“Then it isn’t a question
of property or next of kin?” said the consul.
“Lord! no,” said the lady
vivaciously. “Why, goodness me! I reckon
old Desborough could, at any time before he died, have
‘bought up’ or ‘bought out’
the whole lot of his relatives on this side of the
big pond, no matter what they were worth. No,
it’s only a matter of curiosity and just sociableness.”
The American consul at St. Kentigorn
felt much relieved. He had feared it was only
the old story of delusive quests for imaginary estates
and impossible inheritances which he had confronted
so often in nervous wan-eyed enthusiasts and obstreperous
claimants from his own land. Certainly there
was no suggestion of this in the richly dressed and
be-diamonded matron before him, nor in her pretty daughter,
charming in a Paris frock, alive with the consciousness
of beauty and admiration, and yet a little ennuye
from gratified indulgence. He knew the mother
to be the wealthy widow of a New York millionaire,
that she was traveling for pleasure in Europe, and
a chance meeting with her at dinner a few nights before
had led to this half-capricious, half-confidential
appointment at the consulate.
“No,” continued Mrs. Desborough;
“Mr. Desborough came to America, when a small
boy, with an uncle who died some years ago. Mr.
Desborough never seemed to hanker much after his English
relatives as long as I knew him, but now that I and
Sadie are over here, why we guessed we might look ’em
up and sort of sample ’em! ‘Desborough’
’s rather a good name,” added the lady,
with a complacency that, however, had a suggestion
of query in it.
“Yes,” said the consul; “from the
French, I fancy.”
“Mr. Desborough was English very
English,” corrected the lady.
“I mean it may be an old Norman name,”
said the consul.
“Norman’s good enough
for me,” said the daughter, reflecting.
“We’ll just settle it as Norman.
I never thought about that des.”
“Only you may find it called
‘Debborough’ here, and spelt so,”
said the consul, smiling.
Miss Desborough lifted her pretty
shoulders and made a charming grimace. “Then
we won’t acknowledge ’em. No Debborough
for me!”
“You might put an advertisement
in the papers, like the ’next of kin’
notice, intimating, in the regular way, that they would
’hear of something to their advantage’ as
they certainly would,” continued the consul,
with a bow. “It would be such a refreshing
change to the kind of thing I’m accustomed to,
don’t you know this idea of one of
my countrywomen coming over just to benefit English
relatives! By Jove! I wouldn’t mind
undertaking the whole thing for you it’s
such a novelty.” He was quite carried away
with the idea.
But the two ladies were far from participating
in this joyous outlook. “No,” said
Mrs. Desborough promptly, “that wouldn’t
do. You see,” she went on with superb frankness,
“that would be just giving ourselves away, and
saying who we were before we found out what they
were like. Mr. Desborough was all right in his
way, but we don’t know anything about his folks!
We ain’t here on a mission to improve the Desboroughs,
nor to gather in any ‘lost tribes.’”
It was evident that, in spite of the
humor of the situation and the levity of the ladies,
there was a characteristic national practicalness
about them, and the consul, with a sigh, at last gave
the address of one or two responsible experts in genealogical
inquiry, as he had often done before. He felt
it was impossible to offer any advice to ladies as
thoroughly capable of managing their own affairs as
his fair countrywomen, yet he was not without some
curiosity to know the result of their practical sentimental
quest. That he should ever hear of them again
he doubted. He knew that after their first loneliness
had worn off in their gregarious gathering at a London
hotel they were not likely to consort with their own
country people, who indeed were apt to fight shy of
one another, and even to indulge in invidious criticism
of one another when admitted in that society to which
they were all equally strangers. So he took leave
of them on their way back to London with the belief
that their acquaintance terminated with that brief
incident. But he was mistaken.
In the year following he was spending
his autumn vacation at a country house. It was
an historic house, and had always struck him as being even
in that country of historic seats a singular
example of the vicissitudes of English manorial estates
and the mutations of its lords. His host in his
prime had been recalled from foreign service to unexpectedly
succeed to an uncle’s title and estate.
That estate, however, had come into the possession
of the uncle only through his marriage with the daughter
of an old family whose portraits still looked down
from the walls upon the youngest and alien branch.
There were likenesses, effigies, memorials, and
reminiscences of still older families who had occupied
it through forfeiture by war or the favoritism of
kings, and in its stately cloisters and ruined chapel
was still felt the dead hand of its evicted religious
founders, which could not be shaken off.
It was this strange individuality
that affected all who saw it. For, however changed
were those within its walls, whoever were its inheritors
or inhabiters, Scrooby Priory never changed nor altered
its own character. However incongruous or ill-assorted
the portraits that looked from its walls, so
ill met that they might have flown at one another’s
throats in the long nights when the family were away, the
great house itself was independent of them all.
The be-wigged, be-laced, and be-furbelowed of one
day’s gathering, the round-headed, steel-fronted,
and prim-kerchiefed congregation of another day, and
even the black-coated, bare-armed, and bare-shouldered
assemblage of to-day had no effect on the austerities
of the Priory. Modern houses might show the tastes
and prepossessions of their dwellers, might have caught
some passing trick of the hour, or have recorded the
augmented fortunes or luxuriousness of the owner,
but Scrooby Priory never! No one had dared even
to disturb its outer rigid integrity; the breaches
of time and siege were left untouched. It held
its calm indifferent sway over all who passed its
low-arched portals, and the consul was fain to believe
that he a foreign visitor was
no more alien to the house than its present owner.
“I’m expecting a very
charming compatriot of yours to-morrow,” said
Lord Beverdale as they drove from the station together.
“You must tell me what to show her.”
“I should think any countrywoman
of mine would be quite satisfied with the Priory,”
said the consul, glancing thoughtfully towards the
pile dimly seen through the park.
“I shouldn’t like her
to be bored here,” continued Beverdale.
“Algy met her at Rome, where she was occupying
a palace with her mother they’re
very rich, you know. He found she was staying
with Lady Minever at Hedham Towers, and I went over
and invited her with a little party. She’s
a Miss Desborough.”
The consul gave a slight start, and
was aware that Beverdale was looking at him.
“Perhaps you know her?” said Beverdale.
“Just enough to agree with you
that she is charming,” said the consul.
“I dined with them, and saw them at the consulate.”
“Oh yes; I always forget you
are a consul. Then, of course, you know all about
them. I suppose they’re very rich, and in
society over there?” said Beverdale in a voice
that was quite animated.
It was on the consul’s lips
to say that the late Mr. Desborough was an Englishman,
and even to speak playfully of their proposed quest,
but a sudden instinct withheld him. After all,
perhaps it was only a caprice, or idea, they had forgotten, perhaps,
who knows? that they were already ashamed
of. They had evidently “got on” in
English society, if that was their real intent, and
doubtless Miss Desborough, by this time, was quite
as content with the chance of becoming related to the
Earl of Beverdale, through his son and heir, Algernon,
as if they had found a real Lord Desborough among
their own relatives. The consul knew that Lord
Beverdale was not a rich man, that like most men of
old family he was not a slave to class prejudice;
indeed, the consul had seen very few noblemen off
the stage or out of the pages of a novel who were.
