I must confess at once that at first,
at least, I very much admired the curate. I
am not referring to my admiration of his fine figure six
feet high and straight as an arrow nor of
his handsome, open, ingenuous countenance, or his
candid blue eye, or his thick curly hair. No;
what won my heart from an early period of my visit
to my cousins, the Poltons, of Poltons Park, was the
fervent, undisguised, unashamed, confident, and altogether
matter-of-course manner in which he made love to Miss
Beatrice Queenborough, only daughter and heiress of
the wealthy shipowner, Sir Wagstaff Queenborough,
Bart., and Eleanor, his wife. It was purely
the manner of the curate’s advances that took
my fancy; in the mere fact of them there was nothing
remarkable. For all the men in the house (and
a good many outside) made covert, stealthy, and indirect
steps in the same direction; for Trix (as her friends
called her) was, if not wise, at least pretty and
witty, displaying to the material eye a charming figure,
and to the mental a delicate heartlessness both
attributes which challenge a self-respecting man’s
best efforts. But then came the fatal obstacle.
From heiresses in reason a gentleman need neither
shrink nor let himself be driven; but when it comes
to something like twenty thousand a year the
reported amount of Trix’s dot he
distrusts his own motives almost as much as the lady’s
relatives distrust them for him. We all felt
this Stanton, Rippleby, and I; and, although
I will not swear that we spoke no tender words and
gave no meaning glances, yet we reduced such concessions
to natural weakness to a minimum, not only when Lady
Queenborough was by, but at all times. To say
truth, we had no desire to see our scalps affixed to
Miss Trix’s pretty belt, nor to have our hearts
broken (like that of the young man in the poem) before
she went to Homburg in the autumn.
With the curate it was otherwise.
He Jack Ives, by the way, was his name appeared
to rush, not only upon his fate, but in the face of
all possibility and of Lady Queenborough. My
cousin and hostess, Dora Polton, was very much distressed
about him. She said that he was such a nice
young fellow, and that it was a great pity to see him
preparing such unhappiness for himself. Nay,
I happen to know that she spoke very seriously to
Trix, pointing out the wickedness of trifling with
him; whereupon Trix, who maintained a bowing acquaintance
with her conscience, avoided him for a whole afternoon
and endangered all Algy Stanton’s prudent resolutions
by taking him out in the Canadian canoe. This
demonstration in no way perturbed the curate.
He observed that, as there was nothing better to
do, we might as well play billiards, and proceeded
to defeat me in three games of a hundred up (no, it
is quite immaterial whether we played for anything
or not), after which he told Dora that the vicar was
taking the evening service it happened to
be the day when there was one at the parish church a
piece of information only relevant in so far as it
suggested that Mr. Ives could accept an invitation
to dinner if one were proffered him. Dora, very
weakly, rose to the bait. Jack Ives, airily
remarking that there was no use in ceremony among
friends, seized the place next to Trix at dinner (her
mother was just opposite) and walked on the terrace
after dinner with her in the moonlight. When
the ladies retired he came into the smoking room,
drank a whisky and soda, said that Miss Queenborough
was really a very charming companion, and apologized
for leaving us early, on the ground that his sermon
was still unwritten. My good cousin, the squire,
suggested rather grimly that a discourse on the vanity
of human wishes might be appropriate.
“I shall preach,” said
Mr. Ives thoughtfully, “on the opportunities
of wealth.”
This resolution he carried out on
the next day but one, that being a Sunday. I
had the pleasure of sitting next to Miss Trix, and
I watched her with some interest as Mr. Ives developed
his theme. I will not try to reproduce the sermon,
which would have seemed by no means a bad one had
any of our party been able to ignore the personal application
which we read into it; for its main burden was no
other than this that wealth should be used
by those who were fortunate enough to possess it (here
Trix looked down and fidgeted with her Prayer-book)
as a means of promoting greater union between themselves
and the less richly endowed, and not as,
alas! had too often been the case as though
it were a new barrier set up between them and their
fellow-creatures (here Miss Trix blushed slightly,
and had recourse to her smelling-bottle). “You,”
said the curate, waxing rhetorical as he addressed
an imaginary, but bloated, capitalist, “have
no more right to your money than I have. It
is intrusted to you to be shared with me.”
