It was not many weeks after this departure
of Lord Ravenel’s the pain of which
was almost forgotten in the comfort of Guy’s
first long home letter, which came about this time that
John one morning, suddenly dropping his newspaper,
exclaimed:
“Lord Luxmore is dead.”
Yes, he had returned to his dust,
this old bad man; so old, that people had begun to
think he would never die. He was gone; the man
who, if we owned an enemy in the world, had certainly
proved himself that enemy. Something peculiar
is there in a decease like this of one whom,
living, we have almost felt ourselves justified in
condemning, avoiding perhaps hating.
Until Death, stepping in between, removes him to
another tribunal than this petty justice of ours, and
laying a solemn finger on our mouths, forbids us either
to think or utter a word of hatred against that which
is now what? a disembodied spirit a
handful of corrupting clay.
Lord Luxmore was dead. He had
gone to his account; it was not ours to judge him.
We never knew I believe no one except his
son ever fully knew the history of his
death-bed.
John sat in silence, the paper before
him, long after we had passed the news and discussed
it, not without awe, all round the breakfast-table.
Maud stole up hesitatingly,
and asked to see the announcement of the earl’s
decease.
“No, my child; but you shall
hear it read aloud, if you choose.”
I guessed the reason of his refusal;
when, looking over him as he read, I saw, after the
long list of titles owned by the new Earl of Luxmore,
one bitter line; how it must have cut to the heart
of him whom we first heard of as “poor William!”
“Had likewise issue,
Caroline, married in 17 ,
to Richard Brithwood, esquire,
afterwards divorced.”
And by a curious coincidence, about
twenty lines further down I read among the fashionable
marriages:
“At the British
embassy, Paris, sir Gerard Vermilye,
Bart., To the youthful and
beautiful daughter of ”
I forget who. I only saw that
the name was not her name, of whom the “youthful
and beautiful” bride had most likely never heard.
He had not married Lady Caroline.
This morning’s intelligence
brought the Luxmore family so much to our thoughts,
that driving out after breakfast, John and I involuntarily
recurred to the subject. Nay, talking on, in
the solitude of our front seat for Mrs.
Halifax, Miss Halifax, and Mrs. Edwin Halifax, in the
carriage behind, were deep in some other subject we
fell upon a topic which by tacit consent had been
laid aside, as in our household we held it good to
lay aside any inevitable regret.
“Poor Maud! how eager she was
to hear the news to-day. She little thinks how
vitally it might have concerned her.”
“No,” John answered thoughtfully;
then asked me with some abruptness, “Why did
you say ’poor Maud’?”
I really could not tell; it was a
mere accident, the unwitting indication of some crotchets
of mine, which had often come into my mind lately.
Crotchets, perhaps peculiar to one, who, never having
known a certain possession, found himself rather prone
to over-rate its value. But it sometimes struck
me as hard, considering how little honest and sincere
love there is in the world, that Maud should never
have known of Lord Ravenel’s.
Possibly, against my will, my answer
implied something of this; for John was a long time
silent. Then he began to talk of various matters;
telling me of many improvements he was planning and
executing, on his property, and among his people.
In all his plans, and in the carrying out of them,
I noticed one peculiarity, strong in him throughout
his life, but latterly grown stronger than ever namely,
that whatever he found to do, he did immediately.
Procrastination had never been one of his faults;
now, he seemed to have a horror of putting anything
off even for a single hour. Nothing that could
be done did he lay aside until it was done; his business
affairs were kept in perfect order, each day’s
work being completed with the day. And in the
thousand-and-one little things that were constantly
arising, from his position as magistrate and land-owner,
and his general interest in the movements of the time,
the same system was invariably pursued. In his
relations with the world outside, as in his own little
valley, he seemed determined to “work while
it was day.” If he could possibly avoid
it, no application was ever unattended to; no duty
left unfinished; no good unacknowledged; no evil unremedied,
or at least unforgiven.