So he said, with a slight affectation of authority,
that there was as little doubt of the young lady’s
wealth as there was of her personal attractions.
They were nearing the house through
a long avenue of chestnuts whose variegated leaves
were already beginning to strew the ground beneath,
and they could see the vista open upon the mullioned
windows of the Priory, lighted up by the yellow October
sunshine. In that sunshine stood a tall, clean-limbed
young fellow, dressed in a shooting-suit, whom the
consul recognized at once as Lord Algernon, the son
of his companion. As if to accent the graces
of this vision of youth and vigor, near him, in the
shadow, an old man had halted, hat in hand, still
holding the rake with which he had been gathering the
dead leaves in the avenue; his back bent, partly with
years, partly with the obeisance of a servitor.
There was something so marked in this contrast, in
this old man standing in the shadow of the fading
year, himself as dried and withered as the leaves
he was raking, yet pausing to make his reverence to
this passing sunshine of youth and prosperity in the
presence of his coming master, that the consul, as
they swept by, looked after him with a stirring of
pain.
“Rather an old man to be still at work,”
said the consul.
Beverdale laughed. “You
must not let him hear you say so; he considers himself
quite as fit as any younger man in the place, and,
by Jove! though he’s nearly eighty, I’m
inclined to believe it. He’s not one of
our people, however; he comes from the village, and
is taken on at odd times, partly to please himself.
His great aim is to be independent of his children, he
has a granddaughter who is one of the maids at the
Priory, and to keep himself out of the workhouse.
He does not come from these parts somewhere
farther north, I fancy. But he’s a tough
lot, and has a deal of work in him yet.”
“Seems to be going a bit stale
lately,” said Lord Algernon, “and I think
is getting a little queer in his head. He has
a trick of stopping and staring straight ahead, at
times, when he seems to go off for a minute or two.
There!” continued the young man, with a light
laugh. “I say! he’s doing it now!”
They both turned quickly and gazed at the bent figure not
fifty yards away standing in exactly the
same attitude as before. But, even as they gazed,
he slowly lifted his rake and began his monotonous
work again.
At Scrooby Priory, the consul found
that the fame of his fair countrywoman had indeed
preceded her, and that the other guests were quite
as anxious to see Miss Desborough as he was. One
of them had already met her in London; another knew
her as one of the house party at the Duke of Northforeland’s,
where she had been a central figure. Some of
her naïve sallies and frank criticisms were repeated
with great unction by the gentlemen, and with some
slight trepidation and a “fearful joy”
by the ladies. He was more than ever convinced
that mother and daughter had forgotten their lineal
Desboroughs, and he resolved to leave any allusion
to it to the young lady herself.
She, however, availed herself of that
privilege the evening after her arrival. “Who’d
have thought of meeting you here?” she said,
sweeping her skirts away to make room for him on a
sofa. “It’s a coon’s age since
I saw you not since you gave us that letter
to those genealogical gentlemen in London.”
The consul hoped that it had proved successful.
“Yes, but maw guessed we didn’t
care to go back to Hengist and Horsa, and when they
let loose a lot of ‘Debboroughs’ and ‘Daybrooks’
upon us, maw kicked! We’ve got a drawing
ten yards long, that looks like a sour apple tree,
with lots of Desboroughs hanging up on the branches
like last year’s pippins, and I guess about
as worm-eaten. We took that well enough, but
when it came to giving us a map of straight lines and
dashes with names written under them like an old Morse
telegraph slip, struck by lightning, then maw and
I guessed that it made us tired.
“You know,” she went on,
opening her clear gray eyes on the consul, with a
characteristic flash of shrewd good sense through her
quaint humor, “we never reckoned where this
thing would land us, and we found we were paying a
hundred pounds, not only for the Desboroughs, but all
the people they’d married, and their children,
and children’s children, and there were a lot
of outsiders we’d never heard of, nor wanted
to hear of. Maw once thought she’d got
on the trail of a Plantagenet, and followed it keen,
until she found she had been reading the dreadful
thing upside down. Then we concluded we wouldn’t
take any more stock in the family until it had risen.”
During this speech the consul could
not help noticing that, although her attitude was
playfully confidential to him, her voice really was
pitched high enough to reach the ears of smaller groups
around her, who were not only following her with the
intensest admiration, but had shamelessly abandoned
their own conversation, and had even faced towards
her. Was she really posing in her naïveté?
There was a certain mischievous, even aggressive,
consciousness in her pretty eyelids. Then she
suddenly dropped both eyes and voice, and said to
the consul in a genuine aside, “I like this
sort of thing much better.”
The consul looked puzzled. “What sort of
thing?”
“Why, all these swell people,
don’t you see? those pictures on the walls!
this elegant room! everything that has come down from
the past, all ready and settled for you, you know ages
ago! Something you haven’t to pick up for
yourself and worry over.”
But here the consul pointed out that
the place itself was not “ancestral” as
regarded the present earl, and that even the original
title of his predecessors had passed away from it.
“In fact, it came into the family by one of
those ‘outsiders’ you deprecate. But
I dare say you’d find the place quite as comfortable
with Lord Beverdale for a host as you would if you
had found out he were a cousin,” he added.
“Better,” said the young lady frankly.
“I suppose your mother participates
in these preferences?” said the consul, with
a smile.
“No,” said Miss Desborough,
with the same frankness, “I think maw’s
rather cut up at not finding a Desborough. She
was invited down here, but she’s rather
independent, you know, so she allowed I could take
care of myself, while she went off to stay with the
old Dowager Lady Mistowe, who thinks maw a very proper
womanly person. I made maw mad by telling her
that’s just what old Lady Mistowe would say of
her cook for I can’t stand these
people’s patronage. However, I shouldn’t
wonder if I was invited here as a ‘most original
person.’”
But here Lord Algernon came up to
implore her to sing them one of “those plantation
songs;” and Miss Desborough, with scarcely a
change of voice or manner, allowed herself to be led
to the piano. The consul had little chance to
speak with her again, but he saw enough that evening
to convince him not only that Lord Algernon was very
much in love with her, but that the fact had been
equally and complacently accepted by the family and
guests. That her present visit was only an opportunity
for a formal engagement was clear to every woman in
the house not excepting, I fear, even the
fair subject of gossip herself. Yet she seemed
so unconcerned and self-contained that the consul
wondered if she really cared for Lord Algernon.
And having thus wondered, he came to the conclusion
that it didn’t much matter, for the happiness
of so practically organized a young lady, if she loved
him or not.
It is highly probable that Miss Sadie
Desborough had not even gone so far as to ask herself
that question. She awoke the next morning with
a sense of easy victory and calm satisfaction that
had, however, none of the transports of affection.
