Alison watched the maid and the young
man for half a minute, then drew back a little way
into the room; Jenny followed as far as the piano and
stood leaning her elbows on the top of it, smiling
at him in mockery.
“That’s a fair question,
perhaps. But the idea is staggering!”
Jenny raised her brows. “But
why? Has she practiced deceit and betrayed trust?
Has she broken faith or threatened anybody’s
honor? Or done worse things still? Is she
no fit wife for a young man? What have you against
her, Mr. Alison? Why is this pretty nearly as
bad as the other?”
Alison was sadly put about and flustered.
His confident air of authority vanished with the unimpeachable
ground on which it had been founded. He had shifted
his base; the new base failed him. “Surely
you must see!” he protested.
“I see a dear beautiful girl
and a charming handsome young man of high degree,”
answered Jenny in gay mischief, “and they look
very much in love with one another. Is that dreadful?”
“It’s quite a different
case, of course but really, really, just
as hopeless!”
“You’d better not call
this hopeless neither you nor anybody else
who has anything to say to it!”
“Octon’s daughter!”
He ejaculated the words in a low murmur, flinging
his hands out wide.
“Yes, that’s it!”
said Jenny, her smile getting harder, and with a rather
vicious look in her eyes. “That’s
why, isn’t it? That’s why she’s
not good enough for Amyas Lacey, not good enough to
be mistress of Fillingford Manor! There’s
nothing else against her? Only she’s
Leonard Octon’s daughter! Well, now, I
say to you that that shall not be against her.
It shall be for her mightily for her.
To that she shall owe everything; that shall give
her all she wants. If you have any influence,
don’t use it against her. Use it for her,
back her up. It will be wiser in the interests
of the friends whom you’re so concerned for.”
She left the piano and came into the middle of the
room, facing him. “Because it’s the
alternative to that unnatural hideous thing of which
you came here to speak and spoke so plainly.
If I’m not much mistaken, I can turn this thing
the way I choose. And I tell you that in spite
of all you’ve said, and in spite of all I’ve
said, your friends will be wise to accept the lesser
evil. Margaret is better than me, at all events!”
She was on her high horse now.
Very handsome she looked, with a glowing color in
her cheeks; her voice was full of temper, hard-held.
It was the turning point of the scheme which she was
working out; through Alison she launched her ultimatum
to Fillingford: “Margaret or myself there
is no other alternative.”
Alison was recovering himself.
He dropped into a chair and looked up at her commanding
figure with a smile of kindness with an
admiration wrung from him by her coup.
“You’re really wonderful,”
he told her. “I’ll say that for you and
I’ll be as worldly as you like for a minute.”
“Yes, do try for once.
There is such a thing as this world.”
“Then even setting
aside the obvious objection, the objection our friends
at the Manor are bound to feel Lacey is
Lacey, and will be Fillingford. The girl I
think her as charming as you do comes from
nowhere and has, I suppose, nothing?”
“She’ll come from Breysgate
Priory and not empty-handed.”
“Of course you’d behave kindly to her,
but ”
Back to Octon’s phrase went
Jenny back to the words in which he had
bequeathed his “legacy” to her. Her
face softened. “I shall do the handsome
thing by her,” she said in a low voice.
“Can’t you understand why I do this?”
she asked him. “You were one of the few
people who seemed to understand why I brought her
here to be with me. Can’t you
understand this?”
“Perhaps I can a
little. But is it fair to Lord Fillingford?”
“I can’t think always
and forever of Lord Fillingford,” she told him
impatiently. “He isn’t all the world
to me. I am thinking of Leonard this
is all I can do for him now. I’m thinking
of the child and of myself. I can
give up for myself, but this is my compensation.
What I could have she is to have because
she loves Amyas, and I love her and because
I loved her father. That’s what I mean.
I daresay you’ve some very hard names for it.
They made me give up Leonard once at any
rate behave as if I was ashamed of him. Very well.
They must take Leonard’s daughter now or
that worse thing you and I know of.”
“I’m still on the worldly
plane,” Alison said, smiling. “You
can, of course, if you’re so minded, abolish
all objections except the sentimental. If it’s
a hundred thousand for an Institute, what mightn’t
it be for a whim, Miss Driver?”
“And what mightn’t it
be for my dear man who’s dead?” said Jenny,
very low.
He got up, went to her, and took her
hands. She did not repel him. He whispered
a word or two to her of comfort or sympathy,
as his manner indicated. Then he looked round
at me. “You’ve had a hand in this
mischief, I suppose, Austin?”
“Oh, we just take our orders in this house,”
said I.
“Heaven humble your heart!”
he said to her, but now the rebuke was kindly, almost
playful.
