Alison lost little time in making
his promised attack on Jenny; he was not the man to
let the grass grow under his feet. It might be
improper to say that he chose the wrong moment for
no moment could be wrong from his point of view, and
the one most wrong from a worldly aspect might well
be to his mind the supremely right. Yet according
to that purely worldly standpoint the time was unfortunate.
Jenny had a great many other things to think of very
pressing things: as to many of us, so to her,
her religious position perhaps seemed a matter which
could wait. Moreover by a whimsical
chance the Rector ran up against another
difficulty: to Jenny it was a refuge, of which
she availed herself with her usual dexterity.
When one attack pressed her, I am convinced that she
absolutely welcomed the advent of another from the
opposite direction. Between the two she might
slip out unhurt; at any rate, if one assailant called
on her to surrender, she could bid him deal with the
other first. The analogy is not exact but
there was a family likeness between her balancing
of Fillingford against Octon and the way in which,
assailed by Alison, she interposed, as a shield, the
views urged on her by Mrs. Jepps. Displayed in
a less serious campaign less serious, I
mean, to Jenny’s thinking yet it was,
in essence, the same strategy and it was
a strategy pretty to watch. Be it remarked that
Jenny was busy keeping friends with everybody during
these anxious weeks.
Mrs. Jepps if I have said
it before, it will bear repetition was a
power in Catsford, in the town itself. She might
be said to lead the distinctively town society.
Age, wealth, character, and a certain incisiveness
of speech combined to strengthen her position.
She was a small old lady, with plentiful white hair;
she had been pretty save for a nose too
big; in her old age she bore a likeness to Cardinal
Newman, but it would never have done to tell her so she
would as soon have been compared to the Prince of
Darkness himself. For she was a most pronounced
Evangelical, and her feud with Alison was open and
inveterate. She disapproved profoundly of “the
parish clergyman”; she called him by that title,
whereas he called himself “the priest in charge”;
for his “assistant priests” she would know
no name but “curates.” There had
been an Education Question lately; the fight had waxed
abnormally hot over the souls almost over
the bodies of Catsford urchins, male and
female, themselves somewhat impervious to the bearings
of the controversy. Into deeper differences it
is not necessary to go. The Rector thought her
one of the best women he knew, but one of the most
wrong-headed. Put man for woman and
she exactly reciprocated his opinion; and it is hard
to deny, though sad to admit, that her zeal for Jenny’s
spiritual awakening was stirred to greater activity
by the knowledge that Alison had put his hand to the
alarm. To use a homely metaphor, they were each
exceedingly anxious that the awakened sleeper should
get out on what was, given their point of view, the
right side of the bed.
To Jenny need I say it? this
situation was rich in possibilities of staying in
bed. In response to appeals she might put one
foot out on one side, then the other foot out on the
other; she would think a long while before she trusted
her whole body to the floor either on the right or
on the left. She did not appreciate in the least
the fiery zeal which urged her to one side or the
other: but she knew that it was there and allowed
for its results. To her mind she had two friends while
she lay in bed; a descent on either side might cost
her one of them. While she hesitated, she was
precious to both. For the rest, I believe that
she found a positive recreation in this ecclesiastical
dispute; to play off Mrs. Jepps against Alison was
child’s play compared to the much more hazardous
and difficult game on which she was embarked.
Child’s play and byplay; yet not,
perhaps, utterly irrelevant. It would have been
easy to say “A plague on both your houses!”
But even Mercutio did not say that till he was wounded
to death, and Jenny was more of a politician than
Mercutio. She asked both houses to dinner and
took pains that they should meet.
They met several times with
more pleasure to Mrs. Jepps than to the Rector.
He fought for conscience’ sake, and for what
he held true. So did she but the old
lady liked the fighting for its own sake also.
Jenny’s attitude was “I want to understand.”
She pitted them against one another Mrs.
