was Polly’s only comment.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not the sweep, Miss Brownlow said.
+“We have not had him this fortnight past,” she
+declared. “Don’t you remember, the last—”</p>
+
+<p>“Then we ought to have had.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I am sure we do not need him yet, don’t
+you remember the last time he came—”</p>
+
+<p>Polly did not remember, and she showed no interest
+in the reminiscence; but Theresa, who did not like
+to hear Miss Brownlow treated so cavalierly, encouraged
+her aunt to describe the last coming of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>sweep and the delinquencies of the maid-servant who
+overslept herself on that occasion. “And I really do
+believe he would never have got in at all if it had not
+been for Bill; she heard him ringing and went down
+and let him in,—in her nightdress too!”</p>
+
+<p>“That sixpence is for mending Bill’s boots.” This
+was Polly’s remark.</p>
+
+<p>“What a memory you have!” Miss Brownlow
+exclaimed, and Polly showed signs of remembering
+the incident of the sweep. “Bill did go down
+to him,” she said, “in her nightdress and <i>nothing
+else</i>. I should like to know how long she stopped
+down with him!”</p>
+
+<p>Polly had a habit of talking in italics; her treatment
+of the English language made it acquire an
+almost double value, her intonation giving the words
+an additional worth and meaning. Her last speech
+was an admirable example of her methods; there
+were many more things implied in it than were said.
+It was the implications which made Bella exclaim,
+“You are hard on the child.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, well!” And Polly shrugged her shoulders
+and bent over her work again.</p>
+
+<p>“Poor little Bill, poor little Wilhelmina!” Miss
+Brownlow sighed softly.</p>
+
+<p>Polly sniffed and Theresa asked: “How much
+longer are you going to let her be in the school?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, a long time,” Miss Brownlow answered
+readily; she had not begun to contemplate the problem
+of Bill’s future, nor even to admit its existence.
+Polly knew that and her small dark eyes showed
+that she knew it as she remarked: “I began to
+teach the little ones before I was seventeen.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Brownlow looked distressed, but Bella said
+cheerfully: “That was long ago; Auntie wanted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>help then. Now it is quite different; if Bill were
+ever so able to teach there would not be the slightest
+need for her to do it; in fact I don’t see whom she
+would teach.”</p>
+
+<p>This speech, though perhaps hardly likely to fulfil
+its comforting intention, was unfortunately only too
+true. It was indisputable that Miss Brownlow’s
+school was not what it had been, that its best days
+lay behind it. At one time it had been almost an
+Establishment, the recognised school of Wrugglesby,
+the place to which the country clergymen and gentlemen-farmers
+of the surrounding districts sent their
+daughters. The boarders were so many then that it
+had been necessary to have a <i>mademoiselle</i> and a
+visiting English governess. That was some time
+ago, but even when Theresa first began to help with
+the teaching, things were more prosperous than they
+were now. Gradually they had changed; times had
+changed, boarders had fallen off one by one, new
+ones did not come; girls went further now,—to
+Brighton, to Bournemouth, even to France and
+Germany. Mademoiselle left, and it hardly seemed
+necessary to fill her place, for Theresa was a very
+good French scholar. The English governess married,
+and Bella was found equal to doing all that was left
+of her work. Then, rather more than a year ago,
+Theresa married, and though Miss Brownlow talked
+of finding some nice well-educated girl to fill her
+place, nothing came of it. Theresa used to take the
+elder girls, and they were so few now that Bella
+could quite well help Miss Brownlow with them,
+especially as she was rather clever; she had passed
+the Cambridge Local Examination and attended
+some history lectures. Polly, of course, still taught
+the little ones; she always had done so, and had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>always contrived to drill a certain amount of information
+into them. It is to be feared that she did
+not know very much herself; even Miss Brownlow
+was obliged to admit that; yet she possessed a far
+greater faculty for teaching than did the more accomplished
+Bella. As the school was chiefly composed of
+little girls, it really was important that they should be
+well taught. Sometimes Miss Brownlow felt a passing
+regret when she saw them struggling for their overshoes
+in the lobby; they were not what her old
+pupils had been, not of the same social position, not
+of the same age; most of them were “reductions”
+on account of sisters past, present, or to come; none
+of them were likely to remain any length of time,
+none of them were even weekly boarders. There
+were only two boarders besides Wilhelmina, who
+could hardly be counted since she belonged to the
+household.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Wilson, the principal of the High School
+two stations up the line, thought of Miss Brownlow
+when, in her able paper on the education of girls,
+she had written of teachers of the past. Miss
+Brownlow was of the past, not highly educated, not
+clever, but kindly, simple, pleasant, well loved by
+those pupils of long ago, a gentle power for good in
+those past best days,—and in the present? Ah, well,
+the school was going; there were no boarders to be
+influenced one way or the other now, and the little
+girls who came daily did not trouble about Miss
+Brownlow. She was of a race of schoolmistresses
+fast disappearing from the earth, vanishing under the
+inexorable law of the survival of the fittest. She was
+not the fittest. Inefficient? Yes, that was it; inefficient
+for modern needs, modern wants; growing
+old, just a little past the work she once did, not at all
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>fit for the work now to be done; never a very wise
+woman, thank God, not wise enough to know that
+she was a failure.</p>
+
+<p>“Wilhelmina will teach somewhere else,” Miss
+Brownlow said, after she had mentally reviewed the
+prospect called up by Bella’s words; and mercifully
+the prospect she reviewed was not quite that which
+other people saw.</p>
+
+<p>“Where?” Polly asked casually, as if the matter
+were of small moment.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Brownlow did not know. She had not
+thought, and the question was embarrassing.</p>
+
+<p>Bella came to the rescue. “Mrs. Caxton will
+want a governess if her little girls are leaving at
+Easter. They are leaving because they always catch
+colds from the other children, so she is sure to want
+a governess.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, of course,” Miss Brownlow said enthusiastically;
+“it would be the very thing for Bill; she
+never has a cold.”</p>
+
+<p>“H’m! What is she to teach? How not to
+catch cold? It is about the only thing she knows,
+and she does that by accident.”</p>
+
+<p>“They are so young,” Miss Brownlow went on,
+delighted with the plan and regardless of Polly’s
+interruption; “they will only want elementary
+teaching, reading and writing and spelling.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill can’t spell, not that that matters so very
+much though”—Polly perhaps knew by experience
+that it was possible to teach a subject in which you
+were not very deeply learned. “It certainly would not
+matter to Bill, nothing would matter. If she could
+spell every word in the dictionary, do you suppose
+any one would have her for a governess?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know why not,—when she is a little
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>older of course. She is such a child yet; wait till
+she is grown up.”</p>
+
+<p>“We have been waiting,” Polly observed grimly.</p>
+
+<p>“She is very young for her age; I am sure I don’t
+know how it is.”</p>
+
+<p>“She was born without gumption,” said Polly
+with conviction, “and she has never been able to
+acquire any general knowledge.”</p>
+
+<p>“She is not clever,” Miss Brownlow admitted
+sadly.</p>
+
+<p>“Cleverness has nothing to do with it,” Polly
+retorted. “If you start in life lacking what Bill
+lacks, you must do what you can with common-sense.
+That will teach you a few things,—what not
+to say, and how to say it, and—and all that. Bill
+has no common-sense.”</p>
+
+<p>“We have always treated her like a child;” and
+here Miss Brownlow sighed again.</p>
+
+<p>It was then that Theresa suggested that Bill should
+come home with her to stay at Ashelton for a little
+while. Miss Brownlow was delighted with the suggestion;
+it was just the thing, she was sure. No
+doubt the girl would develop; Theresa would use
+her influence, and her young cousin had always been
+so fond of her, had always respected and admired her
+so much; such a visit would be the best possible
+thing. Theresa herself did not anticipate very great
+results, but she promised to do her best, and after
+some discussion of details regarding the proposed
+visit, Miss Brownlow returned to her accounts and
+the sisters to the exercises, interrupted only now and
+again by a repetition of the elder lady’s satisfaction
+with the plan. After the third interruption Polly
+yawned aggressively. When there was silence again
+she bit her cotton and looked thoughtfully across at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>Miss Brownlow, at the kindly face, the thin hair, the
+black stuff gown she knew so well. She did not
+approve of the whole effect; she thought it “snuffy,”
+and as such unlikely to create a favourable impression
+on the parents of possible scholars. She looked
+beyond Miss Brownlow to the wall behind,—to the
+pale-toned paper with faint gold lines and fainter
+grey flowers, to the old-fashioned water-colours in
+shabby gilt frames, the white marble mantelpiece
+with red glass candlesticks upon it, and to the
+rosewood chairs covered with green rep, standing one
+on either side of the fireplace. The room was no
+more attractive than Miss Brownlow’s dress, she
+thought; it was terribly old-fashioned in comparison
+with Miss Wilson’s flatted walls and artistic green
+cushions. Polly had a poor opinion of art-colours,
+but she seriously considered the advisability of draping
+some of the household gods with the best of the
+shades of yellow. She was, in her own mind,
+reckoning the quantity of material necessary, when
+Miss Brownlow again broke in on her reflections.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you sure Robert won’t mind?” she asked
+for the fourth time.</p>
+
+<p>“Quite sure,” was Theresa’s answer.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right; I should not like to put him
+about at all. You are quite certain?”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa was quite certain, and the subject was
+dismissed. Polly breathed a heavy sigh, and once
+more fell back on her own thoughts. These now
+turned from the art-materials to Robert Morton,
+Theresa’s husband. Polly had not a very high
+opinion of Robert Morton; she liked him well
+enough, but considered him a bad speculation.
+“He’ll die of apoplexy—poor Theresa—I’m sorry
+for that poor girl. He’ll certainly die of it, and I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>expect he’ll die young.” So she had once said to the
+indignant Bella, and she thought of the verdict again
+this evening as she glanced at the sisters and mentally
+dressed Theresa in widow’s weeds. She would make
+a handsome widow, though perhaps not so effective as
+Bella. Polly glanced meditatively at Bella; a widow’s
+cap would look well on that golden head. Theresa
+was darker and older too by nearly four years; she
+would be twenty-six in the summer and she looked her
+age; in fact, Theresa was almost too dignified. Bella
+was not dignified, though she was tall. They were both
+tall and graceful and clear-skinned; both had blue
+eyes, Theresa’s grave and sweet, Bella’s holy, innocent,
+suggesting a madonna’s eyes to the observer until he
+became aware of the turned-up nose between; “a
+flirt’s nose,” Polly called it. Theresa’s features were
+better, though less attractive; she had not a flirt’s
+nose, but also she had no tantalising dimple in her
+chin. Still they were both undeniably beauties, and
+Polly was nothing of the sort.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II.<br>
+<small>BILL.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Theresa</span> and Bella Waring were beauties when they
+came to Miss Brownlow’s seven years ago, well-educated,
+well-informed, used to the ways of society
+(of small professional society), and possessed of sixty
+pounds a year between them. Their father had been
+dead some years then; it was their mother’s death
+which sent them and their sixty pounds to Langford
+House. Theresa came to help with the teaching,
+Bella to finish her education first, and afterwards to
+fill her sister’s place. Of course Miss Brownlow
+received them gladly, loved them warmly, mothered
+them to the best of her ability. She would have done
+that for any number of nieces, and she did it heartily
+for these four. Polly felt angry as she thought of
+their numbers, and thought contemptuously of the
+Brownlow family and its faculty for dying. There
+had been five Miss Brownlows originally; one died
+young, three married first and then died at their
+earliest convenience, leaving their children as a legacy
+to the remaining sister who neither married nor died.
+She, possessed of short views, a large heart, and an
+inexhaustible supply of hope, welcomed them with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>open arms. Two of them she had to adopt entirely;
+the other two, Theresa and Bella, came to her better
+endowed, better equipped, and at a more convenient
+age.</p>
+
+<p>And what had they done with their advantages?
+Polly put the case to herself with contemptuous
+irritation. Bella, so she summed it up, Bella at
+twenty-two had done nothing; Theresa at twenty-six
+had contrived to marry a small farmer. No doubt
+his family had originally been good, but one cannot
+live on a good family, especially if it is all but extinct;
+and the goodness did not prevent Robert from being
+a farmer in a small way, and an unsuccessful one too.
+He was undoubtedly a poor speculation; his tastes
+were expensive, his inclinations horsey, his income
+small, his tendencies apoplectic; he would soon, no
+doubt, die, and die suddenly, leaving Theresa no
+better off than she was a year ago. Really these two
+girls were stupid, as stupid as the Brownlow family.
+And yet their mother had been the best of the five
+sisters, according to all accounts; the strongest as
+well as the prettiest, for she had managed to live to
+quite a respectable age. Possibly her daughters were
+like her; they were sensible enough for any ordinary
+occasion but they were not, in Polly’s opinion, able to
+take advantage of adverse circumstances. “They
+would die off easily,” she thought, “and they haven’t
+an idea between them worth mentioning.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly was not like the Brownlow family. She took
+after her father, a dubious advantage, and she flattered
+herself that she had ideas worth,—well, something,
+although perhaps they were not always quite suitable
+for public mention. She also had an easy conscience,
+and in her youth some little acquaintance with social
+byways. She had a tenacious hold on life, and was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>not likely to follow her mother’s and aunts’ example
+and die easily. “So has Bill,” she thought; “she is
+silly and she is ugly, but she won’t fade out of the
+world in a hurry, though I can’t see what good she
+will ever be in it.”</p>
+
+<p>This last sentiment found something like an echo,
+albeit unexpressed, in the minds of two other inmates
+of Langford House, the two boarders Carrie and
+Alice. They were quiet, inoffensive girls, a year or
+two younger than Bill, and forced by circumstances
+to have more of her company than they desired.
+The greater part of the day the three were together,
+and for the night they shared one room so that the
+sisters’ nocturnal confidences had to be held in
+common with their companion. It must be admitted
+that Carrie and Alice did not altogether like
+Bill, though they felt a sort of superior pity for
+her which was not all unpleasant. On the evening
+when Miss Brownlow and her nieces were
+planning Bill’s future good, Carrie and Alice were
+giving her a little advice while going to bed. It was
+on the subject of hairdressing, Carrie thinking it was
+time Bill coiled her hair on the top of her head.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s quite time,” she concluded. “Are you going
+to wait till you are eighteen? When are you going
+to do it up?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill considered: “To-morrow,” she said at last.</p>
+
+<p>“To-morrow?” Carrie repeated, and Alice added:
+“You can’t, you haven’t got any hairpins.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll get some of Bella’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t,” Carrie said again, and turning to the
+glass began to arrange her own hair.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Waring has gold-coloured hairpins,” Alice
+remarked; “you could not use them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>“Because it would look horrid to have brass hairpins
+sticking out of your hair.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that all?” Bill did not seem impressed.</p>
+
+<p>Carrie turned away from the glass. “That is how
+I shall do my hair,” she said. “I shall do it up the
+day I leave school, the very day.”</p>
+
+<p>“I like plaits better,” Alice observed; but Bill
+examined the head-dress thoughtfully, and then
+asked: “And what else will you do when you leave
+school,—besides your hair, I mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“Besides my hair? How ridiculous you are!”
+Carrie did not seem displeased by the question. She
+condescended to answer it rather fully, and as she
+took off her shoes and stockings talked of the possibilities
+of evening parties, the certainty of afternoon
+calls, the charms of long dresses, and of the young
+men who stayed at the Rectory. Alice joined in
+this explanation, and in fact the sisters were soon
+talking to and for each other only, having almost
+forgotten Bill’s presence until she exclaimed suddenly:
+“Men! It’s all men! Why are they nicer
+than women?”</p>
+
+<p>She was sitting on her pillow in her favourite
+position, her knees drawn up, her elbows resting
+upon them, and her chin framed in her hands; she
+was looking straight in front of her and only turned
+her eyes on the sisters when she spoke. They objected
+to her method of looking round without
+turning her head; that, in addition to the impropriety
+of the remark, made Carrie answer severely:
+“Men are not nicer than women; nobody thinks so
+except those who are fast.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, they are nicer. You think so, Polly thinks
+so, Bella thinks so, every girl thinks so, though I
+don’t see why.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>“You don’t know any men”; this was said with
+great contempt.</p>
+
+<p>“No, nor any girls either, except you two, and
+you are nice!” Bill had an enormous mouth and
+the beginning of a smile curved it as she spoke.</p>
+
+<p>“Then it is more than you are,” Alice retorted
+with irritation, “or you would not talk about men
+like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Men aren’t half so amusing as women,” Bill
+went on, ignoring the last speech; “and women
+aren’t half so amusing when men are there. I can’t
+see where the attraction comes in with any of them—the
+rector, the curates, the masters at the grammar-school,
+Robert Morton, any of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course they don’t take any notice of you,”
+Carrie said, and Alice added: “You only think
+about people being amusing; you like people whom
+you can imitate.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s why I like you,” Bill said sweetly.
+“Why do you like people—men?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like men; you have never heard me
+speak of them!”</p>
+
+<p>“Heard!” Bill laughed. “I have felt; I have
+felt you crinkle up for a boy!”</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t! How dare you say such things!”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not? Where is the harm? You talk
+about men to each other, why not to me? You
+never have before, but I see no reason why you
+should not. Do you consider it wrong to like men?
+How queer it is; you all like men and you all
+pretend you do not. There is a deal of humbug
+about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Some people,” Carrie said with severity, “have a
+sense of decency.”</p>
+
+<p>“A sense of decency? That’s what Adam and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>Eve had when they hid themselves; a sense of
+decency often seems to mean hiding something.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are very wicked!” Alice said scandalised,
+and would have nothing more to say to Bill for some
+time, though after the light was out and all three
+were in bed the sisters continued to talk to each other
+about the wonderful future, the first ball Carrie
+would attend, and the events that would follow.</p>
+
+<p>“And after that,” came the voice from Bill’s bed,—“what
+are you going to do after that?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” Carrie answered; “marry I
+suppose. There is a use for your despised men;
+you can’t marry without them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Marry—h’m!—Yes, I expect you will marry.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you really think so? I don’t know—and
+yet,—yes, I suppose I should rather like to; not yet
+of course, but by and by, to marry and to have
+several children.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you are sure to; you are like the old white
+hen with feathers down her legs; you would make a
+splendid sitter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill!”</p>
+
+<p>“Now what’s the matter? Is it the sense of
+decency again?”</p>
+
+<p>But the sisters would not answer her question and,
+having told her so, went on to say that, as it was
+forbidden to talk after the light was out, they were
+not going to do it any more, especially to her. Then
+they went to sleep, leaving Bill to her own reflections.
+She, thus left, rolled over on her back and lay staring
+up into the darkness above her and thinking. At
+her age one does not always think with a definite
+coherent clearness; dreaming is more to the mind of
+seventeen. Bill dreamed, fancies and thoughts flitting
+to and fro in her mind.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>About marriage, for instance; last year Theresa
+had tried the great experiment to which Carrie looked
+forward. Carrie would try it by and by; she would
+become Mrs. Somebody and grow staid and stout
+and placid; she would talk about “my house” and
+“my husband”; she would bound the universe,
+almost the Kingdom of Heaven by those two; she
+would wear a black silk dress and a heavy gold chain
+like Mrs. Bodling; she would get fatter and fairer
+and calmer; she would entirely lose sight of her
+feet——</p>
+
+<p>Bill stretched out her own feet, and then lay still
+to listen. The wind crept in at the open window
+and stirred the curtains; the cloth on the toilet-table
+flapped idly, reminding her of quiet, slumberous
+summer afternoons, of a certain Thursday afternoon
+in June especially,—it was in June that Theresa had
+entered on the great experiment. In the first freshness
+of early summer she left the school and the old
+routine-work and the narrow, cosy, feminine life and
+went out to try a wider, fuller, new life. She was to
+have a house of her own and a servant; there had
+been a lot of talk about the house (here Bill built an
+ideal house for herself), a lot of things to be bought,
+a lot of new clothes for Theresa. Miss Brownlow
+and the girls had pinched and scraped and worked;
+Bill had been allowed to help a little, though her
+work was more strong than neat. Evening after
+evening Bella and Polly and Theresa had sat at work
+with Miss Brownlow—how they seemed to enjoy it!
+Theresa must have missed that when she went to her
+new home; Bill wondered what she did during those
+first evenings of the new life. Then the great day
+had come; Bill recalled every detail of it. There
+had been excitement and bustle and people and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>flowers, Theresa in her bridal gown, and everywhere
+the scent of the little white roses—the white roses
+which made Bill think of funerals, though she did
+not know why.</p>
+
+<p>Then Theresa had gone away. She kissed them
+all and cried, and smiled and cried again, and went.
+Robert Morton looked rather cross during the kissing
+and crying, but nobody seemed to mind. They
+were quite sure Theresa was happy, quite sure she
+had attained to all that she desired; only Bill
+thought she must be very lonely. She had also an
+inward conviction, founded on nothing, that Theresa
+would be desperately disappointed in her venture.
+There was no reason for these thoughts, and Theresa
+had said nothing to suggest them; she seemed happy,
+and they all thought her so except Bill, and Bill was
+so childish that she could not be expected to know
+anything about the matter. She had only once been
+to Theresa’s home at Ashelton. They had all driven
+there one September day and enjoyed it greatly. Bill
+could recall every detail of the expedition, her memory
+was vivid and her experiences few. She had never
+been again to Ashelton; she had never been on a
+visit—</p>
+
+<p>She was growing very sleepy now, and her thoughts
+became confused with the words of the cousins who
+were speaking just outside the door.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall be very glad to have her.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will be more glad to be rid of her; besides,
+she has no clothes.”</p>
+
+<p>At the Day of Judgment Polly would still be considering
+her clothes—she would probably want to
+let out her garment of righteousness if—but sleep
+mastered Bill here.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III.<br>
+<small>ROBERT MORTON.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was September,—rich September, with warm lights
+and red shadows—when Bill went first to Haylands,
+Robert Morton’s farm. It was March when
+she went again; a grey afternoon, level light, and
+dead stillness over the bare ploughed land and the
+low white house. She drove from Wrugglesby with
+Theresa, a tedious drive along winding lanes,—not
+that she found it tedious, for nothing was tedious to
+Bill. Theresa, too, had enjoyed her homeward
+journey more than usual. She had talked gaily all
+the way until they turned in at her own gateway;
+then somehow her spirits flagged, and in silence they
+drove up the long chase which meandered across a
+grassy field, passed a duck-pond where grey geese
+waded, and so on to the little gate which shut in the
+overgrown garden. Bill looked quickly at the
+garden. It had been a flowery, weedy wilderness
+when she was there in September; it was bare now,
+so dry that the earth rose in dust at the touch of
+Theresa’s skirts, so bare that the leafless raspberry-canes,
+still though they were, seemed to shiver in
+their nakedness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>There was no one about; Robert, no doubt, was
+busy somewhere on the farm. For a moment
+Theresa hesitated with the reins in her hand, then
+a man appeared from the stables and took the pony
+away. Theresa led the way into the house, covertly
+casting an anxious glance at Bill.</p>
+
+<p>“It is very cold,” she said, as she pushed open the
+door of her favourite room and went to the fire.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I suppose it is,” Bill answered cheerfully.
+“I’m not cold though. What a jolly room! It is
+cubby, T.!”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you like it? You saw it when you were
+here before,” Theresa said, feeling somehow a little
+warmer and very glad that Bill was with her. If it had
+been Polly or Bella they might have thought Robert
+neglectful, but as it was only Bill it did not matter.</p>
+
+<p>By-and-bye Robert came in. He did not know
+that Bill was coming back with his wife, and when
+the guest was safely shut in her room he asked,
+“Why on earth did you bring her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mind?” Theresa asked in distress. “I
+am sorry; I did not think you would mind; she
+won’t trouble you much.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, she won’t trouble me; still I don’t see what
+you wanted to have her for.”</p>
+
+<p>“We thought—I thought, it might do her good.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ill?” Morton asked, looking up sharply. “If
+she is ill, we certainly don’t want her here.”</p>
+
+<p>“She is not ill. She does not get on very well at
+school; I mean—” Theresa felt the matter was
+difficult of explanation—“I mean, she is very young
+for her age.”</p>
+
+<p>“She is very ugly,” Morton said, beginning to
+unlace his boots.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa flushed. “She is my cousin,” she said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>“That don’t make her handsome, my dear,” he
+observed, without looking up.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think her at all ugly.” Theresa’s voice
+showed that she was hurt. “If she were, it would
+not be her fault. Do you wish me to send her home
+at the end of the week?”</p>
+
+<p>“I? No, please yourself as to that. Keep her as
+long as you like, as far as I am concerned.”</p>
+
+<p>And he left her to take his boots to the wash-house
+with no idea that there were tears in her eyes. She
+forced them back, turning to the fire as she did so.
+It was certainly cold, a dreary, dreary afternoon. She
+was still standing by the fire, standing stiffly with
+something of unapproachable dignity about her, when
+Bill came down a few minutes later; but Bill was not
+troubled by the dignity, and curled herself up in the
+big chair on the other side of the fire evidently quite
+satisfied. She spent the evening helping Robert to
+mend whips, quite satisfied with that too; possibly
+she found it an improvement on learning grammar
+with Carrie and Alice.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa was relieved to find that Bill and Robert
+showed so much inclination to friendliness; indeed,
+at the end of two days she came to the conclusion
+that they were better friends than ever Robert and
+Bella had been. It was a very good thing, she
+thought, as she watched Bill wandering about the
+cow-yard and investigating the pig-styes. Bill took
+the keenest interest in pigs and poultry, cows and
+butter; her interest extended to the dairy, the kitchen,
+and the store-room; she seemed anxious to do any
+work she could. Theresa gave her dusting and
+churning, and she worked with a will, though when
+the churning was done Theresa was rather horrified
+to find her young cousin scrubbing the dairy-floor.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>“Bill! What are you doing?”</p>
+
+<p>“Clearing up,—I upset some butter-milk.” Bill
+was kneeling on the bricks and she did not cease
+scrubbing to give the answer.</p>
+
+<p>“But, my dear child, there is no necessity,—get
+up.”</p>
+
+<p>“I like it, I like clearing up. I did the old fowls’
+house just before I came in here; you should see it;
+it’s beautifully clean. This afternoon I am going to
+lime-wash it, and then I shall put in the biggest
+family of chickens. They have not half enough
+room where they are; Robert said I might move
+them if I liked.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but,—surely you need not lime-wash the
+house yourself; one of the men can do it. You must
+not do it; you will make yourself in such a state.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am afraid I am rather a dirty worker.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa glanced at Bill’s present condition and saw
+that the statement was only too true. “You must
+leave off,” she said: “the soapsuds are all up your
+sleeves; besides, I want to speak to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right, I can hear; you sit down on that
+wooden tub; I’m just done, and I can finish while
+you are talking.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa sat down in spite of her protestations. “I
+want to talk to you about the prayer-meeting,” she
+said. “You know, during Lent Mr. Johnson holds
+meetings once a week, a kind of Bible-reading. We
+meet at different houses and read passages from the
+Bible, and he explains them and gives a little address.
+They are really rather nice, and not too long. We
+meet at seven and it is all over quite early; we usually
+have supper about half-past eight.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” Bill was working industriously at the
+last corner.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>“I meant—do you think you would care to go?”
+Theresa asked this somewhat doubtfully. Bella and
+Polly had been amused by the idea of the Ashelton
+prayer-meetings, and Bill, according to Polly’s account,
+was not likely to treat them more respectfully. However,
+to Theresa’s satisfaction, Bill answered with enthusiasm:
+“I should like it tremendously; is it
+to-night?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, to-morrow. To-day is market-day at
+Wrugglesby, you know; nothing here is ever fixed
+on a market-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see,” Bill said, taking up her pail of water;
+“then it’s to-morrow? I’ll come if you will take
+me,” and she went away to empty the pail.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa watched her go, and then went into the
+house feeling that her guest was easy to entertain,
+and gave really very little trouble, in spite of Polly’s
+prognostications. Indeed she had been very glad of
+her company ever since her arrival, and especially so
+to-day as Robert had gone to market and was not
+likely to be back till late. The day seemed all the
+shorter for the girl’s presence in the house. The
+weather was gray and cloudy, and Theresa had a
+headache; she was very glad Bill was with her in the
+afternoon. Later on, in the evening, when her headache
+became bad, she was persuaded by her young
+cousin to go to bed and leave her to wait for Robert.</p>
+
+<p>“I hardly like to go; you don’t think it will
+seem unkind?” Theresa offered this last protest
+standing by the door, her candle in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>“No, of course not, I’ll explain.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill somehow knew, though Theresa did not, that
+Robert did not view things in the same light as his
+wife did; so she persuaded her to go to bed and
+settled herself by the fire until the servant was ready
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>to go up-stairs. After that she went round the house
+and fastened the doors, standing a moment in the
+hall curiously impressed by the silence of the place.
+“I have never been up alone in a sleeping house
+before,” she meditated as she put out the light and
+stretched out her hands in the darkness as if to feel
+to the full the sense of solitary night. At that
+moment she remembered that she had fastened the
+back door which Theresa had told her particularly
+to leave unlocked, as Robert always let himself in
+that way.</p>
+
+<p>She went back and unfastened it, turned the handle
+to see if it were really unbolted, and stood a moment
+looking out. The night-breeze stirred her hair; the
+moist fragrance of the earth came to her; she drew
+her breath in deeply, slowly, turning her head from
+side to side, listening to the intense stillness; it
+seemed to her that she could almost hear things
+growing. Her heart began to beat faster; the blood
+in her veins stirred in unison with the moving sap in
+the hidden trees; some wild creature of the woods
+was waking in her, bidding her go forth into the
+darkness. A board creaked; it was only the timbers
+settling down for the night, but it recalled her to the
+house and to her task of waiting for its master’s
+return. With a last glance at the cloudy sky, she
+went in and shut the door.</p>
+
+<p>There was another that night who found it dark,
+so dark that more than once he missed his way in
+the deep lanes which lay between Sales Green and
+Ashelton. More than once he anathematised the
+business which led him to come home from Wrugglesby
+market by way of the little village; the cross-roads
+were intricate and in bad repair, and under the
+darkness of the trees it was impossible to see so much
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>as the hedgerow elms on either side. At last he
+heard the sound of wheels away on the left; he was
+clear of the lanes and out on the high road now; just
+as he emerged a vehicle without lights passed, or
+rather, nearly collided with him.</p>
+
+<p>He pulled his horse up and demanded angrily:
+“Where the devil are you going? If you want the
+whole road you might at least carry lights so that
+one can see what you are doing!”</p>
+
+<p>“Where—going ’self?” a thick voice retorted.
+“Damn your clumsiness! Wha’—what ’yer mean
+by running a man down li’ that!”</p>
+
+<p>“Where are you trying to go?” The man was
+evidently too drunk to be argued with.</p>
+
+<p>“Home;—that’sh if—if can get there. Brute
+pulls li’—like the devil.”</p>
+
+<p>“You had better let me drive you home, Morton—it
+is Morton? I expect I can see better in the
+dark than you can.”</p>
+
+<p>Morton raised no objection and the other dismounted
+as he spoke and climbed up beside him.
+“Pleashed, I’m sure,” Robert muttered. “Been to
+market? Oh, forgot,—saw you there myself, but
+you lef’ early; very cred’able, Mr. Harborough, you’
+shober young man.”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed in a maudlin way, and they started on
+a straight course in the darkness, Harborough’s
+horse, fastened by the bridle, trotting behind. A
+straight road lay before them, the ground rising
+clear from the shade of the trees, just showing paler
+against the blackness, then sloping gently downwards
+to deeper shadow until the turning by the village;
+there the road forked, now to the left, through the
+open gateway, up the chase, and so to the stables and
+home.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>“Come on, ol’ chap, come in and have a—a glass
+of whishky,—don’t b’ unsociable.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough hesitated and thought of Mrs. Morton.
+He glanced up at the house; there was a light in
+one of the lower windows, the rest were dark—was
+she sitting up for her husband? He thought of the
+young wife with her serene, unconscious face, waiting
+for this, and yielding to the affectionate pressure on
+his arm he went in.</p>
+
+<p>“There does not seem to be any one up,” he said,
+as he opened the door and paused on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, sure to be, sure—confound—”</p>
+
+<p>As Morton stumbled, Harborough held him up,
+and then stood listening a moment. The house was
+very quiet except for the chirping of crickets in the
+kitchen. Guided more by instinct than by his companion
+he made his way to Mrs. Morton’s favourite
+sitting-room and opened the door, expecting yet
+dreading to meet the sweet face of the young wife.
+But she was not there; involuntarily he breathed a
+sigh of relief and braced himself to face her substitute.
+There was a substitute, someone curled up in the big
+chair by the fire, a slim young girl. She had been
+reading, and apparently had but just discovered their
+presence in the house, for she only looked up from
+her book as they entered.</p>
+
+<p>“Theresa has gone to bed,” she said, rising as she
+spoke. She did not seem at all surprised to see them
+both. Harborough wondered if she understood, or
+if Morton returned in this condition so often that
+she was prepared for it. “Poor Theresa’s head was
+so bad that I persuaded her to go, and to let me sit
+up,” she added.</p>
+
+<p>“That ’ch al’right, you’n I—quite happy without
+her,” Morton said thickly, smiling upon the girl.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>“You won’t want to disturb her to-night,” she
+went on. “Her head is ever so bad; you will sleep
+in the blue room, won’t you? That will do nicely.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’ll do—we won’t dish’turb her, poor—poor
+T.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is the room ready?” Harborough asked quickly.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head, and flitted away with light
+noiseless feet. Morton stretched out a hand to
+detain her, but she passed him like a shadow and was
+gone.</p>
+
+<p>“Make her sing when ’comes back—sing to you,—cap’tal
+song.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough turned away abruptly. Evidently she
+had not expected this sort of home-coming, or surely
+the room would have been ready. Probably it had
+not occurred before, to Mrs. Morton’s knowledge at
+least; if it had, she would never have left this child
+to face it alone; for a child she was, fifteen, sixteen
+perhaps, but a child certainly. A great anger rose in
+Harborough’s heart against the man who had brought
+his beastliness home here. He glanced round the
+room, which impressed him as daintily feminine,
+doubtless arranged by the bride nine months ago.
+Her work-basket stood on the table, a few spring
+flowers were on the mantelpiece; the whole place was
+pathetically eloquent of her presence. Harborough
+picked up a book which lay on the table and looked
+at the title—<span class="smcap">Romances and Drolls of the West
+of England</span>—an old book of West Country legends
+and folk-lore, fairy tales of a primitive order, the
+book that the girl, who had just left the room, had
+been reading. Pleasant to call a child from her fairy-stories
+to meet a drunkard!</p>
+
+<p>“Now come to bed.” She had returned as noiselessly
+as she had gone.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>“Bed? Not ’f I know it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, come along.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will see Mr. Morton to bed,” Harborough
+said. “Which is the room? No, tell me, don’t
+trouble to come.”</p>
+
+<p>“Second door from the top of the stairs,” was the
+direction she gave, and Harborough, coercing his
+charge, went up-stairs. With the door safely shut
+on them he used more force than persuasion, feeling
+heartily sick of the whole business. When he came
+down again the girl was in her old position, reading
+her fairy-book as before.</p>
+
+<p>“Is he in bed?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Are you alone here—I mean, are you
+going to shut the house up?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, all that is still open. I must, you see, there
+is no one else. You can’t do it when you are outside,
+and you won’t want to stop in to do it; it is
+not difficult.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. You are rather young to be left alone—I
+won’t keep you up; good-night.”</p>
+
+<p>She went to the door with him, the one opening
+on to the yard by which he and Morton had entered
+a little while before. On the step he hesitated; he
+was standing in shadow, she in the light of the lantern
+she had brought that she might see to fasten the
+door after him.</p>
+
+<p>“If I were you,” he said doubtfully, “I should
+not disturb Mr. Morton more than I could help. I
+would not pass his room unless it were necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, after he had gone she stole noiselessly
+to the door and turned the key outside for fear
+the sleeper should awake and disturb Theresa in the
+night. But then that was quite necessary in her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>opinion, and no one was the wiser, for she unlocked
+it again between four and five in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>As for Harborough, having given the caution, he
+felt satisfied and after repeating “good-night” went
+down the yard. He looked back once before she
+closed the door. She was still standing in the same
+position, the lantern in her hand, an elfin thing in its
+glow against the brown shadows of the passage,
+herself all brown and red, skin and hair and eyes,
+colours such as Rembrandt loved. She moved,
+scattering splashes of light from her lantern, then
+shut the door; and Harborough mounted his horse
+and rode a good mile home to Crows’ Farm.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV.<br>
+<small>HARBOROUGH OF CROWS’ FARM.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Nobody</span> could make farming pay, at least no one
+about Wrugglesby. This was an axiom in the
+Ashelton district, which no one attempted to confute
+though each had an explanation for it, according to
+his political opinions and education, or want of
+education. But one and all believed it, though they
+continued to farm and to grumble, both the small
+men and the great. The small men were very
+small, little more than peasant tenants with neither
+the capital nor the ability to farm their small holdings
+with any show of justice to the starved land, living
+from hand to mouth, employing no labour, themselves
+and their families practically doing the work,
+and doing it indifferently. The great men were
+quite another class, a cross between a landed gentry
+and a yeoman squirearchy, socially ranking with the
+professional classes and for all practical purposes
+supplying the place of the county-families, now for
+the most part either impoverished or else removed to
+more congenial centres. The greater farm-owners
+undoubtedly did make some profit out of the land,
+or appeared to do something very like it, though
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>possibly they might have done so more successfully
+had they inclined more towards the yeoman squirearchy
+and less towards the landed gentry in their
+tastes and habits.</p>
+
+<p>At least such was the opinion of one who, a little
+more than six months previous to Bill’s advent in the
+Morton household, had come to settle among the
+yeoman-farmers and to prove to himself and to them
+some of the theories he held with regard to farming.
+His theory-in-chief was a short one, and could be
+summed up in one word,—work. A working farmer
+could make it pay; there were one or two of the
+old-fashioned sort of large working farmers still left,
+who made it pay, even though they had no social
+position and wanted none. Their net profits were
+small, it is true, but then they had not the benefit of
+a modern education; they were also abnormally pig-headed,
+and, in spite of experience, would do as
+their fathers had done in the palmy days of Protection.
+Young Gilchrist Harborough was of opinion
+that, were it only possible to unite the work in
+detail of these men with the knowledge and capital
+of the gentleman-class, results of surprising grandeur
+could be obtained.</p>
+
+<p>He held this theory long ago, before ever he saw
+the English farmer at work; he held it still more
+firmly now that fate had given him an opportunity of
+putting it to the test. The opportunity had come
+unexpectedly in the shape of a legacy from a friend
+of his father’s, a man who had at one time stayed in
+the bush home where Gilchrist was reared, and who,
+half amused and half pleased by the young man’s
+earnestness, had left him Crows’ Farm and a
+sufficiency on which to try his theories on a small
+scale.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>An unpretentious, whitewashed building was the
+farm, not unlike two cottages knocked into one.
+For many years it had been inhabited by a bailiff who
+farmed the adjoining land, the owner, frequently
+absent abroad, only coming down for the partridge-shooting.
+Ashelton was fond of this man, and
+genuinely sorry to hear of his death; he was the
+kind of man those good folks understood, and was
+sadly missed at the social functions which always
+took place in September and in which he usually
+joined. But the new owner, the young Australian
+to whom he had left the farm, was something of a
+puzzle to them. Of course he had a right to his
+theories: everyone has in these highly educated
+days; but it is not everyone who tries to put his
+theories into practice, nor who, moreover, has such
+uncomfortable ones. Harborough lived the life of
+a working farmer in his little old house; lived, so
+report said, almost like Robinson Crusoe, doing his
+own cooking and cleaning, rising early and sharing
+even the most menial toil with his few labourers.
+This was not all strictly correct, but it was near
+enough to the truth to satisfy Ashelton, and the parish
+talked and wondered, and said dubiously that the
+experiment might answer, questioning for a while
+how Mr. Harborough would be received. But in
+the winter the question was settled by Mrs. Dawson,
+who, perhaps, alone was capable of settling it finally.
+She, under the influence of her son Jack, decided
+that Mr. Harborough was as one of themselves,
+notwithstanding his theory and his colonial origin,—a
+decision which scarcely did justice to Harborough,
+but gave great satisfaction to everyone, even including
+Mr. Dane, the old rector. He, indeed, had seemed
+particularly to appreciate it, and had even listened to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>Mrs. Dawson’s judgment on the case with a faint
+smile flickering in his grey eyes. It is true he made
+Harborough’s acquaintance without waiting for Mrs.
+Dawson’s decision, but then, as she said, the rector,
+of course, knew everybody. Mr. Johnson, the curate,
+being only a curate, had waited for her decision.</p>
+
+<p>But none of these matters troubled Harborough.
+He lived his life in his own way, working hard as
+long as he was able, smoking hard when work was
+done; reading sometimes, and the books had nothing
+to do with the theory, neither were they such as Jack
+Dawson would have chosen; dreaming sometimes in
+spite of the theory, in spite also of the pure reason
+with which he was still young enough to believe he
+governed his life. Of his neighbours he thought
+little; he was friendly when he came across them,
+but with the friendliness of the self-contained man
+who regards the rest of his kind as supernumeraries,
+necessary parts of the world-play, but as well filled
+by one set of actors as by another. He knew about
+his neighbours, of course, since he could not well
+live in Ashelton without doing so; but he did not
+care greatly about them, nor was there any reason to
+care; nothing to his knowledge had gone seriously
+wrong or seriously right in Ashelton until that night
+when he took Robert Morton home.</p>
+
+<p>That night there had been something seriously
+wrong, and the more he thought about Morton, the
+more wrong the whole matter seemed. Drunkenness
+looked such a beastly thing in this quiet little
+village, in that peaceful home with that fair young
+wife. “The man’s a brute,” was his disgusted
+verdict, “coming home to a wife like that! Lucky
+it wasn’t her. By the way, I wonder who the girl
+was, queer little thing.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>But he did not wonder very much, for he was too
+sleepy that night and too busy the next day till the
+time when the girl revealed her identity to him. It
+was somewhere about noon when he saw her, as he
+was returning by a lane which bordered one side of
+the Haylands property. He had been that way once
+before during the morning, but was not aware that
+anyone had been watching him. As he came back,
+however, he met the girl of last night’s adventure
+evidently waiting for his return. The Morton’s
+orchard was here; an untidy orchard, with old
+stooping apple-trees, lichen-covered and unpruned,
+a thicket of nuts and pollard quinces and, beyond, a
+briery tangle of blackberries. As yet there was
+neither flower nor leaf, except for one plum-tree near
+the gate white as snow in its blossom.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the orchard that Harborough saw the girl.
+She was sitting on the gate deliberately waiting for him,
+and when he came in sight she made the fact known.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to speak to you,” she announced. “I
+have been waiting ever so long.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” he answered, in some surprise;
+“now I have come, what can I do for you?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is about Robert, Robert Morton—is he often
+drunk?”</p>
+
+<p>If Harborough had any delusions as to her not
+grasping the situation last night, they were now
+dispelled. “I don’t know,” he said; “I have never
+seen him so before.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think he often is?”</p>
+
+<p>“I really cannot tell you; I am only very slightly
+acquainted with him.”</p>
+
+<p>A little smile crept round the corners of the
+girl’s mouth. “I didn’t suppose you were great
+friends,” she said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>Harborough bit his lip. His tone had not implied
+it, yet he was conscious that there had been
+a slight feeling of annoyance at the suggestion of
+intimacy conveyed by her words; there was now
+a second feeling of annoyance that she should have
+discovered the first.</p>
+
+<p>“I am a comparatively new comer in the place,”
+he said somewhat stiffly; “you would perhaps do
+better to ask someone who has lived here longer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Umph!” As she made the oracular answer she
+drew her legs up to the top bar of the gate and
+clasped her hands round them in a position Harborough
+considered most unsafe. As he watched
+her, fascinated, wondering which way she would fall,
+she turned a little towards him.</p>
+
+<p>“Take care!” he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“Theresa does not know,” she said, answering her
+own thoughts. “She has no idea; but she will, you
+know.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough thought it possible, but he only said:
+“I suppose her husband told her he did not wish to
+disturb her last night?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I do not see how she is to know, if you
+do not tell her.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not this time; but next,—I may not be here
+then.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know there will be a next time?”
+he asked. “You have no reason to suppose this
+was anything but,—but an accident which might
+happen to any of us.”</p>
+
+<p>“You, for instance?”</p>
+
+<p>Her blandly innocent eyes were turned on him.
+“Any man,” he answered briefly. The eyes showed
+neither surprise nor disgust; in fact they did not
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>seem much convinced, and he went on. “There is
+no reason to say it must occur again; why do you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why do <i>you</i>?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not,” he answered; “I should be very
+sorry to give such a definite opinion on the subject.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, then,” she replied cheerfully, “that is the
+difference between us. I give the opinions, you only
+have them, but we mean the same thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have not formed any opinion.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, but you know him,—not very well, I dare
+say,—but you know other men. I don’t know him
+very well either, better than you do, of course, but
+not well. I came here on Tuesday, and to-day is
+Friday; before that I don’t think I saw him more
+than six times; but, all the same, I know he will get
+drunk again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Pray, did you expect him to be drunk last
+night?” Harborough asked.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she answered; “I had never thought about
+it. Until I saw him last night I never thought about
+his drinking; now, of course, I know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I must say you took it very coolly,” he observed,
+“that is, if it was a revelation to you.”</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged her shoulders, till he thought she
+must inevitably fall off the gate; she did not, but
+turned to him, asking, “What would you have had
+me do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing different from what you did. I meant
+that you did not seem at all upset.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I don’t think I can be upset easily.” He
+unconsciously looked at the squirrel-like perch on
+the gate. “You see,” she went on, “there was a
+good deal to be done till you went; after that I
+thought.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” He wondered what she thought, what
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>sort of brain she had under that thatch of copper-brown
+hair.</p>
+
+<p>“It is about Theresa,” she went on to explain;
+“she does not know, and she must sooner or later;
+he is bound to let it out some time. He may have
+got drunk and hidden it in the past: he may do so
+in the future; but sooner or later there will come
+another time like last night, and she will find out.”</p>
+
+<p>He drove his stick into the ground thoughtfully.
+“Well,” he said at last, “if this is all as inevitable as
+you say, if this takes place, I suppose Mrs. Morton
+will have to bear it, as other women have borne it
+before. There is nothing else for it; we can’t help
+her; she will just have to bear it.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough felt this was cold comfort. It was
+easy talking out here in the spring sunshine, easy
+adjusting the burden to the accompaniment of the
+thrushes’ love-songs; but to bear it was another
+matter, and the girl evidently thought so.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t know Theresa,” she said. “She just
+can’t bear it; I think it would kill her.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough repressed a smile. “I don’t think it
+would do anything of the kind,” he said, from his
+wider knowledge of mankind. “Mrs. Morton by
+this time knows, what you, too, will find out some
+day, that the world is peopled with men not heroes,
+and that you must take men, even husbands, as you
+find them, and not despair and die because they are
+not heroes of romance.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s just what Theresa has not found out,”
+Theresa’s cousin persisted, “at least not properly.
+She and Robert don’t quite understand one another,
+I’m afraid. It’s an awful pity for people to get
+married; they can’t really know one another unless
+they have lived together for a long time first. You
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>see, T. has lived such a different life. It was a kind
+of she-life, quiet and dainty and small, and nice as
+nice could be,—weak tea in old china and wash the
+cups up carefully afterwards—that is how we lived.
+The pity is she married Robert; it might have
+answered if she had married some other man, better,
+perhaps, or more,—more watered down, or something;
+I don’t know how to say it, but you understand
+how it is. They just belong to different kinds
+of people.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough leaned against the gate-post, the one
+opposite to the end of the gate on which the girl sat;
+he was careful not to give her the least jar as he considered
+the connubial problem presented to him.
+“Of course you think Morton is to blame,” he said
+at last. “You would blame him far more than your
+sister—cousin is it?—your cousin then. He is, I
+suppose, a low hound, drunken and all the rest of
+it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” she answered slowly, “it isn’t so much
+that; he has his good points of course, though I
+don’t altogether like him. It isn’t exactly a case of
+right and wrong; it’s how the thing seems to the
+other person, and it’ll seem bad to T. For myself, I
+don’t think I should like getting drunk, but I don’t
+so much mind about things; I can understand how
+it is in a way, and besides, it is not such a sin to his
+nature; it isn’t nice, but it is all of a piece with
+himself.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough nodded. “That’s so,” he said and
+added: “To come home drunk is not, after all, such
+a dreadful thing from a man’s point of view; it is
+not nice, as you say, but it is not the most awful
+thing in the world. Life’s entire happiness does not
+cease because of it; it is not the end of all things.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>“No,” she said thoughtfully looking past him into
+some fancy picture. “No, there is always the necessity
+to get up and have breakfast next morning, even
+after a big tragedy; things don’t end.”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed a little. “Naturally not, and a good
+thing too on the whole, though perhaps it is not
+dramatic. Why not induce Mrs. Morton to take
+your truly judicial view of the case?”</p>
+
+<p>“My view? It couldn’t be done.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not? I think I understood you to say that
+she had lived in the same circumstances as yourself;
+if the view is possible to you, why not to her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know, but it is not.” Bill spoke with
+absolute conviction. “Besides, I can’t speak about
+it to her; I can’t even warn her what to expect. If
+she had been with me when you brought him home
+last night, I should have been obliged to pretend I
+did not know what was the matter, and I should
+have kept up the pretence afterwards.”</p>
+
+<p>“Would you?” he said, eyeing her curiously. “I
+suppose you would, and she would have helped you;
+women always try to hide the shortcomings of their
+loved ones. She won’t admit it when she finds him
+out; she will stand by him with a sort of proud
+deceit to the end.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” Bill answered simply; “he is her
+family now, and you must stand by your family,
+right or wrong.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose that is what you call loyalty,” Harborough
+said with a laugh. “I was born in a land
+where we don’t think so much of our families, where
+we have not always reason to think much of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mine isn’t much to boast of,” Bill admitted.
+“But that has nothing to do with it; I must stand
+by them all the same,—why, I should bolster up
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>Polly. But we are no nearer the settling of Theresa;
+I suppose we never shall be, so there is no more to
+be said. Thank you for telling me all you knew.”</p>
+
+<p>“All I didn’t know; that is what it amounts to.”</p>
+
+<p>She moved as if she were going to get off the
+gate, then stopped in the act and said suddenly:
+“Polly said Robert would die of apoplexy,—die
+young. What do you think?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think it is a solution of the difficulty I should
+not dwell on, if I were you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not? Isn’t it likely?”</p>
+
+<p>“I should say it was at least uncertain; also it is
+not usually considered decent to think about such
+things, at all events to talk about them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, decent!” she said, and laughed softly as
+she remembered Carrie’s and Alice’s lecture. Then
+she dropped off the gate and was immediately lost
+among the orchard bushes. He stood for a moment,
+half-expecting her to come back, though he did not
+know why. As she did not, he went on, smiling a
+little.</p>
+
+<p>Gradually the smile died away. It was all very
+well to smile out there in the sunshine, all very well
+to talk under the apple-boughs, but the fact remained,
+the grim, stern fact. It was no concern of
+his, it is true, but he could not help thinking about
+it. Of course he knew that Morton drank, not
+desperately, nor enough to do any serious harm, not
+more than did plenty of other men, nothing more
+than occasionally a little too much; so serious an
+affair as last night’s occurrence would probably be an
+exception. It was not exactly a cardinal sin, it was
+just part of his nature, as the little brown girl had
+said, a kind of nature for which Harborough had
+a tolerant contempt when regarded as a detached
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>specimen; as a personal acquaintance it naturally
+wore a different aspect. “If a man drinks, he
+drinks, and it is his affair. One can forgive lapses;
+we are none of us exactly bread-and-butter saints
+when we are nearing the thirties.” Harborough emphasised
+the words with his stick; he had almost
+said them aloud, not quite, but loud enough for the
+man, who that moment joined him, to guess part of
+the speech.</p>
+
+<p>“Who is not a saint when he is nearing the
+thirties?” he asked. “Forgive me for surprising
+your thoughts, Mr. Harborough; you really should
+not think so loud, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will forgive you more easily than I fancy you
+would forgive me for thinking them.” So Harborough
+answered, for he had certain very definite
+notions as to what was and what was not acceptable
+to the clergy, and it was a clergyman who had
+accosted him, the rector of Ashelton on his way to
+the rectory by a field-path well known to at least one
+of his parishioners.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Harborough misjudged this clergyman;
+at all events he promised forgiveness for all sins of
+thought before they were expressed. “I give absolution
+beforehand,” he said; “now confess the
+whole.”</p>
+
+<p>“The whole? I am afraid I was speech-making
+to myself, a bad habit I have got from living so much
+alone; still you shall have it all. Here goes,—If a
+man drinks, he drinks, and it is his affair. One can
+forgive lapses; we are none of us bread-and-butter
+saints when we are nearing the thirties. But a man
+whom the divine wisdom has, it would seem, for its
+own purposes, made something of a beast, should keep
+his beastliness for suitable places. There is a lot
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>done ‘somewhere east of Suez’ and in other places
+nearer at hand, which one does not blame a man for
+doing there; but when he does it in his wife’s
+drawing-room,—when he is such an egregious fool,
+such an unmitigated brute—why then he wants
+kicking, and he should be soundly kicked.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane laughed a little, but whether at the
+length of the speech or the unconscious earnestness
+of its delivery did not appear. “Yes,” he said,
+“yes, brutes want kicking; I’m not sure we don’t
+all want kicking sometimes. Poor little wife; God
+help the wife, whoever she is!”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough acquiesced. “And yet,” he said
+doubtfully, “if she understood, it would be easier,
+much easier; a good woman is a hard judge.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ay, possibly.” The rector’s cold gray eyes
+seemed to summon up the memory of some good
+woman who had judged hardly. “They were not
+made to understand some things.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not all women,” Harborough interposed.</p>
+
+<p>“Not all; are you sure she was a good woman,
+this exception of yours? But perhaps we had better
+not start a controversy now; it is too late. I suppose
+the good women will judge the bad men, and
+love them too, to the end of the story. Bad men?
+No, I beg pardon, average men, neither good nor
+bad, just human, no bread-and-butter saints—good-bye.”</p>
+
+<p>They parted at the rectory-gate. Just as it closed
+after Mr. Dane he turned to call after Harborough:
+“How about the beef and beer saints? What of
+them?”</p>
+
+<p>“Are there any?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, and they’re good for three-score years and
+ten.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V.<br>
+<small>FOR BILL’S GOOD.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Theresa</span> was a conscientious person, and really had
+Bill’s welfare at heart. Miss Brownlow said she
+exercised a good influence over her young cousin.
+Theresa was rather doubtful on the subject herself,
+but she felt the responsibility of her aunt’s expectations,
+and determined to fulfil them if possible; only
+she did not quite know how to set about it. Bill
+proved so very mild; there seemed no occasion for a
+preventive and negative influence, and a positive one
+Theresa found difficult to compass. The only definite
+suggestion she had as yet made for Bill’s mental and
+moral benefit was the invitation to the prayer-meeting.
+That, both in its religious and social aspects, was
+good; the religious side, Theresa felt, must benefit
+her charge, though she did not stop to consider how,
+religion being to her much what charms were to her
+forebears, good and protective, though operating in
+methods neither understood nor questioned. The
+social side of the prayer-meeting was obviously
+beneficial, for it was in every way desirable that Bill
+should mix with her elders, it would help her to
+grow up. Altogether the prayer-meeting was a good
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>thing, and to it, accordingly, Theresa took her cousin
+on Friday evening.</p>
+
+<p>They drove in the dog-cart: “We can walk
+home,” Theresa had said; “it is not far.”</p>
+
+<p>So Robert, who did not affect prayer-meetings,
+drove them and took the cart home again; and as
+Theresa disliked driving very much, this arrangement
+suited her better than any other. It suited Bill also,
+for she sat on the back seat, and was as entirely
+oblivious of the two in front as if she had been alone
+in her silent survey of the country. It was still very
+black and white, she found, though a day of showers
+and sunshine would alter the whole face of the land
+now. She was conscious of the coming change;
+there was a feeling of waiting in the air, as though
+the unconscious earth stood patient on the threshold
+of life. There were no leaves as yet among the elms,
+no blade in the dry, crumbling fields, no hint of green
+in the close-cut hedge, so black by contrast with the
+white road. So white the road was, so hard, stretching
+before them, stretching behind them; Bill looked
+at it and thought what a long way it could be seen in
+the pale strong light. Every thing could be seen,
+the heap of faggots, the pump by the road, the old
+man working in a cottage-garden,—she could even
+see what kind of belt he wore; she could see everything
+near and far,—truly a March evening was a
+beautiful thing. She drew in deep breaths of the
+thin air; it seemed like wine within her, making the
+young blood dance and throb in her veins. She felt,
+though she hardly knew it, that it was a splendid
+thing to be alive: “I should like to live as long as
+the world lasts,” she thought.</p>
+
+<p>Just then they turned in at a gateway. The short
+drive beyond sloped down rapidly and the dog-cart
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>entered with a jerk which nearly unseated the back
+passenger, who, however, was examining the garden
+too intently to be troubled by that. There was a
+large raised flower-bed in the centre of the gravel
+sweep, the drive dividing right and left of it. It was
+a circular bed planted in a geometrical pattern with
+Dutch bulbs; as yet the hyacinths and tulips were
+only green shoots, but the crocuses were in full flower
+and wound like a coloured ribbon across the intricate
+design. Bill was wondering how it was that none of
+the crocuses had gone blind, when the cart stopped
+before a square, ivy-covered house.</p>
+
+<p>“T.,” she said, as she got down, “every single one
+of those crocuses has come up; they must be a good
+sort.”</p>
+
+<p>“I dare say. Mr. Perry is fond of his garden,
+and he has plenty of money.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill’s acquaintance with people possessing plenty
+of money was limited; indeed, she could not recall
+anyone she knew who was in that affluent state. She
+looked at the Perry’s house critically to see how
+“plenty of money” looked when it was translated
+into furniture and fittings. There were lots of white
+curtains, three or four at every window. “That is
+expensive,” she thought; “it means so much washing.”
+There were thick carpets on the floors, old-fashioned
+in design, excellent in preservation, and
+prodigiously ugly; the furniture in the drawing-room
+was rosewood, the chairs as like as peas in a pod
+and all neatly covered in chintz. “I shall tell Polly
+our things are all right,” Bill mentally determined
+as she sat down in a retired corner. She had been
+duly presented to the host and hostess, had duly
+made an inaudible answer to their polite remarks,
+and had then sunk into her corner, still safe under
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>her cousin’s wing, as became one of her youth and
+shyness. No one in Mrs. Perry’s drawing-room
+expected anything different; indeed all would have
+been surprised if she had shown greater forwardness
+of demeanour. Her nearest neighbour, a little old
+lady with a cheerful countenance and a great mosaic
+brooch, spoke to her; but at first Bill could not
+catch what she said, for she lowered her voice out
+of deference to the more important persons present,
+until it was little more than a sigh in her listener’s
+ear. But after a word or two Bill became used to
+the sound and made out, as she might have guessed,
+that the subject of conversation was the weather.</p>
+
+<p>“Dry evening,” was the first she heard, and then
+“a nice walk from Ashelton.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not catch the connecting words, but she
+answered what she heard, although she did not know
+that she had come beyond the boundary of Ashelton
+that evening, and contented herself with saying that
+they had not walked.</p>
+
+<p>“Driven?” suggested the old lady. “I expect
+Mr. Morton drove you and took the pony home
+again; such a good arrangement, and much safer
+than for Mrs. Morton to drive those spirited
+horses herself. I’m sure I wonder she has never
+had an accident; I quite thought there would be
+one when I saw her go by on Tuesday afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you see us then?” Bill asked, and her
+neighbour explained that she lived at the house at the
+corner where the roads divided. Then Bill knew
+that this must be Miss Minchin, the lady who,
+Theresa said, made ample use of the opportunities
+for observation offered by the commanding position
+of her house. At that moment the entrance
+of some fresh arrivals caused such a buzz of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>conversation that Miss Minchin ventured to inquire
+in quite a loud voice whether Bill herself could
+manage a horse.</p>
+
+<p>“I never tried until I came here,” she answered;
+“I only came on Tuesday, but I have done a little
+since then. I drove a waggon of straw home yesterday.
+Tom Griggs told me he thought I should soon
+be able to handle most things on four legs, but I
+don’t suppose he knows.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are learning to drive?” Miss Minchin
+asked, somewhat mystified. “Mr. Morton is teaching
+you? But, my dear, do be careful, he has such
+mettlesome horses; gentlemen seem all alike for that;
+there’s Mr. Harborough, now, he’s nearly as bad.
+You know Mr. Harborough?” Before Bill could
+answer the old lady went on: “Hush! Mr. Perry
+is going to speak. You must come with Mrs.
+Morton to see me to-morrow; I have a cat and
+a canary, and several things that will interest you.”
+The last words were spoken in a shrill whisper in
+Bill’s ear as the company settled themselves, and Mr.
+Perry, a trim little man some years retired from the
+grocery trade, called attention to the fact that the
+reading was about to begin. When he had made
+this announcement in a redundancy of words (for he
+was not averse to speech-making and had few opportunities),
+the proceedings commenced.</p>
+
+<p>The subject for the evening was faith. Mr. Johnson
+was giving a course of Christian virtues during
+that Lent, and faith happened to be the one under
+consideration on the evening when Bill was present.
+She was very much interested, though it was not a
+matter in which she had erred greatly hitherto; she
+believed largely, had much imagination, and as yet
+had thought little and felt less; consequently Mr.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>Johnson’s flowery periods slid harmlessly off her still
+unconscious mind. She was interested, at first a little
+in the words, afterwards entirely by the man. Mr.
+Johnson was a fair man with a tendency towards the
+sandy, smooth, slightly florid, and with more than a
+tendency towards plumpness. He had for many
+years been curate at Ashelton, and, though he was
+now past middle life, it seemed that he was likely to
+remain curate at Ashelton, for it appeared that the
+Church dignitaries had not the same opinion of his
+worth as had some other people who need not be
+named. After all, curate at the three Asheltons was
+on the whole well enough. There was not too much
+work in the big straggling parish, and there was
+much sociability of a sort well suited to a man who
+had a nice taste in tea and pale sherry, and more
+fancy for being a whale among minnows than a
+minnow among whales. At Ashelton, though perhaps
+not exactly a whale, he could pass as a very
+tolerably sized fish among others of congenial dimensions,
+at all events when the rector was not there. As
+for the rector—well, poor man, he was eccentric, he
+had had trouble—Mr. Johnson said so leniently without
+any idea as to what the trouble was. For the
+eccentricity he could vouch: the rector had a cousin
+who was a bishop, in a genuine, important bishopric,
+and another, it was hinted, who was a peer. What
+man, not eccentric, would have remained all these
+years in a little country parish when he possessed these
+advantages? Then there was his passion for music,
+and also his inability to appreciate Mr. Johnson.
+Mr. Johnson had at last come to the conclusion that
+this inability did exist; yet even now he was not sure
+that it was not partly the expression of a not unnatural
+jealousy of his own social and parochial triumphs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>On that particular March evening Mr. Johnson
+knew that he had added one more to the long list of
+those triumphs. It was a small matter, of course,
+but, as he told his wife, trifles like that showed how
+easily he could have influenced a larger audience, had
+he been in command of one. The trifle in question
+was Bill Alardy, whose face showed how deeply
+interested she was in Mr. Johnson’s words. She had
+the most expressive face imaginable, and that evening
+it was alive with interest. She had never taken her
+eyes off the speaker; she listened to every word, the
+tell-tale face expressing the keenest enjoyment and
+appreciation. So marked was this that after supper,
+when all were leaving, Mr. Johnson came to Theresa
+and shook hands with her and Bill, telling the latter
+impressively that he was very glad to see her at the
+reading.</p>
+
+<p>To this Bill answered with equal impressiveness, “I
+am very glad I came.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Johnson smiled encouragingly. “I shall be
+happy if at any time I can be of help to you,” he
+said; “I am always pleased to help any one.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill thanked him vaguely and went out with
+Theresa. She did not know what he meant, but
+it did not matter, as she did not feel conscious of
+wanting his help. In her opinion he could not
+improve upon that evening’s performance, which had
+been perfectly delightful; so delightful that when she
+went to her room she thought about him until it
+became too much for her, and turning to the little
+wooden bed and the chair which stood beside it, she
+addressed them, inanimate though they were. “My
+brothers and sisters,” she said—and her flexible voice,
+far more flexible even than her face, rolled out in
+unctuous tones—“my brothers and sisters, faith is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>the substance of things hoped for, the only evidence
+we can present to our spiritual senses, the only
+evidence they need. It is the be-all and end-all, the
+beginning and the end of all things.” She rolled the
+words lovingly on her tongue, swelling her face until
+it became almost Johnsonian in size. “Everything
+is faith, faith is everything.” Here she stretched out
+a persuasive hand to the quaint little bed. “In it we
+live and move and have our being; being dead, we
+die not if in faith, being alive, we live not without it.
+Whatever is, is not, whatever is not, is, was and shall
+be, world without end, amen.”</p>
+
+<p>But Theresa did not hear this, and held to her first
+opinion as to the kind of spiritual good Bill derived
+from the prayer-meeting. Of the social good she
+was not so sure, until her young cousin came to her
+on Saturday morning and suggested that they should
+go and see Miss Minchin in the afternoon. “Let us
+go,” she said; “she promised to show me her cat and
+bird and other things.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa acceded to the request, feeling that last
+night’s meeting was not without results since it had
+introduced Miss Minchin, and implanted a desire to
+visit in Bill’s mind.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Minchin’s house was set at the corner where
+the high road from Wrugglesby divided, the one way
+to go through Ashelton to the church, the other to
+the lanes and so to the more distant village of Sales
+Green. “It is a terribly public place,” Miss Gruet,
+Miss Minchin’s particular friend, always said with
+commiseration. Her own house was privacy itself,
+the lower windows looking solely on the laurel
+bushes tall and elderly, the upper as effectually
+screened by a great horse-chestnut tree. “It was
+most secluded,” Miss Gruet said, and, out of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>pity no doubt, she often left her seclusion to cheer
+her friend in the publicity which had fallen to her
+share. She did so on the afternoon when Theresa
+and Bill made their call, but did not arrive until Miss
+Minchin had duly shown her treasures. Bill was
+interested in them all,—in the cat asleep on the
+violet bed, only dislodged with the end of an
+umbrella, and the canary before the window in a
+green cage with a piece of grey paper neatly tacked
+round the lower part to keep the seeds in and the
+draughts out. This piece of paper was often changed,
+varying in colour with the Church festivals and other
+important events, always going into mourning on the
+death of royalty; at least, the cage did. Black paper
+Miss Minchin found difficult to obtain, as she explained
+to Bill.</p>
+
+<p>“When the poor dear Duke of Clarence died,”
+she said, “I could not get a scrap. I put a piece of
+black cashmere round the cage, but the little fellow
+(it was not this canary then but another one) did not
+like it a bit.”</p>
+
+<p>The subject of discussion here gave a short burst of
+song. When he ceased Miss Minchin encouraged him
+to continue. “Swee-e-t!” she said; “go on, my
+pretty, swee-e-t! He likes someone to whistle to
+him, but of course I can’t do that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can,” said Bill, and gave a trilling imitation of
+the caged singer.</p>
+
+<p>“I declare,” exclaimed Miss Minchin, “it’s quite
+charming! I’m sure if girls had whistled like that
+in my young days no one would have thought it
+unladylike. They did think so, then, my dear, but
+now, to be sure, things are quite changed; everyone
+can do as they like, and more besides.”</p>
+
+<p>It was just then that Miss Gruet came in. “I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>thought you must be coming here,” Miss Minchin
+said briskly. “I said so to Mrs. Morton just now,
+when I saw you coming down the road.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can see everyone from your window,” Miss
+Gruet said with a touch of severity. “I do believe
+from your back bedroom you could almost see the
+field-path that leads to the rectory.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Miss Minchin admitted, “I can if I move
+the toilet-glass. Of course I never do move it,
+unless it happens that the blind goes wrong, as it
+does sometimes. It is such a tiresome blind; I
+remember I had to see to it the day Tom Davies
+went to put his banns up; he thought no one saw
+him go sneaking to the rectory, but I did, for I was
+mending my blind.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Gruet professed herself properly shocked—and
+interested. “There is no telling what you might
+not see,” she said, “and Mr. Dane a bachelor too!”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Minchin hastened to assure the company that
+she had never seen anything bad; indeed, only
+yesterday morning, when the troublesome blind went
+wrong again, she had seen quite a pleasant sight—Mr.
+Dane and young Mr. Harborough in earnest
+conversation. “So nice,” she said, “for a young
+man like that to be such friends with the rector.”</p>
+
+<p>The others agreed with her, and talked over this
+item of intelligence in all its aspects. A little later,
+Theresa and Miss Gruet being at the time deep in a
+discussion of the difficulty of preventing mice from
+eating cheese-mats, Bill led the conversation back to
+Harborough.</p>
+
+<p>“The Harboroughs of Gurnett,” she said; “does
+this Mr. Harborough belong to them?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, indeed,” Miss Minchin answered, almost
+shocked at the idea. “The Harboroughs of Gurnett
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>are the Harboroughs of Wood Hall, one of the
+oldest families of the county, just as Wood Hall is
+one of the finest places. At least, it used to be, but
+times are sadly changed from what they were. The
+Harboroughs are poor now and cannot afford to
+keep the place up; not but what it is fine still,—have
+you ever seen it?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, but I have heard about it,” Bill said eagerly.
+“There is a room there, the library I think, with a
+fireplace so big that a quadrille could be danced on
+the hearth; and the great hall is so wide that a coach
+and four could turn in it without touching the wall
+on either side.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my dear, yes.” The old lady’s tone was
+sad, as of one who remembers departed greatness.
+“Yes; so they say; they say many things about the
+place. It is sad to think of the way in which it is
+being left, sad to think of the Harboroughs, a good
+old family.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought they were bad,” Bill remarked, remembering
+the common report of the district.</p>
+
+<p>“So they were, bad and extravagant too; they
+nearly all were, and that is why they are so poor
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not express any opinion on good old
+families which were also bad; she only remarked
+meditatively, “I think I shall go to Wood Hall.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t,” Miss Minchin said; “Mr. Harborough
+lives there now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; but parts of the grounds are open, are
+they not? I could see them, as much as can be
+seen.”</p>
+
+<p>“I would not, if I were you.” Miss Minchin’s
+voice was a solemn warning.</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>“Because,—it does not seem exactly right for a
+young girl to go into those grounds.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why?”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Minchin dropped her voice half a tone lower.
+“Mr. Harborough is a bad old man,” she said, “a
+very wicked old man. It does not become me to
+speak ill of one in his station, belonging to this county
+too; still facts are facts and they are terrible.”</p>
+
+<p>“What has he done?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill showed, or Miss Minchin thought she showed,
+too much interest in the subject, and, either because
+she would not, or else because she could not, she
+gave no further information. Whereupon Bill,
+failing to hear anything about the one Mr. Harborough
+turned to the other.</p>
+
+<p>“Is he related to the Wood Hall people?” she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“No, oh dear, no,” Miss Minchin answered.
