In the quiet country town obvious
changes had taken place during the eight years of
Stella’s absence. They were not changes
of importance, however, and one sentence can symbolize
them all there was now tarmac upon its
roads. But in the cluster of houses a mile away
at the end of the deep lane the case was different.
Mr. Harold Hazlewood had come to Little Beeding.
He now lived in the big house to which the village
owed its name and indeed its existence. He lived and
spread consternation amongst the gentry for miles
round.
“Lord, how I wish poor Arthur
hadn’t died!” old John Chubble used to
cry. He had hunted the West Sussex hounds for
thirty years and the very name of Little Beeding turned
his red face purple. “There was a man.
But this fellow! And to think he’s got
that beautiful house! Do you know there’s
hardly a pheasant on the place. And I’ve
hashed them down out of the sky in the old days there
by the dozen. Well, he’s got a son in the
Coldstream, Dick Hazlewood, who’s not so bad.
But Harold! Oh, pass me the port!”
Harold indeed had inherited Little
Beeding by an accident during the first summer after
Stella had gone out to India. Arthur Hazlewood,
the owner and Harold’s nephew, had been lost
with his yacht in a gale of wind off the coast of
Portugal. Arthur was a bachelor and thus Harold
Hazlewood came quite unexpectedly into the position
of a country squire when he was already well on in
middle age. He was a widower and a man of a noticeable
aspect. At the first glance you knew that he was
not as other men; at the second you suspected that
he took a pride in his dissimilarity. He was
long, rather shambling in his gait, with a mild blue
eye and fair thin hair now growing grey. But length
was the chief impression left by his physical appearance.
His legs, his arms, his face, even his hair, unless
his son in the Coldstream happened to be at home at
the time, were long.
“Is your father mad?”
Mr. Chubble once asked of Dick Hazlewood. The
two men had met in the broad street of Great Beeding
at midday, and the elder one, bubbling with indignation,
had planted himself in front of Dick.
“Mad?” Dick repeated reflectively.
“No, I shouldn’t go as far as that.
Oh no! What has he done now?”
“He has paid out of his own
pocket the fines of all the people in Great Beeding
who have just been convicted for not having their babies
vaccinated.”
Dick Hazlewood stared in surprise
at his companion’s indignant face.
“But of course he’d do
that, Mr. Chubble,” he answered cheerfully.
“He’s anti-everything everything,
I mean, which experience has established or prudence
could suggest.”
“In addition he wants to sell
the navy for old iron and abolish the army.”
“Yes,” said Dick, nodding
his head amicably. “He’s like that.
He thinks that without an army and a navy we should
be less aggressive. I can’t deny it.”
“I should think not indeed,”
cried Mr. Chubble. “Are you walking home?”
“Yes.”
“Let us walk together.”
Mr. Chubble took Dick Hazlewood by the arm and as
they went filled the lane with his plaints.
“I should think you can’t
deny it. Why, he has actually written a pamphlet
to enforce his views upon the subject.”
“You should bless your stars,
Mr. Chubble, that there is only one. He suffers
from pamphlets. He writes ’em and prints
’em and every member of Parliament gets one
of ’em for nothing. Pamphlets do for him
what the gout does for other old gentlemen they
carry off from his system a great number of disquieting
ailments. He’s at prison reform now,”
said Dick with a smile of thorough enjoyment.
“Have you heard him on it?”
“No, and I don’t want to,” Mr. Chubble
exploded.
He struck viciously at an overhanging
bough, as though it was the head of Harold Hazlewood,
and went on with the catalogue of crimes. “He
made a speech last week in the town-hall,” and
he jerked his thumb backwards towards the town they
had left. “Intolerable I call it. He
actually denounced his own countrymen as a race of
oppressors.”
“He would,” answered Dick
calmly. “What did I say to you a minute
ago? He’s advanced, you know.”
“Advanced!” sneered Mr.
Chubble, and then Dick Hazlewood stopped and contemplated
his companion with a thoughtful eye.
“I really don’t think
you understand my father, Mr. Chubble,” said
Dick with a gentle remonstrance in his voice which
Mr. Chubble was at a loss whether to take seriously
or no.
“Can you give me the key to him?” he cried.
“I can.”
“Then out with it, my lad.”
Mr. Chubble disposed himself to listen
but with so bristling an expression that it was clear
no explanation could satisfy him. Dick, however,
took no heed of that. He spoke slowly as one lecturing
to an obtuse class of scholars.
