The Reverend Hugh Woodgate, Vicar
of Marley-in-Delverton-a benefice for generations
in the gift of the Dukes of Normanthorpe, but latterly
in that of one John Buchanan Steel-was
writing his sermon on a Friday afternoon just six
months after the foregoing events. The month was
therefore May, and, at either end of the long, low
room in which Mr. Woodgate sat at work, the windows
were filled with a flutter of summer curtains against
a brilliant background of waving greenery. But
a fire burned in one of the two fireplaces in the
old-fashioned funnel of a room, for a treacherous
east wind skimmed the sunlit earth outside, and whistled
and sang through one window as the birds did through
the other.
Mr. Woodgate was a tall, broad-shouldered,
mild-eyed man, with a blot of whisker under each ear,
and the cleanest of clerical collars encompassing
his throat. It was a kindly face that pored over
the unpretentious periods, as they grew by degrees
upon the blue-lined paper, in the peculiar but not
uncommon hand which is the hall-mark of a certain
sort of education upon a certain order of mind.
The present specimen was perhaps more methodical than
most; therein it was characteristic of the man.
From May to September, Mr. Woodgate never failed to
finish his sermon on the Friday, that on the Saturday
he might be free to play cricket with his men and
lads. He was a poor preacher and no cricketer
at all; but in both branches he did his best, with
the simple zeal and the unconscious sincerity which
redeemed not a few of his deficiencies.
So intent was the vicar upon his task,
so engrossed in the expression of that which had already
been expressed many a million times, that he did not
hear wheels in his drive, on the side where the wind
sang loudest; he heard nothing until the door opened,
and a girl in her twenties, trim, slim, and brown
with health, came hurriedly in.
“I’m sorry to disturb
you, dear, but who do you think is here?”
Hugh Woodgate turned round in his
chair, and his honest ox-eyes filled with open admiration
of the wife who was so many years younger than himself,
and who had seen in him Heaven knew what! He never
could look at her without that look first; and only
now, after some years of marriage, was he beginning
sometimes to do so without this thought next.
But he had not the gift of expression, even in the
perpetual matter of his devotion; and perhaps its
perpetuity owed something to that very want; at least
there was none of the verbal evaporation which comes
of too much lovers’ talk.
“Who is it?” he asked.
“Mrs. Venables!”
Woodgate groaned. Was he obliged
to appear? His jaw fell, and his wife’s
eyes sparkled.
“Dear, I wouldn’t even
have let you know she was here-you shouldn’t
have been interrupted for a single instant-if
Mrs. Venables wasn’t clamoring to see you.
And really I begin to clamor too; for she is full
of some mysterious news, which she won’t tell
me till you are there to hear it also. Be an
angel, for five minutes!”
Woodgate wiped his pen in his deliberate way.
“Probably one of the girls is
engaged,” said he; “if so I hope it’s
Sybil.”
“No, Sybil is here too; she
doesn’t look a bit engaged, but rather bored,
as though she had heard the story several times already,
whatever it may be. They have certainly paid
several calls. Now you look quite nice, so in
you come.”
Mrs. Venables, a stout but comely
lady, with a bright brown eye, and a face full of
character and ability, opened fire upon the vicar as
soon as they had shaken hands, while her daughter
looked wistfully at the nearest books.
“He is married!” cried
Mrs. Venables, beginning in the middle like a modern
novelist.
“Indeed?” returned the
matter-of-fact clergyman, with equal directness-“and
who is he?”
“Your neighbor and your patron-Mr.
Steel!”
“Married?” repeated Mrs.
Woodgate, with tremendous emphasis. “Mr.
Steel?”
“This is news!” declared
her husband, as though he had expected none worthy
of the name. And they both demanded further particulars,
at which Mrs. Venables shook her expensive bonnet
with great relish.
“Do you know Mr. Steel so well-so
much better than we do-and can you ask
for particulars about anything he ever does? His
marriage,” continued Mrs. Venables, “like
everything else about him, is ’wrop in mystery,’
as one of those vulgar creatures says in Dickens, but
I really forget which. It was never announced
in the Times; for that I can vouch myself.
Was ever anything more like him, or less like anybody
else? To disappear for six months, and then turn
up with a wife!”
“But has he turned up?”
cried the vicar’s young wife, forgetting for
a moment a certain preoccupation caused by the arrival
of the tea-tray, and by a rapid resignation to the
thickness of the bread and butter and the distressing
absence of such hot things as would have been in readiness
if Mrs. Venables had been expected for a single moment.
It showed the youth of Morna Woodgate that she should
harbor a wish to compete with the wealthiest woman
in the neighborhood, even in the matter of afternoon
tea, and her breeding that no such thought was legible
in her clear-cut open-air face.
“I have heard nothing about
it,” said the vicar, in a tone indicative of
much honest doubt in the matter.
“Nor is it the case, to my knowledge,”
rejoined Mrs. Venables; “but from all we hear
it may become the case any moment. They were married
in Italy last autumn-so he says-and
are on their way home at this minute.”
“If he says so,” observed
the vicar, with mild humor, “it is probably
true. He ought to know.”