+“He is an Australian, or a New Zealander, or something
+American and colonial; I am rather uncertain
+about those places, but he comes from one of them.
+Besides, my dear, consider, he is a farmer, nothing
+but a farmer,—a very good profession; I am not
+saying anything against it,” she added, hastily
+remembering Theresa’s husband; “indeed, I should
+be very sorry to, seeing that all the patriarchs were
+farmers, so to say. Still, you must admit it is not
+quite suitable to a member of the county-families.
+I know old families are not respected as they used to
+be, but no one would think of classing them with
+farmers even now.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill acquiesced and then observed: “It is queer
+he should have the same name.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” Miss Minchin said, bridling
+a little. “It is not such an uncommon name;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>besides the old families spread so. Long ago they
+were, no doubt, much larger than they now are;
+there is no telling where all the younger branches
+go.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think he is a younger branch? Then he
+should be as good as the others.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly not: for one reason he has not lived
+in the same place so long; he and his forebears have
+gone out from among the family; they have not
+kept up the family traditions. There are many
+traditions in a family like that, many, and much
+property too. Why, do you know the side chapel
+in our parish church is the property of the Harboroughs?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not know it, neither did she see the force
+of it as an argument; nevertheless she was interested.
+“The whole chapel?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the little chapel and the little altar and all
+complete. Of course they never go there, for they
+are Catholics. I sometimes think perhaps if Mr.
+Harborough had not been a Catholic—but there!
+We mustn’t be uncharitable. Do you like reading?
+Yes? Then I should advise you to read the history
+of the county; you will find all about Wood Hall
+there and many other things you will like. I don’t
+think Mrs. Morton has a history, but Miss Gruet
+has a very nice book of Selections, which I have no
+doubt she will lend to you; I do believe I have it in
+the house now.” She had borrowed it when Harborough
+first came and had not yet returned it.
+“We can ask her to allow you to take it home with
+you; I’m sure she will.”</p>
+
+<p>This Miss Gruet expressed herself happy to do,
+and Bill carried the book away with her when she
+left with Theresa a few minutes later.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI.<br>
+<small>THE RIGHT OF WAY.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> parish church of Ashelton was very old. It was
+said in Miss Gruet’s selected history of the county to
+be of great antiquarian interest; but antiquaries did
+not abound in Ashelton, and neither the inhabitants
+nor their friends troubled their heads much about the
+stone-work of the fourteenth century, or any of the
+other commended points of interest. At one time
+there had been a couple of letters in a Wrugglesby
+paper about a little Last Judgment window of obscure
+meaning; but the letters had long been forgotten,
+and the rector’s new organ partly hid the window
+now.</p>
+
+<p>Bill paid particular attention to the window on the
+first Sunday that she went to Ashelton church; but
+she had just been reading about it and knew where
+to look for it. For the rest, that which chiefly
+pleased her were the grinning goblin faces which
+looked out from the capitals of pillars and the niches
+of windows,—from every place where the old builders
+could put them; there was even one carved at the
+end of Theresa’s pew. Everybody had a pew, and
+almost everybody went to church in Ashelton. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>Morton’s pew was conveniently situated for keeping
+an eye on the rest of the congregation. There was
+only one better placed for that purpose, Miss Minchin’s;
+but she, as she always maintained, had not
+selected it herself, her dear mother having done so
+long before her time,—in which case, it is possible to
+conceive that Miss Minchin inherited her tastes, as
+well as her pew, from her mother. Bill, from her
+place of vantage, looked at everybody, and everybody,
+with even greater interest, looked at her. In
+fact so much did they look that she, though as a rule
+somewhat indifferent on the subject of clothes, was
+rather glad that Polly had furbished up her winter
+hat before she left Wrugglesby. She gave the hat
+a little pull forward as she thought of it, and looked
+across Mrs. Perry’s purple bonnet to the Harborough
+chapel. It was to the left of the chancel, a step
+higher than the main body of the church and in a
+measure cut off from it by a continuance of the
+slender oak screen which stood before the chancel
+itself. Bill looked at it thoughtfully, opining that
+there could never have been enough Harboroughs to
+fill it, unless they brought their servants with them.
+There was a small altar with a cross upon it, and
+above, an old window where fat cherubs smiled in
+starch-blue smoke. She wondered what its meaning
+was, as others had wondered before her, and came to
+the conclusion that it was a pity the starch clouds, if
+they were clouds, were not red instead of blue: “It
+could not possibly make the place darker than it now
+is,” she thought, “and it would look very much
+nicer.”</p>
+
+<p>It is to be feared that Bill did not pay very much
+attention to the sermon. She looked about her over
+much, but she could still say with truth, when asked
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>by Miss Gruet afterwards, that she had enjoyed the
+service, for she had a keen ear for music, and the
+music at Ashelton church was very good. She
+listened with rapt attention to what Miss Minchin
+called “the set pieces,” and joined enthusiastically in
+the hymns, singing loud and sweet, for though her
+flexible voice was perhaps better suited to the mimicry
+of other sounds than anything else, it still possessed
+a rich sweetness in its many-noted variations.</p>
+
+<p>When Bella came home from visiting Theresa in
+the winter she confessed to Polly that she had found
+Sunday afternoon a little dull; that is to say the first
+Sunday afternoon; on the second she had gone for a
+walk and—Bill had not heard any more, so she did
+not know what prevented the second Sunday afternoon
+from being as dull as the first. She did not
+herself find the afternoon dull, as she went up to the
+garret to look over some books. Theresa in bringing
+away her girlish treasures from Miss Brownlow’s
+had accidentally brought a few things which were
+not hers.</p>
+
+<p>“I have been meaning to take them back several
+times,” she said, “but I keep forgetting. I really
+hardly know what they are now; there are one or
+two books belonging to Polly and to you, or your
+father. I put them in a box in the garret when I
+had to turn the spare room out; you might get
+them down some time and put them with your
+things, if you will.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill said she would, and chose Sunday afternoon
+to do it. She left Robert and Theresa reading and
+dozing by the fire with the port and oranges on the
+table beside them. “Don’t you want any dessert?”
+Theresa had said. But Bill did not care about port
+and oranges; she filled her pocket with nuts and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>went to the garret to eat them while she looked over
+the books. These she found in a lidless packing-case
+neatly covered over with brown paper. The one on
+the top was <span class="smcap">Holy Living and Dying</span>. “That’s
+Auntie’s: Theresa must have got it from the top
+shelf in the dining-room; the books there were
+mostly hers; I suppose she thought they all were
+and took the lot.” The next was a small brown
+volume, <span class="smcap">Plain Truths for Plain People</span>, in which
+she found Polly’s name—“That’s just the book for
+Polly; a plain person she certainly is, and the plain
+truth is a very good thing for her to start on,
+considering how she can trim it.” The two volumes
+were laid aside, and the next dive into the box
+brought out a book she was pleased to see but did
+not before know that they possessed, an old history
+of that part of the county. “Whose is this, I
+wonder?—why, it’s mine!” She had turned to the
+first page and seen her own name Wilhelmina Alardy.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s funny,”—she was cracking her nuts with
+her teeth as she looked. “At least, I don’t know
+that it is so funny after all; I expect it was stuck up
+at the top with the other old things, so I never knew
+about it. Of course I am not that Wilhelmina;
+that’s Grandmother.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill looked long at the book, for she had not many
+relics, or even tales, of her own grandmother, as she
+counted her father’s mother in distinction from her
+mother’s mother whom she shared equally with the
+cousins. There was not, to be sure, much of this
+lady to share; not one of the four cousins had even
+a memory of her, though of their own grandmothers
+the others each had something to tell. Polly had a
+good many tales about hers, with an ugly old portrait,
+too, and a heavy locket she used to wear. Bella and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>Theresa could remember theirs plainly; they had stayed
+with her when they were little girls, and still had the
+coral necklaces she gave them the last Christmas she
+was alive. But Bill had neither tales nor trinkets;
+her parents had both died when she was very young,
+and Miss Brownlow knew no traditions of the Alardys
+and few facts concerning them, except that Bill’s father
+was an only son, and that for relations the girl must
+depend on her; so it happened that Bill knew little
+about her grandmother, except that she herself was
+named after her. There was a little wooden box-ottoman
+in the spare bedroom at Langford House, which,
+she had been told, used to belong to this grandmother.
+She had looked inside it once and found nothing but
+papers, which did not prove very interesting; a few
+letters, not easy to decipher and not, so far as she
+had tried them, entertaining; half a dozen bills, part
+of an old account-book, some recipes for cough-mixture
+and tea-cakes, a few odd sheets of paper and
+manuscript music, and some legal-looking documents
+which were quite beyond her comprehension. The
+greater part of this miscellaneous collection seemed to
+have belonged to her mother; a few of the less intelligible
+were of an older date, and the music and some
+scraps of poetry were not dated at all. Bill had
+thought of carrying the poetry away, as the only
+thing there which interested her; but since she had
+gone to the box without Miss Brownlow’s permission,
+she decided that she had better not take anything
+out, and learned the lines by heart instead.
+Then she shut the box, and gave up any hope of
+boasting as intimate an acquaintance with her grandmother
+as the other cousins did with theirs.</p>
+
+<p>That was in the winter. She had not thought any
+more about it until this Sunday afternoon when she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>unexpectedly came upon the history of the county
+with her grandmother’s name on the fly-leaf. She
+was delighted with her discovery, partly because it
+was her grandmother’s, but chiefly because it was the
+very book she wanted. Settling herself comfortably
+on an empty tea-chest, she proceeded to study it and
+the old map of the district which she found folded
+inside. When at last she was called down-stairs for
+tea she was still full of her treasure, and told Robert
+and Theresa about it. They listened, amused by the
+interest she attached to it and the attraction she found
+in both book and map.</p>
+
+<p>“I believe the map must be a good one,” she said
+at last; “it is so clear, I think I could find my way
+anywhere by it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where do you want to find your way?” Robert
+asked smiling.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, to lots of places, to Gurnett for one. I
+think I shall walk to Gurnett to-morrow; may I,
+Theresa?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is rather a long way, but go if you like.”
+Theresa perhaps thought a long walk would be better
+for her young cousin than spending too much time
+with the animals in the yard.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, accordingly, Bill, armed with
+her map and some sandwiches for refreshment by the
+way, started on her walk. The distance might be
+long, but she could not remember any time in her
+life when she had been really tired. It seemed to
+her that mere walking was not enough, and once
+fairly started in the lonely lanes and quiet fields, she
+broke into a run for pure lightness of heart and
+ecstasy of living. Soon she was out on a road again,
+and here she walked more soberly, looking to right
+and left, noting the veil of green that was spreading
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>over the hedges, enjoying to the full the day and the
+walk and the solitude.</p>
+
+<p>And so Gurnett was reached, almost too soon, and
+the sandwiches eaten behind a grassy bank, very
+much too soon considering it was not yet twelve.
+After that the map was pulled out and considered
+thoughtfully. It was some time before she could
+find on it the exact spot where she now was, but at
+last she did. “Here I am, here—oh, yes, these
+must be the cross-roads; there is Wood Hall, over
+there, and here comes the lane between, the second
+turning after the cross-roads. The little path ought
+to cross just where the road joins the lane; I wonder
+if I shall find it; it seems to go straight from Corbycroft
+on one side of the lane to Wood Hall on the
+other, or rather to the little church in Wood Hall
+grounds. I don’t see what it can have been made
+for, but it must be a real path since it is marked; if
+anyone says anything to me I shall show him the
+map.”</p>
+
+<p>Having come to this satisfactory conclusion Bill
+folded up her map and went on. In due time she
+came to the junction of the road and lane, but there
+was no indication that a footpath existed in any
+direction. In fact, the country itself on the left-hand
+side had undergone something of a change, for
+whereas her map showed that there had been a sort
+of park, the property of the distant hall, Corbycroft,
+there now seemed to be nothing but pasture-fields.
+She climbed the steep bank, the lane here being considerably
+below the level of the fields, and looked
+round. There was nothing but pasture-land, green,
+curving, sloping gradually away from her. A clump
+of elms stood in the centre, beautiful trees, tawny
+with the catkins which hung from their black
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>branches; but there was no park, only pasture-land
+sloping down to the farm in the distance. And the
+farm looked very much as if it were a farm and not
+a hall; perhaps it was the remains of the old hall
+patched up and serving as a farm-house; though, to
+be sure, her history had spoken of a hall, a small off-manor
+belonging to the Corbys, a family who seemed
+to have had their head-quarters and more important
+property away in the north of the county, in the
+direction of the coast. The map and history were
+alike old, and Bill was forced to admit that things
+might have changed since they were made.</p>
+
+<p>But if the left side of the lane was disappointing,
+the right more than fulfilled expectations. The
+ground sloped sharply up on that side; Wood Hall
+evidently stood on a hill and appeared to be hidden
+among trees, for the slope as far as Bill could see
+was covered with wood. It was not a trim park but
+a thicket, a wild young forest growing up as it could
+about the stumps of veteran oaks and beeches long
+since sacrificed to the axe. In some places the young
+trees almost choked each other with their crowded
+growth; in others they struggled for existence with
+the old pollards that still held their ground. Brambles
+and moss and last year’s fern covered the paths and
+choked the water-courses; here and there a tree, too
+lightly rooted to withstand the winters’ storms, or too
+old to bear the weight of its years, had fallen and lay
+as it fell. All was neglected, all growing, in
+crowded thicket or open glade, as only nature
+unassisted can grow; for it was genuine woodland,
+where the sunshine filtered through a close-woven
+roof of branches and chased dancing shadows over
+last year’s leaves; thickets of thorn breaking into
+leaf, primroses hiding in the moss at their feet;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>beeches, tall and straight as pillars of stone, a cathedral
+twilight in their shade; pollard oaks still brown
+in sheltered places; the glossy darkness of holly, the
+stately grace of slim young larches lightly tasselled in
+earliest green; silver birches, old trees, their white
+bark cracked and swelled, blackened by many years;
+young trees, a lace-work of branches, a tangle of
+supple stems and bursting buds.</p>
+
+<p>Bill was over the low boundary fence now. There
+was no evidence of a path, but there ought to have
+been; it was marked on her map and she was going
+to find it, so she began the ascent in the direction in
+which it should have been. Up she went, the ground
+soft and irregular, here the dead leaves of many years
+blown into hollows rustling about her feet, there the
+rich black earth patched with moss, emerald and gray
+and golden brown. An old pollard lay as it had
+fallen; about its head fungus had gathered, and
+under its side primroses grew. Higher up, where
+the leaves were fewer, in sheltered ledges, beneath
+the twisty coils of beech-roots there were more
+primroses, plenty of them, and everywhere anemones,
+fairy flowers that danced among the dead bracken.
+The sun, hidden by the hill, looked down through
+the forest aisles, threading the whole place with
+arrows of light so that all around there was a lattice
+of woven light and shadow, while, before, there
+lay a path golden as Jacob’s way to heaven.</p>
+
+<p>Involuntarily the girl stood still, clasping her
+hands tight on one another, while her breath came
+fast. All round stretched this living woodland,
+thrilling with its growing, stirring life; the bare
+trees, brown and purple and deep blue in their
+shadows, yet touched with the breath of spring,
+faintest green, or gold, or sparkling where the sun
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>caught their yet unopened buds. The very earth
+was audible, alive, as it breathed forth its moist
+sweetness; and the birds sang their anthem of praise
+for the world’s eternal, ever recurring youth.</p>
+
+<p>She stood, a little brown figure in the lonely wood,
+her whole soul going out to the great mother Earth,
+her heart filled with a passionate, inarticulate gladness.
+“Oh, God!” she said, “how good, how good
+it all is!”</p>
+
+<p>She said it aloud because she had not outgrown
+that stage of savagedom which feels, with the Druids
+of old, that God is in the woods. A chaffinch on a
+crab-tree above her head looked down and to another
+hid in the catkinned branches of a hornbeam cried,
+“Come and see, what d’ye think! What d’ye
+think!” And the other replied with exactly the
+same words, or at least it seemed so to Bill; she
+listened a moment, then answered them with a call
+so like their own that they might well have been
+puzzled by it if she had not at that moment begun
+to sing and frightened them both to the safe distance
+of a higher bough—</p>
+
+<p class="center">“There’s laughter for the May-time,”—</p>
+
+<p>She sang and her voice was like a lark’s in its
+complete gladness—</p>
+
+<p class="center">“The morning of the year—the year”—</p>
+
+<p>and the singing was merged into ripples of sound
+neither song nor laughter and yet a wild sweet
+blending of both.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, young woman, I hope you are satisfied.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill stopped abruptly and faced the speaker, an old
+man on the higher ground just above her. He may
+have approached by some path hidden in the thicket
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>on the right, or he may have been close at hand
+waiting till now to declare himself; she did not
+know which, neither did she know what was expected
+of her, so she only answered truthfully,
+“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am glad to hear it.” She looked puzzled, and
+he added abruptly: “You are trespassing,—do you
+know it?”</p>
+
+<p>The light began to dawn on Bill’s mind; she had
+forgotten all about the map and the footpath, but
+now she remembered and answered eagerly: “No, no,
+I am not really, at least I don’t think I can be; there
+is a footpath somewhere about here; I can’t have got
+far from it.”</p>
+
+<p>“There is no footpath.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it is marked on my map,” and Bill began
+to unfold the paper in which she had for greater
+security wrapped her treasure.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t help your map; there is no footpath
+here and there never was. I think I should know
+considering that the place belongs to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you Mr. Harborough?” Bill’s face beamed
+with satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>“I am; the fact seems to afford you pleasure.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am pleased,” Bill admitted. Having once got
+herself into a difficulty she never had any hesitation
+about going through with it, in which course she was
+often helped by a serene unconsciousness of her
+position and offences, a quality Polly reckoned high
+in the list of her condemned exhibitions of no
+“gumption.” “I am pleased. I—I had heard
+about you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am indeed gratified”; he spoke with a sarcastic
+courtesy somewhat wasted on his hearer.
+“Judging by your flattering anxiety to make my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>acquaintance, I must conclude that what you heard
+was to my credit.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was interesting,” Bill said doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon the old man laughed. “In that case,”
+he said, “I must conclude it was not to my credit.”</p>
+
+<p>Without replying Bill unfolded her map. “This
+is the footpath,” she said, and began tracing it with
+her finger.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want to see your map, child.” He was
+looking curiously at the small brown figure. “Look
+up,” he said, “I would rather see your face. Tell
+me where you learnt to sing and laugh and whistle to
+the birds all in a breath.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know; I suppose I was made like that,”
+she still persistently spread out the map. “My
+cousin Polly,” she explained, without glancing up,
+“says my father was a singer, a poor one, you know,
+not anything much, but perhaps I inherited it from
+him. Sometimes, though, Polly says he was a
+ventriloquist or even a clown; I don’t think she
+really knows.—See, here is the footpath.”</p>
+
+<p>“Whose is this map?” Mr. Harborough asked;
+he had taken it from her and was examining it
+through a gold-rimmed glass.</p>
+
+<p>“Mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you did not mark that path; it was done
+years ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, when the map was made.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, certainly not; it was put in afterwards, that
+is easy to see. Even if I did not know that, as no
+such path exists, it could not have been printed then
+or at any other time.”</p>
+
+<p>He dropped his glass and handed the map back to
+Bill who, after looking at it a little, began to see that
+he was correct.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>“Then there is no path here after all,” she said in
+a tone of woful disappointment. “I should like to
+know who marked it on the map?”</p>
+
+<p>“So should I, so should I very much. Where did
+you get the thing?”</p>
+
+<p>“I found it in an old book of my grandmother’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your grandmother?” he said impatiently.
+“What was your grandmother, who was she, how
+did she come by the book and the map, whose were
+they before?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill could give him no information, and he held
+out his hand for the map again. She gave it to him
+and he examined it critically. “There were very
+few people who could have put that in,” he said
+thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“Then there is a path!” Bill exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“No, there is not, and there never was. Come
+with me, just a few steps. There,—now look down,
+your path should pass the pond by that stream, do
+you see? That boggy place, that is where it is
+marked to go; that place has always been the same.
+What do you think of men who chose that way by
+preference,—is it likely they would do it? What
+should you think of them?”</p>
+
+<p>“I should think they were in a great hurry, and
+perhaps, that it was night,” and Bill looked down
+into the marshy, overgrown hollow, at a loss to
+understand.</p>
+
+<p>Her companion’s voice aroused her: “What about
+this grandmother of yours?” he asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know anything; she has been dead a
+long time, but I will find out if I can.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you? Perhaps you think you will also find
+out about this mysterious path?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>Bill was a painfully persistent person. It may
+have been that Mr. Harborough thought so, or it
+may have been that he still wished to keep her to
+enliven the tedium of the day, for he said coolly:
+“I will tell you if you like. There is no path, it is
+true, but the way marked on your map was taken
+one night by men in a hurry to reach the chapel of
+ease further on in these grounds.”</p>
+
+<p>“They made a path for themselves!” Bill cried.
+“They were in a hurry and went the nearest way!
+What were they doing? Why did they want to go
+to the chapel?”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Harborough laughed at her eagerness. “My
+dear young lady,” he said, “I will explain if you
+wish, only we must really walk on. I am sorry to
+say I can no longer stand an indefinite time even to
+discuss anything so romantic as you seem to think
+this tale. Let us go on,—this way. Now for the
+romance: to begin with, do you know a certain old
+tradition in connection with carrying a corpse? It
+may linger still, though I hardly think it, but at the
+time I am speaking of it was not infrequently believed
+that the way along which a body had been carried for
+burial became a path for ever, became what is called
+a right of way. Mind, this is tradition I am telling
+you, not fact; it is not fact and it never was. If
+twenty bodies were carried through my grounds for
+burial no right of way would be established, but at
+one time some people firmly believed such a thing to
+be the case.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then the men were carrying a body?” Bill’s
+face was flushed with excitement. “And the person
+who marked my map knew about it and believed the
+tradition?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. The question is, who marked your map?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>“Did not many people know about carrying the
+body that way?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not many, and certainly very few could have
+marked your map with the accuracy with which I
+believe it to be marked.”</p>
+
+<p>“The burying was private, then?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was anxious to make the most of her romance.
+Her companion watched her eagerness with an amused
+face, and as they came suddenly on to a gravel path,
+he said with an air of impenetrable mystery: “Very
+private, I should say, at that time, very private
+indeed.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII.<br>
+<small>HARBOROUGH OF GURNETT.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was an axiom of Polly’s that if you can’t be clever,
+you had better be a fool. This, needless to state,
+was first said in reference to Bill who, Polly considered,
+fell into the last category and fell there
+comfortably. “Providence, or something else, helps
+fools,” was Polly’s opinion, “while it leaves moderately
+sensible people to shift for themselves. Things
+always turn out right for fools. Whatever muddle
+Bill blundered into, I believe she would blunder out
+of it again not one bit the worse.” The day that
+Bill went in search of the right of way at Wood Hall
+was possibly an illustration of this faculty; for on
+that occasion, though she had the ill-luck to blunder
+on the owner of the property, she was not ignominiously
+turned out of the place, threatened with
+prosecution and other penalties; on the contrary,
+she was—“Well, treated in a way in which I should
+not have been treated,” Polly said with an indignant
+sniff. Wherein she certainly spoke the truth, but
+then, as Bella pointed out, Bill was not Polly; though
+what Bill was that she should please the master of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>Wood Hall, neither could quite say. They did not
+know him.</p>
+
+<p>After all, there was not much to know, only a
+lonely old man who had outlived friends and health
+and amusements. He had come to Wood Hall to
+die, he said, for it was well fitting that he, the last of
+the family in a direct line, should die in the neglected
+home. Certainly he had never used it much as a
+home; perhaps he had not cared to do so in reduced
+state, perhaps, more likely, he had little interest in a
+country life. One autumn, a long time ago, he had
+spent a month or two at the old hall, which was only
+some five miles from the house where the high sheriff
+for the year was living. People said that this proximity
+had something to do with Mr. Harborough’s
+visit; and certainly there was some scandal about the
+sheriff’s wife which had the effect of closing the doors
+of the neighbouring gentry upon him for a time, at
+least of those who still cherished certain provincial
+notions of morality. But that was all a very old tale,
+a tale almost forgotten now. Miss Minchin and her
+compeers might recall it, but to the younger generation
+Mr. Harborough and his doings were little more
+than a name, for since that time Wood Hall had seen
+but very little of him. Indeed, he affected a cynical
+indifference for the old house, which was possibly
+genuine enough, though it had not prevented his
+coming to pass his last lonely days there. Lonely
+they were, and tedious he often found them; tedious
+when he was ill, more tedious still when he was well.
+It was to this tedium, and to the fact that he was
+moderately well that day, that Bill owed the interest
+she had for him; that and, perhaps, some little charm
+her youth had for the old rake.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever may have been the cause, certainly she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>did interest him, for when he led her through the
+wood and out on to the path he showed no
+inclination to let her go. The path was a weed-grown
+gravel sweep, dividing the wood on the one
+side from a shrubbery on the other. Here a man
+with a wheeled chair was waiting the arrival of his
+master.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” Bill exclaimed as she saw the path between
+the trees, “I have come out at the wrong place!
+I had better go back.”</p>
+
+<p>“And lose your way, and trespass still further on
+my property?”</p>
+
+<p>“I will be very careful.”</p>
+
+<p>“I dare say.” The old man seated himself in the
+chair as he spoke. “Don’t you think you have
+trespassed enough for one day?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not consider that she had exactly trespassed,
+but she was not sure that she could make
+anyone else, say a magistrate, take the same view;
+neither was she sure what the penalty for trespass
+might be, so she only said: “I am very sorry;
+I thought the map was right, though I certainly did
+not see a path.”</p>
+
+<p>“On the strength of the thought you went to
+look? Yes? Well, supposing I let you off this
+time—”</p>
+
+<p>“I will never do it again.”</p>
+
+<p>“—Let you off, I say, on a condition.”</p>
+
+<p>“What condition?” Bill asked cautiously.</p>
+
+<p>“That as a penance for coming here, you finish
+that song you began in the wood.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that all? I’ll certainly do that. It is not
+a real song, only a verse of poetry and I don’t sing
+it quite right. The last line should be ‘In winter
+rest is sweet,’ only I like it best the other way.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>Shall I sing it now?” And receiving an answer in
+the affirmative, she sang without more ado:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="first">“There’s laughter for the May-time,</div>
+<div class="verse">The morning of the year;</div>
+<div class="verse">There’s work for all the day-time,</div>
+<div class="verse">When summer’s noon is here;</div>
+<div class="verse">The victor’s crown of glory</div>
+<div class="verse">The harvest home shall greet;</div>
+<div class="verse">But after life’s long story</div>
+<div class="verse">There’s the devil’s bill to meet!</div>
+<div class="verse">The devil’s bill—”</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>she sang till all the wood around her seemed full
+of laughing voices—</p>
+
+<p class="center"> “The devil’s bill, the devil’s bill, the devil’s bill to meet!”</p>
+
+<p>Seeing that the condition laid upon her was a
+light one she felt bound to fulfil it to the uttermost
+and to do her best, using all the tricks of voice and
+tone that she knew. In this laudable endeavour her
+success was such that even the stoical attendant with
+the chair, who, it might have been presumed, had
+outlived astonishment in his master’s service, looked
+at her in surprise, while Mr. Harborough himself
+was delighted.</p>
+
+<p>“Bravo!” he exclaimed. “What a voice it is!
+They ought to put you on the stage, the variety-stage.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was gratified, but not unduly moved. She
+had a tolerably clear idea that her vocal tricks had
+not much real value, and, as she wanted to get home,
+she did not care to stay for more compliments.</p>
+
+<p>“You see, I have got to get back to Ashelton,” so
+she concluded her explanation.</p>
+
+<p>“Ashelton?” Mr. Harborough exclaimed; “you
+cannot get there till after three o’clock. You surely
+do not mean to go fasting? You must not do that.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>You will perhaps give me the pleasure of your
+company at lunch? Yes? You had better; they
+will have eaten up everything by the time you get
+home. Come, you must not say no; that song
+deserves something more than a wander in the wood.
+Little Miss Tucker sang for her supper,—no, for her
+lunch. I promise that you shall not be late in
+getting home, the carriage can take you as far as
+you like on your return journey.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was not troubled with many even rudimentary
+ideas of propriety. The sandwiches were little more
+than a memory, and, besides,—a reason which
+influenced her most of all—if she accepted the invitation
+she would see Wood Hall. Consequently
+she did accept and, walking beside the chair, accompanied
+Mr. Harborough to the house.</p>
+
+<p>What was it like? Bill sometimes tried to describe
+it, but she never succeeded, and always ended by
+saying: “If it were mine, I would never, never give
+it up; I would fight for every brick of it, every
+timber, every stone. I would sell everything to
+keep it; it would break my heart to let it go after
+it had belonged to my people for so many generations.
+It is a house that is just weighed down with
+years; I think it must be almost awful to have all
+those years behind you.”</p>
+
+<p>It was with a hushed sense of the awe belonging
+to a great house which had reached its declining
+days that Bill entered the wide arched doorway.
+She had said, as they came from the wood, how
+much she wanted to see the big hall of local fame, so,
+by Mr. Harborough’s orders, they went by the long
+west front of the house. It was a great pile, built
+of bricks which were neither purple nor red, the
+tint which only the centuries can mix, with rows
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>of mullioned windows, set not too straight by the
+hands of Tudor builders, and pressed yet more
+aslant by the weight of time upon them. Above,
+was a roof high-gabled, many-peaked, running this
+way and that; below, stretching to right and left,
+a terraced walk led to gardens where yew hedges and
+pleached alleys recalled the days of hooped petticoats
+and powdered heads, or even of older times when
+the men of trunk-hose and mighty hand cast bowls
+on the smooth turfed green. But everywhere was
+decay; even the spring sunshine and the glad singing
+birds could not destroy the sense of death and decay,—blistered
+paint and lichened stone, sagging roof
+and darkened windows, grass on the terrace, weeds
+between the stones, unclipped hedges, and rose-walks
+a tangle of thorns; and the great, sad, grand old
+house looking down on it all.</p>
+
+<p>To this place Bill came, out of the spring sunshine
+and the living air into the great hall. It
+was not quite so great as tradition said, but still
+of size enough to tempt some mad Harborough
+of bygone days to try to turn his coach in its width.
+Vast it was, with its dark walls hung with tapestry
+rotten past repair, its polished floor, and its fireplace
+where a man might well share the hearth
+with the logs and not then be overnear the blaze.
+Above the mantelpiece were the arms of the house,
+the house that had seen its best days; the dragons’
+heads, deep cut in polished wood, grinned down
+malignantly on the little intruder whom the Harborough
+of to-day had brought from his woods.
+She paused a moment, awed by the sense of past
+greatness, by the weight of the years that lay behind,
+by the thought of the stately women who had passed
+that way before her. Then she went on, and as
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>she went her light step gained a stateliness, her figure
+a dignity which well became the place and made
+old Harborough ask himself if the child had not
+some good blood in her after all.</p>
+
+<p>He found himself pondering over the same
+question again later on, for Bill, like most born
+mimics, often unconsciously imitated those she was
+with, frequently, without being aware of it, catching
+her manner from theirs, sometimes shaping even her
+speech and accent according to those of the person to
+whom she spoke. Thus, as Mr. Harborough treated
+her with an almost exaggerated courtesy, she returned
+him the same, and, since she was keenly conscious of
+the dignity belonging to the old house, she shaped
+her behaviour in accordance with it. As for her host,
+he was half surprised, half amused, the amusement
+growing, however, as he led her to talk. Nobody
+had found her conversation amusing before; Carrie
+and Alice, though they sometimes laughed, more
+often professed a contempt for her and all her
+sayings, even while they half feared her many
+mocking voices. Certainly no one had laughed at
+her thoughts and replies; she could not herself
+always see a reason for her host’s laughter, but it was
+plain that he did. He was old, she thought, and
+therefore easily pleased, lonely and therefore not very
+critical; but his appreciation encouraged her, the
+wine (the first she had ever tasted) excited her, and
+she talked as she had never talked before, he leading
+her on till she had bewitched herself:</p>
+
+<p>“I tried to amuse him a little while, poor old
+man,” she told Polly meekly afterwards. “I really
+owed him something for the good food he gave me.
+Still, I think I did it more because I liked it than
+for anything else.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>To which Polly, having but small opinion of
+Bill’s powers of amusing, only made reply, “I dare
+say.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Harborough, however, who had lived in
+seclusion so long now that a small thing entertained
+him, vowed, far on in the afternoon, that Bill was
+the best of good company. In acknowledgment of
+which compliment Bill swept him a curtsey, with
+three fingers on her lips in the fashion of the china
+ladies on Miss Minchin’s mantelpiece. Then she
+said she must go home, and in so saying, it is to be
+feared that the imp in her got the upper hand,
+prompting her to the character she loved, for the
+tone and manner of her words suggested Mr.
+Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>Carrie and Alice did not like Bill’s mimicry, but
+Mr. Harborough was otherwise, and he recognised
+the original almost before Bill was aware of it herself.</p>
+
+<p>“I must come and hear that parson of yours,” he
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“Why don’t you?” Bill suddenly became serious.
+“There is the Harborough chapel in Ashelton
+church; what is the good of having a chapel all to
+yourself if you never use it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not belong to the Church of England.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill remembered Miss Minchin’s words. “Oh,”
+she began apologetically, but then a magnificent idea
+occurred to her or to some spirit of mischief that
+possessed her. She cast a quick glance at Harborough,
+her eyes ablaze with light.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it now?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing; at least, you would not do it—I don’t
+believe you could.”</p>
+
+<p>“Try me,” he answered; “lay your commands
+upon me and they are obeyed.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>“It is not a command; but it would be,—I should
+like to see what would happen.”</p>
+
+<p>“In what case?”</p>
+
+<p>“If you had a service in your chapel. I don’t
+know if you could, but I should almost think so; it
+is your own; you could have a Roman Catholic
+service there as well as we could have a Protestant
+one in our part, couldn’t you? I should like to see
+what would happen if you did!”</p>
+
+<p>“I should probably be prosecuted,” Harborough
+said; “that is what would most likely happen.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill sighed. “I never thought of that,” she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you not?” he answered. “Neither should
+I if I wanted the service, or rather, wanted to see what
+would happen.”</p>
+
+<p>“You would risk it?”</p>
+
+<p>“What will you give me if I do?”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough had little respect for either religion,
+less still for his neighbours’ feelings. As for Bill,
+neither thought occurred to her; the thing appealed
+to her as many an act, incomprehensible to a man for
+its folly or its wanton mischief, appeals to the superabundant
+energy of boyhood. It was simply a
+desire to see what would happen, a sporting appreciation
+of an explosion with no realisation of consequences
+painful to other people.</p>
+
+<p>“What would you give me?”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you want?”</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated a moment, and then said: “Come
+and see me again, and we will talk it over.”</p>
+
+<p>She agreed readily: “Yes, if Theresa will let me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Theresa must let you.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill thought it was probable that she would and
+said so, but Mr. Harborough, possibly judging from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>a wider experience, was not so sure and did not seem
+content with the arrangement.</p>
+
+<p>“Why ask?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Because I must; she won’t mind.”</p>
+
+<p>“But supposing she does?”</p>
+
+<p>“She won’t; I shall be able to come.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think so? Then let us make this bargain:
+if I do as you suggest, you will come once more to
+talk over the terms.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well; I will come once, she is sure to let
+me; but when I come, supposing I don’t like your
+terms, supposing they don’t seem fair to me, what
+am I to do? Must I fulfil them?”</p>
+
+<p>He told her that she need not, laughing at her
+caution, as a servant announced that the carriage was
+waiting.</p>
+
+<p>So Bill took her leave and drove away in state,
+though she did not think it necessary to complete
+her journey in the Harborough carriage; in fact she
+dismissed it at the entrance of one of the lanes and
+went the rest of the way home on foot.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you have a nice walk?” Theresa asked
+her young cousin when she met her at the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, glorious! I have had such a good
+time. I went into Wood Hall, not the grounds
+only, but the house too. You never saw such a
+place; it is,—I can’t describe it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Into Wood Hall!” Theresa exclaimed in
+astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, and I saw Mr. Harborough; he was ever
+so kind, not the least like what you would expect—”</p>
+
+<p>And then out came the story of Bill’s adventures,
+a brief and rather incoherent story with some things
+left out and some told twice, and, naturally, no
+mention of the surprise in store for the people of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>Ashelton. That was the only thing she intentionally
+suppressed, but unintentionally she suppressed many
+details and most of the conversation, though enough
+was told to puzzle and disturb Theresa.</p>
+
+<p>“Bill, I don’t know what to say. I am sure you
+ought not to have gone. I wish I had never let you
+go that walk.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa, completely astonished by Bill’s tale, now
+for the first time realised the responsibility of her
+charge. The charge herself had no idea of the
+nature of her offence. “Ought not to have gone?”
+she said. “Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because—because you ought not. I wonder
+you did not know; you should have known by
+instinct.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa’s sense of the enormity of Bill’s conduct
+was increasing, but with it there was also increasing a
+recognition of the difficulty of making it clear to the
+offender; certainly if she depended on Bill’s instinct
+she was not likely to be successful, for, as Polly had
+rightly said, Bill possessed little of that in connection
+with matters of social behaviour.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, for a moment I did wonder if I ought,
+because, of course, I had on my old dress and the
+place is so splendid.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is not the reason at all. You ought not to
+have gone,—I mean, he should not have asked you.
+He would not have done so if he had been a nice
+man; he could not have done so properly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes he did—”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean, he could not have asked you with
+propriety. You know he cannot think you—did not
+ask you as an equal; besides, you must have heard
+about him, the sort of man he is.”</p>
+
+<p>“About his being bad? Miss Minchin did say
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>that, and certainly he did say himself that he had the
+devil’s bill to meet.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not think it wise to explain, in answer to
+Theresa’s exclamation, that she herself had supplied
+the expression. She let that pass and Theresa began:
+“If you thought him all that—”</p>
+
+<p>“But I am not sure he is bad exactly; and if he
+were, I don’t see what harm it would do. Besides, is
+he bad? Of course I shouldn’t say he was good in
+our sense of the word, but then there are so many
+senses. He gave me the idea of being like a person
+who had lost his taste for all except one kind of thing.
+You can’t blame a person for not liking strawberry
+jam when he can only properly taste peppers; I
+should think, in a way, he could only taste peppers;
+and I should not be surprised if he had tried them
+very hot.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t talk nonsense, Bill,” Theresa said severely;
+and Bill, acting on the suggestion, did not talk at all,
+except when she explained to her cousin that she had
+promised to go to Wood Hall once again. This
+Theresa naturally forbade, absolutely refusing to permit
+it on any condition whatever. Bill did not press
+the point, nor go into too many details, for, as she
+said to herself, “Perhaps he won’t do it, and then I
+sha’n’t have to go after all.” If he did, it would be
+then time enough to settle with Theresa, and arrange
+some satisfactory compromise between breaking her
+own word on the one hand and her cousin’s command
+on the other.</p>
+
+<p>But would he do it? Bill wondered about it once
+or twice during the week. Would he be able to get
+a priest to read the service for him? She had a very
+vague idea as to how he would set about it. He had
+said something about knowing a man, and had smiled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>when he said it, not a very nice smile, but it looked
+rather as if he thought the man would do as he was
+asked. So Bill wondered, and the week passed
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Sunday came, a still, peaceful spring day. April
+was fairly in now, every bush and tree was waking to
+the fact even in the grey weather. Sunday was grey,
+quiet and calm, but a Sunday long remembered in
+Ashelton. The congregation assembled in church at
+the usual time, wearing the usual clothes, for it was
+not yet Easter. There was nothing much to look at,
+but from force of habit the congregation looked at
+each other. Bill, from her corner seat, looked across
+the old pews to the Harborough chapel. Was he
+coming? The clock began to strike eleven. No, he
+was not coming after all, he—was he?—she watched.
+The small side door of the chapel was opened from
+without and into the fretted twilight an old man
+stepped—he had come!</p>
+
+<p>A great smile of satisfaction spread over Bill’s face;
+a pleasant sensation of excitement and expectancy
+took possession of her. To tell the truth, something
+like a thrill of excitement ran through the whole
+congregation, though they expected nothing, at least
+nothing definite. Miss Minchin said afterwards that
+she wondered what was going to happen when she
+saw him come in, but then the saying came after the
+event. At the time she certainly looked earnestly
+enough to have seen anything there was to see,
+though that did not amount to a great deal. Mr.
+Harborough, attended by his manservant, entered;
+the verger, who hastened forward for the purpose,
+disposed of the servant in a side seat and shut the
+master in the great front pew. The congregation
+stared intently; Mr. Harborough stared in return
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>with the vacant stare of a superior being,—they
+had always said he was very haughty; his eye met
+Bill’s for a moment, and a faint smile of recognition
+passed over his face, but the general public did not
+notice it.</p>
+
+<p>The clock had ceased striking, and the first notes
+of the organ filled the church with a soft vibrating
+sound. Forth from the new vestry on the right came
+the choir and clergy; forth from the old vestry on
+the left, built originally for the sole use of the
+Harborough chapel, came a priest with shaven face
+set in a mask of stolid endurance. Bill, with the
+wanton cruelty of youth, saw the enduring face, but,
+not recognising its pain, felt no compunction, no pity
+for the man forced by some threat he feared to a
+task hateful to him. She felt nothing at all except a
+thrilling excitement. For a moment the event was
+all she had expected. All around her she could feel
+the mute horror and astonishment of the congregation;
+she could see it uncontrolled on their faces, so
+comical, she thought, in their blank, speechless
+amazement at this unparalleled conduct of the lord of
+the manor. At the end of the aisle was the verger,
+motionless, dumb; in their pews, the churchwardens,
+alike dumb, incapable of action, watching, fascinated,
+the rival clergy who, owing to the situation of the
+altar in the Harborough chapel, were hidden from
+each other’s sight by the wooden screen. No one in
+the chancel knew of those in the chapel; no one in
+the chapel showed any sign of knowledge of those in
+the chancel; all knelt in silence. But as the last
+choir-boy on the right rose from his knees, he leaned
+a little forward and saw the priest beyond the screen.
+His eyes grew round with astonishment; he almost
+fell forward on his head in his eagerness to be quite
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>sure; then the situation struck him as it struck Bill,
+and doubled him up in spasms of suppressed laughter.</p>
+
+<p>“When the wicked man turneth away from his
+wickedness,”—Mr. Johnson began, at the same time
+becoming aware of an unusual rustle and movement
+among the hitherto spell-bound people.</p>
+
+<p>The priest should, no doubt, have begun to read
+at the same time, but he did not. Mr. Harborough
+apologised to Bill afterwards for the way in which he
+failed in his part, for he hesitated and waited a
+moment. In that moment the verger, a shrewd old
+brickmaker, hastened up the aisle, and, without waiting
+for orders from the churchwardens, delivered
+some whispered information to Mr. Dane.</p>
+
+<p>There was a breathless pause; then low but
+distinct came the voice of the priest,—“<i>Introibo ad
+altare Dei</i>—”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Minchin started violently and looked about
+her in an awed fashion. She had seen all that had
+passed, but she hardly thought, as she said afterwards,
+that he would really venture to hold a service in the
+parish church. Mr. Dane passed quietly between the
+slender pillars of the side screen and approached the
+priest. A second whispered conversation, a glance,
+possibly an appealing glance, at Mr. Harborough, and
+Mr. Dane went on to him. Mr. Johnson, in the
+absence of the rector, went on with the service, but
+when Mr. Dane returned to his place he silenced his
+curate with a glance, and the priest, either more
+courteous or more sure of a hearing, did not attempt
+to begin his reading anew.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane turned to the congregation. “My
+brethren,” he said, “our neighbour, Mr. Harborough,
+has expressed a wish to hear the mass read in his
+chapel of St. Mary Magdalen. As the hour he has
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>chosen for the reading coincides with that of our
+morning-service, and as both cannot be conducted
+simultaneously in a seemly manner, I ask you to
+wait with me while the reverend Father reads the
+mass, which may God bless both to him and his
+hearers.”</p>
+
+<p>No one left the church; to a man they stood by
+their rector, though there were those among them
+who had strong feelings and would have much liked
+to enter a protest. The priest turned back to his
+mass-book; his hands shook a little, for the rector’s
+words had distressed him curiously; but Mr. Dane
+composed himself to listen with quiet dignity.</p>
+
+<p>And deep hidden in the shadow of a high old pew
+was one whose grief and self-abasement knew no
+bounds. The event had not been what she had anticipated;
+things looked quite different now.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII.<br>
+<small>THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF GURNETT.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">There</span> can be no doubt that few things are so well
+concealed as the perfectly obvious, no course of conduct
+so little observed as that which is open to all
+observation. If Bill had wished to conceal her doings
+on Sunday afternoon she would probably have been
+found out; since she was perfectly indifferent as to
+who knew what she did, no one discovered it. If
+she had been anxious for concealment she would have
+gone to the rectory by way of the field-path, and
+would inevitably have been seen by Miss Minchin
+and catechised by her in due season. But, since she
+was far too absorbed in other matters to care what
+any one thought, she went by the public way and no
+one knew it; no one, till Mr. Dane’s old housekeeper
+admitted her and took her to the study where
+Mr. Dane, but lately returned from a children’s
+service at Ashelton End, sat before his beloved
+piano.</p>
+
+<p>The rector of Ashelton knew every one in his
+parish and, to a certain extent, all about every one;
+consequently he knew of Mrs. Morton’s aunt and
+sister and cousins in Wrugglesby. To be sure, he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>knew about them before Theresa was Mrs. Morton,
+for Miss Brownlow was an institution of such long
+standing that he, being also an institution of long
+standing, could hardly fail to know of her. Still,
+this knowledge did not give him much information
+about Bill, of whom he only knew that she was a
+niece of Miss Brownlow and a cousin of Mrs.
+Morton. At one time he had tried to find out more
+about her, though not from any personal interest, for
+he did not know her even by sight then. It was on
+account of her name that he had made the enquiries,
+having good reason to remember the name of Alardy.
+However, he could discover nothing to couple her
+with the other Alardy, nor indeed had he been very
+hopeful of discovering anything. It was the
+familiarity of the name that had tempted him; and
+it was this familiarity which caused him an almost
+painful start when she was announced on that Sunday
+afternoon. He did not know her, nor her business,
+nor could he guess what it might be.</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not leave him long in doubt; her very
+face betrayed her; there was about her whole manner
+a contrition and self-abasement almost suggestive of
+a dog in disgrace. “I have come to tell you I did
+it,” she said, standing in the centre of the room; and
+the old rector at once perceived that he was to hear
+a confession, the enormity of which seemed terrible
+to the offender.</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down,” he said kindly. “There is something
+you want to tell me, something which seems
+very bad? Let us hear what is the matter, and we
+will see what can be done.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing can be done or undone.” She spoke
+with absolute conviction. “I want to tell you in
+case you should blame anyone else, and because I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>owe it to you,—that is the reason. The thing can’t
+be altered now.” And then she plunged straight
+into her confession. “It is about this morning’s
+service. It was all my fault; I got Mr. Harborough
+to have it.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane had known the owner of Wood Hall
+more years than he had known Ashelton. He was
+considerably surprised by Bill’s confession, considerably
+more surprised than he had been by the affair of
+the morning.</p>
+
+<p>“You induced Mr. Harborough to have the mass
+read?” he asked. “You? But why?—how?”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought of it,” she answered, “and,—he did it.
+This is how it happened. I was in the wood, and
+he found me and took me to the house to amuse
+him a little while, and I amused him as well as I
+could. It was rather like the daughter of Herodias
+dancing before Herod, though I did not dance, he
+did not ask me; but I sang and talked and pleased
+him. It is true he did not ask me at the end what I
+would like, but when I thought of this he half promised
+to do it; and now,—he has done it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then it was your idea? He did it to please
+you, or rather because you asked him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; it was my fault; he would not have done
+it if it had not been for me. I suppose,” she added
+doubtfully, “he hardly knew what it would be.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane had other opinions, but he only said:
+“Perhaps we had better not consider his action in
+the matter. I have known him long enough to be
+tempted to judge him as one man is sometimes
+tempted to judge another; but we will not do it.
+Let us talk about you; you persuaded him, or at
+least suggested the idea?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; I suggested,—I did not persuade, I only
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>suggested; but I had pleased him first so that he
+was ready to do as I wished; it was almost as good
+as persuading.”</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes were honest, but the rector was perplexed.
+He could not quite understand the case;
+the nature of the offence and the manner of the
+committal were clear enough; but the nature of the
+offender puzzled him. “Tell me,” he said, “what
+made you suggest such a thing; why did you do it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought it would be—” Bill hesitated for a
+word,—“not exactly fun, though still funny,—it was,
+too, at first”; and in spite of her genuine penitence
+a smile stole over her face at the recollection. “I
+believe I wanted to see what would happen more
+than anything else,” she concluded after a pause.</p>
+
+<p>“Were you satisfied with what did happen?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; oh, no, no! If I had thought of that I
+would never have suggested it; I never thought about
+hurting you or the poor priest. When I saw how
+you took it, and how he hated what he had got to
+do, I felt as if I should like to get up and tell Mr.
+Harborough to stop. But it would have been no
+use, I am sure,—I had done it and I could not undo
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he answered her very gravely, “no, you
+could not.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment’s silence, and Bill for the
+first time in her life faced the irrevocable. At last
+the old man spoke again. “And it never occurred
+to you,” he said, “that it would be painful to other
+people? Tell me, did another and a higher consideration
+never occur to you either?”</p>
+
+<p>“That it was irreverent? I did not think of it at
+the time; now, of course, I know it was; but I
+really did not mean to be, and I think God must
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>know. That is the best of it; you need never pretend
+or explain to Him. He knows, but other
+people,—I am very, very sorry.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane pressed that point no further; perhaps
+the offender was beginning to explain herself to him
+a little, and so he judged it unwise. He led her to
+talk of the events which preceded her suggestion;
+she told him all readily, the walk to Gurnett, the
+ramble in the wood, even her own rapture when alone
+there.</p>
+
+<p>“And to think,” she concluded, “that I should
+have felt like that,—as if the whole world were holy—and
+then, a little later think of such a thing!”</p>
+
+<p>“I know,” he said, “I know. The human mind
+is a very strange thing, and evil thoughts, in spite of
+what some people say to the contrary, are perhaps
+the very strangest things which ever come there.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,”—and she drew a deep breath. “I was so
+glad to be alive that morning,” she went on; “I was
+glad about everything; I was fairly crazy with,—with
+life I think. I can’t explain, and I am afraid
+you don’t understand.”</p>
+
+<p>Did he not? It was a great many years ago, but
+he too knew what it meant—life and the joy of
+living, the wanton madness of youth. He understood
+so well that he said little more about the act she
+deplored but could not undo. Instead, he tried to
+prepare for the future, and he prepared by asking
+some few questions about the past, about life at
+Ashelton, life at Wrugglesby with Miss Brownlow,
+poor dear Miss Brownlow. And again she told him
+readily, but her answers only deepened the wrinkles
+in his forehead. She thought they were for her
+wrong doings, but she confessed them all bravely,
+including her enjoyment of the prayer-meeting.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>“I liked it,” she admitted, “because Mr. Johnson
+was so fine when he talked about faith, the evidence
+of the spirit, and the things which are not as they are,
+and all the rest of it. I suppose it is wrong? I have
+not imitated him very much yet; I will try not.
+That is the chief reason why I liked the prayer-meeting
+and why I went to the second one. There
+was another reason,—I liked driving there. It was
+such a splendid evening, one of those that make you
+feel as if you would like to live for ever.”</p>
+
+<p>He ruffled his hair thoughtfully, and looked at her
+with a still troubled brow.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t understand?” she said, mistaking him.
+“I don’t mean eternal life that we—that Mr. Johnson
+talks about; but never to leave the world. It is
+so beautiful, so,—so dear! I can’t”—and there was
+almost a sob in her voice—“I can’t bear to think I
+shall have to die and lose sight of it all; that the
+thrushes will sing and I shall not hear them, the leaves
+come and go, the suns rise and set, and I never see
+them. It is sad to think how much I have lost
+already, though inside myself I always feel as if I had
+not really lost it, as if I had been there all the time
+from the beginning and seen all the changes. You
+know what I mean; you can learn lots about the past
+but nothing about the future; nothing helps you
+about that, and by-and-bye there will be, must be,
+more earth-history—it does not seem possible that I
+shall not know; I do not feel as if I could die!”</p>
+
+<p>She looked up, appealing almost passionately for
+mercy on this first time that her soul had been
+betrayed into words. Perhaps the old rector was a
+lenient judge; his eyes were almost wistful as he
+said half to himself: “And you are never ill, and
+never tired.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>“I never have been.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you have not nearly enough to do—” he
+was speaking solely to himself now—“God help you!”</p>
+
+<p>It is possible Mr. Dane thought this was a case for
+man’s help also; at all events he did not dismiss it
+with some brief fatherly advice and a blessing. He
+talked to Bill as he had not talked before to anyone
+in Ashelton; he, who, as it were, kept all on the
+outskirts of his life, spoke of those things which were
+the innermost shrine of his faith, the things which,
+like the priests of old, he believed should be kept for
+the initiated. And Bill was not initiated. Possibly
+she did not quite understand him; but it did not
+matter, she would do so some day. Possibly he did
+not quite understand her; how should he with all the
+gap of years between them? Nevertheless he treated
+the girlish fancies delicately, almost as holy things.</p>
+
+<p>In the end he set her a penance, for, though a
+believer in spiritual repentance, he also held that work
+was very good for the soul; so for her wrong-doing
+he set her a task, at least he said it was for that.</p>
+
+<p>“What shall I do?” she asked eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“You know that long bed at the bottom of Mrs.
+Morton’s garden? Dig it up. First pull up all the
+weeds and burn them, then dig it up, dig deep, put in
+manure and plant potatoes. I do not think Mrs.
+Morton will object; I fancy she would let you do
+what you like in her garden.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, oh yes, she won’t mind. I will begin to-morrow
+morning; is there nothing else? I shall like
+doing that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do that first,” he said, and she promised, not
+questioning his right to set her a task nor the fitness
+of the one he set. In fact, so satisfied did she seem
+with his wisdom that, just as she was leaving, she told
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>him of the promise to go to Wood Hall again and of
+the difficulties attending it.</p>
+
+<p>“I promised,” she said, “thinking Theresa would
+let me go, and now she won’t; but I must still go.”</p>
+
+<p>“You should not have promised;” and he looked
+very grave.</p>
+
+<p>“But I have; I thought Theresa would not mind.”</p>
+
+<p>“She is quite right; nevertheless one must keep a
+promise.”</p>
+
+<p>It is to be feared that here spoke the man dowered
+with family tradition, and not the clergyman and
+spiritual adviser. The sentiment, however, was one
+which Bill understood. “Yes,” she said, “I must
+go.”</p>
+
+<p>“But not alone,” he answered; “she must go with
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>This Bill did not understand; she was also very
+certain that Theresa would not agree, and proceeded
+to explain the difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>“She would take you, surely she would drive with
+you?” Mr. Dane persisted.</p>
+
+<p>But Bill shook her head. “She would say the
+promise was wrong and could not be kept, and she
+would think she was encouraging wrong by going;
+that is her way of looking at it.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane felt he was brought face to face with a
+difficulty, but he only repeated firmly, “You must
+not go alone.” Perhaps he could think of nothing
+else to say.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately just then Bill thought of a possible
+way out of the trouble. “Do you think it would do
+if Polly were to drive with me?” she asked. “Polly
+is my eldest cousin. I should have to leave her
+outside the house, but I would not be many minutes
+gone.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>Mr. Dane did not know Polly, but he thought
+she would do. He strongly recommended also that
+she should, if possible, accompany Bill into the
+house. Bill was not at all sure that Polly would do
+this, and she was very sure indeed that she did not
+want her to do it; however, she could not explain all
+this to Mr. Dane in the time now at her disposal, so
+she prepared to say good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>“There is one thing I should like to ask you
+before you go,” said Mr. Dane, looking at her
+thoughtfully as she stood by his chair. “It is about
+yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will tell you if I can,” she answered, “but I
+think I have already told you all there is to tell.”
+Indeed, she had told him a great deal, far more than
+she was aware of, but it was not quite what he
+meant.</p>
+
+<p>“Your mother was Miss Brownlow’s sister?” he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the youngest, Kate; but I do not remember
+her at all; she died when I was very little.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane looked at her thoughtfully. “I should
+doubt if you were like your mother,” he said; “you
+are not at all like your cousins, or Miss Brownlow
+either.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I am not like them; sometimes Polly says
+I am like my father; but she did not know him,
+and she only says it when she is angry. I don’t
+think I can be like him really, except that I am dark.
+He was dark, but then he was very clever and
+fascinating; Auntie says he bewitched my mother,
+so that she would marry him in spite of what they
+all said. I believe they did not think him good
+enough for her. I don’t quite know what he was;
+he used to come sometimes to sing at the town where
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>she lived, but he was not a grand professional singer.
+Some people said he was half a gipsy; he loved
+wandering about.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you remember him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not clearly; he did not live long after my
+mother; still I remember him better than I do her.
+I can just remember going about with him, or at
+least I think I can; it is difficult to tell which is
+memory and which fancy, it is all so long ago. I
+came to Auntie when I was very small.”</p>
+
+<p>“And remained there ever since?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, remained there ever since,” and she held
+out her hand to him.</p>
+
+<p>He took it. “Good-bye,” he said, “good-bye,
+little maiden. Do they call you Katie, too?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; Bill,—Wilhelmina.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wilhelmina!”</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the other Alardy had been called Wilhelmina;
+the old man’s face almost looked as if it
+were so, or as if some ghost had sprung to life
+at the name. But Bill did not see his face; for
+a moment he stood in the shadow of the door, then
+turned and went stooping into the dimness of the
+passage; and she went onward down the road,
+thinking only how she could compass to-morrow’s
+visit.</p>
+
+<p>Polly was shrewd enough after her fashion, and if
+she saw Mr. Harborough would, Bill felt certain,
+find out more than was desirable concerning her
+cousin’s share in the reading of the mass. Therefore
+Polly must not set foot inside Wood Hall. Bill had
+some respect for her shrewdness, though she was
+depending on being able to outwit it when she said
+she would get her chaperonage for the intended call.
+“But I’ll get her,” Bill assured herself as she walked
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>home that Sunday afternoon; and the chances were
+that she would, for she was a tenacious little person,
+and also, while much lacking in perception on some
+points, she had an instinctive comprehension of character
+which gave her a truer conception of the turns
+and twists of Polly’s nature than either of the other
+cousins possessed.</p>
+
+<p>On Monday morning Bill set to work to carry out
+her plan. Her newly acquired mastery over the reins
+was the first thing pressed into her service. She
+would drive the old pony over to Wrugglesby, pack
+some clothes she wanted, and bring Polly (Bella would
+be giving music-lessons) home to Haylands with her
+for the night. At first Theresa demurred, but Robert
+only laughed at her fears; and finally Bill was allowed
+to go, with Henry, the boot-boy, in attendance in
+case of accidents. Bill accepted Henry’s escort to
+Wrugglesby, but said he would have to walk back as
+she intended to take Polly for a drive by herself.
+Theresa demurred again, but Robert was on Bill’s
+side; and finally, as might have been foreseen, Henry
+walked back alone, while Bill and Polly went for
+their drive.</p>
+
+<p>Not, however, before Bill had encountered another
+obstacle, which presented itself in the attractive form
+of Bella. Bella wanted to make one of the party;
+she pointed out that there was room for her in the
+pony-carriage, and that Theresa was sure not to
+mind an extra guest for one night. Of course, in
+the ordinary way it would have been impossible for
+her to get out in the afternoon, but to-day it happened
+that nearly the whole school was going to a
+birthday party and there were only two music-lessons
+to give. These two lessons were Bill’s salvation:
+she and Polly would take their drive while Bella gave
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>them; as soon as she had done she was to walk to
+Sales Cross Roads, where they would meet her with
+the pony-chaise at a quarter to four.</p>
+
+<p>The plan met with Polly’s entire approval; she
+did not at all wish to waste the early part of the
+afternoon waiting for Bella, and she was not troubled
+with many unselfish scruples. When Bella inconveniently
+said, “I think I could be at Sales Cross
+before that,” Polly answered decidedly, “But we
+cannot.” Whereupon the good-natured Bella gave
+way, and, with matters at last satisfactorily arranged,
+the other two drove away.</p>
+
+<p>Polly leaned back with great satisfaction; Bill had
+borrowed a cushion from Theresa for her and she
+appreciated it. “Really, Bill,” she said benignly, “I
+should never have thought you would learn to drive
+so well; you are quite getting on.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think I have grown up any more?” Bill
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>Polly looked at her thoughtfully. “I don’t think
+you have developed much,” she said, after consideration.
+Before she reached the end of her journey
+that day she changed her opinion and came to the
+conclusion that Bill had developed surprisingly, in
+one direction at least.</p>
+
+<p>“We are going to Gurnett,” Bill announced, and
+Polly, to whom one place was as good as another,
+acquiesced.</p>
+
+<p>“We can easily get from there to Sales Cross to
+meet Bella,” Bill went on to explain when they were
+nearing the village. “I want to see some one at
+Gurnett, or rather, just this side of it; we don’t go
+through the village.”</p>
+
+<p>“Whom are you going to see? I will hold the
+reins while you go in; I don’t care about going with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>messages to strange farms; there are always geese
+and cows about.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill entirely agreed with this suggestion. “Yes,”
+she said, “you must wait outside while I go in; I
+won’t be long, not more than ten minutes I expect.
+It is not to a farm we are going, though; it is to
+Wood Hall.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wood Hall? Whatever does Theresa want
+from there?”</p>
+
+<p>“Theresa does not want anything; I am going on
+my own business. She does not know I am going,
+and she would be very angry if she did.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Bill!”</p>
+
+<p>“But I have got to go all the same,” Bill continued,
+ignoring the exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>“What about me? Pray, why should I allow it
+if Theresa does not? I insist on hearing all about it
+at once.”</p>
+
+<p>Curiosity as well as indignation prompted this
+speech, which Bill proceeded to gratify to a certain
+extent. “I will tell you as much as there is time
+for,” she said, and there was not time for a great
+deal. Polly’s explosions of righteous wrath, not so
+judicial and certainly not so genuine as Theresa’s,
+helped to shorten the narrative.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Bill, I could not have believed it of you!
+No, I could not, even if anyone had told me! I
+know a good deal about you, it is true, but I should
+never have expected—well—” Words failed, and
+Polly took refuge in a superlatively expressive sniff;
+she had brought the language of sniffs to a rare
+perfection.</p>
+
+<p>But Bill was not at all impressed, and when
+Polly asked with stern dignity, “Do you think
+I, any more than Theresa, will allow you to go
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>to Wood Hall?” she answered, “You can’t help
+yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t help myself, indeed!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, we are just there.” That was undeniably
+true; they were in the drive and must soon reach
+the house. “If you did not mean to come,” Bill
+went on composedly, “why did you not say so before
+we turned in?”</p>
+
+<p>“I did not notice.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was politely doubtful. “Look here, Polly,”
+she said, “what is the good of pretending? It is not
+what things are that matters to you, it is how they look.
+I am sure that this is quite right; you are not; but that
+does not count, as you only want it to look right—”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill! You are a wicked girl. How dare you
+say such things?”</p>
+
+<p>“I dare say them, and you dare think them,” Bill
+retorted, vaguely aware that she must have outraged
+the sense of decency again. At that moment a sharp
+turn in the drive showed them the house just in
+front, the chaise swayed to one side, for the ground
+dipped suddenly down before it rose again for the
+last little ascent.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall come in with you,” Polly said heroically,
+as she gripped the sides of the chaise with a firm,
+though nervous, grasp. “I shall not leave you—Bill,
+do be careful how you drive!—not leave you in
+spite of your conduct to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, you will. You will wait outside, and think
+how it can be made to look best.”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall do nothing of the kind!”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I shall frighten the pony and make him
+run away. He won’t run far, but by the time you
+get back here I shall have gone inside. Good-bye
+for the present; I sha’n’t be long.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>Bill jumped out as she spoke, and the indignant,
+though discreet, Polly took the reins and patiently
+waited in the pony-carriage. Bill certainly had developed,
+and developed, among other things, a painful
+plainness of speech. This hurt Polly more than
+anything else, for she believed in observing all the
+decencies of life, in saying and seeming all that was
+suitable to the occasion, even to a certain extent persuading
+herself to feel it too. She always acted, for
+herself if there was no other audience; she could not
+help it, and the fact that there was not the least
+chance of anyone being deceived did not deter her
+from taking a part. More often than not people
+were a little deceived; they believed in her more or
+less, as she believed in herself. Bill did not, which
+was her misfortune; but she said so baldly, and that
+was her fault, a fault Polly found it hard to forgive
+just then. “Yet,” Polly thought when she sat in
+the chaise waiting and meditating on Bill’s development,
+“she is proving to be rather as I expected;
+she has twenty times the go of the other two, if only
+one could make her sensible.” From which it may
+be seen that Polly had a keen eye to the main chance,
+and even in matters of personal affront sought first
+a possible advantage; afterwards, if expedient, she
+resented the annoyance. During the ten minutes
+that she waited for Bill she had serious thoughts of
+making common cause with that offender.</p>
+
+<p>Bill was as good as her word. Mindful of a limit
+to Polly’s patience, she came to the point as soon as
+possible, and asked what Mr. Harborough demanded
+in return for fulfilling her wish. But he, not aware
+of any urgent reason for haste, set the question aside
+and asked instead if she had been satisfied with
+Sunday’s comedy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>She did not think it a comedy; indeed, to tell the
+truth, she was not quite sure what a comedy was;
+certainly she had not been satisfied, but, as she
+hastened to explain, that was not his fault. “It was
+my own,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Your own, daughter of Eve? Dissatisfied as
+soon as gratified? It’s the way with ’em all. Still I
+own this affair did not turn out as well as it might.”</p>
+
+<p>“You did not expect it to be like that? Neither
+did I; if I had thought—”</p>
+
+<p>“You would have chosen a day when the curate
+was in sole command? It certainly would have been
+better from a sporting point of view.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the vision of what might have
+occurred in those circumstances flitted through Bill’s
+mind, but she banished it and said gravely: “It
+would have been funnier, I dare say, but no better;
+worse, I think, for I should not then have found out
+that it was wrong.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Harborough laughed, seeming to find a good
+deal of amusement in the idea of Bill’s tardy conscientious
+scruples; but on account, he said, of her
+disappointment he asked nothing further of her,
+saying that they would now cry quits to the bargain.
+Bill was relieved, having been afraid he would lay
+some fresh difficulty upon her; as it was, she felt
+she had escaped easily, and prepared to make her
+adieux with a light heart, explaining at the same time
+that, as Polly was waiting outside, she must go at
+once. The idea of Polly waiting outside also seemed
+to amuse Mr. Harborough.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear me, how they have been talking to you!”
+he said. “Bringing home the enormity of your conduct
+to you with a vengeance! They won’t leave
+me my unsophisticated little maiden long; good
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>women are great teachers of the ways of this wicked
+world.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill scarcely understood him; still, she fancied he
+was insinuating something against her cousin whose
+words really had had no weight at all in determining
+her action. “It was not exactly Theresa’s doing,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Not Theresa?” He laughed. “Yet you have
+brought a dragon, a chaperone to watch over you.
+You need scarcely have taken the trouble; I should
+have done you no harm.”</p>
+
+<p>“They would not let me come alone.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder they let you come at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Theresa would not; Polly could not help herself.”
+Bill did not explain Mr. Dane’s share in the
+matter, and Harborough did not ask it. “When
+are you coming again?” was all he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Never.”</p>
+
+<p>“Never? Are you going to leave me all alone in
+my desolate old age?”</p>
+
+<p>“They won’t let me come.”</p>
+
+<p>The old man’s tone had been but half serious, yet
+as he spoke the extreme silence of the house suddenly
+impressed Bill, the loneliness of the great room where
+they two made an oasis of humanity in a desert of
+shadowy memories. The polished floor stretched
+around her, only quivering into life when she moved
+and sent distorted reflections of herself along the
+boards; the mirrors on the wall never waking till she
+turned for them to cast back her brown face and
+ruddy hair. Away at the far end of the room there
+were chairs and cabinets, but they were too distant to
+reflect her on their polished wood, too far off to have
+any connection with this life. They belonged to the
+folks who looked down from the walls. It was a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>wondrous house, a wondrous lonely house for an old
+man who did not care for memories, whose taste,
+vitiated by the hot peppers of his manhood, could not
+appreciate the <i>pot-pourri</i> of the centuries that were
+gone.</p>
+
+<p>“Could you not get someone else to come,” Bill
+said at last, “someone belonging to you? You
+haven’t got anyone?”—he had shaken his head and
+she felt the case was a bad one till a happy idea
+occurred to her. “Why not pay a girl?” she said.
+“You could, you know; you could get one that way.”</p>
+
+<p>“For what would you undertake the post?”</p>
+
+<p>The question was asked with all gravity, but she
+was not quite sure that he was in earnest. It would
+be a good thing if he were, for this was work she
+could do, and, since she had to earn her living, it
+seemed much better that she should do it in this way
+which fitted her small abilities. She glanced quickly
+at him, uncertain what to answer. “Twenty-five
+pounds a year,” she said at last, at a venture, naming
+a sum which seemed to her exorbitant considering his
+straitened circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled a little and shook his head. “Can’t
+be done,” he said, and she prepared to reduce her
+terms cautiously, but he explained the obstacles.</p>
+
+<p>“It is the aunts and cousins who are in the way,
+my dear; if you were alone in the world we would
+not quarrel as to terms.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but I could easily explain to them.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was confident, but Mr. Harborough reminded
+her of her confidence with regard to Theresa’s permission
+to repeat her visit. She was forced to admit
+his superior knowledge there, and to allow of its
+possibility again, although it seemed foolish to carry
+social objections into a purely commercial transaction.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>“Believe me,” he said, “there are no terms on
+which they would allow you to enter my service,
+except the cover of my name.” She did not understand.