“The present question is of
humbling Lord Fillingford’s,” retorted
Jenny.
Alison walked back to the window.
Jenny gave me a quick nod of satisfaction; the fight
was going well. “Are they still there?”
she asked.
“Oh, dear me, yes! He’s
sat down by her on the ground looking up,
you know!”
“Yes, I can imagine, Mr. Alison.”
“A fine pair!” He turned
round with a sigh. “And very fond of one
another! And yet you think you could ?
Well, perhaps you could who knows?”
He seemed to study her thoughtfully.
“I don’t want to, you
know unless I’m driven,” said
Jenny.
“You mustn’t do it,”
he told her, with some return of his authority.
He softened the next moment; “I don’t
believe you would.”
“Run no risks advise
your friends to run none. You’ve seen enough
of me now to know that it’s not safe to conclude
I shan’t do a thing just because I think it’s
wrong or even because I don’t at this
moment mean to do it. I have to reckon with a
temper; others had better reckon with it, too.”
Alison looked at me, pursing up his
lips. “I think that she points out a real
danger.”
“I’m sure she does,”
I rejoined. “And you must reckon with it.”
“Yes,” he murmured, his
eyes again searching her face. She nodded her
head ever so slightly at him with a defiant smile.
“But losing your temper oughtn’t to be
relied on as a resource. Reckon with it if you
like not on it, Miss Driver.”
Jenny laughed outright at that.
“He hits me hard but it makes no
difference,” she said to me. “The
plan stands.” She turned quickly on him:
“In the end, what do you make of it?” She
stretched out her right hand. “Are even
good things soiled if they are taken from that hand?”
“The pity of it!” he murmured,
with a soft intonation of profound sorrow.
“The child’s a pearl.
Let her be happy! Is the beauty of it nothing
to you?”
“Yes, it’s much and
your love for her is much.” He paused a
moment. “And perhaps I should be overbold
to speak against that other love of yours now.
Maybe it lies beyond the jurisdiction committed to
us here on earth.”
Jenny was, I fear, entirely devoted
to earth and, at that moment, to arranging her own
bit of earth as she wanted to have it. She gave
him no thanks for what was, from him, a very considerable
concession. Rather she fastened on his softer
mood as affording her an opportunity.
“Then you oughtn’t to be against me,”
she urged.
“I’m not against you. This is not
my ground not my business.”
“You might even help me.”
He looked doubtful at that. “Simply in one
way. There’s one little thing you can do
easily, though it’s difficult for me. For
all the rest, I leave you to do anything or nothing,
just as you think proper.”
“What’s the one little thing?” he
asked.
“Bring Lord Fillingford and
Margaret together. It’s very easy except
for me and it commits you to nothing.
Give her her chance. Anyhow, none of the trouble’s
her fault, is it?”
“There doesn’t seem much harm in that.”
“Give him no hint of what I’ve
said. It would be so much better if the idea
could come from himself.”
“Impossible!” he cried.
“I don’t know,”
she said thoughtfully. “He seems to be very
frightened. How about some idea of the
lesser evil? He’d still be shocked but
his mind might be a little prepared.”
“You’re altogether too well,
shall I say diplomatic? for me.”
“Come, come,” I interposed, “don’t
do the Church injustice!”
“Let’s go out,”
said Jenny. “Wait a minute I’ll
get a hat, and join you on the terrace. I expect
Margaret and Amyas are still there.” She
walked out of the room with a light buoyant tread.
Alison turned to me with a bewildered gesture of his
arms, yet with a reluctant smile on his face.
“What am I to work on?
I don’t believe the woman has any conception
of what sin means!”
“She has a considerable conception
of the consequences of her actions.”
“My dear fellow, as if that
was at all the same thing! And what’s her
new game? What’s she taking me on the terrace
for?”
“To have a cup of tea, I suppose.
It’s nearly half-past five.”
“I’ll never give her credit
for being as simple as that!” He was disapproving,
but good-natured and altogether occupied
with Jenny in his mind. “I shall never
get hold of her I once thought I should.
A pagan a mere pagan!” He paused
again and added with a reluctant admiration, “A
splendid pagan!”
“There are fifty roads to town and
rather more to heaven,” I quoted.
“Who said that?”
“William Mackworth Praed and you
ought to have known it.”
“I daresay he knew the roads to town, Austin.”
“In both cases the criticism
is obvious much depends on where you start
from.”
We were on the terrace now. At
the other end of it we saw Margaret and Lacey walking
up and down together. The tea table was deserted,
and probably the tea was cold; we were neither of
us thinking about it. Alison had put on his hat,
but now he bared his head again to the evening breeze.
