The forms were observed most punctiliously;
but before the forms began came Lacey, hot from his
talk with Fillingford, amazed, almost bewildered,
protesting against Jenny’s excessive munificence,
passionately anxious that she should be sure that he
had not foreseen it.
“And how can you believe I never
thought of it, when it’s just what I ought to
have thought of just the sort of thing you
would be sure to want to do?”
“I haven’t forgotten your
appalling misery, if you have,” she retorted,
smiling. “I was really afraid you’d
kill yourself before Austin had time to get to the
Manor. It was quite convincing as to your innocence
of my wicked designs, believe me!”
“But I can’t possibly
accept it,” he declared. “It’s
so overwhelming!”
“You’re not asked to accept
a farthing, so you needn’t be the least overwhelmed.
I give it to Margaret. No bride is to go from
Breysgate without a dowry, Amyas. Come, you’d
put up with ten times as much overwhelming for her
sake.” She threatened him playfully:
“You can’t have her with any less so
take your choice!”
“Well, we shall always know
who it is that we owe everything to.” He
took her hand and kissed it. She looked at his
handsome bowed head for a moment.
“If you ever do think of anybody
in that sort of way, try not to think of me only.”
Standing upright again, he looked
at her gravely. “I know what you mean.”
He flushed a little and hesitated. “I hope
you know that that he and I parted that
day in a a friendly way?”
“I know it and I’m
very glad,” she said. “That’s
all about the past, Amyas, in words at least.
Keep your thoughts as kind as you can and
be very gentle to Margaret when she wants to talk
about him. That’s a good return to me,
if you want to make any. And love my Margaret.”
“My love is for her. My
homage is for you always and all the affection
you’ll take with it,” he said soberly.
“It’s little she’d think of me if
that wasn’t so,” he added with a smile.
Then came the forms, but the first
of them Fillingford’s coming was
no mere form to Jenny. She was not afraid or
perturbed, as she had been about meeting Alison she
had done with confession but she was grave,
and preoccupied with it. She bade me look out
for him and bring him to her in the library.
“You must leave us alone, and we’ll join
you at tea in the garden afterwards. Take care
that Margaret is there when we come.”
Nothing can be known of what words
passed between them, but Jenny gave a general description
of their conversation it was not a long
one, lasting perhaps fifteen minutes. “He
met me as if he’d never met me before, he talked
to me as if he’d never talked to me before.
He was a most courteous new acquaintance, hoping that
our common interest in the pair would be a bond of
friendship between us. I followed the same line and
there we were! But I couldn’t have done
it of myself. I tried to thank him for that that
sort of message you gave me from him. The first
word sent him straight back into the deepest recesses
of his shell and I said, ‘Come and
see Margaret.’”
“Oh, you’ll make better
friends than that some day.” I had no strong
hope of my words coming true.
“You seem to have got nearer
to him than I ever could. His shield’s up
against Eleanor Lacey! But he was kind
to Margaret, wasn’t he?”
Yes, he had been kind to Margaret.
He took her hand and looked in her eyes, then gravely
kissed her on the forehead. “We must be
friends, Margaret,” he said. “I know
how much my boy loves you, and you are going to take
his mother’s place in my family.”
There was the same curious quality of careful deliberation
as usual the old absence of any touch of
spontaneity the same weighing out of just
the right measure; but he was obviously sincere.
He looked on her young beauty with a kindly liking,
and answered the appeal in her eyes by taking her hand
between both his and pressing it gently. Margaret
looked round to Jenny with a smile of glad shy triumph.
Amyas came and put his arm through his father’s.
“We three are going to be jolly good friends,”
he said.
Far more stately was the next ceremonial the
one that was, by my stipulation, to follow a few days
later; yet I am afraid that we at Breysgate did not
take Lady Sarah’s coming half so seriously as
she took it herself. She had disapproved of us
so strongly before there was to her knowledge
at least any good ground for disapproval
that her later censures, however well-grounded, had
lost weight. Sinners cannot take much to heart
the blame of those who have always expected to see
them do wrong and come to grief and clapped
themselves on the back as good prophets over the event!
Here was no private interview.
The whole of her adherents surrounded Jenny in the
big drawing-room. Lady Sarah was announced by
Loft himself highly conscious of the ceremonial
nature of the occasion. With elaborate courtesy
Jenny walked to the door to meet her, spoke her greeting,
and led her to one of two large arm-chairs placed close
to one another; it was really like the meeting of
a pair of monarchs, lately at war but bound to appear
unconscious of the disagreeable incidents of the strife.
Now peace was to be patched up by marriage. Margaret
was called from her place in the surrounding circle.
She came and with courage. We had,
I fear, deliberately worked her up to the resolution
of being, from the very beginning, not afraid of Lady
Sarah pointing out that any signs of fear
now would foreshadow and entail slavery for life.