Jepps’s “Letter of the Scriptures”
against Alison’s “Voice of the Living
Church,” his “Primitive Usage and Teaching
of the Fathers” against her “Protestantism
and Reformation Settlement.” It is not
necessary to deny to Jenny an honest intellectual interest
in these and kindred questions, although her concern
did not go very deep but for her an avowed
object always gained immensely in attraction from the
possibility of some remoter and unavowed object attaching
to it. If the avowed object of these prolonged
discussions was the settlement of Jenny’s religious
convictions, the remoter and unavowed was to keep
herself still in a position to reward whichever of
the disputants she might choose finally to hail as
victor. Policy and temperament both went to foster
this instinct in her; the position might be useful,
and was enjoyable; her security might be increased,
her vanity was flattered. Jenny stayed in bed!
In secular politics her course was
no less skillfully taken. She did indeed declare
herself a Conservative there was no doubt,
even for Jenny’s cautious mind, about the wisdom
of that step and gave Bertram Ware a very
handsome contribution toward his Registration expenses;
the expenses were heavy, Ware was not a rich man,
and he was grateful. But at that time the question
of Free Trade against Protection or Free
Imports against Fair Trade, if those terms be preferred was
just coming to the front, under the impetus given
by a distinguished statesman. Fillingford, the
natural leader of the party in the county division,
was a convinced Free Trader. Ware had at least
a strong inclination for Fair Trade. After talks
with Fillingford and talks with Ware, Jenny gave her
contribution, but accompanied it by an intimation that
she hoped Mr. Ware would do nothing to break up the
party. The hint was significant. Between
the two sections which existed, or threatened to exist,
in her party, Jenny with her estate and
her money became an object of much interest.
They united in giving her high rank in their Primrose
League but neither of them felt sure of
her support.
To complete this slight sketch of
the public position which Jenny was making for herself,
add Catsford highly interested in and flattered by
the prospect of its Institute, grateful to its powerful
neighbour for her benefits, perhaps hopefully expectant
of more favors from the same hand proud,
too, of old Nick Driver’s handsome and clever
daughter. Catsford was both selfishly and sentimentally
devoted to Jenny, and of its devotion Mr. Bindlecombe
was the enthusiastic and resonant herald.
Her private relations, though by no
means free from difficulty, were at the moment hardly
less flattering to her sense of self-importance, hardly
less eloquent of her power. Fillingford was ready
to offer her all he had his name, his rank,
his stately Manor; Octon lingered at Hatcham Ford,
hoping against hope for her, unable to go because it
was her will that he should stay: at her bidding
young Lacey was transforming himself from a gay aspirant
to her favor into the submissive servant of her wishes,
her warm and obedient friend. To consider mere
satellites like Cartmell and myself would be an anti-climax;
yet to us, too, crumbs of kindness fell from the rich
man’s table and did their work of binding us
closer to Jenny.
If she stayed as she was the
powerful, important Miss Driver she was
very well. If she married Fillingford, she hardly
strengthened her position, but she decorated it highly,
and widened the sphere of her influence. If she
chose to take the risks and openly accepted Octon,
she would indeed strain and impair the fabric she
had built, but she could hardly so injure it that
time and skill would not build it again as good as
new. But she would make up her mind to none of
the three. She liked independence and feared
its loss by marriage. She liked splendor and
rank, and therefore kept her hold on Fillingford’s
offer. Finally, she must like Octon himself,
must probably in her heart cling more to him than
she had admitted even to herself; there was no other
reason for dallying with that decision. Across
the play of her politics ran this strong, this curious,
personal attraction; she could not let him go.
For the moment she tried for all these things the
independence, the prestige of prospective splendor
and rank, and well, whatever she was getting
out of the presence of Octon at Hatcham Ford, across
the road from her offices at Ivydene.
It was a delicate equipoise the
least thing might upset it, and in its fall it might
involve much that was of value to Jenny. There
was at least one person who was not averse from anything
which would set a check to Jenny’s plans and
shake her power.
Jenny and I had been to Fillingford
Manor where, by the way, I took the opportunity
of inspecting Mistress Eleanor Lacey’s picture,
Fillingford acting as my guide and himself examining
it with much apparent interest and, as
we drove home, she said to me suddenly:
“Why does Lady Sarah dislike me so much?”
