Some Scenes in the Life of a Countess
About the middle of January Harry
Clavering went up to London, and settled himself to
work at Mr. Beilby’s office. Mr. Beilby’s
office consisted of four or five large chambers, overlooking
the river from the bottom of Adam Street in the Adelphi,
and here Harry found a table for himself in the same
apartment with three other pupils. It was a fine
old room, lofty, and with large windows, ornamented
on the ceiling with Italian scroll-work, and a flying
goddess in the centre. In days gone by the house
had been the habitation of some great rich man, who
had there enjoyed the sweet breezes from the river
before London had become the London of the present
days, and when no embankment had been needed for the
Thames. Nothing could be nicer than this room,
or more pleasant than the table and seat which he
was to occupy near a window; but there was something
in the tone of the other men toward him which did not
quite satisfy him. They probably did not know
that he was a fellow of a college, and treated him
almost as they might have done had he come to them
direct from King’s College, in the Strand, or
from the London University. Down at Stratton
a certain amount of honor had been paid to him.
They had known there who he was, and had felt some
deference for him. They had not slapped him on
the back, or poked him in the ribs, or even called
him old fellow, before some length of acquaintance
justified such appellation. But up at Mr. Beilby’s,
in the Adelphi, one young man, who was certainly his
junior in age, and who did not seem as yet to have
attained any high position in the science of engineering,
manifestly thought that he was acting in a friendly
and becoming way by declaring the stranger to be a
lad of wax on the second day of his appearance.
Harry Clavering was not disinclined to believe that
he was a “lad of wax,” or “a brick,”
or “a trump,” or “no small.”
But he desired that such complimentary and endearing
appellations should be used to him only by those
who had known him long enough to be aware that he deserved
them. Mr. Joseph Walliker certainly was not as
yet among this number.
There was a man at Mr. Beilby’s
who was entitled to greet him with endearing terms,
and to be so greeted himself, although Harry had never
seen him till he attended for the first time at the
Adelphi. This was Theodore Burton, his future
brother-in-law, who was now the leading man in the
London house the leading man as regarded
business, though he was not as yet a partner.
It was understood that this Mr. Burton was to come
in when his father went out; and in the meantime he
received a salary of a thousand a year as managing
clerk. A very hard-working, steady, intelligent
man was Mr. Theodore Burton, with a bald head, a high
forehead, and that look of constant work about him
which such men obtain. Harry Clavering could
not bring himself to take a liking to him, because
he wore cotton gloves, and had an odious habit of dusting
his shoes with his pocket-handkerchief. Twice
Harry saw him do this on the first day of their acquaintance,
and he regretted it exceedingly. The cotton gloves,
too, were offensive, as were also the thick shoes which
had been dusted; but the dusting was the great sin.
And there was something which did
not quite please Harry in Mr. Theodore Burton’s
manner, though the gentleman had manifestly intended
to be very kind to him. When Burton had been
speaking to him for a minute or two, it flashed across
Harry’s mind that he had not bound himself to
marry the whole Burton family, and that, perhaps,
he must take some means to let that fact be known.
“Theodore,” as he had so often heard the
younger Mr. Burton called by loving lips, seemed to
claim him as his own, called him Harry, and upbraided
him with friendly warmth for not having come direct
to his Mr. Burton’s house-in Onslow
Crescent. “Pray feel yourself at home there,”
said Mr. Burton. “I hope you’ll like
my wife. You needn’t be afraid of being
made to be idle if you spend your evenings there,
for we are all reading people. Will you come and
dine to-day?” Florence had told him that she
was her brother Theodore’s favorite sister,
and that Theodore as a husband and a brother, and a
man, was perfect. But Theodore had dusted his
boots with his handkerchief, and Harry Clavering would
not dine with him on that day.
And then it was perfectly manifest
to him that every one in the office knew his destiny
with reference to old Burton’s daughter.
He had been one of the Stratton men, and no more than
any other had he gone unscathed through the Stratton
fire. He had been made to do the regular thing,
as Granger, Scarness, and others had done it.
Stratton would be safer ground now, as Clavering had
taken the last. That was the feeling on the matter
which seemed to belong to others. It was not that
Harry thought in this way of his own Florence.