At this point I heard Lady Queenborough sniff and
Algy Stanton snigger. I stole a glance at Trix
and detected a slight waver in the admirable lines
of her mouth.
“A very good sermon, didn’t
you think?” I said to her, as we walked home.
“Oh, very!” she replied demurely.
“Ah, if we followed all we heard in church!”
I sighed.
Miss Trix walked in silence for a
few yards. By dint of never becoming anything
else, we had become very good friends; and presently
she remarked, quite confidentially:
“He’s very silly, isn’t he?”
“Then you ought to snub him,” I said severely.
“So I do sometimes. He’s
rather amusing, though.”
“Of course, if you’re prepared to make
the sacrifice involved ”
“Oh, what nonsense!”
“Then you’ve no business to amuse yourself
with him.”
“Dear, dear! how moral you are!” said
Trix.
The next development in the situation
was this: My cousin Dora received a letter from
the Marquis of Newhaven, with whom she was acquainted,
praying her to allow him to run down to Poltons for
a few days; he reminded her that she had once given
him a general invitation; if it would not be inconvenient and
so forth. The meaning of this communication
did not, of course, escape my cousin, who had witnessed
the writer’s attentions to Trix in the preceding
season, nor did it escape the rest of us (who had
talked over the said attentions at the club) when
she told us about it, and announced that Lord Newhaven
would arrive in the middle of the next day.
Trix affected dense unconsciousness; her mother allowed
herself a mysterious smile which, however,
speedily vanished when the curate (he was taking lunch
with us) observed in a cheerful tone:
“Newhaven! Oh, I remember
the chap at the House plowed twice in Smalls stumpy
fellow, isn’t he? Not a bad chap, though,
you know, barring his looks. I’m glad
he’s coming.”
“You won’t be soon, young
man,” Lady Queenborough’s angry eye seemed
to say.
“I remember him,” pursued
Jack; “awfully smitten with a tobacconist’s
daughter in the Corn oh, it’s all
right, Lady Queenborough she wouldn’t
look at him.”
This quasi apology was called forth
by the fact of Lady Queenborough pushing back her
chair and making for the door. It did not at
all appease her to hear of the scorn of the tobacconist’s
daughter. She glanced sternly at Jack and disappeared.
He turned to Trix and reminded her without
diffidence and coram populo, as his habit
was that she had promised him a stroll in
the west wood.
What happened on that stroll I do
not know; but meeting Miss Trix on the stairs later
in the afternoon, I ventured to remark:
“I hope you broke it to him gently, Miss Queenborough?”
“I don’t know what you mean,” replied
Trix haughtily.
“You were out nearly two hours,” said
I.
“Were we?” asked Trix,
with a start. “Good gracious! Where
was mamma, Mr. Wynne?”
“On the lawn watch in hand.”
Miss Trix went slowly upstairs, and
there is not the least doubt that something serious
passed between her and her mother, for both of them
were in the most atrocious of humors that evening.
Fortunately, the curate was not there; he had a Bible
class.
The next day Lord Newhaven arrived.
I found him on the lawn when I strolled up, after
a spell of letter-writing, about four o’clock.
Lawn tennis was the order of the day, and we were
all in flannels.
“Oh, here’s Mark!”
cried Dora, seeing me. “Now, Mark, you
and Mr. Ives had better play against Trix and Lord
Newhaven. That’ll make a very good set.”
“No, no, Mrs. Polton,”
said Jack Ives. “They wouldn’t have
a chance. Look here, I’ll play with Miss
Queenborough against Lord Newhaven and Wynne.”
Newhaven whose appearance,
by the way, though hardly distinguished, was not quite
so unornamental as the curate had led us to expect looked
slightly displeased, but Jack gave him no time for
remonstrance. He whisked Trix off and began to
serve all in a moment. I had a vision of Lady
Queenborough approaching from the house with face
aghast. The set went on; and, owing entirely
to Newhaven’s absurd chivalry in sending all
the balls to Jack Ives instead of following the well-known
maxim to “pound away at the lady,” they
beat us. Jack wiped his brow, strolled up to
the tea table with Trix, and remarked in exultant
tones:
“We make a perfect couple, Miss
Queenborough; we ought never to be separated.”