“John,” I said, as to-day
this peculiarity of his struck me more than usual,
“thou art certainly one of the faithful servants
whom the Master when He cometh will find watching.”
“I hope so. It ought to
be thus with all men but especially with
me.”
I imagined from his tone that he was
thinking of his responsibility as father, master,
owner of large wealth. How could I know how
could I guess beyond this!
“Do you think she looks pale,
Phineas?” he asked suddenly.
“Who your wife?”
“No Maud. My little Maud.”
It was but lately that he called her
“his” little Maud; since with that extreme
tenacity of attachment which was a part of his nature refusing
to put any one love in another love’s place his
second daughter had never been to him like the first.
Now, however, I had noticed that he took Maud nearer
to his heart, made her more often his companion, watching
her with a sedulous tenderness it was easy
to guess why.
“She may have looked a little
paler of late, a little more thoughtful. But
I am sure she is not unhappy.”
“I believe not thank God!”
“Surely,” I said anxiously,
“you have never repented what you did about
Lord Ravenel?”
“No not once.
It cost me so much, that I know it was right to be
done.”
“But if things had been otherwise if
you had not been so sure of Maud’s feelings ”
He started, painfully; then answered “I
think I should have done it still.”
I was silent. The paramount
right, the high prerogative of love, which he held
as strongly as I did, seemed attacked in its liberty
divine. For the moment, it was as if he too had
in his middle-age gone over to the cold-blooded ranks
of harsh parental prudence, despotic paternal rule;
as if Ursula March’s lover and Maud’s father
were two distinct beings. One finds it so, often
enough, with men.
“John,” I said, “could
you have done it? could you have broken the child’s
heart?”
“Yes, if it was to save her
peace, perhaps her soul, I could have broken my child’s
heart.”
He spoke solemnly, with an accent
of inexpressible pain, as if this were not the first
time by many that he had pondered over such a possibility.
“I wish, Phineas, to make clear
to you, in case of of any future misconceptions my
mind on this matter. One right alone I hold
superior to the right of love, duty.
It is a father’s duty, at all risks, at all
costs, to save his child from anything which he believes
would peril her duty so long as she is too
young to understand fully how beyond the claim of
any human being, be it father or lover, is God’s
claim to herself and her immortal soul. Anything
which would endanger that should be cut off though
it be the right hand the right eye.
But, thank God, it was not thus with my little Maud.”
“Nor with him either. He bore his disappointment
well.”
“Nobly. It may make a
true nobleman of him yet. But, being what he
is, and for as long as he remains so, he must not be
trusted with my little Maud. I must take care
of her while I live: afterwards ”
His smile faded, or rather was transmuted
into that grave thoughtfulness which I had lately
noticed in him, when, as now, he fell into one of
his long silences. There was nothing sad about
it; rather a serenity which reminded me of that sweet
look of his boyhood, which had vanished during the
manifold cares of his middle life. The expression
of the mouth, as I saw it in profile close
and calm almost inclined me to go back
to the fanciful follies of our youth, and call him
“David.”
We drove through Norton Bury, and
left Mrs. Edwin there. Then on, along the familiar
road, towards the manor-house; past the white gate,
within sight of little Longfield.
“It looks just the same the
tenant takes good care of it.” And John’s
eyes turned fondly to his old home.
“Ay, just the same. Do
you know your wife was saying to me this morning,
that when Guy comes back, when all the young folk are
married, and you retire from business and settle into
the otium cum dignitate, the learned leisure
you used to plan she would like to give
up Beechwood. She said, she hopes you and she
will end your days together at little Longfield.”
“Did she? Yes, I know that has been always
her dream.”
“Scarcely a dream, or one that
is not unlikely to be fulfilled. I like to fancy
you both two old people, sitting on either side the
fire or on the same side if you like it
best; very cheerful you will make such
a merry old man, John, with all your children round
you, and indefinite grandchildren about the house
continually. Or else you two will sit alone
together, just as in your early married days you
and your old wife the dearest and handsomest
old lady that ever was seen.”