He knew well enough what a lucky fellow he was to
have won such a girl He was well aware how widely
his Florence differed from Carry Scarness. He
denied to himself indignantly that he had any notion
of repenting what he had done. But he did wish
that these private matters might have remained private,
and that all the men at Beilby’s had not known
of his engagement. When Walliker, on the fourth
day of their acquaintance, asked him if it was all
right at Stratton, he made up his mind that he hated
Walliker, and that he would hate Walliker to the last
day of his life. He had declined the first invitation
given to him by Theodore Burton; but he could not
altogether avoid his future brother-in-law, and had
agreed to dine with him on this day.
On that same afternoon Harry, when
he left Mr. Beilby’s office, went direct to
Bolton Street, that he might call on Lady Ongar.
As he went thither he bethought himself that these
Wallikers and the like had had no such events in life
as had befallen him! They laughed at him about
Florence Burton, little guessing that it had been his
lot to love, and to be loved by such a one as Julia
Brabazon had been such a one as Lady Ongar
now was. But things had gone well with him.
Julia Brabazon could have made no man happy, but Florence
Burton would be the sweetest, dearest, truest little
wife that ever man took to his home. He was thinking
of this, and determined to think of it more and more
daily, as he knocked at Lady Ongar’s door.
“Yes; her ladyship was at home,” said
the servant whom he had seen on the railway platform;
and in a few moments’ time he found himself
in the drawing-room which he had criticized so carefully
when he was taking it for its present occupant.
He was left in the room for five or
six minutes, and was able to make a full mental inventory
of its contents. It was very different in its
present aspect from the room which he had seen not
yet a month since. She had told him that the
apartments had been all that she desired; but since
then everything had been altered, at least in appearance.
A new piano had been brought in, and the chintz on
the furniture was surely new. And the room was
crowded with small feminine belongings, indicative
of wealth and luxury. There were ornaments about,
and pretty toys, and a thousand knickknacks which
none but the rich can possess, and which none can
possess even among the rich unless they can give taste
as well as money to their acquisition. Then he
heard a light step; the door opened, and Lady Ongar
was there.
He expected to see the same figure
that he had seen on the railway platform, the same
gloomy drapery, the same quiet, almost deathlike demeanor,
nay, almost the same veil over her features; but the
Lady Ongar whom he now saw was as unlike that Lady
Ongar as she was unlike that Julia Brabazon whom he
had known in old days at Clavering Park. She
was dressed, no doubt, in black; nay, no doubt, she
was dressed in weeds; but in spite of the black and
in spite of the weeds there was nothing about her
of the weariness or of the solemnity of woe. He
hardly saw that her dress was made of crape, or that
long white pendants were hanging down from the cap
which sat so prettily upon her head. But it was
her face at which he gazed. At first he thought
she could hardly be the same woman, she was to his
eyes so much older than she had been! And yet
as he looked at her, he found that she was as handsome
as ever more handsome than she had ever
been before. There was a dignity about her face
and figure which became her well, and which she carried
as though she knew herself to be in very truth a countess.
It was a face which bore well such signs of age as
those which had come upon it. She seemed to be
a woman fitter for womanhood than for girlhood.
Her eyes were brighter than of yore, and, as Harry
thought, larger; and her high forehead and noble stamp
of countenance seemed fitted for the dress and headgear
which she wore.
“I have been expecting you,”
said she, stepping up to him. “Hermione
wrote me word that you were to come up on Monday.
Why did you not come sooner?” There was a smile
on her face as she spoke, and a confidence in her
tone which almost confounded him.
“I have had so many things to do,” said
he lamely.
“About your new profession.
Yes, I can understand that. And so you are settled
in London now? Where are you living that
is, if you are settled yet?” In answer to this,
Harry told her he had taken lodgings in Bloomsbury
Square, blushing somewhat as he named so unfashionable
a locality. Old Mrs. Burton had recommended him
to the house in which he was located, but he did not
find it necessary to explain that fact to Lady Ongar.
“I have to thank you for what
you did for me,” continued she. “You
ran away from me in such a hurry on that night that
I was unable to speak to you. But to tell the
truth, Harry, I was in no mood then to speak to any
one. Of course you thought that I treated you
ill.”
“Oh, no,” said he.