“Phew, that was a fight!”
he said. “And I suppose I’m beaten!
But if she yields to that temper of hers, I’ll
have no more to do with her.”
“But if she doesn’t if she
needn’t?” I suggested.
He made no answer. I saw his
eyes wander to the shapely couple that walked up and
down.
“Why shouldn’t the child have her chance?”
“You’re tempters all in this house!”
he declared.
Margaret and Lacey suddenly came toward
us no, toward Jenny, who had just come
out of the house. She stood there, near the door,
quite quietly with all her gift of serene
immobility brought into play. There was no signing
to them, no beckoning: but at once, out of the
midst of their delighted preoccupation, they came.
I permitted myself a discreet glance at Alison; he
was watching. I wondered whether he were any nearer
to a theory of why Jenny had proposed that we should
come out on the terrace.
Margaret Octon ran on ahead of her
companion and caught hold of Jenny’s arm.
Lacey came up a second later. I saw Jenny give
him a smile of the fullest understanding. The
young man flushed suddenly, then laughed in an embarrassed
way.
“I know I’ve been here
an awful time. I thought you were never coming
out,” he said.
“The time seemed so long till
I came, did it?” asked Jenny. She stooped
and kissed Margaret on the forehead. The girl
laughed very gently, very happily.
Jenny looked at Alison across the few feet that divided
the two small groups. Her look was an appeal an
appeal from the shy happiness on the girl’s
face to the natural man that was beneath Alison’s
canonicals. “Shan’t the girl have
her chance?” asked Jenny’s eyes.
Suddenly Alison left my side and walked up to her.
“I must go now,” he said,
rather hastily, rather (to tell the truth) as though
he were ashamed of himself. “I think I can
manage that little commission.”
She moved one step forward to meet
him. “I shall be very grateful,” she
told him in her low, rich, steady tones. “The
other way wouldn’t have been nearly so convenient.”
Her bright eyes were triumphant. “Soon?”
she asked.
“I can manage it in a day or
two at longest. And now good-by. I fear
I’ve tired you with all my business.”
The young people listened, all innocent
of the covert meanings.
“Let’s not be tired till our work’s
done!” said Jenny.
She risked that “our”
and challenged his dissent. He stood swaying
between reprobation and admiration, between forswearing
and alliance, between sympathy and repulsion.
She had so much yet not that without which,
in his eyes, all else was in the end worthless.
But she had brought him of
her subtlety she had brought him on to the
terrace. For no cup of tea tolerably stale!
For nothing stale but that the imploring,
aye, the commanding, unconscious desire, the unmeditated
appeal, the unmeant urgency, of Margaret’s heart
might work. “Are you human?” asked
Jenny’s eyes, traveling with a slow meaning from
his face to Margaret’s.
The cunning of the serpent the
simplicity of the dove! Ah, dear serpent, what
had you in your heart save to make your dove happy?
Another thing yes! The dove must triumph for
she bore Leonard’s escutcheon, and must bear
it victorious against his enemies. The serpent
bade the dove wing her happy way!
Might not the dove be made bearer
also of an olive branch, made a harbinger of peace?
That was the idea which Jenny sought to put in Alison’s
mind when she brought him on to the terrace. Could
not all that grace and joy avail to blot out the name
she bore? It was only a name a thing
intangible a name, if Jenny’s plan
prospered, soon to be deleted, buried under a new
and newly significant designation. She must bring
memories with her of old wrong and old humiliation?
Could she not herself destroy even what she brought?
She seemed made to do it. Who could bear a grudge
against that simple joyfulness, who resist that unconscious
pleading for oblivion? Alison was to go from the
terrace with a new zeal for the commission that he
had undertaken, to go with his cause much closer to
his heart.
While he was still there, Dormer whizzed
up the drive in his motor car. He had come to
meet Lacey at Breysgate, and drive him over to Hingston
to dine and sleep. Lacey affected Hingston for
his night quarters more than ever now and
Dormer generally fetched him from Breysgate; it was
an arrangement convenient to both parties.
Jenny had told so much truth that
she was inclined for a little mischief. She greeted
the newcomer with coquettish demureness, marking,
with a smile and a glance at me, Dormer’s ill-concealed
surprise at Alison’s presence, and at the good
terms on which he seemed to be with his hostess.
Dormer asked for whisky and soda, and I went with him
to minister to his wants.
“Did Lacey bring the parson?”
he asked, after a first eager gulp.
“Oh, no. Alison came of
his own accord came to call, you know,”
I answered.
“Did he?” He would obviously
have liked to ask more questions. “That’s
being neighborly, at all events,” he ventured
to comment, with a covert leer. “We shall
be seeing Fillingford or even Lady Sarah here
next!”