+“If the salary were a marriage settlement,”
+he explained, “they would permit you to take it,
+and, under the name of Mrs. Harborough, they
+would raise no objection to your accepting the post
+of companion.”</p>
+
+<p>In spite of her disappointment at finding the offer
+not a genuine one after all, Bill burst out laughing;
+laughing principally at her own stupidity in taking
+him seriously. Then she said: “I must go; Polly
+will be tired of waiting.”</p>
+
+<p>“Laugh and go,” he said. “Do you laugh at
+Wood Hall? I could—by Heaven, it is almost
+worth doing!” he exclaimed with a sudden access of
+energy. “There are some who would not laugh
+then, my little brown elf.”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed himself at the idea, laughed softly
+with a bitter spite in his eyes. Afterwards it occurred
+to Bill vaguely that perhaps he really had
+been in earnest, and that she was to have played a
+part in some scheme of vengeance. But she never
+seriously thought so, and at the time it did not appear
+to her as anything but a jest. As such she laughed
+again so that her merriment rang in the great room;
+and she was still smiling when a minute later she
+came out to Polly waiting in the chaise.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX.<br>
+<small>“RED IS THE ROSE.”</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> four roads which met at Sales Cross were the four
+which went everywhere in the district. “You can’t
+go anywhere without going by Sales Cross,” said
+Bella, basing her opinion on the number of people who
+had passed while she was waiting for Bill and Polly
+on that April afternoon. None of these travellers
+were mentioned by name except Mr. Jack Dawson,
+who could hardly be said to have passed since he was
+still there when the pony-chaise came in sight. He
+looked, too, as if he had meant to stay some time,
+seeing that he had dismounted from his horse and
+was standing, with the bridle over his arm, so deeply
+absorbed in conversation that he did not notice the
+approaching carriage. Bella explained later that he
+got down to help her free herself from the long
+bramble she had twisted round her ankles while
+gathering primroses a few minutes earlier. From the
+conversation which ensued between the two elder
+cousins Bill gathered that Jack Dawson had had
+something to do with Bella’s second Sunday afternoon
+at Ashelton being less dull than the first.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not listen very attentively; Polly’s
+eloquence had not much interest for her, especially
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>since, during the drive from Gurnett, she had settled
+her own differences with her cousin, telling exactly
+what she pleased of the doings at Wood Hall.
+There had been a battle royal during that drive
+conducted with a good many words, and, it is to be
+feared, some vigour of expression on both sides. But
+it had its advantages, it was the first time that Bill and
+Polly had crossed swords as equals, and each understood
+the other the better for doing so; also it gave
+Polly a further indication that Bill was growing up,—“Though
+not in the way we should wish,” as she
+said to Bella with melancholy dignity. “No, Bella,”
+she went on as her listener showed no signs of
+distress at the news, “Bill is not a lady, and nothing
+will ever make her one.”</p>
+
+<p>To which Bill agreed, adding: “I don’t believe I
+have got all the instincts and so on, and I’m sure I
+don’t feel things the way I ought. I suppose I have
+got a little bad blood somewhere.”</p>
+
+<p>“Somewhere!” Polly’s sniff was impressive.
+“With your father—well! we need say no more.”</p>
+
+<p>“Considering what you have already said,” replied
+Bill, “I think you need not.”</p>
+
+<p>Bella wondered what had been said, but she did
+not hear, for soon afterwards they reached Haylands,
+where Theresa declared herself delighted to receive
+the two visitors instead of one. Later on, she heard
+of Bill’s other doings, and with them she was not so
+well pleased. She was distressed as well as angry
+when she was told about the visit to Wood Hall.</p>
+
+<p>Polly had been much opposed to telling her anything
+about it. “Leave it alone,” she counselled; “it
+can’t be altered now. There will only be a great fuss,
+and how shall I look for letting you go?”</p>
+
+<p>But Bill disagreed. It would not be honest, she said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>“None of it was honest,” retorted Polly; and
+certainly the part she took upon herself was open to
+question, although, no doubt, it was the one best
+fitting the situation. “I thought it better to let her
+go to-day,”—so she concluded a most able explanation
+of affairs to Theresa. “You see, to-day I was
+with her; another day she might have been alone.
+She was certain to go, sooner or later, with or without
+me,—she is so dreadfully obstinate—and so I
+was determined that she should go under the most
+favourable circumstances.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa agreed, and blamed Bill severely; but
+Bella remarked: “You stayed outside for her good,
+I suppose, Polly?”</p>
+
+<p>“I stayed outside,” Polly replied with dignity,
+“because she would not let me come in without a
+scene.”</p>
+
+<p>The truth of this statement was obvious and effective.
+Indeed Polly’s manner while at Haylands was
+altogether effective; more especially when, on their
+first arrival, they found Mrs. Dawson talking to
+Theresa on business connected with the Church
+Missionary Society. Mrs. Dawson had the cause of
+missions very much at heart; she attended many
+meetings and paid many visits in connection with it,
+with what exact result to the cause no one knew, but
+doubtless it was beneficial. The principal results of
+the call on Theresa was entirely unconnected with
+missions, being the postponement of Bill’s confession
+for half an hour and the social opportunity afforded
+Polly.</p>
+
+<p>Polly made such good use of the occasion that
+Mrs. Dawson, a rather imposing personage, unbent
+to quite a rare extent. She even hoped that Miss
+Hains would be able to come to her tea-party next
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>day with her cousin, Miss Alardy. Polly regretted
+she could not do so, since she was unfortunately
+obliged to return to Wrugglesby in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>“And I really did regret it too,” she informed the
+others when they were discussing Mrs. Dawson late
+that evening; “I wish I had been staying on here.”</p>
+
+<p>“We could not both have gone,” said Bill, for
+whom the invitation had already been accepted;
+“there’s only the one skirt, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is my skirt.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you have lent it to Bill,” Bella said; “besides
+she is the youngest, and has never been to anything
+yet.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly did not consider this a very valid argument,
+though, as she said, it really did not matter since she
+could not stay any longer at Ashelton.</p>
+
+<p>It was at bedtime that this discussion took place.
+Bella was to sleep with Bill, and Polly had come into
+their room to brush her hair and edify them with her
+views on several subjects. The fact that she did so
+in Bill’s presence showed plainly that she recognised
+her as something like an equal.</p>
+
+<p>“I will tell you all about the tea-party,” Bill said,
+feeling rather greedy in that the festivity had fallen
+to her share.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but you will not be able to do as I
+should,” Polly answered regretfully. “I made an
+impression on Mrs. Dawson this afternoon; I should
+go on making one if I were to see her again, a good
+impression.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill laughed irreverently.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be rude, Bill.” Polly’s manner was
+momentarily that of an elder and teacher, but almost
+immediately she dropped it and returned to the terms
+of familiar intercourse. She at least possessed the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>merit of adapting herself quickly to altered circumstances
+and relationships.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear girls,” she said, sitting down in the one
+easy-chair the room boasted, “one has to make good
+impressions, one never knows when they may be
+useful.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have no use for Mrs. Dawson,” Bella said
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>“No, she does it to keep her hand in, for pure
+pleasure and practice, and because she can’t help it.
+She would try to make a good impression on us if
+there were no one else.”</p>
+
+<p>This was Bill’s opinion, but Polly only said, “You
+are a silly child,” and began to put her hair into curl-papers,
+and at the same time giving the cousins her
+views on many things, notably on matrimony. On
+this subject she had very decided opinions which she
+did not at all mind expressing with a degree of
+frankness which shocked Bella.</p>
+
+<p>“You are horrid, Polly!” she exclaimed at last.</p>
+
+<p>“I have the courage of my opinions,” Polly retorted;
+“I say what others think.”</p>
+
+<p>“They do not think such things.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill, who had hitherto paid small attention to the
+conversation, debated this point in her mind as she
+sat perched on the bed in her favourite position. “I
+don’t believe people think much at all,” was her
+conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Polly told her that she knew nothing about it, but,
+nothing daunted, she went on to explain herself,
+“They don’t think; they do things because the
+things come along, do them by instinct, or impulse,
+or something; they don’t half know what will
+happen. I am nearly sure they don’t think about the
+before and after. Nobody can see the real beginnings
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>and ends, and some people don’t seem able to
+see even a little bit to right and left,—I wonder why.”</p>
+
+<p>Neither of the elder cousins was prepared to go
+into the question, Bella possibly because she herself
+belonged to the class who cannot look before and
+after, Polly, certainly because she wished to discuss
+more practical matters. By way of putting an end
+to Bill’s speculations she introduced the topic,
+suggested by her previous remarks, of their own
+future.</p>
+
+<p>“Say that you, Bella,” she said, “marry money,—”</p>
+
+<p>“I sha’n’t do any such thing!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, well—” and then followed another exposition
+of Polly’s views which Bill lost little by not
+heeding. She had picked up the fairy-book which
+she had taken to bed with her a few nights ago, and
+had become too absorbed in its pages to hear what
+Polly said until the mention of her own name arrested
+her attention.</p>
+
+<p>“And what is to become of Bill?” said Polly, who
+had by this time settled the future for the rest of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>“There is the school she could help—”</p>
+
+<p>“The school!” said Polly disdainfully. “What
+good would Bill be, what can she do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,” the culprit answered, before Bella
+could speak in her defence. “It is quite true, I
+should be of no use. I don’t know what I could do,
+unless, perhaps, be a general servant; they are scarce
+now, and I can work like a steam-engine. I never
+get tired and I can get up ever so early—you should
+just see how I can scrub and iron, and I can cook a
+little too.”</p>
+
+<p>“You ridiculous child!” laughed Bella. “Do
+you suppose we should ever let you do that?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>“She might do worse,” was Polly’s opinion.</p>
+
+<p>“She could not do that,” Bella replied emphatically;
+“neither Theresa nor I would allow it. And
+Polly, you might as well say good-night now; we
+want to go to sleep.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly took her candle, casting a grotesque shadow
+of herself and her curl-papers on the low ceiling.
+“Good-night,” she said with severity. “I am glad
+you can sleep; I don’t find it so easy when I look
+forward to what must happen.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t look,” Bill called after her, “except at
+your candle; look at that, and mind you don’t spill
+the grease.”</p>
+
+<p>None the less Bill lay awake a long time, thinking
+not only of the future but also of the post which
+might almost have been hers that day were it not
+for the aunts and cousins. Also she thought of
+Bella and her future, and from that she mentally
+went to Jack Dawson, who appeared a very pleasant
+sort of person, and to Mrs. Dawson, who did not,
+though in Bill’s opinion she was an entertaining one.
+At least she had thought so when she sat meekly
+silent during the lady’s call that afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>On the next day she had another opportunity of
+studying Mrs. Dawson, for that was the day of the
+state tea-party which Polly had so deeply regretted
+missing. Polly and Bella had gone back to Wrugglesby,
+and Bill was left in undisputed possession
+of the skirt. It was not new, neither was it in
+the latest fashion, but Bill thought it very beautiful,
+as she contemplated herself in her little mirror on
+Tuesday evening. Of course one needed the best
+clothes the family could muster for such an occasion
+as the present; the tea-party at Grays, Mrs. Dawson’s
+house, was really quite an important social function
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>besides being the first which Bill had ever attended.
+She was somewhat impressed and tremendously
+interested by everything, the solemn mahogany
+grandeur of the bedroom where she and Theresa
+took off their wraps, the spotless whiteness of the
+linen covers of the stair-carpets, the giant hat-stand
+by which Robert waited for them in the hall.</p>
+
+<p>The drawing-room was large; the main part of the
+furniture dated from the Sixties, the wonderful blue
+of the upholstery being unmistakably of that era.
+But the sundry tides of fashion that have swept
+through the land since then had left a few deposits
+even in this conservative house: some peacock-feathers
+and a silk-covered palm-leaf, a present possibly
+in the decorative days; a small black table,
+a relic of æstheticism; a rococo photograph-screen
+of later date,—a few such things could be seen here
+and there. “They were given to her,” thought
+Bill gazing earnestly at the immovable black-silk
+dignity of Mrs. Dawson; “they were given by <i>her</i>.”
+This was Bill’s decision when her eye lighted on a
+girl standing near the hostess. The girl was tall
+and muscular, turned four and twenty, athletically
+built, and dressed in the fashion of the day, the
+fashion which obtains in Ealing and similar exclusive
+suburbs. Her face, it is true, did not express much,
+but then other people’s faces do not as a rule express
+much, and she naturally did not wish to do anything
+but what everyone else did. She was doubtless an
+expert at lawn-tennis and hockey, and an authority
+on the technique of golf. Probably she thought her
+aunt at Ashelton much behind the times, though, as
+she informed her friends, she liked staying with her:
+“It was such a deliciously unsophisticated place still.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill looked at her with interest and at first with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>some admiration, for to her inexperienced eyes Miss
+Gladys Dawson was a new and fine specimen of
+humanity. Miss Gladys Dawson looked at Bill only
+with a careless curiosity, she found her a little odd,
+and wondered why she had never seen her at
+Ashelton before. She also (and here came in the
+insult) looked at the skirt. A light blazed up in
+Bill’s eyes, a light that was almost like a red flame,
+and there rose in her heart a great wrath and a
+feminine desire to pay back the offence, to criticise in
+some way the offender and bring ridicule on her.
+Bill had never felt the sentiment before, being in
+the main indifferent to opinions of all sorts. Miss
+Dawson’s glance on herself would have passed
+unnoticed; she cared nothing for criticism and had
+a very poor opinion of herself,—but the skirt was
+another matter, Polly’s cherished skirt which she
+had made with so much labour out of two old silk
+dresses of Miss Brownlow’s! Bill felt that the look,
+half amused, half supercilious, wholly, indescribably
+feminine in its critical survey, was an insult to the
+absent Polly and cried aloud for vengeance. “I
+wish I could do something,” she thought vindictively.
+“I wonder what she would mind most.”</p>
+
+<p>It was now six o’clock, and there was a general
+move to the dining-room for tea. Mrs. Dawson
+had always dined at two and taken tea at six,
+and she always would do so as long as she was able
+to dine and take tea at all. She made no difference
+for visitors, except in the quantity of food prepared,
+and in that respect she certainly planned lavishly.
+The table that night was loaded with the dainties
+which have gone out of fashion with six o’clock
+teas. Bill noticed everything carefully, trying to
+remember all she could for the sake of her absent
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>cousins. There was a wonderful table-cloth, she
+observed, of fine unbleached linen whereon drab dogs
+hunted drab stags over a greyish ground much
+interspersed with drab trees whose leafy branches
+met in the centre of the table and were hidden
+under the pot of a pink azalea. Arranged everywhere,
+almost crowding each other off, were cakes
+both hot and cold, so many of them that Bill could
+not taste them all. There were also several preserves,
+notably one of pineapple, very sticky, very difficult
+of manipulation, inspiring one (if that one were Bill)
+with a desire to take the pot and a spoon to the
+store-room and eat in comfort unobserved. “It
+wants practice,” Bill decided as she watched the ease
+with which Mr. Johnson, who might reasonably be
+expected to have had practice, managed the pineapple.
+“I expect he has been here heaps of times
+before,” she thought, and no doubt she was right
+for he seemed much at his ease. Mr. Perry, on the
+other hand, was never quite able to forget the
+grocer’s shop when he sat down with Mrs. Dawson;
+he talked nervously and rapidly all through the meal,
+forgetting his tea in his anxiety to be polite, and remembering
+that he wanted a third cup when everyone
+had finished and the tea-pot was dry. Bill felt sorry
+for Mrs. Dawson when she saw her pouring tepid
+water through the tea-pot so as to supply the late
+comer, sorrier still for Mr. Perry when he received
+his large shallow cup and made manful efforts to
+drink its contents while the guests waited for him.</p>
+
+<p>Bill sat next to Mrs. Johnson, a placid matron, not
+much given to general conversation; and as she
+returned becoming answers to the few remarks made
+to her, she was voted by her neighbour to be “a
+nicely brought-up girl.” Gladys Dawson, of course,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>was different; being older, and “from London,” she
+was expected to talk, and she did do so; in fact she
+took the lion’s share of the entertainment upon herself.
+Mrs. Dawson was not averse to this, but, as Bill noticed,
+neither was Gladys. “She likes it,” thought the silent
+watcher; and there came into Bill’s mind, by reason
+of the insult offered to Polly’s skirt, a desire which is
+a natural instinct in most of her more developed sisters,—the
+desire to outshine the other woman.</p>
+
+<p>“It would not be easy,” Bill thought, feeling that
+she did not know much about the subjects of greatest
+interest to the ladies present; but then, as she soon
+found, Miss Dawson did not either, and so wisely
+confined herself to entertaining the men. Bill did
+not feel very hopeful of her own powers in that
+direction, and before she could make any definite
+plans her thoughts were interrupted by Mr. Dane’s
+entrance into the drawing-room to which everyone
+had now returned. Mr. Dane never joined these
+parties till after tea, on the excuse of parish-work.
+After the little disturbance created by his entrance
+had subsided, and he had shaken hands with everybody,
+Bill found that he had taken the chair next to
+her. She knew that he wanted to hear if she had
+been to Wood Hall, and she was quite ready to tell
+him. It was easy enough to do this unnoticed in the
+buzz of general conversation; and accordingly she
+told him how she and Polly had driven to Wood
+Hall, how Polly had waited outside, and how Mr.
+Harborough had laid no fresh conditions upon her.
+This was all very well, but it was not so well when
+she went on to talk of Mr. Harborough’s loneliness,
+and so, incidentally, of her suggestion of a paid companion,
+and his offer of the post to herself. “Of
+course he did not mean it really,” she concluded;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>“it was only in fun, but for a moment I thought he
+meant it.”</p>
+
+<p>“What made you think he did not mean it?”</p>
+
+<p>“What he said afterwards;” and she related all that
+followed. “He meant he would have to marry me before
+they would let me come,” she said, laughing a little.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Dane did not laugh. “Yes, marry him,”
+he said, “marry him for Wood Hall, for his name
+and position,—would you do that?”</p>
+
+<p>“I did not have the chance; he did not ask me
+really; it was all fun.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you told your cousins of the fun?”</p>
+
+<p>The old man was looking earnestly at her, waiting
+for her answer, and she hesitated before she gave it.
+She plainly heard Mrs. Perry saying, “I never had a
+sitting of eggs from the Possets turn out badly,”
+before she said, “No, I have not told them.” And
+she wondered why she had not, and why she never
+would, for she knew then that she never would.</p>
+
+<p>“If he had meant it, would you have taken him and
+Wood Hall and the name, and the little you know,
+and the infinitely more which you do not know?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she answered frankly. “I would like
+Wood Hall immensely; I would do a good deal for
+a place like that—I don’t believe I would be too
+particular what; but I could not marry him. I could
+not marry anyone; I could not possibly be cooped
+up with one person. I believe I would like more
+than anything else to be a gipsy and wander from
+place to place, mending chairs and stealing fowls.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane did not reprove the lax morality of this
+speech; all he said was: “Then I suppose you are
+never going to see Mr. Harborough again?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” answered Bill, and as she did so Mr. Johnson,
+who had caught the name, tried to draw his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>rector into a discussion of Sunday’s enormities. But
+Mr. Dane would not be drawn; he was polite, but
+firm and most uncommunicative. The only opinion
+he would give was that he believed Mr. Harborough’s
+proceedings were not actionable, since he himself had
+given consent for the mass to be finished.</p>
+
+<p>“But I am sure we could prosecute,” Mr. Johnson
+persisted. “I was speaking to Stevens,—Stevens of
+Wrugglesby you know—about it; he says it is quite
+possible to prosecute for brawling and creating a
+disturbance in church during divine service, if for
+nothing else.”</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt he is right, but I do not think the
+churchwardens will wish to prosecute. The case
+would offer several nice points to a lawyer, for, though
+the mass was begun without our permission, and so
+was technically a disturbance, the offence was partly
+condoned by the permission to continue which was
+afterwards given. Moreover, though our church is
+of course a church of England as by law established,
+the Harborough chapel is held on a very old tenure
+which it would be necessary to understand clearly
+before any move could be made in the matter. I
+don’t mean to say we could not prosecute: I dare say
+we could; but I hardly think it is necessary. What
+do you think?”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Johnson almost thought it was, on account of
+the precedent: “Solely on account of the precedent;
+it might occur again.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not think it will,” Mr. Dane answered, just
+in time to prevent Bill declaring the same thing
+warmly. Then someone began to sing and they all
+listened, placidly or otherwise according to their
+natures. When the song was over, Bill, finding Mr.
+Johnson’s attention diverted elsewhere, turned to her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>neighbour for information on a subject which had
+puzzled her since her first visit to Wood Hall.</p>
+
+<p>“You know all about this part of the country,” she
+said. “Perhaps you can tell me if it is true that a
+good many years ago a body was carried by night from
+Corbycroft to the little church in Wood Hall park.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, certainly it is true; but what makes you
+ask? Who has told you of it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Harborough, but he did not say much; is it
+a secret?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, oh no; some of the old folks at Gurnett
+still tell the tale, though there are not many now who
+can tell much except from hearsay. It was not much
+talked about at the time, and is pretty well forgotten
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>He spoke as if the subject had long lost its interest
+for him, but to Bill it was all fresh; she felt that her
+romance was becoming exciting again. “Who was
+it?” she asked. “Who were they going to bury?”</p>
+
+<p>“Roger Corby, the old Squire he was called,
+though he was not squire of Gurnett. He died at
+Corbycroft, and he died very much in debt. His
+servants and—and some other people believed that
+his body would, according to a barbarous old
+practice, be arrested for debt, so they removed it by
+night to the church in Wood Hall park.”</p>
+
+<p>“And was it arrested?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, and I do not believe there was any likelihood
+that it would have been. Long ago bodies
+were sometimes arrested, legally or illegally,—I do
+not know which—but so late as that—it was in 1833—it
+was more than improbable.”</p>
+
+<p>“But they must have believed it,” Bill objected;
+“they must have thought it would happen.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but the servants were ignorant, and the girl,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>the Squire’s granddaughter, was a child of thirteen,
+headstrong, daring, imaginative; she heard the
+servants’ chatter and believed it. The thing was
+practically her doing. She was fond of her grandfather,
+and there was no one to take charge at his
+death; her father was abroad and she and the old
+butler managed everything. She always did as she
+liked, and grew up as she pleased, with no one to
+thwart her.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill wondered if Mr. Dane had known the granddaughter,
+or if this too was only part of the local
+tale; she would have liked to ask him but thought
+that perhaps she ought not, as the last words scarcely
+seemed addressed to her. She contented herself with
+inquiring, “Did you live here then?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he roused himself with an effort. “No;
+I was not born in this part of the country and at that
+time I was a lad at school; a little lad I must have
+been, for I am younger than Harborough.”</p>
+
+<p>“And he? Did he know at the time? How old
+was he then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, he knew; he must have known, for he was
+at home when the thing happened.”</p>
+
+<p>There were more questions Bill wanted to ask, but
+she was not able to do so for at that moment Miss
+Dawson’s well-trained soprano informed the company
+that she was “a monkey on a stick.”</p>
+
+<p>By the time she had reached the end of her song
+Mr. Perry had claimed the rector’s attention, and
+Bill was left to meditate on the half-told story until
+Mrs. Dawson asked her with awful politeness for a
+little music. Theresa had warned her that this would
+occur, telling her to bring her music in anticipation.
+Bill had obediently brought it, making up her mind
+to play one of her pieces if required, but now when
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>the time came she did no such thing. She cast a
+quick glance at Miss Dawson, who was now talking
+to Gilchrist Harborough, and thinking of the covert
+sneer at Polly’s skirt, went to the piano in no very
+Christian frame of mind. “I can sing as well as
+you,” was the defiance she mentally hurled at the
+young lady as she sat down to the piano and began
+to play from memory, or, more correctly speaking,
+by ear from some half forgotten melody. It was
+curious music, at first compelling attention by its
+strangeness, afterwards holding it by a charm of its
+own,—a love-song of long ago, low, yet with an
+almost harsh refrain in it, vibrating with a passion at
+first suppressed, but afterwards breaking forth into a
+tumult of emotion likely to tingle strangely in the
+nerves of those who listened.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="first">“Red is the rose thou hast bound in thy hair,</div>
+<div class="indent">Redder thy lips, love.</div>
+<div class="verse">Soft is thy breath, aye, the sweetest of air,</div>
+<div class="indent">Incense to me, love;</div>
+<div class="verse">E’en though it choketh the voice of my prayer,</div>
+<div class="indent">(I pray not now, love.)</div>
+<div class="verse">Stars are thine eyes,—ill stars some declare,</div>
+<div class="indent">Beacons to me, love.</div>
+<div class="verse">Oh, heart of my heart, I want nought but thy beauty,</div>
+<div class="indent">Of here and hereafter, I ask only thee!</div>
+<div class="verse">Sinner or saint, thou art God of my worship,</div>
+<div class="indent">In time and eternity Heaven to me!”</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Silently Mr. Dane rose and went out of the room,
+closing the door noiselessly after him. At the time
+Bill’s astonished audience hardly noticed it; afterwards
+it was said by some of the more severe that he
+went out to mark his disapproval of the tone and
+tenor of the song, which was certainly most unbecoming
+in a young girl. This may have been the
+case; it obviously was not because his Christian
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>forbearance and courtesy were tried beyond endurance,
+as sometimes happened, by false notes, for to
+a musician the rendering of this song left little to be
+desired. Whatever the reason, Mr. Dane left the
+drawing-room, and passing through the hall went
+out by the open garden-door, out into the sweet
+spring night where the song could not reach him.
+His lips moved once as he went:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="first">“If God in His anger hath shut thee from Heaven,</div>
+<div class="verse">Then closed on us both let its golden gates be.”</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And the strange thing was that these words did
+not occur in the first part of the song which he had
+heard, but in the second part which he did not
+hear, and of which Bill was now singing the last
+verses.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="first">“Dark is the future, dark as despair,</div>
+<div class="indent">Dark as thine eyes, love.</div>
+<div class="verse">Cursed is our troth—for curse dost thou care?</div>
+<div class="indent">Curse of the church, love?</div>
+<div class="verse">Death and dishonour, e’en both we must dare,</div>
+<div class="indent">Fearest with me, love?</div>
+<div class="verse">Fearest to love me? Yet still thou’ll not tear</div>
+<div class="indent">Thyself from my heart, love.</div>
+<div class="verse">Now and henceforward, forever thou’rt there,</div>
+<div class="indent">Nor can’st thou go, love.</div>
+<div class="verse">Oh, soul of my soul, if damned is thy beauty,</div>
+<div class="verse">Then damned be my spirit forever with thee!</div>
+<div class="verse">If God in His anger hath shut thee from Heaven,</div>
+<div class="verse">Then closed on us both let its golden gates be!</div>
+<div class="verse">For thou, oh, beloved, art the God of my worship,</div>
+<div class="verse">In time and eternity Heaven to me!”</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And between the box-edged borders, where drooping
+daffodils glimmered in the moonlight, an old
+man stood and murmured in the ghostly, tearless
+upheaval of some dead passion:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="first">“Thou, oh beloved, art the God of my worship,</div>
+<div class="verse">In time and eternity Heaven to me!”</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X.<br>
+<small>IN THE GARDEN.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Doubtless</span> the ladies of Ashelton were right in
+saying that the song sung by Bill Alardy at Mrs.
+Dawson’s tea-party was most unsuitable and highly
+improper. It was not only the words, though, as
+was pointed out, they were reprehensible, but also
+the terrible earnestness with which they were sung.
+Ashelton was justly shocked, and Theresa, although
+agreeably surprised by the unexpected richness of her
+cousin’s voice, was overcome with shame. Even
+Gladys Dawson, who was naturally beyond old-fashioned
+prejudices, looked at Bill with something
+more intelligent than her previous stare. Gilchrist
+Harborough, sitting by Miss Dawson, remembered
+the words spoken by Morton that Thursday night;
+the “little girl” certainly could “sing a capital song”
+of a sort.</p>
+
+<p>But he did not remark on it to Miss Dawson;
+indeed he seemed to have forgotten all about her,
+and looked across to the singer, who had twisted
+round on the piano-stool and now sat uneasily
+regarding the company with a comical mixture of
+fear and defiance in her eyes. She was painfully
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>conscious of their feelings, though not entirely able
+to understand them. She was both surprised and
+angry at the unexpected storm she had raised. Her
+eyes met Harborough’s; he at any rate was not
+shocked; he understood, he was even a little amused.
+Bill’s face began to clear, and the tantalising chameleon
+eyes changed. Miss Dawson addressed a remark to
+the young man, and receiving no reply, glanced in
+the direction where his interest obviously lay. Bill
+saw the glance and experienced a two-fold gratification;
+one person in the room sided with her, and
+another (she who had sneered at Polly’s skirt!) was
+annoyed thereby. Her face cleared entirely, and her
+eyes absolutely shone. The mischief was done.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow or other, Bill did not quite know how, she
+found herself soon afterwards talking to Harborough,
+about the song and about all manner of other things.
+It was quite easy to talk to him, though he seemed a
+grave sort of young man given to taking things
+seriously, so seriously that it was rather strange he
+should approve of the song. He asked her where
+she had learned to sing it, and she told him she did
+not quite know. “I found the verses written out,”
+she said, “and I think I must have heard them sung
+when I was young. Perhaps my father sang them;
+I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“You sang as if you meant it,” he observed.</p>
+
+<p>“So they should be sung.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you have not felt that; you don’t know
+what you were talking about.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no,” she agreed readily, “it is all pretending;
+but that does not matter; one can pretend
+anything. Almost it feels sometimes,” she went on
+thoughtfully, “as if one had felt it in another first
+life; don’t you think so? Or perhaps it is that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>those who went before—the mothers and fathers and
+grandfathers—felt it and passed the memory on.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough shrugged his shoulders. “That is an
+old problem,” he said, “which does not trouble me
+much. I never think about my ancestry as you seem
+to; I find enough to do without seeking for the grip
+of the dead hand.”</p>
+
+<p>“Some people do not have to seek for it,” Bill
+answered. She was thinking of the Harboroughs of
+Gurnett. “Have you ever been to Wood Hall?”
+she asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“No; I have ridden past it once or twice, but I
+have not had occasion to go in that direction often,—why?”</p>
+
+<p>“You know there are Harboroughs there,—people
+of your name?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, possibly distant connections; I have heard
+my father say that his people came originally from
+this part of the country. But I am not proud of the
+fact, if it is one; they appear to have been a pretty
+bad lot.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Bill admitted, “and they are poor, desperately
+poor for the position: at least, so it is said,
+and certainly the place looks like it. Still they have
+been there for hundreds of years.”</p>
+
+<p>“What the better are they for that? Nothing, I
+should say, seeing that each generation seems to have
+been worse than the previous one, till we come to the
+present, last and worst, bankrupt alike in means,
+morals and constitution, played out, worn out, done
+for,—and a good thing too.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is the grip of the dead hand,” Bill said with
+conviction, and when he looked at her, doubtful
+as to her meaning, she explained: “They have an
+awful lot against them; the fathers have eaten sour
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>grapes, and the children have not much choice left
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Much income, you mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I don’t, though they have not very much of
+that either. I believe the estate is mortgaged, but so
+are their natures and characters; they could hardly
+go straight if they would. Think what it must be to
+have all that weight of tradition and fathers’ sins
+pulling against you.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough was not convinced. “Most of us
+have as many ancestors as have the great people of
+Gurnett,” he said, “yet some of us seem capable of
+independent action.”</p>
+
+<p>“We don’t know about them; that makes a difference.
+We have not got them, in a way, stored up
+as the Harboroughs have. If you had been into
+Wood Hall you would know what I mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you think the next Harborough is bound
+to go and do likewise?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know him,” Bill said; “but I think he
+has a bigger chance of doing likewise than you
+have.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; because if I believed I was doomed to be
+the same kind of blackguard as my ancestors I should
+blow my brains out.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill looked at him gravely. “You wouldn’t
+really,” she said; “because you would not be as
+you are now if you were one of them. I wonder
+how nearly you are related?”</p>
+
+<p>“What does it matter?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,—unless you could claim Wood Hall.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am generations away from that,” he laughed;
+“and I don’t want to be any nearer.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are not a Catholic? No? I wonder if the
+owner of Wood Hall must be?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>“Certainly not; a man’s conscience is his own.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill nodded. “And his family?” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Have nothing to do with it; a man has a right
+to his own opinion.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough spoke warmly: he almost looked as
+if he defied Bill to defend the position; but she only
+said: “A woman is better off then; she has a right
+to two opinions,—her own and that of the person she
+is with.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is scarcely the point,” Harborough said; but
+he did not get her back to the point, for she would
+have no more serious discussion; either her ability or
+her interest was exhausted. Harborough, whose bent
+of mind was habitually grave, tried in vain to bring
+the conversation back, and was half amused, half
+vexed by her evasions. He was certainly wholly
+vexed when Miss Dawson, from the ottoman, introduced
+the labour-problem as a subject likely to
+interest him.</p>
+
+<p>Bill perceived the vexation and was amused. If
+she had been truly feminine she would probably have
+been gratified; but her nature was lacking in some
+of these girlish characteristics, and though she was
+pleased by the annoyance of Gladys, her enjoyment
+partook more of the pleasure of vengeance than of a
+womanly appreciation of pre-eminence. She was glad
+to have avenged the insult offered to Polly’s skirt,
+but she had no other feeling about it. She certainly
+never thought of Gilchrist; by the next morning,
+when she set about her penance in the garden, she
+had forgotten all about him.</p>
+
+<p>She enjoyed the penance immensely. It was hard
+work in the open air and there was something to
+show for the labour; moreover, it appealed strongly
+to her, for it was a clearing up and setting straight
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>with the prospect eventually of a productive yield.
+She had already made plans for the improvement of
+other parts of the garden when the long bed should
+be finished. There was plenty of room for improvement,
+for the garden seemed to be nobody’s business;
+Robert was not interested in it, and Theresa,—more
+because she had never been used to doing so than for
+any other reason—never thought of working in it.</p>
+
+<p>“She does not like digging and she hates worms,”
+Bill said. “You would not expect T. to grub out
+here; besides, she has work in the house.”</p>
+
+<p>This was said to Gilchrist, who apparently had not
+entirely forgotten her existence, whatever she may
+have done with regard to his. At all events, when
+he saw her from the footpath which crossed the field
+beyond the garden, he came to enquire how she was
+and what she was doing. She told him her intentions
+with regard to the plot of ground on which she was
+engaged, but she did not cease work to do so.</p>
+
+<p>He watched her half amused. “I wonder Morton
+did not set one of the men to dig this for you,” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“Why should he? I can do it well enough.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he admitted, “but it is hard work for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Work,” she replied oracularly, “is an excellent
+thing. You yourself believe in the dignity of
+labour.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who told you that?” he asked reddening
+slightly.</p>
+
+<p>She had stooped down and was wrestling with a
+giant worm as yet but half above the soil. “Don’t
+you believe it?” she inquired. “Out you come—”
+this was addressed to the worm—“you’re not going
+to stop here, come along now!” It came, and she
+threw it over the iron fence to find a new home in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>the field. “This is the dignity of labour,” she said
+as she returned to her work.</p>
+
+<p>There was very little dignity about the small,
+hatless figure on the deeply dug plot. Bill had a
+great faculty for putting trade-marks of her occupation
+on herself and clothes; labour she might
+represent, but dignity never.</p>
+
+<p>Harborough laughed a little; it was impossible to
+know when the girl was in fun and when in earnest.
+“Mrs. Morton will have a lot of potatoes if your
+crop is a good one,” he observed.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but they’ll keep,—besides, she can bring
+them to Wrugglesby for us if she likes. There is an
+awful lot of waste in this garden; one could grow
+heaps of things—it does seem a pity. While I am
+here I am going to try what can be done with it.”</p>
+
+<p>“In the way of growing potatoes?”</p>
+
+<p>“All manner of things. I don’t know much about
+it, but I’ll find out; there is a book about gardening
+here, and Mr. Dane has got another, a big one, I saw
+it in his bookshelf. I expect you know a good lot.”</p>
+
+<p>She stopped work for a moment as the idea
+occurred to her, then went on again with it and her
+questions at the same time till Harborough soon
+found himself giving information on the subject of
+fruit and vegetable culture; flowers did not seem to
+enter into the girl’s consideration at all.</p>
+
+<p>“Some grow themselves,” she said of them, “and
+there are heaps of wild ones to be got. I would see
+about flowers afterwards; the other things must
+come first.”</p>
+
+<p>“But,” Harborough objected, “in such a garden
+as this it would be possible to grow many more
+eatables than Mrs. Morton could use; surely it
+would be better to devote the surplus time and room
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>to flowers. Unless,” he added slily, “you think the
+other vegetables could be brought to Wrugglesby like
+the potatoes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, yes,” Bill admitted, “some could, and the
+rest could be sold.”</p>
+
+<p>“To whom? Believe me there is no profit
+attached to market-gardening on a small scale; your
+profits would not pay your freight to London.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should not send them to London.” Bill was
+at the end of the row now, and Harborough had
+moved farther along the fence to keep even with her.
+“I should take some in the light cart to Wrugglesby
+and sell to people who had no gardens, and some I
+should take to Darvel. It is rather a long distance
+off, but it is quite a big town with barracks and lots
+of houses without gardens. People with things to
+sell come to our house in Wrugglesby like that; at
+first we did not buy much, but now we have a good
+deal from them—that is how it would be with me.
+I should sell rabbits too, I think, and fowls and eggs;
+Theresa does not half make them pay.”</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy she would raise objections to your making
+them pay in that way.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was forced to admit that such a thing was
+probable. “Still,” she said, “if it was really right I
+might do it all the same if I lived here; I could easily
+get round Robert. But I don’t live here, so I am
+afraid there is an end of the matter.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough watched her curiously for a moment.
+“You don’t appear to suffer from any class-prejudices,”
+he observed.</p>
+
+<p>“What are they? Do you mean I don’t mind
+what I do? If that is it, I don’t; why should I?
+Do you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>The question was superfluous, he thought, for did
+not his manner of living demonstrate his theory to
+Bill as to everyone else?</p>
+
+<p>“You work your own farm,” she said, so she
+evidently knew, “and I should work my own
+cabbage garden. We should not make big profits,
+but we should make enough to live on with what we
+grew for ourselves, and we should enjoy ourselves at
+the same time.”</p>
+
+<p>“You would like it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, very much. I do not mean I should do it
+if I were rich. I should find some other work then;
+there is sure to be some belonging to being rich; but
+if I were not rich, only rich enough to have a farm or
+a cabbage garden, I should work them like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder if you know what real work is?”</p>
+
+<p>The remark was more speculation than question,
+and seemed to emanate from a different and much
+older being. Bill was not piqued, for indeed she
+regarded him in the light of a different and older
+being.</p>
+
+<p>“I have not done much,” she said, “but I mean
+to get this garden a little straight before I go back to
+Wrugglesby.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you don’t get tired of it first.”</p>
+
+<p>“I sha’n’t do that; you can come every morning
+if you like, to see if I am at work or not.”</p>
+
+<p>This was something of a challenge. Harborough
+at first had not intended accepting it, yet, since on
+the next day circumstances caused him to come home
+at mid-day by the field-path, he thought he might as
+well see if the girl was really at work. The day was
+moist and close, and a warm fine rain, which fell at
+intervals, might have offered some excuse for remaining
+indoors. But she had not availed herself of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>the excuse; very likely, he thought, because she
+expected he would come, thinking which he wished
+he had not done so, and even for a moment
+meditated going away without betraying his presence.
+But it was too late for that; she had seen him and
+glanced up from her work to ask, “Are you going
+to market this afternoon?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you can’t see Robert off in good time?
+Theresa will be waiting for him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will do what I can.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you.” She resumed her work, and he
+went on his way determined to keep his promise.</p>
+
+<p>And either he did keep it, or else some other
+circumstance brought about the desired results, for
+Robert came home early that night; and Bill, who
+was sitting with Theresa, was satisfied, trying to
+persuade herself that Harborough was right in saying
+that the one escapade was an accident not likely to be
+repeated.</p>
+
+<p>She did not see Harborough for the next few days,
+and so could not thank him for his good offices. She
+did not altogether expect to see him; indeed, to tell
+the truth, she had forgotten about him in the engrossing
+interest of her work. But after nearly a
+week he passed that way again and found her still
+very busy, though now at a spot some little way from
+the railing. She did not cease work to come to him,
+and as he did not jump the rail to come to her,
+they carried on their conversation in tones suitable to
+the distance that separated them,—an arrangement
+which struck Harborough as more practical than
+pleasant, though he would not take the initiative in
+improving upon it. The conversation itself was
+practical, strictly horticultural, and mostly concerned
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>with the growing of lettuces, which, though it showed
+a laudable attention to business on Bill’s part, was
+uninteresting. She was attending very much to
+business and not very much to Harborough; she
+even once went unceremoniously away to fetch some
+water-cans, singing as she went.</p>
+
+<p>Harborough turned to go; the water-cans, it is
+true, were not far away, but she had gone for them
+without a word of apology. He was an extremely
+practical young man, believing in utility, in the
+importance of work above all things; but he did not
+quite appreciate seeing manners (and himself) sacrificed
+to some one else’s notion of work.</p>
+
+<p>“‘There’s work for all the day-time,’” Bill sang,
+repeating to herself fragments of the song she had
+sung to the other Harborough, and quite unconscious
+of having offended this one. “The rose of this can
+has rather big holes in it; I believe it will wash the
+seeds out of the ground—‘the victor’s crown of
+glory,—of glory, glory’—now, then, I have filled
+my shoes with water. ‘But after life’s long story
+there’s the devil’s bill to meet.’”</p>
+
+<p>“What are you singing?” Harborough stopped
+to ask.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,” and Bill stood on one foot while she
+emptied the water out of her shoe.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but what was it?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill recited the verse to him and began to water
+her seed-patch.</p>
+
+<p>“Why don’t you come nearer?” Harborough
+asked. “All the men in the yard will hear what
+you are saying.”</p>
+
+<p>“There are none there now, they are all eating
+their lunch in the barn; besides what does it matter
+if they do? It will do no harm.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>“Oh, no; it might even do some good; it is
+almost a pity they should not be edified by your—hymn
+is it?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill looked up arrested by his tone. “It isn’t a
+hymn,” she said, “but it is true all the same, every
+bit of it, the laughter and the work and the bill, only
+I don’t think you always have to wait till the end of
+life’s long story for that. After all it is only fair;
+you must expect to pay a good price for a good
+thing,—and it is good!”</p>
+
+<p>“Which? The broken cucumber-frame or your
+own work? You are admiring both.”</p>
+
+<p>“Everything,—just being alive.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you consider one is in the devil’s debt for
+life? It is a new idea.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not exactly that. The debt you owe is the
+wrong you do. You have not half lived if you have
+done no wrong; you miss an awful lot if you never
+do any wrong,—don’t you think so?”</p>
+
+<p>She looked up as she spoke. Wrong so prefigured
+appeared wonderfully alluring, for there was an indescribable
+provocation in her face and figure, a
+fascination, nay, a temptation personified, which
+roused the youth in him, stirring the pulses usually
+so cool. Theory and reason are all very well,
+admirable in fact for ordinary use, but young blood
+will course in spite of them; the world’s spring will
+not always take <i>no</i> for answer.</p>
+
+<p>Harborough went home that day vibrating with
+an emotion which was strange to him. Afterwards,
+when he was cool again, he was ashamed of it, for it
+did not seem exactly a good thing, and he vowed he
+would not go near the garden again. Yet how could
+he help himself? In a rash moment he had offered
+to mend the broken cucumber-frame for the girl,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>and she, serenely unconscious of his emotions, had
+accepted the offer. There had not been time then:
+Theresa wanted her in the house in five minutes;
+but he would come some other time. She had
+suggested to-morrow, or any day he liked. It did
+not matter when it was done, but it had to be done;
+he had left himself no choice.</p>
+
+<p>That same evening he met Theresa in the lane,
+and, acting on impulse, he told her of his offer to
+mend the frame. On the whole, he thought it
+better, even if she put a false construction on his
+actions, than jumping the fence some morning when
+Bill was alone in the garden. But Theresa did not
+put any construction whatever on his actions; she
+looked upon her young cousin as more of a child
+than she really was, and much more of one than
+Harborough thought her. “She told me you
+offered to do it,” Theresa said; “it is very kind of
+you, I’m sure. She has taken a great fancy to
+gardening, and I am glad of it, though I cannot give
+her much help myself, for I know so little about it,
+and am so busy besides.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough assured her he was pleased to give
+any assistance he could, and Theresa thanked him
+again for sparing his valuable time, and invited him
+to do so to-morrow afternoon, and to have tea afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>This he did, he and Bill spending an hour in the
+garden before tea. That afternoon Bill did not
+arouse any sentiments, unholy or otherwise, in his
+breast, neither did she sing or whistle; she devoted
+herself to business, and Harborough, having of late
+worked with farm-labourers, found it a refreshing
+change to work with a person who understood what
+was wanted and did as she was told. “She has more
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>common-sense than most of the men I know,” was
+the opinion he formed that day, both when they
+were at work before tea, and when they were at the
+table later on. Her intercourse with Robert Morton
+impressed him very much; she had gauged the man’s
+character to a nicety, and Harborough could not but
+see that she understood him better, blamed him less,
+and could do infinitely more with him than could his
+stately young wife. He was not sure that he liked
+her the better for that. “An odd girl,” was his
+opinion, when at last he had convinced himself that
+she was not really conscious of the part she was
+playing; “she simply reflects her surroundings,
+but—” His ideal of womanhood was not a changing
+elf, a will-o’-the-wisp, a creature who could in mind
+enter into all things, reflect all things, good, bad, and
+indifferent, without judging or condemning. Woman
+should be above man; she should not understand
+evil except when he taught her; she should be
+merciful, of course, with the mercy of love, the pity
+of superiority, but not tolerant with the liberality of
+good fellowship; she should have nothing in common
+with a man like Robert Morton; she should be
+something fairer, better—unconsciously he looked at
+Theresa.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Bill fascinated him. She was not fair, above,
+apart; she was of the earth earthy, a brownie by the
+hearth, not a goddess for a shrine. And yet the last
+thing in his waking thoughts that night was the dark
+glowing face watching him from the gate, the first
+thing that haunted his dreams was the small figure
+gliding into the green twilight of the nut-bushes.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI.<br>
+<small>WILHELMINA I. AND II.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Polly</span> always declared she foresaw the end from the
+very beginning of the affair, and certainly at the outset
+of Miss Brownlow’s illness she prophesied fatal
+results; but then she always did foretell the worst,
+and Bella said she did not believe her, though she
+sobbed as she said it. But it seemed so impossible:
+Miss Brownlow only slipped down the last four or
+five of the cellar-stairs; Jane was getting coals at the
+time, and declared she saw her and could swear it was
+not more than five steps. She must have struck her
+head on the corner at the bottom, for it was so long
+before she recovered consciousness, and she seemed
+to so wander in her mind when she did recover.
+This was before she became very ill; after that took
+place Polly did not prophesy anything; the cousins
+only looked at one another in silence.</p>
+
+<p>But before that time Theresa had come. Bella
+was so intensely relieved by her coming, that she did
+not for a moment dispute with Polly for the right of
+bringing her. She sat by Miss Brownlow’s side alone
+while Polly was away; the room was so dark, for the
+blinds were pulled down and the day was overcast,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>that she could barely see to correct the pile of exercise-books
+before her. As yet the school had not
+been broken up; but the noise of the children did
+not seem to disturb Miss Brownlow, hardly even to
+reach her as she lay in semi-stupor. Neither of the
+cousins felt it wise to dismiss their pupils lightly, and,
+notwithstanding Polly’s prophetic warnings, neither
+really anticipated the worst, or fully realised the
+serious nature of the accident.</p>
+
+<p>On account of the school Polly was not able to
+leave Wrugglesby till after four o’clock; but, seeing
+the grave nature of her errand, she ordered a fly from
+the Red Lion in spite of Bella’s demur at the extravagance,
+and drove away in becoming state and
+solemnity. Bill was working in the garden at the
+time of the arrival at Haylands; when she went to
+the pump for water to wash her hands before tea she
+saw the fly standing in the yard.</p>
+
+<p>“Whose is that?” she asked as she pumped water
+into a wooden bowl.</p>
+
+<p>Sam, with the milk-pails on his way to the dairy,
+stood contemplating the object.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t roightly know,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Bill carried her bowl to a wooden bench outside
+the dairy door, brought a large piece of yellow soap
+from the wash-house, rolled up her sleeves and proceeded to wash;
+the refinements of life did not at
+that time greatly trouble her. The man with the
+pails followed her to the dairy, went in and began
+pouring the milk into the pans.</p>
+
+<p>“Oi shouldn’t be s’proised if that b’longed to
+Wazzel,” he said glancing down the yard; “looks
+loike ’is shay, that do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wazzel of the Red Lion? Who has come from
+Wrugglesby?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>“Come fr’ Wrugglesby? Oh, it’s one o’ the
+Misses’s sisters as come, but I’m not sartin that is
+Wazzel’s—”</p>
+
+<p>“Which one? Bella, the pretty one?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, the old ’un. Wazzel—”</p>
+
+<p>But Bill had gone with still wet hands to see what
+had brought Polly to Ashelton. She knew, directly
+she looked into the room, that there was something
+wrong, or that Polly was persuading herself there
+was. There was an air of momentous gravity about
+Polly, of depressing, dignified solemnity which pervaded
+the whole room and infected all present.
+Even the frivolous young maid, who was setting out
+the tea-things, looked awed and spread the best cloth
+out of respect for the gravity of the visitor. Robert,
+who was also there, seemed glum and silent, and
+Polly was not attempting to entertain him according
+to her usual manner; she was acting up to the situation
+and enjoying it proportionately.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter?” Bill asked.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa turned, and Bill knew when she saw her
+face that there was real trouble.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt is very ill,” Polly answered, “and I have
+come for Theresa.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ill?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but not dangerously,” Theresa hastily explained;
+“at least we hope not,—we are sure it
+cannot be,—she was quite well a day or two ago.
+She has had a tumble down-stairs which has shaken
+her a good deal. It is so difficult for Polly and Bella
+to nurse her and look after the school too, that they
+want me to go and help.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see.” Bill was greatly relieved.</p>
+
+<p>“How long has she been ill? How bad is she?”</p>
+
+<p>They told her, Polly characteristically painting the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>case black, Theresa white. Bill was left to draw her
+own conclusions, based on the one fact that Polly
+usually served the truth in the sauce she considered
+most fitting, and on the other that Theresa really
+knew very little of the state of the case. In the end
+she did not know what to think; her fears were
+half aroused, yet she could not believe matters really
+were serious; nothing serious had happened within
+her memory, and it did not seem possible that it
+could now. That which needed the most consideration,
+however, was not so much what had happened
+as the more immediate question of Theresa’s leaving
+home. This proved difficult to arrange; she hardly
+knew what to do.</p>
+
+<p>“The dairy needs a lot of management just now,”
+she said, “and Jessie really is very inexperienced;
+she has been with us such a little time too.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think I could do anything?” Bill asked.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa looked at her doubtfully, but Robert, who
+was tired of the discussion, said shortly: “Of
+course she could; there is not such a lot to do. You
+had better get your things together and go back at
+once; there’s no need for any more talk about it.”</p>
+
+<p>It was nice of Robert to give permission so readily,
+even if he did not give it graciously. No doubt
+Polly thought so, as she cast a quick, comprehending
+glance at him from the corner of her small dark eyes.
+“Thank you,” she said; “I’m sure it is very nice of
+you to spare her; we are so much obliged, so very
+much. Now, Theresa, you can come with a light
+heart,—as soon as we have had tea; we may as well
+wait for that. We must have tea somewhere, and it
+takes no longer in one place than another.”</p>
+
+<p>So Theresa drove away with Polly, leaving Bill
+for a day or two only, she said, though in her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>heart she thought it likely to be longer. Bill also
+thought it possible, and took over the charge of
+the house and dairy rather in anticipation of such
+an event. Taking over the charge was a serious
+matter in Bill’s opinion; Jessie also found it a
+serious matter, for with the cheerful and friendly
+Bill she found herself working as she had never
+worked before. Bill loved work in all its branches,
+and somehow those with her usually had to work
+too, either because they were infected by her
+energy, or because they could not avoid it; but
+for some reason they usually worked. Jessie
+worked now as she never did before or afterwards,
+until she got a house of her own and a husband
+to keep.</p>
+
+<p>It must be admitted Bill did a great deal more
+than there was any necessity to do, a great deal
+more than Theresa did or expected to be done;
+the only thing which prevented her from doing yet
+more was a desire to go on with her gardening.
+It was one morning when she was hurrying over the
+last of the butter-making so as to get out to her
+plants that Mr. Dane came and hindered her awhile.
+He came to ask if some of the skimmed milk could
+be sent to Mrs. Hutton, an old woman at Ashelton
+End. He was going to the front door in the
+orthodox manner but, hearing Bill singing gaily in
+the dairy, he went round the end of the house
+and came to seek her at her work. He knew
+Theresa had gone to Wrugglesby; all Ashelton
+knew that, for Miss Minchin, from the vantage-point
+of her corner window, had seen the fly from the
+Red Lion drive past. She had kept a careful watch
+on the road till the same vehicle drove back, even
+sitting at tea with one eye on the window and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>the other on the tea-pot, so as to have a really
+good look at it on its return journey and to see
+Mrs. Morton and another lady inside.</p>
+
+<p>On account of this sight, doubting that Mrs.
+Morton could have left her cousin alone at Haylands,
+thinking that, had she done so, the young
+creature might be lonely, or want a little help, Miss
+Minchin set off to see her the very next afternoon.
+Bill was in the garden at the time, fortunately out
+of sight of the drawing-room window, when Jessie
+came to tell her of the visitor.</p>
+
+<p>“What does she want?” Bill asked.</p>
+
+<p>“To see you, Miss. I expect she wants to find
+out about the Missis, if the truth were known.”
+Jessie knew Miss Minchin by reputation.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you could have told her that,” said Bill,
+loth to leave her gardening.</p>
+
+<p>“But she didn’t ask me. Lor’, miss, she pretends
+she’s come to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“To call?” Bill asked, and Jessie nodded.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” said Bill delighted, and ran to the pump.
+She made a back-door toilette and presented herself
+in the drawing-room quite unconscious of the
+quantity of loam on her short skirts. Miss Minchin
+found out all Bill could tell her, offered (and really
+meant it) any assistance she could give, and had,
+as she said, “a very nice little chat,” Bill playing
+hostess most successfully. She went away quite
+satisfied, told Miss Gruet all she had heard and all
+she surmised, and at the end of three days everyone
+in Ashelton and Ashelton End and Brook
+Ashelton, even including Mr. Dane, knew something
+of Mrs. Morton’s summons to Wrugglesby. Consequently,
+when on that sunny April morning the
+rector heard the vigorous young voice singing in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>the dairy, he knew that the lady of the house
+was to be found there.</p>
+
+<p>Bill was singing a perfectly irreproachable hymn,
+occasionally, when her work became very engrossing,
+leaving off or perhaps humming a bar or two;
+but just as Mr. Dane drew near she broke out
+at the top of her voice so that she did not hear
+his approach, nor did she know that he was there
+until he stopped in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-morning,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-morning,” she replied, giving him a large
+smile of welcome. “Do you want me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but please don’t let me interrupt you; you
+look very busy.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was making butter-pats, and apparently had
+been churning earlier, for the butter-milk still dripped
+from her bare elbows. She was standing on a small
+inverted wash-tub, for the shelves were high and
+she liked to be well above her work. “I am rather
+busy,” she said; “come in and sit down, won’t you?
+That pickle-tub is quite safe; the lid won’t give
+way.”</p>
+
+<p>The rector came in and sat down, making his
+request for milk at the same time.</p>
+
+<p>“She shall have some,” Bill said after a moment’s
+thought. “I will take her some by-and-bye, if
+that will do; or do you want her to have it earlier?”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane said that would do, though on second
+thoughts he suggested that, if convenient, he would
+take the milk himself as he was going to Mrs.
+Hutton.</p>
+
+<p>Bill mentally rearranged the milk at her disposal
+and said he could have it now. Had she been
+Theresa, she would have insisted that the boy should
+carry the can to the cottage; being Bill she did
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>no such thing, for she had set the boy some weeding
+which would take all his time. She volunteered to
+carry it herself as soon as the butter should be done,
+and would have been pleased to do so. It never
+occurred to her that the carrying of a milk-can could
+appear to Mr. Dane in a different light from that
+in which it did to her; and fortunately she was
+right.</p>
+
+<p>She went off to find a can, and it took her some
+few minutes to do so. As she searched, the old
+man heard her softly complete the interrupted verse
+of the hymn she had been singing, and the varied
+richness of her voice struck him forcibly.</p>
+
+<p>“You have a very remarkable voice, my child,”
+he said when she came back.</p>
+
+<p>Bill coloured a little with pleasure. “I believe
+I can imitate other sounds better than I can do
+anything else,” she said; and to illustrate her words
+she mimicked with rare perfection the liquid recurrent
+whistle of a thrush in the apple-tree outside
+the window. “Perhaps it is because I have got
+a correct ear,” she added, as if apologising for her
+own skill.</p>
+
+<p>“I think you must have,” he answered, “and
+a good memory too. You remember what you have
+once heard perhaps? Yes? Tell me, then, where
+did you hear the song you sang at Mrs. Dawson’s?”</p>
+
+<p>The old man was looking at her very keenly,
+almost eagerly. She gave the butter an unnecessary
+thump as she answered, “I don’t know,” and then
+added somewhat defiantly, “I never thought they
+would mind it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mind it? Who minded it? How did you
+learn it? Think,—tell me whom you have heard
+sing it.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>Bill saw that Mr. Dane had found no offence in
+the song, and being reassured she set herself to
+answer his question. “I cannot tell you how I
+came to know it,” she said; “I have never seen the
+music in print that I can remember. The greater
+part of the words I found with some letters and
+things which are kept in an old box at home. When
+I read them I seemed to recognise them, and remembered
+the part that was missing,—you know the
+way I mean, the way you grope things out of your
+mind. At first I thought I would take the paper
+away: then I thought I ought not to, so I just
+learned them by heart. As for the music, it seems
+to belong to the words—don’t you think so? I can
+only suppose my father used to sing the song,
+perhaps very often, and I have remembered it, though
+in that case it may not be quite right.”</p>
+
+<p>“There was one mistake; you did not repeat the
+refrain with sufficient accuracy in the latter part of
+the song.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have heard it before!” Bill exclaimed in
+astonishment. “You know it too!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I have heard it—many years ago, very
+many; that is why I wondered how you came to
+know it; I did not think it had been sung lately.”</p>
+
+<p>He rose as he spoke, and held out his hand for the
+can. He looked old and weary, yet withal a very
+fine and courteous gentleman though standing among
+milk-pans talking to a little dairy-maid. Bill
+wondered if he had heard the song when he was
+young, and if it were very long ago. She gave him
+the milk-can saying, “I will send the same quantity
+to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, thank you, little Mistress Bill.
+Bill,—it’s a name to fit you.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>She laughed. “Better than Wilhelmina,” she said.
+“That is ever so much too long; I was called
+Wilhelmina after my grandmother.”</p>
+
+<p>He stopped on the threshold. For a moment he
+leaned against the door-post; the lined face looked
+gray in the shaded light, though perhaps only by
+reason of it, for he merely said, “Yes, yes, of course,
+Wilhelmina Alardy,—good-bye,” and so went away
+with his milk-can.</p>
+
+<p>Wilhelmina Alardy! Of course she was Wilhelmina
+Alardy; he knew that before. And the other
+Wilhelmina was her grandmother; of course he had
+known that too, or at least he almost felt as if he
+had. Not that she was like, not like at all, not even
+in face; he could trace no resemblance to the first
+Wilhelmina, tall and slim and queenly, with her
+beautiful black hair. Bill’s hair was dark, it is true,
+but with a glowing, coppery darkness, brown shot
+with red, a colour of which a man was never sure
+even when he thought he saw it in her eyes. Wilhelmina’s
+eyes were different, dark, proud, passionate.
+Bill’s were not proud, nor were they passionate; but
+they took possession of a man’s mind; they held an
+indescribable charm not to be forgotten, they were,—they
+were other eyes, another face—</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane turned abruptly from the painting he
+was contemplating; he was at home now, his visit to
+Mrs. Hutton having been an unusually brief one.
+When he reached home he locked himself in his
+study so that he should not be disturbed. His
+housekeeper thought he was busy over his sermon;
+but if he was, his text was an old portrait taken from
+a locked drawer, and his subject a beautiful woman,
+young and proud, to whom the painter had given a
+milk-white skin and curling black hair. Her gown
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>sloped away on the shoulders in the fashion of forty
+years ago, and her brow curved softly in that fashion
+too; but the painter, in spite of a laudable desire to
+bring the face within the then prevailing standard of
+beauty, had not been able to flatter the chin out of
+its imperious waywardness nor the eyes out of their
+proud unrest.</p>
+
+<p>There was no likeness to Bill in this face of the
+other Wilhelmina; and yet—this was but one of the
+looks she had worn—who should say there was not
+some of her sleeping undeveloped in the girl of
+to-day? Men know so little of the working of such
+things. Who could say how many of Wilhelmina’s
+reckless ancestors had gone to the making of Bill,
+had revived in Bill, gipsy Bill? Of course she was
+gipsy; Anthony Alardy was half a gipsy, dark-faced,
+lawless, part sinner, part saint, knight and churl in
+one; a child of nature alive with a glowing vitality,
+impregnated with a magnetism, a charm, a quality
+without a name, hard to define yet harder still to
+defy. To this day the man who sat with the old
+portrait in his hand could recall, ay, and acknowledge,
+the charm, even though he owed to it so much
+of sorrow and dishonour in the long ago. And the
+voice! He remembered the voice too; the musician
+in him could never forget it, for he would never hear
+such another. He might hate it,—he did hate it, all
+the man in him hated it—but the musician could not,
+and could never forget.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Red is the rose thou hast bound in thy hair.</p>
+
+<p>That night there were red roses in her hair, he
+remembered,—how he remembered! And the song—what
+music, what passion of melody! It was not
+art, it was nature, man’s nature, woman’s nature
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>crying out, passion which swelled up and spoke, to
+be answered, to be satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane put the portrait of his young wife away,
+put it away and, by degrees put away too the scenes
+and memories which had returned to him. Strange
+that after so many years the past should return thus,
+stranger still, since it did return, that pain should
+outweigh all other feelings now. Where had gone
+the sense of injury, the shame, the agony, the unforgiving
+hate? They were gone, all was only a pain
+now; thank God for it, and for the mercy of the
+years, the pity and the merciful wisdom learned of
+the long, patient years.</p>
+
+<p>He locked the drawer and put away the key. She
+was dead, dead long ago. And her grandchild was
+here, singing the old passionate song; looking out
+on the world with eager, unknowing eyes; containing
+in herself funded possibilities handed down from
+a dead past, acquired from circumstance, environment,
+a hundred things of which a man cannot judge, on
+which he cannot reason. Her grandchild! A little
+brown creature full of untold possibilities! Her
+grandchild? Almost she might have been his own—for
+a moment he fancied he hated her for it. Might
+have been? Had she been she would not have been
+such as she now was; and after all, that was the
+thing which concerned him, the thing which he had,
+if need be, to help.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII.<br>
+<small>NATURAL SELECTION.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bill</span>, of course, knew nothing of what was in the
+rector’s mind; she only wondered once or twice
+about the song, and decided to sing it no more in
+public since the greater number of her acquaintances
+disapproved of it, and the one whose opinion she
+most valued did not like it. Harborough liked it or
+had seemed to like it on the night she sang it at the
+Dawsons’. But she was not quite sure of him, for
+she had begun to think there were two separate
+persons in Gilchrist Harborough,—one a strong, cool,
+somewhat old young man whose only weakness was
+theories, and who was the normal and usual person
+in possession; the other a very different person, who
+only looked out now and then, by accident as it were.
+It was to this last that the song appealed, this last
+who waked once or twice under her influence.
+She was not sure, but she rather fancied Harborough
+despised this second self, even denied its existence.
+That was a pity, in her opinion, for the second self
+was the thing in him which played, which laughed,
+and enjoyed life and despised theories. For this
+reason, and also for pure mischief, Bill tried occasionally
+to rouse this other self.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>She had not many opportunities, for Harborough
+was very guarded, and by degrees, since she was
+much absorbed in her work, she forgot all about it,
+though she saw him often while Theresa was at
+Wrugglesby. It is true, if he passed when she was
+working in the garden he did not usually stop to say
+more than “good-afternoon”; indeed, had she only
+known it, his demeanour on those occasions suggested
+“lead us not into temptation” in a manner which
+was scarcely complimentary. However, as it happened,
+about this time business brought Harborough
+to Robert, and Robert brought him to Haylands,
+where of necessity he saw Bill. Even when he did
+not come to the house, he met her in the yard or
+barns or dairy, “looking diligently to the ways of
+her household.” There could be no doubt as to her
+capabilities and diligence as a housewife; Harborough
+never saw her now without being impressed with her
+ability and, indeed, with her great suitability for the
+post of mistress of a working-farm.</p>
+
+<p>Events, or rather his opinions, culminated on the
+afternoon when he invited her to take shelter from
+the rain in Crows’ Farm. It was very heavy rain and
+very sudden, and she had on her best hat; in ordinary
+circumstances she would have declined his hospitality
+and paddled cheerfully home, but the hat was not
+ordinary; so she accepted his offer and took shelter
+under his roof for the hour that the rain lasted.
+While there she made tea for him without disturbing
+the method of his arrangements; she washed the
+cups without splashing his scrubbed table, and she
+did not, even when asked for her opinion, say
+that his way of keeping kitchen utensils was
+wrong. Finally she sat by the smouldering fire
+with folded hands saying with unmistakable sincerity
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>that his manner of living was one after her own
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>“You would like it?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, better than anything except gipsying.”</p>
+
+<p>“You would not like that,” he told her smiling.
+“At least when you came to know what it was really
+like, you would not.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think not? Perhaps so; I don’t know
+much about it: have you tried?”</p>
+
+<p>“Rather not,” he said; “I have tried bush-life
+though.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that like it?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; not altogether. There are not so many
+fellow-gipsies in that; also there are not necessarily
+dirt and dishonesty.”</p>
+
+<p>“But there are sometimes?” Bill asked as if she
+were anxious there should be.</p>
+
+<p>“Occasionally you run against queer customers,
+men from the ends of the earth, who had very much
+better have stayed there, if they could not contrive
+to drop off altogether.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should think they were worse than fellow-gipsies,”
+Bill observed.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s a matter of opinion; besides, there is always
+plenty of room there, and you don’t come across them
+often. I think the thing which strikes me most of
+all here is the smallness; it is all so ‘preserved.’”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was interested. “I should like to see the
+bush,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“It is not much to see,” he told her, but added,
+“station-life would suit you; I believe you would
+like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me about it.” And he told her what he
+thought would interest her, she listening with eager
+face.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>And thus they spent the time pleasantly enough
+until the rain ceased sufficiently for her to go home.
+He walked to the gate with her, and then went back
+to his barns and sheds revolving in his mind a theory
+he had not much considered before,—the theory of
+natural selection, which he interpreted to mean the
+wisdom of choosing your wife as you choose your
+horse, for general suitability to your purpose.</p>
+
+<p>She was young, it was true, and perhaps a little
+wild, but she could be trained; she would also sober
+down of herself, and she would probably never
+develop her latent possibilities for mischief if she
+married early. She was not what one would describe
+as tractable, though she was accommodating, far too
+accommodating not to be more or less submissive to
+superior experience. And she was all one could
+desire for practical purposes.</p>
+
+<p>Practical purposes! That was just it; in adopting
+a practical farmer’s life he found he needed a practical
+farmer’s wife; there was no room at his hearth for
+the stately lady whom fancy (not yet dead) had once
+painted in that position. There was something
+wrong with the present arrangement; a man either
+wanted to be something less or else to have something
+more than modern codes allowed. The
+patriarch Abraham supplied what must even then
+have been a long-felt want, in taking, besides the
+chief and lady wife, a humbler working partner.</p>
+
+<p>Harborough was not a man given to acting hastily,
+at least the paramount person in his character was
+not; concerning the other person he did not know
+much. He thought a long time of Bill and her
+suitability for his purpose, entirely oblivious for the
+moment of her curious attractions; but he could
+come to no conclusion either as to whether he wanted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>her or whether, if he did, she wanted him. However,
+he need not have wearied himself with the
+consideration that night, for, as it chanced, he had
+almost a month in which to think it over before he
+saw her again. That very evening she went to
+Wrugglesby and did not come back to Ashelton for
+some weeks.</p>
+
+<p>As she crossed the yard on her homeward way,
+Robert met her, his heavy face wearing a look of real
+concern.</p>
+
+<p>“Bear up, little girl!” was his greeting, for he saw
+that his face had already broken the bad news.
+“Cheer up! It hasn’t come to the worst yet, and
+we’re not going to be frightened into thinking it’s
+coming, either;—we’re just going to drive in to
+Wrugglesby and see.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have they sent for me?” she asked, her face
+whitening.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,—you’re not going to cry, are you? It
+mayn’t be so bad as all that. There’s a brave girl!
+Run in and get a wrap or something, you’ll be cold
+before you get there. They’ll have Beauty in the
+cart in a twinkling, and you shall drive her if you
+like.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill smiled a little; he was trying to comfort her
+as well as he could and she was grateful for
+the intention. She even pretended to be pleased to
+drive the spirited mare hitherto forbidden to her; it
+might have hurt him if she had not. It might have
+hurt him if she had refused the sweets he kept
+popping in her mouth, and she ate them though each
+one seemed as if it would choke her.</p>
+
+<p>He talked a little during the first part of the drive
+and she tried to answer him, but after a while he felt
+the wisdom of silence, and they both became quiet
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>until just as he handed her out at Langford House
+he said awkwardly: “You shall never want for
+anything while I live, I swear you sha’n’t! Theresa
+and I will always have a home for you,—mind that,
+little girl.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII.<br>
+<small>CHASING A SHADOW.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. James Brownlow</span> was a busy man; a hard-working
+solicitor, partner in an old firm, and a good
+firm though scarcely a rich one. He was not rich
+himself; he had worked hard all his life to attain
+moderate comfort, and he continued to work hard,
+though he was now past middle-age, partly to maintain
+the same standard of comfort, and partly because
+he cherished a delusion that nothing in the firm could
+go on without him. But, in spite of his business and
+its importance, he felt bound to devote a certain
+amount of time to the affairs of the late Miss Isabella
+Brownlow. It is true she was not a very near
+relation, but he had been legal adviser as well as
+relation, and moreover, the nieces she left seemed to
+be in a particularly solitary condition.</p>
+
+<p>“But one is married, I thought,” Mrs. Brownlow
+objected from the further end of the dinner-table.
+The train from Wrugglesby had been late, and made
+the dinner late too; accordingly the lamb was
+overcooked, and the clockwork regularity of the
+household disturbed. Mrs. Brownlow felt slightly
+annoyed; also she considered that if one of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>nieces was married her husband should have taken
+over the affairs of the family, instead of troubling
+somebody else’s husband,—and, incidentally, somebody
+else’s excellent cook.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brownlow probably knew these sentiments,
+but he was not disturbed by them that night for the
+importance of business was great in his eyes;
+moreover, he had been discreetly handled earlier in
+the day. “Yes,” he said, “yes, one is married,
+comfortably married, I should say; but a man is not
+bound to take over his wife’s family. He has professed
+himself quite ready to give a home to the
+youngest girl; the others will carry on the school.”</p>
+
+<p>“A wise plan, I should think,” Mrs. Brownlow
+said, with a sigh. She was always sadly affected by
+the delinquencies of the present age, which she
+possessed great abilities for discovering. “It is
+liberal of him,” she went on. “I suppose he will be
+repaid by the girl finding out one day that she is
+unable to bear a dependent position and must make
+her own way in the world, after having had a long
+training for it at somebody else’s expense. Girls
+usually get such ideas nowadays.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brownlow agreed with the general sentiment,
+but defended this particular girl. “I don’t think she
+is that sort at all,” he said. “She is very young, a
+plain, quiet little thing; she looked docile; Miss
+Hains spoke of her as if she were a child.”</p>
+
+<p>“There is no family?” Mrs. Brownlow asked.