“Phineas don’t don’t.”
I was startled by the tone in which he answered the
lightness of mine. “I mean don’t
be planning out the future. It is foolish it
is almost wrong. God’s will is not as our
will; and He knows best.”
I would have spoken; but just then
we reached the manor-house gate, and plunged at once
into present life, and into the hospitable circle of
the Oldtowers.
They were all in the excitement of
a wonderful piece of gossip; gossip so strange, sudden,
and unprecedented, that it absorbed all lesser matters.
It burst out before we had been in the house five
minutes.
“Have you heard this extraordinary
report about the Luxmore family?”
I could see Maud turn with eager attention fixing
her eyes wistfully on Lady Oldtower.
“About the earl’s death.
Yes, we saw it in the newspaper.” And
John passed on to some other point of conversation.
In vain.
“This news relates to the present
earl. I never heard of such a thing never.
In fact, if true, his conduct is something which in
its self-denial approaches absolute insanity.
Is it possible that, being so great a friend of your
family, he has not informed you of the circumstances?”
These circumstances, with some patience,
we extracted from the voluble Lady Oldtower.
She had learnt them I forget how:
but news never wants a tongue to carry it.
It seemed that on the earl’s
death it was discovered, what had already been long
suspected, that his liabilities, like his extravagances,
were enormous. That he was obliged to live abroad
to escape in some degree the clamorous haunting of
the hundreds he had ruined: poor tradespeople,
who knew that their only chance of payment was during
the old man’s life-time, for his whole property
was entailed on the son.
Whether Lord Ravenel had ever been
acquainted with the state of things, or whether, being
in ignorance of it, his own style of living had in
degree imitated his father’s, rumour did not
say, nor indeed was it of much consequence.
The facts subsequently becoming known immediately
after Lord Luxmore’s death, made all former conjectures
unnecessary.
Not a week before he died, the late
earl and his son chiefly it was believed
on the latter’s instigation had cut
off the entail, thereby making the whole property
saleable, and available for the payment of creditors.
Thus by his own act, and as some one had
told somebody that somebody else had heard Lord Ravenel
say: “for the honour of the family,”
the present earl had succeeded to an empty title, and beggary.
“Or,” Lady Oldtower added,
“what to a man of rank will be the same as beggary a
paltry two hundred a year or so which he
has reserved, they say, just to keep him from destitution.
Ah here comes Mr. Jessop; I thought he
would. He can tell us all about it.”
Old Mr. Jessop was as much excited as any one present.
“Ay it’s all
true only too true, Mr. Halifax. He
was at my house last night.”
“Last night!” I do not
think anybody caught the child’s exclamation
but me; I could not help watching little Maud, noticing
what strong emotion, still perfectly child-like and
unguarded in its demonstration, was shaking her innocent
bosom, and overflowing at her eyes. However,
as she sat still in the corner, nobody observed her.
“Yes, he slept at my house Lord
Ravenel, the Earl of Luxmore, I mean. Much good
will his title do him! My head clerk is better
off than he. He has stripped himself of every
penny, except bless me, I forgot; Mr. Halifax,
he gave me a letter for you.”
John walked to the window to read
it; but having read it, passed it openly round the
circle; as indeed was best.
“My dear friend,
“You will have
heard that my father is no more.”
("He used always to say ‘the earl,’” whispered Maud, as she looked over
my shoulder.)
“I write this merely to say,
what I feel sure you will already have believed that
anything which you may learn concerning his affairs,
I was myself unaware of, except in a very slight degree,
when I last visited Beechwood.
“Will you likewise believe that
in all I have done, or intend doing, your interests
as my tenant which I hope you will remain have
been, and shall be, sedulously guarded?
“My grateful remembrance to all your household.
“Faithfully
yours and theirs,
“Luxmore.”
“Give me back the letter, Maud my child.”
