If you be built on a grand scale,
there’s always people to feel the greatness,
and though, when you hap to be a knave, their respect
is a bit one-sided, still there it is: greatness
will be granted.
In the case of John Warner, he weren’t
a knave, but his greatness, so to call it, took the
form of such a complete and wondrous selfishness that
you was bound to own a touch of genius in the masterful
way he bent all things to his purpose and came out
top over his neighbours. The man was an only
son, and what might have been chastened in his youth
was fostered by a silly mother, who fell in love with
his fine appearance and never denied him a pleasure
she could grant. And his father weren’t
no wiser, so when, at five-and-twenty, he found himself
an orphan and Wych Elm Farm his own, lock, stock,
and barrel, young John Warner come to his kingdom with
a steadfast determination to get the best he could
for himself out of life and make it run to his own
pattern so far as unsleeping wit of man could do.
He married a pretty woman with a bit
of money and he altered a good few of his father’s
ways and used Jane Slowcombe’s dowry to buy up
a hundred acres alongside his own. The land had
been neglected and wanted patience and cash; but where
his lasting interests were concerned, John never lacked
for one, nor stinted the other. He was a clever
man and a charming man, and his cleverness and his
charm appeared in many ways. Over the steel hand
of sleepless selfishness John drew the velvet glove
of good manners and nice speech. He created the
false idea that he never wanted to do more than give
and take in the properest spirit you could wish.
He spoke the comfortablest words ever a farmer did
speak to his fellow-creatures, and many a man was
lost afore he knew it when doing business with John
Warner, and never realised, till it came to the turn,
how a bargain which sounded so well had somehow gone
against him after all.
Of course, John prospered exceeding,
for amongst his other gifts, he weren’t afraid
of work. He knew his business very well indeed,
and always understood that it was worth his while
to take pains with a beginner and paid him in the
long run so to do. People felt a good bit interested
in him, and though they knew there was a lot to hate
in the man, yet they couldn’t give a name to
it exactly. When a fallen foe was furious and
bearded John and shook a fist in his face, as sometimes
happened, he’d look the picture of sorrow and
amazement and express his undying regrets. But
he never went back on nothing, and near though he might
sail to the wind, none ever had a handle by which
to drag him before the Law. ’Twas just
the very genius of selfishness that sped him on his
way victorious every time.
He never took no hand in public affairs,
nor offered for the Borough Council, nor nothing like
that. He might have been a useful man in Little
Silver, where we didn’t boast more brains than
we needed, nor yet enough; but John Warner said he
weren’t one of the clever ones and felt very
satisfied with them that were, and applauded such men
as did a bit of work for nothing out of their public
spirit. For praise, though cheap, is always welcome,
and he had a great art to be generous with what cost
him nothing.
He’d pay a man a thought above
his market value if he judged him worth it, and he
often said that on a farm like Wych Elm, where everything
was carried out on the highest grade of farming, ’twas
money in any young man’s pocket to come to him
at all. And nobody could deny that either.
And he never meddled in his neighbour’s affairs,
or offered advice, or unfavourably criticised anything
that happened outside his own boundaries.
One daughter only John Warner had,
and that was all his family, and her mother struck
the first stroke against his happiness and content,
for she died and left him a widower at five-and-forty.
She fell in a consumption, much to his regret, after
they’d been wedded fifteen years; and their girl
was called Jane after her, and ’twas noted that
though sprung of such handsome parents, Jane didn’t
favour either but promised to be a very homely woman a
promise she fulfilled.
Her father trained her most industrious
to be his right hand, and she grew up with a lively
admiration for him and his opinions. Farming interested
her a lot, and men mildly interested her; but among
the hopeful young blades with an eye on the future
who offered to keep company and so on, there was none
Jane saw who promised to be a patch on her parent,
and after his worldly wisdom and grasp of life and
shrewd sense, she found the boys of her own age no
better than birds in a hedge. Indeed she had no
use for any among ’em, but made John Warner
her god, as he meant she should do; for, as she waxed
in strength and wits, he felt her a strong right hand.
In fact, he took no small pains to identify her with
himself for his own convenience, and secretly determined
she shouldn’t wed if he could help it.
Little by little he poisoned her mind against matrimony,
praised the independent women and showed how such
were better off every way, with no husband and family
to fret their lives and spoil their freedom.
Jane was one, or two-and-twenty by
now a pale, small-eyed maiden with a fine,
strong body and a great appetite for manual work.
There was no taint from her mother in her and she
lived out of doors for choice and loved a hard job.
She’d pile the dry-built, granite walls with
any man, and do so much as him in a day; and folk,
looking on her, foretold that she’d be rich
beyond dreams, but never know how to get a pennyworth
of pleasure out of all her money.
But Jane’s one and only idol
was her father, and for him she would have done anything
in her power. She counted on him being good to
live for ever, along of his cautious habits, and she’d
give over all thought of any change in the home when
the crash came and the even ripple of their lives
was broke for her by a very unexpected happening.