+“I mean the married one,—Mrs. Morton, didn’t
+you say the name was—has no family?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“But if she has by-and-bye, what will become of
+this girl? Can they afford to keep her? Is it wise,
+do you think?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>“I have talked it all over with Miss Hains who
+really is a sensible woman. She is five and thirty, I
+dare say, and a sensible, clever woman.” Polly
+might have been considered clever in some senses of
+the word; that she had certain claims to ability was
+proved by the opinion she had produced in Mr.
+Brownlow’s mind. “She and I,” went on the worthy
+gentleman unconsciously placing the persons in their
+right order of importance, “she and I have decided
+that her cousin Wilhelmina had better return home
+with Mrs. Morton for the present. The school is
+not larger than she herself, with the assistance of
+Miss Waring, can manage. In the course of time
+they hope to increase it, when Wilhelmina can come
+back to help them with the younger pupils.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brownlow thought this an excellent arrangement
+and asked for personal details of its originator.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Hains? No, she is not handsome,” her
+husband said in answer to her question, “but a
+sensible, practical woman. Really it is quite surprising
+how business-like she is when you come to
+think that she has lived so long in that little country
+town,—how business-like and yet how very womanly,
+how essentially feminine, not in the least self-assertive
+and opinionated.”</p>
+
+<p>Such were the golden opinions Polly had won
+from Mr. Brownlow. Hardly so flattering was her
+opinion of him, which she was at that same time
+expressing to Bella and Bill as they sat together in
+the twilight.</p>
+
+<p>The first shock of their grief was now over. It is
+true there was an aching blank left in their lives by
+the death of this kindly, not over-wise aunt, but the
+first sharpness was over, the first ache a little dulled.
+Bella and Theresa had lost their own mother not so
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>many years ago, and though they had dearly loved
+their aunt, the loss of her was not what the earlier
+grief had been, nor yet what it was to Bill who could
+remember no mother. Bill’s loss was greatest, and
+greatest also to her was the shock, for this was the
+first time real sorrow had touched her life. She had,
+too, more time and opportunity to think about it,
+having, as the youngest, but little to do with all the
+plans and work consequent upon Miss Brownlow’s
+death. Polly, of course, was very busy: mourning
+alone offered a large field for her energies, for the
+cousins could not afford to employ even the local
+milliner and dressmaker.</p>
+
+<p>“We must let them dress us for the funeral,”
+Polly had said, but added, “I hardly think we need
+get Bill’s hat there; I will do that myself, for we
+must save wherever we can. As for other clothes,
+we must manage somehow; one good dress apiece is
+all we can afford.”</p>
+
+<p>And she had sighed; extensive mourning would
+have compensated her somewhat for a much heavier
+bereavement. Not but that she did mourn for Miss
+Brownlow; her grief was real, though perhaps not
+quite so deep as theirs, thought Bella and Theresa.
+As for Bill, when she had cried herself sick with the
+abandonment of childhood, she felt an hysterical
+inclination to laugh as she watched the perfection of
+Polly’s sorrow. It was real, as real as any other of
+Polly’s feelings; she felt it after her fashion, but
+principally because it was the fashion to feel it.</p>
+
+<p>By the May evening when Mr. Brownlow so much
+commended Polly, that “sensible and practical
+woman” considered it time to abate the first intensity
+of her grief. She had been abating it by degrees, and
+during Mr. Brownlow’s visit had shown a demeanour
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>of subdued sorrow blent with practical common-sense.
+After his departure she subdued her sorrow still more,
+and when the cousins sat together that evening she
+discussed matters with the air of one who, having paid
+off the funeral <i>cortège</i>, now opens the shutters and
+prepares to return to the normal condition of things.
+Theresa had gone home to Haylands; she had been
+obliged to go back there some time before, but had
+driven to Wrugglesby with Robert that day so
+as to be present during Mr. Brownlow’s visit. The
+school was to re-open at the beginning of the next
+week, the holidays on account of Miss Brownlow’s
+death being deducted from the midsummer vacation;
+an unavoidable arrangement not much to Polly’s taste.</p>
+
+<p>“We are too poor to afford sorrow,” she observed;
+“at least comfortable sorrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“As if comfort mattered at such a time!” Bella
+replied with scorn. She was leaning with her elbows
+on the sill, looking through the open window into
+the street.</p>
+
+<p>Polly was of opinion that it did matter, but she did
+not explain her views at length, for she wanted to
+talk over Mr. Brownlow’s suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>“You and I,” she said to Bella, “are to keep on
+this school for the rest of our lives. We must move
+into a smaller house to do it when the lease of this
+one is up. How would Chestnut Villa do? It is
+empty now, and I don’t expect anyone will take it
+before then; it is too mouldy.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” acquiesced Bella in a spiritless voice. She
+looked across the empty, darkening street to the
+doctor’s prim house opposite; the scent of the
+laburnums came to her from his garden, the sound of
+a wheel-barrow from a neighbour’s close by. It was
+all very dull and narrow and small—and the prospect
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>offered? It is hard to be young and fair and told at
+two-and-twenty that to live at Chestnut Villa (too
+mouldy for anyone else) and teach small girls is one’s
+fate beyond redemption.</p>
+
+<p>“We are to keep on with the school,” Polly was
+saying.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose so.” Bella did not look round.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you?” Polly retorted. “I don’t then! For
+one thing, I don’t suppose the school will keep on
+with us.”</p>
+
+<p>Bella did look round now. “It will, it must!”
+she exclaimed. “What else are we to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“It won’t,” Polly affirmed with confidence. “Look
+how it has gone down even while poor Aunt, whom
+everyone knew, was here. If she,—and people sent
+their children to her out of friendship or because their
+cousins or someone used to come—if she could not
+keep it together, what are we likely to do? You
+can teach, but you have not passed many examinations,
+and you are young and not at all imposing; as
+for me, I have no certificates at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Polly, you are clever in your own way;
+surely you could get pupils?”</p>
+
+<p>Polly did not think so, and she proceeded to make
+a statement of the case,—which girls were leaving,
+which likely to leave, and which among those living
+in the district were likely to come to Langford House,
+the last appearing to be very few. The case as set
+forth by her was not inspiriting.</p>
+
+<p>“But,” said Bella at last, “why did you not tell
+Mr. Brownlow this? You seemed to think it all
+satisfactory when you were talking to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Brownlow!” Polly replied contemptuously.
+“What would be the good of telling a person like
+that?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>“We have no one else to advise or help us, no one
+at all; Robert does not know and I am sure you
+don’t think much of his opinion.”</p>
+
+<p>Seeing Bella in real consternation, Bill shut her
+book. It was <span class="smcap">A Midsummer-Night’s Dream</span>,
+recommended by Mr. Dane, and she had found a
+great delight in it during those days. “What is your
+plan?” she asked Polly, as she put the book away
+and seated herself on the table.</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot say I have a plan,” Polly answered
+slowly, “not exactly a plan,—I may not do it; it
+depends on several things.”</p>
+
+<p>“Several persons?” Bill suggested; “persons or
+a person?” Polly did not answer, and Bill followed
+up her suspicions: “A person who you are not sure
+will do what you want?”</p>
+
+<p>Polly shifted uneasily; she seldom reckoned persons
+as obstacles to her plans, but in this case Bill was
+right, for she herself was the person in question, and
+Polly was not at all sure of the worth of her own
+authority over her ward—she and Theresa had been
+appointed guardians.</p>
+
+<p>“It is all very perplexing,” she said with a sigh.
+“I hardly know what will be best to do for you and
+me. It principally concerns you and me, as poor
+Aunt said, for Bella has a little money of her own,
+and, even if she does not marry, she is never likely
+to want a home with Theresa living so near.”</p>
+
+<p>“Neither is Bill,” Bella said. “Robert has offered
+it to Bill; I don’t see how you can expect him to
+take us both. I am very glad he has offered it to
+her; she wants it much more than I do.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly agreed. “But,” she added, “I should not
+think Bill would like to quarter herself on Robert
+and Theresa for the rest of her life; that is what it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>would amount to, for she could never be a governess
+and come and go as you could. It was very kind of
+them to offer it, but I should not think Bill would
+take it, except, of course, just for the present. I
+know I should not.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will mostly take all you can get,” Bill
+observed not without truth. Before Polly could
+deny the charge she asked: “On whom does your
+plan depend? Not on Bella; she evidently has
+nothing to do with it; have I?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Bill,” Polly said severely; “it is for your
+good as well as mine. You don’t deserve to be considered,
+but I have a sense of responsibility.”</p>
+
+<p>“What can I do that is any good to you?” Bill
+speculated. “What is it, Polly? Something you
+hardly expect me to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing of the sort! I should always expect
+you to do as I wished, especially as I am your
+guardian.”</p>
+
+<p>An audience of two was quite sufficient for Polly,
+who even when alone could hardly refrain from
+taking a part. Bill knew the value of her efforts.
+“What is your plan?” she asked simply, and Polly,
+after a few more preliminary flourishes, set it forth.
+Briefly it was this: to let things remain as arranged
+with Mr. Brownlow until Christmas, when the lease
+of the house expired; then to give up the school,—sell
+it if there was anything to sell—Bella to obtain a
+situation as resident governess, making Haylands her
+home in the holidays; Polly and Bill to move to
+London or the suburbs—</p>
+
+<p>“And take lodgers!” cried Bill.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, probably,” Polly said; “we should not
+have enough to live on without doing something, and
+that would be the best we could do. I have thought
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>about boarders, but that won’t do; you want more
+capital for a boarding house; besides boarders are a
+nuisance, nor do they really pay so well as lodgers,
+though of course they sound much better. We
+need not tell people about here that we are letting
+lodgings; we can say we are taking a few paying
+guests, because we could not get a house small
+enough for just our two selves.”</p>
+
+<p>This plan, except for the unnecessary deception,
+met with Bella’s entire approval. Bill, to Polly’s
+annoyance, did not give an opinion, but sat thinking,
+probably of what part she was to play and why she,
+rather than Bella, had been chosen for the venture.
+The same question occurred to Bella. “Why should
+not you and I do this?” she asked. “I should do
+just as well as Bill, and besides, we should have more
+capital as I could put my money into it. And then
+there would be no need to upset Robert’s arrangement;
+I am sure he really meant Bill to make Haylands
+her home.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Bella”—Polly was motherly—“there
+are two or three reasons why it should not be you.
+To begin with, you are too pretty; our lodgers
+will probably be men, very likely young city men,—you
+understand? To go on with, why should
+not Bill be independent? If she puts her share of
+the money in and helps me she would be independent
+in a measure, and I certainly know of no other way
+in which she could be.”</p>
+
+<p>Bella was not altogether satisfied; but Bill was,
+for she had solved the problem on her own account.
+“There is going to be no servant kept in that
+house!” she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“What nonsense!” Bella said, and Polly explained
+that she should have a girl. Then they talked the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>plan over afresh, Bill remaining aggravatingly silent.
+At last, Bella going into the kitchen to speak to the
+maid, Polly turned angrily to the table where the
+small figure was almost lost in the darkness. “I
+suppose,” she said sharply, “you are going to oppose
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill laughed softly. “Fancy you being afraid of
+me and my opposition,” she said half to herself.</p>
+
+<p>Polly did not attempt to deny the fact. “You
+are the most obstinate, contrary, silly little creature
+in the world,” was her only answer.</p>
+
+<p>Bill seemed still more amused. “Why did you
+let me know you were afraid?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“What is the good of pretending?” was Polly’s
+only answer, and Bill quoted some past words of her
+cousin’s in reply. “‘Truth is a luxury poor people
+cannot always afford;’ I have heard you give that to
+somebody as an excuse for your pretending. I don’t
+think it a very good one myself, but I have heard
+you make it. I suppose you can afford to be truthful
+with me?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am not going to pretend with you,” Polly said.
+“Look here, Bill, you are only a child and you are
+very ignorant and not at all clever,—I hope you don’t
+mind me saying these things, I am only telling the
+plain truth—you are all this, but in some respects
+you have much more sense than Bella and Theresa;
+you have more vitality, more—I don’t know what—but
+more backbone; you are not so much a Brownlow,
+not a Brownlow at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you.” Bill did not seem overwhelmed
+with the flattery.</p>
+
+<p>“What is your objection?” Polly asked after a
+pause: “I suppose you think you would have to
+work too hard.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>“No I don’t. Oh, no I don’t at all; we should
+share the work out fairly, Polly, very fairly.”</p>
+
+<p>Just then Bella came back, and the discussion was
+dropped, but Polly was not altogether dissatisfied,
+concluding from Bill’s manner then, and later, that
+she would probably fall in with the plan when the
+time came. As for Bill there was no hesitation in
+her mind about accepting the proposition; there was
+nothing else she could do, for she could not live with
+Robert and Theresa permanently, unless they would
+let her work their garden for a profit and look upon
+the proceeds as payment from her. They would not
+let her do this, so, though she would have preferred
+the garden to the lodgings, she was quite willing to
+accept the latter, since the former was unattainable.
+Live with Theresa without the garden she would
+not, for she had discovered, or rather she had gradually
+come to know of certain things which led her to
+believe that Theresa and Robert could not afford to
+offer her a permanent home. “I don’t believe
+Theresa knows,” she said to herself, “or if she does,
+she does not realise how things are. I wonder if
+Robert does? He was always telling me separate
+bits; I wonder if he looks at things whole; but he
+must, of course he must do so.”</p>
+
+<p>These thoughts occupied Bill’s mind a good deal,
+and another was added to them at this time, surprise
+at her own power over Polly. Either openly or
+covertly Polly’s will had been supreme at Langford
+House; she had always planned and decided for
+them all; it was a strange and wonderful thing that
+she should have considered Bill in this plan, feared
+her opposition even while she sought her help—strange
+yet perhaps not altogether unreasonable.
+Bill felt a childish amusement in the novelty of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>situation, and also a sense of responsibility. But of
+course she had, and she knew she had, a certain compelling
+power over Polly, else why had she taken
+her to Wood Hall? Shrewd, unprincipled Polly!
+To be sure, Bill did not call her that: she did not think
+about her principles, but, true to her nature, accepted
+her cousin as she found her, and never judged her at
+all.</p>
+
+<p>What with one thing and another Bill seemed to
+be fast growing older: when she went back to
+Ashelton at the end of May she felt that years instead
+of weeks had elapsed since she had left it. A month
+makes a difference to the country in the spring-time,
+and she noticed many changes during the drive to
+Haylands. The grass had grown: in some of the
+fields it had come up into little billows, where a patch
+of more fertile soil had caused some part to rise
+above the rest; in other fields it was all long and
+soft, spiked here and there with the shafts of its
+unopened flowers. Everywhere there were butter-cups,
+a golden cloth of butter-cups; everywhere
+hawthorn, each hedge snow-powdered with its
+blossom, each thorn-bush a bride in its white veil.
+The earth had been busy, Bill felt, very busy; the
+early fruit was set in the orchard, the blossom was off
+the apples, the oaks fully in leaf, the cow-parsley,
+waist-high, made every ditch a fairy-land.</p>
+
+<p>It had all changed very much, and Bill felt that
+she had changed too; then she turned to the garden,
+and in a sudden rebound from the trouble of the
+past weeks forgot about herself and her changes.
+There was so much, so very much to be done, to
+have lost a month at this time of year was a sad
+thing. She worked desperately, enthusiastically, to
+make up for it; and at dusk she struck work and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>forgot all about her age and her responsibilities,
+wandering forth with Shakespeare’s fairies (she knew
+them all by heart now) into the orchard and the
+fields and the deep, grass-grown ditches almost as
+if she expected to find the fairy-folk there.</p>
+
+<p>And thus it was that Gilchrist Harborough found
+her. During her absence at Wrugglesby he had
+debated his problem of natural selection more than
+once, and had at last decided to let matters drift.
+He did not phrase his decision thus; he put it that,
+since he was not likely to see her again for a long
+time, it was not worth thinking about it any more.
+So he did not think; indeed, he thought so little that,
+when he saw Bill again, he forgot the problem and
+never for an instant thought of her as an integral
+part of it, or as a practical farmer’s wife, or anything
+else practical. He himself on that occasion could
+hardly be regarded as a practical person seeking a
+wife in a cool and reasonable manner. There was no
+suggestion of a carefully thought out plan about it;
+it was just man and woman, and the dewy fragrance
+of trodden grass in the dusk of an evening when
+May and June meet to make it neither spring nor
+summer but a mid-heaven between.</p>
+
+<p>He heard Bill’s curious many-noted voice as he
+passed down the lane where he had talked with her
+on the day they first spoke of Robert Morton. She
+had been in the orchard then, as she was now. She
+had discovered an echo in the orchard,—the back of
+some barns, the end of an old wall, something caused
+it; it pleased her, and she sang softly, pausing to hear
+the repeated sound. “Fearest to love me”—and
+“love me” came the echo distinctly. “Love me,”
+she cried again to the clear repetition, “love me—me!”
+answering the sound as it answered her, till the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>twilight seemed filled with passionate whispering
+melody.</p>
+
+<p>Harborough stopped abruptly. If he had been
+wise he would have gone on, but he forgot to be
+wise; we are none of us always wise. The old love-song
+had wooed another on a summer night long
+ago; it held him now, it roused something in him,
+and he could not go. The singer ceased; she must
+have felt his presence, for she turned where she stood
+knee-deep in the coarse grasses and white-flowered
+weeds, and saw him leaning against the gate.</p>
+
+<p>“Go on,” he said; “finish it.”</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps not a polite form of greeting after
+her weeks of absence and trouble, but he had forgotten
+that; he had forgotten everything in his
+desire to hear the words that he knew should follow.
+The natural man in him was urging him to leap the
+gate, to stand beside her, and to make her say those
+words for him.</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated in silence for a moment. In the
+dusk she could not see his face very clearly, yet she
+must have known that the self in him to which she
+appealed was in the ascendant; she wanted to play
+and to make him play, yet she was half afraid.
+“No,” she said standing still among the grasses.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he answered, “yes—I will come and make
+you!”</p>
+
+<p>Then the witchcraft of the night took possession
+of her, and the unnamed, irresistible impulses, thought
+of our simple ancestry to be born of the elfin-folk,
+came upon her. “Come then!” she cried.</p>
+
+<p>In an instant he was over the gate, under the
+green twilight of the apple-trees, among the grasses
+where she stood. But she, now wild as a kitten
+at evening, had fled; from the denser shadow
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>of the nut-bushes she called to him, yet when he
+reached their shade her voice came from a far corner
+of the orchard—“Fearest to love me—fearest”—and
+because she was now in the best possible position for
+her echo the answer came back “Fearest,” “fearest!”
+till it was hard to say which was the fickle varying
+voice and which the repeated sound.</p>
+
+<p>It was like hunting a shadow, about as easy, about
+as wise, but—but he was young and she was younger
+still, and the earth redecked was young too, young
+with eternal youth. The fragrance of its breath was
+like wine to them, the scent of the falling laburnum
+and lilac in the garden, the smell of the hawthorn in
+the hedge, the trodden grass under foot, the dew that
+was upon the ground, the wind that whispered in the
+darkness of the trees. He was intoxicated with it,
+intoxicated with the chase; an instinct of the days
+when man wooed maid with swiftness of foot and
+strength of arm was upon him. He was—ah, well,
+it did not matter, there was no explanation; only
+when suddenly he startled her all unawares among
+the tall weeds, he completed the line which surprise
+had stayed on her lips. “Fearest,” she had called
+thinking him far away; and “To love me?” he
+finished, crushing her to silence in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment she was still in his arms; it might
+have been her will, it might not;—then, with a
+sudden effort she wrenched herself free, and he was
+alone in the darkening orchard.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV.<br>
+<small>THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF CROWS’ FARM.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Man</span> is a triple development; call him, body, soul
+and spirit, or mind, matter and extension,—he is,
+however regarded, a trinity. A man who recognises
+his three natures (which fortunately all do not), and
+who in his wife or work gratifies two of the three, is
+asking much of Providence when he complains that
+the third is unsatisfied. Yet this was Gilchrist Harborough’s
+case. Mind had counselled him to seek
+Wilhelmina Alardy as his wife; reason pointed out
+her unique suitability to his requirements; common-sense
+told him that she was exactly and precisely the
+person for all practical purposes. Yet he had
+hesitated, perhaps because he had an intuitive, if unexpressed,
+idea that such excellent logic was not
+always the best foundation for domestic happiness.
+That was a month ago; but then, last night in the
+twilight came Matter, and, forgetting Mind’s cool
+selection, discovered that the girl was desirable, sought
+and made her captive in a somewhat savage fashion,
+asking no better reason than her voice, no stronger
+proof than her contact when his arms held her.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>Yet in the morning the man was not satisfied with
+this double choice. To begin with, he despised himself
+because he had allowed Matter to get the upper
+hand; as a consequence he—well, no, he did not
+exactly despise the cause—but at least he did not
+altogether respect her just then. “The woman
+tempted me,”—it was a coward’s excuse and he would
+not make it. She was not to blame, at least not
+much; he would do her justice. And he honestly
+tried, though he did not altogether succeed, for he
+did not understand the childish folly which had
+prompted her to the game in the orchard. Sheer
+folly it had been, and nothing more; she knew
+nothing of his sensations and emotions, and his
+capture of her at the end had come like a thunderclap
+in its stunning suddenness and left her even now
+not fully aware of the true state of the case.</p>
+
+<p>So Harborough in his mind did her justice so far
+as he could; and in his actions he determined without
+delay to explain his equivocal words of last night and
+make her a formal offer of marriage. And when he
+felt not altogether glad about this decision, he reminded
+himself how entirely reason had chosen her
+before impulse had dictated last night’s words. As
+for the ideal, the fair and stately woman, a queen with
+holy face and ways of gentle dignity,—there was not
+room at his hearth for her. She could not rise early
+to milk his cows; she could not toil and work and
+stand beside him in the dirt and drudgery of his
+daily round; at least his queen could not, for so she
+would not be queen. There is doubtless a dignity
+in labour, but it is not easily discernible when labour
+is translated into soap and water, mud and ashes, red
+hands and tumbled hair. He could not afford an
+ideal: he did not need a woman to worship, but one
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>to live with, human, likeable, one to work with,
+strong, capable,—and he went to look for Bill.</p>
+
+<p>But Bill was not easy to find; she should have
+been working in the garden at this time, but from
+the field-path he could not see her. He retraced his
+steps, and from another point sought her as unsuccessfully.
+He climbed a little hill and looked
+down upon the garden, but she was not there. Then
+he went back, by way of the lane, to the orchard,
+but she was not there either; she must have gone on
+some message for Theresa: he would come again in
+the afternoon, and find her then. But he did not
+find her, for then, as earlier, she saw him coming and
+ran away to hide. She did not exactly know why;
+she was afraid of what he would say, of what he
+had said; she did not altogether understand herself
+or him or anything; only she was afraid. She
+longed to tell someone,—Mr. Dane—her world held
+no one else who was likely to be of any use. She
+would have liked to tell him as she told him of
+Harborough of Gurnett, but, for some reason that
+she could not fathom, she was ashamed; so she only
+worked hard and tried not to think, and when she saw
+her lover coming (if lover he was) she hid herself.</p>
+
+<p>But Gilchrist Harborough was not to be turned
+from his purpose like this, and, having sought her in
+vain the next day, he presented himself at the house
+in the evening and asked Jessie for Miss Alardy. It
+was raining, a fine soft rain, which rejoiced the heart
+and made things almost grow before the eyes. Bill
+would be indoors now, for the rain clouds had closed
+the evening in early, and in the drawing-room, where
+he waited, it seemed already dark.</p>
+
+<p>Jessie went to find Bill. “She has just gone to
+the attic for a sieve,” Theresa said, and Jessie went
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>up the attic-stairs. “Miss Bill!” she called, standing
+at the top and looking down the long passage from
+the right of which the three attics opened. The
+place looked ghostly in the grey twilight; there was
+a spot of wet on the low ceiling, the roof leaked by
+the chimney where the starlings had built last year,
+there was a great hole in the floor under the window,
+and there were rats in the attic. Jessie gathered her
+skirts about her, and, after a preliminary <i>sh-oo!</i> to
+frighten any chance creatures that might be about,
+came into the passage. “Miss Bill,” she called
+again, “you’re wanted; Mr. Harborough wants to
+see you.”</p>
+
+<p>Now that was precisely the information for which
+Bill was waiting. She had heard the door-bell ring
+as she looked over some tools in the back attic, but
+she had not associated the sound with herself until
+Jessie began to ascend the stairs. Then she had
+guessed that the visitor was Gilchrist Harborough,
+and that he had come to see her. She fully intended
+to go down and see him; it was, of course, what she
+must do, and there certainly was no reason why she
+should not; yet when she heard Jessie’s voice an
+uncontrollable impulse to escape took possession of
+her. She looked round; there was no escape, no
+way out but the door by which Jessie would enter.
+The door of a big cupboard, however, stood ajar
+behind her; quick as thought she opened it, pulled
+it to after her and stood pressed against the wall
+within, holding the door close by its rough planking.</p>
+
+<p>Jessie peeped into each of the attics in turn, and
+then muttering, “She ain’t here after all,” went
+down-stairs again; but Bill remained in the cupboard
+till she heard the front door shut after Harborough.
+It was some time, for they looked thoroughly for her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>before he went away. Her prison was cramped,
+dark, and very close, and there was a warm smell
+of old hops about it which afterwards she always
+associated with that evening and her folly. It
+was folly, and as such she regretted it when it was
+too late and would have gladly undone it if she
+could.</p>
+
+<p>Later, when she came down-stairs, Theresa told her
+of Harborough’s visit and asked her where she was
+when they called her. She did not tell and her reply,
+guardedly given, left only a vague impression on her
+cousin’s mind. Theresa, believing she must have
+gone to the barn with her tools, thought no more
+about it until the next afternoon when Harborough
+presented himself again. This time he asked for
+Theresa, having learned from Robert that his wife
+and Polly were left guardians of their young cousin.</p>
+
+<p>It was Sunday, and by Theresa’s invitation Bella
+and Polly had walked from Wrugglesby that morning
+to spend the day at Haylands; they had come early
+and would stay till the evening, when Robert was
+going to drive them home. Polly was dozing
+placidly on the dining-room sofa when Harborough
+came, and Bill was curled up in the orchard with a
+book, oblivious alike of impending events and the
+dampness of the grass. Harborough might almost
+have caught her now had he tried; but he did not,
+for he decided that his best plan would be to apply
+in the old-fashioned way to Mrs. Morton for permission
+to address her cousin.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly he did so, and he did it with some
+self-possession, for the whole thing was now very
+clear in his own mind and he wished to get it settled.
+It was, after all, to him a very simple and straightforward
+matter now.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>But to Theresa it was very different, very overwhelming,
+it might almost be said, in its unexpectedness.
+She gazed at him blankly for a moment, too
+much astonished for speech. “Bill?” she said at
+last, “Bill? She is a child!”</p>
+
+<p>“She is young,” Harborough admitted, “but she
+must be nearly eighteen; that is not so very young,
+you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“She is not eighteen till the winter; we have
+always looked upon her as a child. You must
+forgive my astonishment, she seems such a child
+to us.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough said he could easily understand her
+feelings; indeed, he allowed, in some respects Bill
+seemed a child to him, though in others the very
+reverse.</p>
+
+<p>“She is very capable,” Theresa said, “but I am
+afraid when you come to speak to her on this subject
+you will find her very childish,—I mean, she will be
+so unprepared for it, it will be difficult.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough smiled slightly. “I do not think it
+will be an entire surprise to her,” he said. “I do
+not mean that I know how she will receive me, but
+that I should come will not, I fancy, altogether
+astonish her.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa felt more and more bewildered. “I think
+you must be mistaken,” was all she could say; but
+he was persistent in his opinion, and certainly,
+whether he was right or wrong, there was no valid
+reason why he should not speak to Bill. Theresa,
+however, still believing in the girl’s complete ignorance,
+stipulated for one thing: Bill’s decision, whatever
+it was, should not be considered final. “For,”
+Theresa said, “I am very much afraid she will not
+really know her own mind.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>Harborough acquiesced to this, and also to the
+suggestion that Polly should be consulted. “She is
+here now,” Theresa told him; “perhaps it would be
+better if you were to see her, as Bill is really more
+her charge than mine.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough had no particular wish to consult the
+unknown Polly, but he could not do less than agree,
+so Theresa went to find her. She was still dozing on
+the sofa in the dining-room, and there was no one
+else there. Theresa roused her and told her the
+news briefly, wishing the while that Polly had not
+slept so soundly, and fearing lest she should not fully
+understand. But she need have had no fears; Polly
+grasped the situation completely. “Has he any
+money?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, oh yes, some, not a great deal, of course;
+he has a little farm. But, Polly, Bill—”</p>
+
+<p>“A farm? Oh, he is the man who lives by himself
+and does his own work to prove something, I
+remember. That will just suit Bill.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly got up, went to the glass above the mantelpiece
+and began to arrange her front hair.</p>
+
+<p>“It is impossible to think of that child marrying
+him, of her marrying anyone yet,” Theresa protested.</p>
+
+<p>Polly did not think so. “I don’t see why she
+should not,” she said coolly; “you may be pretty
+sure she has given him encouragement, or he would
+not come here like this.”</p>
+
+<p>“That proves nothing,” said Theresa. “He does
+not know in the least whether she will have him or
+not; he spoke to me first because she is so very
+young.”</p>
+
+<p>“Possibly, but she knows what is coming; he as
+good as told you so.”</p>
+
+<p>“He is mistaken; I am sure he is.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>“I’ll tell you whether I think so or not after I
+have seen him. I don’t much expect he is; and
+knowing Bill as well as I do, well—” Polly broke
+off and with an impressive silence conveyed more
+than words could.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa did not altogether believe her, but she felt
+that she herself was far from understanding Bill.
+“At all events,” she said, “I told him he could
+speak to her. There is nothing against him as far as
+I know, and whatever she says now is not to be
+considered absolutely binding.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?” Polly stopped abruptly
+to ask the question as she was opening the door.</p>
+
+<p>“I mean,” Theresa answered, “that if she accepts
+him she is not to be considered engaged; she shall be
+free to change her mind if she likes, for I am sure
+she cannot really know anything about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not to be engaged?” Polly repeated. “Is it to
+be kept private? No one is to be told, we are to have
+no hold over him?”</p>
+
+<p>“I will not have her bound; it is not right,—you
+can’t think it right.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa was surprised at Polly’s manner, and still
+more surprised when she turned upon her in low-voiced
+wrath,—“You idiot!” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Polly!” Theresa exclaimed reddening, and then
+added: “I will not have it; mind, I will not have
+her bound!”</p>
+
+<p>And then the two passed into the drawing-room.
+Polly was affability itself; she spoke of “dear little
+Wilhelmina’s” youth, and of her own surprise, but
+held out some hopes of success to Harborough, who
+did not altogether trust her, though owing to her
+skill he did not distrust her as much as might have
+been expected. Nothing was said about Theresa’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>condition, except that as Harborough was leaving she
+repeated it, and Polly, unable to do anything else,
+seconded her.</p>
+
+<p>“I expect he wanted to see Bill this afternoon,”
+Theresa said when he had gone.</p>
+
+<p>“I expect he did,” Polly replied; “but I want to see
+her first. I mean to know what she has been doing.”</p>
+
+<p>“What she intends to do,” was also part of Polly’s
+meaning, and she set off at once to the orchard,
+feeling the remainder of the afternoon was all too
+short for her investigations.</p>
+
+<p>“Bill,” she said, sitting down beside her cousin on
+a cushion she had brought for the purpose, “Bill,
+what about Mr. Harborough?” Polly wasted no
+time over preliminaries. “The Mr. Harborough
+who lives here, I mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“What about him?” Bill inquired, looking up
+from her book.</p>
+
+<p>Polly closed the book for her. “Yes, what?” she
+said. “When and where have you seen him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh in lots of places,—why? He does not
+belong to Wood Hall.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know that. Bill,” she added suddenly, “has
+he been making love to you?”</p>
+
+<p>Then the time had come; Bill felt it intuitively
+and braced herself to meet it. But for the life of her
+she would have found it hard to say whether he had
+or had not committed the offence in question. She
+would not permit herself to do more than ask
+cautiously, “Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“He has!” Polly exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’m not sure;” and Bill so evidently
+meant what she said that Polly for a moment was
+nonplussed. “He has been here this afternoon,” she
+said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>“To see me?” Bill asked, and Polly felt that was
+something of an admission. “No,” she answered,
+“to see Theresa and me about you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Whatever for?”</p>
+
+<p>“To ask our permission—”</p>
+
+<p>“To make love to me?” At first the idea struck
+Bill as comical, but its gravity soon came home to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you think that absurd,” Polly said,
+“since he has already done it without our permission;
+and he has done it, Bill, or something very like it.
+It is no use denying it; something must have
+happened, something fairly pronounced, before a man
+of his stamp would come to Theresa and me as he
+came this afternoon. You must have given him very
+direct encouragement.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly paused for Bill to deny the charge, but the
+denial did not come; the girl sat silently considering
+the matter, tearing a leaf to pieces as she did so.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” Polly said at last interrogatively.</p>
+
+<p>“Did he tell you I had encouraged him? I mean,
+did he absolutely say so? I shall ask him myself if I
+think you are deceiving me.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly thought it very likely that she would do so,
+and accordingly made answer: “No, of course he did
+not say so in so many words, but his coming to us
+showed it; besides he told Theresa, when she
+said you would be astonished, that he did not think
+you would be, that he had reason to believe you
+expected him.” <i>Not be surprised to see him</i> and
+<i>expected him</i> were convertible, if not synonymous,
+terms.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” was Bill’s only answer.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you expect him?” Polly demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose I did; I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>“You must know what you expect if you are not
+absolutely stupid, and you might as well be honest
+about it; some people would have a good deal to say
+about your underhand dealings.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill suggested that her cousin should say all she
+wished on the subject, but Polly, regarding it as a
+waste of time, went on to observe with dignity: “I
+don’t want to inquire into your actions nor yet your
+intentions, but all I can say is that you have made an
+honourable man,—a good man, Bill—believe you care
+for him; and if you do not, if you mean nothing,
+you must settle the matter with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe you!” Bill exclaimed. “I ran
+away from him, though I did tell him to come—I
+was only in fun—he hardly held—”</p>
+
+<p>She broke off, feeling that she could not lay the
+matter bare to her cousin. Polly was disappointed at
+the confession ending so abruptly, but she only said:
+“Tell him you were only in fun. If he knew you as
+well as I do he might not be surprised at such a
+questionable proceeding; but as he loves you, I am
+afraid it will be rather a shock to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Loves me!—he loves me!” Bill repeated the
+words gently, her whole face softening. She had not
+thought of this before. She had such high, idyllic
+notions of love, hardly definite notions at all, only a
+feeling that it was very great and supreme and far
+removed from her own life.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course he does,” Polly said, surprised at having
+touched an answering chord here, “else why should
+he want to marry you? You have nothing to recommend
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Bill admitted, “no, I have not. How
+strange that he should want to marry me,—how
+strange and wonderful!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>She sat looking across the orchard, her eyes filled
+with a great shining, her heart thrilled with gratitude
+to one who could love her. For herself, she did not
+know; his emotion would arouse an answering emotion
+in her; if he loved her she could not choose but love
+him, just as when he held her she could not choose
+but stay for just a moment. She was very humble
+and submissive in heart just then.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole Polly was well satisfied with her talk.
+Bill would accept Harborough. Two things were in
+his favour, the girl’s joy and pride in this, the first
+love offered to her, her innocence of life and all it
+held, and also her curious, one-sided sense of honour.
+The first, aided by her oddly sympathetic, almost reflective,
+nature, would make her wish to accept the
+lover; the second, aided by Polly’s statement of the
+case, would make it impossible for her to refuse the
+man. So Polly was satisfied that Bill would marry
+Harborough; probably next summer, as Theresa
+would not allow it before then, and Polly herself did
+not wish it. She wanted to begin her lodging-venture
+in the winter, and, though she would take Bella into
+partnership when Bill was married, she would prefer
+to have the younger cousin at the beginning of the
+enterprise. She considered that Bill was now settled
+for life, her future assured in a most unexpected
+fashion. Harborough, she judged, was the sort of
+man she could depend upon to do his duty by his
+wife, and in spite of Theresa’s words, she would take
+care that at least a little of the arrangement was
+known to a few mutual friends. In this laudable
+intention, however, she was eventually frustrated by
+Bill. She had reckoned that Bill would see no reason
+for secrecy; being sure of herself, whatever motives
+ruled her decision now would rule it in a year’s time,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>and so she would oppose Theresa. But she did no
+such thing, not because she objected to publicity or
+saw any reason against it, but because Polly was in
+favour of it and Theresa against it.</p>
+
+<p>“It may be wise,” she said to Polly, “if you urge
+it, but if Theresa does it is right; in this I would
+rather do what is right than wise.”</p>
+
+<p>In vain Polly pointed out the wisdom, and explained
+that publicity was the only hold they had.
+Bill retorted haughtily that she wished for no hold,
+and went on to add that, if any rumour of her affairs
+should get about, she should consider Polly the culprit,
+and behave accordingly. And Polly, having an
+inward conviction that she would keep her word in
+some unpleasant way, was obliged to remain silent.</p>
+
+<p>On that same Sunday evening, when Harborough
+spoke to the cousins, came Theresa to Bill’s room
+after she had gone to bed, and kissed her and cried
+over her and asked her if she really loved him. And
+Bill flung her arms round the young wife’s neck,
+almost suffocating her in the wealth of her hair, and
+said she did not know, feeling vaguely sorry for
+Theresa, and wondering if loving and being loved
+always brought tears.</p>
+
+<p>All the next day she was quiet and subdued, and
+in the evening the time came. She went into the
+orchard, thinking it likely that he would come down
+the lane to her. He did come; he saw her, and
+jumped the gate and came to her as she stood in the
+soft grass, her heart beating, a shy fearing happiness
+in her half-awakened soul. He came to her striding
+over the grass in the twilight of the apple-trees; but
+he did not know the tumult in her breast, did not
+recognise the half-awakened womanhood. He was
+not to-night, as once before, the strong man wooing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>the maid, nor was he the lover come to claim a girl’s
+heart. He came to ask her to be his wife because he
+believed it right to do so, because he believed it wise,
+because he thought for all practical purposes she was
+the woman best suited to his needs. He had desired
+her, it is true, but to-night it was not desire, not
+impulse; it was a deliberate plan, the wise performance
+of a wise act. But it lacked fire, lacked it
+woefully. And she, who shyly lifted shining eyes to
+those of the sober lover, could not kindle it; nay,
+she herself was not the same as the alluring shadow
+of the other night. He did not love the woman;
+the elf-child fascinated him, the housewife pleased
+him, but the woman he did not recognise. The best
+of his nature was untouched by her; he knew that
+he did not in the highest sense love her, and he did
+not pretend that he did. But, the pity was she
+thought he did; they had told her so, and, after all,
+as <i>to love</i> is often translated into daily life, perhaps
+they were right, though in her idyllic, almost childish
+rendering of the word, they were entirely and hopelessly
+wrong.</p>
+
+<p>So the question was asked and answered under the
+lichen-covered branches; coolly, dispassionately, yet
+withal gently he asked; shyly she answered, not yet
+aware of the lack in it all. She was so ignorant, what
+should she know of love’s ways? So awed, she could
+not criticise his words, so subdued and humble she
+could not doubt him. Thus she gave her word not
+knowing, stood awhile under the trees a little disappointed
+but not yet aware, and bade him good-bye
+with only a half-wakened doubt.</p>
+
+<p>He left her, thinking perhaps she would prefer to
+see her cousin alone first, refusing her invitation to
+come to the house from a sense of delicacy. She did
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>not know his reason, but she was vaguely glad he
+refused. They walked together to the gate, talking
+ordinarily, rationally, his manner as usual, hers as
+calm as it was reflective of his. There was no passion,
+no shyness; it would not have been embarrassing to
+meet Theresa, though she was glad they were not
+going to meet her. Glad, too, she was, consciously
+glad that he was going; she wanted him to go,—she
+hated to have him there—she was beginning to realise
+the lack in it all.</p>
+
+<p>They parted at the orchard-gate; the first wild
+roses were opening, their fragrance filled the air,
+a spray showed faintly pink against the girl’s hair
+as she leaned over the gate. Something in the
+scent and the face, half seen in the twilight, stirred
+Harborough; he made an impulsive movement, but
+he had himself well in hand that night, and the impulse
+ended in nothing more than stooping to kiss
+her without any demonstration of emotion. So he
+bade her good-bye and went, she standing to watch
+him till he was lost in the dusk of the summer night,
+standing to watch him quite calmly though her breast
+heaved, until he was out of sight; then with a movement
+of passionate rage she wiped the kiss from her
+face and flung the handkerchief into the hedge.</p>
+
+<p>“He did not make love to me a little bit!” she
+wailed. “‘Will you marry me?’ ‘Will you scrub
+the floor?’ It might as well have been one as the
+other. ‘Can you make butter?’ ‘Can you love
+me?’ Can I? I could hate you! How I shall
+hate you, if you don’t take care!”</p>
+
+<p>There was someone talking in the garden, Theresa
+and Robert perhaps; she almost thought it was, and
+fearful of discovery crept into the deep dry ditch and
+lay hid among the tall stalks of the cow-parsley. In
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>that green darkness she sobbed out her grief for the
+loss of her dream, the dream of loving and being
+loved which comes to all women at some time. It
+had come to her only yesterday; it had died unborn
+to-day,—unborn, for she did not love the man; had
+he loved her, or had he wooed her with the passion
+of the other night, her responsive nature might have
+replied, or at least she would have thought it did.
+But he had not done so, and the thing was only a
+dream; loving and being loved,—both must be
+mourned as never known, both buried together in
+the twilight of the white-flowered weeds.
+Nevertheless she was in honour bound to the man,
+that curious, distorted, inviolable law of honour which
+she had from some ancestry and could not break.
+The spoken word must be fulfilled, the unspoken
+pledge redeemed, the unconscious encouragement, of
+which Polly had made so much, justified. Polly had
+done well to trust to this other bond.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV.<br>
+<small>FAMILY HISTORY.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Wagnall</span> was an antiquary, avowedly an
+antiquary. A man of means and leisure, he had
+ample time to devote to his subject, and so well
+had he devoted it that there was unknown to him
+little that was strange in family tradition and village
+history throughout the Eastern Counties, which, as
+his birthplace and home, were the principal scenes of
+his research. He never studied architecture or
+building to any great extent; churches, Druidical
+stones, and Roman remains had little charm for him;
+the land and those who owned it chiefly claimed
+his attention. He had at one time intended to
+follow the profession of the law, and had spent
+his earlier days in a solicitor’s office; it was this
+early training, possibly, which gave him his taste
+for family histories and involved land tenures. One
+other thing he owed to it,—and that was of more
+obvious value than his love of land-lore—a friend, in
+the person of a former fellow-student now developed
+into Stevens, solicitor of Wrugglesby, consulted by
+Mr. Johnson on the subject of the Harborough
+chapel and the service held therein.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>Now and again Mr. Wagnall visited his friend at
+Wrugglesby, and it happened that this very subject
+of the Harborough chapel and service brought him
+there at the time that Gilchrist Harborough was
+arranging his matrimonial affairs at Ashelton. About
+this time Mr. Stevens, remembering that he had not
+seen his friend lately, wrote to invite him to the little
+town, at the same time mentioning such affairs of
+interest as had recently taken place. The Harborough
+service was not a recent event, but he had
+not written since it occurred, and, knowing his
+friend’s love of such things, he used it, and the
+chance of investigating it, as an inducement to his
+friend to visit Wrugglesby. Events justified his
+expectations; Mr. Wagnall accepted his invitation,
+came to Wrugglesby at the earliest possible date, and
+plagued his host with questions, seeking information
+about “this most interesting revival.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stevens was obliged to confess himself not
+very well informed on the subject, but in a happy
+moment Mrs. Stevens thought of inviting Mr. and
+Mrs. Johnson to meet the antiquary. She had no
+notion of satisfying his thirst for information, her
+idea being solely to give an entertainment. She was
+a lady of aspiring mind, and longed for society on
+other lines than those obtainable at the solemn
+dinners and more humble teas which were in
+vogue in Wrugglesby. Mr. Johnson was particularly
+flattered by the pointed way in which Mr.
+Wagnall singled him out for conversation, and the
+interest with which he listened to all he had to
+say about the Harborough chapel and service. Considering
+the warmth his feelings still retained on
+these subjects, he was a little disappointed to find his
+patient listener of the opinion that the family had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>a right to hold a service in their own chapel,
+according to their professed religion, even during the
+time of morning prayer.</p>
+
+<p>“Mind, I do not say they have a legal right,” the
+antiquary said, “though I am of opinion it would be
+difficult to get a decision against them; but whatever
+their legal right, they have a moral right, most
+decidedly a moral right. I think your rector was
+wise in his determination to take no steps in the
+matter; it is not an occurrence likely to be repeated.
+It has not been done within anyone’s memory until
+this time; it has not been repeated since then,
+and take my word for it, sir, it never will be.
+It was done to revive an old right, my dear sir,
+that is what it was done for, to revive an old
+right and establish a claim; an old family does
+not like to let its traditions lapse entirely.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Johnson thought this was a very probable
+explanation of the “outrage,” though, as he pointed
+out, there was no necessity for the mass to have
+been said during morning-service; the claim could
+have been established without that.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, yes, yes,” Mr. Wagnall admitted; “still it
+would hardly have been so emphatic; no, under those
+circumstances, it would not have been so emphatic.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Johnson again agreed with him. He also
+asked Mr. Wagnall if he would care to walk over
+some day and have a look at the Harborough
+chapel, offering to act as cicerone should he do
+so. Mr. Wagnall accepted the offer with pleasure,
+and from that they got to talking about the Harboroughs
+and their family history, with which Mr.
+Wagnall was very well acquainted, though he did
+not attempt to set the clergyman right even when he
+gave sundry strange pieces of information about
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>them. There was, however, one piece of information
+given which was both new and interesting to
+Mr. Wagnall,—the existence of Gilchrist Harborough
+of Crows’ Farm.</p>
+
+<p>“A member of the family he—” “may be,” Mr.
+Johnson was going to say, preparatory to enlarging
+upon his nature and pursuits, but Mr. Wagnall cut
+him short.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course he is a member of the family,” he
+said; “Gilchrist is a family name, the next heir
+to the property is a Gilchrist. You would not get
+Gilchrist and Harborough in combination without
+some connection with the old stock.”</p>
+
+<p>“Just so,” said Mr. Johnson, “just so, a member
+of the family, although he comes from Australia; a
+younger branch, I have heard it suggested, though
+he claims no connection with the Harboroughs of
+Gurnett.”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Not</i> a younger branch,” Mr. Wagnall’s tone was
+emphatic; “<i>not</i> a younger branch, or he could claim
+something more than a connection.”</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for Mr. Johnson’s further enlightenment
+the conversation was interrupted here, not to
+be resumed again that evening, and he had to
+content himself with waiting to hear more until Mr.
+Wagnall should come to Ashelton. But Mr. Wagnall
+did not have to wait so long for his enlightenment,
+for he questioned his host at the earliest
+opportunity. From him he learnt little, for Mr.
+Stevens was not professionally connected with Harborough
+of Gurnett, although he had sometimes
+done a little legal work for the agent during the
+master’s long absences abroad. Owing to this he
+knew something of the affairs of the estate, and, like
+most people in the neighbourhood, he also knew the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>name, age, and whereabouts of the next heir, and
+sundry of the reports concerning Mr. Harborough
+besides. But of Harborough of Crows’ Farm he
+knew little, except that he was an Australian with a
+theory, that he worked his own farm, and that he
+himself had been favourably impressed by the young
+man on the occasion when he had personally come
+across him. “But,” he concluded, “I shouldn’t
+wonder if he was in at the office to-morrow as it is
+market-day. He is thinking of buying a bit of
+meadow which cuts into his land, and I should not
+wonder if he were to look in during the afternoon to
+see me about it. You might drop in and meet him if
+you like; but I tell you beforehand that he won’t repay
+investigation or appreciate it either, and he certainly
+won’t know anything about the affair of the mass.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wagnall was by no means discouraged, and
+determined to look in at the office on Thursday
+afternoon in case the lawyer’s anticipation proved
+correct. It did so: Harborough presented himself
+somewhere about four o’clock, and almost before his
+business was discussed, Mr. Wagnall also presented
+himself and was duly introduced to the younger man
+as one interested in antiquities in general and family
+histories in particular. Harborough himself had
+small interest in such things, but he was quite willing
+to sympathise with another, and obligingly gave all
+the information he could concerning himself and his
+family. Of the Harboroughs of Gurnett, their
+history and chapel, he knew even less than Mr.
+Johnson, but of himself and his own people he told
+all he could.</p>
+
+<p>“But,” he asked, “what purpose does it serve?
+We are a long way from this part of the family, a
+younger branch who emigrated years ago.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>“If you are a younger branch in direct line, if
+you can prove such a thing,—and I cannot help
+saying I think it would be difficult—it would be—very
+interesting.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why? Is there no younger branch? You
+mean to say you think we come of bastard stock?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, oh dear no, not at all, not necessarily. Only
+the Harboroughs used to hold their estates according
+to an old tenure by which the property goes to the
+youngest instead of the eldest son, and if you really
+were the representative of a younger branch than
+those in possession—”</p>
+
+<p>“I could claim?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense,” the lawyer here broke in, “the
+Harboroughs have given up that manner of succession
+for several generations.”</p>
+
+<p>“It could be revived,” Mr. Wagnall suggested;
+“it would be interesting to revive it, as interesting
+as reviving the right to hold service in the chapel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Interesting from an antiquarian point of view it
+might be,” Mr. Stevens observed drily; “but Mr.
+Harborough here would find it an expensive form of
+amusement. Old Mr. Harborough has been in
+possession at Wood Hall for over fifty years, and it
+would take something considerable to turn him out
+now. Why, bless you, my friend, if I had squatted
+unmolested at Wood Hall for all those years you
+would find it difficult to turn me out, though I
+had not a shadow of right to the place originally.
+Possession is rather more than nine points of the law
+if you only have it long enough; whatever the
+weakness of old Harborough’s original claim you
+would find it a tough and expensive job to make
+your own good now.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilchrist Harborough laughed at the lawyer’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>warmth. “I was not thinking of making a claim,”
+he said; “I would rather invest my surplus cash
+in other and more profitable ways than fighting for
+encumbered estates.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stevens applauded such a decision. “Quite
+right,” he said, “quite right, though the estate is
+hardly so much encumbered as people think; of late
+years old Harborough has lived carefully, and things
+are not so bad as they are made out to be. I don’t
+mean to say the place is free; it is not, and no doubt
+the next man will get into a worse state than ever,
+for they are all alike, an extravagant lot. But I
+believe a careful man with a little capital and reasonable
+ideas, in fact not a Harborough—beg pardon,
+I was not thinking of you—might do a good deal
+towards getting things straight.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think so?” Harborough asked. “They
+have got to get their reasonable man first, and they
+don’t seem great at producing such articles. As for
+me, I don’t belong to them; and if I did I don’t
+know that I can lay claim to all your requirements,
+small capital and reasonable ideas as well. At any
+rate, I don’t think I am the man for the job; it does
+not seem that I am within measurable distance of the
+base of operations.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned to Mr. Wagnall as he spoke, but the
+lawyer answered for him. “No, no, certainly not,”
+he said; but Mr. Wagnall asked: “Are you sure
+that your family is a younger branch? May it not
+be an elder, but, owing to the fact that the idea of
+disqualification is usually associated with the younger
+ones, you have in the course of time come to consider
+yourself as such?”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough allowed this to be possible, though
+he hardly thought it the case. Mr. Wagnall hardly
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>thought it likely either. “So far as I know anything
+about the family,” he said, “it is not very likely, the
+Harboroughs have not been such a prolific family
+that the elder and younger ones need be confused.
+There never have been many of them; the heads of
+the house, as a rule, lived hard and died young, their
+legitimate children have been few in number.
+Indeed,” the antiquary went on turning to Stevens,
+“when you say the old manner of succession has
+fallen into disuse you are hardly doing them justice,
+for there has not been much choice lately. The
+family is practically extinct when the old man dies;
+he has no children living; the heir is the grandson
+of his only sister, not a Harborough at all except
+that he has been given the name. He is an only
+son, too, the sole representative of the younger
+generation,—strange how these old families seem to
+wear themselves out.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilchrist Harborough did not think it strange at
+all, neither did he think it to be regretted; the only
+thing which surprised him in the matter was the
+interest felt in them and the detailed record kept of
+their history. “It is not as if they were anything
+much,” he said, “or had done anything much; they
+are only twopenny-halfpenny country squires who
+have never done anything worth remembering; in
+fact, the only thing which can be said about them
+is that they have been a little more rich and a good
+deal less respectable than their yeoman neighbours.”</p>
+
+<p>Such a view was not likely to commend itself to
+the antiquary, but as he was unable to make his own
+view any more commendable to young Harborough,
+he had to content himself with admitting the family
+under discussion to be country squires, and to have
+been country squires so long that they counted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>themselves at least the equals of the newer nobility;
+and moreover to have kept their own records and
+traditions with jealous care from the days when their
+manor was first granted to them, at which time,
+doubtless, they were far other than they now were in
+the days of their decadence.</p>
+
+<p>“If the records are kept with such care,” Harborough
+observed, “it should be easy to see where I
+come in, if come in I do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Mr. Wagnall agreed; “I can put my
+finger on the only spot where at all recently we can
+expect to find that your people joined the common
+stock. I know something about the Harborough
+history; I was enabled through the good offices of a
+friend to study it at the time that I was writing my
+little volume on <span class="smcap">East Anglian Heirships</span>. You
+have perhaps seen the book? It was noticed in
+several of the papers.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough had not seen it, and it is to be feared
+he was less interested in it than in the family history.
+Mr. Stevens, seeing that his friend was now well
+mounted on his hobby, suggested that he and his
+listener should go into the private room, and leave
+the office clear for other visitors.</p>
+
+<p>He half regretted being obliged to do so, for he
+felt he was giving the elder man an admirable opportunity
+for firing the imagination and ambition of the
+younger. Still, as the kind-hearted lawyer reflected,
+the young Australian was a cool and well-balanced
+individual, with a not too exalted opinion of the value
+of landed property and old families to depreciate his
+idea of the prize at stake. “He won’t take fire like
+a young fellow from about here,” thought the lawyer,
+“but if he does he’ll fight and fight to the end.”
+And again he wished he could have prevented this
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>unearthing of family history. But it was too late, as
+he found when, after the young man had gone, he
+asked the elder one what had passed.</p>
+
+<p>“He was very interested, very interested indeed,”
+Mr. Wagnall said. “He seems to think it highly
+probable that he derives from the Gilchrist Harborough
+who turned Protestant and left England in
+1843.”</p>
+
+<p>“In 1843,” the lawyer said raising his eyebrows;
+“that brings it very near.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very near indeed,” Mr. Wagnall replied with
+satisfaction; “but so he seems to think.”</p>
+
+<p>“Seems to think,” Stevens repeated; “that is not
+worth much.”</p>
+
+<p>“To think that he is legitimately derived I should
+have said; he is positive that he is derived, he has
+excellent reasons for thinking so; it is a mere question
+of legitimacy.”</p>
+
+<p>“It often is with these respectable old families,”
+Stevens observed drily. “What did you want to
+put all these ideas in his head for? You had much
+better have left him alone.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wagnall did not think so; he considered the
+whole subject most interesting, and, as he pointed
+out, there was a good deal of information he could
+not have obtained without this talk with young
+Harborough.</p>
+
+<p>“Who,” Mr. Stevens said, “naturally does not
+regard the matter in the same placid way in which
+you do, seeing that he has a personal interest in it.
+By Jove, though, if it is as you say, and he can prove
+the legitimacy, he would have a good case, a very
+good case indeed. But he won’t be able to prove it,
+sure not,—he would have an infernally good case if
+he could!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>From a purely legal point of view the subject had
+less interest for Mr. Wagnall, who had no particular
+desire that the right man should come to his own;
+and in spite of a genial nature, he felt small compunction
+about the trouble which might possibly arise
+from his investigations.</p>
+
+<p>“A nice hornet’s nest you are likely to have
+routed out,” said Mr. Stevens, who was differently
+constituted, “and a nice squabble there will be! If
+Harborough of Crows’ Farm waits till the old man
+dies (and the chances are he won’t last another
+winter), I should say it will be a bad look-out for
+young Kit Harborough. Not that the place is worth
+such a great deal, and I dare say he would muddle it
+if he got it; but it is hard to lose what you have
+always looked upon as your own. The Australian—”
+the lawyer laughed a little—“he’s the man I
+described after all, the man with a little capital and
+reasonable ideas. He might pull the place round,
+cut down the timber, put some of the park-land
+under cultivation, drive the plough—”</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Wagnall cried out in dismay at such
+impossible barbarity. Nevertheless it was exactly
+what Gilchrist Harborough was thinking as he drove
+home by way of Gurnett, and looked thoughtfully at
+the woods and broad park-lands which surrounded
+the hall. It was exactly too what he said to Bill in
+the orchard on the next Sunday afternoon.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI.<br>
+<small>A GRANDFATHER.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was now three weeks since the day when Gilchrist
+Harborough came to see Theresa and Polly, three
+weeks since they told Bill he loved her, almost three
+weeks since she found out what they meant by love
+and buried her dream among the tall weeds in the
+orchard-ditch. The grass was long in the orchard
+now, its flowers were covered in seed, brown and
+yellow and purple dust blowing off at the lightest
+breath. The leaves on the trees were thick, so thick that
+when one looked up it seemed an unbroken roof of
+green. The year had grown older, much older, it
+was the first maturity of summer; the light was the
+warmer light of summer, the shadows the slow-moving
+shadows of summer; the scents, richer,
+fuller, were the scents of summer,—the pink briar-roses
+in the hedge, the wreath of honeysuckle from
+the tree, the hay half cut in the field beyond the
+lane. Spring had gone, and even if its indescribable
+freshness and youth were missing one could hardly
+ask for anything more than summer.</p>
+
+<p>Bill’s was a supremely contented disposition; after
+her one outburst on the night when Harborough did
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>not make love to her she accepted fate resignedly.
+There was, as she herself had said, always to get up
+and have breakfast next morning even after a tragedy,
+and she was herself what in domestic parlance is called
+“a good getter up.” So in the early morning after
+Harborough’s formal offer of marriage, she thought
+the matter out and put it on a reasonable basis.</p>
+
+<p>It is true he did not love her in the superlative and
+ideal way she had imagined, but then neither did
+other people seem to love in that way. She thought
+over the married couples of her acquaintance, and
+came to the conclusion that they loved each other
+after a fashion. Harborough must have loved her
+in a fashion, too, or else why had he sought to marry
+her, seeing how little she had to commend her?
+Yes, he must have loved her, even though he did not
+make love to her that night. There were two of
+him, she knew, and she also knew that she sometimes
+appealed to one of the two, the one that made love,
+the lesser and weaker part of his nature. Under
+these circumstances she had reason to be glad that
+the other part, the cleverer, more dominant part,
+liked her well enough to ask her to be his wife. On
+the whole she did not find the situation impossible.
+Why should she? Her limited experience showed
+her no better things; her sunny philosophy led her
+to take the world as she found it, teaching her to
+judge it according to a more lenient and elastic
+standard than any ideal one. It is true that she did
+not in the present case quite extend this tolerance
+to Harborough; perhaps she unconsciously gauged
+his nature, and, measuring it by his own standards,
+found his love wanting.</p>
+
+<p>But on the whole she was moderately content, and
+certainly there was no possibility of avoiding the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>contract; honour demanded its fulfilment, and since it
+was unavoidable Bill was not likely to dwell on the
+dark side. She was pre-eminently of that nature
+which, when its hopes are wrecked, makes a fire of
+the drift-wood to warm itself and its friends. Moreover,
+let it be remembered, to supreme ignorance
+and a sunny temperament the life marked out did
+not seem an unendurable one. “Besides,” so she had
+concluded her reflections that morning when she
+faced facts, “there will be the farm and the dairy
+and heaps to do.”</p>
+
+<p>So Bill accepted matters, and she and Harborough
+established themselves on an easy and friendly footing
+in which love-making played but a small part.
+Theresa thought them an extraordinarily prosaic and
+matter-of-fact couple, but it suited Harborough well
+enough; he did not, as a rule, want to make love to
+Bill, and she did not now want him to make love
+to her; in fact, she would not now meet any of
+his overtures, and had a curiously wayward but
+uncompromising way of receiving his occasional
+tendernesses. Even in these early days he found
+there was a tantalising, untamed trait in her nature
+with which it would be hard to deal, and yet which
+constantly attracted while it annoyed him. He felt
+once or twice that he should like to come to close
+quarters with and understand it, even as he had
+come to close quarters on the night when he chased
+her like a shadow; but the moment for that was
+passed, and he could not recapture it; the shadow
+always eluded him now. This feeling occasionally
+troubled him, but not often, and in other respects
+he was satisfied. It was as a matter of course that
+he turned his steps to the orchard that Sunday afternoon,
+and as a matter of course he told Bill of Mr.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>Wagnall’s words and the extraordinary possibilities
+they presented.</p>
+
+<p>Bill listened with absorbed attention. Wood Hall,
+and all that concerned it, had a great fascination for
+her, but she could hardly realise that his words
+contained a bare chance of its coming within her own
+reach.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t mean to say,” she said at last, “that
+there is any way by which you could claim?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am not sure,” Harborough answered cautiously,
+anxious not to encourage the building of any castles
+in the air.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me what you mean then,” she said, and he
+explained the case as clearly as he could.</p>
+
+<p>“My grandfather,” he said, “is the nearest we can
+get to the Harboroughs of Gurnett; he was called
+Gilchrist as I am, and was the middle one of three
+brothers. About the year 1843 he quarrelled with
+his family and left England; I think he turned
+Protestant.”</p>
+
+<p>“He must have had convictions; I wonder if he
+was like you,” Bill observed under her breath with a
+particularly provoking look; but Harborough ignored
+the remark and went on with his history.</p>
+
+<p>“Part of this,” he said, “I heard from Mr.
+Wagnall on Thursday, part I knew before. I have
+always been told that my grandfather left England on
+account of a quarrel; the story was usually told me
+as a warning against quarrelling, but I don’t know
+that it made much impression. What he did after
+he left England I do not know, travelled a bit I
+think at first, and then the next year he married in
+Paris. But his wife’s family, though they were living
+in France, were English; indeed it was from my
+grandmother, who knew this part of the country,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>that we had the tradition of our people. She does
+not seem to have known much about them; my
+father always said she was vague in her tales, and
+never knew anything personally of her husband’s
+relations. My grandfather died the same year that
+he married and before his son was born; my grandmother
+continued to live on in Paris with her own
+people, teaching English, I think, for she must have
+been poor from what my father said.”</p>
+
+<p>“And he?” Bill asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Lived in Paris too till he was about nineteen
+when, my grandmother being dead, he emigrated to
+Australia with a notion of gold-mining. At first he
+was unlucky; then he married when he was only
+twenty-two, and after that his luck changed, but as
+soon as he had made enough he cut the mining and
+bought a share in a sheep-run. I don’t know if he
+would have made anything more at the mining, but
+he was not very successful with the sheep; still there
+was always enough to live on as far back as I can
+remember. I am the second of his three sons; my
+elder brother died when he was a boy, my younger
+in 1882.”</p>
+
+<p>“And your mother and father?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, they died some while ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are the only one left?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the only son of an only son. The family
+curse seems to have fallen upon us inoffensive
+colonists too; we are near dying out.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill looked at him thoughtfully. “You are a
+long way from dead,” she remarked and then
+enquired as to the fate of the brothers of the elder
+Gilchrist.</p>
+
+<p>“The younger,” Harborough answered, “died in
+1845, so Mr. Wagnall told me, that is the year after
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>my grandfather’s death; the elder came into the
+property and has it still. He is the man at Wood
+Hall now, a childless widower with no one nearer
+than a sister’s grandson to succeed him. He was
+two years older than my grandfather, I think, born
+in 1820.”</p>
+
+<p>“In 1820,” Bill repeated thoughtfully; “then he
+was thirteen in 1833. Of course he remembered
+about the old Squire’s body; why he was the same
+age as the granddaughter who planned it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Planned what? Whose granddaughter? What
+are you talking about?”</p>
+
+<p>“Only a tale that is told in Gurnett,” Bill made
+answer; “I will tell you some other time; finish
+your family history first.”</p>
+
+<p>He knew nothing as yet about her visit to Wood
+Hall. She would tell him of course, as she saw no
+reason why he should object to it; but it was a pity
+to interrupt his narrative, so she asked him to go on
+and explain the way in which all this family history
+bore on his connection with Wood Hall. Accordingly
+he told her of the custom of the succession of
+the youngest. “And it appears,” he concluded,
+“that, as the Harboroughs inherited according to
+this custom, the youngest son should always have
+succeeded to the estates.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know why,” he answered, feeling the
+question to be entirely beside the point. “It does
+not matter why; it was so, that is all. It is a tenure
+called Borough English by which some estates are
+held, and apparently the Harboroughs’ originally was
+so held.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see,” Bill cried; “until the time of your grandfather
+Gilchrist it was so, and then, owing to his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>going away before his son was born and the other
+man not knowing he had a son at all, the elder
+brother got it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Something of the sort.” Harborough was not
+inclined so entirely to attribute the chain of events to
+the ignorance of those in possession, but that did not
+matter to Bill.</p>
+
+<p>“And you are going to claim through your grandfather?”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I expect so, in time,” Gilchrist answered.
+“But you are in too much of a hurry; wait a bit,
+and I will explain. Most likely I shall not claim in
+the present owner’s lifetime, that is if I ever do it at
+all; he is an old man in bad health, and they say he
+is not likely to outlast the year; I think I should
+wait till after his death.”</p>
+
+<p>“It would be kinder,” said Bill.</p>
+
+<p>But that was not Harborough’s reason, and though
+he did not say so, he made his real motive fairly clear.
+“It is a very difficult thing,” he said, “to turn out a
+man who has been in possession such a long time;
+indeed, it is just possible that if I could not prove
+that neither I nor my father knew that we had the
+right to claim for all those years, I should not be
+able to do it at all. If we had known it, and had for
+some reason left Mr. Harborough in possession, I
+don’t believe we could turn him out; but as we did
+not know I ought to be able to do it, though I don’t
+think I shall try unless he shows signs of living
+longer than now seems likely.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see; then he will never know you have a
+claim?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not if I can prevent it. I will tell you why.
+He does not care much for the heir, it is said, though
+he wishes him to have the property for family reasons;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>he is altogether rather an eccentric old man”—Bill
+knew that—“and it is possible that if he is left to
+himself he will make no will. Now, I don’t want
+him to make a will, which would only complicate the
+case. If he has no right to the property he can’t
+bequeath it; but the existence of a will, bequeathing
+it to the recognised heir, would give him a show of
+right which he would not otherwise have. So, you
+see, I do not want a will made, and I do not want to
+give Mr. Harborough any reason for making one by
+hinting at my claim yet.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that fair?” Bill asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course it is fair. What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know, I am not quite sure,” she answered
+thoughtfully; “I shall have to think about it. But
+don’t let’s bother now; tell me about your case.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know what you mean by fairness,” Harborough
+said somewhat severely. “If there is anything
+unfair it is the way in which my people have
+been kept out all these years. As to my case, there
+is very little more to tell about it, except, of course,
+that I shall have to prove my legitimate descent from
+Gilchrist Harborough, that my grandmother was
+legally married to him, and all that.”</p>
+
+<p>“How could she be anything else?” Bill asked
+wondering.</p>
+
+<p>“He could have had another wife living at the
+same time, or he could have been married before, or
+something of the sort.”</p>
+
+<p>This was a new but impossible difficulty to Bill.
+“Oh, but he wouldn’t,—at least, seeing that he was
+a Harborough—” She paused and then added
+demurely: “I thought you did not wish to belong
+to that played-out family, and had a poor opinion of
+their mortgaged property.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>“I can’t help my ancestors,” Harborough replied,
+“and besides, they are some way back; we have
+been honest working men for two generations. As
+for the property, it is not so much encumbered as is
+usually thought, so Stevens, the lawyer at Wrugglesby,
+says; it is his opinion that a practical man with a
+small capital and reasonable notions could pull the
+place together yet.”</p>
+
+<p>“You!” Bill cried. “‘Thou art the man’!” and
+she made the best obeisance to him that she could
+without getting down from her perch on the low
+branch of an apple-tree.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know about the reasonable notions,”
+Harborough said seriously, “and as for the small
+capital, what I have is not large for such a job; still,
+since I made the lucky speculation which emboldened
+me to ask you to be my wife, I suppose I can lay
+claim to a little capital. Something could be done
+with the place I am sure; I drove past the other day
+and made observations; there is a lot of fine timber
+still among all the rubbish in the wood and more in
+the open park-land—that’s worth something; then a
+good lot of that park could be cultivated profitably;
+it would take time, but I believe it could be done.”</p>
+
+<p>“And the house,” Bill added, “is big too. If we
+lived there we could take boarders in the summer;
+if we advertised among the seaside and farm-house
+lodgings in the time-table, we should be sure to get
+some answers.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough never was quite sure whether she was
+in fun or in earnest; he was not sure now, but in
+either case he was annoyed and felt his annoyance to
+be justifiable. “That would be impossible,” he said
+severely, though had he given expression to what was
+in his mind he would have requested her not to be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>absurd. However, for politeness sake he contented
+himself with the milder speech, rising as he uttered
+it.</p>
+
+<p>“Why?” Bill asked jumping down from her
+perch.</p>
+
+<p>“Why? Because it would be out of the question.
+As Mrs. Harborough of Wood Hall how could you
+receive boarders? It may be all very well for you
+and Miss Hains to do it in London, though, as you
+know, I don’t altogether approve of the plan, but
+here—here it would be impossible.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why impossible? You don’t explain.”</p>
+
+<p>He was holding the gate open for her, and jerked
+it with annoyance as he answered. “To begin with,
+in that position—”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but there wouldn’t be one,” Bill interrupted;
+“there would be no position. The stiff-necked
+county would hardly recognise you on the strength
+of your grandfather if you ploughed your park; and
+as for me—even if I were Madame La Princesse
+your wife I should still be ‘only Bill.’”</p>
+
+<p>She uttered the name with the wealth of contempt
+and annoyance which Polly, at times of extreme
+irritation, could concentrate into its one syllable.