Her taste was satisfied by the love of a handsome
young fellow, a typical Englishman, who,
if not exactly original or ideal, was, she felt, of
an universally accepted, “hall-marked”
standard, the legitimate outcome of a highly ordered,
carefully guarded civilization, whose repose was the
absence of struggle or ambition; a man whose regular
features were not yet differentiated from the rest
of his class by any of those disturbing lines which
people call character. Everything was made ready
for her, without care or preparation; she had not
even an ideal to realize or to modify. She could
slip without any jar or dislocation into this life
which was just saved from self-indulgence and sybaritic
luxury by certain conventional rules of activity and
the occupation of amusement which, as obligations
of her position, even appeared to suggest the novel
aspect of a duty! She could accept all this
without the sense of being an intruder in an unbroken
lineage thanks to the consul’s account
of the Beverdales’ inheritance. She already
pictured herself as the mistress of this fair domain,
the custodian of its treasures and traditions, and
the dispenser of its hospitalities, but as
she conscientiously believed without pride
or vanity, in her position; only an intense and thoughtful
appreciation of it. Nor did she dream of ever
displaying it ostentatiously before her less fortunate
fellow countrywomen; on the contrary, she looked forward
to their possible criticism of her casting off all
transatlantic ties with an uneasy consciousness that
was perhaps her nearest approach to patriotism.
Yet, again, she reasoned that, as her father was an
Englishman, she was only returning to her old home.
As to her mother, she had already comforted herself
by noticing certain discrepancies in that lady’s
temperament, which led her to believe that she herself
alone inherited her father’s nature for
her mother was, of course, distinctly American!
So little conscious was she of any possible snobbishness
in this belief, that in her superb naïveté she would
have argued the point with the consul, and employed
a wit and dialect that were purely American.
She had slipped out of the Priory
early that morning that she might enjoy alone, unattended
and unciceroned, the aspect of that vast estate which
might be hers for the mere accepting. Perhaps
there was some instinct of delicacy in her avoiding
Lord Algernon that morning; not wishing, as she herself
might have frankly put it, “to take stock”
of his inheritance in his presence. As she passed
into the garden through the low postern door, she
turned to look along the stretching façade of the
main building, with the high stained windows of its
banqueting-hall and the state chamber where a king
had slept. Even in that crisp October air, and
with the green of its ivied battlements against the
gold of the distant wood, it seemed to lie in the
languid repose of an eternal summer. She hurried
on down the other terrace into the Italian garden,
a quaint survival of past grandeur, passed the great
orangery and numerous conservatories, making a crystal
hamlet in themselves seeing everywhere
the same luxury. But it was a luxury that she
fancied was redeemed from the vulgarity of ostentation
by the long custom of years and generations, so unlike
the millionaire palaces of her own land; and, in her
enthusiasm, she even fancied it was further sanctified
by the grim monastic founders who had once been content
with bread and pulse in the crumbling and dismantled
refectory. In the plenitude of her feelings she
felt a slight recognition of some beneficent being
who had rolled this golden apple at her feet, and
felt as if she really should like to “do good”
in her sphere.
It so chanced that, passing through
a small gate in the park, she saw walking, a little
ahead of her, a young girl whom she at once recognized
as a Miss Amelyn, one of the guests of the evening
before. Miss Desborough remembered that she played
the accompaniment of one or two songs upon the piano,
and had even executed a long solo during the general
conversation, without attention from the others, and
apparently with little irritation to herself, subsiding
afterwards into an armchair, quite on the fringe of
other people’s conversation. She had been
called “my dear” by one or two dowagers,
and by her Christian name by the earl, and had a way
of impalpably melting out of sight at times.
These trifles led Miss Desborough to conclude that
she was some kind of dependent or poor relation.
Here was an opportunity to begin her work of “doing
good.” She quickened her pace and overtook
Miss Amelyn.
“Let me walk with you,” she said graciously.
The young English girl smiled assent,
but looked her surprise at seeing the cynosure of
last night’s eyes unattended.
“Oh,” said Sadie, answering
the mute query, “I didn’t want to be ’shown
round’ by anybody, and I’m not going to
bore you with asking to see sights either.
We’ll just walk together; wherever you’re
going is good enough for me.”
“I’m going as far as the
village,” said Miss Amelyn, looking down doubtfully
at Sadie’s smart French shoes “if
you care to walk so far.”
Sadie noticed that her companion was
more solidly booted, and that her straight, short
skirts, although less stylish than her own, had a
certain character, better fitted to the freer outdoor
life of the country. But she only said, however,
“The village will do,” and gayly took
her companion’s arm.
“But I’m afraid you’ll
find it very uninteresting, for I am going to visit
some poor cottages,” persisted Miss Amelyn, with
a certain timid ingenuousness of manner which, however,
was as distinct as Miss Desborough’s bolder
frankness. “I promised the rector’s
daughter to take her place to-day.”
“And I feel as if I was ready
to pour oil and wine to any extent,” said Miss
Desborough, “so come along!”
Miss Amelyn laughed, and yet glanced
around her timidly, as if she thought that Miss Desborough
ought to have a larger and more important audience.
Then she continued more confidentially and boldly,
“But it isn’t at all like ‘slumming,’
you know. These poor people here are not very
bad, and are not at all extraordinary.”
“Never mind,” said Sadie,
hurrying her along. After a pause she went on,
“You know the Priory very well, I guess?”
“I lived there when I was a
little girl, with my aunt, the Dowager Lady Beverdale,”
said Miss Amelyn. “When my cousin Fred,
who was the young heir, died, and the present Lord
Beverdale succeeded, he never expected
it, you know, for there were two lives, his two elder
brothers, besides poor Fred’s, between, but
they both died, we went to live in the Dower
House.”
“The Dower House?” repeated Sadie.
“Yes, Lady Beverdale’s separate property.”
“But I thought all this property the
Priory came into the family through her.”
“It did this was
the Amelyns’ place; but the oldest son or nearest
male heir always succeeds to the property and title.”
“Do you mean to say that the
present Lord Beverdale turned that old lady out?”
Miss Amelyn looked shocked. “I
mean to say,” she said gravely, “Lady
Beverdale would have had to go when her own son became
of age, had he lived.” She paused, and
then said timidly, “Isn’t it that way in
America?”
“Dear no!” Miss Desborough
had a faint recollection that there was something
in the Constitution or the Declaration of Independence
against primogeniture. “No! the men haven’t
it all their own way there not
much!”
Miss Amelyn looked as if she did not
care to discuss this problem. After a few moments
Sadie continued, “You and Lord Algernon are pretty
old friends, I guess?”
“No,” replied Miss Amelyn.
“He came once or twice to the Priory for the
holidays, when he was quite a boy at Marlborough for
the family weren’t very well off, and his father
was in India. He was a very shy boy, and of course
no one ever thought of him succeeding.”
Miss Desborough felt half inclined
to be pleased with this, and yet half inclined to
resent this possible snubbing of her future husband.
But they were nearing the village, and Miss Amelyn
turned the conversation to the object of her visit.
It was a new village an unhandsome village,
for all that it stood near one of the gates of the
park. It had been given over to some mines that
were still worked in its vicinity, and to the railway,
which the uncle of the present earl had resisted; but
the railway had triumphed, and the station for Scrooby
Priory was there. There was a grim church, of
a blackened or weather-beaten stone, on the hill,
with a few grim Amelyns reposing cross-legged in the
chancel, but the character of the village was as different
from the Priory as if it were in another county.
They stopped at the rectory, where Miss Amelyn provided
herself with certain doles and gifts, which the American
girl would have augmented with a five-pound note but
for Miss Amelyn’s horrified concern. “As
many shillings would do, and they would be as grateful,”
she said. “More they wouldn’t understand.”