Dora did not ask the curate to dinner
that night, but he dropped in about nine o’clock
to ask her opinion as to the hymns on Sunday; and
finding Miss Trix and Newhaven in the small drawing
room, he sat down and talked to them. This was
too much for Trix; she had treated him very kindly
and had allowed him to amuse her; but it was impossible
to put up with presumption of that kind. Difficult
as it was to discourage Mr. Ives, she did it, and
he went away with a disconsolate, puzzled expression.
At the last moment, however, Trix so far relented
as to express a hope that he was coming to tennis to-morrow,
at which he brightened up a little. I do not
wish to be uncharitable least of all to
a charming young lady –but my opinion
is that Miss Trix did not wish to set the curate altogether
adrift. I think, however, that Lady Queenborough
must have spoken again, for when Jack did come to tennis,
Trix treated him with most freezing civility and a
hardly disguised disdain, and devoted herself to Lord
Newhaven with as much assiduity as her mother could
wish. We men, over our pipes, expressed the opinion
that Jack Ives’ little hour of sunshine was past,
and that nothing was left to us but to look on at
the prosperous, uneventful course of Lord Newhaven’s
wooing. Trix had had her fun (so Algy Stanton
bluntly phrased it) and would now settle down to business.
“I believe, though,” he
added, “that she likes the curate a bit, you
know.”
During the whole of the next day Wednesday Jack
Ives kept away; he had, apparently, accepted the inevitable,
and was healing his wounded heart by a strict attention
to his parochial duties. Newhaven remarked on
his absence with an air of relief, and Miss Trix treated
it as a matter of no importance; Lady Queenborough
was all smiles; and Dora Polton restricted herself
to exclaiming, as I sat by her at tea, in a low tone
and a propos of nothing in particular, “Oh, well poor
Mr. Ives!”
But on Thursday there occurred an
event, the significance of which passed at the moment
unperceived, but which had, in fact, most important
results. This was no other than the arrival of
little Mrs. Wentworth, an intimate friend of Dora’s.
Mrs. Wentworth had been left a widow early in life;
she possessed a comfortable competence; she was not
handsome, but she was vivacious, amusing, and, above
all, sympathetic. She sympathized at once with
Lady Queenborough in her maternal anxieties, with
Trix on her charming romance, with Newhaven on his
sweet devotedness, with the rest of us in our obvious
desolation and, after a confidential chat
with Dora, she sympathized most strongly with poor
Mr. Ives on his unfortunate attachment. Nothing
would satisfy her, so Dora told me, except the opportunity
of plying Mr. Ives with her soothing balm; and Dora
was about to sit down and write him a note, when he
strolled in through the drawing room window, and announced
that his cook’s mother was ill, and that he should
be very much obliged if Mrs. Polton would give him
some dinner that evening. Trix and Newhaven
happened to enter by the door at the same moment,
and Jack darted up to them, and shook hands with the
greatest effusion. He had evidently buried all
unkindness and with it, we hoped, his mistaken
folly. However that might be, he made no effort
to engross Trix, but took his seat most docilely by
his hostess and she, of course, introduced
him to Mrs. Wentworth. His behavior was, in fact,
so exemplary that even Lady Queenborough relaxed her
severity, and condescended to cross-examine him on
the morals and manners of the old women of the parish.
“Oh, the vicar looks after them,” said
Jack; and he turned to Mrs. Wentworth again.
There can be no doubt that Mrs. Wentworth
had a remarkable power of sympathy. I took her
in to dinner, and she was deep in the subject of my
“noble and inspiring art” before the soup
was off the table. Indeed, I’m sure that
my life’s ambitions would have been an open book
to her by the time that the joint arrived, had not
Jack Ives, who was sitting on the lady’s other
side, cut into the conversation just as Mrs. Wentworth
was comparing my early struggles with those of Mr.
Carlyle. After this intervention of Jack’s
I had not a chance. I ate my dinner without
the sauce of sympathy, substituting for it a certain
amusement which I derived from studying the face of
Miss Trix Queenborough, who was placed on the opposite
side of the table. And if Trix did look now
and again at Mrs. Wentworth and Jack Ives, I cannot
say that her conduct was unnatural. To tell the
truth, Jack was so obviously delighted with his new
friend that it was quite pleasant and,
as I say, under the circumstances, rather amusing to
watch them. We felt that the squire was justified
in having a hit at Jack when Jack said, in the smoking
room, that he found himself rather at a loss for a
subject for his next sermon.