+Harborough felt irritated too; no man who has all
+his life assumed an indifference to position likes to be
+shown that he too has a trace of the universal respect
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>“If you think,” he said coldly, “that I care for
+the county you are very much mistaken. Other
+people’s opinion is not of the slightest importance to
+me as you should know, and though I care a good
+deal what manner of woman my wife is, it is for
+myself I care, not for my neighbours.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII.<br>
+<small>THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF A GUARDIAN.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>“<span class="smcap">It</span> is my belief,” said Miss Minchin to Miss Gruet,
+when the sultry days of August had reduced the two
+ladies to visiting one another in the cool of the
+evening only, “it’s my belief that Mr. Harborough
+is courting Mrs. Morton’s cousin; he goes to Haylands
+so very regularly now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very likely,” Miss Gruet made answer, “although
+I should hardly have thought so poorly of him.”</p>
+
+<p>“So poorly?” Miss Minchin repeated.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, so poorly, for she is little more than a child.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t know.” Miss Minchin bridled at
+some recollection. “I had an offer before I was her
+age.”</p>
+
+<p>That was true, although, since the suitor was still
+younger it could hardly be regarded as eligible. Miss
+Gruet, having no such testimony to bring forward,
+contented herself with saying, “Girls don’t marry so
+young nowadays.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Miss Minchin was forced to admit, “no,
+perhaps you are right. But what takes Mr. Harborough
+so often to Haylands? He must go to see
+someone; who is it?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>Now, oddly enough, that was exactly the question
+Polly was propounding to herself, and seeing how
+entirely she considered the engagement (except for
+the secrecy) her own arrangement, it was strange.
+Fortunately about this time she had ample opportunities
+for studying the question, for she and Bella
+came to Ashelton as often as they could during the
+summer months. They usually walked from Wrugglesby,
+nearly a six miles’ tramp along dusty country
+roads; but as compensation they always drove home
+with a certain quantity of spoil stowed under the
+seat. Sometimes it was butter they brought back
+packed in a damp cloth, or eggs carefully held in
+Bella’s lap, or chickens showing under the back seat;
+sometimes it was only vegetables, or a basket of fruit,
+or a pigeon pie, or a basin of dripping, or some
+equally humble subscription to the larder. Polly
+despised nothing and refused nothing. When
+Theresa hardly liked to offer such trifles to the elder
+housekeeper, Bill relieved her of any difficulties by
+putting various small articles in the old safe which
+stood in the corner of the wash-house, and which
+came in the course of time to be kept for Polly’s sole
+use. “That’ll do for Polly,” she would say when
+Theresa debated how to use this or that; and if
+Theresa demurred saying, “I can’t offer her such
+things,” Bill assured her: “You can offer her anything
+you don’t mind her having; the only thing you
+can’t offer her is anything you don’t want her to have
+and only offer out of politeness. Put it in her cupboard;
+she’ll take it.”</p>
+
+<p>And take it she always did. So, partly because
+this collecting of odds and ends suited her near, but
+effective, style of housekeeping, and partly from a
+sense of responsibility which prompted her to see how
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>things went on at Haylands, Polly came often to
+Ashelton that summer. And what she saw there led
+her to ask herself the question which Miss Minchin
+asked: “Whom did Gilchrist Harborough come to
+see?” And the answer she gave herself was the one
+which with great truthfulness she gave in different
+words to Miss Minchin, “I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Minchin asked the question, or rather, by
+less bald methods sought the answer, when Polly
+came to stay at Haylands in August. It was the
+middle of the month when she and Bella came; they
+had had to continue school during the earlier part of
+the month to compensate the pupils for the time lost
+at Miss Brownlow’s death, but by the middle they
+came to Ashelton to stay for a fortnight. For the
+first week Theresa would be there; for the second
+the three cousins would be left in charge as she and
+Robert were going away. It was a busy time for a
+farmer to leave, but Robert did not seem to mind;
+as he said that he would much rather leave now than
+in September, partridge-shooting possibly had more
+to do with his decision than farming. However that
+might be, he decided to go, and Polly and Bella came
+to Haylands with the understanding that they would
+look after Bill and the house during Theresa’s
+absence. It was a few days after their arrival that
+Polly met Miss Minchin in the lane. As they were
+going the same way they walked on together, Miss
+Minchin making many enquiries as to the health and
+general welfare of the cousins. Polly gave all suitable
+answers, and talked in her best style, with
+perhaps more regard for effect than accuracy. What
+she said in reference to Harborough, however, was
+mainly true, more true than she herself liked under
+the circumstances.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>Of course, so she told herself, Harborough came
+to see Bill, and since, being a busy man with no spare
+time, his visits were paid at fixed hours, he usually
+did see Bill. It sometimes happened, though not
+often, that the time of his coming varied a little, and
+also it sometimes happened, even when he was regular,
+that Bill was busy or not to be found for a few
+minutes. On these occasions Theresa entertained
+him until Bill appeared, when she would have been
+quite willing to leave them to enjoy each other’s
+society undisturbed. But they did not show the
+least wish for such a thing. “We haven’t got anything
+private to say,” Bill told her once when Theresa
+remonstrated with her. So by degrees it came about
+that if the cousins were indoors Harborough joined
+them, and if they were out of doors he sat under the
+elm-tree with them, helping Bill to shell peas or
+string currants, or whatever peaceful occupation she
+might be engaged upon that evening. Theresa
+would willingly have taken such work from her on
+the evenings when Harborough came, but if she did
+Bill only got something else to do, and that possibly
+of a less suitable nature. Theresa could not understand
+the girl at all; she never seemed shy or eager
+to see her lover; she was never anxious to put on
+her best frock for his coming; and yet she appeared
+happy in the engagement. Of course Harborough
+himself was not demonstrative; he was always grave
+and serious when Theresa saw him, but no doubt, so
+she thought, he was different in her absence, thinking
+which she went away. Whereupon, the currants
+being done, the pair took to watering the garden
+with a silent industry and a strict attention to
+business.</p>
+
+<p>Polly saw all this and more still with her shrewd
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>little eyes, and before Theresa went away she spoke
+to her on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>“You have noticed it too?” Theresa said, as if
+relieved to find it not all her own fancy. “Do you
+think Bill is really fond of him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I do, and I think it is very hard on her that
+you should take so much of his attention.”</p>
+
+<p>“I!” exclaimed Theresa flushing. “I! How
+can you say such a thing, Polly?”</p>
+
+<p>Polly both could and did say such a thing, and she
+said it with the repetitions and variations she so well
+knew how to use, until Theresa, hurt and angry and
+mortified by turns, first denied the charge and then
+defended the action.</p>
+
+<p>“Somebody must be civil to him,” she said at
+last. “Bill never wants to see him alone; she
+makes him work in the garden if I leave them; she
+won’t be nice to him or put her best dress on, or
+anything.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill is a little goose, and the chances are she
+does all that out of pride and contradiction because
+she is jealous of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“She can’t be jealous of me, it is impossible,”
+Theresa said, and the next moment added, “and
+if she is, why does she not try to please him? When
+he wants her to talk seriously she won’t; she says
+the most ridiculous things in the gravest manner,
+and the gravest in the most ridiculous, till he never
+knows how to take her, and that’s annoying to
+a man, you know. And then she will persist in
+calling him Theo. For a long time she did not
+call him anything, at least not when I was there,
+always beginning, ‘I say,’ just as if that was his
+name; it was so rude, I told her about it. She
+said she did not like Gilchrist, there had been too
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>many of them. I told her to settle that with him,
+but I’m sure I don’t know what she said, for now
+she calls him Theo which she says is short for
+theory, and I know he can’t bear it.”</p>
+
+<p>To this recital of Bill’s misdeeds Polly only said:
+“I must have a good talk with Bill, I think she
+minds me more than you; only, you know, my
+dear Theresa, your being nice to Gilchrist will hardly
+compensate for Bill being nasty. I am sure you
+don’t mean anything but the very best, still, quite
+unintentionally of course, you sometimes make it
+a little hard for her.”</p>
+
+<p>Theresa was truly grieved as Polly meant her
+to be, and determined to be very careful of her
+conversation with Harborough in the future. It
+must be admitted that she could not disguise from
+herself the fact that she really did enjoy talking to
+him, and he could not disguise from her woman’s
+wit the respectful and quite impersonal admiration
+he had for her.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa was easy enough to deal with; Bill was
+the real difficulty, as Polly knew, a difficulty she did
+not feel at all sure of being able to tackle successfully.
+She thought over the subject for some time,
+and finally decided to leave it for the present.
+Theresa was going away in a day or two, and when
+she returned Bill herself was to leave with Polly and
+Bella. In these circumstances it hardly seemed
+necessary to open the question now, and Polly
+determined to study the matter for the present and
+speak of it while they were away together.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa was only away for a week, but the three
+cousins left behind contrived to get a certain amount
+of excitement into the week. It was really Bill’s
+fault, Polly said, Bill and her plums. Plums were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>very scarce that year, not only in Ashelton but
+in all that part of the country. There had been
+every promise of a good yield in the spring, but
+a few late frosts had terribly damaged the crop;
+many trees were quite bare and many others had but
+little fruit; those in the Haylands orchard had
+escaped. The plums were decidedly the best of the
+trees in the orchard; they were younger and in
+better condition than the apples or pears, and they
+were, moreover, very good kinds. In the spring
+they had shown every promise of abundance of fruit,
+and when the late frosts came, damaging the neighbouring
+trees, they did not suffer much owing to
+good luck and a sheltered position. Bill was delighted
+by their escape, and during the summer took
+great interest in the health of the trees, propping up
+the overloaded branches and regretfully thinning the
+too abundant crop. By the end of August the fruit
+was ripe and a source of great satisfaction to her.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see what you are going to do with
+them,” Polly said one morning as she looked at the
+trees from which Bill was filling Bella’s pudding-basin.</p>
+
+<p>“We can’t eat them all,” Bella said, biting one
+as she spoke, “nor make jam, nor pies, nor give
+them away; there are far too many; they have all
+got ripe together. What a pity Theresa is not here;
+I wonder what she does with the fruit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sells it,” said Bill as she went on to look at
+the next tree.</p>
+
+<p>“To whom?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. The apples used to go away last
+year; I have seen some of the baskets about. These
+plums ought to be picked; they are quite ripe and
+the wasps are getting at them.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>“Yes,” Polly said judicially, “they ought to be
+picked to-day. I think, Bill, you had better get
+what we want for jam and perhaps you might get
+a basketful for Mrs. Dawson. Mr. Dawson was
+saying the other day that they had none at all. You
+had better gather all we can use this morning.”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean to,” Bill replied, “but you have got to
+help. Oh, yes you have; they must be all, or at
+least the greater part picked to-day; you will have
+to help.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill,” Polly began with dignity, but Bella, disturbed
+about her sister’s property, interposed. “It
+does seem a pity not to sell them: I do think
+it is silly of Theresa not to have left any orders
+about them; can’t we write to her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not in time,” Bill answered. “I expect she
+left no orders because she did not think; she
+and Robert always call these my trees, because I
+take such an interest in them. Robert said I should
+keep anything I could make out of them; I don’t
+want to do that, but I mean to make something.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see how you are going to sell them,”
+Polly called from the gate as she was leaving the
+orchard.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you? I have seen for several days.
+Don’t go, Polly, you must help to pick; it is going
+to be a busy day and you will have to help; you
+might begin at once while I find the baskets.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll come too as soon as I have taken this to
+Jessie,” and Bella went away with the basin as she
+spoke, leaving Bill and Polly in animated conversation.
+When she came back to begin her share
+of the plum-picking she found Polly at work; Bill
+had coerced her into it somehow, and, what was
+more remarkable still, kept her at it. They all three
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>worked steadily, finding it decidedly more tiring
+than they had anticipated. Not only did they
+gather the fruit, but they also packed it in the
+baskets in which it was to travel. In time the
+baskets gave out, and Bill proposed to borrow some
+from Mr. Dane. “I know he has got some,” she
+said; “I saw them round by his back door the
+last time I went for books. It won’t take me long
+to go and borrow them.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t,” Polly said; “besides we have done
+enough; it is nearly four o’clock.”</p>
+
+<p>“We sha’n’t have done enough,” Bill observed,
+descending her ladder, “until we have done all we
+can.”</p>
+
+<p>“It would be a great pity to waste any,” Bella
+added; “there are heaps more just perfect, and
+this weather they won’t hang.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you intend to keep on till dark?” Polly
+demanded. “How absurd! Have you forgotten
+that Gilchrist Harborough is coming this evening?”</p>
+
+<p>“All the better,—he can help,” was the only
+answer, and the gate closed after Bill as she went in
+quest of the rector’s baskets.</p>
+
+<p>“It is perfect nonsense,” Polly said wrathfully;
+“why couldn’t she have got one of the men about
+the farm to do this work?”</p>
+
+<p>“They are busy,” Bella answered; “I expect she
+does not want to take their time, more especially as
+Robert said she could have the profits.”</p>
+
+<p>“There won’t be any; and if there are I see no
+reason why I should work for her profit.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is not bad work. I wonder how she found
+out where to sell them; I expect she made Theo tell
+her. Do you like him, Polly? I think I do.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like this work,” was Polly’s only answer,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>“and I am not going to do any more of it at present;
+I shall lie down for half an hour.”</p>
+
+<p>And away she went, calculating that Bill could not
+be less than half an hour in borrowing the baskets,
+and in any case she would hear her return through
+the open window. Bella, left to herself, went on
+industriously with her work until the sound of footsteps
+in the lane arrested her attention. She was
+standing on a high rung of the ladder, and peering
+through the plum-branches, she looked to see who
+might be passing, secure that she herself was unseen.
+In this belief she was, however, mistaken, for the
+passer by glancing up at that moment had the vision
+of a flushed face and a frame of golden hair, the curls
+all loosened and caught by the tiresome interwoven
+branches, the whole surrounded by those same
+branches in a way which he found almost bewildering.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-afternoon, Miss Waring,” he said. “I
+was just on my way to Haylands about the bees,—is
+any one at home?”</p>
+
+<p>Polly was at home, but Polly might not like to be
+disturbed; still of course the bees were a matter of
+business, so Bella looked out again, or rather, partly
+looked out, having in the moment’s retirement given
+some infinitesimal but effective touches to her tie and
+hair. Jack Dawson found her irresistible, but he had
+found her that before. Mrs. Dawson could hardly
+have selected a more momentous time for acquiring a
+hive of bees than the one she did, for her son Jack
+discovered that the Mortons’ bees were the best, in
+fact the only really good bees to be had, and even
+these he found needed a great deal of investigation
+before purchase. At least such must have been the
+case to judge by the number of calls of inquiry he
+paid and the length of time he spent looking at the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>hives with Bella. Mrs. Dawson is reported to have
+said at the end of the month that that hive cost her
+more than anything she ever bought, but eventually
+she came to a gentler way of thinking; for after all,
+though it undoubtedly is a criminal offence for only
+sons to marry, it is an offence they will commit, and
+Jack’s partner in guilt, or rather promised partner,
+won her way into Mrs. Dawson’s heart in time.</p>
+
+<p>But that was all in the future; in the present,
+Jack, on his mother’s behalf, was industriously following
+up his quest for bees, and Bella, on her sister’s
+behalf, was helping him. It is to be presumed that
+these were their motives, though a casual observer
+might have thought their interests, though mutual,
+were more circumscribed on the occasion when they
+helped each other to gather Bill’s plums. Bella said
+she could not leave off till Bill came back; it would
+be so unkind if both she and Polly went away without
+a word of explanation. Jack agreed, saying that
+there was no hurry and he could wait any time,
+and while he waited he helped to make up for Polly’s
+desertion. Polly, meanwhile, slept peacefully, and
+Bill went by way of the rector’s back door into the
+rector’s presence.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII.<br>
+<small>THE PLUM HARVEST.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bill</span> was a privileged intruder at the rectory now,
+coming and going as she chose, saying and doing
+what she chose, with no one to hinder her.</p>
+
+<p>At first the old rector had not known whether he
+hated or loved this grandchild of the dead past, this
+creature who was Wilhelmina, and Gipsy Alardy, and
+a score of other things half bitter and half sweet.
+But after a time he forgot to think of hatred or love;
+he never thought now of that dead past, for she was
+not Wilhelmina, nor Gipsy Alardy, nor anything but
+her untutored, half-developed self. So he buried the
+past again, and, accepting the present as he found
+it, turned to the work in hand. In that work he
+included Bill, and the queerest, pleasantest, most
+incomprehensible work he found her. So to the
+rectory she came for all manner of things and to the
+rector for all manner of information; he seldom
+refused her, never repulsed her, listened to her plans
+and fancies, never condemned nor ridiculed, lending
+a sympathetic ear to all things, even including those
+which some would have had him condemn. From
+her heart Bill longed to tell him of her promise to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>Harborough, feeling it almost a breach of confidence
+to shut him out of this secret; but when she asked
+Theresa if she might speak, Theresa said she had
+better not. She knew Mr. Dane was kind to her
+young cousin, but she did not understand the odd
+friendship there was between them, and, as she no
+doubt wisely said, should Bill tell one person, Harborough
+could justly claim the right to tell one on
+his side, and the secret would be a secret no longer;
+it must either remain among themselves or else be
+public to all the world. Bill saw no reason why it
+should be a secret, but as Polly advised her to say
+just what she thought best to Mr. Dane, she let the
+matter drop; she did not know Polly’s motives, but
+she would not in this follow her advice in opposition
+to Theresa’s. So Mr. Dane knew nothing about the
+arrangement, knowing only, as all Ashelton knew,
+that Gilchrist Harborough went to Haylands, but,
+owing to what he himself knew of Bill, he attached
+little importance to that.</p>
+
+<p>On the day when Bill came to borrow the baskets
+the rector was busy, so busy that he was not disturbed
+by her light footstep nor aware of her presence
+until she was by his chair making her request.</p>
+
+<p>“Baskets, Princess Puck?” he said; “of course,
+take what you like.”</p>
+
+<p>And she had gone again before the ink in his pen
+was dry.</p>
+
+<p>“Away already?” he said, looking up as the handle
+rattled when she closed the door after her.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I’m very busy, and so are you.” She
+opened the door again an inch or two to say it.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, I see; you’re always busy.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m gathering plums. We have all three been
+doing it most of the day, and we shall keep on till
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>dark; there are heaps to be gathered, the whole lot
+are ripe together. Would you like some? I’ll send
+some this evening.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, thank you, you are very kind. I
+dare say I shall be down your lane this evening, and
+if I am perhaps I can take them away with me; that
+will save your time and let me see you busy people
+at work.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will come?” Bill opened the door wider
+to put the question joyously. “Monseigneur, you
+shall have the biggest and best, and as many as you
+can carry!”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough’s visit had passed entirely out of her
+mind, and when it came back to her on her way
+home with the baskets she did not regret the rector’s
+promise to come. She went to the orchard with a
+light heart, and an ungainly appearance, having slung
+the two biggest hampers across her shoulders, to
+facilitate their transport, while she carried the smaller
+baskets in her hands. She went by way of the fields,
+and as Miss Minchin was engaged in chasing the
+course of the sun with her window-blinds on the other
+side of the house, she reached the orchard unobserved.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Dawson and Bella were on the same ladder,
+and in the heart of the same plum-tree. They did
+not see Bill until she, having unburdened herself and
+discovered Polly’s absence, announced herself by the
+question, “Where is Polly?”</p>
+
+<p>A ripe plum fell heavily from the branch above as
+Bella started at the voice. “I,—she’s gone in,—Mr.
+Dawson is helping me while she rests.”</p>
+
+<p>“How long has she been resting?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ever since you went away,—but, Bill—”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t disturb her,” entreated a masculine voice
+from the branches, and the masculine legs descended
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>the ladder a little way. “I can stay and take her
+place; she must be awfully tired, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“She isn’t,” announced the inexorable Bill; “she’s
+lazy, that’s all. It is very good of you to offer to
+take her place, but if you really will help, you had
+much better take Bella’s; she has worked hard, as
+hard as possible.”</p>
+
+<p>“If Miss Waring will allow me to help her?”
+Jack suggested persuasively.</p>
+
+<p>“You will, won’t you, Bella?” Bill said; “and
+I’ll go and fetch Polly.” And she suited the action
+to the word.</p>
+
+<p>“It is a pity to disturb Miss Hains,” Jack said
+and Bella agreed with him, sincerely hoping Bill
+would not succeed in the difficult task of uprooting
+the reposeful Polly.</p>
+
+<p>However she was disappointed; in a very short
+time Polly, gracious and serene, accompanied Bill to
+the orchard. But the indefatigable couple were not
+disturbed in their industry, Polly, after polite greeting,
+going to work on a distant tree and taking Bill
+with her.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Dawson helped them all the remainder of
+the afternoon, and Harborough found him still
+hard at work when he arrived in the evening.
+Polly, in her position of chaperone, regarded the two
+pairs with a judicial eye and felt dissatisfied. Jack
+and Bella were well enough, and their relative output
+of work and conversation was more calculated
+to satisfy her than the amateur market-gardener; it
+was the market-gardener herself and Gilchrist Harborough
+who displeased Polly.</p>
+
+<p>“That young man is a splendid agricultural implement,”
+was her opinion as she watched him. “He
+might as well be Darby’s digger or somebody’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>steam-plough, and Bill—well.” Here Polly sniffed
+aloud, but whether from contempt for Bill or sympathy
+with her own difficulties one could not say. At that
+moment her attention was arrested by Bill’s voice.</p>
+
+<p>“You have come then, Monseigneur! You shall
+have the very best.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly looked round sharply; the tone of the girl’s
+voice was so unlike that in which she usually spoke
+to Harborough, there was something of caress in
+it, of the frank familiarity of assured welcome and
+response. It was not wonderful that Polly looked to
+see if Theo answered to this new nickname, and
+when it was evident he did not, that she looked still
+more eagerly to see who did.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane, the courteous but somewhat exclusive
+rector of Ashelton! He was Monseigneur, it was
+for him Bill was opening the rickety gate, he whom
+she welcomed so gladly! It was surprising, Polly
+felt, but safe. Perhaps Harborough felt the same,
+for he did not seem to resent Bill’s evident satisfaction
+in Mr. Dane’s presence, and he did not, as
+Polly did, lecture Bill afterwards on the impropriety
+of addressing elderly gentlemen in so free and easy a
+fashion.</p>
+
+<p>Of course Bill did not in the least mind what was
+said, and went to bed as indifferent to Polly’s
+remarks as Mr. Dane himself would have been. He
+went home thinking kindly of the young folks
+under the orchard trees, pretty Bella and her suitors,
+as he took both young men to be, the favoured and
+the unfavoured one. The favoured one,—and in
+judging Jack Dawson to be such the rector was right—did
+not retire to rest in the peaceful manner of the
+other plum-gatherers, having first had to endure an
+extremely stormy interview with his mother.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>Perhaps Bella had some idea of what might be
+taking place, for she lay awake long that night,
+though Bill, with whom she shared the room, did
+not know it. The younger girl slept soundly and
+dreamlessly, not troubling at all about Jack or
+Harborough, nor yet about her own plans for the
+morrow. Those same plans necessitated getting up
+at a very early hour the next morning; fortunately
+Bella was sleeping quietly at the time, so without
+challenge Bill dressed and went out.</p>
+
+<p>It was cold out of doors, everything drenched
+with dew; everything still, almost awfully still,—the
+dead world, the motionless air, the opaque sky,
+dark except where at the horizon’s rim it showed
+faintly grey like the ashes of yesterday. It was not
+really dark; Bill wondered why all things were so
+clear in this ghostly, shadowless twilight. “It is as
+if the world were dead,” she thought, “burned out
+and finished, resurrection and judgment over, and
+just me left behind forgotten.”</p>
+
+<p>Then she unlocked the stable-door and, putting
+fancies aside, set seriously to work, first harnessing
+the old roan horse to the roomy light cart, and afterwards
+climbing in beside the hampers of plums
+placed there over-night. She had told Polly and
+Bella that she herself would take the plums away,
+and that she would have to start before breakfast to
+do it. Bella was too much disturbed about her own
+concerns to feel much interest, and Polly saw no
+reason to object, as had Theresa been at home she
+possibly might have done. As it was, the two
+remaining cousins had breakfast without Bill, though
+Polly was much annoyed by a note the girl had left
+saying she would not be back till the afternoon. All
+thoughts of Bill, however, were soon driven out of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>her head by the confidence Bella could withhold no
+longer.</p>
+
+<p>And thus it was that Bill drove away with her
+plums in the grey dawn, not to Wrugglesby and the
+railway-station, but to Darvel, the regimental town, a
+far longer distance but a bigger town with richer inhabitants,
+military and civil. The strawberry roan
+was a good old horse though terribly ugly: he would
+trot well along the winding lanes and empty highways
+on the journey, and at the journey’s end stand
+patiently beside the curb while Bill went to the back
+doors to sell her plums. That was her notion of
+doing business; untroubled by any idea of license, and
+fortunately remaining untaught by painful experience,
+she went from house to house selling her fruit by the
+pound, having taken the dairy scales with her for the
+purpose. And a very good trade she did, for plums
+were scarce and hers were beyond reproach; she
+asked a fair price and gave good weight, dealing as an
+honest and humble trader should.</p>
+
+<p>It was with a clear conscience and satisfied mind
+that she drove home, light in load and heavy in
+pocket. She came back by the Wrugglesby road,
+which was further but better going now that dry
+weather had loosened the roads. The afternoon was
+far advanced and the shadows stretched long on the
+cropped grass fields and matted seed-clover. In the
+distance the air still quivered with heat, and the red-roofed
+farms glowed warmly in it. Now and again
+came the whirl of machinery, some stack in process
+of erection or a reaper in a wheat-field near at hand.
+Bill looked around her, at the dusty hedgerows, the
+deep green trees, the poppies by the road, it was all
+very good in the drowsy afternoon; the whole world
+was so good, she could have sung aloud for joy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>Propriety, however, demanded that she should not,
+and moreover some one accosted her at that moment,
+a stranger asking the way to Sales Cross. She
+pulled up to tell him and then, as she was passing
+that way herself, offered him a lift. He accepted,
+glancing at her curiously; the voice and manner
+were not quite what he had expected from the
+general appearance of herself and her equipage.
+However, he seated himself beside her and began to
+speak of the harvest-prospects and the weather,
+equally popular topics of conversation just then. A
+small farmer or bailiff’s daughter, he thought her,
+concluding that latter-day education must in some
+way be responsible for her unusual manner.</p>
+
+<p>So he talked to her on various topics, incidentally
+learning a little about herself, among other things
+that she had been to Darvel to sell fruit. In this
+way, Bill making no effort to learn anything of him
+and his business, they reached Sales Cross and there
+for the first time she asked him of his concerns,
+inquiring which way he wanted to go.</p>
+
+<p>“There is a footpath leading off from the road on
+the left, I am told,” he said, and when she pointed it
+out to him he got down and bidding her good-afternoon
+went on his way.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder where he is going,” she thought. “He
+could get to part of Ashelton that way, but I don’t
+suppose he is going there, and he could get to several
+other places equally well.” Then she drove on
+dismissing the subject from her mind.</p>
+
+<p>Now, Polly, though she had talked and thought
+principally about Bella that day, had found time,
+as the afternoon wore on, to wonder a little what
+mischief Bill had in hand, and to wonder a great deal
+more as to who would find her out. Polly’s morals
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>were of a strictly utilitarian character, and being a
+great believer in the eleventh commandment <i>Thou
+shalt not be found out</i>, she was prepared to measure her
+wrath with Bill’s misdoings in proportion to the
+publicity of their nature. Therefore when, at about
+five o’clock in the afternoon the offender came to
+her on the lawn, she proceeded to catechise her in a
+brief and business-like way, reserving her most important
+question till the last.</p>
+
+<p>“And whom did you meet? Who knows about
+this?”</p>
+
+<p>“Who? Why, of course, all the people I sold
+plums to, and—”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no, the people about here I mean, people
+whom we know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no one.”</p>
+
+<p>“No one in Ashelton or Wrugglesby? Didn’t
+you see anyone to speak to?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; I gave a lift to a stranger who wanted to find
+the way to Sales Cross. He asked me if I had been
+to Wrugglesby market, and I told him that it was not
+market-day, and that I had been to Darvel with fruit.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly was extremely angry at this indiscretion, and
+said so in no measured terms. She reflected, however,
+that, the man being a stranger, no harm had
+been done unless he happened to be visiting any of
+their acquaintances in the neighbourhood, in which
+case he might perhaps recognise Bill on some future
+occasion.</p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t see what harm I have done,” Bill
+objected. “I dare say T. won’t like it when I tell
+her, she is rather particular, but you are not proud
+and it is no good saying you are; there is no reason
+why you should object any more than Theo will
+when I tell him.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>But Polly was not at all sure that Theo would
+approve of Bill’s performance, and she said so, without
+convincing Bill; she also reproved her sharply
+without showing her wherein lay the wrong. Bill,
+who did not at all believe in Polly, was entirely unimpressed,
+and Bella just then came out from the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you told her?” she asked, and Bill noticed
+that she looked troubled and excited.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Polly said, “I have not; I had enough to
+do thinking about her behaviour.”</p>
+
+<p>“Told me what?” Bill asked. “What is it?”</p>
+
+<p>And because they felt the news they had to tell
+was of greater importance than her own comparatively
+obscure misdoings, they told her. Soon even
+Polly had forgotten about Bill in the greater news;
+as for Bill herself, she thought no more of anything
+but Bella and her happiness in Jack’s love and her
+fear of Jack’s mother. Bill could not quite understand
+the fear; if you were sure of the love, in her
+opinion, you could not be afraid, for nothing would
+matter. And the love,—she looked rather wistfully
+at Bella, wondering why she could not feel as this
+cousin did. But she said nothing of these things,
+forgetting them for the time being in the engrossing
+talk which was only closed when they all went indoors,
+Bill saying as they went: “But, Polly, how
+about your lodgings now? By next summer you
+will have no one to help you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall go on alone,” Polly answered magnanimously.
+“I shall be able to do it, and even if I
+could not, I should not dream of standing in the way
+of either of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you seem to want us both to get married,”
+Bill said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>“I do, if you marry well. I am sure that neither
+of you would forget all I have done for you, and I
+am sure you will both remember how valuable even
+trifles are to me.”</p>
+
+<p>There was something faintly suggestive of the
+beggar’s whine in Polly’s tone, which made both the
+younger cousins laugh as they went into the house
+completely forgetful of Bill’s doings.</p>
+
+<p>But there was one who did not forget them, who
+felt he had good reason to be angry with them, and
+that one was Gilchrist Harborough. It was to him
+that the stranger Bill met was going. He was a
+Sydney lawyer and the fortunate possessor of private
+means; he had been a friend of Harborough’s in the
+new country, and now that he was home for a holiday
+in the old, Harborough had thought it worth while
+to tell him the story of his claim to the Gurnett
+estates, asking his opinion rather than his help. The
+lawyer, however, was so much impressed with the
+strength of the case when he first heard the story in
+June, that he immediately set to work on his own
+account to verify one or two necessary points.
+Having by this week’s mail received from Australia
+the information he wanted, he came to tell Harborough
+of his success. At first he intended to
+write, but as he was going to stay a week or two
+with some friends further down the line, he broke his
+journey at Wrugglesby and spent a couple of hours
+discussing the situation with Harborough.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, he did not confine himself entirely
+to business during that couple of hours, for he
+casually mentioned the little fruit-seller who gave
+him a lift in her empty cart. “The queerest little
+oddity I have ever seen,” he said. “I wonder if you
+know who she is; let’s see if I can describe her. She
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>was small, dark, shabby, shabbier than any cottage-girl
+I have yet come across in this well-favoured old
+country—untidy, simple, though ’cute I should say,
+frank as an American, brown as a berry, hair dark
+but reddish, face,—I don’t know, a provoking little
+face, and perfectly irresistible eyes.”</p>
+
+<p>Harborough knew who she was though he did not
+say; a slighter description would have served him.
+There were not two such about; two brown girls
+who spoke good English and sold fruit by the pound
+in Darvel, who wore their right boots laced with
+string (Harborough knew that boot well) and had
+brown eyes with the sunshine in them; who made
+friends with all comers, who whistled to the birds in
+the hedges, who was, in fact,—Bill, his promised
+wife.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX.<br>
+<small>PETER HARBOROUGH: SHOT.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bella</span> was not proud, neither was she exacting in
+any particular; but there are times when even the
+least proud is tried by his family. Bella was so tried
+on the day that she went with Polly and Bill to
+Bymouth.</p>
+
+<p>Bymouth was the place selected by the three for
+the change which Polly said they needed after all
+their trouble. They could not afford a change, it is
+true; but as Polly also said: “It is no good waiting
+till you can afford a thing; by that time you will
+probably not want it.” Bella agreed with Polly;
+Bill’s cautious vote on the opposite side was overruled,
+and to Bymouth they went. Bymouth, being
+four miles from a railway-station, had the merit of
+being a cheap place; a railway-line was indeed on its
+way there, but had not yet got very far. Visitors
+who wished to go to Bymouth drove from Bybridge,
+or walked, sending their luggage by the carrier’s cart.
+The cousins walked, and as the carrier charged
+threepence for each package Polly said, “We must
+not take too much.”</p>
+
+<p>Bella agreed: it was easy to agree, for they had
+not much to take, and they were only going for a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>week; but Polly’s notion of luggage and Bella’s were
+not identical. This was the first of Bella’s trials; the
+matter of provisions was another question which
+needed settlement. Polly said they had better take
+all they could with them, for Bymouth (she had
+never been there) was a very out-of-the-way place
+where everything would be difficult to get: also (she
+added as an afterthought) what they took with them
+they would have free, while what they bought there
+they would have to pay for. Bella did not see the
+necessity of provisioning themselves as if they were
+going to a desert-island; however, she gave way to a
+certain extent, and Polly put a cold fowl in her hat-box
+(Bella would not have it in hers), three large
+lettuces rolled up in Bill’s bathing-dress, and a neat
+packet of fat ham in slices securely wedged among
+the same obliging cousin’s underwear.</p>
+
+<p>“You can take the tea,” Polly said, handing Bella
+a large paper bag.</p>
+
+<p>Bella took it in so pleasant a manner that Polly
+was induced to try her with some plum turnovers
+which she was anxious not to leave behind, because
+she said, “they would be so nice to eat in the
+train.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t eat things in the train,” Bella exclaimed
+scandalised, “least of all plum turnovers. Besides,
+do you think I am going to open my luggage in
+the train to get them out? Why, it will be in the
+van!”</p>
+
+<p>“So it will,” Polly agreed; “I forgot that. Still,
+they will be nice to eat when we get there; we shall
+be hungry then, for we must dine very early to leave
+in time.”</p>
+
+<p>But Bella was obdurate; she would not take the
+turnovers, which she was sure would not be wanted.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>“Oh, well, please yourself,” Polly said good-humouredly,
+and packed them in the crown of Bill’s
+hat. “She will have to wear her best one,” she said;
+“this is much easier to pack.” And she crammed in
+hat and turnovers together.</p>
+
+<p>Bella, not seeing what she was doing, raised no
+objections, but on the subject of apples she was firm.
+There were a certain number of windfall apples Polly
+wanted to bring, because, she said, fruit was always
+dear at the seaside; but she could not get them in
+among her things or Bill’s, and Bella absolutely
+declined to have them. Polly was annoyed, but at
+last gave it up, leaving the apples scattered over the
+dressing-table, while she turned her attention to
+strapping up waterproofs. Bill had begun to do this,
+putting in with them an extra petticoat; Polly added
+the subscription of a dressing-jacket, but she was
+called down-stairs just then and Bella took the straps
+from Bill and persuaded her to give up the idea of
+taking the additions. “You don’t want them,” she
+said, “and we can’t go about looking as if we were
+bringing home the family washing in a mackintosh.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why does Bella want to look so respectable?”
+Bill asked Polly, when they were alone later on.</p>
+
+<p>“Because,” Polly answered severely, “she is a lady.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill, not at all impressed, smiled her derision, and
+enquired: “Why was she so cross when she found
+out too late that my best boots were packed?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because Jack Dawson will be at the station.
+Just as if”—Polly was contemptuous—“he would
+look at your boots! It is market-day, so he is going
+to Wrugglesby; he is going to drive Bella—you and
+I and the luggage will go in the chaise with Sam.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see,” Bill said, and began to make various odds
+and ends, refused accommodation elsewhere, into a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>parcel. She had no idea of annoying Bella, but she
+had two different pieces of brown paper, both too
+small, and no genius for making parcels.</p>
+
+<p>Polly glanced round to see if there was anything
+forgotten; her eye fell on the apples. “It does seem
+a pity to leave them,” she sighed. Then an idea
+occurred to her and her face brightened. “I know
+what I will do,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>She turned to an open drawer and stirred it over
+till she found a small calico bag. She had many
+such,—Bill called them nosebags—which she used to
+hold all manner of odds and ends collected from
+various people. The one she brought out now contained
+scraps of ribbon, the accumulation of many
+years. She emptied it, finding a home for most of
+its contents in a smaller bag already used to hold
+some fifteen pieces of pencil. Then she put the best
+of the apples into the empty bag and forced it some
+way up the centre of Bella’s neat roll of waterproofs.
+“It is a pity to unfasten them,” she said; “they are
+so nicely done up. I am sure the bag won’t fall out,
+and it hardly shows at all.”</p>
+
+<p>That may have been, but the first thing Bella saw
+when she came on the platform at Wrugglesby was
+the bag, mouth-end foremost, sticking out of the
+roll which Bill held under her arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Are they here?” Jack asked as he came out of
+the booking-office with her ticket. They were here,
+very much here; poor Bella almost wished they
+were not.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see them,” Jack went on, looking down
+the crowded platform: the train stopped everywhere
+and was always full. “Oh yes,” he said at
+last, “there’s Miss Hains, but I don’t see the
+luggage.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>Bella could hardly see anything else, she was so
+painfully conscious of it—Polly’s round tin hat-box,
+packed to bursting, with the white string of
+some garment shut in the hinge; the little hair-trunk
+with a broken handle (the property of the late Mr.
+Hains), Bill’s paper parcel resting on the top; Bill
+herself, with her old boots very much in evidence,
+standing beside.</p>
+
+<p>Polly caught sight of Bella and smiled pleasantly
+as they approached; Jack took charge of the
+luggage and the train came in.</p>
+
+<p>“Jump in, and I’ll hand the things to you,” he
+said. “Are you going to have this in the carriage?”
+and he lifted the tin hat-box which would neither
+go under a seat nor in a rack.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes, please!” Polly cried, and took it from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He picked up Bill’s parcel; the two ends drooped
+in a dangerous manner, but he handed it to its
+owner without mishap, while Polly tried to force
+the unwieldy hat-box under a seat. It would not
+go, and after disturbing efforts Polly left it among
+the legs of the other passengers, straightening herself
+just in time to see Bill drop her parcel in
+Bella’s lap and take the roll which Jack handed to
+her, the bag of apples falling out with a thud as he
+did so.</p>
+
+<p>“Hullo!” said Jack; “what have I dropped?”</p>
+
+<p>Bella grew scarlet, and prayed that the bag might
+have fallen down on the line. No such thing,—it
+lay on the platform, one of the apples shaken out
+by the fall beside it. Jack picked it up and gave
+it to Bill. “Here you are, Miss Bill,” he said;
+“wait a moment, here’s another one,—you nearly
+lost your refreshment that time.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>Fortunately the train started almost immediately
+and so prevented Bill from explaining that the
+apples were Polly’s and not hers. Bella leaned back
+in the carriage overcome with shame, while Bill
+serenely restored the apple to the bag, and then
+tried in vain to get it back into its original hiding-place.
+“It won’t go,” she said at last; “we shall
+either have to undo the straps or carry it separately:
+which would you rather, Bella?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t care; it does not matter.” Bella felt
+that to be asked which she preferred now was adding
+insult to injury.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us undo the straps,” Polly said; “then we
+can put your parcel in too; it does not look very
+strong.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill unfastened the straps, and finding the parcel
+too broad to go inside comfortably, she unfastened
+that too and rearranged its miscellaneous contents.
+Then she packed it and the apples into a waterproof;
+one of the apples rolled on to the floor and was
+pounced upon by a small fellow-traveller.</p>
+
+<p>“Mustn’t, mustn’t,” the mother said; “it belongs
+to the ladies; give it to the ladies.”</p>
+
+<p>But the ladies, as represented by Polly, were
+benign and made a present of the apple, afterwards
+entering into conversation with the mother on the
+subject of the age and habits of the child. Bella
+took no part, and Bill applied herself to the refastening
+of the straps. When that was done she
+listened to what was being said, for the talk by
+this time had worked round to Bymouth, which,
+it seemed, the mother knew well.</p>
+
+<p>Now Bymouth had been Bill’s own choice; she
+did not know much about it, nor did the others,
+except that the journey there was a cheap one and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>that, after all, was an important piece of knowledge.
+The thing, however, which attracted Bill was the fact
+that the recognised heir to Wood Hall had been
+spoken of in her presence as Harborough of Bybridge.
+She did not exactly expect to come across
+him while passing through the small town on her
+way to Bymouth, but she had a vague idea
+that she might see him, and she was anxious to
+know what he was like. Yet another reason for
+her interest in the place was that her history of
+the county had told her that it was the home of
+the Corby family, they who had also owned the
+small manor of Corbycroft whence the old Squire’s
+body had been carried to the Chapel at Wood Hall.
+Somewhere between Bybridge and Sandover, a place
+somewhat higher up the coast than Bymouth, had
+been their ancestral home. It had been pulled down
+long ago, and the family had died out, probably
+in great poverty from the story of the old squire’s
+body being in danger of arrest for debt. But in
+their day the Corbys had been rich: all the ground
+on which the now fashionable watering-place of
+Sandover stood had been theirs; and though as
+agricultural land it had not been worth much, its
+annual rental now was more than enough to reinstate
+the family fortunes twice over.</p>
+
+<p>Bill asked many questions of their talkative travelling-companion
+when she found that, besides being
+born at Bymouth, she had lived since her marriage at
+Sandover. However, she could tell little of what
+Bill wanted to know; she could speak of the extravagant
+price of lodgings at Sandover, the beauty
+of the pier, the number of the grocers’ shops,—her
+husband owned one, the very best in the
+town. There were tombs, she said, lots of old
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>tombs in St. Clement’s churchyard; people often
+came to see them. “Old gentlemen come with
+spades and things,” she went on, becoming somewhat
+mixed in her ideas, “and poke about and
+read inscriptions and find no end—why, the cliffs
+are full of queer things, fossils as big as your hand
+and little tiny shells. Sandover is a very interesting
+place.”</p>
+
+<p>“I dare say,” Polly said with vacant affability;
+“we must try to go there one day.”</p>
+
+<p>She had not the least intention of going, but Bill,
+who did not say so, had, and she brought their
+loquacious informant back to St. Clement’s and the
+tombs. After some time she learned that the interesting
+churchyard was situated on the outskirts of
+Sandover, on the landward side. The particular
+attraction of the tombs she could not learn, her
+informant having only been there once: “When my
+Joey was nine months old, and it was a hot day
+too, I carried him all the way; my sister, she
+did offer to help me but—”</p>
+
+<p>Here she addressed herself to Polly, who sympathised
+on the subject of heat and the weight of
+nine months old babies until the tombs seemed
+forgotten. But Bill, patient and persistent, was at
+last rewarded by hearing that the charm of one
+lay in the fact that it commemorated a man who
+shot himself nearly a hundred years ago.</p>
+
+<p>“They say,” continued Joey’s mother, taking the
+core of the apple from the disappointed Joey, to
+the great relief of a maiden lady in a light gown,
+“they do say he didn’t ought to’ve been buried
+there at all, for they were very particular in those
+days about burying suicides at the cross-roads.
+However, some thought he hadn’t really shot himself,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>but that his friend, who he’d been gambling
+with, murdered him or something. They didn’t
+rightly know, so they put him in the churchyard
+on the chance, as the nearest cross-roads had already
+been took up for a farmer who cut his throat with a
+sickle.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill, who had handled one, wondered how he did
+it, but contented herself with asking the name of the
+other suicide.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t call to my mind,” was the answer she
+received, “but he was one of the gentlefolks. I’ve
+heard my good man say he was squire, but of course
+it was long before his time; there’s none of the name
+about now; but my husband, he’s a great one for
+finding out things, he’s—”</p>
+
+<p>And there followed a detailed account of his
+peculiarities and accomplishments, at the conclusion
+of which Bill suggested that the forgotten name
+might be Corby.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s it!” the voluble lady exclaimed with
+delight. “Fancy you remembering it and me not!
+I have got a head! Corby, that’s it—or is it Harborough?
+There are both there, but I think it’s
+Corby; they were the great people hereabouts; my
+man says they used to own all the land, but they are
+dead and gone now, every one of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who owns the land now?” asked Bill.</p>
+
+<p>“A Mr. Briant, a rich man living in London; he
+comes to Bymouth for shooting, but he don’t trouble
+Sandover much. He’s made a good thing of it, a
+fine man of business he’s called, though I should call
+him precious close myself.”</p>
+
+<p>A list of Mr. Briant’s delinquencies followed, with
+an account of the way in which he was bringing
+other seaside places into fashion, a form of speculation
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>to which he seemed addicted. Bill did not listen
+very much, she was thinking of the long dead
+Corbys and Harboroughs. She thought of them a
+good deal both then and later, determining to pay
+their graves a visit at the first opportunity. But
+she did not put this determination into practice at
+once, for she forgot all about it during the first two
+days at Bymouth. The cousins arrived there on a
+Thursday evening; Friday and Saturday were two
+golden, never-to-be-forgotten days to Bill, in which
+she cannot be said to have thought of anyone or anything.
+She did precisely what she pleased, and,
+according to Polly, undid all the little good she had
+gained during the past months. “She is five years
+younger, and ten times worse than she ever was,”
+said that remorseless critic, and debated how best she
+could speak to the offender about Gilchrist and her
+behaviour to him. Bill did not trouble herself much
+about Gilchrist at this time; Polly told her that she
+ought to write to him every day as Bella did to Jack,
+but this she entirely declined to do, and only under
+great pressure could she be induced to write every
+other day, considering even that a great waste of time
+and stamps as she had nothing to say to him.</p>
+
+<p>While Polly was still pondering on the subject of
+Gilchrist Harborough, Bill’s thoughts returned to the
+other and older members of the family. On Sunday
+she recalled her intention of visiting their graves, and
+went to St. Clement’s, Sandover, for the afternoon
+service. She walked in the heat of the day (thereby
+losing her dinner), reached the church in time for the
+<i>Magnificat</i>, and heard the dreariest music and the
+most unedifying sermon in the world. But it did not
+matter; she was seventeen, sound in wind and limb,
+body and soul, and consequently quite unconscious
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>of herself mentally, morally and physically. The
+womanhood, which had timidly tried to assert itself
+during the early summer, had slipped away; the
+thoughts and cares, the hopes and fancies which had
+begun to grow in the past months were lulled to sleep
+now by the sea and the sunshine, playmates which
+had called her irresistibly during these last days. She
+was a child still though she was not conscious of it;
+afterwards, in looking back, she knew those three
+perfect days were the last of her childhood.</p>
+
+<p>When the service was over she went out into the
+churchyard to examine the gravestones, which did not
+prove so numerous or so interesting as she had
+expected. A fair proportion of the older ones were
+in memory of the Corbys, who also, as she had seen
+during the service, had two tablets within the church
+inscribed to them. One she could not read; the
+other was to the honour and glory of a lady named
+Jane, wife of one Richard Corby, and evidently the
+pattern and model of what a wife should be; she
+possessed so many virtues that Bill felt, when she
+saw how young she had died, that, though sad, it was
+but natural.</p>
+
+<p>“She must have been the mother of the granddaughter
+who managed the old Squire’s burial,” she
+thought as she craned her neck to see the date. “I
+expect Jane would have objected to that business. I
+wonder what became of the granddaughter; perhaps
+she is buried outside.”</p>
+
+<p>But she was not; there were no more recent
+tombs to the family outside. Jane’s husband had
+died and been buried abroad some years after his
+wife, the event being announced briefly at the foot of
+the encomium of that lady’s virtues. The old Squire,
+who must have died later still, was not buried in this
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>part of the country; the few graves in St. Clement’s
+churchyard which bore the Corby name were all of
+older date, the inscriptions of some half effaced, none
+in their briefness telling a story, romantic or tragic,
+of that forgotten past. The stone slab in memory of
+the suicide was hardly an exception to this rule, and
+the man whose brief record it bore was not a Corby
+at all. <i>Peter Harborough, died at Corby Dean in this
+parish. March 12th, 1799. Shot.</i> That was all;
+of the history of his life and the tragedy of his death
+there had been found nothing to say but the one
+word, <i>shot</i>. To Bill it seemed almost terrible in its
+uncompromising briefness. As she stood looking at
+the stone, a brown-winged butterfly rested for a
+moment on the moss-grown lettering. “Who did
+it?” She asked herself. “Who and why?” But
+there was no answer; she did not know who, nor
+yet why some unknown hand had left this single
+record of the tragedy.</p>
+
+<p>She turned away at last, and unfolding the cheap
+little map of the district she had borrowed to help her
+on the way to St. Clement’s, she spread it on a flat
+tombstone and searched for Corby Dean. It used
+to be the seat of the Corby family, she knew; now
+that the house was pulled down the name seemed to
+have passed to a small farm and a handful of cottages
+built, apparently, on the spot where the house once
+stood.</p>
+
+<p>“Corby Dean meant the house where Peter Harborough
+was shot,” Bill said with her finger on the
+map. “He was with the Corbys then. What
+happened? What were they doing?”</p>
+
+<p>She clasped her hands round her knee and gave
+herself up to dreams. All round her was the peace
+of earliest September, rich in its haze of tender
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>warmth, summer still except for the opalescence of its
+lights, the coolness of its lengthening shadows. But
+Bill did not see it; she was building in her mind a
+history of the past, reconstructing the life which had
+been, groping in her memory, feeling that there, if
+she could but find it, was a picture of this old tragedy;
+a tale, nay, more than a tale, an actual experience if
+she could but recall it. A robin chirped shrilly in
+the churchyard yew; she started at the sound and
+the half-awakened memory was gone from her, the
+ghosts crept back to their graves, the past was
+merged in shadows again. Here was nothing but
+the stillness of Sunday afternoon, the peace of the
+earth’s sabbaths of September. Such golden restful
+days had been before these men lived, and still were
+though they were gone.</p>
+
+<p>She rose, and folding her map, went out of the
+churchyard shutting the gate behind her. Dead;
+that generation was dead, gone, forgotten, that
+generation—and the next? That too was lost in
+mist—and the next? The Corbys were ended,
+exhausted, but the Harboroughs? This brought her
+to the present day and to Harborough of Bybridge.
+She remembered that as yet she had heard nothing of
+him, and so remembering, she determined if possible
+to find out what manner of man he was—a determination
+she need hardly have troubled to make,
+for the next day, without effort on her own part,
+she knew.</p>
+
+<p>Monday did not seem a propitious day for discoveries;
+the weather was unsettled in the morning
+and the afternoon was one of ceaseless rain. Polly,
+seeing the state of affairs, prepared to spend three
+pleasant hours over her wardrobe; she pulled the
+table to the window, brought out her Sunday hat,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>took off the trimming, and proceeded to rearrange it
+with the bows behind instead of before. Bella retired
+to the bedroom (they only had one between the
+three) to write a letter, and Bill found a delightful
+occupation down-stairs. Their rooms were over the
+village shop which was also the post-office for a wide
+district. The rain seemed to make very little difference
+to the business done there; in fact it appeared
+to rather increase the number of customers, those
+who were not obliged to come finding some excuse
+to spend ten minutes or so in this cheerful little
+centre of gossip.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Rose, the landlady and post-mistress, was
+short-handed just at present, her assistant having
+gone home to nurse a sick mother. The girl who
+helped with the housework came in to lend a hand,
+but she was not clever, and the drawing-room lodgers
+had an elaborate tea at five o’clock which seemed to
+require much preparation in the afternoon. Thus it
+was without much trouble that Bill persuaded Mrs.
+Rose to let her help in the shop that day. The
+permission once given she set to work with great
+satisfaction, and soon found out something of the
+whereabouts of the articles most in demand. The
+stock was a very miscellaneous one, ranging from
+boots and twine through strange specimens of
+crockery and many-coloured cottons to Gregory’s
+Powder and treacle. Occasionally it took some little
+while to find the thing required, but the customers
+were in no hurry; indeed, most of them seemed
+more inclined to talk than to buy, Mrs. Rose seconding
+them when she was not despatching a telegram
+or otherwise conducting State-affairs through the
+medium of her post-office. Bill talked a good deal
+and listened even more; her parcels, it is to be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>feared, were not of the neatest, but her conversation
+was admirable and the customers seemed satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>These customers were a representative lot. Some
+were visitors who found the afternoon tedious and
+came to while away the time by buying sweetmeats
+or papers or strange little penny dolls, according to
+their age and tastes; some were neighbours from
+near by come for a pound of marmalade and a gossip;
+others were from the next village, genuine customers
+really anxious to transact business. The landlady
+from the house next door came once, being in trouble
+because her lodgers would have curry that night, and
+“she without a mite of curry-powder in the house.”
+A man from the coastguard station came asking for
+a species of tobacco that Bill took ten minutes to
+find, during which time he gave limitless information
+about the prospects of the weather. One of the
+customers was an anxious mother who wanted to buy
+castor-oil, but Bill, discovering that there was none,
+induced her to have Gregory’s Powder instead. “It
+will do just as well if he is five years old,” she said
+putting up a small dose. “Now, my dear, what for
+you?” This was said to a little girl with eyes just
+level with the top of the high counter.</p>
+
+<p>“Treacle, half cup,” was the answer, and the cup,
+with the coppers wrapped in paper reposing inside it,
+was handed up.</p>
+
+<p>Bill turned to the green barrel-shaped tin canister
+with the label <i>golden syrup</i> and the spigot-tap she had
+been itching to turn all the afternoon. As the purchaser
+of Gregory’s Powder left the shop, another
+customer came in, a young fellow in splashed gaiters
+and streaming mackintosh. Bill did not notice him
+much, being engaged in a struggle with the tap
+grown stiff by reason of age and treacle. He held a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>paper in his hand, perhaps a telegram, but he waited
+patiently enough while an animated conversation
+went on between Mrs. Rose and an elderly lady
+whom she had just served. The tap moved a little,
+and the treacle began to run, slowly, it must be
+admitted, but still it ran, in the course of time
+doubtless the cup would be half filled. Bill glanced
+at the last comer; “a member of the surrounding
+aristocracy” she thought, noticing an indefinable
+something about his clothes and bearing and clear-cut
+profile. When he turned the accuracy of the profile
+was lost, but the eyes, very grave young eyes, met
+hers and—</p>
+
+<p>Her heart began to beat very fast, though she
+could not in the least tell why. She ought to have
+lowered her eyes, but she did not; they were fixed;
+she could not look away, and he did not look away
+either. She could hear the beating of her heart
+plainly, almost as if some giant hand were clutching
+it. She was afraid, she knew not of what, afraid to
+look, afraid to look away, most terribly afraid of
+herself, ashamed, yet foolishly, triumphantly glad.
+Her hands grew very cold and moist, her breath
+came short, she lost consciousness of what was going
+on around her; the little dim shop vanished, the pile
+of boots and pans and seaside pails, the child who
+peered at her over the counter, the women who
+talked by the desk. They two were alone, he and
+she, alone in all the world.</p>
+
+<p>“Cup’s runnin’ ower.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill started like one waking from a deep sleep;
+the dark, greenish fluid was slowly running over the
+sides of the cup. She forced the tap back; her hands
+seemed so weak it was difficult to move it, and they
+trembled till she could hardly hold the cup. She
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>gave it to the child,—one cannot put surplus treacle
+back into a tightly closed canister—she gave it, full
+as it was, and the child took it, carefully licking the
+edges to prevent any running to waste, and walked
+sedately out of the shop. Bill sat down on a little
+high stool behind the counter; her face was very pale
+and she was shaking all over. Mrs. Rose, who had
+disposed of her last customer, saw her. “Why
+Missie,” she said, “you’re tired out. I oughtn’t of
+kep’ you here all this blessed afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am not tired, thank you,” Bill protested
+mechanically.</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Rose was unconvinced. “That I’m sure
+you are; I never saw such a lot of folks as we had
+this afternoon, a gossipin’ lot too. As for that Mrs.
+Randal, I thought she’d never go, taking up the room
+like that! I’m sure that gentleman was going to
+send a telegram and he never did; he walked out of
+the shop without sayin’ a word, a loss of sixpence to
+the Government.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who is he, do you know?” Bill’s voice sounded
+curiously stifled in her own ears; she looked down
+as she spoke, but she could feel the colour rising to
+her forehead.</p>
+
+<p>“Who? Why, young Mr. Harborough of
+Bybridge.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XX.<br>
+<small>HARBOROUGH OF BYBRIDGE.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Kit Harborough</span> paced the lane restlessly. The
+rain had ceased but he still wore his long mackintosh,
+and in one pocket the unsent telegram was crushed
+forgotten. For a moment he stood, then walked his
+five yard beat of wet road again. A church-bell
+sounded on the moist air,—curfew, they still tolled
+curfew at Bymouth; it was eight o’clock and nearly
+dark in the deep lane. On either hand rose high
+banks luxuriant with unclipped nuts and dogwood
+and sharp-thorned sloes, the late rain still dripping
+from every spray; the pleasant scent of wet ferns
+filled the air, the pungent flavour of the fungus on
+some tree-stump in the hedge mingling with the
+smell of the drenched grass growing tall and rank
+beside the road. The fragrance of the refreshed
+earth reached Kit but he hardly knew it, hardly heard
+the creak of the hidden grasshoppers in the moist
+darkness of the banks, hardly saw the wild flowers
+glimmering in the roadside grass.</p>
+
+<p>He leaned against a gate and looked across the
+darkening land, across the stubble-field whence the
+corn had been carried, over the slope of the hill to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>the village in the hollow, a huddle of roofs in the
+gathering gloom, the chimneys sharp against the sky
+and the smoke-wreaths hanging low in the wet air.
+Lights were beginning to twinkle here and there, one
+in the house at the corner, the little shop where he
+had seen her.</p>
+
+<p>He settled himself against the gate-post and
+watched. He was two-and-twenty and had never
+looked consciously at a woman before. Two and
+twenty, and now he had found, among the mouse-traps
+and string-balls and miscellaneous gear of a
+village shop, a little brown witch with the spell of a
+dead man’s charm in her eyes, the passion of a dead
+woman’s love in her blood!</p>
+
+<p>A partridge rose suddenly on the further side of
+the stubble-field; there was a whirr of wings, and
+then silence again and the soft drip of the wet trees.
+Then he heard a swift, light footfall, and saw a little
+figure speeding up the lane, perhaps to reach the
+high ground near the gate whence to look at the
+surrounding country in the beauty of this tearful
+twilight.</p>
+
+<p>Kit Harborough stepped out of the shadow by the
+gate to the centre of the road: the girl stopped
+abruptly with a little cry.</p>
+
+<p>“I knew you would come,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>He did not know how he knew, or if he really
+knew; he did not stop to consider and she did not
+ask him. “You!” was all she said, “You!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” and it seemed almost as if she were distressed.
+“I—I wanted to speak to you; I have
+something I must tell you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Me? I am very glad.”</p>
+
+<p>He was astonished at himself, being a curiously
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>diffident boy in some respects; so inexperienced, too,
+that had he stopped to think he would never have
+known what to say. But he did not think, he spoke
+on impulse, and the words came naturally enough;
+his only fear was lest she should escape and he should
+lose her in the gloom, but even that was not a real
+fear; he felt as if he could prevent her.</p>
+
+<p>She was standing in the middle of the road now.
+“You are glad?” she said. “That is because you
+do not know.”</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him as she spoke and he, because
+he could not help it, or because he willed it, or for
+some other reason, or the want of one, looked down
+at her.</p>
+
+<p>Ah the smell of the rain-washed earth and the
+wood-smoke from the cottage below the hill, the
+chirp of hidden grasshoppers, the drip, drip, drip
+from the nut-boughs near the gate! Ah youth and
+ignorance and the first sweet taste of love and life!</p>
+
+<p>The partridge, disturbed by the girl’s coming,
+returned to rest chuckling softly. Kit looked round
+but did not move; he was not very close to her; it
+seemed almost as if he thought the place whereon she
+stood was holy ground.</p>
+
+<p>“Bill!”—Polly’s voice rang shrilly—“Bill! Are
+you up the lane? Come in at once!” For an
+instant even the grasshoppers ceased, then—“Bill!
+Bill!” came again, but no nearer, Polly did not wish
+to brave the mud of the lane needlessly.</p>
+
+<p>“I must go,” Bill said; “and oh,”—with sudden
+remorse for the lost moments—“I have not told
+you!”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me to-morrow.” He was surprised at his
+own boldness. “I am staying here, at the River
+House, and you—”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>“We are staying at the shop—you know.” Bill
+grew rosy in the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I know,” he answered very softly.</p>
+
+<p>“We go away on Thursday, and I must tell you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thursday!”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill!” Polly could not make up her mind
+whether Bill was in the lane or not.</p>
+
+<p>But the culprit, who was thinking solely of the
+news she had to tell Kit Harborough, did not heed
+Polly. “I must tell you,” she said, “you must
+hear, it is so unfair! But when? How?—oh, it is
+hard!”</p>
+
+<p>“Hard?”</p>
+
+<p>“Bi-ill!”</p>
+
+<p>“I must go!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but first, when shall I see you? When will
+you tell me?”</p>
+
+<p>“To-morrow early.” Bill instinctively fixed her
+clandestine affairs for the time when the less energetic
+cousins were not awake to their responsibilities or her
+proceedings. “Early,—I’ll bathe before breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>“So will I; I often go for a swim first thing, and
+afterwards—”</p>
+
+<p>“I will meet you,”—she finished for him—“about
+seven; I will tell you then.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill! I can hear you talking! You are in the
+lane!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Polly, and I am going back across the field
+so I shall be home before you.” And she was over
+the gate and down the field almost before Kit realised
+she was gone.</p>
+
+<p>Polly turned round and went home; she had
+never ventured further than the mouth of the lane,
+neither was she certain that she heard Bill’s voice in
+conversation, but she was exceedingly annoyed with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>Bill for having kept her standing there so long in
+the damp. She was also slightly annoyed with herself
+for being kept. “As if it mattered what Bill did!”
+Only, as she was out (Bella had a romantic idea that
+she wanted to look at the sea by night) she thought
+she might as well see what Bill was doing. She had
+an instinctive feeling, based on her general distrust of
+humanity, that Bill was sure to be doing something
+wrong.</p>
+
+<p>For the sake of her own satisfaction—Polly not
+possessing the disposition which “rejoiceth not in
+iniquity”—it is a pity she did not penetrate a little
+way up the lane, for she certainly would have seen
+Kit Harborough had she done so. He stood where
+he was for a full minute after Bill had left him, absolutely
+still in the middle of the road. It did not
+matter; he was already so hopelessly late for dinner
+at the River House that a minute either way could
+make no difference. If he changed very quickly
+there was a chance that he would be in time for the
+cheese; earlier than that he could not expect to
+appear. Dinner and such mundane matters did not
+occur to him till after Bill had gone, and when they
+did he wondered what excuse he was to give to his
+host. On this subject he need not have troubled
+himself, for his elaborate explanations were thrown
+away, Mr. Briant not being deceived by them for a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>“Petticoat,” he observed briefly in answer to all
+Kit had to say. He was a man of some experience,
+and there was something in the boy’s manner, in his
+very indifference to dinner, which betrayed him to
+his elders.</p>
+
+<p>He flushed hotly; it was desecration even to think
+of Bill and the meeting in the lane here.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>“Hullo! It seems a serious case,” some one
+observed, and a man at Kit’s elbow inquired: “First,
+isn’t it, Harborough? Lucky young dog, he’s never
+met a divinity before; he has got it all to come.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit’s eyes flashed. “You are entirely mistaken,”
+he said coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” his host said with great good-humour.
+“Did you send my telegram?”</p>
+
+<p>Until that moment he had not thought of it;
+“I—I forgot it,” he was obliged to answer confusedly.</p>
+
+<p>“What a deuce of a time she kept you!”</p>
+
+<p>“She did not! She did no such thing.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a roar of laughter, and Kit, realising his
+blunder, had the good sense to leave it and apologise
+for the neglect of the telegram. This being of but
+slight importance was forgotten by the party far more
+quickly than his unfortunate admission.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime Bill was also taking the consequences
+of her wanderings in the lane. Polly was
+severely reprimanding her for going out after dark,
+for keeping other people waiting about in the damp,
+and for gossiping with farm-labourers and other
+persons. To all of which Bill listened with the
+tolerant indifference with which she often treated
+Polly’s harangues. “Let’s have supper,” she said at
+last. “I have told you I went out because I felt as
+if—as if I should burst if I stopped in any longer. I
+had to go out, to get away; it was a pure accident
+that I met any one.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly said, “Oh, I dare say,” and repeated several
+of her previous remarks with variations. Then they
+had supper, Polly still a little difficult in temper; the
+drawing-room lodgers had had steak and onions for
+tea, and she being one who dearly loved what she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>called “a relish with her tea,” had not yet got over
+the appetising odour which had not served as a relish
+to her own bread and jam.</p>
+
+<p>Never before in her life had Bill so longed to be
+alone—to be absolutely by herself, if it were only for
+half an hour. But it was out of the question; even
+when they went to bed the only solitude possible was
+the compromise of companionship offered when the
+cousins were asleep. She thought once of stealing
+softly down to the darkened sitting-room to spend an
+hour there in the starlight, but the bedroom door
+rattled so terribly that she was certain in opening it
+to awaken Bella if not Polly. She was afraid of facing
+their curious inquiries, she who so seldom had been
+afraid before, who never knew when her conduct was
+strange or worthy to invite inquiry until the fact was
+plainly shown her; there was some subtle change in
+her.</p>
+
+<p>She lay still on the outer edge of the wide low bed
+she shared with Polly, and tried to think. The room
+was very dark and quiet, yet she could not think.
+There was neither Kit nor Gilchrist in her mind,
+neither past, present, nor future; it was all a whirl,
+with for paramount feeling the thought of that unmade
+claim to the Harborough estates.</p>
+
+<p>“It is not fair,” she thought. “He shall know;
+they shall fight fairly; I will tell, whether it makes
+a difference or not.” Then the picture of Wood
+Hall came into her mind, the stately house in the
+autumn of its days, the great hall, the solemn rooms,
+“Theo’s, all Theo’s! Theo there, Theo and the
+boarders!” She laughed softly, half hysterically, at
+the idea. “He thought I meant it,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Polly muttered indistinctly in her sleep. Wood
+Hall and the gardens, the tangled rose-walk and the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>lawns, how green the grass would be now! The
+wood on the slope of the hill—there would be yellow
+leaves here and there, and the bracken would be
+golden—how very beautiful it all would be! September
+suited the place, but October would suit it
+even better, the long west front in the afternoon
+glow, the great arched doorway, all of it. And so
+on and on, a hundred vague ideas, a tangle of
+emotions, but never Kit; she never once faced the
+thought of him. At last she slept and dreamed—our
+dreams are our own; we are not accountable for
+them. In the morning things looked clearer and
+emotions fainter. Sleep blots out some of the fancies
+and brings facts into a better working perspective.
+When in the morning Bill rose early to keep her
+appointment she had a distinct notion of what she
+was going to do. She got up and dressed quietly:
+for the first time in her life she was troubled because
+her gown was shabby; but she did not know why,
+for she had not consciously considered the question
+of Kit Harborough at all. She was going to meet
+him, it is true, but that was solely to warn him of
+the danger which threatened him. Still she was sorry
+her frock was shabby, and her old straw hat a little
+the worse for the plum turnovers and a good deal the
+worse for wear.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not trouble herself much. By the
+time she had finished her bath she had forgotten
+about appearances; also to a certain extent she had
+forgotten her troubles, washed them away in the
+kindly sea or evaporated them in the sunny air: there
+was not, up to the present, anything so very much
+amiss in her world that still September morning. She
+was whistling softly when Kit found her, wringing her
+wet bathing-dress the while.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>“Let me do that for you,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>She held the dress a moment. “You had better
+not,” she said, “it will make your hands blue; the
+dye comes out like anything. The first time it got
+wet I was like an ancient Briton; it is not so bad
+now, but it still makes one a bit stripy.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit protested that he did not mind the dye and
+took the dress while she gathered up her towels and
+hung them in festoons about the tent, whistling when
+she was on the far side.</p>
+
+<p>“Is that you?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she admitted, wondering if he thought it
+unladylike.</p>
+
+<p>He did not; he seemed to think it clever. “What
+a mimic you are!” he said. “It was just like a
+chaffinch.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can imitate some things,—birds.” Bill forgot
+her mockery of her fellow-men; she forgot all those
+things, for there was a curious holy feeling about her
+just then.</p>
+
+<p>Kit had finished wringing the dress and was carrying
+it now as they walked slowly along the shore.
+“Not all birds?” he was saying; “not a lark!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not a lark, I have never tried to do that; I
+don’t think I could. I don’t think there is anything
+quite like a lark’s song; it is so completely, absolutely
+happy; I don’t believe anyone could imitate
+that.”</p>
+
+<p>He agreed with her and then asked if she knew
+Shelley’s Ode to the Skylark. They were not
+approaching the business of their interview very
+rapidly.</p>
+
+<p>Bill shook her head. “I don’t know any of his
+poetry,” she said, “except a piece about the moon
+which we had to analyse in our grammar-class last
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>Christmas. It was beautiful poetry, though I never
+could find the principal sentence.”</p>
+
+<p>“What a shame to give you Shelley for that!”</p>
+
+<p>Bill thought it was too, and then Kit told her he
+believed she would like the Ode to the Skylark.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me some,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>He obeyed and repeated the greater part. Business
+was receding even further into the distance.</p>
+
+<p>His was somewhat of a studious nature, and he
+had, moreover, the musician’s ear for harmonious
+sound and the unspoiled heart to delight in beautiful
+thought. She was a greedy listener, her mind an
+empty well in its ignorance, in its insatiable desire to
+be filled; she, too, had the love of melody, though
+never till that moment had she felt the need of the
+universe and of her own soul to be expressed in
+rhythm. But now the whole world somehow became
+one pulsing harmony, and they two wandered along the
+lonely shore in that dream which comes twice to no
+man. The air around them was delicate and crisp,
+fresh yet tenderly soft, the sunlight chastened and
+mild, threading with sloping bars the mist on the
+land, gleaming bright and pale on the wet sand and
+the incoming tide and the great white gulls that
+played in the creeping waves.</p>
+
+<p>Business and the purpose of their meeting receded
+further and further; indeed, it might almost have
+been forgotten entirely had it not been reached by a
+most circuitous route through Byron and Heine.
+They had been speaking of the sea’s place in poetry
+and concluded with the opinion that none of the
+poets had quite expressed their sentiments on the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>“They don’t seem to get at the sort of mother-feeling,”
+Bill said at last; “at least none of those we
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>know do. I mean the kind of feeling of going home
+that you get when you come near the sea—you know
+what I mean? It seems sometimes as if it stretched
+out its arms to you and called you,—don’t you
+hear?”</p>
+
+<p>She listened and he listened too, for of course he
+understood what she was trying to say for both.