“Then keep it, and dole it out
as you like,” said Sadie quickly.
“But I don’t think that that
Lord Beverdale would quite approve,” hesitated
Miss Amelyn.
The pretty brow of her companion knit,
and her gray eyes flashed vivaciously. “What
has he to do with it?” she said pertly;
“besides, you say these are not his poor.
Take that five-pound note or I’ll
double it, get it changed into sovereigns at
the station, and hand ’em round to every man,
woman, and child.”
Miss Amelyn hesitated. The American
girl looked capable of doing what she said; perhaps
it was a national way of almsgiving! She took
the note, with the mental reservation of making a
full confession to the rector and Lord Beverdale.
She was right in saying that the poor
of Scrooby village were not interesting. There
was very little squalor or degradation; their poverty
seemed not a descent, but a condition to which they
had been born; the faces which Sadie saw were dulled
and apathetic rather than sullen or rebellious; they
stood up when Miss Amelyn entered, paying her
the deference, but taking little note of the pretty
butterfly who was with her, or rather submitting to
her frank curiosity with that dull consent of the
poor, as if they had lost even the sense of privacy,
or a right to respect. It seemed to the American
girl that their poverty was more indicated by what
they were satisfied with than what she thought
they missed. It is to be feared that this did
not add to Sadie’s sympathy; all the beggars
she had seen in America wanted all they could get,
and she felt as if she were confronted with an inferior
animal.
“There’s a wonderful old
man lives here,” said Miss Amelyn, as they halted
before a stone and thatch cottage quite on the outskirts
of the village. “We can’t call him
one of our poor, for he still works, although over
eighty, and it’s his pride to keep out of the
poorhouse, and, as he calls it, ‘off’
the hands of his granddaughters. But we manage
to do something for them, and we hope he profits
by it. One of them is at the Priory; they’re
trying to make a maid of her, but her queer accent they’re
from the north is against her with the servants.
I am afraid we won’t see old Debs, for he’s
at work again to-day, though the doctor has warned
him.”
“Debs! What a funny name!”
“Yes, but as many of these people
cannot read or write, the name is carried by the ear,
and not always correctly. Some of the railway
navvies, who come from the north as he does, call him
‘Debbers.’”
They were obliged to descend into
the cottage, which was so low that it seemed to have
sunk into the earth until its drooping eaves of thatch
mingled with the straw heap beside it. Debs was
not at home. But his granddaughter was there,
who, after a preliminary “bob,” continued
the stirring of the pot before the fire in tentative
silence.
“I am sorry to find that your
grandfather has gone to work again in spite of the
doctor’s orders,” said Miss Amelyn.
The girl continued to stir the pot,
and then said without looking up, but as if also continuing
a train of aggressive thoughts with her occupation:
“Eay, but ’e’s so set oop in ’issen
’ee doan’t take orders from nobbut leastways
doctor. Moinds ’em now moor nor a floy.
Says ’ee knaws there nowt wrong wi’ ’is
’eart. Moût be roight how’siver,
sartén sewer, ’is ‘EAD’S a’
in a muddle! Toims ‘ee goes off stamrin’
and starin’ at nowt, as if ‘ee a’nt
a n’aporth o’ sense. How’siver
I be doing my duty by ’em and ’ere’s
‘is porritch when a’ cooms ’gin
a’ be sick or maad.”
What the American understood of the
girl’s speech and manner struck her as having
very little sympathy with either her aged relative
or her present visitor. And there was a certain
dogged selfish independence about her that Miss Desborough
half liked and half resented. However, Miss Amelyn
did not seem to notice it, and, after leaving a bottle
of port for the grandfather, she took her leave and
led Sadie away. As they passed into the village
a carriage, returning to the Priory, filled with their
fellow guests, dashed by, but was instantly pulled
up at a word from Lord Algernon, who leaped from the
vehicle, hat in hand, and implored the fair truant
and her companion to join them.
“We’re just making a tour
around Windover Hill, and back to luncheon,”
he said, with a rising color. “We missed
you awfully! If we had known you were so keen
on ‘good works,’ and so early at it, by
Jove! we’d have got up a ‘slummin’
party,’ and all joined!”
“And you haven’t seen
half,” said Lord Beverdale from the box.
“Miss Amelyn’s too partial to the village.
There’s an old drunken retired poacher somewhere
in a hut in Crawley Woods, whom it’s death to
approach, except with a large party. There’s
malignant diphtheria over at the South Farm, eight
down with measles at the keeper’s, and an old
woman who has been bedridden for years.”
But Miss Desborough was adamant, though
sparkling. She thanked him, but said she had
just seen an old woman “who had been lying in
bed for twenty years, and hadn’t spoken the
truth once!” She proposed “going outside
of Lord Beverdale’s own preserves of grain-fed
poor,” and starting up her own game. She
would return in time for luncheon if she
could; if not, she “should annex the gruel of
the first kind incapable she met.”
Yet, actually, she was far from displeased
at being accidentally discovered by these people while
following out her capricious whim of the morning.
One or two elder ladies, who had fought shy of her
frocks and her frankness the evening before, were
quite touched now by this butterfly who was willing
to forego the sunlight of society, and soil her pretty
wings on the haunts of the impoverished, with only
a single companion, of her own sex! and
smiled approvingly. And in her present state
of mind, remembering her companion’s timid attitude
towards Lord Beverdale’s opinions, she was not
above administering this slight snub to him in her
presence.
When they had driven away, with many
regrets, Miss Amelyn was deeply concerned. “I
am afraid,” she said, with timid conscientiousness,
“I have kept you from going with them.
And you must be bored with what you have seen, I know.
I don’t believe you really care one bit for it and
you are only doing it to please me.”
“Trot out the rest of your show,”
said Sadie promptly, “and we’ll wind up
by lunching with the rector.”
“He’d be too delighted,”
said Miss Amelyn, with disaster written all over her
girlish, truthful face, “but but you
know it really wouldn’t be quite
right to Lord Beverdale. You’re his principal
guest you know, and they’d
think I had taken you off.”
“Well,” said Miss Desborough
impetuously, “what’s the matter with that
inn the Red Lion? We can get a sandwich
there, I guess. I’m not very hungry.”
Miss Amelyn looked horrified for a
moment, and then laughed; but immediately became concerned
again. “No! listen to me, really now!
Let me finish my round alone! You’ll have
ample time if you go now to reach the Priory
for luncheon. Do, please! It would be ever
so much better for everybody. I feel quite guilty
as it is, and I suppose I am already in Lord Beverdale’s
black books.”
The trouble in the young girl’s
face was unmistakable, and as it suited Miss Desborough’s
purpose just as well to show her independence by returning,
as she had set out, alone, she consented to go.
Miss Amelyn showed her a short cut across the park,
and they separated to meet at dinner.
In this brief fellowship, the American girl had kept
a certain supremacy and half-fascination over the
English girl, even while she was conscious of an invincible
character in Miss Amelyn entirely different from and
superior to her own. Certainly there was a difference
in the two peoples. Why else this inherited conscientious
reverence for Lord Beverdale’s position, shown
by Miss Amelyn, which she, an American alive to its
practical benefits, could not understand? Would
Miss Amelyn and Lord Algernon have made a better match?