“She has three excellent reasons.
You eclipse her, you threaten her, and you dislike
her.”
“How does she know I dislike her?”
“How do you know she dislikes
you, if you come to that? You women always seem
to me to have special antennæ for finding out dislikes.
I don’t mean to say they’re infallible.”
“At any rate Lady Sarah and
I seem to agree in this case,” laughed Jenny.
“She’s right if she thinks I dislike her,
and I’m certainly right in thinking she dislikes
me. But how do I threaten her?”
“Come, come! Do you mean
me to answer that? Nobody likes the idea of being
turned out any more than they welcome playing
second fiddle.”
“I’m always very civil
to her oh, not only at Fillingford!
I’ve taken pains to pay her all the proper honors
about the Institute. Very fussy she is there,
too! She’s always dropping in at Ivydene
to ask something stupid. She quite worries poor
Mr. Powers.”
Jenny might resent Lady Sarah’s
excessive activity at Ivydene, but she gave no sign
of being disquieted by it. To me, however, it
seemed to be, under the circumstances, rather dangerous;
but not being supposed to know, or to have guessed,
the circumstances, I could say nothing.
Jenny’s next remark perhaps
explained her easiness of mind.
“We don’t let her in if
we don’t want her. I must say that Mr. Powers
is very good at keeping people out. Well, I must
try to be more pleasant. I don’t really
dislike her so much; it’s chiefly that family
iciness which is so trying. It’s a bore
always to have to be setting to work to melt people,
isn’t it?”
I hold no brief against Lady Sarah,
and do not regard her as the villain of the piece.
She was a woman of a nature dry, yet despotic; she
desired power and the popularity that gives power,
but had not the temper or the arts to win them.
Jenny’s triumphs wounded her pride, Jenny’s
plans threatened her position in her own home at Fillingford
Manor. Her dislike for Jenny was natural, and
it is really impossible to blame very severely perhaps,
if family feeling is to count, one ought not to blame
at all her share in the events which were
close at hand. It is, in fact, rather difficult
to see what else she could have done. If she had
a right to do it, it is perhaps setting up too high
a standard to chide her for a supposed pleasure in
the work.
When we got home, Cartmell was waiting
for Jenny, his round face portentously lengthened
by woe. He shook hands with sad gravity.
“What has happened?” she
cried. “Not all my banks broken, Mr. Cartmell?”
“I’m very sorry to be
troublesome, Miss Jenny, but I’ve come to make
a formal complaint against Powers. The fellow
is doing you a lot of harm and bringing discredit
on the Institute in its very beginnings. He neglects
his work; that doesn’t matter so much, there’s
not a great deal to do yet; he spends the best part
of the mornings lounging about public-house bars,
smoking and drinking and betting, and the best part
of his evenings doing the same, and ogling and flirting
with the factory girls into the bargain. He’s
a thorough bad lot.”
Jenny’s face had grown very
serious. “I’m sorry. He’s he’s
an old friend of mine!”
“That was what you said before.
On the strength of it you gave him this chance.
Well, he’s proved himself unworthy of it.
You must get rid of him for the sake of
the Institute and for your own sake, too.”
“Get rid of him?” She
looked oddly at Cartmell. “Isn’t that
rather severe? Wouldn’t a good scolding
from you ?”
“From me? He practically
tells me to mind my own business. If there are
any complaints, the fellow says, they’d better
be addressed to you!” He paused for a moment.
“He gives the impression that you’d back
him up through thick and thin, and, what’s more,
he means to give it.”
“What does he say to give that
impression?” she asked quickly.
“He doesn’t say much.
It’s a nod here, and a wink there and
a lot of vaporing, so I’m told, about having
known you when you were a girl.”
“That’s silly, but not very bad.
Is that all?”
“No. When one of my clerks Harrison,
a very steady man gave him a friendly warning
that he was going the right way about to lose his job,
he said something very insolent.”