She had been taking possession of
it, as in right of being his “pet” she
generally did of all Lord Ravenel’s letters.
But now, without a word of objection, she surrendered
it to her father.
“What does he mean, Mr. Jessop, about my interests
as his tenant?”
“Bless me I am so
grieved about the matter that everything goes astray
in my head. He wished me to explain to you that
he has reserved one portion of the Luxmore property
intact Enderley Mills. The rent you
pay will, he says, be a sufficient income for him;
and then while your lease lasts no other landlord
can injure you. Very thoughtful of him very
thoughtful indeed, Mr. Halifax.”
John made no answer.
“I never saw a man so altered.
He went over some matters with me private
charities, in which I have been his agent, you know grave,
clear-headed, business-like; my clerk himself could
not have done better. Afterwards we sat and
talked, and I tried foolishly enough, when
the thing was done! to show him what a frantic
act it was both towards himself and his heirs.
But he could not see it. He said cutting off
the entail would harm nobody for that he
did not intend ever to marry. Poor fellow!”
“Is he with you still?” John asked in
a low tone.
“No; he left this morning for
Paris; his father is to be buried there. Afterwards,
he said, his movements were quite uncertain.
He bade me good-bye I I didn’t
like it, I can assure you.”
And the old man, blowing his nose
with his yellow pocket-handkerchief, and twitching
his features into all manner of shapes, seemed determined
to put aside the melancholy subject, and dilated on
the earl and his affairs no more.
Nor did any one. Something in
this young nobleman’s noble act it
has since been not without a parallel among our aristocracy silenced
the tongue of gossip itself. The deed was so
new so unlike anything that had been conceived
possible, especially in a man like Lord Ravenel, who
had always borne the character of a harmless, idle
misanthropic nonentity that society was
really nonplussed concerning it. Of the many
loquacious visitors who came that morning to pour upon
Lady Oldtower all the curiosity of Coltham fashionable
Coltham, famous for all the scandal of haut ton there
was none who did not speak of Lord Luxmore and his
affairs with an uncomfortable, wondering awe.
Some suggested he was going mad others,
raking up stories current of his early youth, thought
he had turned Catholic again, and was about to enter
a monastery. One or two honest hearts protested
that he was a noble fellow, and it was a pity he had
determined to be the last of the Luxmores.
For ourselves Mr. and Mrs.
Halifax, Maud and I we never spoke to one
another on the subject all the morning. Not until
after luncheon, when John and I had somehow stolen
out of the way of the visitors, and were walking to
and fro in the garden. The sunny fruit garden ancient,
Dutch, and square with its barricade of
a high hedge, a stone wall, and between it and the
house a shining fence of great laurel trees.
Maud appeared suddenly before us from
among these laurels, breathless.
“I got away after you, father.
I I wanted to find some strawberries and I
wanted to speak to you.”
“Speak on, little lady.”
He linked her arm in his, and she
paced between us up and down the broad walk but
without diverging to the strawberry-beds. She
was grave, and paler than ordinary. Her father
asked if she were tired?
“No, but my head aches.
Those Coltham people do talk so. Father, I
want you to explain to me, for I can’t well understand
all this that they have been saying about Lord Ravenel.”
John explained, as simply and briefly as he could.
“I understand. Then, though
he is Earl of Luxmore, he is quite poor poorer
than any of us? And he has made himself poor
in order to pay his own and his father’s debts,
and keep other people from suffering from any fault
of his? Is it so?”
“Yes, my child.”
“Is it not a very noble act, father?”
“Very noble.”
“I think it is the noblest act
I ever heard of. I should like to tell him so.
When is he coming to Beechwood?”
Maud spoke quickly, with flushed cheeks,
in the impetuous manner she inherited from her mother.
Her question not being immediately answered, she
repeated it still more eagerly.
Her father replied “I do not know.”
“How very strange! I thought
he would come at once to-night, probably.”
I reminded her that Lord Ravenel had
left for Paris, bidding goodbye to Mr. Jessop.