“What do you say,” suggested
my cousin, puffing at his pipe, “to taking constancy
as your text?”
Jack considered the idea for a moment,
but then he shook his head.
“No. I think,” he
said reflectively, “that I shall preach on the
power of sympathy.”
That sermon afforded me I
must confess it, at the risk of seeming frivolous very
great entertainment. Again I secured a place
by Miss Trix on her left, Newhaven being
on her right, and her face was worth study when Jack
Ives gave us a most eloquent description of the wonderful
gift in question. It was, he said, the essence
and the crown of true womanliness, and it showed itself well,
to put it quite plainly, it showed itself, according
to Jack Ives, in exactly that sort of manner and bearing
which so honorably and gracefully distinguished Mrs.
Wentworth. The lady was not, of course, named,
but she was clearly indicated. “Your gift,
your precious gift,” cried the curate, apostrophizing
the impersonation of sympathy, “is given to you,
not for your profit, but for mine. It is yours,
but it is a trust to be used for me. It is yours,
in fact, to share with me.” At this climax,
which must have struck upon her ear with a certain
familiarity, Miss Trix Queenborough, notwithstanding
the place and occasion, tossed her pretty head and
whispered to me, “What horrid stuff!”
In the ensuing week Jack Ives was
our constant companion; the continued illness of his
servant’s mother left him stranded, and Dora’s
kind heart at once offered him the hospitality of
her roof. For my part I was glad, for the little
drama which now began was not without its interest.
It was a pleasant change to see Jack genially polite
to Trix Queenborough, but quite indifferent to her
presence or absence, and content to allow her to take
Newhaven for her partner at tennis as often as she
pleased. He himself was often an absentee from
our games. Mrs. Wentworth did not play, and Jack
would sit under the trees with her, or take her out
in the canoe. What Trix thought I did not know,
but it is a fact that she treated poor Newhaven like
dirt beneath her feet, and that Lady Queenborough’s
face began to lose its transiently pleasant expression.
I had a vague idea that a retribution was working
itself out, and disposed myself to see the process
with all the complacency induced by the spectacle
of others receiving punishment for their sins.
A little scene which occurred after
lunch one day was significant. I was sitting
on the terrace, ready booted and breeched, waiting
for my horse to be brought round. Trix came
out and sat down by me.
“Where’s Newhaven?” I asked.
“Oh, I don’t always want
Lord Newhaven!” she exclaimed petulantly.
“I sent him off for a walk I’m
going out in the Canadian canoe with Mr. Ives.”
“Oh, you are, are you?”
said I, smiling. As I spoke, Jack Ives ran up
to us.
“I say, Miss Queenborough,”
he cried, “I’ve just got your message
saying you’d let me take you on the lake.”
“Is it a great bore?”
asked Trix, with a glance a glance that
meant mischief.
“I should like it awfully, of
course,” said Jack; “but the fact is I’ve
promised to take Mrs. Wentworth before I
got your message, you know.”
Trix drew herself up.
“Of course, if Mrs. Wentworth ”
she began.
“I’m very sorry,” said Jack.
Then Miss Queenborough, forgetting as
I hope or choosing to disregard my presence,
leaned forward and asked, in her most coaxing tones:
“Don’t you ever forget a promise, Mr.
Ives?”
Jack looked at her. I suppose
her dainty prettiness struck him afresh, for he wavered
and hesitated.
“She’s gone upstairs,”
pursued the tempter, “and we shall be safe away
before she comes down again.”
Jack shuffled with one foot on the gravel.
“I tell you what,” he
said; “I’ll ask her if she minds me taking
you for a little while before I ”
I believe he really thought that he
had hit upon a compromise satisfactory to all parties.
If so, he was speedily undeceived. Trix flushed
red and answered angrily:
“Pray don’t trouble. I don’t
want to go.”
“Perhaps afterward you might,”
suggested the curate, but now rather timidly.