The thought irritated her, even while she knew that
she herself possessed the young man’s affections,
the power to marry him, and, as she believed, kept
her own independence in the matter.
As she entered the iron gates at the
lower end of the park, and glanced at the interwoven
cipher and crest of the Amelyns still above, she was
conscious that the wind was blowing more chill, and
that a few clouds had gathered. As she walked
on down the long winding avenue, the sky became overcast,
and, in one of those strange contrasts of the English
climate, the glory of the whole day went out with the
sunshine. The woods suddenly became wrinkled
and gray, the distant hills sombre, the very English
turf beneath her feet grew brown; a mile and a half
away, through the opening of the trees, the west part
of the Priory looked a crumbling, ivy-eaten ruin.
A few drops of rain fell. She hurried on.
Suddenly she remembered that the avenue made a long
circuit before approaching the house, and that its
lower end, where she was walking, was but a fringe
of the park. Consequently there must be a short
cut across some fields and farm buildings to the back
of the park and the Priory. She at once diverged
to the right, presently found a low fence, which she
clambered over, and again found a footpath which led
to a stile. Crossing that, she could see the
footpath now led directly to the Priory, now
a grim and austere looking pile in the suddenly dejected
landscape, and that it was probably used
only by the servants and farmers. A gust of wind
brought some swift needles of rain to her cheek; she
could see the sad hills beyond the Priory already veiling
their faces; she gathered her skirts and ran.
The next field was a long one, but beside the further
stile was a small clump of trees, the only ones between
her and the park. Hurrying on to that shelter,
she saw that the stile was already occupied by a tall
but bent figure, holding a long stick in his hand,
which gave him the appearance, against the horizon,
of the figure of Time leaning on his scythe. As
she came nearer she saw it was, indeed, an old man,
half resting on his rake. He was very rugged
and weather-beaten, and although near the shelter of
the trees, apparently unmindful of the rain that was
falling on his bald head, and the limp cap he was
holding uselessly in one hand. He was staring
at her, yet apparently unconscious of her presence.
A sudden instinct came upon her it was
“Debs”!
She went directly up to him, and with
that frank common sense which ordinarily distinguished
her, took his cap from his hand and put it on his
head, grasped his arm firmly, and led him to the shelter
of the tree. Then she wiped the raindrops from
his face with her handkerchief, shook out her own
dress and her wet parasol, and, propping her companion
against the tree, said:
“There, Mr. Debs! I’ve
heard of people who didn’t know enough to come
in when it rained, but I never met one before.”
The old man started, lifted his hairy,
sinewy arm, bared to the elbow, and wiped his bare
throat with the dry side of it. Then a look of
intelligence albeit half aggressive came
into his face. “Wheer beest tha going?”
he asked.
Something in his voice struck Sadie
like a vague echo. Perhaps it was only the queer
dialect or some resemblance to his granddaughter’s
voice. She looked at him a little more closely
as she said:
“To the Priory.”
“Whaat?”
She pointed with her parasol to the
gray pile in the distance. It was possible that
this demented peasant didn’t even understand
English.
“The hall. Oh, ay!”
Suddenly his brows knit ominously as he faced her.
“An’ wassist tha doin’ drest oop
in this foinery? Wheer gettist thee that goawn?
Thissen, or thy maester? Nowt even a napron, fit
for thy wark as maaid at serviss; an’ parson
a gettin’ tha plaace at Hall! So thou’lt
be high and moity will tha! thou’lt not walk
wi’ maaids, but traipse by thissen like a slut
in the toon dang tha!”
Although it was plain to Sadie that
the old man, in his wandering perception, had mistaken
her for his granddaughter in service at the Priory,
there was still enough rudeness in his speech for her
to have resented it. But, strange to say, there
was a kind of authority in it that touched her with
an uneasiness and repulsion that was stronger than
any other feeling. “I think you have mistaken
me for some one else,” she said hurriedly, yet
wondering why she had admitted it, and even irritated
at the admission. “I am a stranger here,
a visitor at the Priory. I called with Miss Amelyn
at your cottage, and saw your other granddaughter;
that’s how I knew your name.”
The old man’s face changed.
A sad, senile smile of hopeless bewilderment crept
into his hard mouth; he plucked his limp cap from his
head and let it hang submissively in his fingers,
as if it were his sole apology. Then he tried
to straighten himself, and said, “Naw offins,
miss, naw offins! If tha knaws mea tha’ll
knaw I’m grandfeyther to two galls as moight
be tha owern age; tha’ll tell ’ee that
old Debs at haaty years ’as warked and niver
lost a day as man or boy; has niver coome oopen ’em
for n’aporth. An’ ‘e’ll
keep out o’ warkus till he doy. An’
’ee’s put by enow to by wi’ his
own feythers in Lanksheer, an’ not liggen aloane
in parson’s choorchyard.”
It was part of her uneasiness that,
scarcely understanding or, indeed, feeling any interest
in these maundering details, she still seemed to have
an odd comprehension of his character and some reminiscent
knowledge of him, as if she were going through the
repetition of some unpleasant dream. Even his
wrinkled face was becoming familiar to her. Some
weird attraction was holding her; she wanted to get
away from it as much as she wanted to analyze it.
She glanced ostentatiously at the sky, prepared to
open her parasol, and began to edge cautiously away.
“Then tha beant from these pearts?” he
said suddenly.
“No, no,” she said quickly and emphatically, “no,
I’m an American.”
The old man started and moved towards
her, eagerly, his keen eyes breaking through the film
that at times obscured them. “’Merrikan!
tha baist ’Merrikan? Then tha knaws ma
son John, ’ee war nowt but a bairn when brether
Dick took un to ’Merriky! Naw! Now!
that wor fifty years sen! niver wroate
to his old feyther niver coomed back, ’Ee
wor tall-loike, an’ thea said ’e feavored
mea.” He stopped, threw up his head, and
with his skinny fingers drew back his long, straggling
locks from his sunken cheeks, and stared in her face.
The quick transition of fascination, repulsion, shock,
and indefinable apprehension made her laugh hysterically.
To her terror he joined in it, and eagerly clasped
her wrists. “Eh, lass! tha knaws John tha
coomes from un to olé grandfeyther. Who-rr-u!
Eay! but tha tho’t to fool mea, did tha, lass?
Whoy, I knoawed tha voice, for a’ tha foine peacock
feathers. So tha be John’s gell coom from
Ameriky. Dear! a dear! Coom neaur, lass!
let’s see what tha’s loike. Eh, but
thou’lt kiss tha grandfather, sewerly?”
A wild terror and undefined consternation
had completely overpowered her! But she made
a desperate effort to free her wrists, and burst out
madly:
“Let me go! How dare you!
I don’t know you or yours! I’m nothing
to you or your kin! My name is Desborough do
you understand do you hear me, Mr. Debs? Desborough!”
At the word the old man’s fingers
stiffened like steel around her wrists, as he turned
upon her a hard, invincible face.