“He ought to have come to us
instead of to Mr. Jessop. Write and tell him
so, father. Tell him how glad we shall be to
see him. And perhaps you can help him:
you who help everybody. He always said you were
his best friend.”
“Did he?”
“Ah now, do write, father dear I
am sure you will.”
John looked down on the little maid
who hung on his arm so persuasively, then looked sorrowfully
away.
“My child I cannot.”
“What, not write to him?
When he is poor and in trouble? That is not
like you, father,” and Maud half-loosed her arm.
Her father quietly put the little
rebellious hand back again to its place. He
was evidently debating within himself whether he should
tell her the whole truth, or how much of it.
Not that the debate was new, for he must already
have foreseen this possible, nay, certain, conjuncture.
Especially as all his dealings with his family had
hitherto been open as daylight. He held that
to prevaricate, or wilfully to give the impression
of a falsehood, is almost as mean as a direct lie.
When anything occurred that he could not tell his
children, he always said plainly, “I cannot tell
you,” and they asked no more.
I wondered exceedingly how he would deal with Maud.
She walked with him, submissive yet
not satisfied, glancing at him from time to time,
waiting for him to speak. At last she could wait
no longer.
“I am sure there is something
wrong. You do not care for Lord Ravenel as much
as you used to do.”
“More, if possible.”
“Then write to him. Say,
we want to see him I want to see him.
Ask him to come and stay a long while at Beechwood.”
“I cannot, Maud. It would
be impossible for him to come. I do not think
he is likely to visit Beechwood for some time.”
“How long? Six months? A year, perhaps?”
“It may be several years.”
“Then, I was right. Something
has happened; you are not friends with him any
longer. And he is poor in trouble oh,
father!”
She snatched her hand away, and flashed
upon him reproachful eyes. John took her gently
by the arm, and made her sit down upon the wall of
a little stone bridge, under which the moat slipped
with a quiet murmur. Maud’s tears dropped
into it fast and free.
That very outburst, brief and thundery
as a child’s passion, gave consolation both
to her father and me. When it lessened, John
spoke.
“Now has my little Maud ceased
to be angry with her father?”
“I did not mean to be angry only
I was so startled so grieved. Tell
me what has happened, please, father?”
“I will tell you so
far as I can. Lord Ravenel and myself had some
conversation, of a very painful kind, the last night
he was with us. After it, we both considered
it advisable he should not visit us again for the
present.”
“Why not? Had you quarrelled?
or if you had, I thought my father was always the
first to forgive everybody.”
“No, Maud, we had not quarrelled.”
“Then, what was it?”
“My child, you must not ask, for indeed I cannot
tell you.”
Maud sprang up the rebellious
spirit flashing out again. “Not tell me me,
his pet me, that cared for him more than
any of you did. I think you ought to tell me,
father.”
“You must allow me to decide that, if you please.”
After this answer Maud paused, and
said humbly, “Does any one else know?”
“Your mother, and your uncle
Phineas, who happened to be present at the time.
No one else: and no one else shall know.”
John spoke with that slight quivering
and blueness of the lips which any mental excitement
usually produced in him. He sat down by his
daughter’s side and took her hand.
“I knew this would grieve you,
and I kept it from you as long as I could. Now
you must only be patient, and like a good child trust
your father.”
Something in his manner quieted her.
She only sighed and said, “she could not understand
it.”
“Neither can I often
times, my poor little Maud. There are so many
sad things in life that we have to take upon trust,
and bear, and be patient with yet never
understand. I suppose we shall some day.”
His eyes wandered upward to the wide-arched
blue sky, which in its calm beauty makes us fancy
that Paradise is there, even though we know that “The
kingdom of heaven is within
us,” and that the kingdom of spirits may
be around us and about us everywhere.
Maud looked at her father, and crept
closer to him into his arms.
“I did not mean to be naughty.
I will try not to mind losing him. But I liked
Lord Ravenel so much and he was so fond
of me.”