“Of course you did. If
I thought you did not, I should be angry with you
now. But had it been to save my life I could not
have helped it. Why did not Sir Hugh Clavering
come to meet me? Why did not my sister’s
husband come to me?” To this question Harry
could make no answer. He was still standing with
his hat in his hand, and now turned his face away from
her and shook his head.
“Sit down, Harry,” said
she, “and let me talk to you like a friend unless
you are in a hurry to go away.”
“Oh, no,” said he, seating himself.
“Or unless you, too, are afraid of me.”
“Afraid of you, Lady Ongar?”
“Yes, afraid; but I don’t
mean you. I don’t believe that you are coward
enough to desert a woman who was once your friend because
misfortune has overtaken her, and calumny has been
at work with her name.”
“I hope not,” said he.
“No, Harry; I do not think it
of you. But if Sir Hugh be not a coward, why
did he not come and meet me? Why has he left me
to stand alone, now that he could be of service to
me? I knew that money was his god, but I have
never asked him for a shilling, and should not have
done so now. Oh, Harry, how wicked you were about
that check? Do you remember?”
“Yes; I remember.”
“So shall I; always, always.
If I had taken that money how often should I have
heard of it since?”
“Heard of it?” he asked. “Do
you mean from me?”
“Yes; how often from you?
Would you have dunned me, and told me of it once a
week? Upon my word, Harry, I was told of it more
nearly every day. Is it not wonderful that men
should be so mean?”
It was clear to him now that she was
talking of her husband who was dead, and on that subject
he felt himself at present unable to speak a word.
He little dreamed at that moment how openly she would
soon speak to him of Lord Ongar and of Lord Ongar’s
faults?
“Oh, how I have wished that
I had taken your money! But never mind about
that now, Harry. Wretched as such taunts were,
they soon became a small thing. But it has been
cowardly in your cousin, Hugh; has it not? If
I had not lived with him as one of his family, it
would not have mattered. People would not have
expected it. It was as though my own brother had
cast me forth.”
“Lady Clavering has been with you; has she not?”
“Once, for half an hour.
She came up for one day, and came here by herself;
cowering as though she were afraid of me. Poor
Hermy! She has not a good time of it either.
You lords of creation lead your slaves sad lives when
it pleases you to change your billing and cooing for
matter-of-fact masterdom and rule. I don’t
blame Hermy. I suppose she did all she could,
and I did not utter one word of reproach of her.
Nor should I to him. Indeed, if he came now the
servant would deny me to him. He has insulted
me, and I shall remember the insult.”
Harry Clavering did not clearly understand
what it was that Lady Ongar had desired of her brother-in-law what
aid she had required; nor did he know whether it would
be fitting for him to offer to act in Sir Hugh’s
place. Anything that he could do, he felt himself
at that moment willing to do, even though the necessary
service should demand some sacrifice greater than
prudence could approve. “If I had thought
that anything was wanted, I should have come to you
sooner,” said he.
“Everything is wanted, Harry.
Everything is wanted except that check
for six hundred pounds which you sent me so treacherously.
Did you ever think what might have happened if a certain
person had heard of that? All the world would
have declared that you had done it for your own private
purposes all the world, except one.”
Harry, as he heard this, felt that
he was blushing. Did Lady Ongar know of his engagement
with Florence Burton? Lady Clavering knew it,
and might probably have told the tidings; but then,
again, she might not have told them. Harry at
this moment wished that he knew how it was. All
that Lady Ongar said to him would come with so different
a meaning according as he did or did not know that
fact. But he had no mind to tell her of the fact
himself. He declared to himself that he hoped
she knew it, as it would serve to make them both more
comfortable together; but he did not think it would
do for him to bring forward the subject, neck and
heels as it were. The proper thing would be that
she should congratulate him, but this she did not
do. “I certainly meant no ill,” he
said, in answer to the last words she had spoken.
“You have never meant ill to
me, Harry; though you know you have abused me dreadfully
before now. I daresay you forget the hard names
you have called me. You men do forget such things.”
“I remember calling you one name.”
“Do not repeat it now, if you
please. If I deserved it, it would shame me;
and if I did not, it should shame you.”
“No; I will not repeat it.”
“Does it not seem odd, Harry,
that you and I should be sitting, talking together
in this way?” She was leaning now toward him,
across the table, and one hand was raised to her forehead
while her eyes were fixed intently upon his.