“And who was she?” his
young wife asked with immense interest, the cups having
gone round, and the bread and butter been accepted
in spite of its proportions.
“My dear Mrs. Woodgate,”
said Mrs. Venables, cordially, “you may well
ask! Who was she, indeed! It was the first
question I asked my own informant, who, by the way,
was your friend, Mr. Langholm; but he knew no more
than the man in the moon.”
“And who told Mr. Langholm,
of all people?” pursued Morna Woodgate.
“It is not often that we get news of the real
world from him!”
“Birds of a feather,”
remarked her caller: “it was Mr. Steel himself
who wrote to your other eccentric friend, and told
him neither more nor less than I have told you.
He was married in Italy last autumn; not even the
town-not even the month-let alone
the lady’s name-if, indeed-”
And Mrs. Venables concluded with a
sufficiently eloquent hiatus.
“I imagine she is a lady,” said the vicar
to his tea.
“You are so charitable, dear Mr. Woodgate!”
“I hope I am,” he said
simply. “In this case I see no reason to
be anything else.”
“What-when you know really nothing
about Mr. Steel himself?”
And the bright brown eyes of Mrs.
Venables grew smaller and harder as they pinned Hugh
Woodgate to his chair.
“I beg your pardon,” said
that downright person; “I know a great deal
about Mr. Steel. He has done an immense amount
for the parish; there are our new schoolrooms to speak
for themselves. There are very few who would
do the half of what Mr. Steel has done for us during
the short time he has been at Normanthorpe.”
“That may be,” said the
lady, with the ample smile of conscious condescension;
“for he has certainly not omitted to let his
light shine before men. But that is not telling
us who or what he was before he came here, or how
he made his money.”
Then Hugh Woodgate gave the half boyish,
half bashful laugh with which he was wont to preface
his most candid sayings.
“And I don’t think it’s any business
of ours,” he said.
Morna went a trifle browner than she
naturally was; her husband said so little that what
he did say was often almost painfully to the point;
and now Mrs. Venables had turned from him to her,
with a smile which the young wife disliked, for it
called attention to the vicar’s discourtesy
while it appealed to herself for prettier manners and
better sense. It was a moment requiring some
little tact, but Mrs. Woodgate was just equal to it.
“Hugh, how rude of you!”
she exclaimed, with only the suspicion of a smile.
“You forget that it’s your duty to be friendly
with everybody; there’s no such obligation on
anybody else.”
“I should be friendly with Mr.
Steel,” said Hugh, “duty or no duty, after
what he has done for the parish.”
And his pleasant honest face and smile
did away with the necessity for a set apology.
“I must say,” added his
wife to her visitor, “that it’s the same
with me, you know.”
There was a pause.
“Then you intend to call upon
her?” said Mrs. Venables, coming with directness
to an obviously premeditated point.
“I do-I must-it
is so different with us,” said the vicar’s
young wife, with her pretty brown blush.
“Certainly,” added the
vicar himself, with dogmatic emphasis.
Mrs. Venables did not look at him,
but she looked the harder at Morna instead.
“Well,” said she, “I
suppose you are right. In your position-yes-your
position is quite different!” And the sudden,
half accidental turn of her sentence put Mrs. Venables
on good terms with herself once more; and so she rose
all smiles and velvet. “No, not even half
a cup; but it was really quite delicious; and I hope
you’ll come and see me soon, and tell me all
about her. At his age!” she whispered as
she went. “At sixty-five-if
he’s a day!”
A stranger would have imagined that
this lady had quite decided not to call upon the newcomer
herself; even Mrs. Woodgate was uncertain of her neighbor’s
intention as the latter’s wheels ground the Vicarage
drive once more, and she and her husband were left
alone.
“It will depend upon the county,”
said she; “and Mrs. Venables is not the county
pure and simple, she’s half Northborough still,
and she’ll take her cue from the Invernesses
and the Uniackes. But I do believe she’s
been round the whole country-side, getting people to
say they won’t call; as if it mattered to a
man like Mr. Steel, or any woman he is likely to have
chosen. Still, it is mysterious, isn’t it?
But what business of ours, as you say? Only,
dear, you needn’t have said it quite so pointedly.
Of course I’ll call as soon as I can in decency;
she may let me be of use to her. Oh, bother Mrs.
Venables! If she doesn’t call, no doubt
many others won’t; you must remember that he
has never entertained as yet. Oh, what a dance
they could give! And did you hear what she said
about his age? He is sixty-five, now!”
The vicar laughed. It was his
habit to let his young wife rattle on when they were
alone, and even lay down the law for him to her heart’s
content; but, though fifteen years her senior, and
never a vivacious man himself, there was much in their
life that he saw in the same light as she did, though
never quite so soon.
“Sixty-five!” he suddenly
repeated, with a fresh chuckle; “and last year,
when Sybil was thought to be in the running-poor
Sybil, how well she took it!-last year
her mother told me she knew for a fact he was not
a day more than five-and-forty! Poor Steel, too!
He has done for them both in that quarter, I am afraid.
And now,” added Hugh, in his matter-of-fact
way, as though they had been discussing theology all
this time, “I must go back to my sermon if I
am to get it done to-night.”