“What?” She was sitting very still, very
intent.
“He laughed and said he thought
you knew better than that. Said in the way he
said it, it it came to claiming some sort
of hold on you, Miss Jenny. That’s a very
dangerous idea to get about.”
Cartmell was evidently thinking of
the old story of the episode of Cheltenham
days. But had Powers been thinking of that?
And was Jenny, with her bright eyes intent on Cartmell’s
face? She did not look alarmed only
rather expectant. She foresaw a fight with Powers,
but had no doubt that she could beat him if
only the mischief had not gone too far.
“He seemed to refer to Cheltenham?”
she asked, smiling.
Cartmell was the embarrassed party
to the conversation. “I I’m
afraid so, Miss Jenny,” he stammered, and his
red face grew even redder.
“Oh, I’ll settle that all right,”
Jenny assured him.
“You’ll give him the sack?” Cartmell
asked bluntly.
She had many good reasons to produce
against that, just as she had produced many for bringing
him to Catsford. “I’ll reduce him
to order, anyhow,” she promised.
That was what she wanted to
bring him to heel, not to lose him. But surely
it was no longer for his own sake, nor even to satisfy
that instinct of hers which forbade the alienation
of the least of her human possessions? There
was more than that in it. He was part of the
scheme he fitted into that explanation which
my brain had insisted on conceiving as I walked home
from Ivydene. Of this aspect of the case Cartmell
was entirely innocent.
By one of her calculated bits of audacity concealing
much, she would seem to have nothing to conceal she
took me with her when she went down to Ivydene the
next morning, to haul Powers over the coals. She
would have me present at the interview between them.
Well, it may also have been that she did not want
too much plain speaking or, rather, preferred
to do what was to be done in that line herself.
She attacked him roundly; he stood
before her not daring to resist openly, yet covertly
insolent, hinting at what he dared not say plainly certainly
not before me, for he had not yet decided what game
to play. He waited to see what he could still
get out of Jenny. She rehearsed to him Cartmell’s
charges as to his conduct; its idleness, its unseemliness,
the disrepute it brought on her and on the Institute.
Somehow all this sounded a little bit unreal or,
if not unreal, shall I say preliminary? Powers
confessed part, denied part, averred a prejudice in
Cartmell this last not without some reason.
She rose to her gravest charge.
“And you seem to have the impertinence
to hint that you can do what you like, and that I
shall stand it all,” she said.
“I never said that, Miss Driver.
I may have said you had a kind heart and wouldn’t
be hard on an old friend.” He had his cloth
cap in his hands and kept twisting it about and fiddling
with it as he talked. He smiled all the time,
insinuatingly, yet rather uneasily, too.
“It’s not your place to
make any reference to me,” she said haughtily.
“I’ll thank you to leave me out of your
conversation with these curious friends of yours,
Mr. Powers.”
He looked at her, licking his lips.
I was a mere spectator, though I do not think either
of them had for a moment, up to now, forgotten my
presence; indeed, both were, in a sense, playing their
parts before me.
“I don’t know that my
friends are more curious than other people’s,
Miss Driver. People choose friends as it suits
them, I suppose.”
She caught the insinuation he
must have meant that she should. Her eyes blazed
with a sudden anger. I knew the signs of that;
when it came, prudence was apt to be thrown to the
winds. She rose from her chair and walked up
to where he stood.
“What do you mean by that?” she demanded.
He was afraid; he cowered before her
fury: “Nothing,” he grumbled sullenly.
“Then don’t say things
like that. I don’t like them. I won’t
have them said. It almost sounded as if you meant
a reference to me.”
Of course he had meant one. She
saw the danger and faced it. She relied on her
personal domination. He was threatening, she would
terrify. She went on in a cool, hard voice very
bitter, very dangerous.
“Once before in your life you
threatened me,” she said. “I was a
child then, and had no friends. You got off safe you
even got a little money a little very dirty
money.” (He did not like that; he flushed red
and picked at his cap furiously.) “Now I’m
a woman and I’ve got friends. You won’t
get any money, and you won’t get off safe.