“You’ll get on much better if you stand
up for yourself,” Amyas himself assured her.
Margaret stood, awaiting welcome.
Lady Sarah put on her eyeglasses, made a careful inspection
of her prospective niece, but offered no comment whatever
on her appearance. She dropped the glasses from
her nose again, and remarked, “I’m glad
to become acquainted with you. I’m sure
that you intend to make Amyas a good wife and to do
your duty in your new station. Kiss me!”
She turned her cheek to Margaret, who achieved the
salute with grace but, it must be confessed, without
enthusiasm. Lady Sarah did not return it.
“There will be a great deal
to do and think of at Oxley,” she pursued, “but
I shall be very glad to assist you in every way.”
“But there’ll be nothing
to do, Lady Sarah. Jenny’s doing everything every
single thing.”
“I’m going to give them
a few sticks to start housekeeping on,” said
Jenny, with a lurking smile.
“Old houses have a style of
their own; one learns it by living in one,”
Lady Sarah observed. Oxley was old so
was Fillingford Manor. Breysgate was hardly middle-aged
in comparison. Lady Sarah cast a glance round
its regrettable newness; Jenny’s refurnishing
had not availed to obliterate all traces of that.
“I’m not following this
model,” said Jenny. “I’m taking
the best advice though I’m sure Margaret
will be very glad of anything you can tell her.”
“Of course I shall, Lady Sarah.
But the people Jenny’s going to are really the
best people in the trade they know all about
it.”
“When you have seen the Manor ”
Lady Sarah began impressively, but Lacey who
had been, the moment before, in lamentable difficulties
between a yawn and a smile cut in:
“Ah, now when shall she come and see the Manor?”
Lady Sarah was prepared with an invitation
for the next day: that was another of the forms,
to be carried out precisely, as Fillingford had undertaken.
She turned to Jenny. “You’ve seen
it, of course, Miss Driver?”
Jenny nodded serenely. Amyas
flushed again his fair skin betrayed every
passing feeling as he said, “We shall
be delighted if we can induce Miss Driver to come,
all the same.”
“Oh, very delighted, very, I’m sure,”
agreed Lady Sarah.
“You’ll enjoy showing
it to Margaret all by yourself much better,”
said Jenny to Amyas. “I’ll come another
day soon, and have tea with Lady Sarah, if she’ll
let me.”
“Very delighted, very,” Lady Sarah repeated.
She rose to take leave; this time
she did herself kiss Margaret on the cheek. I
think we were all waiting to see whether, in her opinion,
the terms of the treaty demanded a kiss for Jenny
also. Lady Sarah decided in the negative; Jenny’s
particularly erect head, as she held out her hand,
may have aided and certainly welcomed the
conclusion. We escorted her to her carriage with
most honorable ceremony. Then we sighed relief save
Chat, who had been, from a modest background, an admiring
spectator of the scene. “She’s not
very effusive,” said Chat, “but she has
the grand manner, hasn’t she, Mr. Austin?”
“I never knew what it really
meant till to-day, Miss Chatters.”
“She probably never hated anything
so much in her whole life,” Jenny remarked to
me, when we were next alone together, “so it’s
really hardly fair to criticise her manner. But
I rejoice from the bottom of my heart that she didn’t
think it necessary to kiss me.”
“Since you escaped this time,
I should think you might escape altogether.”
“Well, the wedding day will
be a point of danger,” she reminded me, “but
I’m pretty safe against its becoming habitual.
We both hate the idea of it too much for that.”
Then a week later came
the public announcement, made duly and in due form
in the Times and Herald: “Between
Lord Lacey, son and heir of the Right Honorable the
Earl of Fillingford, and Margaret, daughter of the
late Leonard Octon, Esq.” The sensation
is not to be described. So many things were explained,
so many mysteries cleared up! Folks knew now why
Lacey had been so much at Breysgate, Sir John Aspenick
learned for whom Oxley Lodge was wanted, and Cartmell
understood why he had been forced to disburse that
much grudged five hundred pounds for early possession.
For, with the announcement, came an inspired leading
article, revealing the main terms of the proposed
settlement; a little discretion was exercised as to
the exact figures, but enough was said to show that,
besides the gift of the Oxley Grange estate as it stood,
there were large sums to pass both now and in the
future. Let the parties have been who they might,
such a transaction would have commanded the universal
attention of the countryside; when it took place between
Lord Fillingford’s heir and the late Mr. Octon’s
only daughter, people with memories recalled and retold
their stories, and found newcomers ready indeed to
listen. Once again Jenny filled all Catsford and
all the neighborhood with gossip, speculation, and
applause.
“I told you you’d have
to undo the purse-strings to some style,” I said
to Cartmell. “What do you think of this,
Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer?”
He winked his eye at me solemnly.