“I’m going out with Lord
Newhaven,” said she. And she added, in
an access of uncontrollable annoyance. “Go,
please go. I I don’t want you.”
Jack sheered off, with a look of puzzled
shamefacedness. He disappeared into the house.
Nothing passed between Miss Trix and myself.
A moment later Newhaven came out.
“Why, Miss Queenborough,”
said he, in apparent surprise, “Ives is going
with Mrs. Wentworth in the canoe!”
In an instant I saw what she had done.
In rash presumption she had told Newhaven that she
was going with the curate and now the curate
had refused to take her and Ives had met
him in search of Mrs. Wentworth. What could
she do? Well, she rose or fell to
the occasion. In the coldest of voices she said:
“I thought you’d gone for your walk.”
“I was just starting,”
he answered apologetically, “when I met Ives.
But, as you weren’t going with him ”
He paused, an inquiring look in his eyes. He
was evidently asking himself why she had not gone with
the curate.
“I’d rather be left alone,
if you don’t mind,” said she. And
then, flushing red again, she added. “I
changed my mind and refused to go with Mr. Ives.
So he went off to get Mrs. Wentworth instead.”
I started. Newhaven looked at
her for an instant, and then turned on his heel.
She turned to me, quick as lightning, and with her
face all aflame.
“If you tell, I’ll never
speak to you again,” she whispered.
After this there was silence for some minutes.
“Well?” she said, without looking at me.
“I have no remark to offer, Miss Queenborough,”
I returned.
“I suppose that was a lie, wasn’t it?”
she asked defiantly.
“It’s not my business to say what it was,”
was my discreet answer.
“I know what you’re thinking.”
“I was thinking,” said
I, “which I would rather be the man
you will marry, or the man you would like ”
“How dare you! It’s not true.
Oh Mr. Wynne, indeed it’s not true!”
Whether it were true or not I did
not know. But if it had been, Miss Trix Queenborough
might have been expected to act very much in the way
in which she proceeded to act: that is to say,
to be extravagantly attentive to Lord Newhaven when
Jack Ives was present, and markedly neglectful of
him in the curate’s absence. It also fitted
in very well with the theory which I had ventured
to hint that her bearing toward Mrs. Wentworth was
distinguished by a stately civility, and her remarks
about that lady by a superfluity of laudation; for
if these be not two distinguishing marks of rivalry
in the well-bred, I must go back to my favorite books
and learn from them more folly. And
if Trix’s manners were all that they should
be, praise no less high must be accorded to Mrs. Wentworth’s;
she attained an altitude of admirable unconsciousness
and conducted her flirtation (the poverty of language
forces me to the word, but it is over-flippant) with
the curate in a staid, quasi-maternal way. She
called him a delightful boy, and said that she was
intensely interested in all his aims and hopes.
“What does she want?”
I asked Dora despairingly. “She can’t
want to marry him.” I was referring to
Trix Queenborough, not to Mrs. Wentworth.
“Good gracious, no!” answered
Dora, irritably. “It’s simple jealousy.
She won’t let the poor boy alone till he’s
in love with her again. It’s a horrible
shame!”
“Oh, well, he has great recuperative power,”
said I.
“She’d better be careful,
though. It’s a very dangerous game.
How do you suppose Lord Newhaven likes it?”
Accident gave me that very day a hint
how little Lord Newhaven liked it, and a glimpse of
the risk Miss Trix was running. Entering the
library suddenly, I heard Newhaven’s voice raised
above his ordinary tones.
“I won’t stand it!”
he was declaring. “I never know how she’ll
treat me from one minute to the next.”
My entrance, of course, stopped the
conversation very abruptly. Newhaven had come
to a stand in the middle of the room, and Lady Queenborough
sat on the sofa, a formidable frown on her brow.
Withdrawing myself as rapidly as possible, I argued
the probability of a severe lecture for Miss Trix,
ending in a command to try her noble suitor’s
patience no longer. I hope all this happened,
for I, not seeing why Mrs. Wentworth should monopolize
the grace of sympathy, took the liberty of extending
mine to Newhaven. He was certainly in love with
Trix, not with her money, and the treatment he underwent
must have been as trying to his feelings as it was
galling to his pride.