“My father was born predestined
to believe that all the people whom he knows are invariably
wrong, and all the people he doesn’t know are
invariably right. And when I feel inclined to
deplore his abuse of his own country I console myself
with the reflection that he would be the staunchest
friend of England that England ever had if
only he had been born in Germany.”
Mr. Chubble grunted and turned the
speech suspiciously over in his mind. Was Dick
poking fun at him or at his father?
“That’s bookish,” he said.
“I am afraid it is,” Dick
Hazlewood agreed humbly. “The fact is I
am now an Instructor at the Staff College and much
is expected of me.”
They had reached the gate of Little
Beeding House. It was summer time. A yellow
drive of gravel ran straight between long broad flower-beds
to the door.
“Won’t you come in and
see my father?” Dick asked innocently.
“He’s at home.”
“No, my lad, no.”
Mr. Chubble hastened to add: “I haven’t
the time. But I am very glad to have met you.
You are here for long?”
“No. Only just for luncheon,”
said Dick, and he walked along the drive into the
house. He was met in the hall by Hubbard the butler,
an old colourless man of genteel movements which seemed
slow and were astonishingly quick. He spoke in
gentle purring tones and was the very butler for Mr.
Harold Hazlewood.
“Your father has been asking
for you, sir,” said Hubbard. “He seems
a little anxious. He is in the big room.”
“Very well,” said Dick,
and he crossed the hall and the drawing-room, wondering
what new plan for the regeneration of the world was
being hatched in his father’s sedulous brains.
He had received a telegram at Camberley the day before
urgently calling upon him to arrive at Little Beeding
in time for luncheon. He went into the library
as it was called, but in reality it was the room used
by everybody except upon ceremonial occasions.
It was a big room; half of it held a billiard table,
the other half had writing-tables, lounges, comfortable
chairs and a table for bridge. The carpet was
laid over a parquet floor so that young people, when
they stayed there, rolled it up and danced. There
were windows upon two sides of the room. Here
a row of them looked down the slope of the lawn to
the cedar-trees and the river, the other, a great bay
which opened to the ground, gave a view of a corner
of the high churchyard wall and of a meadow and a
thatched cottage beyond. In this bay Mr. Hazlewood
was standing when Dick entered the room.
“I got your telegram, father, and here I am.”
Mr. Hazlewood turned back from the window with a smile
upon his face.
“It is good of you, Richard. I wanted you
to-day.”
A very genuine affection existed between
these two, dissimilar as they were in physique and
mind. Dick Hazlewood was at this time thirty-four
years old, an officer of hard work and distinction,
one of the younger men to whom the generals look to
provide the brains in the next great war. He
had the religion of his type. To keep physically
fit for the hardest campaigning and mentally fit for
the highest problems of modern strategy and to boast
about neither the one qualification nor the other these
were the articles of his creed. In appearance
he was a little younger than his years, lithe, long
in the leg, with a thin brown face and grey eyes which
twinkled with humour. Harold Hazlewood was intensely
proud of him, though he professed to detest his profession.
And no doubt he found at times that the mere healthful,
well-groomed look of his son was irritatingly conventional.
What was quite wholesome could never be quite right
in the older man’s philosophy. To Dick,
on the other hand, his father was an intense enjoyment.
Here was a lovable innocent with the most delightful
illusion that he understood the world. Dick would
draw out his father by the hour, but, as he put it,
he wouldn’t let the old boy down. He stopped
his chaff before it could begin to hurt.
“Well, I am here,” he said. “What
scrape have you got into now?”
“I am in no scrape, Richard.
I don’t get into scrapes,” replied his
father. He shifted from one foot to the other
uneasily. “I was wondering, Richard you
have been away all this last year, haven’t you? I
was wondering whether you could give me any of your
summer.”
Dick looked at his father. What
in the world was the old boy up to now? he asked himself.
“Of course I can. I shall
get my leave in a day or two. I thought of playing
some polo here and there. There are a few matches
arranged. Then no doubt ” He
broke off. “But look here, sir! You
didn’t send me an urgent telegram merely to
ask me that.”
“No, Richard, no.”
Everybody else called his son Dick, but Harold Hazlewood
never. He was Richard. From Richard you might
expect much, the awakening of a higher nature, a devotion
to the regeneration of the world, humanitarianism,
even the cult of all the “antis.”
From Dick you could expect nothing but health and
cleanliness and robustious conventionality. Therefore
Richard Captain Hazlewood of the Coldstream and the
Staff Corps remained. “No, there was something
else.”
Mr. Hazlewood took his son by the
arm and led him into the bay window. He pointed
across the field to the thatched cottage.
“You know who lives there?”
“No.”