“It’s great,” he said. “What
a mind she has! There she’ll sit at Breysgate with
the town under one foot, and Fillingford and Oxley
under the other!”
“Hardly that!” I smiled.
“Look what she’s giving
now! Aye, and, my boy, think of what she’s
still got left to give! If human nature goes
on being what it’s been ever since I remember,
Miss Driver’s word will be law in both those
houses if not now, in a few years at all
events. It’s a lot of money but
it’s not ill-spent. It makes her the queen
of the place, Austin!” He laughed in enjoyment.
“I wish old Nick Driver could see this!
He’d be proud of his daughter.”
“However much or little that
may be the result, I’m sure it was not her object.”
He looked at me with a good-humored
pity; he thought me a fool in practical matters.
“Have that as you like,” he said, “but
she won’t object to the result nor
waste it, either I promise you.”
He chuckled again. “She’s got back
at them with a vengeance!”
It was true. Never even in the
days before the flight did she make such a figure.
The Aspenicks surrendered at discretion, Fillingford
Manor was in forced alliance, Oxley Lodge was annexed;
Hingston did not hold out long, and Dormer, placated
by a big price for his farms, put his pride and his
sulks where he had put the money. The town was
at Jenny’s feet, even if it were an exaggeration
to say that it was under them. Timeservers bowed
the knee to so much power; the charitable accepted
so splendid an atonement. If any still had conscientious
doubts, Alison’s conduct was invoked as warrant
and example. If he were enthusiastically for
the mistress of Breysgate now, who had a right to criticise who
could arrogate to himself such merit as would entitle
him to refuse to forgive even though a
certain feature in the arrangement made it forever
impossible to forget?
The chorus of applause was loud and
almost unanimous; but it was broken by the voice of
one sturdy dissenter one to whom interest
could not appeal and, even had she wanted anything
of Jenny, would have appealed vainly one
on whom the sentimental side had no effect, since both
her sentiment and her charity moved in the strait
fetters of unbending rules. Mrs. Jepps was rigid
and obstinate. She had not fallen to the temptation
of using the park road, as Lady Aspenick had:
she would not now bow the knee to Baal, however splendid
and imposing a deity Baal might be. Many had
a try at shaking her and Alison among the
rest. He told me about his effort, laughing as
he confessed his failure.
“I was well snubbed. She
told me that Romish practices led to Romish principles,
and that where they led it was easy to see; but that
she for her part had other principles and didn’t
palter with them. When it suited Miss Driver
to explain, she was ready to listen. Till then nothing
to do with the woman!”
Jenny heard of this her
one signal failure (for she had extorted alliance,
if not loyalty, from Lady Sarah) with composure, almost
with pleasure, although pleasure of an unusual variety.
“Well, I respect Mrs. Jepps,”
she said, “and I wish very much that she wouldn’t
deprive herself of her drives in the park. I’d
promise not to bow to her! Mrs. Jepps is good
for me, Austin a fat, benevolent, disapproving
old skeleton at the feast a skeleton with
such fat horses! crying out ‘You
did it, you did it!’ That’s rather useful
to me, I expect. Still I should like “ she
smiled mischievously “to try her
virtue a little higher with an invitation
to the laying of the foundation stone! I’m
going to have that in four or five months, and Mr.
Bindlecombe is angling for a prince to do it.
If Mrs. Jepps holds out against the prince, she has
my leave to hold out against me forever!”
Still it was her instinct to conquer
opponents, even when her judgment indorsed their opposition
and her feelings did not resent it.
“If she were a young woman,
you’d get her at last,” I said, “but
she’s very old. She’ll go to heaven
before you’ve time; I can only hope, for the
sake of this household, that she won’t be made
a door-keeper, or we may as well give up all hope
and take what chances await us elsewhere.”
“Let her be,” said Jenny.
“She only serves me as all the rest would have
done, if I hadn’t inherited Nick Driver’s
money. I’ve beaten them with that.”
“That’s not the way you beat Alison,”
I reminded her.
Her face had been hard as she referred
to the power of her money; it softened at the mention
of Alison’s name. “It was more Margaret’s
victory than mine. I like best to fight with Margaret;
that’s a clean sword, Austin. When I’m
fighting with and for her, then I’m right.
But right or wrong, you wouldn’t have me beaten?”
“You’ve no right to impute
any such immoral doctrine to me.”
“By now, I think I have,”
she laughed. “I wonder how soon Lady Sarah
will tell Margaret all about me!”
“I don’t think she will and,
if she did, you’d never know it.”
Jenny smiled. “Yes, I should.
Some day for no apparent reason Margaret
would come and kiss me extraordinarily often.”
She gave a shake of her head. “I’d
rather it didn’t happen, though.”
It is not to be supposed that, during
her Fillingford campaign, Jenny had neglected her
Institute. No day had passed without talk or
correspondence about it, and she had been in constant
consultation with Bindlecombe, Chairman of the Committee
of the Corporation in whose charge the scheme was.