+He had felt it as she had, and neither had said it
+before, and both were certain of an understanding
+now, wherein lay the delight and the danger.</p>
+
+<p>“Once,” Bill said, “I saw four lines which were a
+little about the feeling I mean; do you know them?</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="first2">‘Hail to thee, oh thou Ocean eterne!</div>
+<div class="verse">Like voices of home thy waters are rushing,</div>
+<div class="verse">Like visions of childhood saw I a glimmering</div>
+<div class="verse">Over thy heaving billowy realm.’”</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Kit said he did not know the lines and asked
+whose they were; but she could only tell him that
+she had found them quoted in a book of Mr. Dane’s.
+“I’ll ask him,” she said; “I dare say he will know,
+and he is sure to tell me. He is my great friend,
+you know, the rector of Ashelton.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ashelton!” Kit exclaimed. “Do you know
+Ashelton?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” and then Bill remembered, and the mutual
+acquaintance with Ashelton and the surrounding
+district, which seemed so very delightful to her
+companion, wore quite another aspect to her. “I
+had almost forgotten,” she went on; “I mean, forgotten
+what I had come to say; but I must tell you,
+I will tell you about it.”</p>
+
+<p>And forgetting the poets and the seductive calling
+of the sea she told him all,—of the Australian and
+his claim, of its strength, and of his decision to be
+silent until after old Mr. Harborough’s death; she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>told him exactly how it stood, and how she thought
+it unfair he should not know what threatened him.
+He listened quietly as she talked, coldly, unconsciously
+demonstrating to her one good gift that an
+old family bestows upon its children, the power to
+receive a blow unmoved, to hear with the silence of
+pride and to speak with the indifference of studied
+self-control. Kit Harborough had not much for
+which to thank his ancestors; the dead hand of the
+past was heavy upon him and the weight of
+tradition but little in his favour; nevertheless his
+birth and breeding helped him to receive Bill’s blow
+with a proud composure, almost an indifference which
+roused her deepest admiration, though at the same
+time it touched her curiously.</p>
+
+<p>She talked on fast to hide her own feelings.
+“They seem to think,” she said, though she had
+said it before and the whole case was painfully clear
+now, “they seem to think that if Mr. Harborough
+is left to himself he will not make a will; I don’t
+know why.”</p>
+
+<p>“Because he does not like me,” Kit told her.</p>
+
+<p>“He wishes me to have the property simply on
+account of the name. I am called Harborough
+because of the property, and I am,—was to have had
+it because of the name; but he wishes it so little that
+since he is sure I should have it, he would not set it
+down.”</p>
+
+<p>“But if he knew of Theo—of the other one?”</p>
+
+<p>“He still would not make a will, or if he did it
+would not be in my favour; the other man is a
+Harborough and so fulfils his only condition. I
+have told you he dislikes me.”</p>
+
+<p>“He would dislike Theo a good deal more if he
+knew him,” Bill said warmly; “he is going to cut
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>down the wood if he gets the estate, and plough the
+land, and grow turnips in the park.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think you could make my uncle believe
+that.” Kit’s composure belied his feelings. “And
+if one could, if one could induce him to make a will,
+I don’t believe I should care to do it, and, besides,
+you know, it might not make much difference after
+all. Thank you, thank you very much for telling
+me,”—the composure was not nearly so marked;
+stoicism is not perfect at two-and-twenty; “it was
+very good of you to do it. I’m glad to know; it’s
+much easier when one knows what’s coming, but I
+can’t exactly take advantage of it; you didn’t really
+mean me to, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“But the house,” Bill pleaded, “the beautiful,
+beautiful house! Think of it, the long west front
+with the sunset on it,—the great hall with the
+dragons on the mantelpiece—the rooms where all
+your people were born and died!”</p>
+
+<p>“I know.”</p>
+
+<p>They were sitting on a pebbly ridge now; Kit
+ground his stick into the shingles and answered in a
+muffled voice, not looking at her. “But the thing
+is not settled yet,” he went on after a pause. “He
+will have to fight for it whether there is a will or not;
+he may not win, and,—and if he does, they are his
+people too; he is more really Harborough than I am.”</p>
+
+<p>“He does not care for them,” Bill said; “he
+despises old families and he does not care for tradition;
+he would like the position but he does not
+really care for anything else; he would not love nor
+understand the place a little bit. He would save
+money, I dare say, perhaps make it, and in time
+build up a new family on the old foundation. He is
+just fitted to found a new family; he would do it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>splendidly, he has the right kind of brains and
+opinions; but he is not in the least fitted to carry on
+an old name,—he has not been bred up to it or
+educated for it. You don’t know him or else you
+would understand.”</p>
+
+<p>“I understand very well indeed. But what is the
+use? Why do you talk about it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because,” Bill answered vehemently, “the place
+is what it is; because of the house and the wood—think
+of cutting down the wood! Because it seems
+so likely he will get it, and if it were mine I would
+never let it go. If it had belonged to my people, as
+it has to yours, I would do anything—I should not
+care what—to get it and keep it.”</p>
+
+<p>The shingles rattled sharply against one another
+as Kit moved. “Do you think I don’t care?” he
+asked almost savagely. “But if it is that business
+of the will you mean, I can’t do it. I don’t suppose
+it would make a difference, and anyhow I can’t do
+it; you know I can’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I will,” Bill said. “I will see Mr. Harborough
+and explain. I will get him to make a
+will; I believe I could.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Kit exclaimed, “no, you must not do that.
+It would be no better than if I did; it would be
+taking an unfair advantage of the other man,—promise
+me you will not do it.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill hesitated. “I have taken an advantage of
+him already in telling you,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“That is different; it was only warning, preparing
+me for what is to come; you were not using your
+knowledge against the other man; you would not do
+that.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was not so sure; though, true to her reflective
+nature, she felt at the moment that perhaps he was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>right. “Then you will give it up,” she said at last,
+“you will let a man who does not understand have
+the house and everything?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not unless I am compelled.”</p>
+
+<p>“And will you be compelled? What do you
+think?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know; it sounds pretty bad as you have
+told it, of course. It may not be; I can’t tell.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill looked hopelessly out to sea. “It is my fault,”
+she said, more to herself than to him, “all my fault.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your fault?” he asked. “How? What have
+you to do with it?”</p>
+
+<p>“It was through me that Theo knew of his claim,
+through the mass in the Harborough chapel, and it
+was I who got the mass to be read. Yes, you have
+heard about it, of course, but you did not know it
+was my doing; nobody does except one person, but
+it was, all the same. Mr. Harborough had it said to
+please me, or at least because I suggested it; it was
+my idea, and it was all through that service that
+Theo heard of his claim to Wood Hall. A man, an
+antiquary, one of those interfering people who are
+always digging in ancestral dust-heaps and finding
+things which had much better not be found, heard
+about the service and came to enquire into it. He
+came and he inquired, and poked about, and found
+out a lot about the chapel and the Harboroughs;
+then he met Theo, and talked to him, and found out
+all about him too. Before that nobody knew anything
+of Theo, and he did not know anything of the
+claim; he never troubled about his relationship to
+you other Harboroughs; but between them he and
+Mr. Wagnall pieced it all out, and there you are;
+that is how he found out he had a claim. If it had
+not been for that mass bringing Mr. Wagnall to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>Wrugglesby it would never have been discovered; it
+is all my fault.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit did not share this opinion. “It is not your
+fault,” he said decidedly; “not a bit in the world;
+you never knew what would come of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I did it, all the same.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you are not to blame; you are not responsible
+because the truth, if it is the truth, has been
+found out, and no one would blame you for it if
+you were. I don’t think you to blame, and I am the
+person most concerned, after this Theo.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, he doesn’t think I have had anything to do
+with it,” Bill said, smiling a little at the idea.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well then, that is settled,” Kit said more
+lightly; “you are not to blame; nobody thinks so,
+neither you, nor I, nor Theo. By the way, you
+seem to be very intimate with Theo,—great friends
+or great enemies, which is it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Both,” said Bill smiling; “I am going to marry
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly the smile died out of her eyes, out
+of her heart, out of sea and sky and world, and for
+the first time in her life she was afraid to think.</p>
+
+<p>Kit turned and looked at her full, his well-bred,
+stoical face expressing nothing, only his grave eyes
+very grave as he said slowly: “You are going to
+marry him?”</p>
+
+<p>She nodded, meeting his eyes for a minute; and
+then she looked out to sea, driving her palms deep
+among the small pebbles as she sat, one hand on
+either side, staring rigidly before her.</p>
+
+<p>The gulls dipped down to the breaking waves and
+circled above in the pale-toned sky; sea and sky
+alike were as tinted silver, the whole day delicate,
+tender-hued, like the colours found in a pearl. A
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>great peace, a great silence everywhere; no sound
+but the ripple of the waves that crept up the sand,
+crept till they reached the shingle where the girl sat,
+and broke with tiny spray almost at her feet.</p>
+
+<p>“We had better move; the tide is coming up.”</p>
+
+<p>The voice of the man beside her aroused her. He
+suddenly seemed a man to her, a boy no longer: it
+seemed too as though there was a great gulf between
+them. She rose automatically and they walked along
+the shore in the direction of the village. He was
+very kind and polite; there was an indefinable
+difference between his manners and those of the
+people she usually met, but it only made her the
+more conscious of the difference between herself and
+him. He talked as they went, easily and well, on
+indifferent topics, the cliffs, the shore, the places of
+interest about, the peculiarity of the stones on the
+beach. Once he picked one up, dark grey and
+heavy, a flint sea-urchin, he told her it was, rather an
+uncommon fossil, he said, as he gave it to her. She
+took it, and talked about it and a dozen other things,
+in spite of her consciousness of the gulf, as easy and
+as self-possessed as he. Why not? Was she not
+Bill, the mimic, the player’s child? She was sure
+just then that he had been a player, a strolling
+mummer, a singer ever on tour, perhaps even the
+circus-clown Polly called him. And she,—she was a
+clown too, a buffoon, a fool, for all that she wore no
+motley, to make old men laugh with her songs and
+quips, to charm young men for a moment with her
+hundred changes,—“all things by turn and nothing
+long”—nothing except the little gipsy creature that
+was under all and that was miles and miles away
+from Kit Harborough of Bybridge, from him and
+the women of his class. She knew those women,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>tall, fair, white-skinned, serenely unconscious. She
+was a long way from them, from everyone in the
+universe, farthest of all from this boy with his considerate
+courtesy, his polite speech, his accurate
+clothes. She was painfully conscious of his clothes
+and even more so of her own, of her work-stained
+hands, her too rapid movements. She was conscious
+of it all, but more than all of a passionate desire to
+run away and hide with the wild things which were
+her kin, to run away not from him alone but from
+all her world, to run right away into the woods and
+hide even from herself, if it could be.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not run away, as she would have done
+some months earlier; pride held her back and crushed
+the wild nature down, helping her to politeness and
+teaching her to give her little brown hand at parting
+much as Kit Harborough did. So with some
+formality they said good-bye, and parted at the top
+of the cliff-path, he to the left to the River House,
+she to the right to the little shop where Bella was
+waiting breakfast and Polly finishing a belated toilet.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXI.<br>
+<small>THE ACQUISITIVE FACULTY.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Polly</span> may have been a clever woman, as Mr. James
+Brownlow had said she was, but in his catalogue of
+her abilities he omitted to mention her one great gift,
+her undeniable talent for getting things. She was a
+true collector and picker-up of trifles; she had
+brought this too little appreciated art to a rare perfection,
+and she never went anywhere without
+acquiring something, never came home completely
+empty-handed, never declined or passed by a single
+article or opportunity however trivial or cumbersome.
+Her motto was <i>It might be useful.</i> “If she went to
+the Sahara,” Bill said, “she would bring home sand for
+the chickens’ run.” But besides the collectors’ art
+Polly possessed the true genius for getting, not
+begging nor demanding, but annexing calmly as by
+right divine, or acquiring gracefully as bestowing a
+favour in accepting one. “I don’t ask for things,”
+she used to say; “people always offer them to me.
+I am sure I don’t know how it is, but they do, and it
+looks so rude to refuse.”</p>
+
+<p>So she never refused, and seldom went anywhere
+or met anyone without directly or indirectly turning
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>the occasion to profit. Bymouth did not promise a
+very likely field for her abilities, but even here she
+found and seized an opportunity. It was late in the
+visit certainly, not till after their fellow-lodgers had
+gone. This took place on Tuesday, the day on
+which Bill told Kit Harborough of the claim.</p>
+
+<p>The drawing-room family left at one o’clock, the
+cousins watching them go. They drove to Bybridge
+in a small wagonette, and it was interesting to see
+them getting into it, for the family was large, far too
+large for the wagonette.</p>
+
+<p>“They will never do it,” Bella said as she watched
+them.</p>
+
+<p>“After the way in which they packed into that
+bedroom,” Polly remarked severely, “I should say
+they could go anywhere or anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p>“They had two bedrooms,” Bill said; “there was
+another up the yard.”</p>
+
+<p>“I call it positively indecent,” was Polly’s opinion,
+but Bill asked: “Where is the indecency? The
+girls were in one and the boys in the other. Mrs.
+looked after the girls and Mr. after the boys; they
+had more space apiece than we three have, and I am
+sure we are all right.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly explained that their own arrangement was
+quite different and much better, but Bill, who had
+now joined Bella at the window, did not pay any
+attention to her.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, do come and look, Polly,” she said; “they
+have nearly done it. They would do it easily if it
+were not for the luggage; they ought to have a cart
+for that.”</p>
+
+<p>“They are far too stingy,” Polly observed contemptuously.</p>
+
+<p>“The mother will nurse the baby,” Bill went on,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
+“and the father the next-sized one, and the little
+girl that big bundle. They have left one box out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where will they put it?” Bella said.</p>
+
+<p>“They can’t get it in front,” was Bill’s opinion;
+“the coachman can hardly see round the rampart of
+luggage as it is. They are going to try though. If
+they would put it inside it could be managed. There
+it goes! I knew it would fall off the front! If you
+were to put it—”</p>
+
+<p>“Come in, Bill!” Polly seized Bill’s arm. “Come
+in at once! It is no business of yours; let people
+manage their own concerns. I am ashamed of you!”</p>
+
+<p>But Bill was not ashamed of herself; she was far
+too much absorbed in the difficulties of the family to
+care for Polly, and when someone in the wagonette
+below having heard her voice called up to know what
+she had said, she leaned out of the window again and
+told them. “Put it inside; I believe you could do
+it then,—not that way, small end down. You don’t
+mind me suggesting it, do you? It would have been
+such a pity” (“Bill!”) “if you couldn’t all get in.
+That’s right; now” (“Bill! Shut that window,
+Bella.”) “if the two little boys sit on it and the
+biggest one stands on the step—that’s splendid!”</p>
+
+<p>“Shut that window, Bella!”</p>
+
+<p>Bella shut the window almost on to Bill’s neck,
+leaving her no choice but to draw her head in. The
+family, who did not appear to resent her interference,
+shouted their thanks to where she had been, while
+Bella, who had been as much annoyed as Polly by
+Bill’s behaviour, joined the elder cousin in telling the
+culprit so.</p>
+
+<p>But Bill did not mind much. “It would have
+been such a pity if they had not managed it,” she
+said, “and I don’t believe they could any other way.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>“It was no affair of yours,” Bella said; “I don’t
+see why you wanted to make such an exhibition of
+yourself. There were people passing too, one of
+those shooting men from the River House had just
+come out of the post-office; he did stare at you, and
+no wonder!”</p>
+
+<p>Bill said she did not care, which was true; but she
+did not know that the man described the incident,
+inclusive of her and her directions, in Kit Harborough’s
+hearing that evening. Kit recognised her
+from the description, as Gilchrist had done when his
+lawyer-friend Ferguson described her, and Kit, like
+Gilchrist, did not betray her identity. He said even
+less about her than did Gilchrist, though he experienced
+a youthful desire to knock the informant down
+when he announced an intention of finding out who
+the girl was. But the pugilistic wish was restrained,
+Kit reflecting that, as Bill was leaving the day after
+to-morrow, it was most unlikely the fellow would
+find out anything about her; and, after all, that he
+should wish to do so was, in Kit’s opinion, quite
+natural and only what was to be expected. It was
+also, in the same opinion, quite natural that Bill
+should assist the family in the wagonette with her
+advice, quite natural and quite right; indeed, so right
+that Kit never questioned its propriety at all, possibly
+because she did it; though in his defence it must be
+said that he troubled less about the correctness of
+an action than did Gilchrist, thinking not at all of
+“how it looked.” He had been brought up among
+people who, being quite sure of themselves and their
+public, never troubled as to how a thing might
+look.</p>
+
+<p>Polly had not been so brought up, and, conscious
+that her actions would not always bear investigation,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
+she was most anxious that appearances should, when
+possible, be beyond reproach. She lectured Bill
+proportionately, and was, as usual, listened to with
+indifference; but when at last Polly brought her
+remarks to a close with, “It was like everything else
+you do, most unladylike,” Bill said rather wistfully:
+“I suppose I am unladylike, Polly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Hopelessly,” was the crushing answer.</p>
+
+<p>“I should like to be better,” the voice was a
+shade more wistful; “I would try if I knew what
+to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t lean out of the window to give advice
+to strangers,” Polly said, and Bill making no reply,
+she began to perceive that her young cousin was
+in an unusually pliant mood. Seeing this she seized
+the opportunity, the first that had offered, of speaking
+to her on her behaviour to Gilchrist. As a
+preliminary she heaved a deep sigh, and, after a
+quick glance at the girl, began with chastened
+mildness.</p>
+
+<p>“After all,” she said, “to lean out of the window
+like that is only a small thing, but it is an illustration
+of your ways. Your ways often trouble me, Bill, do
+you know that? Sometimes I feel as if I shall give
+you up entirely, and then again sometimes I think
+you really are ignorant and would try to do better
+if you only knew how your behaviour looked.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill twisted restively, Polly’s voice having taken on
+the melancholy semi-nasal drawl which belonged to
+her part of the grieved guardian. Bill did not
+believe in her at any time, and that afternoon the
+manner irritated instead of amusing. But she was
+sincerely convinced of her own shortcomings, and
+though she had no great opinion of Polly, there
+was no one else to whom she could go; so she said:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
+“Tell me what I do wrong; you need not put in all
+that about being sorry and the rest; I know how
+that goes, and can fill it in for myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, Bill,” Polly said with dignity; but
+quickly seeing the girl’s attitude of mind and the
+precariousness of her own opportunity, she shortened
+her part and, after a brief remark on her cousin’s
+impoliteness and her own forbearance, got to business
+without further delay.</p>
+
+<p>“You want to know where I think you wrong? I
+will tell you one or two things,”—she spoke as one
+who has a wide range of examples from which to
+choose. “There is your behaviour to Gilchrist to
+begin with; you do not behave at all nicely to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“To Theo!” Bill exclaimed in astonishment, “to
+him! What do I do wrong to him?”</p>
+
+<p>“You call him Theo for one thing; he objects to
+it and it is ridiculous; all nicknames are ridiculous.”</p>
+
+<p>“All?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, all; and abbreviations of names are almost
+as bad.—I don’t see why you should not be called
+Wilhelmina instead of Bill. It does not suit you,
+it is true, but I am sure he would prefer it, besides
+Bill is vulgar; don’t you think so yourself?”</p>
+
+<p>“He can call me Wilhelmina if he likes,” Bill said
+in a subdued voice. “And as for Theo, that is
+easily altered; He can be Gilchrist if he wishes it,
+though I think it is quite as unsuitable as Wilhelmina
+for me.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Bill,”—Polly was delighted to have
+made so much impression—“it is not a question
+of what you think but of what he wishes. You
+ought to consider his wishes; you ought to try
+to please him and consult his tastes; remember, he is
+proposing to give you a great deal, and as you can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
+give him nothing in return except a little consideration,
+it is hardly right to withhold that as you do.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?” Bill’s voice, quiet and
+cold, was almost like that of one who faces an
+unexpected shock.</p>
+
+<p>Polly, really in her element now, enumerated a
+list of the things Bill had done wrong, or might have
+done right, concluding her remarks with,—“Try
+to be pleasant to him, talk seriously when he wants
+you to, be cheerful and lively when he is in the
+humour for it, put on your best dress and try to
+make yourself nice when he comes. It is your duty,
+you know, you owe it to him. Make the most
+of yourself; don’t set him to water the garden and
+so on, but talk to him and be pleasant.”</p>
+
+<p>“Always, do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>There was something very like consternation in
+Bill’s tone, but Polly did not know it, and answered
+readily,—“Yes, of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“Always?” Bill dropped her hands on the table.
+“I can’t do it,” she said vehemently; “it is simply
+no use, Polly, I can’t do it; I shall have to throw
+it up.”</p>
+
+<p>“Throw what up? What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t be respectable always; it is no use trying;
+he would be sure to find me out after we were
+married, if not before. He knew the sort of person
+I was when he asked me to marry him; if he
+did not like it why did he ask me?”</p>
+
+<p>“You did not call him Theo before you were
+engaged,” Polly said, wisely attacking the details and
+not the mass of Bill’s protest. “And of course,”
+she went on, “people usually expect their <i>fiancées</i>
+will be nice to them. The average girl does it
+as a matter of course because she wishes to; it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
+is because you do not seem to know what is expected
+of you, and never wish to do what is right, that
+I have had to speak to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is part of the contract, you think?” Bill
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly not; there is no contract in the
+matter.”</p>
+
+<p>So Polly said, but Bill took her meaning otherwise,
+as it was intended she should, and there was
+a long silence. Polly, feeling the subject was closed,
+rose and moved about the room, while Bill sat lost
+in thought. At last the younger cousin spoke. “I
+will try to do what is right,” she said, “I will really.
+I’ll write to Theo—to Gilchrist this afternoon,
+though I did write yesterday. I’ll take the letter
+out on the sands with me.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly was very much pleased; here was an obvious
+sign of repentance, and one moreover which would
+keep Bill from wading for shrimps, an occupation
+she herself strongly disapproved of. She set off for
+the shore that afternoon with a really happy mind;
+she had settled Bill’s affairs, she had arranged for
+a good tea when she should come in, and the
+drawing-room family, a great source of annoyance to
+her, were gone. She felt very well pleased with the
+world in general and herself in particular as she
+sat watching Bill writing her letter, a grotesquely and
+pathetically polite letter it was too, if only she had
+known it. Polly felt that the stay at Bymouth had
+been most successful; before she finally left she was
+even more convinced of this, for while at the little
+seaside resort she achieved a piece of business which
+even astonished herself. “Fancy,” she used to say
+with complacency afterwards, “fancy meeting my
+future landlord at a little place like that!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>But this she did in the person of the old gentleman
+who came to the drawing-room floor on
+Tuesday evening. He only arrived on Tuesday,
+and Polly left on Thursday; but she made good use
+of her time and struck up a great friendship with
+him and his wife, sympathising with their ailments,
+recommending a butcher, telling them in the course
+of time something of her own difficulties. They
+were interested, pleased, favourably impressed. They
+gave her a good deal of advice,—this she asked for
+but did not necessarily take; they also eventually
+gave her a little help,—this she did not ask for
+but, true to her rule, took without hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman had some house property in
+London, small houses Bayswater way, “a shrewd
+investment,”—Polly was sure of it. The tenants had
+been giving a great deal of trouble lately, “disgraceful,”—Polly
+was sympathetic. It was a capital place
+for apartments, and Polly could not do better than
+settle in that part when she made her “plucky
+venture;” that was the old gentleman’s advice.
+One of the houses was empty now, and before
+Polly left on Thursday, she was warmly pressed to
+take it on the most advantageous terms; that was
+the old gentleman’s offer.</p>
+
+<p>Polly thanked him in her very best manner, saying
+she doubly appreciated his kindness since she was so
+much alone in the world. Mr. Brownlow had died
+during the summer, and Polly said at the time that
+it was convenient as they were already in mourning;
+she said it was convenient now, since she was consequently
+free to conduct her affairs without his advice
+and criticism. She did not say this to the old
+gentleman, but told him, after thanking him for his
+offer, that she must talk it over with her cousins<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
+before finally accepting it; adding that she was
+nearly sure of their approval, quite sure of their
+obligation on her behalf and their own for his kindness,—and
+so forth.</p>
+
+<p>Polly was vastly pleased with herself and detailed
+the whole affair with much satisfaction to the two
+younger girls as they had a hurried lunch before
+starting on their walk to Bybridge station. Bella
+was not at all congratulatory; she did not like
+having the family affairs discussed with strangers,
+neither did she like posing as part of Polly’s responsibilities.</p>
+
+<p>“I am not,” she said, “and I don’t see why you
+should say I am. I am only your cousin and that is
+no responsibility, and not such a wonderfully near
+relationship either.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Polly retorted, “not when you are married
+to a rich man like Jack Dawson and I let lodgings in
+town for a bare living; the relationship will not be
+near then, I admit,” and Polly sniffed.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t mean that!” Bella cried; “Oh, you
+are unkind! I don’t look down on you and I never
+shall; it is with your cadging ways that I hate to be
+mixed up.”</p>
+
+<p>“Polly is a born cadger,” Bill said resignedly,
+“and we are part of her stock in trade. She is like
+a beggar-woman singing in the street and never
+asking for pennies, but always getting them. I am
+her hired baby and you are her imitation cough; she
+would not get on nearly so well without us.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, at all events you reap the benefit of what
+I get,” Polly said.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” Bill agreed readily.</p>
+
+<p>“And I don’t think, Bill, that you will ever
+despise me.” Polly’s tone was becoming highly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
+moral. “It is a great comfort to me to think that
+when you leave me and marry you will never look
+down on or ignore me. It is true you will never
+have Bella’s temptation, but I am sure you would
+not do it.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are unkind!” Bella repeated. But Bill’s
+face had suddenly hardened; she was thinking of
+Gilchrist and Wood Hall and the county who were
+going to be compelled to recognise him and his wife,—his
+wife who would have to reform and perhaps
+forget.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said suddenly, almost passionately; “I
+will never forget you, Polly, never look down on
+you, never, no matter where I am, nor what I
+become. If I lived in a palace you should come and
+stay with me; if I married a king he should receive
+you and take you in to dinner, and all the silly
+courtiers should bow down to you because you were
+mine. You are an old fraud, Polly, and a cadger,
+and a bit of a humbug too, but I am fond of you all
+the same. We are not swells, you and I, but we
+will stand by each other, and I will never, never
+forget!”</p>
+
+<p>“That is a very nice spirit,” Polly said impressively
+and very much through her nose.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think I would forget?” Bella asked
+rather hurt. “You seem to think I am a horrid
+creature.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, we don’t,” Bill answered her, “of course we
+don’t; we know really that you never would be
+ashamed of your grubby relations. Don’t let us
+talk any more nonsense about it.”</p>
+
+<p>So peace was restored, and Polly began cutting
+slices of the cold shoulder of mutton while the
+younger girls finished their lunch.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>“If you married a king,” Bella said to Bill laughing,
+“he might object to Polly walking up to the
+palace with a nosebag of apples sticking out of the
+middle of her mackintosh.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not if he had married me; he would have got
+used to that sort of thing.”</p>
+
+<p>Bella laughed again. “It is a good thing your
+Theo is not very particular about appearances.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t know very much about Theo,” Bill
+answered quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“I know this much,” Bella replied; “he will not
+let you do just as you like if it happens to be something
+he does not like and has good reason to think
+wrong.”</p>
+
+<p>“There may be difficulties,” Bill admitted with
+the glimmer of a smile, her war-smile which Polly
+knew to her cost.</p>
+
+<p>“Bill is very easy to manage when you understand
+her,” that lady said as she sharpened her knife.
+“Gilchrist will find out how to do it in time; at
+least he may.”</p>
+
+<p>She added the last words under her breath, neither
+of the others hearing her, for Bella was asking in
+astonishment: “You would never really oppose a
+man you loved, would you, Bill?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill debated the question for a moment looking
+straight before her. “No,” she said at last, “I
+suppose I should not.” Then she changed the
+subject abruptly: “What is that meat for, Polly?”</p>
+
+<p>“To take home with us. I am not going to leave
+all that good meat behind; there is quite enough
+now on the bone to look decent, and it would be a
+great pity to leave all this.”</p>
+
+<p>Bella did not approve of this proceeding, but
+Polly, untroubled by her objections, packed the meat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
+up. “There,” she said, giving the parcel a final pat,
+“it will come in very nicely for our supper when we
+get home, and I am sure there is quite a lot on the
+joint still.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill examined it gravely. “There is enough for
+our cat here,” she said: “it seems a pity to leave
+that. Let’s take it; we haven’t time to scrape it off,
+but you might put the bone in your hat-box; it
+would go in if I broke it in half.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be ridiculous, Bill,” Polly said with
+dignity, “ridiculous and mean. I don’t see anything
+to laugh at, Bella.”</p>
+
+<p>Apparently Bella did, but Polly never minded
+being laughed at, and it was in a friendly fashion that
+the three cousins started for home. In the main the
+three agreed admirably; Bella seldom opposed Polly,
+and Bill, since she had developed an opposing individuality,
+had been little with them; moreover, she
+was of a nature with which it was not easy to quarrel.
+Polly, however, having a respect for her ability to
+give trouble on occasions, sent her back to Theresa at
+Ashelton two days after their return to Wrugglesby.
+“I have got a lot of things to settle,” she explained
+to Bella, “and I can do them better without
+her.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXII.<br>
+<small>POLLY SETTLES THINGS.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">So</span> Bill was packed off to Ashelton, and then Polly
+proceeded to settle things to her own complete
+satisfaction. She saw the house in Bayswater and
+settled that; she saw the parents of the few pupils
+remaining to her and settled them very completely;
+and then she wound up her connection with
+Wrugglesby with but few difficulties and not a
+single regret.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I cannot say I ever cared for it,” she said
+when Bella expressed some natural sorrow at leaving
+the town which had been her home for nearly seven
+years. “I never was fitted for a pokey little place
+like this; I need a wider life.”</p>
+
+<p>“It may be pokey,” Bella declared with tears in
+her eyes, “but I like it, and I am sorry to leave it,
+and to leave the shabby old house and the shabby
+old furniture.”</p>
+
+<p>“We are not leaving the furniture,” Polly said
+quickly. “We are taking all we want with us, and
+only selling what is of no use to any of us. You
+and Theresa have each chosen what you wanted;
+one can’t keep all the rubbish.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>The last was added very decidedly, for there had
+been some discussion about the furniture. Bella had
+fallen in quietly enough with Polly’s judicious
+arrangements, but Bill, who cherished ridiculous
+sentiments about old and cumbersome articles of
+furniture, had disputed Polly’s decision article by
+article, winning sometimes, losing sometimes, and
+only desisting when it was obvious that the little
+house at Bayswater could hold no more. All this
+had taken place during the visits she and Theresa
+occasionally paid the cousins at Wrugglesby during
+the time of the settlement. It was all over now,
+arranged finally some days ago; Polly was only
+afraid of reopening the question. The three were
+assembled for the last time at Langford House,
+Robert having driven Bill to Wrugglesby that afternoon
+to see the last of the old place and the old
+associations. There was nothing at all to be done,
+it was really nonsense for her to come, Polly said,
+and was not at all surprised that Bill did not arrive
+till almost dark.</p>
+
+<p>Robert had been delayed in starting, and when
+Wrugglesby was reached Bill would not be driven to
+the house, but got down from the dog-cart at the
+stables and walked, with something clinking forgotten
+in her pocket, down the familiar streets, saying a
+silent good-bye. It was a grey, gusty afternoon, the
+first of October. There were dead leaves in the
+quiet corners,—all the corners were quiet here—and
+the wind came now and then whirling them about
+her feet. It was a good wind, fresh and sweet for
+all its strength, and the girl felt she loved it; it was
+the home-wind to her, the wind of the Eastern
+Counties. And the greyness and the peace and the
+great sense of space and abundant room were home
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>to her, the land of the Eastern Counties, not grand
+at all, but still and wide, and very, very dear.</p>
+
+<p>She stood a moment on the outskirts of the little
+town looking across the well remembered country.
+Then she turned and walked home through the small,
+ill-paved streets, past the familiar shops,—those with
+the new fronts, those with the old many-paned
+windows; past the police-station, the Georgian house
+with the legend <i>County Police</i> set over the door; past
+the church with its ancient burying-ground where,
+five steps above the town, Aunt Isabel slept under
+the dark green grass and fluttering sycamore leaves;
+past genteel houses with small gardens where sunflowers
+lingered with hollyhocks and dahlias still
+unhurt by frost; past each familiar thing until at last,
+just as the lamps in the town were being lighted,
+Langford House was reached.</p>
+
+<p>But the cousins who received her knew nothing of
+Bill’s lonely walk, nor yet of the something which
+clinked in her pocket. Indeed, she herself did not
+think of the last immediately; she did not think of it
+until after Bella had made the remark on her regret
+at leaving Wrugglesby. Bill did not speak of her
+regret, and as for Polly, she had none of which to
+speak. “As we have got to go some time,” she
+said, “it may as well be now as later; better in fact,
+for though the lease is not up till Christmas, we could
+not expect to get such another chance of a house as
+the one now offered.”</p>
+
+<p>To which wisdom Bella assented; after all, leaving
+the house now did not concern her so very much,
+for in any circumstances she would have had to leave
+before the spring, as Jack insisted that they should
+be married in February. Mrs. Dawson, though she
+had at first objected to this arrangement, finally came
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>to the conclusion that since it was inevitable it might
+as well be soon as late. Indeed after a time she came
+to accept it with so much meekness (other people
+called it pleasure) that she invited Bella to come to
+Greys when Polly left Wrugglesby and stay there
+till the winter set in. Therefore Bella, though she
+assented to them, cannot be said to have had a very
+personal interest in Polly’s plans.</p>
+
+<p>As for Bill, on this particular afternoon she said
+nothing even with regard to the furniture, except
+that in reply to Polly’s emphatic remark to the effect
+that they could not take all the rubbish with them,
+she said she hoped it would get a good home and be
+well treated. Polly considered such sentiments
+foolish in the extreme and, having said so, dismissed
+the subject from her mind and remarked: “I
+flatter myself that we have done very well on the
+whole.”</p>
+
+<p>Bella agreed, but Bill corrected. “It is not we
+but you who have done it. It was you who cadged
+the house in London on very low terms, you who
+first impressed Mrs. Dawson with the fact that we
+are a nice family,—oh yes, she likes Bella for herself
+now, but she began by liking you, or rather what
+she takes you to be. You arranged that, just as you
+arranged the contract for the repairs of this house at
+the end of the lease. You are a champion cadger,
+Polly, whatever else you are.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly was not certain whether to be pleased or
+offended by this tribute. “I think you have a great
+deal to thank me for,” she said complacently; “I am
+glad you appreciate it, though I object to the word
+<i>cadger</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>“What shall I say?” Bill asked, “If you don’t
+cadge things what do you do? Acquire them?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>“Well, yes, perhaps I do,” Polly admitted; “yes,
+I suppose I have the acquisitive faculty.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should say you have.”</p>
+
+<p>“So have you,”—Polly did not like Bill’s tone.
+“I am sure you have it; people give you things and
+you don’t refuse them.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill laughed and went over to the fireplace, the
+something in her pocket clinking audibly as she
+moved.</p>
+
+<p>“What is that?” asked the inquisitive Polly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I had forgotten.” Bill put her hand into
+her pocket. “It is something I brought to show
+you,” she said, and drew out first a piece of crumpled
+paper in which the articles had been wrapped and
+then two large old-fashioned shoe-buckles.</p>
+
+<p>“What are they?” Polly made a pounce on one.</p>
+
+<p>“Where did you get them?” Bella took the
+other from the table where Bill had put them.
+“What are they?”</p>
+
+<p>They gleamed in the fading light as the cousins
+held them, gleamed and shimmered with wonderful
+changing splendour, flashing when the firelight
+touched them and found a dozen answering tongues
+of flame.</p>
+
+<p>“Paste,” Polly said, “old paste; they must be
+worth a lot of money.”</p>
+
+<p>“Diamonds,” Bill corrected.</p>
+
+<p>“Diamonds? Nonsense! They might be worth
+as much as a hundred pounds apiece if they were!”</p>
+
+<p>“They are diamonds,” Bill persisted, “though they
+can’t be worth that. They are mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yours?” Polly almost screamed. “Diamonds—and
+yours? Talk about the acquisitive faculty!”</p>
+
+<p>Bill flushed. “I did not acquire them,” she said
+rather illogically; “at least, I hated to have them,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>and I have promised to give them to somebody as a
+wedding-present, not yet, some day, when there is a
+wedding. I will give them back,—I don’t care what
+you say,—you need not think about selling them,—they
+are not going to be sold.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t talk nonsense to me,” was Polly’s answer.
+“If they are diamonds they shall be sold, that is, if
+you have any right to them, which I am sure you
+have not. They must be paste!”</p>
+
+<p>Bill took the buckle out of her hand, Bella placing
+the fellow on the table beside it: “Are they really
+diamonds?” she asked. “How did you come by
+them, and whose were they?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill stood looking at them a moment as they
+flashed in the firelight. “They were Peter Harborough’s
+shoe-buckles,” she said.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIII.<br>
+<small>PETER HARBOROUGH’S SHOE-BUCKLES.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Polly</span> had no doubt done wisely in sending Bill to
+Ashelton while she herself was settling affairs at
+Wrugglesby. Not only was she thus freed from
+Bill’s interference, but also Bill had an opportunity
+for putting into practice her good resolutions regarding
+Gilchrist Harborough. Polly was sure she would
+make use of the opportunity, for Bill could always be
+relied on to keep her word. In the main she fulfilled
+Polly’s expectations; she certainly tried to do so.
+Theresa found her curiously subdued on her return
+to Ashelton, and found also that she herself was
+watched and sometimes imitated with an embarrassing
+closeness. Bill was trying to be a lady.</p>
+
+<p>She obeyed to the letter Polly’s instructions concerning
+Gilchrist, always putting on her best dress
+for his coming, never calling him Theo now, never
+baffling him by tantalising moods and goblin mockery
+and playful defiance. Indeed so circumspect was her
+behaviour that Gilchrist not unnaturally concluded
+that the lecture he had given her after the affair
+of the plums had taken effect. Of course he was
+humanly gratified to find that his words had not been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>wasted, but it is to be feared that he found Bill in her
+new character of lady, as copied from Theresa, something
+of a disappointment; she did not always compare
+favourably with her model.</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not know how her efforts impressed
+Gilchrist, neither did she greatly care, for his opinion
+was not her highest standard. But she was herself
+by no means satisfied, and one day, soon after her
+return to Ashelton, she took her difficulties to her
+friend the rector. He, by right of his office and
+reason of his experience, had been consulted on many
+points in his time, some rather peculiar ones since his
+acquaintance with Bill; but even she had never faced
+him with anything quite so unexpected as on the day
+when she brought him the problem of her own behaviour.
+She was examining the high shelves of his
+book-case at the time, standing on the back of an
+arm-chair to do so, having first weighted the seat
+with encyclopaedias.</p>
+
+<p>“<span class="smcap">The Diary of a Lady</span>,” she read the title of
+one of the books, then stood a moment looking at it
+thoughtfully. “Monseigneur,” she said, “you know
+I told you I was trying to behave better? Well, I
+am not getting on a bit.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane was busy with his parish accounts; as a
+rule the girl’s presence did not disturb him at all, but
+now he looked up, arrested by her tone.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it?” he asked, putting down his pen.
+“What have you been doing?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing; I haven’t done anything wrong and I
+do all the right things I can find to do. Theresa
+thinks I am much improved, but I’m not really.” As
+she reached up to replace the book, the chair tilted a
+little. “Would you mind kneeling on the seat?” she
+said. “The chair tips when I reach up. Thank you.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>She jumped to the ground and drawing a chair
+to the writing-table faced the rector. “What is your
+notion of a lady?” she asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane considered a moment, before hazarding
+an opinion, knowing that his answer would be taken
+literally and perhaps translated into action. “One,”
+he said at length, “who considers others, who never
+by word or deed causes unnecessary pain, who listens
+sympathetically, talks pleasantly, never says a great
+deal even when she feels much or knows more. One
+who does her mental and moral washing in private,
+but is not afraid to do her duty in public; who
+respects the secrets of others, the honour of her
+family, and her own self more than all. One who
+speaks with tact, acts with discretion, and places God
+before fashion without needlessly advertising the fact
+to the annoyance of the rest of the world.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” said Bill, and a long silence followed;
+perhaps she was learning the definition for her own
+benefit. At last she spoke again. “You think I
+could be a lady if I learned to control myself and,—and
+did not run away when I wanted to, and all those
+sorts of things?”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane did think so; possibly he did not regard
+her as so hopeless a case as did Polly. Then there
+was another silence during which there came the
+sound of wheels on the drive at the other side of the
+house. Neither noticed it, and Bill, thinking of
+Polly’s lectures on her disreputable appearance, asked
+a second question. “I suppose a lady always wants
+to look right? It matters very much how she looks,
+how she is dressed?”</p>
+
+<p>“It matters very much for some,” the rector
+answered; “but others—” he was only a man after
+all, and though old not altogether wise—“with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>others,” he said, “you are so busy wondering what
+colour their eyes are that you never notice their
+gowns; so much perplexed as to what they are,
+Princess Puck, that you never know what they
+wear—”</p>
+
+<p>He broke off smiling as the housekeeper opened
+the door: “A gentleman to see Miss Alardy,” she
+announced.</p>
+
+<p>“Me?” Bill exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, miss; he has been to Haylands, he says,
+and they told him you were here; he’s waiting in the
+hall now,—young Mr. Harborough.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Harborough?” Bill repeated rising. “Whatever
+can he want?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not Mr. Harborough from Crows’ Farm,” the
+housekeeper explained; “young Mr. Harborough
+from Wood Hall.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!—I’ll come and speak to him.”</p>
+
+<p>Ladies controlled themselves; they said nothing
+even when they felt much; they respected themselves,
+the honour of their family, the secrets of their
+friends. Bill was going to be a lady, and she would
+not even allow herself to feel surprised.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane took up his pen again. Old Mr. Harborough
+was worse no doubt; he had been ill all the
+week, and that it was a mere question of days everyone
+knew. Probably it was a question of hours now,
+and for that reason they had summoned the heir.
+And for what reason had the heir come for Bill? If
+old Mr. Harborough had a fancy for seeing her again
+before he died Mr. Dane was not the man to gainsay
+him. Bill knew that, the instant he came into the
+hall where she stood with Kit Harborough.</p>
+
+<p>“Go, by all means,” was his advice, “go at once;
+I will explain to Mrs. Morton.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>So Bill fetched her hat from the study where it lay
+on the encyclopaedias, and without another word
+drove away with Kit to Wood Hall. And Mr. Dane
+had time to finish his accounts and then explain
+matters to Theresa before lunch.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa was very much surprised to hear of Bill’s
+going, but since the rector approved she was quite
+willing to do the same. As the afternoon wore on
+and Bill did not return, she began to wonder a little
+what the girl was doing; and when in the evening
+Gilchrist called and Bill was still absent, she found
+the situation rather awkward. Gilchrist showed such
+an unreasonable displeasure at her absence that
+Theresa wished Mr. Dane could have explained to
+the impatient lover the propriety and justice of Bill’s
+going. To tell the truth, Gilchrist was both displeased
+and anxious, for he did not feel at all sure
+what Bill might be saying with regard to the Wood
+Hall estate. She had told him how she had met and
+warned Kit Harborough at Bymouth; and though
+it is true that she had listened with commendable
+humility to his natural explosion of anger, and at
+the end had assured him (with the shadow of contempt
+in her voice) that the heir had declined to take
+advantage of the warning, what guarantee was there
+that she might not, for some reason of her own,
+think fit to warn the old man in time to create unnecessary
+complications? Gilchrist was very uneasy
+indeed, not at all sure what Bill would do.</p>
+
+<p>But Kit had no doubts at all. He was perfectly
+sure she would say nothing; and, as certain of her as
+he was of himself, he never once during the drive to
+Gurnett reopened the question of the claim. He
+never even mentioned it when he helped her to
+alight at the great door, never spoke of it or referred
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>to it as he led her across the echoing hall to the wide
+stairs and the rooms above.</p>
+
+<p>Old Harborough was dying, but dying elegantly,
+almost as if with a subtle and unconscious recollection
+of what was due to the traditions of his family.
+He was powerless in body but terribly alert in mind,
+keenly conscious of the situation and accepting the
+inevitable with the cynicism he had shown to so many
+of the happenings of his life, neither curious nor
+afraid, politely indifferent, almost politely sceptical.
+Bill, the many-sided, the sympathetic, felt something
+like a touch of admiration for this survival of a passing
+type. He, on his part, feeble as he was, still
+received her with something of his former mocking
+courtesy, thanked her for troubling to come to him,
+apologised for the manner of her reception, and
+prayed her to be seated.</p>
+
+<p>There was a nurse present when Bill entered the
+room, a tall, quiet woman who looked curiously at
+the girl. The man who had met Mr. Harborough
+with the chair that April day in the woods was also
+present; but he did not look curiously at Bill, either
+because he thought it bad manners, or else because he
+understood her claim to his master’s interest. Both
+of them, however, withdrew to a more distant part of
+the large room. Kit remained standing near the bed,
+but Mr. Harborough took no notice of him, only
+once indirectly acknowledging his presence and then
+in no pleasant manner; it was when he himself
+apologised to Bill for not handing her to a chair.</p>
+
+<p>“You must take the will for the deed,” he said,
+“since I cannot do it; it is clear such trifling attentions
+will not survive the old generation.”</p>
+
+<p>He did not look at Kit, nevertheless the lad
+coloured hotly. Bill sat down, wondering a little
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>how the old manners would suit the new generation;
+but she did not say so and in a minute she dropped
+the thought out of her mind, turning her entire
+attention on Mr. Harborough. She did not find it
+difficult to talk to him, though Kit was a listener,
+even when the old man referred to her last visit
+and the offer then made she felt little embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you not sorry you did not take it?” he
+asked her. “I’d have left you Wood Hall for as
+long as you remained a Harborough. Pity it was
+not done! It might have saved the old place; an
+heiress isn’t always the only thing or the best thing
+to mend a broken family.” He seemed almost to be
+speaking to himself, but he addressed her directly
+when he asked abruptly: “Are you not sorry you
+did not take it? By this time to-morrow it would
+all have been yours.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want it,” she answered him vehemently.
+“I don’t want it; I would hate to have it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Hate to have it? Why, I thought you liked
+it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do, so much that I would hate to have it.”</p>
+
+<p>A priest had come quietly into the room, but,
+seeing Mr. Harborough engaged in conversation, he
+went to a distant window and opened a book he
+carried. Bill recognised him at once for the same
+man who had read the mass at Ashelton Church.
+Mr. Harborough followed her eyes but, not being
+aware that she recognised him, thought she was only
+wondering as to the reason of his presence.</p>
+
+<p>“The last relic of the Catholic faith here,” he
+explained in his weak harsh voice. “I have to be
+dressed for the next world, the last of us who ever
+will be. Kit is not a Catholic; he is a Purist or a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>Deist or something sincere and modern. He troubles
+about his soul and his Creator like any other mental
+dyspeptic, and believes something on his own account.
+When I was young it was thought ill-bred to interfere
+with the concerns of the Almighty, and the minding
+of souls was left to those who were paid to do it.
+We were not tied down by a Sunday-school morality
+in those days, and we had the courage of our
+convictions.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill nodded. “I know,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know?” he asked sharply.</p>
+
+<p>“By you,” she answered.</p>
+
+<p>“By me? What have I said to you? What do
+you know?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t exactly explain,” she said doubtfully;
+“only the world was different then. One can’t
+measure you by the people of to-day, nor the people
+of to-day by you.”</p>
+
+<p>He fixed her with eyes which were still keen.
+“How do you know that?” he persisted.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know; I suppose I feel it.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are a lenient judge,” he said almost softly,
+“about the most lenient judge I have ever had,
+you odd child. What an odd child! I did not
+know how odd the day I found you in the wood,
+the day you found God in the wood; you did find
+Him, did you not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she answered simply. “He seemed very
+close; but then I think the devil was too.”</p>
+
+<p>“God and the devil at your right elbow and your
+left. A survival of Puritan days,—to find God in
+the woods now!”</p>
+
+<p>The tone was not wholly mocking; there was a
+touch of wistfulness in it, and Bill hearing it
+answered it from the depth of her own convictions.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>“Everywhere it is beautiful one feels God,” she said
+softly, “in forest and sea and sky.” She raised her
+eyes and met Kit’s. He may have been guilty of a
+Sunday-school morality; he certainly was guilty of a
+belief, and he betrayed its existence then to one who
+shared it.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Harborough did not know it; he was
+not thinking of Kit at all as he lay looking curiously
+at the girl. His lips moved once: “Shall see God,”
+he said as if to himself, then raising his voice slightly
+he asked: “Who is it that shall see God, Father
+Clement?”</p>
+
+<p>The priest turned. “‘Blessed are the pure in
+heart for they shall see God,’” he answered drawing
+nearer.</p>
+
+<p>“The pure in heart,” Mr. Harborough repeated,
+“that is it; I had forgotten. Well, little witch, you
+have seen something that I, for all my years and
+experience, have not; something that I—I suppose
+because of those years and experience—cannot see.
+But now I must ask you to go; there is a heavenly
+toilet to be made. Go down and get some lunch,
+but come back by-and-bye. Kit must take you;
+I apologise for him beforehand.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill rose. “Kit does not need anyone’s apology,”
+she said hotly; then she followed the young man
+out of the room feeling ashamed. Kit that day was
+like the Kit of Bymouth, the Kit she had met in
+the lane; there did not seem such a gulf between
+them as when they parted, nor yet such terrible
+courtesy. They were boy and girl in the great
+house together, boy and girl watching together, by
+an odd chain of circumstances, for the coming of
+the great shadow. They went to the solemn old
+dining-room and lunched in state as Bill had once
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>lunched with Mr. Harborough. During the meal
+Kit did not mention to his guest the subject which
+had never really been absent from his mind since she
+herself first put it there that morning on the sands at
+Bymouth. A little while back he had had some talk
+with a solicitor of his acquaintance, and without
+betraying a personal interest in the test-case he
+described, had learned the very serious position of
+the man placed as he was. But he did not speak
+of it to Bill then, although, in spite of the still
+intangible nature of it all, he felt the shadow of this
+man from the new country spread over the stately
+old house, filling its most secret corners, taking
+possession of its most sacred spots. And Bill,
+though he did not speak of it, knew the thought
+that was in her companion’s mind, and felt with him
+this haunting presence.</p>
+
+<p>After lunch the doctor and nurse agreed in
+forbidding either Kit or his guest to see the patient
+before four o’clock, saying that they should be
+summoned then unless some unexpected change
+made their presence necessary earlier. There were
+nearly two hours before them, two hours for Kit
+to play host in the house which might soon pass
+to another. With an effort he tried to banish the
+thought from his mind as he asked Bill to come
+to the library.</p>
+
+<p>“This is the room I like best,” he said when they
+stood in the great low room where some past Harborough
+had gathered a store of books. Mercifully
+the later comers, not thinking them of sufficient
+value to sell, had left them intact, even, indeed,
+adding a volume now and then, each man according
+to his taste, for there was no lack of intellect even
+among the wildest of them. The September sunlight
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>slanted through the broad low windows where
+weedy sunflowers and uncut trails of late-blooming
+roses looked in on a big room, irregular in shape, full
+of angles, with bookshelves jutting out in unexpected
+places, and a silence in it which was a luxury of the
+brain. The light was a warm brown gloom cast back
+from book-lined shelves; the smell was the wonderful,
+indescribable smell of an old library, Russia
+leather, and oak shelves, and book-dust blended into
+one, a perfume never to be forgotten. For, as the
+rose on his mistress’s bosom to a lover, or the
+breath of the clover which filled the air when he
+pledged his vows, so is the smell of such a library to
+the man of books, and above all, to the man who has
+been reared to it, the man who has learned by
+common use and childish association to love the
+outside of the volumes before ever he could read them
+within.</p>
+
+<p>Bill felt her breast heave suddenly, and a great
+lump came in her throat. She had never been in
+such a library before, never to her knowledge smelt
+its sweet familiar smell, yet her breast heaved and
+she could not speak. It was absurd, of course;
+it was nothing to her, the books were not her
+friends, and as an alien she could claim no kinship
+with them; yet she felt for them, felt so that she
+could not speak. As for Kit, he had followed her
+into the room and stretched out a hand to set
+straight a book on a lower shelf, but he did not
+touch it; his hand dropped and he turned abruptly
+to a window, and for a long minute both stood
+silent, not regarding one another. Then Bill
+mastered herself with an effort.</p>
+
+<p>“What is this?” she asked, taking a book at
+random.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>It was Sir Thomas Brown’s <span class="smcap">Vulgar Errors</span>, an
+old folio edition with wonderful woodcuts. Kit
+looked at it for a moment, though he knew it
+well enough, and then recovering himself he told
+her. They took the book to the broad window-sill
+and together turned its pages, looking at the curious
+pictures. After that he took down another book
+and then another; Bill was sitting on the window-sill
+now, the books piled beside her, while Kit drew
+a great wooden chair in front. In this way he
+showed her a Chaucer massively bound and clamped
+with brass, a Pope of 1717, a <span class="smcap">Pilgrim’s Progress</span>
+grotesquely illustrated,—the books he loved, wonderful
+old German prints, poets of a later date, and
+stout old sermon-writers with whose solid works he
+had built houses in childish days.</p>
+
+<p>So the afternoon passed with strange pleasure to
+both, though neither quite forgot the shadow that
+hung over the house, nor the even deeper shadow not
+only of death, that brooded over the library and in
+some unexplained way touched every book they
+looked at and every passage they read. Once Kit
+took down a Milton, old and shabby and unopened,
+except by himself, for many years, and began to
+read a passage from <span class="smcap">Il Penseroso</span>.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="first">“Oft on a plat of rising ground</div>
+<div class="verse">I hear the far-off curfew sound,</div>
+<div class="verse">Over some well watered shore,</div>
+<div class="verse">Swinging slow—”</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He stopped abruptly; each heard the curfew as on
+that night, each smelt the scent of the wet grass in
+the lane. There was a pause when neither looked at
+the other; then he went on hurriedly, a little lower
+down the page:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="first">“Some still removèd place will fit,</div>
+<div class="verse">Where glowing embers through the room</div>
+<div class="verse">Teach light to counterfeit a gloom—”</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Kit shut the book sharply and gave it up. All
+round him lay the heaped up volumes as they used
+to lie on the winter afternoons when he had built
+towers with the works of the divines in that same
+glowing gloom. He glanced at the wide fireplace;
+Bill had glanced at it before him, because she too had
+thought of it, though she had never seen it when the
+fire burned low at twilight. So they each looked,
+and then each looked at the other and neither, for all
+their resolutions, hid the thought nor pretended to
+hide it. Bill’s throat began to swell again. A
+volume of Hooker, balanced on the window-sill, fell
+with a thud to the floor. Kit took a long time in
+picking it up, and when at last he put it in a place of
+safety with Marcus Aurelius on the top, he said:
+“He would love the books.”</p>
+
+<p>It was perfectly unnecessary to explain who <i>he</i> was;
+Bill knew and thought of Gilchrist’s tastes and bookshelf
+before she answered: “Yes, I think he would.”
+She picked up the <span class="smcap">Meditations</span>. “He has got
+this,” she said; “his is in English, though, bound in
+green cloth, and cost one and sixpence. I believe he
+would like his own edition better; it is cheaper and
+clearer.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit silently took the imperial philosopher from the
+girl’s hand, as she got down from the window-seat
+and helped him to put the books back in their places.
+Neither spoke of Gilchrist again; and a little later
+someone came to fetch them to Mr. Harborough.</p>
+
+<p>They went up-stairs together and quietly into the
+old man’s room. Bill noticed a difference directly
+she entered; she needed no one to tell her that she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>had been called to say good-bye to the eccentric old
+man she had so little known.</p>
+
+<p>“Come here,” he said hoarsely when he saw her
+hesitate near the door.</p>
+
+<p>She came and stood close to him, Kit standing on
+the other side of the bed.</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s a keepsake for you,” he whispered, trying
+to raise his nerveless hand. “I give it you in the
+presence of witnesses,” he glanced at the nurse as he
+spoke, “so there will be no dispute afterwards. It
+is not an heirloom, and I can do with it as I like.
+Put your hand on mine, take it, here.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill put her hand in his as requested and the cold
+powerless fingers beneath her warm touch fumbled
+feebly before the two glittering buckles fell into her
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>“There,” he said triumphantly, “they are for you;
+that is, if you will do me the favour of accepting
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>“For me?” she said gazing half bewildered, half
+fascinated by the brilliancy of the stones.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, for you,” Mr. Harborough told her.
+“They are yours now, the gift is witnessed,” he
+went on, for she hardly seemed to realise the fact.
+Then she stooped and kissed the hand that gave
+them.</p>
+
+<p>“They were Peter Harborough’s shoe-buckles,”
+he whispered, “about the only thing he did not lose
+at cards; he lost everything else even including—”
+there was a little cough for breath—“including his
+life. My father left them to me; they are my own;
+I can do with them as I like, and I like to give them
+to you. They are all the diamonds we have now
+and,” addressing Kit with a sudden access of spite,
+“no wife of yours can have them now.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>Bill dropped the buckles as if they had burnt her;
+they fell with a clink on the counterpane and lay
+there, a sparkle of light. “I can’t take them,” she
+said. “I won’t have them; you—you don’t understand.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit leaned across and, picking them up, gently gave
+the buckles back to her. He did not speak, but there
+was something in his manner she could not resist.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s right,” the old man muttered as if he
+had not fully understood. “They are yours,
+little witch; he can’t take them; I have given them
+to you.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill grasped them in silence, pressing the sharp
+stones into her flesh.</p>
+
+<p>“Now good-bye,” Harborough said more clearly,
+“good-bye, or shall we say <i>au revoir</i>?” His breath
+failed him for a moment but he recovered himself
+and went on cynically, “I have to go through with
+this business, and being new to it I may bungle. In
+case I do not die decently I would rather not disgrace
+myself in the presence of a lady.”</p>
+
+<p>So Bill said good-bye and went out. Kit opened
+the door for her, and shutting it after her, left her
+standing alone outside. So she stood a moment,
+like one in a dream, the diamonds still pressed into
+her flesh; then she turned and went with slow steps
+down the stairs, with quickening steps across the hall
+to the open door, and so out into the garden where
+the afternoon shadows were long and the tender
+warmth of September lay over everything. She
+followed the terraced path awhile, and then, her steps
+still quickening, crossed the lawn where the grass
+was emerald green and the elm leaves lay scattered
+here and there. She was almost running now, quite
+running when she came to the shrubbery, running at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>full speed, running blindly, wildly, faster and faster
+until she reached the wood and flung herself down in
+the waist-deep bracken and sobbed as if her heart
+would break.</p>
+
+<p>It was much later when Kit found her, knowing
+perhaps where to look for her. She had told him of
+her first ramble in the wood; at any rate when all
+was over, he found her under the yellowing beeches
+half hidden among the ferns. She started when she
+heard his step beside her, and at first was minded to
+pretend she had not been crying and practise a
+belated self-control. But she did not, chiefly because
+he did not pretend; he made no pretence of anything,
+nor yet behaved in the manner expected of him and
+worthy of his breeding. He sat down beside her
+without speaking, whereupon she obstinately buried
+her face in the bracken and would not so much as
+look up though the stiff fern-stalks pricked her neck.
+She moved her head uneasily and he gently broke a
+stalk away; in doing so his hand came in contact
+with her hair, a little curl of which, having become
+loosened, had contrived to get wet with tears. The
+contact with it, and the recognition that it was wet
+with tears, were things Kit did not soon forget; but
+he drew his hand away and only said stupidly:
+“Don’t cry, please don’t cry; I didn’t know you
+cared about him like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“He was good to me”—Bill’s voice was muffled
+by the ferns—“but it isn’t exactly that.”</p>
+
+<p>He had not been good to Kit, yet Kit felt vaguely
+grieved and shocked by his death; he looked in
+some perplexity at the girl beside him. “What is
+it then?” he asked, but she did not answer, so he
+fell back on his first remark and entreated her not to
+cry any more.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>“I shall,” she answered without looking up. “I
+have not cried half enough yet,—there are so many
+things.—I haven’t nearly done.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit glanced rather hopelessly at the half-buried
+figure. “Are you going to cry for them in order?”
+he asked attempting to smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless Bill, with the sunny lights coming
+back to her eyes, sat up, rustling the dead leaves as
+she did so. “I wonder if the wood will be cut
+down,” she said wistfully, as she glanced up at the
+interwoven branches above her.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Kit told her, “for neither you nor I would
+allow it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; if it is not mine it will be yours, or as good
+as yours.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mine?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; if it is Theo’s—you said you were going to
+marry him—it will be yours too, and I am glad.”</p>
+
+<p>“Glad! I am not.”</p>
+
+<p>Her voice was passionate, almost vindictive, and
+Kit went on quickly: “I am glad, and you ought to
+be too. You said once that, were you in my place,
+you would do anything to get Wood Hall; surely
+you ought not to mind if you have it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not in your place,” Bill said, “and I don’t
+want it a bit. Do anything to get it! A woman
+can’t do anything but be married. I don’t want
+Theo to have it, and I don’t want to come here.”</p>
+
+<p>She buried her face in the ferns again, but now she
+did not cry. Kit broke the stiff fern-stalk into little
+pieces, and as he threw them away caught sight of
+the buckles shining among the ferns near the girl’s
+arm. Bill heard them clink as he picked them up,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>and sat up again, facing him now with a calm determination.
+“I am not going to have them,” she said
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“You must; you can’t help yourself. They were
+given to you, and you must have them,” and he
+dropped them into her lap.</p>
+
+<p>“I am not going to have them,” she repeated;
+“had he known, he would not have given them
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, because very probably they would have
+come to you in any case; I don’t know how such
+things go, but it is likely they would have come to
+you. At all events they are yours beyond dispute
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mine, not my husband’s?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly, yours absolutely.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mine to do with as I like?” The sense of
+ownership seemed to please the girl. Kit wondered
+why a little, but he did not ask and her next words
+explained. “Then I can give them to whom I
+please? I shall give them to your wife on her
+wedding-day.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill put the rejected buckles in her pocket, but
+Kit said quietly: “That you will never do, for I
+shall never marry.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIV.<br>
+<small>THE COURTSHIP OF HARBOROUGH OF BYBRIDGE.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Polly</span> said it was quite unnecessary for Bill to go to
+old Mr. Harborough’s funeral, though the wish to
+do so showed a nice feeling on her part; and since
+she did wish it (and had a black dress) there really
+was no reason why she should not go, more especially
+as she was leaving for London the next day and
+would thus escape Miss Minchin’s cross-questioning.
+But Gilchrist had other opinions; he strongly disapproved
+of Bill’s going, seeing no reason for it and
+a great many against it. He himself had never
+claimed any connection with the Harboroughs during
+the old man’s life and did not intend to do so at his
+death, except through the medium of the law. He
+said he should consider it an impertinence on his
+own part to go to the funeral. Bill agreed with him
+as to the propriety of his staying away, but persisted
+in going herself. Gilchrist became really angry, and
+told her it was absurd to go simply because Mr.
+Harborough had given her the diamond shoe-buckles;
+people who did not know the circumstances
+might put another construction on her actions. Bill
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>said she did not mind that, and also that the shoe-buckles
+were only part of her reason for going.</p>
+
+<p>“What other reason is there?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to speak—” she began and then broke
+off. “Oh, I can’t tell you,” she said impatiently.
+“I don’t mind your knowing if only I had not the
+bother of explaining; as it is, I really can’t go into
+it. You say so much about things, ask so many
+questions, see so many motives, and foresee so many
+consequences, that I really shall be obliged to give
+up telling you. I don’t mind your knowing, and
+up till now I have told you things; but I am
+afraid I shall have to begin taking you in to save
+trouble.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know what you are saying?” was the
+beginning of Gilchrist’s not unnaturally severe
+answer: the end was less pacific. However, there
+was no quarrel between them, but he was exceedingly
+angry with her sayings then, and even more so with
+her doings later on, for she went to the funeral in
+spite of him. It was not easy to quarrel with Bill,
+as she did not retaliate and did not mind; but also,
+as Polly knew, she could not be moved, quietly
+taking her own course unless you could convince her
+it was wrong; “and Gilchrist can’t convince her,”
+Polly said after the affair of the funeral. She herself
+advised Bill not to go when she found how strong
+was Gilchrist’s opposition; but it did not make the
+slightest difference. Bill had promised Kit she would
+go, and she went.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon after five on the afternoon when old
+Mr. Harborough died that Kit found the girl in the
+wood; yet it was nearly nine when she reached
+Haylands. The intervening time was not entirely
+occupied in the drive home, nor yet in the conversation
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>concerning the reason for Bill’s tears. Most of
+that conversation was carried on while she was half
+buried in the ferns; but there was another and a
+longer one when she faced the facts of the case in
+the old library. Indeed, after a while her position
+and Kit’s were to a certain extent reversed; it was
+she who comforted and planned, arraying the future
+in its best colours, he who at first declined to see
+hope anywhere, even though he faced that future
+with much apparent indifference.</p>
+
+<p>Truly, as Bill was forced to admit, the future did
+not look promising. Both from what she had learned
+from Gilchrist—and she had made many inquiries
+of late—and from what Kit had heard from the
+solicitor and confided to her now, she could not help
+seeing that the case looked bad against him. Even
+if a will existed—and Kit seemed to think that by
+no means likely—it would do little more than complicate
+the case without giving him a title to the
+estates, unless he could make good his uncle’s title
+first. He told her all he knew about it, and she
+returned the compliment; but they cannot be said
+to have advanced matters very much or come to any
+resolution. Of course, Kit was going to win the
+lawsuit,—that was a foregone conclusion—but Bill,
+whose universe was always constructed with a convenient
+back door for use when foregone conclusions
+failed, strongly recommended him to consider how
+he would stand if the impossible were to happen.
+And it must be admitted that, if the catastrophe
+really took place, he would not stand very well, for
+with Wood Hall and all it entailed gone there was
+not a great deal left; briefly, a hundred a year
+inherited from his mother, a liberal education and
+studious tastes which together had enabled him to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>take a good classical degree at Oxford in the previous
+summer, and had further allowed him to study
+modern languages and literature with rather more
+than usual thoroughness. These, besides youth and
+health, were the only passably serviceable possessions
+he could claim. There was a taste for writing poetry
+and an aptitude for translating Greek verse, but
+neither was any use; there were several other tastes
+which were no use, and yet others which were
+positively detrimental.</p>
+
+<p>“I am afraid you would find it awfully hard,” Bill
+said once. She felt a compassion which was almost
+motherly for him in his ignorance of the shifts and
+turns of the genteel poverty in which she had been
+reared.</p>
+
+<p>“No harder than other people,” he answered
+rather curtly.</p>
+
+<p>Bill knew better. A hundred a year would have
+been wealth to her and Polly; sixty between Bella
+and Theresa seemed almost a fortune; however, she
+did not say so, but talked of small privations instead.</p>
+
+<p>“You would not be able to have a clean shirt
+every day,” she said, and Kit winced at the mention
+of such sordid trifles. “Washing costs such a lot,”
+the girl went on; “besides it wears things out. You
+would not be able to have an evening paper if you
+had a morning one, and you certainly would not be
+able to have many new books; you would have to
+have your boots mended over and over again, and
+think what tips you would give the porters. Saving
+in big things is not so hard; it is the little things you
+would hate, filing the edges,—you have to file the
+edges when you are making money or saving it either—it
+would set your teeth on edge horribly, I’m afraid.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not more than it does yours,” Kit retorted.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>But Bill did not agree with him. “It does not
+hurt me,” she said; “I’m used to it and my people
+have been used to it; we have been poor long
+enough not to mind about these things. Besides,
+I love work; I don’t care much what it is; I like to
+do things, and I don’t care what I do. I am afraid,
+too, I am not so very refined; things that would
+hurt you don’t hurt me; I don’t believe I have
+got very ladylike tastes.”</p>
+
+<p>But Kit turned on her here: in his opinion she
+was the most perfect lady living, not even she herself
+should question it in his hearing; and for a time the
+conversation became personal, but eventually it returned
+to the original subject. Bill learned a good
+deal of Kit’s history that day,—of his mother, dead
+rather more than a year, but beloved and tenderly
+revered, as indeed she deserved to be seeing that he
+owed to her all the better part of himself,—of the
+quiet life at Bybridge, the red Queen Anne house,
+with the walled garden, the pleasant homecomings
+there to the widowed mother,—the student’s days at
+Oxford, the travels in continental cities, tales of
+times and sights which fired Bill’s ready imagination
+and set her gipsy blood aflame to be free to wander
+and to see and learn. In their interest in these tales
+both listener and narrator almost forgot the graver
+matters before them. But there were other things,
+memories of still earlier days which brought them
+back, the recollection of boyish days spent at Wood
+Hall, holidays when the parents were abroad and
+silently and unconsciously there grew in the young
+mind that love of the old place which is as an entail
+binding one generation to the next.</p>
+
+<p>Bill listened greedily, forgetting all about home
+and Gilchrist who was waiting for her there. At
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>last, however, she did remember and somewhat
+hastily departed, feeling that in this talk of the past
+they had rather neglected considerations of the
+future. Before she went she promised she would
+come to the funeral, partly to remedy the omission
+of that evening and partly to do honour to the
+old man who would not have many real mourners.</p>
+
+<p>In one respect, however, Bill made something of
+a mistake, for she had that day without knowing
+it helped Kit Harborough for the future. Unconsciously
+she had preached to him the gospel
+which was so completely incorporated into her own
+nature that she did not even know she believed
+it,—the gospel of work;—the delight and satisfaction
+in work for its own sake irrespective of kind or
+place, just doing for the sake of doing, and doing
+now, not waiting the time and opportunity for a
+great work, but setting to at once on the nearest
+thing that offered. Not lamenting because the
+beautiful edifice of faith or hope has tottered and
+fallen, but taking, instead, stones from the ruin
+to build a shelter while the plans for some greater
+work are maturing.</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not think these things; she did not even
+know she believed them; only she unconsciously
+translated them into action, and as unconsciously,
+by her words and by her attitude of mind, preached
+them to Kit.</p>
+
+<p>She went to the funeral and stood respectfully on
+the outskirts of the group which gathered in the
+little churchyard in Wood Hall park. She did not
+attach herself to the party, feeling herself an alien,
+but Kit, who as recognised heir was chief mourner,
+saw her though he could not come to her till a good
+deal later in the afternoon. She had said she would
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>wait for him among the beeches, and she did wait,
+for a time almost forgetting him in the exquisite
+perfection of the silent October wood. When at
+last he came they finished the conversation begun the
+other day, and they did not hurry over it unduly.