Be sure of that. Who’ll employ you if I
won’t? What character have you except what
I choose to give? I think, if I were a man, I’d
thrash you where you stand, Mr. Powers.”
This remark may perhaps have been
unladylike that would have been Chat’s
word for it. For my part I thoroughly appreciated
and enjoyed it. She was a fine sight in a royal
rage like this.
“But though I’m not a
man, I’ve friends who are. If you dare to
use your tongue against me, look out!”
He could not stand against her nor
face her. Indeed it would have been hard to fight
her, unless by forgetting that she was a woman.
He cringed before her, yet with an obstinately vicious
look in his would-be humble eyes.
“I beg your pardon, Miss Driver indeed
I do. I I’ve been wrong.
Don’t be hard on me. There’s my poor
wife and family! You shall have no further cause
of complaint. As for threatening, why, how could
I? What could I do against you, Miss Driver?”
Did his humility, hardly less disagreeable
than his insolence, disarm her wrath? Did her
mood change or had the moment come for an
artistic dissimulation? I must confess that I
do not know; but suddenly she struck him playfully
on the point of the chin with her glove and began
to laugh. “Then, you dear silly old Powers,
don’t be such a fool,” she said.
“Don’t quarrel with your bread and butter,
and don’t take so much whisky and water.
Because whisky brings vapors, and then you think you’re
a great man, and get romancing about what you could
do if you liked. I’ve stood a good deal
from you, haven’t I? I would stand a good
deal for old times’ sake. You know that;
but is it kind to presume on it, to push me too far
just because you know I like you?”
This speech I defend less than the
unladylike one; I liked her better on the subject
of the thrashing. But there is no denying that
it was very well done. Was it wholly insincere?
Perhaps not. In any event she meant to conquer
Powers, and was not without reason, or precedent, in
trying to see if blarney would aid threats.
He responded plausibly, summoning
his mock gentlemanliness to cover his submission,
and, I may add, his malice. He regretted his mistakes,
he deplored misunderstanding, he avowed unlimited
obligation and eternal gratitude. He even ventured
on hinting at the memory of a sentimental attachment.
“I can take from you what I would from no other
lady.” (At no moment, however agitated, would
Powers forget to say “lady.”) The remark
was accompanied by an unmistakable leer.
Even that, which I bore with difficulty,
Jenny accepted graciously. She gave him her hand,
saying, “I know. Now let’s forget
all this and work pleasantly together.”
She glanced at me. “And Mr. Austin, too,
will forget all about our little quarrel?”
“I’m always willing to
be friends with Mr. Powers, if he’ll let me,”
I said.
“And so are all my friends, I’m sure,”
said Jenny.
Going out, we had a strange encounter,
which stands forth vivid in memory. Jenny’s
brougham was waiting perhaps some thirty yards up the
road toward Catsford: the coachman had got down
and was smoking; it took him a moment or two to mount.
In that space of time, while we waited at the gate,
Octon came out from Hatcham Ford and lounged across
the road toward us. At the same instant a landau
drove up rapidly from the other direction, going toward
Catsford. In it sat Lady Sarah Lacey. She
stared at Octon and cut him dead; she bowed coldly
and slightly to Jenny; she inclined her head again
in response to a low bow and a florid flourish of
his cap from Powers. I lifted my hat, but received
no response. Jenny returned the salute as carelessly
as it was given, bestowed a recognition hardly more
cordial on Octon, and stepped into the brougham which
had now come up. As we drove off, Powers stood
grinning soapily; Octon had turned on his heel again
and slouched slowly back, to his own house.
Jenny threw herself into the corner
of the brougham, her body well away, but her eyes
on my face. For many minutes she sat like this;
I turned my eyes away from her; the silence was uncomfortable
and ominous. At last she spoke.
“You’ve guessed something, Austin?”
I turned my head to her. “I couldn’t
help it.”
She nodded, rather wearily, then smiled at me.
“The signal’s at
‘Danger,’” she said.