Fruits of the activity had now appeared. The
gardens of Hatcham Ford had been laid waste. (O Bindlecombe,
what of your deceitful promises to spare them?) Only
the shrubberies in front (where Lacey had once hidden)
remained of the old pleasure grounds. Everywhere
else were excavations, or lines that marked foundations
to be laid; already in some spots actual buildings
poked their noses out of the earth, their raw red
brick shamed by the mellow beauty of the old house
which still stood and was to stand as the center of
the architectural scheme. Like all things with
which Jenny had to do, the plan had grown larger and
larger as it progressed, took more ground, embraced
more projects, swallowed more money. It spread
across the road, absorbed the garden of Ivydene, and
happily involved the destruction of that odious villa
of unpleasant memories. It made inroads on Cartmell’s
money-bags till what with it, and Margaret’s
great endowment, to say nothing of Dormer’s
fields rich Miss Driver was for two or three
months positively hard up for ready money! But
the result was to be magnificent; with every fresh
brick and every additional sovereign, Catsford grew
more loyal, and the prospect of catching that prince
more promising. “And I’m going to
get Mr. Bindlecombe made Mayor again next year, and
Amyas must pull all the wires in London town to get
him a knighthood. With Margaret and Amyas married,
the Institute opened, and Mr. Bindlecombe Sir John,
I think I may sing Nunc Dimittis, Austin!”
“We might perhaps look forward
to a short period of peace,” I admitted cautiously.
“Come down and look at the old
place once more, before it’s changed quite out
of recognition. Just you and I together!”
We went down together one evening
in the dusk. Architects and surveyors, clerks,
masons, and laborers had all gone home to their rest.
The place was quiet for the night, though the rents
in the ground and the rising walls spoke loud of the
toils of the day. The old house stood unchanged
in the middle of it all; unchanged, too, was the path
down which Jenny had passed after she begged the loan
of Lord Fillingford’s carriage. She took
a key from her purse and opened the door of the house.
“Let’s go in for a minute.”
She led me into the room where once
I had waited for her where, another time,
I had found her holding Powers’s head, where
Fillingford had come upon us in the very instant when
I had hailed safety as in sight. The room was
just as Octon had left it his heavy dining
table, his ugly dining chairs, the two old leather
ones on each side of the fireplace, his spears and
knives on the wall. And there, too, on the mantelpiece,
was the picture of the beautiful child which I had
marked as missing when I reached the house that night.
“You’ve been here before,”
I said to Jenny, pointing at the picture.
“I found it among his papers
after he was at peace,” she answered, sitting
down in one of the old leather chairs. “I
knew this was its place; it has returned to it.
And there it will stay, so long as I or Margaret have
a voice here. Yes, I have been here before and
I shall be here often. This is to be my room sacred
to me. From here I shall pull the wires!”
She smiled at me in a humorous sadness.
“Not the wires of memory too often!” I
suggested.
“Two men have made me and my
life made me what I am and my life what
it is and is to be. Here in this place they
meet. This room is Leonard’s all
the great thing that’s coming into being outside
is my father’s. They appreciated one another,
you’ve told me and so has Leonard.
They won’t mind meeting here, Austin.”
“They neither of them did justice
to you!” I cried. “Was the Smalls
and the Simpsons justice? And was what he the
other let you do justice either?”
“I don’t know and
I don’t care,” said Jenny. “They
were both big men. They had their work, their
views, their plans, their occupations. They had
their big lives, their big selves, to look after.
They couldn’t spend all the time thinking whether
they were doing justice to a woman!”
“That’s a nice bit of
special pleading!” I said. “But there,
I’m not a great man as both of your
big men have, on occasion, plainly told me.”
She smiled at me affectionately.
“But one of them gave me in the end all
he had, and for the other I in the end would
have given all I had. Oh, yes, it’s ‘in
the end’ with us Drivers because we
must try to get everything first before
we are ready to give! But in the end all was
given or ready to be given, and here they shall stay
together. I have no pedigree, Austin, and I shall
have no biography. Here stand both. At Hatcham
Ford read my pedigree and my biography.”
The room grew dark, but her pale face
stood out against the gloom. She rose from her
chair and came up to me.
“My big ghosts are very gentle
to me now gentler than one would have been
in life, I think gentler than the other
was. You see, they’re at rest their
warfare is accomplished. I think mine’s
accomplished, too, Austin, and I will rest.”
“Not you! Rest indeed!”
“I may work, and yet be at peace
in my heart. Come, my friend, let’s go
back home. Amyas dines with us to-night.
Let’s go back home, to the happiness which God Allah
the All-Merciful has allowed me, sinner
that I am, to make.”
Through the soft evening we walked
back to where Amyas and Margaret were.