My sympathy was not premature, for
Miss Trix’s fascinations, which were indubitably
great, began to have their effect. The scene
about the canoe was re-enacted, but with a different
denouement. This time the promise was forgotten,
and the widow forsaken. Then Mrs. Wentworth put
on her armor. We had, in fact, reached this very
absurd situation, that these two ladies were contending
for the favors of, or the domination over, such an
obscure, poverty-stricken, hopelessly ineligible person
as the curate of Poltons undoubtedly was. The
position seemed to me then, and still seems, to indicate
some remarkable qualities in that young man.
At last Newhaven made a move.
At breakfast, on Wednesday morning, he announced
that, reluctant as he should be to leave Poltons Park,
he was due at his aunt’s place, in Kent, on
Saturday evening, and must, therefore, make his arrangements
to leave by noon on that day. The significance
was apparent. Had he come down to breakfast with
“Now or Never!” stamped in fiery letters
across his brow, it would have been more obtrusive,
indeed, but not a whit plainer. We all looked
down at our plates, except Jack Ives. He flung
one glance (I saw it out of the corner of my left
eye) at Newhaven, another at Trix; then he remarked
kindly:
“We shall be uncommonly sorry to lose you, Newhaven.”
Events began to happen now, and I
will tell them as well as I am able, supplementing
my own knowledge by what I learned afterward from
Dora she having learned it from the actors
in the scene. In spite of the solemn warning
conveyed in Newhaven’s intimation, Trix, greatly
daring, went off immediately after lunch for what she
described as “a long ramble” with Mr.
Ives. There was, indeed, the excuse of an old
woman at the end of the ramble, and Trix provided Jack
with a small basket of comforts for the useful old
body; but the ramble was, we felt, the thing, and
I was much annoyed at not being able to accompany
the walkers in the cloak of darkness or other invisible
contrivance. The ramble consumed three hours full
measure. Indeed, it was half-past six before
Trix, alone, walked up the drive. Newhaven, a
solitary figure, paced up and down the terrace fronting
the drive. Trix came on, her head thrown back
and a steady smile on her lips. She saw Newhaven;
he stood looking at her for a moment with what she
afterward described as an indescribable smile on his
face, but not, as Dora understood from her, by any
means a pleasant one. Yet, if not pleasant, there
is not the least doubt in the world that it was highly
significant, for she cried out nervously: “Why
are you looking at me like that? What’s
the matter?”
Newhaven, still saying nothing, turned
his back on her, and made as if he would walk into
the house and leave her there, ignored, discarded,
done with. She, realizing the crisis which had
come, forgetting everything except the imminent danger
of losing him once for all, without time for long
explanation or any round-about seductions, ran forward,
laying her hand on his arm and blurting out:
“But I’ve refused him.”
I do not know what Newhaven thinks
now, but I sometimes doubt whether he would not have
been wiser to shake off the detaining hand, and pursue
his lonely way, first into the house, and ultimately
to his aunt’s. But (to say nothing of
the twenty thousand a year, which, after all, and
be you as romantic as you may please to be, is not
a thing to be sneezed at) Trix’s face, its mingled
eagerness and shame, its flushed cheeks and shining
eyes, the piquancy of its unwonted humility, overcame
him. He stopped dead.
“I I was obliged
to give him an an opportunity,” said
Miss Trix, having the grace to stumble a little in
her speech. “And and it’s
all your fault.”
The war was thus, by happy audacity,
carried into Newhaven’s own quarters.
“My fault!” he exclaimed.
“My fault that you walk all day with that curate!”
Then Miss Trix and let
no irrelevant considerations mar the appreciation
of fine acting dropped her eyes and murmured
softly:
“I I was so terribly afraid of seeming
to expect you.”
Wherewith she (and not he) ran away
lightly up the stairs, turning just one glance downward
as she reached the landing. Newhaven was looking
up from below with an “enchanted” smile the
word is Trix’s own; I should probably have used
a different one.
Was then the curate of Poltons utterly
defeated brought to his knees, only to
be spurned? It seemed so; and he came down to
dinner that night with a subdued and melancholy expression.
Trix, on the other hand, was brilliant and talkative
to the last degree, and the gayety spread from her
all around the table, leaving untouched only the rejected
lover and Mrs. Wentworth; for the last named lady,
true to her distinguishing quality, had begun to talk
to poor Jack Ives in low, soothing tones.