“Mrs. Ballantyne.”
Dick put his head on one side and
whistled softly. He knew the general tenor of
that cause célèbre.
Mr. Hazlewood raised remonstrating hands.
“There! You are like the
rest, Richard. You take the worst view. Here
is a good woman maligned and slandered. There
is nothing against her. She was acquitted in
open trial by a jury of responsible citizens under
a judge of the Highest Court in India. Yet she
is left alone like a leper. She is
the victim of gossip and such gossip. Richard,”
said the old man solemnly, “for uncharitableness,
ill-nature and stupid malice the gossip of a Sussex
village leaves the most deplorable efforts of Voltaire
and Swift entirely behind.”
“Father, you are going
it,” said Dick with a chuckle. “Do
you mean to give me a step-mother?”
“I do not, Richard. Such
a monstrous idea never entered my thoughts. But,
my boy, I have called upon her.”
“Oh, you have!”
“Yes. I have seen her too.
I left a card. She left one upon me. I called
again. I was fortunate.”
“She was in?”
“She gave me tea, Richard.”
Richard cocked his head on one side.
“What’s she like, father? Topping?”
“Richard, she gave me tea,”
said the old man, dwelling insistently upon his repetition.
“So you said, sir, and it was
most kind of her to be sure. But that fact won’t
help me to form even the vaguest picture of her looks.”
“But it will, Richard,”
Mr. Hazlewood protested with a nervousness which set
Dick wondering again. “She gave me tea.
Therefore, don’t you see, I must return the
hospitality, which I do with the utmost eagerness.
Richard, I look to you to help me. We must champion
that slandered lady. You will see her for yourself.
She is coming here to luncheon.”
The truth was out at last. Yet
Dick was aware that he might very easily have guessed
it. This was just the quixotic line his father
could have been foreseen to take.
“Well, we must just keep our
eyes open and see that she doesn’t slip anything
into the decanters while our heads are turned,”
said Dick with a chuckle. Old Mr. Hazlewood laid
a hand upon his son’s shoulder.
“That’s the sort of thing
they say. Only you don’t mean it, Richard,
and they do,” he remarked with a mild and reproachful
shake of the head. “Ah, some day, my boy,
your better nature will awaken.”
Dick expressed no anxiety for the
quick advent of that day.
“How many are there of us to be at luncheon?”
asked Dick.
“Only the two of us.”
“I see. We are to keep
the danger in the family. Very wise, sir, upon
my word.”
“Richard, you pervert my meaning,”
said Mr. Hazlewood. “The neighbourhood
has not been kind to Mrs. Ballantyne. She has
been made to suffer. The Vicar’s wife,
for instance a most uncharitable person.
And my sister, your Aunt Margaret, too, in Great Beeding she
is what you would call
“Hot stuff,” murmured Dick.
“Quite so,” replied Mr.
Hazlewood, and he turned to his son with a look of
keen interest upon his face. “I am not familiar
with the phrase, Richard, but not for the first time
I notice that the crude and inelegant vulgarisms in
which you abound and which you no doubt pick up in
the barrack squares compress a great deal of forcible
meaning into very few words.”
“That is indeed true, sir,”
replied Dick with an admirable gravity, “and
if I might be allowed to suggest it, a pamphlet upon
that interesting subject would be less dangerous work
than coquetting with the latest edition of the Marquise
de Brinvilliers.”
The word pamphlet was a bugle-call to Mr. Hazlewood.
“Ah! Speaking of pamphlets,
my boy,” he began, and walked over to a desk
which was littered with papers.
“We have not the time, sir,”
Dick interrupted from the bay of the window.
A woman had come out from the cottage. She unlatched
a little gate in her garden which opened on to the
meadow. She crossed it. Yet another gate
gave her entrance to the garden of Little Beeding.
In a moment Hubbard announced:
“Mrs. Ballantyne”; and
Stella came into the room and stood near to the door
with a certain constraint in her attitude and a timid
watchfulness in her big eyes. She had the look
of a deer. It seemed to Dick that at one abrupt
movement she would turn and run.
Mr. Hazlewood pressed forward to greet
her and she smiled with a warmth of gratitude.
Dick, watching her from the bay window, was surprised
by the delicacy of her face, by a look of fragility.
She was dressed very simply in a coat and short skirt
of white, her shoes and her gloves were of white suede,
her hat was small.
“And this is my son Richard,”
said Mr. Hazlewood; and Dick came forward out of the
bay. Stella Ballantyne bowed to him but said no
word. She was taking no risks even at the hands
of the son of her friend. If advances of friendliness
were to be made they must be made by him, not her.