“So thou’lt call thissen
Des-borough, wilt tha? Let me tell tha, then,
that ‘Debs,’ ‘Debban,’ ‘Debbrook,’
and ‘Des-borough’ are all a seame!
Ay! thy feyther and thy feyther’s feyther!
Thou’lt be a Des-borough, will tha?
Dang tha! and look doon on tha kin, and dress thissen
in silks o’ shame! Tell ’ee thou’rt
an ass, gell! Don’t tha hear? An ass!
for all tha bean John’s bairn! An ass!
that’s what tha beast!”
With flashing eyes and burning cheeks
she made one more supreme effort, lifting her arms,
freeing her wrists, and throwing the old man staggering
from her. Then she leaped the stile, turned, and
fled through the rain. But before she reached
the end of the field she stopped! She had freed
herself she was stronger than he what
had she to fear? He was crazy! Yes, he must
be crazy, and he had insulted her, but he was an old
man and God knows what! Her heart was
beating rapidly, her breath was hurried, but she ran
back to the stile.
He was not there. The field sloped
away on either side of it. But she could distinguish
nothing in the pouring rain above the wind-swept meadow.
He must have gone home. Relieved for a moment
she turned and hurried on towards the Priory.
But at every step she was followed,
not by the old man’s presence, but by what he
had said to her, which she could not shake off as she
had shaken off his detaining fingers. Was it
the ravings of insanity, or had she stumbled unwittingly
upon some secret was it after all a secret?
Perhaps it was something they all knew, or would know
later. And she had come down here for this.
For back of her indignation, back even of her disbelief
in his insanity, there was an awful sense of truth!
The names he had flung out, of “Debs,”
“Debban,” and “Debbrook” now
flashed upon her as something she had seen before,
but had not understood. Until she satisfied herself
of this, she felt she could not live or breathe!
She loathed the Priory, with its austere exclusiveness,
as it rose before her; she wished she had never entered
it; but it contained that which she must know, and
know at once! She entered the nearest door and
ran up the grand staircase. Her flushed face
and disordered appearance were easily accounted for
by her exposure to the sudden storm. She went
to her bedroom, sent her maid to another room to prepare
a change of dress, and sinking down before her traveling-desk,
groped for a document. Ah! there it was the
expensive toy that she had played with! She hastily
ran over its leaves to the page she already remembered.
And there, among the dashes and perpendicular lines
she had jested over last night, on which she had thought
was a collateral branch of the line, stood her father’s
name and that of Richard, his uncle, with the bracketed
note in red ink, “see Debbrook, Daybrook, Debbers,
and Debs.” Yes! this gaunt, half-crazy,
overworked peasant, content to rake the dead leaves
before the rolling chariots of the Beverdales, was
her grandfather; that poorly clad girl in the cottage,
and even the menial in the scullery of this very house
that might be hers, were her Cousins!
She burst into a laugh, and then refolded the document
and put it away.
At luncheon she was radiant and sparkling.
Her drenched clothes were an excuse for a new and
ravishing toilette. She had never looked so beautiful
before, and significant glances were exchanged between
some of the guests, who believed that the expected
proposal had already come. But those who were
of the carriage party knew otherwise, and of Lord
Algernon’s disappointment. Lord Beverdale
contented himself with rallying his fair guest on
the becomingness of “good works.”
But he continued, “You’re offering a dreadful
example to these ladies, Miss Desborough, and I know
I shall never hereafter be able to content them with
any frivolous morning amusement at the Priory.
For myself, when I am grown gouty and hideous, I know
I shall bloom again as a district visitor.”
Yet under this surface sparkle and
nervous exaltation Sadie never lost consciousness
of the gravity of the situation. If her sense
of humor enabled her to see one side of its grim irony;
if she experienced a wicked satisfaction in accepting
the admiration and easy confidence of the high-born
guests, knowing that her cousin had assisted in preparing
the meal they were eating, she had never lost sight
of the practical effect of the discovery she had made.
And she had come to a final resolution. She should
leave the Priory at once, and abandon all idea of
a matrimonial alliance with its heir! Inconsistent
as this might seem to her selfish, worldly nature,
it was nevertheless in keeping with a certain pride
and independence that was in her blood. She did
not love Lord Algernon, neither did she love her grandfather;
she was equally willing to sacrifice either or both;
she knew that neither Lord Algernon nor his father
would make her connections an objection, however they
might wish to keep the fact a secret, or otherwise
dispose of them by pensions or emigration, but she
could not bear to know it herself!
She never could be happy as the mistress of Scrooby
Priory with that knowledge; she did not idealize it
as a principle! Carefully weighing it by her
own practical common sense, she said to herself that
“it wouldn’t pay.” The highest
independence is often akin to the lowest selfishness;
she did not dream that the same pride which kept her
grandfather from the workhouse and support by his
daughters, and had even kept him from communicating
with his own son, now kept her from acknowledging them,
even for the gift of a title and domain. There
was only one question before her: should she
stay long enough to receive the proposal of Lord Algernon,
and then decline it? Why should she not snatch
that single feminine joy out of the ashes of her burnt-up
illusion? She knew that an opportunity would
be offered that afternoon. The party were to take
tea at Broxby Hall, and Lord Algernon was to drive
her there in his dogcart. Miss Desborough had
gone up to her bedroom to put on a warmer cloak, and
had rung twice or thrice impatiently for her maid.
When the girl made her appearance,
apologetic, voluble, and excited, Miss Desborough
scarcely listened to her excuses, until a single word
suddenly arrested her attention. It was “old
Debs.”
“What are you talking about?”
said Sadie, pausing in the adjustment of her hat on
her brown hair.
“Old Debs, miss, that’s
what they call him; an old park-keeper, just found
dead in a pool of water in the fields; the grandfather
of one of the servants here; and there’s such
an excitement in the servants’ hall. The
gentlemen all knew it, too, for I heard Lord Algernon
say that he was looking very queer lately, and might
have had a fit; and Lord Beverdale has sent word to
the coroner. And only think, the people here
are such fools that they daren’t touch or move
the poor man, and him lyin’ there in the rain
all the time, until the coroner comes!”
Miss Desborough had been steadily
regarding herself in the glass to see if she had turned
pale. She had. She set her teeth together
until the color partly returned. But she kept
her face away from the maid. “That’ll
do,” she said quietly. “You can tell
me all later. I have some important news myself,
and I may not go out after all. I want you to
take a note for me.” She went to her table,
wrote a line in pencil, folded it, scribbled an address
upon it, handed it to the girl, and gently pushed
her from the room.
The consul was lingering on the terrace
beside one of the carriages; at a little distance
a groom was holding the nervous thoroughbred of Lord
Algernon’s dog-cart. Suddenly he felt a
touch on his shoulder, and Miss Desborough’s
maid put a note in his hand. It contained only
a line:
Please come and see me in the library,
but without making any fuss about it at
once. S. D.
The consul glanced around him; no
one had apparently noticed the incident. He slipped
back into the house and made his way to the library.
It was a long gallery; at the further end Miss Desborough
stood cloaked, veiled, and coquettishly hatted.
She was looking very beautiful and animated.