+Bill knew that Gilchrist and the cousins would
+be angry with her late return, but so angry that
+half an hour one way or the other would make
+no difference.</p>
+
+<p>Before the interrupted conversation was resumed
+Kit told her a piece of news which at first seemed of
+great importance to her, though afterwards she was
+obliged to agree with him in not attaching too much
+value to it. It appeared that old Mr. Harborough
+had made a will after all, and by the terms of it Kit
+would, were it not for the Australian, succeed to the
+property exactly as he used to anticipate.</p>
+
+<p>Bill clasped her hands with excitement. “Oh,
+I am so glad,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“So am I, although I don’t think it will make
+much difference to the case.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t?”</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head but repeated that he was glad,
+and there was a few moments’ silence before Bill said
+softly: “I am so glad you did not speak about
+the will; it has happened without your speaking;
+you were right and I was wrong.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit did not agree with her there, thinking they
+had been of one mind on the subject of the will:
+but they did not discuss the point at length, turning
+instead to the consideration of Kit’s future, should
+the case be decided against him.</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless if this really occurred his friends and
+relations would find or do something for him but
+he and Bill planned, curiously though practically,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>without considering the relations at all. Bill’s plans
+seldom depended on outside help, and usually, however
+absurd, had the merit of being such that they
+could start working at once. She was rather anxious
+that Kit should start at once, for, as she said, if
+he could earn anything the money would be no
+disadvantage should the case go in his favour, and a
+decided advantage should it go against him. The
+only difficulty was, to find anything he could do
+in his present circumstances and with his modest
+talents.</p>
+
+<p>“You could teach,” Bill said doubtfully, having
+but a poor opinion of that refuge of the destitute;
+“with your degree you could get a mastership, but
+then I suppose your people would not like it;
+besides it would be rather awkward for other reasons.
+You might get some translating to do, as you know
+languages pretty well. I believe it is awfully hard to
+get, and not well paid; still it would be better than
+nothing, and if it is really so difficult to get, it would
+be just as well to see after it before the need comes;
+you would be ready then if it did come. You said
+it might take as long as two years to settle about
+Wood Hall? In two years you ought to be able to
+get a little translating, I should think.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit thought so too, and they talked over ways
+and means, he telling her sundry youthful dreams,
+she listening with admiring sympathy not untouched
+with practical common-sense. Eventually he did make
+a start as she suggested, and finding, as they feared,
+that such work as he could do was almost impossible
+to obtain, he turned, till it came, to one of the youthful
+dreams and translated some of the lesser known
+dialogues of Lucian into scholarly English. And
+though even his inexperience could not but tell him
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>that the work, when done, would not be a marketable
+commodity, the doing of it was a great satisfaction
+to him. Later, through the good offices of a college
+friend, he got a German book on botany to translate,
+and very uninteresting work he found it. Nevertheless,
+because it was the first work he had ever been
+paid for, he was pleased with it, and so pleased with
+the small sum he received for it that he invested the
+whole in a large crystal of rough amethyst, remembering
+how rapturous Bill had been in her admiration of
+the small crystal he had shown her in the collection
+of such specimens at Wood Hall. When, however,
+it came to the point of sending his crystal to the girl
+his courage failed; afraid of displeasing her he put
+the amethyst away, and no one knew of its existence
+for a long time.</p>
+
+<p>But all this happened later and had no part in the
+conversation on that October afternoon. It must be
+admitted, however, that if the conversation had
+entirely confined itself to plans for the future, Bill
+would have reached home earlier than she did. Some
+chance reference to the shoe-buckles and the value
+Polly put upon them brought Peter Harborough to
+her mind, and with him the recollection of the gravestone
+at Sandover and its record of his tragic death.
+Who Peter Harborough was, and how he died, were
+questions which perplexed her on the Sunday afternoon
+when she saw his grave; they returned to her
+with redoubled interest now that his buckles had
+come into her possession; and she sought information
+of Kit.</p>
+
+<p>He could tell her little more than that the man was
+the younger brother of old Mr. Harborough’s grandfather,
+and as such should have succeeded to the
+property if death had not intervened. “He was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span>great friends with the Corbys; it was at Corby Dean
+he was shot,” Kit concluded.</p>
+
+<p>“I know, but who shot him? Was it one of the
+Corbys, or did he do it himself?”</p>
+
+<p>“No one knows, but his brother apparently was
+satisfied that it was all right; he asked no questions,
+took the property, and said nothing.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill pondered the matter for a minute. “Which
+Corby was it?” she asked. “I mean with which
+one was he friendly and played cards? What
+relation was he to Roger Corby, the old Squire?”</p>
+
+<p>“It was Roger Corby himself,” Kit told her;
+“Roger, the last of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Roger Corby, himself,” Bill repeated. It was
+curious how she seemed to stumble upon fragments
+of this man’s history. She tried vainly to piece out
+his life, but she had so little to go on. At length she
+said: “But he was not the last of them; he had a
+granddaughter who outlived him.”</p>
+
+<p>“She can hardly be counted.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why? I suppose she could have taken the
+property if there was any, even if she did marry and
+change her name.”</p>
+
+<p>“There was nothing to take; in fact the old
+squire was so much in debt at his death that,
+although they sold all that was left of the property,
+it was little more than enough to pay everything off.
+Of course there was not much to sell then; there
+was little about here; Corby Dean, the house near
+Bybridge, was heavily mortgaged and nearly tumbling
+down, and most of the land near Sandover and Bybridge
+had already been disposed of.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean where Sandover now stands? It
+belongs to Mr. Briant now, doesn’t it? By the way,
+you must have been staying with him at Bymouth,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>for you were staying at the River House and that is
+where he lives. Polly found out; she always asks
+about the people who live in the big houses.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit said he had been staying with Mr. Briant and
+added: “It was the grandfather of that man who
+first had the land from Roger Corby. It was not
+worth much then, the present owner being the one
+who has developed it so tremendously; still even at
+that time it was a good lot for a man with the old
+squire’s income to give to his steward.”</p>
+
+<p>“His steward? Was Mr. Briant’s grandfather
+Roger Corby’s steward?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; steward or bailiff or something of the sort;
+at least he was at one time, but he left his service
+and went abroad, I think soon after Peter Harborough
+was shot.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill considered the matter a moment. “And
+Roger gave him the land?” she asked at length.</p>
+
+<p>“Something very like it; he granted it to him
+absolutely, subject only to some nominal rental payable
+if demanded, and that practically amounts to a
+gift, at least to the first owner if not to his children.”</p>
+
+<p>“Roger Corby must have had some reason,” Bill
+said with conviction.</p>
+
+<p>Kit agreed with her, though he could not say for
+certain what it may have been. “Briant was steward
+at Corby Dean when Peter Harborough was shot,”
+he said; “that may have had something to do with
+it. But whether he knew something about it and
+threatened to speak, or whether he did not know and
+only threatened to make a charge which Roger Corby
+could not disprove because of the secrecy of the
+affair I could never find out. Of course it is all very
+long ago now, and people do not seem to take much
+interest in such things as a rule.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span>This was said almost apologetically, as if the
+speaker were ashamed of his own interest; but he
+need not have apologised to Bill, who was herself
+more fascinated by these tales of the past than he
+was.</p>
+
+<p>“It was an awful lot to give,” she said at last,
+“but I suppose he had no choice. I wonder why he
+put in the nominal rental; has it ever been demanded,
+do you know?”</p>
+
+<p>“I should not think so; there has been no one to
+demand it. I expect that it was put in so that it
+might be possible for the Corbys eventually to recover
+the land at the end of the time for which it was
+granted. But it does not matter much now, for there
+are no more Corbys.”</p>
+
+<p>“But the granddaughter,” Bill asked, “what
+became of her? Did she not marry and have
+children?”</p>
+
+<p>“She married but had no children; I don’t think
+anybody knows what became of her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did she run away?” Bill thought it just possible,
+considering what was told of her childhood, that this
+last of the Corbys might have run away if her fate
+demanded that solution of a difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that is it,” Kit said; “she ran away from her
+husband. I don’t know the name of the man she
+went with, but they say she was never very fond of
+her husband, and I should think she must have been
+rather difficult to deal with; my uncle knew her, and
+he always spoke as if she were. The man she
+married was younger than she, a clergyman—but you
+know him, I expect you know all this; at least you
+must have heard something of Mr. Dane’s wife?”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Dane!” Bill exclaimed, her eyes growing
+wide. “Was she his wife? His wife—and he would
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>have loved her so! Oh, Monseigneur, poor Monseigneur,”
+and her voice took the almost tender wail
+of a primitive woman who mourns her loved ones.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you not know?” Kit asked, trying to remember
+if she had expressed pity for his troubles in
+that tone.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. “I knew he had been
+married,” she said, “though people at Ashelton
+usually speak as if he had not; perhaps they don’t
+know. He never speaks about his wife, so I thought
+she must have died very long ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“She did, or rather she left him long ago, forty
+years or more. I am surprised you did not know,
+though now I come to think of it, people about here
+hardly would; it did not happen here, and Mr.
+Dane did not come to Ashelton till some time afterwards.
+Wilhelmina Corby had not lived here since
+she was quite a young girl, and there was nothing to
+connect Mr. Dane with her in people’s minds.”</p>
+
+<p>“Was her name Wilhelmina? Then I wonder he
+puts up with me! I am Wilhelmina; he ought to
+hate me. He ought to do that for several things; I
+asked him something yesterday I would never have
+asked had I known this.”</p>
+
+<p>“What was it? Will you tell me?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill hesitated a moment before she said: “Yes, if
+you like. I asked him what he did when things
+went utterly wrong with his life, when”—the girl’s
+tone had taken a passionate ring as if the occasion
+were not entirely impersonal—“when he felt like
+Job’s wife and wanted to curse God and die because
+things were so hopelessly, incurably wrong.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why did you ask?”</p>
+
+<p>The words were uttered almost before Kit knew
+what he said. When they were once spoken, he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span>would sooner have bitten his tongue through than
+that they should have been said.</p>
+
+<p>She sat silent for a long moment pulling the fern
+to pieces in her hands; when at last she did speak it
+was to repeat to him, with a curious quietness, Mr.
+Dane’s words to herself.</p>
+
+<p>“He said,” so she told him, “on such a day as
+you speak of I shut a door in my mind and went
+away without speaking or looking back; afterwards I
+played cricket at the school-treat, and I think I
+played as well as usual.”</p>
+
+<p>That was all she said; after she had spoken there
+was a great silence in the yellow wood, except when
+the beech-nuts fell pattering on the dead leaves, and
+the robins, the year’s grandchildren, sang shrill and
+sweet in the branches.</p>
+
+<p>At last she spoke again, scarcely above a whisper
+now: “I think I am going to try to do that.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit turned and faced her; there was a faint flush
+on his cheek, but his eyes met hers unflinchingly—“And
+I too,” he said; and then they walked on in
+silence.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXV.<br>
+<small>GENERAL SERVANT.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is an old saying, and doubtless a good one, that
+two is company and three none; yet the presence of
+a third person who stands somewhat apart from the
+other two is frequently a great assistance to domestic
+happiness and a great preventive of domestic friction.
+Polly took Bill to London during the first week in
+October and Theresa missed her at every turn.
+There was no one to play bézique with Robert in the
+long dull evenings; Theresa hated cards, and though
+she tried to play from a sense of duty her skill was
+so small that her efforts were a failure. There was
+no one to talk and amuse him when he came in at
+odd times; Theresa was somewhat silent by nature,
+and she did not seem to have grasped the details of
+his work. She could not remember the points of his
+horses or the names of his dogs; it all came natural
+to Bill who, Theresa reflected, had less on her mind
+and so of course might be expected to remember
+better. She missed the girl herself, too, in the dairy
+and store-room, in the house and orchard and garden.
+She missed her when the late apples fell, and when
+the dead leaves gathered thick in the garden; she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>missed the all-pervading sunshine of her nature, and
+she missed the regular visits Gilchrist Harborough
+used to pay on Bill’s account.</p>
+
+<p>Of course she had nothing but the most impersonal
+interest in Gilchrist,—no one, not even Polly had
+suggested otherwise, though Theresa flushed as she
+remembered what Polly had suggested—still it was
+pleasanter when he used to come. If Bill had been
+here he would have come to-night; it was one of his
+evenings. Robert had gone to a political meeting at
+Wrugglesby and would not be home till late, and
+Theresa sighed a little, to think of the weary number
+of hours before her. She wondered a little, over her
+sewing, if Gilchrist had gone too.</p>
+
+<p>But Gilchrist had not gone to the political meeting;
+he did not even know Robert had gone, for he came
+to Haylands that evening to speak to him, and
+finding he was not at home, came in to leave a
+message with Theresa. She was sincerely glad to see
+him, and he, to judge from his manner, was sincerely
+glad to be there again. To tell the truth he too
+missed those pleasant evenings at Haylands, the refinement
+and indescribable femininity of the house
+appealing to him in a way that surprised even
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>“One needs a woman about a place,” he reflected
+that evening when he went once more to the house
+and found that though Bill was gone, the femininity
+remained,—flowers, needlework, delicate womanly
+atmosphere, all as before, all as attractive. It must
+be admitted that he did not expect otherwise, for to
+him Bill did not suggest such things; she could
+arrange flowers as well as grow them, and she often
+sat at needlework when he saw her, sewing very
+strongly, very intently; yet to him there was something
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>unfeminine in the very energy with which she
+did the smallest things. Theresa,—he did not think
+much about Theresa, except to decide that it was an
+advantage to be sure what a woman meant, and
+sometimes what she thought, advantages he did not
+feel he possessed with regard to Bill.</p>
+
+<p>She, it is true, had been surprisingly docile of late,
+but her docility was flat and uninteresting, and there
+was besides an uneasy feeling in Gilchrist’s mind that
+he did not know what lay behind. He did not feel
+that he had grasped Bill at all. He had been exceedingly
+angry on the occasion of Mr. Harborough’s
+funeral, and there had followed an interview with
+Bill which should have been stormy. It was not,
+however; Bill was truly sorry for having annoyed
+him so much, confessed her sins, and promised more
+respect for his wishes in future. She was honestly
+trying to do her duty now, and to behave in the way
+she ought. Gilchrist did not altogether believe in
+her repentance, which was perhaps not unnatural;
+and when she confessed herself wrong, he agreed
+with her and accepted her self-accusations as a matter
+of course. It is sometimes a pity to accept another’s
+self-accusations so readily; just it may be, but it is
+not always encouraging. Fortunately it mattered
+less to Bill than to most people and peace was
+patched up between them, though things were not
+perhaps in the most satisfactory state when she left
+for London. Had the engagement not rested on
+something more reliable than mutual affection it
+would hardly have been wise of Polly to take the
+girl to London, for in spite of her faults, she had a
+species of fascination for Gilchrist when she was
+present, and when she was absent there was Theresa
+to consider.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>However, about that time Gilchrist did not give
+much attention to either Theresa or Bill, for the
+opening of the Harborough lawsuit occupied most of
+his thoughts. It also occupied the thoughts of his
+neighbours, and was looked upon as a matter of
+tremendous local interest; Ashelton even split into
+factions over the question of the justice or injustice
+of the claim, of which, by the way, very little was
+generally known. Mr. Stevens was much pressed
+for information, or at least for his opinion as to the
+probable issue, but though he had no professional
+connection with either party he maintained a discreet
+silence. He once went so far as to say that a lot of
+good money would be wasted by two young men who
+could ill afford it, and that without knowing a great
+deal more than he now knew he should be sorry to
+bet on either. This discreet opinion was more
+moderate than those held by most of his neighbours.</p>
+
+<p>Theresa knew little more than the rest of the
+village on the great subject of the Harborough
+claim, for Gilchrist had not had time to explain it to
+her since the case opened, and before that time he
+had thought it wiser to keep silence even with
+members of Bill’s family.</p>
+
+<p>“Not that I minded you knowing,” he said to
+Theresa the night Robert went to the political
+meeting. “I had not the least objection to that,
+only I was afraid if Bill told you she would also tell
+Miss Hains, and she, you know, is perhaps not
+quite so discreet. I am sure she would not mean to
+betray a confidence, but she talks a good deal, and
+people who do that often say more than they intend.”</p>
+
+<p>In this he scarcely did Polly justice, for though she
+might betray a secret it was not by accident or through
+foolishness. But Theresa said she understood, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span>led him to talk of his chances of success. He was
+very cautious and would not commit himself at all,
+but she persisted in speaking as if a favourable issue
+were certain.</p>
+
+<p>“Fancy little Bill mistress of such a place as Wood
+Hall!” she said, when at last she had in her own
+mind brought all to a satisfactory conclusion. She
+was evidently delighted with the idea, but this particular
+side of the termination was exactly what
+Gilchrist did not fancy; however, he only replied to
+Theresa by saying with a smile: “Things have not
+quite reached that point yet, and I almost doubt if
+Bill expects them to do so; she hardly seems to
+quite realise what the position would be if they
+did.”</p>
+
+<p>“I expect not. She little thought when once or
+twice she went to see old Mr. Harborough that she
+herself might one day live at Wood Hall. It will
+take her a long time to get used to the idea; she is
+such a child.”</p>
+
+<p>That was not her worst complaint in Gilchrist’s
+eyes, but he only said, “Time will cure that.”</p>
+
+<p>It was just then that there came the sound of a
+stumble in the passage. Theresa started from her
+chair. “I did not hear Robert’s horse,” she exclaimed.
+“I—you—I’m afraid—”</p>
+
+<p>Gilchrist had heard that heavy stumble, that
+muttered oath before; he had reached the door as
+soon as she and put out his hand to open it first.</p>
+
+<p>“I am afraid Robert is not well;” she faced him
+unflinchingly with the lie. “Will you excuse me?
+I must go to him—good-night;” and she passed out
+leaving him alone.</p>
+
+<p>Bill had been right; she had found him out, and
+she stood between him and all the world, hiding his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>fall with her pitiful little pretence. And he—Gilchrist
+ground his teeth in impotent rage as he walked
+home through the darkness that night—what was he
+to receive such loyalty, such service!</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps fortunate for Gilchrist Harborough
+that he had a good deal to think of just now; the
+lawsuit absorbed a large proportion of his time and
+interests, and it was just as well that it did, for,
+although it prevented him from paying much attention
+to Bill, it also prevented him from paying much to
+other subjects which were better let alone. After
+the evening when he saw Theresa he devoted himself
+more assiduously than ever to the matter of the suit,
+and so really absorbing did he find it that, though he
+was in town pretty often that autumn, he was not
+once able to spare an hour to go to Bayswater to see
+Bill. However, about the beginning of December
+he fancied he should be able to manage it, and wrote
+to tell her that he hoped to come.</p>
+
+<p>Bill and Polly had been well established now for
+some time, for they did not take long settling down,
+though the process had not been all that Polly had
+anticipated. If the truth must be known, her position
+now was not altogether unlike that of the old magician
+who, having raised a spirit to help him in his schemes,
+finds the obliging goblin to be of such unexpected
+magnitude that it proves not only embarrassing but
+likely to constitute itself master instead of servant.
+Polly’s spirit, very obliging, very hard-working and
+even-tempered, presented one serious drawback,—it
+would rule. It was useless for Polly to attempt any
+of the little shifts dear to her heart; Bill, who knew
+her, was equal to them all, and forestalled her in the
+pleasantest but completest way possible. Once or
+twice at the beginning of the partnership Polly
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span>threatened to turn her all too active partner out, but
+she never did it. Probably she never seriously
+thought of it, for Bill was very useful; there was
+no need to employ a girl with Bill in the house, no
+need to have either a boot-boy or a charwoman; no
+need for Polly herself to do more than a very
+moderate share of the work. Bill also got on well
+with the lodgers and with the tradespeople, and,
+when once they two had got to understand their
+relative positions, excellently well with Polly herself.</p>
+
+<p>Bill had altered in several ways besides in this
+development of the ruling spirit. Polly found her
+quieter than she used to be, on the whole more a
+woman and less a child, though she occasionally lapsed
+into her old ways. She had shut a door in her mind,
+and was trying hard to do well the thing which
+came next. It was easy enough when it was housework
+or cooking; she did them to the best of her
+ability, too well, in fact, according to Polly, who was
+no advocate for superfluous thoroughness. But
+there were other things she tried to do which were
+not easy; she was trying under somewhat adverse
+circumstances to be more of a lady, more like Theresa
+to please Gilchrist, more like the gentlewoman of
+Mr. Dane’s definition to please herself.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole the cousins lived happily and let
+their rooms with a fair amount of success. Polly’s
+lot was occasionally brightened by a hamper from
+Haylands, or shaded by the loss of a paying
+lodger or the all too previous departure of one
+who had not paid. But in the beginning of
+December when Gilchrist came to town things were
+not very prosperous; the rooms had been empty
+some time, the cold weather had set in early, and the
+fog, which preceded and sometimes accompanied the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span>frost, was both depressing and likely to be expensive
+in gas. Polly economised in candle-ends, bemoaning
+her fate, and then indulged in buttered muffins “to
+cheer us up.” It was on the occasion of the muffins
+that Bill received Gilchrist’s letter.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder if he is going home again the same
+night,” Polly speculated. “He had much better stay
+here,—there is plenty of room. I shall ask him;
+it will be more correct for me to do it than for you.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not know why it was more correct, but
+knowing Polly liked these small details she raised no
+objection, and in due time the invitation was given
+and accepted. Polly was much pleased, being genuinely
+hospitable and moreover very proud of her
+dingy little house; she also thought a great deal of
+Gilchrist since the matter of Wood Hall had come to
+her knowledge, and she prepared for his reception
+accordingly. The best bedroom was made ready,
+the best sitting-room set in order. Bill did most of
+that, but Polly, with an eye to effect, brought their
+work-baskets and books from the kitchen, where
+they were usually kept.</p>
+
+<p>“We must make it look as if we sat here always,”
+she said, as she put a reel of cotton on the mantelpiece.</p>
+
+<p>“Then we must bring the cat,” Bill replied, “for
+he always sits with us. But it is rather nonsense;
+why should not Gilchrist know we live in the
+kitchen? He knows that somebody must do the
+work, and he won’t think the worse of us for
+doing it.”</p>
+
+<p>But Polly thought otherwise. “It was different
+when he was only a working farmer,” she said.
+“Now, since all this about Wood Hall has happened,
+he won’t look at it in quite the same way.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span>“I don’t see any reason for pretending, when he
+knows that we work.”</p>
+
+<p>“He knows it in a general way, but it is one
+thing to know it and quite another to see it being
+done.”</p>
+
+<p>With which incontestable opinion Polly closed her
+remarks and carried her point, and when Gilchrist
+came soon after six o’clock the best sitting-room
+looked as snug as though it were the family’s
+habitual living-room. Bill had on her best frock
+and her best manners, and everything was as pleasant
+as possible. Polly was delighted; she had been a
+little afraid that Gilchrist, in his position of claimant
+to the Wood Hall estate, might wish to make a
+more advantageous marriage than the one in prospect.
+She was very much afraid that he might use
+the private and not very binding nature of the
+engagement as an excuse to repudiate it, or to
+induce Bill to release him. But on that December
+evening she was perfectly satisfied, he and Bill
+evidently understanding one another, and Bill was
+behaving beautifully; she was so gentle and submissive,
+she might almost have been anybody.</p>
+
+<p>Polly, in spite of her low financial ebb, had prepared
+what she called a “tasty supper” in honour of
+the guest. It was not altogether unlike her millinery—an
+ingenious “do-up” finished off with a few new
+trimmings, but it was undeniably successful. She
+was very gratified by its success and by things in
+general, and it was with a cheerful countenance that
+she withdrew after the meal.</p>
+
+<p>“I know you must have a lot to talk about,” she
+said, beaming upon the other two; “and as I have
+some letters to write, I think I will go and do them
+down-stairs.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>So she went, though the letters resolved themselves
+into the supper-things which she washed, while up-stairs
+Gilchrist told Bill all about Wood Hall and the
+progress of the case, which was not rapid, and his
+opinion of the rival claimant, which was not enthusiastic.
+Bill listened and answered as sympathetically
+as she could, though it is possible she would rather
+have been washing dishes in the kitchen. Still she
+did her share in the conversation admirably, and
+when they spoke of things other than those concerning
+Wood Hall she was really splendid in her efforts
+to be like Theresa. Nevertheless Gilchrist did not
+commend her improvement; perhaps he was not
+satisfied with it, nor with the submissive girl, who
+was trying so hard to please him.</p>
+
+<p>Bill felt the failure when she went to bed that
+night. “I expect it did not ring true,” she thought;
+“I must try to feel like Theresa as well as behave
+like her. I’ll do it in time; I believe I could be
+anything if I tried long enough.” And so she fell
+asleep, resolutely trying to school herself to what she
+conceived to be Theresa’s attitude of mind. She
+woke next morning with the same thought uppermost
+and continued her practice of what she called
+“Theresaing” her mind while she cleaned the
+guest’s boots in the basement.</p>
+
+<p>At breakfast that morning Gilchrist said he should
+not leave for Wrugglesby until the six o’clock train.
+Bill felt a pleasurable expectancy; perhaps he would
+suggest that they two should go for a walk somewhere;
+she knew where they would go, the British
+Museum was free to all comers and they would go
+there and look at all the mummies. There was so
+little work to do now, Polly would not mind, and
+it would be very nice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>Gilchrist said he had business which would occupy
+him during the morning. That was natural, but the
+afternoon—Polly supposed, with an affable smile,
+that he “would want her to spare Bill part of the
+afternoon.” But Gilchrist, looking out of the
+window, said it did not promise to be a very nice
+day, adding that he probably would not be back
+before four, when it would be quite dark.</p>
+
+<p>“Just as if it is not possible to go out after dark
+and enjoy it too!” Polly observed indignantly later
+on in the day. The cousins were clearing up after
+their mid-day dinner and Polly slammed the plates
+into the rack in a dangerous manner as she spoke,
+her disgust with Gilchrist having been simmering all
+the morning.</p>
+
+<p>But Bill hardly glanced round. “I don’t care,”
+she said indifferently; “I did not want to go so very
+much.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I dare say!” Polly snorted indignantly.
+“He ought to have taken you all the same; I don’t
+think it is at all nice behaviour on his part. He has
+not brought you a present or anything, in spite of
+all his fuss about Wood Hall.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want presents. He is no richer than he
+was, and he has no time to think of it, and—and—I
+don’t want things.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill’s face was rosy and her tone hurt, but Polly
+went on volubly: “Look at Jack Dawson; besides
+a lovely engagement-ring (which you have not got
+through Theresa’s nonsense) he has given Bella—”</p>
+
+<p>“I tell you, Polly, I don’t want presents; I won’t
+have you say any more about it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, well, of course I can quite understand you
+don’t like to have it mentioned, but I must say
+I don’t think it is at all nice of him. You haven’t
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>cost him much, in fact nothing at all; I suppose
+he thought, as he could have you for the asking,
+he need not trouble, but it isn’t very flattering. I
+do think he might have taken you out—might
+have taken us both out—after all the trouble we
+have had too, that lovely supper last night, and fried
+bacon for breakfast this morning, and all.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill laughed. “A truly commercial mind!” she
+said. “But perhaps Gilchrist will leave a tip for
+our invisible servant; if so, you could take that
+in payment for the supper.”</p>
+
+<p>But Polly was much annoyed with the guest, more
+than was just, for he was really too busy to
+think of anything at present, and he certainly had
+not intended to slight or wound either of the
+cousins. Nevertheless he had wounded Polly’s
+pride; as for Bill, no one knew what she thought,
+for which reason, if for no other, Polly reflected
+that she had done very foolishly to speak as she
+had done. She was herself dressing to go out
+now because she “felt so upset that she could not
+stay in.” While she dressed she came to the conclusion
+that she had been most indiscreet, for if it
+were true that Gilchrist had been neglectful it was her
+place to pour balm on Bill’s wounds, not to point out
+Gilchrist’s misdemeanours. She had certainly been
+foolish, and accordingly, before going out, she went
+to the kitchen and apologised for what she had said.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t mean anything,” she explained. “I was
+annoyed by that butcher sending in his bill as he
+did, and I was put out and cross altogether. Of
+course I would not say a word against Gilchrist.
+You know what a lot I think of him; he’s worth
+twenty of Jack Dawson; nobody would expect him
+to waste his money on silly presents.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span>Bill said it was “all right,” and Polly went
+out leaving her young cousin cleaning the kitchen-hearth.
+And possibly it would have been all right
+but for what followed. Bill had not thought of
+receiving presents from Gilchrist, nor yet of going
+out with him; she did not expect either, and though
+she was disappointed about the mummies, she did
+not regard his actions as an index of his affections.</p>
+
+<p>It was when she had almost finished the hearth
+that there came a ring at the front door. It was
+not much after three yet, and Polly had said she
+would be home at half-past so as to be ready by
+the time Gilchrist returned at four. Bill came to
+the conclusion that it must be the baker who rang,
+and since the summons sounded peremptory, she
+went up-stairs without waiting to take off the sacking
+apron she had put on for cleaning the hearth. She
+wore her oldest frock, which she had put on as
+soon as their visitor went out; it was short as
+well as old, and her disreputable shoes showed
+well below it. It was not wonderful that Gilchrist
+looked at her blankly for a moment when she
+opened the door to him and his friend Ferguson.
+Only for a moment he looked, and then Bill,
+withdrawing herself behind the door after the manner
+of maids-of-all-work, spoke: “Miss ’Ains is out,”
+she said; “but walk in, won’t yer, sir?”</p>
+
+<p>Gilchrist walked in, half paused, and then went
+on without speaking. It was impossible to present
+her to Ferguson as his future wife, more especially
+impossible in the light of her stupidly unrecognising
+look; she herself made the introduction impossible
+by the very perfection with which she had assumed
+her part. So the introduction was not made, and
+the two men went up to the sitting-room to examine
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span>a document Gilchrist had left there, while Bill, with
+a clatter of ill-shod feet, went back to the kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>By-and-bye the street door was closed, and soon
+after, the work being done, Bill went up-stairs to
+change her dress. She thought Gilchrist had gone
+out with his friend, but she was mistaken. As
+she passed the half-open door of the sitting-room
+she saw him standing before the fireplace, where,
+for economy’s sake, the fire had been allowed to
+go out after he had left that morning. Bill paused:
+Polly had told her to re-light the fire before half-past
+three. It must be done; moreover, she in her own
+character never hesitated about going through with
+any difficulty into which she might have blundered;
+in the character of Theresa it was impossible to
+know how to act, for Theresa never got into these
+difficulties. Consequently the character of Theresa
+was forgotten, and it was the original Bill who
+walked into the room with genuine regret for what
+had occurred, but not entirely without a little
+amusement too.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll light the fire,” she said, turning back the
+hearth-rug before she knelt down and beginning to
+arrange paper in the grate. “I am very sorry,
+Gilchrist,” she went on penitently as she glanced up
+at the young man’s gloomy face. “I never expected
+you back so early; I thought it was the baker.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you in the habit of going to the baker
+like that?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, sometimes, if I am in a hurry or he
+is. I thought the ring sounded like a hurry. I
+really am sorry, but Mr. Ferguson didn’t know me,
+so there’s not much harm done.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think there is a great deal of harm done.”
+Gilchrist’s face did not relax. “Don’t trouble about
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>the fire just now, I want to talk to you. Tell me, is
+it necessary for you to get in this condition?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill obediently left laying the fire and answered
+apologetically: “I am afraid I am a dirty worker.”</p>
+
+<p>“But surely it is hardly necessary to do this work.
+What have you been doing? What do you do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I was cleaning the kitchen-stove when you
+rang,” Bill answered meekly, though something in
+the masterfulness of his tone was rousing the old
+Bill whom it was not easy to drive. “Perhaps,”
+she went on with a spark of fun in her eyes, “it
+was hardly necessary to do the stove, but I don’t
+know; it is a point open to discussion; the same
+with the knives which I have cleaned since; but
+your boots, which I did earlier in the day, really
+were necessary, don’t you think so?”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you clean my boots?”</p>
+
+<p>“I cleaned your honour’s noble boots,” and she
+swept him a courtesy and then looked up with a
+dawning smile.</p>
+
+<p>But he did not smile. “You ought not to have
+done it,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Why? I did not mind.”</p>
+
+<p>“I mind.”</p>
+
+<p>Yet his tone somehow told her that he minded
+because she was his future wife and the possible
+mistress of Wood Hall, rather than because she
+was herself.</p>
+
+<p>“I told you I should be a general servant,” she
+said. “Do you remember that night we went to the
+Dawsons and Miss Dawson was so contemptuous?”
+and she set her mobile face into Miss Dawson’s
+supercilious stare. But Gilchrist did not seem
+pleased by the recollection, and the imp in Bill getting
+the upper hand, she went on somewhat recklessly.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>“Well, I am a general servant now, though not a very
+good one. What a queer little slavey you’ve got here,
+Harborough,” and her change of tone made the man
+start, and for a moment almost think Ferguson was
+back. “Who the devil is she? I believe I know
+her face—by Jove, she’s like the plum girl I met
+near your place last summer. But I don’t think
+Gilchrist told her name.”</p>
+
+<p>“No”—his tone was cold with suppressed anger—“I
+did not tell your name; I was not exactly proud
+of my future wife.”</p>
+
+<p>The smile died out of her face. “I am very sorry,”
+she said penitently, and the penitence was genuine,
+but Gilchrist was not mollified.</p>
+
+<p>“You do not show it,” he said; “mimicking my
+friends and making fun of what you have done hardly
+suggests regret. I think under the circumstances it
+would be as well if we said no more about it. Perhaps
+you had better go and change your dress; talking
+will not make matters any better.”</p>
+
+<p>She began to move towards the door humbled by
+his words, but half turned before she opened it.
+“Are matters very bad?” she asked wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>“Can you think them very good? Do you think
+your life, or ways, or,—or anything at all fitting to
+the position you may have to occupy? I don’t mean
+to blame you, but things do not promise to be quite
+the same as they were, and I wish you would try to
+remember the difference.”</p>
+
+<p>She turned fully now, and unconsciously both tone
+and manner had changed, becoming quiet and firm.
+“You mean,” she said, “that what was fitting for
+your wife when you were only Harborough of
+Crows’ Farm is not fitting now? You are quite
+right; I agree with you.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span>“Then I wish you would act upon it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot, the unfitness goes too deep, for it is I
+myself who was fit to be your wife then but am not
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill! What nonsense is this? I am no different
+from what I was: the case is not decided, may never
+be decided in my favour; and if it were it would
+make no difference. I have never suggested such a
+thing and I never meant it.”</p>
+
+<p>“You did not say it, but I do; it is true. Listen
+a minute—I have tried to be ladylike, as I thought
+you would wish me to be, and sometimes I think I
+succeed a little,—this afternoon doesn’t count, it was
+an accident—but my ladylikeness, even if it were more
+successful, is not what is wanted. It is I, my real self,
+who am unfit to be your wife under the present circumstances.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know what right you have to say such a
+thing; I suppose you are angry because of what I
+said this afternoon.” If she were angry the
+young man could not help thinking she had a strange
+way of showing it, for her whole manner suggested
+clear-sighted calmness; the excitement was his. “I
+own I spoke sharply,” he went on, “and I am sorry
+for it, but I was annoyed.”</p>
+
+<p>“You had a right to be,” she told him; “I
+deserved it and I am not angry at all. It is not what
+you said just now that makes me say this, it is the
+whole thing; I cannot help seeing I am not fit for
+you now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, you are; the position has not altered, and
+if it did you are as fit for the new as the old if you
+choose to be.”</p>
+
+<p>But the girl shook her head. “No,” she said, “I
+am not. I was fit for Crows’ Farm; that life would
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>have drawn out a good side of me, just as it drew out
+a side of you which wanted me. Wood Hall acts
+differently. Oh, I know you have not got it yet,
+may never have it; but the fact that you have
+claimed it, that you have a close acknowledged connection
+with the other Harboroughs has altered your
+position, has altered you and your ideas. No matter
+what happens now you cannot be only the working
+farmer of Crows’ Farm who wants a working wife.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean to say you believe I don’t think you
+good enough?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, oh no; it is not that exactly; I think it is
+that we don’t fit now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you want to fit?” Gilchrist eyed her sternly
+as he asked the question.</p>
+
+<p>“I did want to,” she told him. “I tried hard to
+be what you would like while I thought you wanted
+to marry me—”</p>
+
+<p>“You think I don’t want to marry you now?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she answered simply, and her school companions
+Carrie and Alice would have told her that she
+had not yet acquired a sense of decency, for she
+certainly did not know how to mince matters. “You
+did want to marry me,” she said, “and I would have
+married you; but the new position makes you and
+your wants different and would make me different
+too. The whole thing had better end.”</p>
+
+<p>“In plain terms, you won’t marry me now?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I will,” she said meeting his eyes bravely.
+“I will marry you if you can truthfully say you still
+wish it.”</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated a moment. “Of course I do,” he
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>But that was not what Bill meant and she said so.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t believe me?” he said rather stiffly.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span>“You must please yourself about that, but if you
+wish to be free of course you can be; our engagement
+was on those terms; you are not bound.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am bound by my own word,” she answered;
+“so long as you want me I am bound. But you
+don’t really want me. Look at me; am I suited to
+be your wife? Tell me—you know me now—do
+you wish it?”</p>
+
+<p>She stood at the end of the room, the murky light
+of the winter dusk falling upon her, intensifying not
+concealing the faults in her dress, her shoes, her sacking
+apron. A small, odd, shabby figure she looked
+in that cheerless little parlour with its empty grate,
+small and odd, not alluring at all in the gloom. The
+man saw each detail, and seeing, wondered how she
+had ever bewitched him.</p>
+
+<p>He could not but look at her, and as he looked he
+moved slightly. “You are talking nonsense,” he said,
+turning to the empty grate; “to-morrow you will
+think better of all this.”</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at her as he ceased speaking, but it
+was too late. He should have met her eyes before if
+he wished to convince her.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” she said simply; “now you have
+told me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I—told you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; you need not mind, you did it quite
+honourably. Don’t mind. See here, I will square it
+with Polly and Theresa; it will be better so; they will
+only think I have changed my mind. Theresa will
+be sorry and Polly angry, but they won’t say anything
+to you; they won’t know about you: they will think
+it is all me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean to tell me you consider our engagement
+at an end and you will tell your cousins so?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“You shall do no such thing!”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall tell Polly to-day; she is not in yet, but
+she will be soon. I shall tell her as soon as she
+comes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you do it against my will.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,”—Bill spoke doubtfully—“telling is against
+the grain I dare say, but the breaking off is not. It
+is no good, Theo; don’t let us pretend any more.
+I know you would have honourably gone through
+with it because you gave your word, and I would
+have honourably done the same because I gave mine
+and believed you wished it; and we should have both
+done what we could to make the best of it afterwards.
+But all through me getting so grubby this afternoon
+I have found out the truth, and you are freed from
+your word, and it is all over; so let us say so, and
+be friends.”</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later Polly found the street door ajar
+and entered the house mentally abusing Bill’s carelessness.
+She went up-stairs and seeing the sitting-room
+door open, she looked into the room. Neither
+fire nor gas was lighted; in the cold twilight she saw
+the small figure by the window.</p>
+
+<p>“Bill,” she exclaimed, “not dressed yet! And
+the fire not laid, nothing done and Gilchrist will be
+here directly. This is nice!”</p>
+
+<p>“Gilchrist is not coming; he has gone away
+altogether.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not coming! Not coming back, do you mean?
+And I have bought two lovely tea-cakes and half-a-pound
+of fresh butter!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVI.<br>
+<small>AN OLD WOUND.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>“<span class="smcap">Do</span> come here for Christmas,” wrote Bella to Bill
+from Haylands about the middle of December.
+“You must come, if it is only for a week. It is
+nonsense for Polly to say she can’t spare you; she
+simply must. Theresa thinks that it will do you
+good. She won’t believe what Polly says about the
+way in which you have taken this breaking off with
+Gilchrist; she thinks you must be upset, and that to
+come here might do you good. I enclose a postal
+order for six shillings for the fare. Polly is sure to
+say you can’t afford it; Theresa and I can, and we
+want you to come.”</p>
+
+<p>And in spite of Polly’s protestations and objections
+Bill went. Polly could not go; she had one lodger
+now and could not shut the house up. But seeing
+that he was only one, and one who did not require
+much waiting on, and seeing also that Bella and
+Theresa had paid Bill’s fare, there was no reason why
+she should not go. So Bill went to Wrugglesby,
+and Bella and Theresa, who had driven from
+Ashelton for some shopping, met her and brought
+her home.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span>Bella was glad Bill was coming, although, she reflected,
+if the girl was really as disturbed as Theresa
+imagined about her broken engagement she would be
+but poor company and not much relief from the
+dulness of Haylands. For some reason or other it
+had been dull there that autumn, at least on the days
+when Jack did not come. Theresa, who had always
+been quiet, was more quiet than ever now; she
+seemed to have aged during the past months, or else
+Bella, used to associating with the livelier if more
+unprincipled Polly, thought so. “Marriage does
+alter people,” thought Bella, and fell to speculating
+about herself and Jack. There really was very little
+to think about at Haylands, very little to talk about
+in all Ashelton. Even Miss Minchin, at the fortnightly
+working-parties, had nothing fresh to say,
+and so went untiringly over the nine days’ wonder of
+Gilchrist Harborough’s claim to Wood Hall.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Minchin might not be tired of that, but Bella
+was, and by the beginning of December she had heard
+quite enough of that and most other subjects of
+Ashelton conversation. But about that time she and
+Theresa found a fresh subject in the letter Bill wrote
+to them after Gilchrist’s visit to London. She wrote
+by one post, and by the next Polly wrote a good two
+ounces of lamentation, indignation, and abuse, the last
+both of Theresa and her “ridiculous secrecy,” and
+also, in a far larger degree, of Bill and her obstinacy.
+Theresa was much perplexed; neither she nor Bella
+could understand how it had come about; there was
+no explanation, except that Bill had availed herself of
+their permission to change her mind, and that somehow
+seemed unlikely. Bella was inclined to blame
+Gilchrist, and cited several instances when his devotion
+had fallen short of Jack’s. Theresa, on the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>other hand, was for putting the change down to
+girlish caprice. She made a point of talking to Gilchrist
+on the subject, but without enlightening herself
+to any great extent. “Of course I could not cross-question
+him,” she wrote to Polly, and was naturally
+not aware of that lady’s wrathful exclamation,—“I
+know I could then!”</p>
+
+<p>Although Theresa did not hear this, or any other of
+Polly’s remarks, she could guess their nature, and her
+invitation to Bill was given partly with a view of
+saving the girl from the ceaseless bombardment of
+the elder cousin’s wrath. As it happened, however,
+Polly was comparatively merciful in her indignation;
+she knew when words were a waste of breath, and
+understood with some precision when she could, and
+when she could not, move her partner. Consequently
+Bill was let off easily, and for that, or for
+some other reason, she did not seem at all unhappy
+when she stepped out on the platform at Wrugglesby
+station. The sisters, who met her, recognised the
+fact at once, and Bella at least was glad of it as she
+helped to carry Polly’s hat-box to the pony-carriage.
+Bill talked a good deal on the homeward way, seeming
+anything but depressed. Once when they were
+clear of the town she looked round and said softly:
+“How beautiful it is! How very, very beautiful it
+is out here!”</p>
+
+<p>Bella thought the girl must be expressing her
+delight at leaving London and all her troubles behind
+her. She could see no beauty in the landscape,—bare
+fields spread wide beneath the winter sky; gaunt,
+black-limbed elms and leafless hedgerows where the
+twilight crept mysteriously; a pale flare of sunset
+breaking through the ashen clouds to make the level
+land luminous and show near objects with a wonderful
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span>distinctness; stacks and barns and low-roofed cottages
+whence the smoke in thin spirals went straightly up
+into the evening air.</p>
+
+<p>Robert came out to meet the pony-carriage with
+quite a cheerful smile of welcome.</p>
+
+<p>“Here, brother-in-law Laziness,” Bill said, filling
+his arms with Theresa’s parcels; “take some more,
+you can have these. I’ve got the sugar, T.”</p>
+
+<p>And they went indoors, Robert’s setter slobbering
+over Bill,—she never had a dress that could be hurt
+by a dog’s caress—and sheepishly following them into
+the forbidden precincts of the house.</p>
+
+<p>“You are jolly cold, I expect,” Robert said as he
+poked the fire into a blaze. “Get your boots off and
+warm your feet. Where are your slippers? In this
+thing? Is this the key tied on outside?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill said it was; in her opinion to tie its key to the
+handle of an article was a sure way of having the key
+when you wanted it. Robert unfastened the box and
+rummaged over the contents with clumsy hands till
+he found the shoes; afterwards he put the things
+back anyhow, so that the box had to be carried up-stairs
+with the lid open.</p>
+
+<p>How they talked that evening! Bella and Robert,
+even Theresa as well as Bill. Bill wanted to know
+everything, about the horses and dogs, the cows and
+pigs; what that stack had yielded when it was
+threshed, how the potatoes were keeping, why the
+long meadow was ploughed. She wanted to know
+all about everybody in the place, how they were and
+what new clothes they had; she wanted to know when
+Jack came last and when he was coming next, what
+quantity of butter Theresa was getting now, and the
+pattern of the lace Bella had bought for her petticoats.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow or other the commonplaces of life, the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>veriest trivialities assumed a vivid interest with Bill;
+the life which had seemed rather dull in the living
+became full of humour and incident when told to
+her. Her own life in London, when she told them
+about it, seemed almost fascinating. Bella found
+herself wishing that she had insisted on joining the
+lodging-venture; she did not realise that the life,
+like the flat wintry landscape, required to be looked
+at through the lens of a particular kind of mind to
+assume the aspect it did for Bill.</p>
+
+<p>One could not help being conscious of Bill’s
+presence in the house. By the next afternoon
+Theresa was beginning to be aware of the difference
+she made. Bill had been in the attic that morning
+and looked over the nuts and apples that she herself
+had put there; she had brought down the rotten
+ones and brought down also the rose-leaves, put away
+to dry and forgotten. She had been round the barns
+and stables and out into the frozen garden, round the
+orchard to look for broken branches and dead wood
+for burning, into the icy dairy to help Jessie and hear
+about her love-affairs.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s like openin’ the winders on a summer
+mornin’,” Jessie said, when just before dinner Bill
+passed the kitchen-door with some Christmas roses
+she had found in a sheltered corner of the garden.
+She had gone to the pantry to arrange them in a
+glass, singing as she did so. Strangely enough she
+had not sung or whistled since that September morning
+at Bymouth when she mimicked the birds while
+Kit Harborough wrung out her wet bathing-dress.
+But she did not know this, neither did Jessie, though
+she heard the singing appreciatively now. Still, it
+was not that which caused her remark when Bill,
+now quiet, passed the kitchen-door.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span>“It do freshen the house up wonderfully to have
+you here again, miss; it’s for all the world like
+openin’ the winders on a sunny mornin’.”</p>
+
+<p>But Bill scarcely understood the allusion any more
+than Theresa did the fact. Theresa certainly did not
+understand; she was glad to have the girl back
+again, but she felt that she was more incomprehensible
+than ever. Her whole attitude towards Gilchrist
+and the broken engagement was extraordinary
+to Theresa. She questioned Bill of course, and
+learned practically nothing, though her questions
+were answered freely enough. Bill was glad when
+the questioning was over; she was very tired of the
+subject and she wanted to hear about Bella’s
+<i>trousseau</i>; also she wanted to go and see Mr.
+Dane.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dane knew nothing about the engagement;
+there was no reason now why Bill should tell him,
+yet that afternoon, as she knelt on his hearth-rug in
+the twilight, she suddenly determined to do so and
+to ask his opinion on her own course of action. It
+was after one of those pleasant, companionable
+silences which often fell between them that she
+approached the subject, entirely without introduction,
+as was her way. “Monseigneur,” she said abruptly,
+“do you think it is ever right to break a promise,—a
+promise to marry someone, I mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“To marry someone?” Mr. Dane repeated, and
+though his tone was only surprised there was a
+gravity in his manner as if he feared trouble in the
+near future. “Yes,” he said after a moment’s consideration,
+“in some circumstances I do think it
+right to break such a promise.”</p>
+
+<p>“What circumstances?”</p>
+
+<p>“If the person giving the promise finds out afterwards
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>that he or she does not love the one to whom
+it is given.”</p>
+
+<p>“If one of the two finds that out?” Bill said in
+surprise. “You do not really think that is enough?
+You would not break a promise for that, you would
+not think it honourable; it would not be either—neither
+honourable nor right.”</p>
+
+<p>“It would not be right for some people,” Mr.
+Dane admitted; “but for others—” he broke off
+abruptly, and after a pause turned to her with an
+almost terrible earnestness. “Child,” he said, “do
+not think I am trifling with right and wrong; indeed
+I am not. Yet still I say that, though it might not
+be honourable for some to break such a promise, for
+you it would not be a question of honour or dishonour
+but of absolute necessity.”</p>
+
+<p>“I did not think so.”</p>
+
+<p>“You?” he exclaimed with an excitement which
+astonished her; “you did not think so?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said, “I did not. I promised to marry
+Gilchrist Harborough, but I did not love him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then, in God’s name, do not marry him! You
+don’t know what you are doing. Do you think it
+worse to break your promise and dishonour your
+word, or to break a man’s heart and dishonour him,
+yourself, and God’s law, all that is most holy and
+most binding on earth?”</p>
+
+<p>And then Bill realised what she had done, and how
+her words had wounded her friend. Had he not
+married a woman who did not love? Had he not
+suffered to the full the uttermost bitterness of which
+he spoke? As she realised how she had reopened
+the tragedy of his life the girl was struck dumb with
+remorse, too grieved for the moment to think of
+explaining the circumstances of her own affairs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>But Mr. Dane did not know the reason of her
+silence, and he went on, his face drawn and stern.
+“You do not know your own history nor the danger
+which may threaten you. I do; and knowing, I say
+you must not, cannot marry a man you do not truly
+love. It is a mockery to pray ‘lead us not into
+temptation’ and then to put yourself in temptation’s
+way. There is a passion which is stronger than you;
+it may sleep now but it will not always sleep, believe
+me, it will not always sleep. Listen now: first
+concerning your mother. You did not know her,
+neither did I, but you yourself told me she married
+in defiance of her parents; she loved the man and
+counted them well lost for him. And he,—he loved
+her, bewitched her, desired her,—she had no will but
+to go,—I know how it was done.”</p>
+
+<p>“You knew my father!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I knew his father. I saw the spell at work;
+I know the will of those Alardys and the power of
+their love; I have good reason to know. Your
+grandmother, the first Wilhelmina, I knew her too.
+She was another man’s wife; she married him though
+she did not love him; she thought it was safe; she
+did not know—then came this other—”</p>
+
+<p>He stopped abruptly. He was pacing the far side
+of the room with the restlessness almost of a young
+man; he stood in the shadow now, but she sat
+regarding him wide-eyed, something almost of horror
+in her face. That he should tear open these old
+wounds for her, his wife’s grandchild, Wilhelmina’s
+grandchild! Wilhelmina! Yes, she knew now, the
+links in the chain were joined and she knew,
+although she murmured,—“My grandmother, Wilhelmina
+Corby?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said, and then he came into the firelight
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>and his face was very pitiful. “Child, child,” he
+said sadly, “there are passions of which you know
+nothing; pray God you never may!”</p>
+
+<p>The girl’s eyes suddenly filled with tears: “Do
+you not hate me?” she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>But he did not hate her. The blessed years which
+had taught him not to hate, taught him to be merciful
+as well as just. “No, Princess Puck,” he said,
+smiling gently, “I do not think I hate you.”</p>
+
+<p>She crept dog-like to his side of the fire. “Shall I
+tell you something,” he said, reaching a hand down
+to touch her hair, “something which I do not count
+the least of my blessings this year?—God’s goodness
+in sending to me, whom He has denied wife or child,
+a little brown elf for a granddaughter.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill could not speak. She only mutely pressed
+against his chair, and for a long time they sat silent
+while he softly stroked her hair and the ashes fell
+quietly on the hearth. At last the old man spoke
+again; he had been thinking of the girl’s half-made
+confidence and it troubled him greatly. “This
+promise of which you spoke,” he said,—“is it to be
+kept or broken?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill started like one awakening. “Broken,” she
+said, “I have broken it”; and she told him the
+whole story, always, of course, excepting that which
+was said, or rather was not said, when she and Kit
+Harborough met under the beeches on a day when a
+dream proved to be a dream no longer. But perhaps
+Mr. Dane discovered a little of that for himself, for
+when he said good-bye to her that night he realised
+that his Princess Puck was a child no more.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVII.<br>
+<small>A CHIP OF THE OLD BLOCK.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was towards the end of January that Bella came
+to town to finish buying her <i>trousseau</i>. A <i>trousseau</i> is
+a really momentous affair, and Bella, feeling that the
+shops at Wrugglesby were not equal to the occasion,
+came to Bayswater, where Polly gave her limitless
+advice and all the help in her power. Polly really
+enjoyed Bella’s visit, and Bill, who knew Polly’s
+weakness, did all the housework so that the elder
+cousin should be free to go shopping or help with
+the needlework according as opportunity offered.
+During the time Bella was in London it seemed to
+Bill that they thought of, talked of, and considered
+very little beyond clothes, except perhaps once or
+twice in the evenings when Bella told them a little
+about Ashelton. Such conversations did not interest
+Polly, but as Bill liked them Bella talked to her.
+Once indeed Polly showed some interest, when Bella
+spoke of the change in Theresa and Robert.</p>
+
+<p>“They both have altered a good deal,” she concluded,—“especially
+Robert. You saw him at
+Christmas, Bill; don’t you think he is changing?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not changing exactly,” Bill said, “he is,—I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>think he is developing, growing to what you would
+expect. Some kinds of people are bound to grow in
+particular kinds of ways; they can hardly help
+themselves.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like Robert’s kind of way, then. I think
+he has changed a good deal, and for the worse; so
+would you if you had stayed at Haylands as long as
+I have.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not explain that what Bella called “a
+change for the worse” and she “a natural growing”
+were one and the same thing; she did not say anything
+about it, though she felt a good deal, and knew
+that she could not help Theresa now any more than
+she could have helped her last spring.</p>
+
+<p>Bella had gone on to speak of the change in Theresa
+and of the quiet of Haylands. “Hardly a soul
+comes there now,” she said; “Theresa keeps them
+all at arm’s length. I expect that is why Miss
+Minchin and Mrs. Johnson and the rest of them
+never come now. Of course Gilchrist Harborough
+would not come.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly heaved a sigh. “I expect Bill’s breaking with
+Gilchrist troubled Theresa a good deal,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>But Bella laughed at such an idea, and afterwards
+went on to speak of Gilchrist and the lawsuit. “He
+has so little spare time just now,” she said, “that I
+don’t believe he would go to see anyone except on
+business. Jack sees him sometimes, and that is how
+I get to hear about him and his case. He is rather
+disgusted with it just now, Jack says, abuses the
+lawyers, and professes a great contempt for the
+slowness of the law.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill opened her eyes. “Why,” she said, “he
+has only just begun! It will be two years before it
+is over. What did he expect?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>“How do you know?” demanded Polly.</p>
+
+<p>“I was told,” Bill answered, and Bella saved
+her further explanation by remarking: “That is
+what Mr. Stevens says; he told Jack so, and Jack
+told Gilchrist.”</p>
+
+<p>“What did he say?” Bill inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, that he did not see how they were going to
+make the time out, but he supposed they would do it
+somehow. Jack said he seemed disgusted with
+everything that day, and vowed he would not mind
+selling his chances for a good sum down.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did he say that?” Bill asked quickly. “He told
+Jack that? But he couldn’t do it, he couldn’t sell
+his chances; they would be no good to anyone else.”</p>
+
+<p>“He could sell them to the other side,” Bella said
+with the pride of recently acquired knowledge.
+“Jack told me that if the Harboroughs were rich
+they would probably by the autumn, if his claim
+seemed pretty good, try to compromise,—pay him to
+withdraw, you know. But then they are not rich;
+they have no spare money at all, and Jack says he
+does not think they could raise any. It seems rather
+a pity, for Jack says he believes Gilchrist would
+agree to a reasonable arrangement; he does not care
+a bit about Wood Hall now and only wants to go
+back to Australia.”</p>
+
+<p>“We all know why that is,” Polly said with pious
+conviction. “Bill has only herself to thank if he does
+leave England like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t suppose it would make any difference to
+Bill if he did go,” Bella retorted; “and she certainly
+has nothing to do with his wanting to go. Jack says
+he is disgusted with people in general, with the
+lawyers and the other claimant much more than with
+Bill.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>“Poor Gilchrist!” Polly said with commiseration,
+and continued to look in a meaning manner at Bill,
+who, however, was far too absorbed in the thoughts
+suggested to her by Bella’s words to heed her.</p>
+
+<p>Long that night she lay thinking of these new
+ideas, her brain full of conflicting thoughts, impossible
+plans, crazy fancies. Money, money,—she had never
+felt the want of it before, never, for all her poverty,
+felt any desire to be rich. She had always been poor
+and she had never minded; she had never been
+tempted by girlish superfluities, had never cared for
+ribbons and lace and nice food. But now,—now she
+wanted money desperately, not a few shillings, or a
+few pounds as Polly, who did mind being poor,
+wanted it; but money in the big sense of the word,
+in the sense in which Polly never wanted it, in which
+she herself had hardly contemplated it before. Not
+that it mattered whether she wanted much or little,
+shillings or pounds or hundreds of pounds; one
+seemed about as attainable as the other.</p>
+
+<p>It was always part of Bill’s work to get up and
+clean the boots and light the fires before breakfast; it
+was no very great effort to her, and seemed moreover
+to fall naturally to her share. On the morning after
+she had lain so long thinking over the problem of
+ways and means, she got up as usual, cleaned the
+lodgers’ boots, lighted the fires, washed her hands,
+and then, taking a candle from the kitchen-dresser,
+climbed on the back of a chair that stood against the
+wall. Moving an almanack hanging high above it, a
+hole became visible from which she drew out, wrapped
+in paper, Peter Harborough’s shoe-buckles. For a
+long time she stood looking at them. Once she
+rubbed them on the corner of her apron; once she
+held them close to the candle so that the brilliant,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>refracted light flashed back from the gems and
+scattered sparks of white fire over her face and hands.
+She could not tell what they were worth, perhaps a
+hundred pounds, perhaps two hundred,—Polly had
+said two; diamonds were very valuable she knew,
+but how valuable she could not tell. At last she
+wrapped the buckles up again, put them back in their
+hiding-place and went about her work with a
+thoughtful face.</p>
+
+<p>She wore a thoughtful face all that day, for she
+was revolving a plan in her mind. In the afternoon
+she went to her bedroom and there opened the little
+oak box which used to stand in the spare room at
+Langford House. She had only been to it once
+since last winter, but now she turned over its contents
+carefully. She was not much the wiser for her
+examination; the only papers old enough to interest
+her conveyed little to her mind, beyond the indisputable
+fact that the name Corby appeared in them.
+However, her failure to find anything important in
+the little chest did not alter her plans, and in the
+evening, when the elder cousins were at leisure, she
+spoke to Polly about them. Bella and Polly had been
+busy with the <i>trousseau</i> all day, but by the evening
+they were able to listen to Bill when she informed
+them that she was going to Wrugglesby the next day.</p>
+
+<p>“To Wrugglesby!” Bella exclaimed. “What on
+earth are you going there for?”</p>
+
+<p>But this Bill was not prepared to say; she expected
+to be asked the question and several others, and to
+give much annoyance by not answering them, but it
+could not be avoided. She felt that she could not
+explain matters yet. Things fell out exactly as she
+anticipated; Bella was only curious, but Polly was
+decidedly angry; she felt that she had a right to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span>inquire, and she exercised it,—with no good results,
+for when, on Bill’s refusing to assign any reasons, she
+forbade her going to Wrugglesby, the girl showed
+every intention of going in spite of her. Whereupon
+Polly, who by this time knew she could not always
+drive the stubborn Bill, became very dignified, retreating
+from her post of dictator behind a manner
+of superior and chilling indifference, after which she
+climbed down from her pinnacle of outraged authority
+and informed the offender that she should not pay her
+fare.</p>
+
+<p>“No, of course not,” Bill said readily; “I have
+some money.”</p>
+
+<p>And she had; for it so happened that after a
+battle royal with Polly one day she had succeeded in
+arranging for wages of a pound a month, the same as
+any other little servant. Polly had vowed that she
+should not have it, that she was a partner in the firm
+and not a paid servant, but Bill stood to her guns,
+foregoing any future profits but insisting on present
+wages; and as she struck work when they were not
+paid she contrived to get them regularly, and so to
+have a little money for an emergency. Remembering
+which Polly said ungraciously: “At any rate you
+can’t go until the one o’clock train.”</p>
+
+<p>The one o’clock train was a very slow one, but it
+suited Bill admirably, and by it she went the next day.</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly three when the one clerk who looked
+out on Wrugglesby High Street from Mr. Stevens’s
+office-window saw the small figure cross the road and
+come towards the door.</p>
+
+<p>“A lady to see you, sir,—Miss Alardy.”</p>
+
+<p>The clerk announced this to his employer, although
+he thought Miss Alardy an exceedingly young lady
+to consult a lawyer on her own account. Mr. Stevens
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>thought so too; he had a hazy recollection on hearing
+the name that she must be one of Miss Brownlow’s
+nieces, but he was not sure of the relationship until
+he saw the girl. Then he remembered her as the
+youngest of the nieces, the one whom, it seemed only
+the other day, he used to see walking beside the
+governess with a dusky mane of hair hanging about
+her shoulders and a general appearance suggestive of
+a tendency to turn restive on provocation.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, and what has brought you to Wrugglesby?”
+he said when he had asked after the other cousins.
+No one treated Bill in a business-like way; even the
+grocer at Bayswater regarded her as a man and a
+brother. Mr. Stevens certainly had no idea of being
+professionally consulted by this slip of a girl.</p>
+
+<p>“I have come to see you,” she answered simply.
+“I want to ask you a question, a law question.”</p>
+
+<p>She had her purse in her hand and looked somehow
+as if she were prepared to pay six-and-eightpence,
+cash down, for his opinion.</p>
+
+<p>“I will try to answer you,” he said with as much
+gravity as he could contrive. “What is this
+question?”</p>
+
+<p>“It begins in the year 1799,” she said without
+more ado. “In that year a man, Roger Corby,—perhaps
+you have heard of him? But that does not
+matter—in the year 1799 he gave a piece of land to
+another man—Briant. He gave it for ninety-nine
+years, but no rent was to be paid.”</p>
+
+<p>“A lease, that is,” the lawyer said, “and the rental
+probably one peppercorn payable if demanded. Yes,
+proceed.”</p>
+
+<p>“This year,” Bill said, “the time will be up, and I
+imagine Roger Corby would get his land back if he
+were alive?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span>“Naturally.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he is not alive, so I suppose his descendants
+would get it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that is what is usually expected to take
+place.”</p>
+
+<p>“He has only got one descendant; she comes like
+this,” and Bill took up some books which lay on the
+table. “Roger Corby’s only son died a year after
+him,”—she put a thin black book down,—“he is
+dead, you see”—pushing the book away—“and so
+does not count. The son’s only child, a daughter, is
+dead too, but she married when she was fairly young
+and she married twice. She ran away from her first
+husband and he divorced her; then she married the
+other man and had one son, the only child she had.
+Well, the son is dead too and the only person left is
+his daughter. Would she be able to get the land at
+the end of the ninety-nine years?”</p>
+
+<p>“Most probably, if she has the necessary documents
+and can prove she is legally descended from
+Roger Corby.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill said “Thank you,” and sat thinking a minute.
+The lawyer watched her curiously, feeling sure there
+must be something behind all this, and wondering a
+little what it could be.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Briant,” Bill said at last,—“I mean the
+Mr. Briant who now has the land—does not think
+it will be claimed, at least I believe not; he probably
+does not know of the second marriage of Wilhelmina
+Corby, and the son and the granddaughter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Which means,” Stevens observed, “that he will
+very strongly object to acknowledging their existence
+and will do his best to keep what he has got. Were
+I the granddaughter, I think I should first make
+quite sure that the thing in question is worth fighting
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span>for, and also I should be very clear that Wilhelmina
+Corby was divorced from her first husband and
+legally married to her second; can you tell me these
+things?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill could tell him one of the things. “Do you
+know Sandover?” she asked. “Yes? A good part
+of Sandover now stands on the land; of course at the
+time it was given it was only corn fields and grass,
+but now it must be valuable.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stevens whistled, although it was supposed to
+be a business interview. “It is worth something,
+I admit. Now for Wilhelmina Corby,—how about
+her?”</p>
+
+<p>“It would have to be found out,” Bill said, “but
+I believe it is all right. But tell me, what did you
+mean by necessary documents?”</p>
+
+<p>“First and principally the counterpart of the lease.
+You don’t know what that is? It is an exact copy
+of the deed, the lease which is in possession of the
+man who now has the land and by right of which he
+has it. There is certain to have been such a deed;
+this man, Briant, is sure to have his lease, and unless
+the granddaughter can produce her counterpart she
+would find it well-nigh impossible to prove her case.
+Has she got it, do you think?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not know, and Mr. Stevens went on to
+say:—“In the first instance it would probably have
+been among Roger Corby’s papers, and so it may
+have passed into his granddaughter’s keeping; if it
+did, the question is what became of it when she
+changed husbands? And if she kept it in her
+possession, has her granddaughter got it still, or
+failing that, is it possible to trace it?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill considered a while; she was thinking of the
+little oak box and her search in it. “There is an
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>oak box,” she said at last; “it is used as an ottoman
+in my bedroom, but I have heard that it belonged to
+my grandmother. It is full of papers, mostly letters
+and recipes of my mother’s, but there are a few which
+are older, one or two very large, tough, yellowish
+ones, not written in the ordinary way. I looked at
+them yesterday but I could not make them out,
+except that the name Corby occurs in them, and that
+at least one has the date 1799. Do you think the
+thing we want is there?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think it is just possible.” Mr. Stevens was not
+altogether surprised at this dropping of the impersonal.
+“So you are the granddaughter of Wilhelmina
+Corby, are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. I did not bring the box with me, but
+I wish I had now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps there is nothing of value in it. What
+are these old papers like? Can you describe them
+to me?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did as well as she could, and though the
+description was not very detailed Mr. Stevens seemed
+satisfied. “I do not know,” he said, “if you have
+the counterpart, but I should say from what you tell
+me that you must have one or two of the old Corby
+documents. Don’t think that I mean they are of
+any pecuniary value, as the chances are all against it;
+the counterpart, if we could find it, might be, but the
+others are just so much legal lumber.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill did not seem troubled by this discouraging
+remark, nor yet by the lawyer’s next words: “If it
+is not a rude question, may I ask how much of all
+this does your cousin’s solicitor know?”</p>
+
+<p>“We have not got a solicitor,” Bill answered
+readily. “Mr. Brownlow made Aunt Isabel’s will,
+but he is dead now, and when he was alive we did
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>not see anything of him. Polly thought him very
+stupid.”</p>
+
+<p>“Polly? That’s Miss Hains, is it not? Has
+your coming to me her sanction?”</p>
+
+<p>It had not, for the very good reason that Bill had
+not consulted her on the subject, or even informed
+her that any such subject existed; accordingly she
+told Mr. Stevens so, and explained that the affair was
+her own entirely.</p>
+
+<p>“Am I to understand,” the puzzled man enquired,
+“that she knows nothing at all about this?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Bill told him, “she doesn’t even know my
+grandmother was a Corby. I did not know much
+myself before Christmas, and when I did know, it
+hardly seemed worth while telling her. I did not
+realise then that it might be valuable; I did not
+realise that till the night before last.”</p>
+
+<p>“The night before last? What happened then?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wanted money desperately, and I thought and
+thought of ways of getting it.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stevens repressed an inclination to smile.
+“You have by no means got it yet in spite of your
+interesting story,” he said. “Let me enumerate
+some of the difficulties in the way. Supposing you
+have the counterpart of the lease and it is all correct,
+you have got to be sure of several things,—that none
+of all these people between yourself and Roger Corby
+were bankrupt, that they made no awkward marriage-settlements,
+and, if they died intestate, left no more
+than one child apiece to survive them.”</p>
+
+<p>“These things will have to be found out,” Bill
+said calmly. “Marriage-settlements I don’t know
+anything about; children I do. There were no
+more than I have said, or at least none that lived to
+grow up; I have no relations at all on my father’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>side. As for bankrupt, I believe it is all right, but
+I am not sure; Roger Corby died in debt, though I
+think it was all paid off after his death. But I know
+he was in debt when he died, that is why Wilhelmina,
+my grandmother, had his body carried away by
+night.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stevens had heard something of this story, but
+always believed it to be a mere local tradition. “I
+had no idea it really happened,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Bill assured him that she had excellent reasons for
+believing that it did; then she returned to the subject
+of more direct interest to herself. “Supposing,” she
+said, “that all these things of which you spoke were
+right, what then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Then, if you can get over the difficulty of the
+divorce and remarriage and subsequent birth of a son,
+you should have a very good case and ought, if all
+goes well, eventually to get the money you so much
+need; or rather certain persons in authority would
+get it to hold in trust for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“In trust for me?” Bill said with rather an anxious
+look.</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly; you are not of age yet, are you?
+Eighteen! The law does not consider you of age
+till you are twenty-one. Until that time the money,
+if you get it, will be in the hands of guardians who
+will manage it entirely and only allow you the use of
+a moderate and reasonable proportion.”</p>
+
+<p>“Polly and Theresa are called my guardians;
+would they have to look after the money?”</p>
+
+<p>“That depends,” Mr. Stevens said. “If they are
+only ‘called’ your guardians, the court, if the case
+were decided in your favour, would appoint some
+one to look after you and your money, you would
+be a ward of the court, and the court takes very
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span>great care of its wards and looks after them in a
+manner not always permitted to parents nowadays.
+If, on the other hand, your cousins are legally
+appointed your guardians, they would, until you were
+twenty-one, have the control of your property,
+applying it solely for your benefit and allowing you a
+certain amount for your use. But, remember, they
+could not do as they chose with it, for they could be
+called upon to give a very exact account of their
+proceedings.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill breathed a sigh of relief. “That’s all right,”
+she said. “Polly and Theresa, more especially Polly,
+are set down in Aunt Isabel’s will as my guardians;
+I should be able to manage if I got the money.”</p>
+
+<p>“They would not allow you more than a comparatively
+small sum; you could not touch any
+great amount. I don’t fancy you would be much
+better off than under the court if you wanted to do
+anything foolish, unless of course, the folly took the
+form of an unwise marriage, when you certainly
+would have more liberty if you were not a ward of
+the court.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill laughed softly. “I will tell you what I will
+do if I get the money,” she said. “I shall give Polly
+so much a year for the rest of her life; she deserves
+it and I would give her as much as I could afford;
+and with the rest I should do what I liked. We
+should arrange it somehow; Polly would do as I
+told her. There is time at least to try to find some
+way of doing it legally, but if I could not find one I
+don’t see that it would so very much matter, because
+Polly would be the person who did wrong according
+to the law and I should be the person who suffered
+wrong, and consequently the one who ought to have
+her up when I was old enough. As the case would
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>really be the other way round, I should not have her
+up, and she could not have me up, so it would be all
+right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” Mr. Stevens remarked drily, “that is how
+you think you will arrange matters, is it? It strikes
+me you are a worthy granddaughter of Wilhelmina
+the wilful. I fancy, though, you will find more
+obstacles than you bargain for in this little game;
+where, for instance, does the other cousin and
+guardian come in?”</p>
+
+<p>“I should have to explain to Theresa that it was
+right. You would think it so if you knew. Theresa
+will always do what she thinks right, and Polly will
+do what she is made to do. To get your own way
+is mostly a matter of time.”</p>
+
+<p>“This time I should not be surprised if it took
+you till one-and-twenty. Law is not so easy to
+play with as you think; and cases of this sort are not
+so easy to win either, neither are they settled in a
+hurry.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was prepared for that. “How long do you
+think it would take?” she asked. “A year?”</p>
+
+<p>“Probably; it might be longer, or it might, if you
+have very good luck and few difficulties, be a little
+shorter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Would it cost a great deal?”</p>
+
+<p>“It could not be done for nothing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Would a hundred pounds be any good to start
+with?”</p>
+
+<p>“It would be excellent.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill put her hand into her pocket and drew out
+the diamond buckles: “I don’t know what they are
+worth,” she said as she placed them before the
+astonished lawyer, “but at least a hundred pounds;
+more than that, I expect.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span>“Where did you get them?” Mr. Stevens had
+taken one to the window, and glanced from it to the
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>“Old Mr. Harborough gave them to me before he
+died.”</p>
+
+<p>“What!” The lawyer lost all interest in the
+buckles and stood staring at their owner, wondering
+what new surprise this granddaughter of the Corbys
+was going to develop.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Harborough gave them to me,” she repeated.