There was just one awkward moment of hesitation.
Then Dick Hazlewood held out his hand.
“I am very glad to meet you,
Mrs. Ballantyne,” he said cordially, and he
saw the blood rush into her face and the fear die out
in her eyes.
The neighbourhood, to quote Mr. Hazlewood,
had not been kind to Stella Ballantyne. She had
stood in the dock and the fact tarnished her.
Moreover here and there letters had come from India.
The verdict was inevitable, but but there
was a doubt about its justice. The full penalty no.
No one desired or would have thought it right, but
something betwixt and between in the proper spirit
of British compromise would not have been amiss.
Thus gossip ran. More-over Stella Ballantyne was
too good-looking, and she wore her neat and simple
clothes too well. To some of the women it was
an added offence when they considered what she might
be wearing if only the verdict had been different.
Thus for a year Stella had been left to her own company
except for a couple of visits which the Reptons had
paid to her. At the first she had welcomed the
silence, the peace of her loneliness. It was
a balm to her. She recovered like a flower in
the night. But she was young she was
twenty-eight this year and as her limbs
ceased to be things of lead and became once more aglow
with life there came to her a need of companionship.
She tried to tramp the need away on the turf of her
well-loved downs, but she failed. A friend to
share with her the joy of these summer days! Her
blood clamoured for one. But she was an outcast.
Friends did not come her way. Therefore she had
gratefully received old Mr. Hazlewood in her house,
and had accepted, though with some fear, his proposal
that she should lunch at the big house and make the
acquaintance of his son.
She was nervous at the beginning of
that meal, but both father and son were at the pains
to put her at her ease; and soon she was talking naturally,
with a colour in her cheeks, and now and then a note
of laughter in her voice. Dick worked for the
recurrence of that laughter. He liked the clear
sound of it and the melting of all her face into sweetness
and tender humour which came with it. And for
another thing he had a thought, and a true one, that
it was very long since she had known the pleasure
of good laughter.
They took their coffee out on the
lawn under the shade of a huge cedar-tree. The
river ran at their feet and a Canadian canoe and a
rowing-boat were tethered close by in a little dock.
The house, a place of grey stone with grey weathered
and lichen-coloured slates, raised its great oblong
chimneys into a pellucid air. The sunlight flashed
upon its rows of tall windows they were
all flat to the house, except the one great bay on
the ground floor in the library and birds
called from all the trees. The time slipped away.
Dick Hazlewood found himself talking of his work,
a practice into which he seldom fell, and was surprised
that she could talk of it with him. He realised
with a start how it was that she knew. But she
talked naturally and openly, as though he must know
her history. Once even some jargon of the Staff
College slipped from her. “You were doing
let us pretend at Box Hill last week, weren’t
you?” she said, and when he started at the phrase
she imagined that he started at the extent of her
information. “It was in the papers,”
she said. “I read every word of them,”
and then for a second her face clouded, and she added:
“I have time, you see.”
She looked at her watch and sprang to her feet.
“I must go,” she said.
“I didn’t know it was so late. I have
enjoyed myself very much.” She did not
hesitate now to offer her hand. “Goodbye.”
Dick Hazlewood went with her as far
as the gate and came back to his father.
“You were asking me,”
he said carelessly, “if I could give you some
part of the summer. I don’t see why I shouldn’t
come here in a day or two. The polo matches aren’t
so important.”
The old man’s eyes brightened.
“I shall be delighted, Richard,
if you will.” He looked at his son with
something really ecstatic in his expression. At
last then his better nature was awakening. “I
really believe ” he exclaimed and
Dick cut him short.
“Yes, it may be that, sir.
On the other hand it may not. What is quite clear
is that I must catch my train. So if I might order
the car?”
“Of course, of course.”
He came out with his son into the porch of the house.
“We have done a fine thing to-day,
Richard,” he said with enthusiasm and a nod
towards the cottage beyond the meadow.
“We have indeed, sir,”
returned Dick cheerily. “Did you ever see
such a pair of ankles?”
“She lost the tragic look this
afternoon, Richard. We must be her champions.”
“We will put in the summer that
way, father,” said Dick, and waving his hand
was driven off to the station.
Mr. Hazlewood walked back to the library.
But “walked” is a poor word. He seemed
to float on air. A great opportunity had come
to him. He had enlisted the services of his son.
He saw Dick and himself as Toréadors waving red
flags in the face of a bull labelled Conventionality.
He went back to the pamphlet on which he was engaged
with renewed ardour and laboured diligently far into
the night.