“I want you to please do me a great favor,”
she said, with an adorable smile, “as your own
countrywoman, you know for the sake of
Fourth of July and Pumpkin Pie and the Old Flag!
I don’t want to go to this circus to-day.
I am going to leave here to-night! I am!
Honest Injin! I want you to manage it.
I want you to say that as consul you’ve received
important news for me: the death of some relative,
if you like; or better, something affecting my
property, you know,” with a little satirical
laugh. “I guess that would fetch ’em!
So go at once.”
“But really, Miss Desborough,
do let us talk this over before you decide!”
implored the bewildered consul. “Think what
a disappointment to your host and these ladies.
Lord Algernon expects to drive you there; he is already
waiting! The party was got up for you!”
Miss Desborough made a slight grimace. “I
mean you ought to sacrifice something but
I trust there is really nothing serious to
them!”
“If you do not speak to
them, I will!” said Miss Desborough firmly.
“If you say what I tell you, it will come the
more plausibly from you. Come! My mind is
made up. One of us must break the news! Shall
it be you or I?” She drew her cloak over her
shoulders and made a step forwards.
The consul saw she was determined.
“Then wait here till I return, but keep yourself
out of sight,” he said, and hurried away.
Between the library and the terrace he conceived a
plan. His perplexity lent him a seriousness which
befitted the gravity of the news he had to disclose.
“I am sorry to have to tell you,” he said,
taking Lord Beverdale aside, “that I was the
unlucky bearer of some sad news to Miss Desborough
this morning, through my consular letters some
matter concerning the death of a relation of hers,
and some wearisome question of property. I thought
that it was of little importance, and that she would
not take it seriously, but I find I was mistaken.
It may even oblige her to catch the London train to-night.
I promised to make her excuses to you for the present,
and I’m afraid I must add my own to them, as
she wishes me to stay and advise her in this matter,
which requires some prompt action.”
Miss Desborough was right: the
magic word “property” changed the slight
annoyance on the earl’s face to a sympathetic
concern. “Dear me! I trust it is nothing
really serious,” he said. “Of course,
you will advise her, and, by the way, if my solicitor,
Withers, who’ll be here to-morrow, can do anything,
you know, call him in. I hope she’ll be
able to see me later. It could not be a near
relation who died, I fancy; she has no brothers or
sisters, I understand.”
“A cousin, I think; an old friend,”
said the consul hastily. He heard Lord Beverdale
say a few words to his companions, saw with a tinge
of remorse a cloud settle upon Lord Algernon’s
fresh face, as he appealed in a whisper to old Lady
Mesthyn, who leaned forward from the carriage, and
said, “If the dear child thought I could be of
any service, I should only be too glad to stay with
her.”
“I knew she would appreciate
Lady Mesthyn’s sympathy,” said the ingenious
consul quickly, “but I really think the question
is more a business one and”
“Ah, yes,” said the old
lady, shaking her head, “it’s dreadful,
of course, but we must all think of that!”
As the carriage drove away, the consul
hurried back a little viciously to his fair countrywoman.
“There!” he said, “I have done it!
If I have managed to convey either the idea that you
are a penniless orphan, or that I have official information
that you are suspected of a dynamite conspiracy, don’t
blame me! And now,” he said, “as I
have excused myself on the ground that I must devote
myself to this dreadful business of yours, perhaps
you’ll tell me what it really is.”
“Not a word more,” said
Miss Desborough; “except,” she added, checking
her smile with a weary gesture, “except
that I want to leave this dreadful place at once!
There! don’t ask me any more!”
There could be no doubt of the girl’s
sincerity. Nor was it the extravagant caprice
of a petted idol. What had happened? He might
have believed in a lovers’ quarrel, but he knew
that she and Lord Algernon could have had no private
interview that evening. He must perforce accept
her silence, yet he could not help saying:
“You seemed to like the place
so much last night. I say, you haven’t
seen the Priory ghost, have you?”
“The Priory ghost,” she said quickly.
“What’s that?”
“The old monk who passes through
the cloisters with the sacred oil, the bell, and the
smell of incense whenever any one is to die here.
By Jove! it would have been a good story to tell instead
of this cock-and-bull one about your property.
And there was a death here to-day. You’d
have added the sibyl’s gifts to your other charms.”
“Tell me about that old man,”
she said, looking past him out of the window.
“I was at his cottage this morning. But,
no! first let us go out. You can take me for
a walk, if you like. You see I am all ready,
and I’m just stifling here.”
They descended to the terrace together.
“Where would you like to go?” he asked.
“To the village. I may want to telegraph,
you know.”
They turned into the avenue, but Miss Desborough stopped.
“Is there not a shorter cut across the fields,”
she asked, “over there?”
“There is,” said the consul.
They both turned into the footpath
which led to the farm and stile. After a pause
she said, “Did you ever talk with that poor old
man?”
“No.”
“Then you don’t know if he really was
crazy, as they think.”
“No. But they may have
thought an old man’s forgetfulness of present
things and his habit of communing with the past was
insanity. For all that he was a plucky, independent
old fellow, with a grim purpose that was certainly
rational.”
“I suppose in his independence
he would not have taken favors from these people,
or anybody?”
“I should think not.”
“Don’t you think it was
just horrid their leaving him alone in the
rain, when he might have been only in a fit?”
“The doctor says he died suddenly
of heart disease,” said the consul. “It
might have happened at any moment and without warning.”
“Ah, that was the coroner’s
verdict, then,” said Miss Desborough quickly.
“The coroner did not think it
necessary to have any inquest after Lord Beverdale’s
statement. It wouldn’t have been very joyous
for the Priory party. And I dare say he thought
it might not be very cheerful for you.”
“How very kind!” said
the young girl, with a quick laugh. “But
do you know that it’s about the only thing human,
original, and striking that has happened in this place
since I’ve been here! And so unexpected,
considering how comfortably everything is ordered here
beforehand.”
“Yet you seemed to like that
kind of thing very well, last evening,” said
the consul mischievously.
“That was last night,”
retorted Miss Desborough; “and you know the line,
‘Colors seen by candlelight do not look the same
by day.’ But I’m going to be very
consistent to-day, for I intend to go over to that
poor man’s cottage again, and see if I can be
of any service. Will you go with me?”
“Certainly,” said the
consul, mystified by his companion’s extraordinary
conduct, yet apparent coolness of purpose, and hoping
for some further explanation. Was she only an
inexperienced flirt who had found herself on the point
of a serious entanglement she had not contemplated?
Yet even then he knew she was clever enough to extricate
herself in some other way than this abrupt and brutal
tearing through the meshes. Or was it possible
that she really had any intelligence affecting her
property? He reflected that he knew very little
of the Desboroughs, but on the other hand he knew
that Beverdale knew them much better, and was a prudent
man. He had no right to demand her confidence
as a reward for his secrecy; he must wait her pleasure.
Perhaps she would still explain; women seldom could
resist the triumph of telling the secret that puzzled
others.
When they reached the village she
halted before the low roof of Debs’s cottage.
“I had better go in first,” she said; “you
can come in later, and in the meantime you might go
to the station for me and find out the exact time
that the express train leaves for the north.”
“But,” said the astonished
consul, “I thought you were going to London?”