The attitude was one which he felt to express extreme
intimacy. She would not have sat in that way,
pressing back her hair from her brow, with all the
appearance of widowhood banished from her face, in
the presence of any but a dear and close friend.
He did not think of this, but he felt that it was
so, almost by instinct. “I have such a
tale to tell you,” she said; “such a tale!”
Why should she tell it to him?
Of course he asked himself this question. Then
he remembered that she had no brother remembered
also that her brother-in-law had deserted her, and
he declared to himself that, if necessary, he would
be her brother. “I fear that you have not
been happy,” said he, “since I saw you
last.”
“Happy!” she replied.
“I have lived such a life as I did not think
any man or woman could be made to live on this side
the grave. I will be honest with you, Harry.
Nothing but the conviction that it could not be for
long has saved me from destroying myself. I knew
that he must die!”
“Oh, Lady Ongar!”
“Yes, indeed; that is the name
he gave me; and because I consented to take it from
him, he treated me O heavens! how am I to
find words to tell you what he did, and the way in
which he treated me. A woman could not tell it
to a man. Harry, I have no friend that I trust
but you, but to you I cannot tell it. When he
found that he had been wrong in marrying me, that
he did not want the thing which he had thought would
suit him, that I was a drag upon him rather than a
comfort what was his mode, do you think,
of ridding himself of the burden?” Clavering
sat silent looking at her. Both her hands were
now up to her forehead, and her large eyes were gazing
at him till he found himself unable to withdraw his
own for a moment from her face. “He strove
to get another man to take me off his hands; and when
he found he was failing he charged me with
the guilt which he himself had contrived for me.”
“Lady Ongar!”
“Yes; you may well stare at
me. You may well speak hoarsely and look like
that. It may be that even you will not believe
me; but by the God in whom we both believe, I tell
you nothing but the truth. He attempted that
and he failed; and then he accused me of the crime
which he could not bring me to commit.”
“And what then?”
“Yes; what then? Harry,
I had a thing to do, and a life to live, that would
have tried the bravest; but I went through it.
I stuck to him to the last! He told me before
he was dying before that last frightful
illness, that I was staying with him for his money.
’For your money, my lord,’ I said, ‘and
for my own name.’ And so it was. Would
it have been wise in me, after all that I had gone
through, to have given up that for which I had sold
myself? I had been very poor, and had been so
placed that poverty, even, such poverty as mine, was
a curse to me. You know what I gave up because
I feared that curse. Was I to be foiled at last,
because such a creature as that wanted to shirk out
of his bargain? I knew there would be some who
would say I had been false. Hugh Clavering says
so now, I suppose. But they never should say I
had left him to die alone in a foreign land.”
“Did he ask you to leave him?”
“No; but he called me that name
which no woman should hear and stay. No woman
should do so unless she had a purpose such as mine.
He wanted back the price he had paid, and I was determined
to do nothing that should assist him in his meanness!
And then, Harry, his last illness! Oh, Harry,
you would pity me if you could know all!”
“It was his own intemperance!”
“Intemperance! It was brandy sheer
brandy. He brought himself to such a state that
nothing but brandy would keep him alive, and in which
brandy was sure to kill him and it did
kill him. Did you ever hear of the horrors of
drink?”
“Yes; I have heard of such a state.”
“I hope you may never live to
see it. It is a sight that would stick by you
for ever. But I saw it, and tended him through
the whole, as though I had been his servant.
I remained with him when that man who opened the door
for you could no longer endure the room. I was
with him when the strong woman from the hospital,
though she could not understand his words, almost
fainted at what she saw and heard. He was punished,
Harry. I need wish no farther vengeance on him,
even for all his cruelty, his injustice, his unmanly
treachery. Is it not fearful to think that any
man should have the power of bringing himself to such
an end as that?”
Harry was thinking rather how fearful
it was that a man should have it in his power to drag
any woman through such a Gehenna as that which this
lord had created. He felt that had Julia Brabazon
been his, as she had once promised him, he never would
have allowed himself to speak a harsh word to her,
to have looked at her except with loving eyes.
But she had chosen to join herself to a man who had
treated her with a cruelty exceeding all that his
imagination could have conceived. “It is
a mercy that he has gone,” said he at last.
“It is a mercy for both.