After dinner Trix was not visible;
but the door of the little boudoir beyond stood half-open,
and very soon Newhaven edged his way through.
Almost at the same moment Jack Ives and Mrs. Wentworth
passed out of the window and began to walk up and
down the gravel. Nobody but myself appeared
to notice these remarkable occurrences, but I watched
them with keen interest. Half an hour passed,
and then there smote on my watchful ear the sound
of a low laugh from the boudoir. It was followed
almost immediately by a stranger sound from the gravel
walk. Then, all in a moment, two things happened.
The boudoir door opened, and Trix, followed by Newhaven,
came in, smiling; from the window entered Jack Ives
and Mrs. Wentworth. My eyes were on the curate.
He gave one sudden, comprehending glance toward the
other couple; then he took the widow’s hand,
led her up to Dora, and said, in low yet penetrating
tones.
“Will you wish us joy, Mrs. Polton?”
The squire, Rippleby, and Algy Stanton
were round them in an instant. I kept my place,
watching now the face of Trix Queenborough. She
turned first flaming red, then very pale. I saw
her turn to Newhaven and speak one or two urgent,
imperative words to him. Then, drawing herself
up to her full height, she crossed the room to where
the group was assembled round Mrs. Wentworth and Jack
Ives.
“What’s the matter? What are you
saying?” she asked.
Mrs. Wentworth’s eyes were modestly
cast down, but a smile played round her mouth.
No one spoke for a moment. Then Jack Ives said:
“Mrs. Wentworth has promised
to be my wife, Miss Queenborough.”
For a moment, hardly perceptible,
Trix hesitated; then, with the most winning, touching,
sweetest smile in the world, she said:
“So you took my advice, and
our afternoon walk was not wasted, after all?”
Mrs. Polton is not used to these fine
flights of diplomacy; she had heard before dinner
something of what had actually happened in the afternoon;
and the simple woman positively jumped. Jack
Ives met Trix’s scornful eyes full and square.
“Not at all wasted,” said
he, with a smile. “Not only has it shown
me where my true happiness lies, but it has also given
me a juster idea of the value and sincerity of your
regard for me, Miss Queenborough.”
“It is as real, Mr. Ives, as it is sincere,”
said she.
“It is like yourself, Miss Queenborough,”
said he, with a little bow; and he turned from her
and began to talk to his fiancee.
Trix Queenborough moved slowly toward
where I sat. Newhaven was watching her from
where he stood alone on the other side of the room.
“And have you no news for us?” I asked
in low tones.
“Thank you,” she said
haughtily; “I don’t care that mine should
be a pendent to the great tidings about the little
widow and curate.”
After a moment’s pause she went on:
“He lost no time, did he?
He was wise to secure her before what happened this
afternoon could leak out. Nobody can tell her
now.”
“This afternoon?”
“He asked me to marry him this afternoon.”
“And you refused?”
“Yes.”
“Well, his behavior is in outrageously bad taste,
but ”
She laid a hand on my arm, and said in calm, level
tones.
“I refused him because I dared
not have him; but I told him I cared for him, and
he said he loved me. And I let him kiss me.
Good-night, Mr. Wynne.”
I sat still and silent. Newhaven
came across to us. Trix put up her hand and
caught him by the sleeve.
“Fred,” she said, “my dear, honest
old Fred; you love me, don’t you?”
Newhaven, much embarrassed and surprised,
looked at me in alarm. But her hand was in his
now, and her eyes imploring him.
“I should rather think I did, my dear,”
said he.
I really hope that Lord and Lady Newhaven
will not be very unhappy, while Mrs. Ives quite worships
her husband, and is convinced that she eclipsed the
brilliant and wealthy Miss Queenborough.
Perhaps she did perhaps not.
There are, as I have said, great qualities
in the curate of Poltons, but I have not quite made
up my mind precisely what they are. I ought,
however, to say that Dora takes a more favorable view
of him and a less lenient view of Trix than I.
That is perhaps natural. Besides,
Dora does not know the precise manner in which the
curate was refused. By the way, he preached next
Sunday on the text, “The children of this world
are wiser in their generation than the children of
light.”