“Child” and
her father himself could not help smiling at the simplicity
of her speech “it is often easiest
to lose those we are fond of and who are fond of us,
because, in one sense, we never can really lose them.
Nothing in this world, nor, I believe, in any other,
can part those who truly and faithfully love.”
I think he was hardly aware how much
he was implying, at least not in its relation to her,
else he would not have said it. And he would
surely have noticed, as I did, that the word “love,”
which had not been mentioned before it
was “liking,” “fond of,” “care
for,” or some such round-about, childish phrase the
word “love” made Maud start. She
darted from one to the other of us a keen glance of
inquiry, and then turned the colour of a July rose.
Her attitude, her blushes, the shy
tremble about her mouth, reminded me vividly, too
vividly, of her mother twenty-eight years ago.
Alarmed, I tried to hasten the end
of our conversation, lest, voluntarily or involuntarily,
it might produce the very results which, though they
might not have altered John’s determination,
would almost have broken his heart.
So, begging her to “kiss and
make friends,” which Maud did, timidly, and
without attempting further questions, I hurried the
father and daughter into the house; deferring for
mature consideration, the question whether or not
I should trouble John with any too-anxious doubts
of mine concerning her.
As we drove back through Norton Bury,
I saw that while her mother and Lady Oldtower conversed,
Maud sat opposite rather more silent than her wont;
but when the ladies dismounted for shopping, she was
again the lively independent Miss Halifax,
“Standing
with reluctant feet,
Where womanhood
and childhood meet;”
and assuming at once the prerogatives
and immunities of both.
Her girlish ladyship at last got tired
of silks and ribbons, and stood with me at the shop-door,
amusing herself with commenting on the passers-by.
These were not so plentiful as I once
remembered, though still the old town wore its old
face appearing fairer than ever, as I myself
grew older. The same Coltham coach stopped at
the Lamb Inn, and the same group of idle loungers
took an interest in its disemboguing of its contents.
But railways had done an ill turn to the coach and
to poor Norton Bury: where there used to be
six inside passengers, to-day was turned out only
one.
“What a queer-looking little
woman! Uncle Phineas, people shouldn’t
dress so fine as that when they are old.”
Maud’s criticism was scarcely
unjust. The light-coloured flimsy gown, shorter
than even Coltham fashionables would have esteemed
decent, the fluttering bonnet, the abundance of flaunting
curls no wonder that the stranger attracted
considerable notice in quiet Norton Bury. As
she tripped mincingly along, in her silk stockings
and light shoes, a smothered jeer arose.
“People should not laugh at
an old woman, however conceited she may be,”
said Maud, indignantly.
“Is she old?”
“Just look.”
And surely when, as she turned from
side to side, I caught her full face what
a face it was! withered, thin, sallow almost to deathliness,
with a bright rouge-spot on each cheek, a broad smile
on the ghastly mouth.
“Is she crazy, Uncle Phineas?”
“Possibly. Do not look
at her.” For I was sure this must be the
wreck of such a life as womanhood does sometimes sink
to a life, the mere knowledge of which
had never yet entered our Maud’s pure world.
She seemed surprised, but obeyed me
and went in. I stood at the shop-door, watching
the increasing crowd, and pitying, with that pity
mixed with shame that every honest man must feel towards
a degraded woman, the wretched object of their jeers.
Half-frightened, she still kept up that set smile,
skipping daintily from side to side of the pavement,
darting at and peering into every carriage that passed.
Miserable creature as she looked, there was a certain
grace and ease in her movements, as if she had fallen
from some far higher estate.
At that moment, the Mythe carriage,
with Mr. Brithwood in it, dozing his daily drive away,
his gouty foot propped up before him slowly
lumbered up the street. The woman made a dart
at it, but was held back.
“Canaille! I always
hated your Norton Bury! Call my carriage.
I will go home.”