Because, much to his own astonishment,
John Warner found his mind dwelling on a wife once
more the last thing as ever he expected
to happen to him. Indeed the discovery flustered
the man not a little, and he set himself to consider
such an upheaval most careful and weigh it, as he weighed
everything, in the scales of his own future comfort
and success. He was a calculating man in all
things, and yet it came over him gradual and sure
that Mrs. Bascombe had got something to her which made
a most forcible appeal and awakened fires he thought
were gone out for ever when his wife died. As
for Nelly Bascombe, she was a widow and kept a shop-of-all-sorts
in Little Silver and did well thereat, and Bascombe
had been dead two years when his discovery dropped
like a bolt out of a clear sky on John Warner.
It vexed him a bit at first and he
put it away, after considering what an upstore a second
wife would make in the snug and well-ordered scheme
of his existence; but there it was and Nelly wouldn’t
be put away. So John examined the facts and came
to the interesting conclusion that, in a manner of
speaking, his own daughter was responsible for his
fix. Because, being such a wintry fashion of
female, she made all others of the sex shine by contrast,
and her father guessed it was just her manly, hard,
bustling way that showed up the feminine softness and
charming voice and general appealing qualities of
Nelly Bascombe.
Nelly was a tall, fine woman of forty
years old. Her hair was thick and dark, her eyes
a wondrous big pair and so grey as the mist, and her
voice to poor Jane’s was like a blackbird against
a guinea-fowl. Farmer, he dropped in the shop
pretty often to pass the time of day and measure her
up; and for her part being a man-loving sort of woman,
who had lost a good husband, but didn’t see
no very stark cause why she shouldn’t find another,
she discovered after a bit what was lurking in the
farmer’s mind. Then, like the rest of the
parish, she wondered, for ’twas never thought
that such an own-self man as Warner, and one so well
suited by his daughter, would spoil his peace with
another wife.
But nobody’s cleverer to hide
his nature than a lover, and Warner found himself
burrowing into Nelly’s life a bit and sizing
up her character, though full of caution not to commit
himself; and she was very near as clever as him, and
got to weigh up his points, good and bad, and to feel
along with such a man that life might be pleasant enough
for a nature like hers. For she was a good manager
with a saving disposition. She liked John’s
handsome appearance and reckoned the fifteen year between
’em would work to suit her. And, more than
that, she hated her business, because a shop-of-all-sorts
have got a smell to it like nothing else on earth,
and Nelly found it cast her spirits down a bit as
it always had done. She made no secret of this,
and John Warner presently got to see she was friendly
disposed towards him and might easily be had for the
asking if he asked right. He took his time, however,
and sounded Jane, where he well knew the pinch would
come.
He gleaned her opinion casual on the
subject of a woman here and there, and he found Jane
thought well enough of Mrs. Bascombe, whose shop was
useful and her prices well within reason. But
it was a long time before he made up his mind, the
problem being whether to tell Jane of the thing he
was minded to do before he done it, or take the step
first and break it to her after. In the end he
reckoned it safer to do the deed and announce it as
an accomplished fact; because he very well knew that
she would take it a good bit to heart and hate with
all her might any other female reigning at Wych Elm
but herself.
And meanwhile, all unknown to farmer,
Jane chanced to be having a bit of very mild amusement
with a male on her own account.
Martin Ball was known as ‘the
busy man of Little Silver,’ and none but had
a good word for him. He was a yellow-whiskered,
stout, red-faced and blue-eyed chap with enough energy
to drive a steamship. The folk marvelled how
he found time for all he undertook. He was Portreeve
of the district an ancient title without
much to it nowadays and he was huckster
to a dozen farms for Okehampton Market. He also
kept bees and coneys and ran a market-garden of two
acres. He served on the Parish Council and he
was vicar’s warden. And numberless other
small chores with money to ’em he also undertook
and performed most successful. And then, at forty-two
years of age, though not before, he began to feel a
wife might be worked into his life with advantage,
and only regretted the needful time to find and court
the woman.
And even so, but for the temper of
his old aunt, Mary Ball, who kept house for him, he
would have been content to carry on single-handed.
He knew the Warners very well and
Jane had always made a great impression on him by
reason of her fearless ways and great powers and passionate
love of work; and though he came to see very soon
that work was her only passion, beyond her devoted
attachment to her father, yet he couldn’t but
mark that such a woman would be worth a gold-mine to
any man who weren’t disposed to put womanly
qualities first. Of love he knew less than one
of his working bees, but maybe had a dim vision at
the back of his mind about it, which showed him clear
enough that with Jane Warner, love-making could never
amount to much. He measured the one against t’other,
however, and felt upon the whole that such a woman
would be a tower of strength if she could only be
got away from her parent.
And so he showed her how he was a
good bit interested, and had speech with her, off
and on, and made it pretty clear in his scant leisure
that she could come to him if she was minded.