“More unlikely things than that have happened.”
“That’s what I always
remember,” he remarked, nodding sagaciously over
his long tumbler. “What I say is try
your luck, even if it does need a bit of cheek.”
I had a notion that Dormer was inclining
toward the confidential.
“If it doesn’t come off,
you’re no worse than you were before. If
it does, there you are, by Jove!”
“I should think that must be
every successful man’s philosophy. But
what, may I ask, makes this call on your reserve of
cheek, Dormer? which will, I make no doubt,
be equal to it.”
“Wait and see,” he answered,
with a pronounced wink. Having executed this
operation, his eye turned to Lacey, visible through
the window of the smoking room where we were.
“There’ll be a row at Fillingford Manor
some day soon that’s my opinion.”
“Let’s wait and see about
that, too,” I suggested mildly. Now he was
trying to make me confidential.
He winked again. “You’re
a pretty safe old chap, Austin,” he was good
enough to tell me.
When we returned to the terrace, Lacey
was ready to start and, with a look at his watch,
Dormer went up to Jenny to say good-by. During
our brief absence Alison had departed to
set about his commission, as I hoped.
“I say, may I come over the
day after to-morrow? Shall you be here?”
Dormer asked.
“The day after to-morrow?
Thursday? Yes, I shall be delighted to see you.
I want to know how you’re getting on in those
negotiations with Mr. Cartmell, you know.”
This referred to those farms of his she
had by now settled on three which she wanted
to round off her frontier.
Dormer smiled slyly at her. “All
right, we’ll talk about that, too.”
“Have we any other business?”
she asked, lifting her brows in feigned surprise.
“Something may crop up,”
he answered with a laugh. “Till then, Miss
Driver!”
The young men got in and drove off,
Margaret watching and waving her hand as they went a
salutation copiously acknowledged by Lacey; Dormer
was busy with his handles.
“If Mr. Alison is prompt with
his commission, Thursday may be a busy day,”
Jenny remarked, as she sat down in a low chair and
lay back in it with an air of energy relaxed.
Sitting down by her, I began to smoke my pipe.
Margaret passed us, smiling, and went into the house.
“That was a fight,” said
Jenny presently, “rather a stiff one but
we’ve got our stiffest still to come. Lord
Fillingford will fight; I must move all my battalions
against him. I shall bribe perhaps
I shall still have to bully.” She sighed.
For the moment, the afternoon’s struggle done,
a weariness was upon her. She sat silent again
for a long while, her brows knit in meditation or
in sorrow.
“I won’t tell anybody
else,” at last she said. “I have told
you, because I wouldn’t have you live here on
false pretenses because you’re my
friend. I told Mr. Alison to-day for the reason
you heard. I’ll tell nobody else.
The old attitude toward the rest! It’s really
no use telling I can’t tell it right;
I can’t put it into words. For myself even
I can’t recover the past can’t
quite see how I did it what woman I was
then, or how that woman stands to the woman I am now.
A mist has come between the two.”
“For Heaven’s sake, vex
yourself no more! Let the dead bury its dead.
Alison has upset you.”
“I’m in the mist but
Leonard isn’t. He grows clearer and clearer,
and” (she smiled faintly) “larger and
larger. His great kind loving-roughness fills
all my vision. I suppose it filled all my vision
then, and so it happened!” She turned
to me with a quick question. “Do you think
I’m right in the determination I’ve come
to about myself?”
“I should be far from holding
it obligatory either on you or on anyone else.
Good things pass by and things indifferent and
things bad. The disturbance passes off the face
of life’s stream; the stream pursues its course.
There’s no duty on you, in my opinion. Yet
I think that for yourself you’re right.”
“I’m glad you do,”
she told me. “At that we’ll leave
it a fixed point!”
“Unless Lord Fillingford is very obstinate?”
As she looked at me, a smile broke
slowly over her face. “From the way you
say that, I think you suspect me of having indulged
in a little bluff this afternoon. But I think
I was honest. I don’t mean to do it, I
should hate doing it but they might make
me angry enough.”
“I don’t believe you’d
ever go through with it. We should have flight
again!”
“Too awful!” sighed Jenny,
frowning, yet almost smiling. She smiled frankly
the next moment, as she turned to me and laid her hand
on my arm. “Do let’s agree you
and I that I’m quite incapable of
it and was bluffing most audaciously!”
“We’ll agree to that with all my heart.”
“So you spoil me so you go on spoiling
me!” she said very gently.
I went down the hill to my own house,
leaving her still sitting there, a stately solitary
figure, revolving many thoughts in the depths of her
mind.