Perhaps you can understand now something of my married
life. And through it all I had but one friend if
I may call him a friend who had come to terms with
my husband, and who was to have been his agent in
destroying me. But when this man understood from
me that I was not what he had been taught to think
me which my husband told him I was he
relented.”
“May I ask what was that man’s name?”
“His name is Pateroff.
He is a Pole, but he speaks English like an Englishman.
In my presence he told Lord Ongar that he was false
and brutal. Lord Ongar laughed, with that little,
low, sneering laughter which was his nearest approach
to merriment, and told Count Pateroff that that was
of course his game before me. There, Harry, I
will tell you nothing more of it. You will understand
enough to know what I have suffered; and if you can
believe that I have not sinned ”
“Oh, Lady Ongar!”
“Well, I will not doubt you
again. But as far as I can learn you are nearly
alone in your belief. What. Hermy thinks
I cannot tell, but she will soon come to think as
Hugh may bid her. And I shall not blame her.
What else can she do, poor creature?”
“I am sure she believes no ill of you.”
“I have one advantage, Harry one
advantage over her and some others. I am free.
The chains have, hurt me sorely during my slavery;
but I am free, and the price of my servitude remains.
He had written home-would you believe that? while
I was living with him he had written home to say that
evidence should be collected for getting rid of me.
And yet he would sometimes be civil, hoping to cheat
me into inadvertencies. He would ask that man
to dine, and then of a sudden would be absent; and
during this he was ordering that evidence should be
collected! Evidence, indeed! The same servants
have lived with me through it all If I could now bring
forward evidence I could make it all clear as the day.
But there needs no care for a woman’s honor,
though a man may have to guard his by collecting evidence!”
“But what he did cannot injure you.”
“Yes, Harry, it has injured
me; it has all but destroyed me. Have not reports
reached even you? Speak out like a man, and say
whether it is not so!”
“I have heard something.”
“Yes, you have heard something!
If you heard something of your sister where would
you be? All the world would be a chaos to you
till you had pulled out somebody’s tongue by
the roots. Not injured me! For two years
your cousin Hugh’s house was my home. I
met Lord Ongar in his house. I was married from
his house. He is my brother-in-law, and it so
happens that of all men he is the nearest to me.
He stands well before the world, and at this time
could have done me real service. How is it that
he did not welcome me home; that I am not now at his
house with my sister; that he did not meet me so that
the world might know that I was received back among
my own people? Why is it, Harry, that I am telling
this to you to you, who are nothing to me;
my sister’s husband’s cousin; a young
man, from your position, not fit to be my confidant?
Why am I telling this to you, Harry?”
“Because we are old friends,”
said he, wondering again at this moment whether she
knew of his engagement with Florence Burton.
“Yes, we are old friends, and
we have always liked each other; but you must know
that, as the world judges, I am wrong to tell all this
to you. I should be wrong, only that the world
has cast me out, so that I am no longer bound to regard
it. I am Lady Ongar, and I have my share of that
man’s money. They have given me up Ongar
Park, having satisfied themselves that it is mine
by right, and must be mine by law. But he has
robbed me of every friend I had in the world, and yet
you tell me he has not injured me!”
“Not every friend.”
“No, Harry, I will not forget
you, though I spoke so slightingly of you just now.
But your vanity need not be hurt. It is only the
world Mrs. Grundy, you know, that would
deny me such friendship as yours; not my own taste
or choice. Mrs. Grundy always denies us exactly
those things which we ourselves like best. You
are clever enough to understand that.”
He smiled and looked foolish, and
declared that he only offered his assistance because
perhaps it might be convenient at the present moment.
What could he do for her? How could he show his
friendship for her now at once?
“You have done it, Harry, in
listening to me and giving me your sympathy.
It is seldom that we want any great thing from our
friends. I want nothing of that kind. No
one can hurt me much further now. My money and
my rank are safe; and, perhaps, by degrees, acquaintances,
if not friends, will form themselves round me again.
At present, of course, I see no one; but because I
see no one, I wanted some one to whom I could speak.
Poor Hermy is worse than no one. Good-by, Harry;
you look surprised and bewildered now, but you will
soon get over that. Don’t be long before
I see you again.” Then, feeling that he
was bidden to go, he wished her good-by, and went.