“No,” said Miss Desborough
quietly, “I am going to join some friends at
Harrogate.”
“But that train goes much earlier
than the train south, and and I’m
afraid Lord Beverdale will not have returned so soon.”
“How sad!” said Miss Desborough,
with a faint smile, “but we must bear up under
it, and I’ll write him. I will
be here until you return.”
She turned away and entered the cottage.
The granddaughter she had already seen and her sister,
the servant at the Priory, were both chatting comfortably,
but ceased as she entered, and both rose with awkward
respect. There was little to suggest that the
body of their grandfather, already in a rough oak
shell, was lying upon trestles beside them.
“You have carried out my orders,
I see,” said Miss Desborough, laying down her
parasol.
“Ay, miss; but it was main haard
gettin’ et dooan so soon, and et cooast”
“Never mind the cost. I’ve
given you money enough, I think, and if I haven’t,
I guess I can give you more.”
“Ay, miss! Abbut the pa’son
‘ead gi’ un a funeral for nowt.”
“But I understood you to say,”
said Miss Desborough, with an impatient flash of eye,
“that your grandfather wished to be buried with
his kindred in the north?”
“Ay, miss,” said the girl
apologetically, “an naw ‘ees savit th’
munny. Abbut e’d bean tickled ’ad
’ee knowed it! Dear! dear! ’ee niver
thowt et ‘ud be gi’en by stranger an’
not ’es ownt fammaly.”
“For all that, you needn’t
tell anybody it was given by me,” said Miss
Desborough. “And you’ll be sure to
be ready to take the train this afternoon without
delay.” There was a certain peremptoriness
in her voice very unlike Miss Amelyn’s, yet
apparently much more effective with the granddaughter.
“Ay, miss. Then, if tha’ll
excoose mea, I’ll go streight to ’oory
oop sexten.”
She bustled away. “Now,”
said Miss Desborough, turning to the other girl, “I
shall take the same train, and will probably see you
on the platform at York to give my final directions.
That’s all. Go and see if the gentleman
who came with me has returned from the station.”
The girl obeyed. Left entirely
alone, Miss Desborough glanced around the room, and
then went quietly up to the unlidded coffin. The
repose of death had softened the hard lines of the
old man’s mouth and brow into a resemblance
she now more than ever understood. She had stood
thus only a few years before, looking at the same
face in a gorgeously inlaid mahogany casket, smothered
amidst costly flowers, and surrounded by friends attired
in all the luxurious trappings of woe; yet it was the
same face that was now rigidly upturned to the bare
thatch and rafters of that crumbling cottage, herself
its only companion. She lifted her delicate veil
with both hands, and, stooping down, kissed the hard,
cold forehead, without a tremor. Then she dropped
her veil again over her dry eyes, readjusted it in
the little, cheap, black-framed mirror that hung against
the wall, and opened the door as the granddaughter
returned. The gentleman was just coming from
the station.
“Remember to look out for me
at York,” said Miss Desborough, extending her
gloved hand. “Good-by till then.”
The young girl respectfully touched the ends of Miss
Desborough’s fingers, dropped a curtsy, and
Miss Desborough rejoined the consul.
“You have barely time to return
to the Priory and see to your luggage,” said
the consul, “if you must go. But let me
hope that you have changed your mind.”
“I have not changed my mind,”
said Miss Desborough quietly, “and my baggage
is already packed.” After a pause, she said
thoughtfully, “I’ve been wondering”
“What?” said the consul eagerly.
“I’ve been wondering if
people brought up to speak in a certain dialect, where
certain words have their own significance and color,
and are part of their own lives and experience if,
even when they understand another dialect, they really
feel any sympathy with it, or the person who speaks
it?”
“Apropos of” asked the consul.
“These people I’ve just
left! I don’t think I quite felt with them,
and I guess they didn’t feel with me.”
“But,” said the consul
laughingly, “you know that we Americans speak
with a decided dialect of our own, and attach the same
occult meaning to it. Yet, upon my word, I think
that Lord Beverdale or shall I say Lord
Algernon? would not only understand that
American word ‘guess’ as you mean it,
but would perfectly sympathize with you.”
Miss Desborough’s eyes sparkled
even through her veil as she glanced at her companion
and said, “I guess not.”
As the “tea” party had
not yet returned, it fell to the consul to accompany
Miss Desborough and her maid to the station. But
here he was startled to find a collection of villagers
upon the platform, gathered round two young women
in mourning, and an ominous-looking box. He mingled
for a moment with the crowd, and then returned to Miss
Desborough’s side.
“Really,” he said, with
a concern that was scarcely assumed, “I ought
not to let you go. The omens are most disastrous!
You came here to a death; you are going away with
a funeral!”
“Then it’s high time I
took myself off!” said the lady lightly.
“Unless, like the ghostly monk,
you came here on a mission, and have fulfilled it.”
“Perhaps I have. Good-by!”
In spite of the bright and characteristic
letter which Miss Desborough left for her host, a
letter which mingled her peculiar shrewd sense with
her humorous extravagance of expression, the
consul spent a somewhat uneasy evening under the fire
of questions that assailed him in reference to the
fair deserter. But he kept loyal faith with her,
adhering even to the letter of her instructions, and
only once was goaded into more active mendacity.
The conversation had turned upon “Debs,”
and the consul had remarked on the singularity of the
name. A guest from the north observed, however,
that the name was undoubtedly a contraction.
“Possibly it might have been ‘Debborough,’
or even the same name as our fair friend.”
“But didn’t Miss Desborough
tell you last night that she had been hunting up her
people, with a family tree, or something like that?”
said Lord Algernon eagerly. “I just caught
a word here and there, for you were both laughing.”
The consul smiled blandly. “You
may well say so, for it was all the most delightful
piece of pure invention and utter extravagance.
It would have amused her still more if she had thought
you were listening and took it seriously!”
“Of course; I see!” said
the young fellow, with a laugh and a slight rise of
color. “I knew she was taking some kind
of a rise out of you, and that remark reminded
me of it.”
Nevertheless, within a year, Lord
Algernon was happily married to the daughter of a
South African millionaire, whose bridal offerings alone
touched the sum of half a million. It was also
said that the mother was “impossible”
and the father “unspeakable,” the relations
“inextinguishable;” but the wedding was
an “occasion,” and in the succeeding year
of festivity it is presumed that the names of “Debs”
and “Desborough” were alike forgotten.
But they existed still in a little
hamlet near the edge of a bleak northern moor, where
they were singularly exalted on a soaring shaft of
pure marble above the submerged and moss-grown tombstones
of a simple country churchyard. So great was
the contrast between the modern and pretentious monument
and the graves of the humbler forefathers of the village,
that even the Americans who chanced to visit it were
shocked at what they believed was the ostentatious
and vulgar pride of one of their own countrywomen.
For on its pedestal was inscribed:
Sacred to the
Memory
of
John Debs Desborough,
Formerly of this parish,
Who departed this life October 20th,
1892,
At Scrooby Priory,
At the age of eighty-two years.
This monument was erected as a loving testimony
by his granddaughter,
Sadie Desborough, of New York, U. S.
A.
“And evening
brings us home.”