Through its coarse discordance, its
insane rage, I thought I knew the voice. Especially
when, assuming a tone of command, she addressed the
old coachman:
“Draw up, Peter; you are very
late. People, give way! Don’t you
see my carriage?”
There was a roar of laughter, so loud
that even Mr. Brithwood opened his dull, drunken eyes
and stared about him.
“Canaille!” the
scream was more of terror than anger, as she almost
flung herself under the horses’ heads in her
eagerness to escape from the mob. “Let
me go! My carriage is waiting. I am Lady
Caroline Brithwood!”
The ’squire heard her.
For a single instant they gazed at one another besotted
husband, dishonoured, divorced wife gazed
with horror and fear, as two sinners who had been
each other’s undoing, might meet in the poetic
torments of Dante’s “Inferno,” or
the tangible fire and brimstone of many a blind but
honest Christian’s hell. One single instant, and
then Richard Brithwood made up his mind.
“Coachman, drive on!”
But the man he was an old
man seemed to hesitate at urging his horses
right over “my lady.” He even looked
down on her with a sort of compassion I
remembered having heard say that she was always kind
and affable to her servants.
“Drive on, you fool! Here” and
Mr. Brithwood threw some coin amongst the mob “Fetch
the constable some of you; take the woman
to the watch-house!”
And the carriage rolled on, leaving
her there, crouched on the kerbstone, gazing after
it with something between a laugh and a moan.
Nobody touched her. Perhaps
some had heard of her; a few might even have seen
her driving through Norton Bury in her pristine
state, as the young ’squire’s handsome
wife the charming Lady Caroline.
I was so absorbed in the sickening
sight, that I did not perceive how John and Ursula,
standing behind me, had seen it likewise evidently
seen and understood it all.
“What is to be done?” she whispered to
him.
“What ought we to do?”
Here Maud came running out to see what was amiss in
the street.
“Go in, child,” said Mrs. Halifax, sharply.
“Stay till I fetch you.”
Lady Oldtower also advanced to the
door; but catching some notion of what the disturbance
was, shocked and scandalised, retired into the shop
again.
John looked earnestly at his wife,
but for once she did not or would not understand his
meaning; she drew back uneasily.
“What must be done? I mean, what
do you want me to do?”
“What only a woman can do a woman
like you, and in your position.”
“Yes, if it were only myself.
But think of the household think of Maud.
People will talk so. It is hard to know how
to act.”
“Nay; how did One act how
would He act now, if He stood in the street this day?
If we take care of aught of His, will He not take
care of us and of our children?”
Mrs. Halifax paused, thought a moment,
hesitated yielded.
“John, you are right; you are
always right. I will do anything you please.”
And then I saw, through the astonished
crowd, in face of scores of window-gazers, all of
whom knew them, and a great number of whom they also
knew, Mr. Halifax and his wife walk up to where the
miserable woman lay.
John touched her lightly on the shoulder she
screamed and cowered down.
“Are you the constable?
He said he would send the constable.”
“Hush do not be afraid. Cousin Cousin
Caroline.”
God knows how long it was since any
woman had spoken to her in that tone. It seemed
to startle back her shattered wits. She rose
to her feet, smiling airily.
“Madam, you are very kind.
I believe I have had the pleasure of seeing you somewhere.
Your name is ”
“Ursula Halifax. Do you
remember?” speaking gently as she
would have done to a child.
Lady Caroline bowed a ghastly
mockery of her former sprightly grace. “Not
exactly; but I dare say I shall presently au
revoir, madame!”
She was going away, kissing her hand that
yellow, wrinkled, old woman’s hand, but
John stopped her.
“My wife wants to speak to you,
Lady Caroline. She wishes you to come home with
us.”
“Plait il? oh
yes; I understand. I shall be happy most
happy.”
John offered her his arm with an air
of grave deference; Mrs. Halifax supported her on
the other side. Without more ado, they put her
in the carriage and drove home, leaving Maud in my
charge, and leaving astounded Norton Bury to think
and say exactly what it pleased.