+“They are my very own; young Mr. Harborough
+was there at the time they were given, and he said
+they were my own and no one could take them away.
+I did mean to keep them for another purpose, but I
+believe it would be more right to use them for this.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you any idea what these buckles are
+worth?”</p>
+
+<p>“More than a hundred pounds,” Bill said readily;
+“they will do to begin the case, won’t they?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is altogether extraordinary,” the lawyer
+muttered, and began to wrap the buckles in paper
+with the resigned air of one who gives up a
+problem.</p>
+
+<p>He offered the parcel to Bill, but she put her hands
+behind her back; “I want you to keep them,” she
+said, “and begin at once.”</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps as well that Mr. Stevens was not
+busy that afternoon, for he found there were several
+more points to be explained to his young client,
+among others that she herself could not bring an
+action or give directions for legal proceedings. This
+difficulty she disposed of by undertaking to arrange
+matters with Polly within two days. Another point
+the good man had to explain was that no one would
+undertake the case without first knowing a great
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span>deal more about it. This the indefatigable Bill met
+with a promise to send the oak box to him by an
+early train the next morning, and to set to work at
+once to find out any and every detail she could concerning
+the first Wilhelmina. When at last Mr.
+Stevens, again handing her the buckles, told her that
+her method of payment was not according to custom,
+she was still not nonplussed. “Shall I get them
+sold,” she asked, “and give you the money?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly not; don’t attempt to sell them. And
+listen to me: I should not in any circumstances
+undertake this business for you; I will examine the
+contents of the box if you like, and tell you how I
+think you stand; but I would not undertake the
+case, which is completely out of my range. I am a
+country lawyer with quite as much country work as I
+can do; I am not a very young man, not a very
+poor one, and not at all an ambitious one. I have
+neither the time nor the inclination for such a piece
+of work as this.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you could find someone who would do it?”
+Bill asked, not in the least impressed by the gravity
+of his manner.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose I could,” he said, smiling in spite of
+himself. “But even if I were to find someone, and
+there really was something for that someone to do,
+you must see that there are a good many things to
+settle before it comes to terms. When, and if, it
+does your cousin is the proper person to be consulted.”</p>
+
+<p>But Bill did not agree with him there. She
+pointed out that the affair was hers and the buckles
+hers; still she conceded that Polly could be talked
+to, and, since he wished it, she would take the
+buckles back to town. She put them in her pocket
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span>again, to the no small uneasiness of Mr. Stevens,
+although, as she herself said, they were too big to
+drop out, and no one would expect to find anything
+of value in her pocket.</p>
+
+<p>She was about to leave, by no means dissatisfied
+with the interview, when Mr. Stevens made a remark
+which caused her to pause. After saying that she
+must not make sure of her position, and that he
+himself could give her no hope until he had examined
+the contents of the oak box, he concluded: “And
+even if everything else proves satisfactory, it is quite
+possible you will come to grief over the matter of the
+divorce; the other side would be sure to make the
+most of that; it will have to be gone into very
+thoroughly.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill stopped on the threshold. “Do you mean,”
+she asked, “that you will have to go into it
+thoroughly, or that it will have to be done in
+public?”</p>
+
+<p>“I should not have much to do with it, but both
+your lawyers and those on the opposite side would
+have plenty; it is a point on which a good deal
+might turn.”</p>
+
+<p>“I had not thought of that,” and Bill’s face
+clouded.</p>
+
+<p>“You had better think of it,” the lawyer said,
+“for it will certainly arise. You must be sure, and
+the other side would insist on being sure, that there
+was a divorce; they would want the date of it and
+the date of the second marriage and the date of the
+birth of the child.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will they want the name of the first husband?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will it be published in the papers?”</p>
+
+<p>“It would probably figure in the reports of the case.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span>“Then I am not at all sure the case can ever come
+off,” Bill said, to Mr. Stevens’s great astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Because the first husband is alive, and I would
+not hurt him for all the world.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stevens regarded this as a matter of sentiment,
+but a sentiment he could honour, though he hardly
+knew how to advise. “Well,” he said at last, “you
+need not, and indeed cannot, do anything for a long
+time. I will look over your papers and tell you how
+I think you stand, and by that time you will have
+been able to decide what you wish to do.”</p>
+
+<p>But this was not Bill’s manner of going to work at
+all. “Thank you very much,” she said, “but I think
+I must decide sooner than that. When does the last
+up-train leave for London? Eight o’clock, is it?
+Thank you, I will decide before that. Perhaps I had
+better not come to see you so late; I will write from
+town.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear young lady,” the lawyer said, moved by
+the gravity of her face and manner, “there is no need
+to take the matter so seriously, or to do anything in
+such a hurry. Send me the box, and afterwards we
+will talk over what can be done.”</p>
+
+<p>But though Bill again thanked him, not disagreeing
+with him this time, he was not at all sure that he had
+convinced her.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a pity if she drops it,” he meditated as he
+watched her go down the street. “She would win if
+she went in, somehow—and probably do precisely
+what she pleased with her fortune when she got it.
+She is the kind that does; she would bamboozle the
+Court of Chancery and dance through an Act of
+Parliament.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVIII.<br>
+<small>THE OAK BOX GOES TO WRUGGLESBY.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> waiting-room of a railway-station is not usually
+selected as the best place in which to think seriously
+over a matter of perplexity. But if the waiting-room
+be attached to the station at a very small country
+town where trains are infrequent and passengers few,
+a worse place might be chosen; it has at least the
+merit of freedom from friendly advice. Moreover
+the fact of a person sitting there doing absolutely
+nothing for an hour or more creates no surprise, as
+it is to be presumed he is only waiting for the next
+train. On the January afternoon of Bill’s visit to
+Wrugglesby she found the waiting-room an admirable
+place for quiet thought. When she left Mr.
+Stevens’s office she went straight to the station and,
+sitting down with her back to the window, tried to
+think over the difficulties suggested by the lawyer’s
+words.</p>
+
+<p>The difficulties resolved themselves into one and
+one only,—Mr. Dane. The other obstacles to the
+success of her undertaking might or might not prove
+insurmountable; at any rate Bill would face them
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>undauntedly with a light heart and a clear conscience.
+But Mr. Dane was another matter; she could not
+wilfully, and with her eyes open, do what she felt
+sure would give him pain; and yet,—how could she
+give up this enterprise?</p>
+
+<p>At this point two stout women entered the waiting-room.
+They were going to Darvel by the next
+down train in some twenty minutes’ time, and had
+walked in three miles from a neighbouring village;
+when one walks three miles the balance of a spare
+half-hour is not much to allow for catching a train.
+They were in “nice time,” they told each other,
+though they seemed flustered and annoyed when
+they found the booking-office still closed. Bill heard
+what they said without understanding, just as she saw
+them without perceiving; she sat looking straight
+before her though her true gaze was inwards. They
+glanced at her once or twice. “A natural, poor
+thing,” was the conclusion they came to. “They
+didn’t oughter let her be about alone like that,” was
+their final opinion as she rose from her seat and
+walked out of the waiting-room.</p>
+
+<p>Bill left the station, turned out of the main street,
+and took the road to Ashelton. She had decided
+what to do: she would go to Mr. Dane, not to ask
+his permission to claim her connection with the Corby
+family and consequently to drag him and his past
+before the eyes of his neighbours, but to tell him her
+story and ask his advice. She loved him so well that
+she felt sure he would give his advice without prejudice;
+she was absolutely certain that he would not
+misunderstand or misjudge. She started on her walk
+with a comparatively quiet mind, not an absolutely
+quiet one, for she knew she must give a full confidence
+or none at all. She must tell all, even including that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span>which concerned Kit Harborough, and the dream
+which was a dream no more.</p>
+
+<p>At first Bill thought of nothing but what she had
+to tell, but bit by bit the solitude of the road and the
+exhilaration of the exercise soothed her so that she
+thought no more. Six miles of lonely road, a level
+country wide spread and bare on either hand, a silent
+wintry afternoon with the suggestion of twilight
+gathering before the village was reached,—what more
+could one ask to minister to a mind diseased?
+Nothing in Bill’s opinion, as she walked the six miles
+in something under an hour and a half, without a
+single doubt of her ability to walk them back again
+after dark and her pleasure in doing it.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not walk those six miles back; the
+proprietor of the White Horse at Ashelton received
+a request during the evening for the little cart and
+old pony for Mr. Dane. And it is to be presumed
+he drove Bill to Wrugglesby in time for the eight
+o’clock train, for some sort of vehicle brought her to
+the station in time for that train, and a little after
+eight o’clock Mr. Dane rang at the private house of
+Stevens the lawyer.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stevens wanted very much to know what
+had brought Mr. Dane to see her husband at that
+time in the evening. She had a great opinion of
+Mr. Dane, of whom she knew little, and of his
+Family (with a capital F), of which she knew less.
+She and Mr. Johnson had conferred more than
+once on the subject of the relative who was a lord
+and the other relative who was a bishop, and the
+mystery why Mr. Dane himself was—if not a bishop
+or a lord—at least something more than a country
+parson. On that particular evening, after Mr. Dane
+had left, Mrs. Stevens naturally wished to know the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>reason of his visit; first she sought indirectly for
+information and learned nothing; then she asked
+boldly what had brought him there that night.</p>
+
+<p>“A small pony-cart, my dear,” Mr. Stevens said
+amiably; “and the same vehicle has taken him away
+again. I hope he will reach his destination safely,
+for he is not as young as he was and the night is
+dark, though the pony, I must admit, looks a safe
+beast.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stevens, being somewhat annoyed by this
+answer, condescended to no more questions and
+maintained a dignified silence for the rest of the
+evening,—a proceeding which it is to be feared did
+not greatly trouble Mr. Stevens, since he was so
+completely engrossed in his own meditations that he
+was not aware of it. After Mrs. Stevens had gone
+to bed he poked the fire into a blaze and observed
+to the crackling coals: “You were a fool, Wilhelmina
+the first, a fool! You threw away a very fine
+and noble gentleman for your gipsy lover.” And
+being a country lawyer of somewhat prosaic practice,
+and being also a man of genial sympathies, he once
+more gave himself up to meditations on the story
+which had been told him that night.</p>
+
+<p>And Mr. Dane, having reached home in safety,
+also thought a little of the story which had been
+revived that night. But not for long; he resolutely
+put it away from him as he put away the diamond
+buckles Bill had left. She had left them on purpose
+and with a definite understanding. “You must
+keep them, Monseigneur,” she said. “I can reclaim
+them, if I ever have the money, and if you do not
+sell them before. I cannot have you undertake this
+great thing for me unless you will have them as a
+sort of guarantee; I would rather you kept them;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>it is better so.” So he kept them, for after he had
+seen how she carried them loose in her pocket and
+heard how she kept them in a hole in the kitchen-wall,
+he also thought that it was better so.</p>
+
+<p>Bill went back to London without her buckles,
+but Polly was not aware of the fact. Indeed Polly
+did not hear anything much about the visit to
+Wrugglesby that evening, for Bill did not reach
+home till late, too late to tell all about it, she said,
+and put off the explanation till the next day, when
+she promised to tell Polly everything. Bella was
+rather disappointed by this arrangement for she would
+be out then,—at the dressmaker’s in the morning and
+at Mrs. James Brownlow’s in the afternoon. It
+must be admitted that, fond as Bill was of her cousin,
+Bella’s absence suited her well, for she wanted to have
+a long and somewhat difficult talk with Polly.</p>
+
+<p>Bella went out early, and early also went the little
+oak box by rail to Wrugglesby, carefully addressed
+and properly insured as Mr. Stevens had impressed
+upon Bill it must be. Before it went she pulled off
+the chintz cover from the top and took one thing
+from the inside; not a document or deed, or even
+one of her mother’s recipes, only a fossil sea-urchin
+found on the beach at Bymouth on a sweet September
+morning. She hid it away among her linen; then
+she nailed down the lid of the box, tied a rope round
+it, and sent it away.</p>
+
+<p>Polly did not know it had gone until later when
+Bill told her in the course of their talk. This talk
+did not prove so difficult as Bill had anticipated, for
+Polly was quick to grasp the possibilities of the
+case. It was true, Bill had acted without her consent
+and in a measure outraged her in her part of guardian;
+but Polly was not always playing that part, and she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>was, as the late Mr. Brownlow had said, a capital
+woman of business; when it came to plain facts
+apart from appearances, Bill’s conduct and communication
+wore a very different aspect. As Polly said:
+“You risk nothing; even if you lose you are no
+worse off than you were except for those diamond
+buckles—” (here, in spite of a previous and very
+eloquent statement of her opinion of Bill’s giving
+them up, Polly could not forbear from making a
+short digression and recapitulation of her sentiments)—“except
+for those buckles, you lose nothing since
+Mr. Dane is going to advance the money and take
+all the trouble. You are quite sure he means you
+only to pay if you win? You lose nothing if you
+fail and if you succeed—well!”</p>
+
+<p>The prospect seemed almost too much for Polly,
+and Bill forbore to mention any of her own plans
+regarding the money, should she win it. Polly, of
+course, had something to say about the way in which
+she had not been consulted, though not much, for,
+as she admitted, Bill “had done very well”; moreover,
+she was somewhat mollified by the nominal
+share in future transactions which Bill assured her
+would be hers. Bill explained matters as clearly as
+she could to Polly’s great satisfaction and sufficient
+enlightenment. In a matter of this sort Polly was
+quick to grasp the essential points, and in a matter
+of any sort even quicker to accommodate herself to
+the part she was to play. There was one thing,
+however, which Polly did not understand, and which
+Bill would not explain,—the reason that had induced
+Mr. Dane to follow such an extraordinary course as
+he had, and not only to give his sanction to the
+proceedings but also to lend active and financial
+assistance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>“I can’t tell you,” was all Bill would say; “you
+would not understand. I hardly know myself and I
+certainly can’t explain. I can’t talk about him, he
+is,—he is too good.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly was not satisfied, but she could get no other
+explanation, and when Bill left her after some rather
+able though unsuccessful cross-examination, she
+hurled after her as a parting shot: “It is a very
+peculiar thing, Bill, very peculiar indeed, the way in
+which elderly gentlemen do things for you. One
+gives you a pair of diamond buckles, and another is
+undertaking a law-case for you. It is most peculiar,
+not to put too fine a point upon it,—most peculiar!”</p>
+
+<p>And though Polly went to the kitchen-door and
+raised her voice so that Bill, who had gone up-stairs,
+should not lose any of the remark, she still contrived
+to throw a vast deal of meaning into the last words
+and the sniff which followed them. But Bill, if she
+heard, did not answer, which was wise; and Polly,
+who was too satisfied with the results of Bill’s
+“peculiarity” to trouble very much about explanations,
+went back to her work and asked no more
+unanswerable questions.</p>
+
+<p>Bella and Theresa had to be taken into confidence
+of course, but neither of them thought the matter so
+important as Bill and Polly did. It was interesting
+to know all about Bill’s people, but the substantial
+benefits to be reaped from it seemed uncertain and
+shadowy. “It was all rather improbable and unwise,”
+Theresa said, while Bella, being full of her
+own concerns, hardly understood what was being
+discussed; and both sisters entirely failed to realise
+the value of success should it ever be attained.</p>
+
+<p>“They are so stupid,” Polly once said impatiently;
+“they don’t grasp anything out of their own groove.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>I’ve no patience with either of them; they are
+thorough Brownlows, without an ounce of vitality
+between them. They’re all right so long as you put
+them in ordinary circumstances,—a decent house
+with a decent servant, decent meals at regular hours,
+and a decent husband to come home at regular times
+and provide the money. But as for striking out a
+line for themselves, or saving a situation, or doing or
+even understanding anything which is out of their
+ordinary rut or wants a small amount of enterprise,
+they simply can’t do it!”</p>
+
+<p>Bill laughed a little, though she could not deny
+the truth of at least part of the indictment. She
+could not deny to herself either that this same
+characteristic of the sisters made it easier for her to
+carry through, unquestioned and undisturbed, the
+enterprises which they could neither undertake nor
+understand. However, she did not remark on this
+to Polly, but merely said: “I think Bella and T. are
+both rather occupied with their own concerns just
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly would not allow this excuse to Theresa,
+though she admitted it might hold good for Bella,
+whose wedding-day was so near. Bella’s wedding
+occupied all their minds about this time, Polly being
+determined that it should be of suitable though quiet
+magnificence. “Of course we are still in mourning,”
+she said, “or at least we can reckon we are; Aunt
+was almost like a mother to us, besides an out of
+mourning wedding would cost so much. As it is, we
+can make a very good show indeed at a reasonable
+price. And I mean to do it too, Bill; we are quite
+as good as the Dawsons, and I’m not going to let
+them think we are not.” And Polly made all the
+preparations in her power; her chief cause of trouble
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>being that, since Bella was to be married at Ashelton,
+she herself could not be at the base of operations very
+long beforehand.</p>
+
+<p>Bella left town early in February, in the company
+of Jack, who had come to town on business. When
+Polly heard of his coming she regretted that she
+could not offer him the hospitality she had offered
+Gilchrist, but her house was too full now to allow of
+it. However, Jack came to see them and stopped
+some time, and was, as Polly said, “as pleasant as
+possible and quite different from Mr. Gilchrist Harborough.”
+Indeed, Jack, instead of disapproving of
+Bill’s working, insisted on helping her to clear the
+table, making much fun over it. He always seemed
+to regard Bill as a jolly little school-girl not to be
+taken seriously; that day he teased her about the
+apples she took to eat in the train on her journey to
+Bymouth. Bill told him they were Polly’s, but he
+would not believe her, and they laughed over it for
+some time. Later on, however, she became serious
+and asked him some questions about the Harborough
+lawsuit. Of late Jack had become somewhat intimate
+with Gilchrist; Bill had gathered this from Bella’s
+talk, and thinking that, if anyone could tell her of
+the present condition of the Harborough case, Jack
+could, she questioned him on it.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Lady of Law,” he exclaimed when he
+found out how much she knew of the original claim,
+“you seem to know a good deal about it already!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I heard all about that part,” she told him;
+and he remembered that Gilchrist had been very
+often to Haylands during the summer, so often that
+he had once thought there was some sort of an
+understanding between Bill and the Australian,
+though latterly he had begun to doubt it. “I am
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>afraid,” he said, thinking her interest in the case was
+on Gilchrist’s account, “I am afraid your friend
+won’t get this affair settled in a hurry; there seem to
+be a hundred and one things to prove.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes? What? Tell me.”</p>
+
+<p>He smiled at her earnestness. “Let me see,” he
+said, “what shall I tell you? I have heard about it
+no end of times, but I am not so very much the wiser
+and I’m sure you won’t be; still here goes. The
+lawyers now, I believe, are busy trying to find out
+whether this precious rule of the youngest son inheriting
+applies to sons only, or whether it can be extended
+to other relations when the sons give out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t it? I should have thought it could.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, but you’re not a lawyer; lawyers don’t
+think, they prove. They say sometimes the extension
+is allowed and sometimes it is not, according
+to early arrangement or tradition or something; they
+have got to find out how the first Harborough had
+his affairs arranged. Then another question they are
+busy about is how much old Harborough knew of
+the existence of another claimant, and I don’t see
+how they are ever to discover that under the circumstances.
+Things are rather mixed altogether; for
+instance, your friend’s father was born in 1845, old
+Harborough came into the property that same year,
+and that year also there died his youngest brother,
+the one who should have had the property,—that is
+what I call indecently crowding events to no purpose.
+Then the old man’s will seems likely to prove another
+bone of contention,—whether he had a right to make
+a will, why he made it, whether he believed his
+position insecure and made it to strengthen it, or
+whether he thought it secure and made it in good
+faith,—oh, it is a lovely tangle I can tell you!
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span>Harborough has talked to me about it till I have
+completely forgotten which party wants to prove
+what, and have got so mixed myself that I have gone
+home deciding to sow estates-tail in the home-field,
+drain the pond and turn it into an estate in fee simple
+to settle on my bonny bride.”</p>
+
+<p>He drew Bella’s hand into his own as he spoke,
+and it was easy to see from their faces that there
+would be no more discussion of the Harborough case
+for the present. But Bill could not forbear asking
+one last question: “I suppose it will take a long
+time to settle?”</p>
+
+<p>“Years! You’ll have time to grow up twice over
+before they are done squabbling, and Bella will be a
+staid and sober matron by the time the decision is
+given.”</p>
+
+<p>Bella combated this opinion, not because she
+doubted the length of the Harborough lawsuit but
+because she vowed she would never be staid and
+sober. A conversation natural to the circumstances
+ensued, and lasted until Jack and Bella left the house
+together.</p>
+
+<p>It was of course quite out of the question for both
+Bill and Polly to attend Bella’s wedding, as they
+could not leave the house to take care of itself, so it
+had been arranged for Bill to stay and Polly to go.
+It was really important that she should be present at
+the function, if for no other reason than her own
+belief that Bella and Theresa would not be equal to
+the situation and the Dawson family in its strength.
+“They would never manage without me,” Polly said
+with conviction. “I shall go down a day or two
+beforehand,—I really must, to see after things. You
+can do here quite as well as I can, and no one need
+know you are alone; I am not afraid to trust you, as
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span>I know you can take very good care of yourself and
+the house.”</p>
+
+<p>To this Bill agreed. “Of course I shall be all
+right,” she said. “You had better stay as long as
+Bella and Theresa want you.”</p>
+
+<p>But Polly had decided not to remain after the
+wedding. “There will be no need for me to do
+that,” she said. “I shall go several days before to
+see that everything is arranged properly and I shall
+come back directly after. Or,—no, on second
+thoughts, I think it had better be the day after; it
+would perhaps be nicer if I waited till the day after,
+as there will be such a lot of clearing up to do.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill heard this last decision with a smile, she knew
+that Polly’s “clearing up” would mean a substantial
+hamper-shaped addition to her luggage. But she
+said nothing, as she knew Theresa would not mind,
+and Polly fulfilled her plan exactly. She went to
+Wrugglesby three days before the wedding with the
+most wonderful costume that even her ingenuity had
+ever compassed, safely packed in a cardboard box and
+placed on the seat beside her.</p>
+
+<p>Polly’s work, and she certainly did work during
+those three days, was not in vain. Bella’s wedding
+was in every way successful. The Dawson family
+was properly impressed with the desirability of the
+new connection; Mrs. Dawson was almost satisfied,
+and Miss Gladys Dawson charmingly (and unpleasantly)
+put in her place by the presiding genius. Polly
+really was in her element that day and showed to the
+best advantage. Mrs. Stevens was warm in her
+praises, and even Gilchrist Harborough, who was
+there more as the bridegroom’s friend than the
+bride’s, thought that his former opinion of Miss
+Hains had been unjust.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span>“It really was as nice a wedding as I have ever
+seen,” was Miss Gruet’s opinion, and in the main
+Ashelton agreed with her, finding in the event a
+delightful subject of conversation during the lengthening
+days.</p>
+
+<p>“It is quite <i>the</i> event of the spring,” Miss Minchin
+said gaily. So it was in Ashelton, and beyond Ashelton
+the ladies did not take very much account.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond Ashelton, at the little house at Bayswater,
+there was another event, and one of such interest to
+those concerned that even Polly for a time regarded
+Bella’s wedding as of secondary importance. Mr.
+Stevens had examined the contents of Bill’s box and
+found that the deed dated 1799 was indeed the
+counterpart of the lease granted by Roger Corby in
+the year that Peter Harborough was shot. Mr.
+Dane, acting upon this information, had been to a
+certain old established firm of solicitors in London
+and had seen the senior partner. He was not the
+man who, something more than forty years ago, had
+helped to cut the bond Wilhelmina Corby had tried
+to break for herself; nevertheless he soon knew all
+about it, for it was recorded in the annals of the firm
+and only needed to be looked up. Looked up it
+accordingly was, together with other events, dates,
+and certificates; and the lease and the information
+and everything else there was to place were placed
+in the hands of this lawyer who, at Mr. Dane’s
+request, undertook the case Mr. Stevens had refused.
+Altogether, what with one thing and another, things
+were progressing surprisingly well, and Polly and Bill
+had good reason to congratulate themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Before the spring was over Mr. Briant of Sandover
+felt the consequences of the energy and inquiry Bill
+had provoked, for he received the most unwelcome
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span>intelligence that a descendant of the Corbys existed
+and claimed, in a purely legal and formal manner, a
+large piece of his valuable Sandover estate. He did
+not believe the claim genuine; and then he did not
+believe it could be substantiated; and in any case he
+was, if possible, going to contest it, for he had always
+believed there were no legitimate descendants of the
+Corbys left.</p>
+
+<p>“It rains lawsuits,” he grumbled once; “before
+Kit Harborough is through with his trouble I am let
+in for one. Although,” so he added to a friend,
+“between you and me, I should be glad to see the
+boy clear of his business half as well as I shall be of
+Mary Ann Hains, guardian of somebody Corby’s
+granddaughter.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[378]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIX.<br>
+<small>POLLY PROVES A TRUE PROPHET.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was in June that the accident happened, early
+June, but the season was warm that year and already
+the little white roses were in bloom. They were in
+bloom the year of Theresa’s marriage,—white roses
+for the wedding, and now, with but one other June
+to intervene, white roses for the burying. It was
+Bill who thought of this, not Theresa, although
+Theresa, smelling the scent of the flowers under the
+window, thought of her wedding-day as she sat
+waiting that night.</p>
+
+<p>She shivered a little as she recollected; it may
+have been at her thoughts, it may have been with
+cold, for the air was chilly. It was very late; she
+rose, and going to the window closed it, shutting out
+the sweet scents of the night. Then she glanced at
+the clock,—how late it was!—past twelve,—Robert
+had never been so late before. Surely nothing could
+have happened to him? Nothing ever happened;
+he was late, that was all, and she sat down again with
+a set look on her face.</p>
+
+<p>There was a letter in her work-basket; she had
+read it once, but something made her put her sewing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[379]</span>down and take it from its envelope to read again.
+It was from Bella, who had gone to spend a few
+days with some relations of her husband’s at Kensington.
+How happy Bella seemed! How delighted
+that Jack was going to join her that day! It was
+such a pleasant letter, though it told little. Theresa
+read it and folded it, smiling as she did so; then for
+a moment she sat listening, thinking she heard the
+sound of a horse’s feet. The road was not near, but
+the night was so still that she could almost have
+heard in her present state of tension. She might be
+mistaken, but there was certainly a sound of some
+kind. Wheels,—someone driving home—then she
+was mistaken, for Robert was riding to-night; this
+must be some other wayfarer, perhaps Gilchrist
+Harborough come down by the mail from London.
+She set herself to watch again; the sound of the
+wheels had passed now, the vehicle may have driven
+out of earshot, or it may have paused by the gate
+where the road was dark. The last must have been
+the case for, after a moment, she caught the sound
+again; perhaps the horse started suddenly, for the
+noise was much plainer now. It was coming nearer—surely
+there was not some one driving up to the
+house?</p>
+
+<p>She rose quickly, a nameless dread at her heart,
+and went into the hall. There she paused a moment
+listening; the noise of wheels came nearer, then
+ceased, and through the closed door she heard, or her
+over-wrought senses told her she heard, the sound of
+a horse breathing. A man came up the steps; she
+heard him as she stood there, her hand upon the
+door, nerving herself to meet she knew not what.
+He stopped, and she opened the door to find herself
+face to face with Gilchrist Harborough.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[380]</span>For a second he shrank from her, and in the starlight
+she saw it.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it?” she asked with lips that seemed too
+dry to speak.</p>
+
+<p>“Robert has been hurt,” he answered, avoiding
+her eyes. “I—I have brought him home.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hurt?”</p>
+
+<p>Her voice rang distinct, almost sharp, and Harborough
+knew the question she was asking herself,
+although she was too loyal to put it to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he answered, meeting her eyes now; “he
+has been hurt, badly hurt, I am afraid.”</p>
+
+<p>“Badly? How badly?” Fear was whitening
+her face and quickening her perceptions. “You
+don’t mean—oh Robert!—Why, I can see him out
+there! Robert!”</p>
+
+<p>She passed Harborough and would have gone
+down the steps but he stopped her. “That is Dr.
+Bolton,” he said gently; “I brought him with me.
+Robert is there,—but,—you can’t see him.”</p>
+
+<p>She leaned against the door-post and caught her
+breath, searching his face with questioning eyes.
+“He is dead?”</p>
+
+<p>He felt the words were spoken, though he hardly
+heard them. “Come in here,” he said gently. He
+led her to the room she had just left, and put her
+unresisting in a chair.</p>
+
+<p>“Dead,” she whispered, “dead?” Her breath
+was coming in gasps; she shook a little, but she did
+not weep or faint. For some reason Gilchrist was
+afraid to look at her; he moved to the door. “Are
+you going to bring him in?” she asked in that same
+low, breathless voice.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Up-stairs?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[381]</span>“It would be better.” That was the doctor’s
+voice outside; both the doors were open and he had
+heard what was said.</p>
+
+<p>“You will want a light; there is none in the
+room.”</p>
+
+<p>She had risen as she spoke, but the doctor, seeing
+her white strained face, said: “No, no, wait here;
+Harborough will go up first, and set a light.”</p>
+
+<p>She paid no heed to him, but tried to light a little
+hand-lamp. Gilchrist took the matches from her
+trembling fingers and, lighting it for her, put it into
+her hand. She gave him a look of thanks and then
+went slowly up-stairs.</p>
+
+<p>It was early the next morning when Bill received
+the telegram that summoned her to Ashelton. That
+Bill should be summoned both annoyed and surprised
+Polly; she objected to parting with her for one
+reason, and for another she considered that she
+herself was the right person to be sent for in an
+emergency. “I don’t see what good you can do,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>But Bill did not argue the point; she looked at
+the time-table, and then went up-stairs to dress for
+the journey. Polly picked up the telegram and
+having read it again followed Bill. “‘Come at once,
+Mrs. Morton wants you. Harborough.’” She read
+the message aloud to Bill when she reached her room.
+“What has Gilchrist got to do with it, I should like
+to know?”</p>
+
+<p>“Robert is ill, I expect,” Bill said. “If it were
+Theresa, Robert would have sent the telegram;
+but as neither of them did, I expect Robert is ill.”</p>
+
+<p>“Robert ill!” Polly sniffed contemptuously, then
+with the air of a prophet who sees his evil prognostications
+fulfilled, she added: “It is very likely you
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[382]</span>are right; he never was much good. Still I don’t see
+why Gilchrist Harborough should telegraph for you;
+he has no connection with the matter, neither have you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Jack and Bella are away. I expect Gilchrist is
+looking after things; he would be very good in an
+emergency.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill got her dress out of the cupboard as she
+spoke, and Polly looked at the telegram again.
+“Robert’s not ill,” she said with sudden conviction;
+“he’s dead!” Bill, from the wording of the telegram,
+thought it just possible too; still she did not
+say so, and Polly went on: “I always said he would
+die young and die suddenly; now he has done it and
+probably left Theresa very badly off.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was used to seeing Polly in moral undress by
+this time; the elder cousin did not always think it
+necessary to keep up appearances with the younger
+now that she knew how little the girl appreciated or
+was deceived by them. Bill had so often been treated
+to Polly’s unvarnished opinion of late that she was
+not much surprised by her way of regarding the
+possible death of Theresa’s husband.</p>
+
+<p>“Really I never saw anyone so unlucky as we are,”
+Polly was saying; “no sooner do we get Bella settled
+than we have Theresa thrown back on our hands. It
+is hard, just as we are beginning to get on a little
+too, and make things pay. You and I have worked
+things up and managed splendidly, and this is our
+reward! It seems to me that, manage as we may,
+we shall never reap any benefit from it. We can
+work and it seems we always may. As for those
+Warings, I have no patience with them!”</p>
+
+<p>“So it seems, since you won’t wait to hear how
+Robert is before deciding not only his death, but his
+widow’s future as well.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[383]</span>“Oh, I know he is dead,” Polly said irritably as
+she followed the younger girl down-stairs. And
+Bill felt nearly sure of it too, even before she got
+to Wrugglesby station and saw Sam, who had been
+sent to meet her. When she saw him there was
+room for doubt no longer.</p>
+
+<p>On the homeward drive he told her all he knew
+about the accident. The master had gone to
+Wrugglesby yesterday and returned late; he was
+riding a skittish young horse and must have been
+thrown and probably killed on the spot. Mr. Harborough,
+who had come from London by the mail-train,
+drove home along the same road and found
+him, but it was thought he must have been lying
+there for several hours. Dr. Bolton had been called
+up and came with Mr. Harborough to Haylands;
+but it was quite useless, the master was beyond
+help when he was found; “and the missus”—so
+Sam concluded—“was somethin’ terrible, quite
+stunned, not sheddin’ so much as a tear.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill could believe that; it seemed to her quite
+natural that Theresa should be stunned. But when
+she reached Haylands it seemed just as natural that
+Theresa, when she met her and put her arms round
+her, should burst into a paroxysm of weeping. Bill
+wept with her of course; it was her nature; but she
+wept for the pity of life’s tangle, while Theresa wept
+for the husband dead last night and the lover dead
+months ago, for the widowhood of name which had
+fallen upon her now and the widowhood of heart
+which had fallen long before; wept for her grief and
+her loss and her double grief that the loss and grief
+were not greater, and for all combined till thought
+was vague and her heart was eased.</p>
+
+<p>So she wept, and no longer dreaded that the world,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[384]</span>seeing her grief, should also see that which lay
+behind. She had feared lest the secret she had
+guarded during Robert’s life should be revealed after
+his death. It was for this reason she would not have
+Polly or Bella or anyone but Bill,—Bill whose eyes
+were not quick to mark anything amiss. The others
+might discover or think, but Bill—no one minded
+Bill. And then, when Bill came with her sympathy
+and her pliant changing nature, there suddenly
+seemed no secret to hide, nothing amiss which could
+be marked—all was melted in a gush of tears.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Theresa became widow indeed, and though
+she sorrowed as such she was all the better for the
+sorrowing. Quite unconsciously she turned to the
+girl, whom she still persisted in regarding as a child,
+for comfort and help. Bill gave all the comfort she
+could, listened when Theresa told her how Robert
+went out yesterday and she had not said good-bye;
+wept when Theresa wept over this omission and over
+the hundred trifles which seemed to speak of his
+presence still near,—his pipe on the mantelpiece, his
+whip behind the door, his dog waiting wistfully in
+the hall. Bill listened, but she also worked, for that
+suited her best. Theresa was really prostrate with
+grief; so Bill assumed, by the quiet right of the one
+who can, the management of the household, and the
+management so assumed remained with her some time.</p>
+
+<p>It was during the days which followed that Gilchrist
+Harborough found himself thinking that Bill,
+viewed in a light other than that of prospective wife,
+had something to recommend her. He had not seen
+her since the December day when she cancelled their
+engagement; but in the time that followed Robert’s
+death he saw her often, for she stayed at Ashelton
+till the summer was well advanced. Polly wanted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[385]</span>her back in town, but she was obliged to allow that
+Theresa needed her more at Haylands. Very reluctantly
+she gave permission for Bill to remain; very
+reluctantly, with the wages Bill forfeited by absence,
+she hired a girl to help with the work. And Bill
+spent a second June at Haylands, very unlike the
+first, excepting only that she saw Gilchrist Harborough
+often, though even in seeing him there was
+one great and essential difference, for they met now
+on a new footing, a footing much nearer equality.</p>
+
+<p>Jack was a good brother-in-law, but Greys was
+some way from Haylands, and he, being but recently
+married, and having besides a great deal of land to
+look after, found it somewhat difficult to give
+Theresa’s farm the supervision it required. Harborough
+lived much nearer, had more time and
+possibly more inclination, for the lawsuit did not
+occupy so much of his attention just now, therefore
+he came often to Haylands that summer, and in
+coming, met Bill often, but always in her working
+capacity; a capacity, he thought, which suited her so
+well that he wondered how he had ever come to think
+of her,—the most able collaborator man could wish,—as
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>But Theresa’s domestic arrangement, admirable as
+she found it, did not suit Polly at all. To begin
+with she did not find the girl at all an efficient substitute
+for Bill, and to go on with she “wanted to
+know how it was all going to end.” Bill also wanted
+to know that, not because she found the arrangement
+any less pleasant than did Theresa, but because it was
+her custom to plan several miles in advance of the
+elder cousin’s range of vision. So, before Theresa
+had contemplated the future as a working possibility,
+Bill had answered Polly’s enquiries.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[386]</span>“I’m afraid,” so she wrote, “things are not much
+better than you expected; Theresa will be left very
+badly off. Still, I think she will most likely have a
+little, so there is a certain amount of choice as to
+what is to be done; I have not properly talked it
+over with her so I do not know if she has any
+wishes. As far as I can see we three (she and you
+and I) must live together; we can’t afford two
+houses, but together I believe we might live here or
+in town. If we stop here we should have to give
+up most of the land, only keeping enough for a
+certain amount of dairy work. The dairy, with pigs,
+poultry, and vegetable growing, I reckon would keep
+us in food and pretty well pay the rent—I believe
+this could be made to answer. We could have a
+boarder in the summer if you liked. Of course the
+other choice is for you and me to go on as before
+and take Theresa in; I don’t know what else can be
+done, unless she goes to Jack and Bella, which seems
+hardly fair.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly read this letter and digested it thoughtfully,
+and her thoughts, it is to be feared, were not so
+much for the common good as for her own personal
+comfort, and that did not incline her towards going
+to Ashelton. She preferred town to country; she
+liked her present life in many respects, and she
+certainly did not relish the idea of making pigs and
+poultry pay with Bill’s assistance, not because she
+thought they would not pay but because she knew
+quite well that the assistance would be on the wrong
+side in such a venture. Theresa she did not consider
+in the matter, and fortunately for her, Theresa
+had no very strong wishes; she did not greatly care
+whether she remained at Haylands or went to
+London; it seemed to her that her life had been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[387]</span>snapped and could go on as well, or as ill, in one
+place as another. Jack was in favour of giving up
+the farm, pronouncing Bill’s scheme to be a mad
+one. Gilchrist, who knew Bill better, was not so
+sure of that; but he saw that it would entail much
+hard work on all, on Theresa, who in his opinion
+was not fit for it, as well as on Bill who was. Therefore,
+as the general voice was with Polly, she carried
+the day, to her own great satisfaction, and at
+Michaelmas the farm was given up.</p>
+
+<p>It is not to be supposed that Bill remained undisturbed
+at Haylands all the summer. She was
+merely keeping Theresa company, and when Bella’s
+husband spared her to do that for a time, Bill, very
+reluctantly, returned to town, to Polly and her
+domestic difficulties. It is hard, when one can do
+work and has half done it, that it should be taken
+away and given to another, who not only cannot do
+it but does not recognise that it exists to be done.
+Bill did not want her work recognised, but she did
+want to finish it; but since that was impossible there
+was no choice but to silently resign it half-finished,
+without a hope of its being anything but wasted by
+the one who came after. So she went back to town,
+and Bella, it is to be feared, fulfilled her anticipations;
+the seed plants died, the vegetables languished, the
+ducks laid away, and the poultry intermarried disastrously.
+Later on Polly went down to Haylands,
+for a rest, she said; and Bill did not ask her to
+look after any of her pet projects, thinking perhaps
+that it would only be useless. When Polly returned
+she did enquire how the fruit was that year, and
+was told that the trees were breaking with the weight
+of plums.</p>
+
+<p>“Does no one pick them?” Bill asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[388]</span>“Some of them,” Polly told her; “but fruit
+fetches so little this year; it is not worth a man’s
+time to pick it, at least so Gilchrist says, and he is
+managing everything, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill was not thinking of Gilchrist’s management
+but of private enterprise; Polly was thinking of
+something quite different and it was she who spoke
+first. “Did it strike you, Bill,” she said, “that
+Gilchrist takes a great interest in Theresa and her
+affairs?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, of course; he likes managing, and he does
+it thoroughly.”</p>
+
+<p>But this was not what Polly meant at all and she
+said so. “What I want to know,” she concluded,
+“is, why did he begin it? Why does he do it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because it wanted doing, and because he can do
+it. Somehow or other the people who can do things
+always have to do them whether it is their business
+or not; they have a sort of right to the jobs that
+want doing.”</p>
+
+<p>This was not Polly’s opinion. “It’s my belief,”
+she said, “that he has an interest in what he does.”</p>
+
+<p>“An interest? He does not get the profits.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Polly retorted impatiently, “but Theresa
+does; that’s his interest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean he is fond of Theresa?” Bill
+asked in astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>Polly did, and explained herself at some length,
+without convincing Bill who, when she had come to
+the conclusion that this was only one of Polly’s
+fancies, went back to the subject of the plums. Polly
+was not interested in plums, and when Bill asked
+if she and Theresa picked any, answered snappishly,
+“No, we did not; we did not choose to spend our
+days up ladders.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[389]</span>A recollection of last year lent viciousness to this
+remark; Bill remembered last year too and sighed.
+Had she been at Ashelton early enough very likely
+there would have been a repetition of the plum-selling.
+But she was not there in time to do anything, for,
+though she did go down to Haylands to help Theresa
+to pack at the last, the fruit was practically over. It
+was a bad year for apples; there were hardly any in
+the orchard at Haylands, and Bill saw at once, when
+she went to look round, that there was nothing to be
+done with them. As for the plums, they were a
+real grief to her when she saw them lying rotten on
+the grass beside the branches which the heavy fruit
+had broken down.</p>
+
+<p>“Gilchrist could not look after everything,” she
+told herself, “and Theresa would not know.”</p>
+
+<p>After all, the waste of the plums did not trouble
+her so much as did the sight of the withered plants
+in the garden, and the raspberry-canes, still loaded
+with shrivelled fruit, dried up for want of water.
+But bad as the garden was, it was not the worst, for
+in one short tour of the stackyard she found, besides
+the feathers of many untimely victims of stray cats,
+five lots of addled eggs laid and lost in the summer
+months. She had her last find of eggs in a basket on
+the Saturday afternoon when she went to the orchard
+to look for fallen apples. There were not many, but
+she picked up what there were and took the eggs to
+the ditch to throw them away to make room for the
+apples.</p>
+
+<p>It was just then that Mr. Stevens came by. He
+was a busy man, but he sometimes allowed himself
+a little holiday on Saturdays in September to shoot a
+friend’s partridges; he had been shooting partridges
+that day and very good sport he had had to judge
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[390]</span>from the beaming good-humour he was carrying
+back to Wrugglesby.</p>
+
+<p>When he saw Bill he pulled up. “Good-afternoon,”
+he cried; “I didn’t know you were back.
+You haven’t been over to see me; don’t you want
+to have a talk about your affairs?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill came to the gate. “There isn’t much to say
+about them, is there?” she asked. “I thought
+nothing much could be done at this time of year.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, no, not much certainly; everybody is out
+of town now. Still, if you’d like to have a chat, you
+might look in when you’re in Wrugglesby; I’m not
+very busy just now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, I will if I have time; I am only
+here for a few days just to help Theresa to pack.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, of course, she is leaving soon, poor thing.
+Going to live in London with you, isn’t she?”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stevens felt very sorry for Theresa, of whose
+affairs he knew all that was commonly reported and
+a little more besides. He felt sorry for Bill, too,
+that afternoon; she did not seem to be so cheerfully
+and completely satisfied with life as usual.</p>
+
+<p>“We must make the best of a bad job,” he said
+encouragingly, “and look for better times. Let’s
+hope your business will be through before Christmas,”
+and he shook his reins as if he were going on.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think it could be done so soon as that?”
+Bill asked with animation.</p>
+
+<p>“I dare say; I don’t see why not, or at the
+latest early in the new year. Woa, my beauty!”
+and he pulled up again. “Mr. Briant is a rich man
+and can afford to fight as a poorer could not; but
+you’re too strong for him, and since the business of
+the divorce and remarriage was settled he knows it.
+It’s my belief—though as I’m not professionally connected
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[391]</span>with the case perhaps you will say I have no
+right to an opinion—it’s my belief Briant never suspected
+a second marriage. But owing to the rector’s
+help you have incontestable proofs, and the other
+side haven’t a case worth mentioning.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you think it will be settled soon?” Bill
+asked. “I am very glad; and I am glad, too, that
+Mr. Briant is so rich that one need not much mind
+taking money from him; even if I win he will still
+have plenty left.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stevens, though he was amused by her
+scruples, assured her that she might be quite easy on
+that score. “He’ll have plenty,” he said, “plenty,
+seeing that he has neither son nor daughter to take it
+after him. Bless my soul, he ought to be quite
+pleased to make provision for a young lady in that
+way!”</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer laughed as he spoke and Bill laughed
+too. “I am afraid he won’t see it in that light,” she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid not either. No; I think if you win
+your case you will have to thank your good aunt’s
+care in keeping old bills and letters and recipes for
+herb-tea. That is what will have the most to do
+with it, since she managed to keep with them several
+of old Roger’s useless documents, and one valuable
+one. Yes, you will have to thank her for her care
+and Mr. Dane for his generosity. Good-bye, and a
+speedy success to you.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[392]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXX.<br>
+<small>A RELISH WITH TEA.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bella’s</span> baby was born in January, and Theresa
+went to Greys’ for the event. Indeed she went
+there a good deal before the event, for, if the truth
+must be known, life in London with Bill and Polly
+was not entirely successful. Two women who have
+each had a home of their own do not always get on
+when they come to share one between them. Bella
+wrote in November inviting Theresa to come to her,
+and Polly urged the acceptance of the invitation with
+unnecessary warmth. Theresa hesitated a while as to
+her duty and then finally accepted it and went.
+“And a good thing too,” Polly said frankly.</p>
+
+<p>She said this to Bill when they were at tea on the
+afternoon Theresa left. Polly sat at her ease with
+her feet on the fender and her tea-cup on the hob;
+she liked this position, and she liked the table drawn
+on to the hearth-rug so that she could sit between it
+and the fire. Theresa did not approve of such
+things; she did not exactly say so, but she looked it,
+and when she set the tea-things she never pulled the
+table up.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s all very well, Bill,” Polly went on to say.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[393]</span>“Theresa may be a very nice person,—I dare say
+she is, but she does not do here, and if she is going
+to live here she will have to alter a good deal.”</p>
+
+<p>“She will settle down in time.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly had her doubts about that and expressed
+them; she also expressed a hope that Theresa would
+stay with Bella while the settling process went on.
+“The longer she stays there the better,” she concluded.
+“Perhaps if she is there long enough and
+Gilchrist Harborough sees her often enough, he may
+marry her and take her to Wood Hall where she
+could be as elegant as she pleased without interfering
+with me.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill laughed. “You are in rather a hurry,” she
+observed. “Theresa has only been a widow six
+months, and Gilchrist has not by any means got
+Wood Hall yet. You finish things off rather too
+quickly.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish somebody else would,” and Polly turned
+up her gown to preserve it from the fire.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be too hard on T.,” Bill said rather sadly.
+“I don’t believe she is more particular than she used
+to be; she always was,—well, you used to call it
+ladylike.”</p>
+
+<p>Polly ignored her own past attitude with regard to
+Theresa and only remarked: “I could be ladylike if
+someone else did the dirty work. I should like to be
+ladylike; but some people can’t have what they wish
+in this world; they have to work that others may.”</p>
+
+<p>“Poor old Polly! I’m so sorry you have had to
+do the stoves lately. That place on my finger is
+nearly well, and I believe I shall be able to do them
+again to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not grumbling about you,” Polly said magnanimously.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[394]</span>“What is the use of grumbling about anything?”
+Bill asked. “It may let off steam, but I believe it
+rusts the pipes. Don’t let’s talk about Theresa; let
+us talk about hats.”</p>
+
+<p>Millinery was a subject of perennial interest to
+Polly, but to-night she refused to discuss it. “I
+don’t know anything about hats,” she said; “how
+should I? I haven’t seen anything but these four
+walls since I don’t know when.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not go to Regent Street to-morrow afternoon?”
+Bill suggested. “My finger is really quite
+well, so I can do the work and you have not been
+out for ages; take an omnibus to Oxford Circus and
+go and look at all the shops.”</p>
+
+<p>This was Polly’s favourite recreation and invariable
+panacea for dulness, but she still refused to be cheered.
+“What is the use?” she said. “I shall only see a
+hat I want and can’t afford.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will see some new way of trimming up your
+old one,” Bill assured her; and though Polly persisted
+that she would not go, when the afternoon
+came she changed her mind and went.</p>
+
+<p>It was during Polly’s absence that the great news
+came to Bill. Mr. Dane brought it; he had come
+to town for a few days on business, he said, probably
+on her business. At all events it was fortunate that
+his coming to town was at this time, for he was able
+to bring the news to Bill in person. Of course Polly
+received a formal intimation; Polly always received
+formal intimations and requests from the lawyers as
+did Mr. Dane; she was the guardian of the plaintiff,
+a person of importance, and he was a great factor in
+the case, more especially as the lawyers were his
+lawyers and the money his money. But Bill was
+only the “infant,” so she was not greatly troubled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[395]</span>with intimations and consultations; and she, in the
+first instance, was not the person to be formally
+acquainted with the decision of the court. Nevertheless
+she was the person to whom Mr. Dane came,
+even before Polly had received her legal information
+and while that lady was out looking at the bonnet-shops
+in Regent Street.</p>
+
+<p>It was four o’clock when Mr. Dane came. Bill
+had no idea of seeing him when she went to answer
+his knock; and the sight of him standing on the
+doorstep in the November dusk was so unexpected
+that she forgot in her delight to wonder why he had
+come. She led him to the kitchen, their living-room
+now, and gave him Polly’s shabby old arm-chair.
+She never thought of apologising; it was the best
+she had to offer and so needed no apology; moreover
+he was her friend and would expect none.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Princess,” he said at last,—at first it had
+not seemed possible to speak of his errand—“what
+do you think brings me here to-day?”</p>
+
+<p>Bill looked at him doubtfully for a moment. “I
+have something to tell you,” he went on, and then
+her whole face became illuminated with understanding.
+“Oh, Monseigneur!” she said, clasping her
+hands with an eagerness begotten half of hope, half of
+fear.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my child,” he said gently, “yes, you have
+won. That which Roger Corby gave as a price for
+wrong is paid back a hundred fold; and you, you
+little Bill, are an heiress in your own right.”</p>
+
+<p>Bill gave a great gasp. “Thank God,” she said,
+“it is in time! Thank God, thank Him, very, very
+much!” And there followed a pause; perhaps she
+thanked the God who always seemed so close to her.
+When she spoke again it was in hushed tones. “It
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[396]</span>seems very wonderful,” she said. “And,—and I
+owe it to you!”</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Dane did not think she owed it all to
+him; perhaps he shared Mr. Stevens’s opinion and
+thought she was the stuff that wins under any circumstances.
+As for the particular circumstances of
+this case he set them aside, and when she persisted,
+her voice quivering with emotion as she recounted
+all he had done, he still set them aside. “It seems
+a great thing to do, does it?” he said at last. “Ah,
+you are young; things look different when you are
+young. I am old and I have lived much and loved
+much, and outlived much too perhaps, and to me,”—and
+he put a tender hand on the glowing hair—“to
+me it does not seem such a very great thing to
+do for the child of my past, the daughter of consolation
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>Then she said no more, but she kissed him with
+tears in her eyes. Afterwards they talked of this
+fortune, and what it would mean, and the debt that
+Bill thought she owed to the Harboroughs—to Peter
+Harborough, shot, to hide whose death the price
+which was the foundation of her fortune had been
+paid—to Kit Harborough, whose rival through an act
+of hers had learned the claim that he had made,—and
+to the old man, last of the Harboroughs of Gurnett,
+who slept in the little churchyard among the ferns
+where Roger Corby lay.</p>
+
+<p>It was past five o’clock before Polly returned.
+Mr. Dane had left only a little while before, and she
+must have almost passed him at the end of the
+street, though, if she did, she failed to recognise
+him. She did not notice anything particularly until
+she reached her own house, and was surprised to see
+there were no lights at any of the windows. Miss
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[397]</span>Scrivens, who now occupied the drawing-room, must
+have fallen asleep and forgotten to ring for the
+lamp; and Polly decided with some satisfaction that
+Bill for once had followed her instructions and not
+taken the light until it was rung for. With a
+gratified feeling at this unusual display of obedience
+she let herself in and went up-stairs; while she was
+up-stairs the drawing-room bell rang sharply and Bill
+went to answer it. She was still attending to the
+lamp, or the lady, when Polly entered the kitchen
+and found to her surprise that the tea-tray was not
+set.</p>
+
+<p>“What has the girl been doing?” she muttered as
+she went to the dresser. She was reaching up to get
+a jug from a high hook when there came a dancing
+step behind her and, before she could look round,
+Bill’s arms were thrown round her neck from behind
+and Bill’s strong hands took hers prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>“Polly!” she exclaimed, possessing herself of the
+jug and then twisting Polly round. “Polly, dear old
+Polly! It has come at last! You shall have the
+finest hat in all Regent Street even if it’s a salad of
+roses with a cockatoo rampant on the top! You
+shall have it and we will drive all the way in a hansom
+cab to buy it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Bill! What is the matter with the girl? Bill,
+put down that jug and tell me what you mean!”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean,”—but Bill did not put down the jug,
+she filled it with milk instead—“I am going to get
+Miss Scrivens’s tea,” she said. “I ought to have
+got it before only I have been hindered this afternoon,
+and I’m crazy I think. But, oh, Polly! I’ve
+got it, got it at last; the money I mean, or at least
+as good as got it, it is going to be mine. I expect
+you will have to do things and sign things first, but
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[398]</span>the case is decided for us and it is all as good as mine
+already!”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Bill!” Polly was momentarily overwhelmed
+by the news, then she recovered herself and
+fetched a tin of sardines from the cupboard. “Oh,
+well,” she said, “if that’s the case we can afford to
+have a relish with our tea.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[399]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXI.<br>
+<small>THE FULFILLING OF THE DREAM.</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the opinion of certain members of the Chancery
+bar the conclusion of the Harborough case was disappointing,
+for from a legal point of view, there was
+no conclusion. In spite of all that had been said on
+both sides, all the facts and traditions and curious
+crooks that had come to light, the case was in the
+end as far from a legal decision as ever; it was
+merely withdrawn. This was the best thing possible
+for the litigants and certainly the wisest; still, it was
+to be deplored, for a decision would have been
+interesting. Apart from the legal aspect the conclusion
+could not be regretted; the buying of the
+claimant was undeniably wise, and at the same time
+almost romantic, for there was something of mystery
+about it. Nobody, not even the Harboroughs, knew
+who paid for it. Someone, whose name was not
+mentioned and who apparently had no personal
+interest in the case, found the money, which Gilchrist
+accepted in lieu of his chance of the Gurnett estates,
+and for the consideration of which he duly undertook
+that neither he nor his should ever raise the claim
+again.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[400]</span>Thus it happened, when the case was well on in
+its second year, that all ended and came to nothing,
+and Kit Harborough found himself very much where
+he used to expect he would be; but with an addition
+he did not expect in those days,—a certain price to
+pay for having defended his right to be there.
+Gilchrist had something to pay too, but it did not so
+much matter to him, for he had thought of the costs
+when he bargained for the price of his withdrawal.
+On the whole he was satisfied with the terms; they
+were not so high as he had tried to get, but they
+were all his chance was worth to him, and all,
+apparently, that the benevolent person unknown was
+willing to pay.</p>
+
+<p>There was one man, in no way connected with the
+case, who took a keen interest in that benevolent
+person unknown; not so much at the time, but a
+little later. In the light of subsequent events Mr.
+Stevens chose to find that individual most interesting.
+“Unless I am much mistaken,” he once said, though
+wisely in no one’s hearing but his own, “there is
+stuff for a good Chancery suit in that buying off of
+Gilchrist Harborough. Certain persons have been
+juggling with the law, or I’m a Dutchman; persons,
+too, who should have been above suspicion. Mistress
+Wilhelmina has a deal to answer for, bless her wicked
+little heart! I wonder how it was done? I’d give
+something to know.” But he never did know;
+only, in later years, he used sometimes to doubt if
+there had been much juggling with the law after all;
+if rather a certain childless old man, who was so
+much richer than most people knew, had not chosen
+secretly to serve a girl in his life instead of benefiting
+her after his death. But of this fancy Mr. Stevens
+never spoke, for he knew, if it were true, that it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[401]</span>was a secret hidden even from the girl herself, and
+he, though only a country lawyer, was a man possessed
+of that best wisdom, the knowledge when to
+keep silent.</p>
+
+<p>But all this was long after; at the time when the
+Harboroughs’ suit was concluded no one even
+suspected who their benefactor might be. The Harboroughs
+themselves puzzled over it for some time
+and then, as is the nature of man, turned to the consideration
+of their own affairs. Those affairs were
+identical for both of them in one particular at least,—the
+question of Gilchrist’s return to Australia.
+It was generally understood among those whom it
+concerned that Gilchrist was going back to Australia;
+he had said he should go so soon as the case was
+settled, but now when it came to the point he did not
+seem so sure about it. Kit took a most surprising
+interest in his rival’s departure, and he noticed his
+hesitation directly the subject was introduced. There
+was only one occasion when the two Harboroughs
+spoke of the matter, the only occasion on which they
+met on purely social terms, the day they lunched
+together at Wood Hall. Kit had invited Gilchrist
+there as it were to shake hands after the fight,
+possibly feeling it his duty to do so. Gilchrist
+accepted the invitation, partly for similar reasons,
+and partly because he had never been inside Wood
+Hall and thought he would rather like to see the old
+house for which he had been fighting; coming with
+this motive, there is no doubt he also came prepared
+to observe critically and to put a market-value on
+all he saw.</p>
+
+<p>“I think I have the best of the bargain,” he told
+Theresa afterwards; “the place is in bad repair and
+at the best of times would take a lot of keeping up.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[402]</span>Still, I admit it has a charm of its own, a charm
+which cannot be bought or exchanged, and would
+not, I believe, stand a change of ownership. If the
+house were mine, I should do it up, and, I suppose,
+change its nature; since it is his, he will let things
+remain as they are; he can’t afford to do anything
+else, poor beggar! But he will keep the charm and
+a few absurd, inimitable, medieval prejudices which
+even an enlightened education cannot make us
+altogether despise.”</p>
+
+<p>It is to be feared that Gilchrist was not far from
+the truth in his estimate of the poverty likely to reign
+at Wood Hall. The estate, crippled before, could
+ill afford the money spent in defence of its owner’s
+claim to it. Kit knew this, and knew that the
+Australian was quick to mark signs of prosperity or
+decay.</p>
+
+<p>The two Harboroughs did not lunch in the big
+dining-room where Kit had sat with Bill on the day
+that old Mr. Harborough died, but in a smaller, more
+modern room where neither length of possession nor
+shortness of means stood out so plainly. There was
+little here to suggest that evil days had fallen upon
+the old place, excepting only the view from the
+windows. Gilchrist glanced out once; the pale
+February sunlight was wan on the crack in the stone-work
+of the terrace, on the unswept leaves of the
+autumn and the untouched borders by the wall.
+Unconsciously he looked towards his host and observed
+him curiously—the well-bred, stoical face, the
+grave eyes, the well-finished hands—the whole man
+which told so little.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you going to live here?” he asked suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>“Probably not.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[403]</span>There was a moment’s silence. Kit was evidently
+not communicative on that subject, and Gilchrist
+looked out of the window again before giving expression
+to the thoughts in his mind. “Pity the
+old place should go to pieces!” he said at last. “I
+could have saved it—spoiled it, perhaps you would
+have said—still, saved its life after a fashion, but
+you—”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall probably go abroad for the next twenty
+years; after which, if I am not an inveterate
+wanderer by that time, I shall come home and think
+about getting some bricks and mortar to mend the
+hole in the terrace which we can see so well from
+here.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilchrist laughed, although he was a little annoyed;
+he had felt vaguely sorry for Kit and the decline of
+the house of Harborough. But Kit kept him well
+at arm’s length, and the house of Harborough was
+plainly not his concern, so he withdrew his sympathy
+from the end he had himself hastened, and the
+subject was pursued no further.</p>
+
+<p>It was then that Kit enquired concerning the
+return to Australia, and learned that there was a
+good deal of uncertainty connected with the date
+of Gilchrist’s departure; indeed, it seemed almost
+possible that he would not leave England at all that
+year. Kit did not ask why; he knew that it was a
+woman’s will and a woman’s preparations that ruled
+the time of the Australian’s going. Herein he was
+quite right, though he was not right in thinking that
+woman Bill Alardy. Bill’s preparations, like her will,
+were never long in making; but the woman for
+whom Gilchrist waited was different; who is to hurry
+a nine months’ widow, and who make love to the
+wife of a man whose grave has not long been green?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[404]</span>But of this difficulty Kit knew nothing, and since
+he was very well aware that Bill’s betrothal was of a
+private nature, he could not make any remark upon
+it even had he wished. So he was still unenlightened
+as to the name of the woman whose pleasure Gilchrist
+waited when a little later the Australian took
+his leave.</p>
+
+<p>Kit went to the door with him, stood on the step
+looking after him even when he was out of sight,
+stood there until the sound of his horse’s feet had
+died away in the distance. The sun was gone now;
+ashy clouds had crept over the sky, and all the world
+was still and grey with the soft, tired look of endless
+afternoon. Kit went down the steps and walked
+slowly past the west front of the house; once he
+glanced up at the crooked windows and the sloping,
+many-peaked roof, but he looked away again quickly
+as if the sight hurt him. He reached the end of the
+terrace but he did not go back; instead he wandered
+aimlessly across the lawn, down the rose-walk, past
+the box-edged beds and the yew trees once trimly
+clipped into quaint devices. The devices were lost
+now, the clipping had not been done for many years.
+Bill had once said that, were the trees hers, she would
+learn to clip them herself rather than that they should
+be left. So she would, too; she would clip the trees
+and weed the paths and save the house from its
+approaching decay! Gilchrist had said that day he
+would have saved it; how could he fail to save it
+with her for wife? Old Harborough himself had
+testified that she, and such as she, penniless though
+they might be, alone could save an exhausted family, a
+proud, poor, played-out race.</p>
+
+<p>Kit had come to the outskirts of the wood now;
+he stopped for a moment, not from indecision as to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[405]</span>which path to follow, but because he wished to call a
+halt in his mind and force himself to face the truth.
+Why should he pretend to look upon Bill as the
+saviour of his family, the prop of his house? It is
+true she could have been all that, but it was also true
+that she was something else to him; not prop nor
+saviour, but the only woman the world held. He
+had been but a boy eighteen months ago when he
+first looked into her eyes; he had grown to manhood
+in those eighteen months, but it did not matter,
+the look thrilled him still. He had not seen her
+since that October day when they pledged each other
+to duty, but he had not forgotten; he would never
+forget; there are some it is not easy to forget.</p>
+
+<p>He had been following the footpath that led from
+the gardens to the little church, but he turned away
+before he reached the low boundary wall and wandered
+on through the waste of dead bracken till he struck
+the public footpath which gave upon the lane by a
+swing-gate. There was someone standing by the
+gate, someone with arms resting upon the topmost
+bar, and eyes fixed, not upon the path with its
+approaching figure, but upon the leafless tree-tops of
+the wood.</p>
+
+<p>For half a second Kit paused, a sensation almost
+of fear at his heart—how could she be here in the
+flesh? Then, at a bound he had reached the gate;
+flesh or phantom, he must see her, must touch her
+hand once again.</p>
+
+<p>“Bill!”</p>
+
+<p>He had put his hand on the hands on the gate.
+They were warm, living hands; he held them fast
+and there was no effort made to draw them away.
+She did not start nor cry out; she did not move at
+all; she only looked up at him, silent yet with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[406]</span>throbbing breast. So they stood, the gate between
+them, for the space of a full minute, and the world
+seemed to hold but them alone.</p>
+
+<p>From the main road there came the sound of
+horse’s feet, steady, slow-going, some farm-horse on
+its way to the blacksmith’s in the village. The
+sound of hoofs recalled to Kit the last time he had
+heard it and recalled also the thought of the man
+who rode away from his house not an hour ago. He
+dropped the hands he held almost as if they burnt
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“He cannot—shall not have you!” The words
+were hardly spoken; they seemed wrung from him
+against his will.</p>
+
+<p>The discarded hands pulled a splinter off the gate.
+“He,—he doesn’t want me”—their owner seemed
+much interested in the splinter.</p>
+
+<p>“Not want you? You—”</p>
+
+<p>The gate was between them no longer.</p>
+
+<p>A while later the farm-horse, having been to
+the blacksmith’s, was led home by way of the lane;
+the man who led him saw no one about the lonely
+spot; there was no one by the swing-gate or on the
+footpath going to the church, no one visible at all.
+In the shelter of the leafless wood, however, there
+were two who explained many things. There
+were many things which needed explanation they
+found,—the mystery of Bill’s freedom, for one,
+and Kit’s ignorance of it, for another. The first
+was easy to recount; the second Bill found harder
+to explain.</p>
+
+<p>“I could not tell you,” she said at last; “of course
+I could not tell you. Do you know the feeling, the
+consciousness almost, that you can have and get
+whatever you make up your mind to have? That
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[407]</span>has been my feeling so long; but I was afraid to seek
+for this; I wanted it to be the free gift of God to
+me; I wanted it an unsought gift, or not at all. Do
+you understand what I mean?” And in case he did
+not, she went on to give another reason. “I have
+been getting so much lately,” she said, flashing a shy
+smile at him, “getting and willing and taking that I
+think I wanted someone to take me.”</p>
+
+<p>And it is to be presumed that Kit understood the
+art of taking her, for the next explanation did not
+follow immediately. When it did come it had reference
+to Bill’s unexpected appearance at the gate that
+afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>“There is no mystery about that,” Bill said. “I
+came to look at a house at Sales Green. We are
+thinking of moving in the spring or early summer,
+and we are looking out for a house with a large
+garden somewhere in this part—the garden is for me,
+the house for Polly, the part for Theresa who wants
+to be near Bella. However, the Sales Green house
+is no good at all; we shall have to look out for
+another.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you come from town to-day?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; Bella met me at Wrugglesby and drove
+me to look at the house and then home with her to
+lunch. Afterwards I started to walk to the rectory,
+having promised to go to tea with Mr. Dane; he is
+going to drive me to the station this evening.”</p>
+
+<p>“You do not seem to have chosen a very direct
+route to the rectory.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Bill was obliged to admit; “but I thought
+I would like to go down the lane once more and,—and
+I did not know you were at home.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit showed the utmost satisfaction in having been
+at home on this occasion, and they passed on to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[408]</span>next explanation which was of a different nature and
+was given by Kit. It had to do with his prospects
+and the narrow means he had to offer; the thought
+of them made him remember now it was too late
+that he had but small right to ask her to share his
+lot.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you know?” Bill exclaimed eagerly almost
+before she had heard him out. “Haven’t you heard?
+I have got money now,—oh, I am so glad! I thought
+perhaps Mr. Briant would have told you, but I suppose
+he thought you had worries enough of your
+own.”</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps this was the case; at all events, as Mr.
+Briant had not told the tale in full, Bill told it now,
+and with it the name of the unknown benefactor who
+had put an end to the Harborough suit. Possibly
+she did not tell it well, certainly Kit was astonished
+almost beyond comprehension.</p>
+
+<p>“You?” he said and he stood to look at her.
+“You did it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” and she stood still too, twisting a dry twig
+she held. She snapped the brown thing nervously.
+“I’m sorry, Kit,” she said humbly. She knew that
+it is not always easy to receive a favour. “I’m sorry,
+but there did not seem anyone else to settle it, and it
+had to be done. I know it is hard to take things
+from a woman but,—do you mind so very much
+from me?”</p>
+
+<p>Kit’s throat swelled painfully. After all, he was
+very much a boy still; but he took the favour and
+the giver of the favour all in one.</p>
+
+<p>Later, as they went up the forest path together, he
+asked her what she would have done had he not met
+her at the gate that day. “It is all very well,” he
+said, “to say that you have saved Wood Hall for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[409]</span>yourself as well as for me, but supposing I had not
+met you to-day, supposing I had never learned you
+were free?”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I should have gone to live in a house with
+a big garden and grown tons of cabbages.”</p>
+
+<p>Kit laughed. “But tell me,” he persisted, “would
+you have never let me know?”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. “I made up my mind to tell
+no one,” she said, “only Polly assured me that if
+ever I married I would have to tell my husband; for
+one reason because he might find out if I did not, for
+another because it would be wrong to hide things
+from him. For the first reason I do not care, I
+would have risked that; but for the second it is
+different. I am not afraid that you will misunderstand
+and it seems a pity to begin with secrets.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes;”—Kit had possessed himself of the small
+strong hand,—“a great pity since we are to have all
+things in common.”</p>
+
+<p>And so they passed through the silent wood where
+the shadows lay, brown and purple and deepest blue;
+they followed the wet path still studded with the
+autumn’s funguses, crossed the deep hollows where
+last year’s leaves glowed in the even light, under the
+old trees, twisted pollards and stately beeches, and
+so on, up the hill. Once a startled jay flashed from
+the covert of a thorn-bush low down across their
+path; once a rabbit looked out from among the
+beech-roots; nothing else moved, and in the stillness
+of a holy world they came to the gardens and to
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>Together they went by the western front to the
+great door still open as Kit had left it; together
+they entered the wide, dim hall. Kit turned as he
+stood on the threshold and looked up at the old
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[410]</span>house. “Not yours nor mine,” he said, “but ours,
+sweetheart.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But the diamond buckles came to Kit Harborough’s
+wife after all, for they were given to her
+on her wedding-day by one who still called her
+“Princess Puck, child of the Lord’s consolation.”</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The End.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="tiny">
+<p class="center"><small>GLASGOW: PRINTED AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS BY ROBERT MACLEHOSE AND CO.</small></p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="transnote">
+<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
+
+<p>Perceived typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
+
+<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
+</div></div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76967 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for book #76967
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76967)