It pleased her a good bit to find such a remarkable
man as Ball had found time to think upon her, and she
also liked his opinions and his valiant hunger for
hard work. She’d even let herself think
of him for five minutes sometimes before she went to
sleep of a night, and what there was of woman in her
felt a mild satisfaction to know there lived a man
on earth she’d got the power to interest.
Marriage was far outside her scheme, of course; but
there’s a lot that wouldn’t marry for
a fortune, yet feel a good bit uplifted to know they
might do so and that a male exists who thinks ’em
worth while.
So Jane praised Martin Ball and let
him see, as far as her nature allowed, that she thought
well of him and his opinions and manner of life; and
he began to believe he might get her.
He touched it very light indeed to
John Warner one day when they met coming home on horse-back,
and then he found himself up against a rock, for when
he hinted that Warner would be losing his wonderful
daughter some time, the farmer told him that was the
very last thing on earth could ever happen.
“Never,” said John Warner.
“The likes of her be her father’s child
to her boots. I’m her life, Ball, and there’s
no thought of marriage in her, nor never will be so
long as I’m above-ground. She ain’t
that sort anyhow, and I’m glad of it.”
He wanted it both ways, you see.
In his grand powers of selfishness, John had planned
to have Nelly for wife by now, and he’d also
planned to keep his daughter, well knowing that no
wife would do a quarter of what Jane did, or be so
valuable on a business basis. Jane for business
and Nelly Bascombe for pleasure was his idea.
And then John offered for Mrs. Bascombe,
after making it clear to her that he was going to
do so and finding the running good. He put it
in his masterly language and said that he’d
be her willing slave, and hinted how, when he was
gathered home, the farm would be her own for life and
so on; and while knowing very well that John weren’t
going to be her slave or nothing like that, Mrs. Bascombe
reckoned the adventure about worth while, having took
a fancy to him and longing most furious to escape the
shop-of-all-sorts. And so she said “Yes,”
though hiding a doubt all the time, and Warner, who
hated to have any trouble hanging over him, swore he
was a blessed and a fortunate man, kissed her on the
lips, and went home instanter to tell Jane the news.
He broke it when supper was done and they sat alone her
darning and him mixing his ‘nightcap,’
which was a drop of Hollands, a lump of sugar and
a squeeze of lemon in hot water.
“I’ve got glad news for
you, Jane,” he said. “Long I’ve
felt ’twas a cheerless life for you without
another woman to share your days on a footing of affection
and friendship and more for your sake than
my own I’ve ordained to wed again.
Not till I heard you praise her did I allow my thoughts
to dwell on Mrs. Bascombe, but getting better acquaint,
I found her all you said, and more. A woman of
very fine character so fearless and just
such a touzer for work as yourself, and, in a word,
seeing that you did ought to have a fellow-woman to
share your labours and lighten your load, I approached
her and she’s took me. And I thank God for
it, because you and her will be my right and left hand
henceforward; and the three of us be like to pull
amazing well together. ’Tis a great advancement
for Wych Elm in my judgment, and I will that the advantage
shall be first of all for you.”
She heard him out with her little
eyes on his face and her darning dropped and her jaw
dropped also, as if she’d been struck dead.
But he expected something like that, because he very
well knew Jane would hate the news and make a rare
upstore about it. He was all for a short battle
and very wishful to go to bed the conqueror.
But he did not. Jane hadn’t got his mellow
flow of words, nor yet his charming touches when he
wanted his way over a job; but she shared a good bit
of his brain-power and she grasped at this fatal moment,
with the future sagging under her feet, that she’d
never be able to put up no fight nor hold her own that
night. In fact, she knew, as we all do, that
you can’t do yourself justice after you’ve
been knocked all ends up by a thunderbolt. But
she kept her nerve and her wits and looked at him
and shut her mouth and put up her work in her workbasket.
“Good night, father,”
she said. “Us’ll talk about it to-morrow,
if you please.”
Then she rose up and went straight to her chamber.
He was sorry for himself, though not
at all surprised; and he finished his liquor, locked
the house and retired. An hour had passed before
he went to bed, and he listened at Jane’s door
and ordained that if by evil chance he heard her weeping
he’d go in and say comforting words and play
the loving father and advance his own purpose at the
same time. But Jane weren’t weeping; she
was snoring, and John Warner nodded and went on.
He couldn’t help admiring her, however, even
at that moment.
“She’s saving all her
powers for to-morrow,” thought Jane’s parent;
and she was. She slept according to her custom,
like a dormouse, and woke refreshed to put up the
fight of her life. They got to it after breakfast,
when the house-place was empty, and Warner soon found
that, if he were to have his will, ’twould be
needful to call on Heaven to help him.
Jane didn’t waste no time, and
if her father had astonished her, she had quite so
fine a surprise for him after she’d thought it
all over and collected herself.
“’Tis in a nutshell,”
she said. “All my life I’ve put you
afore everything on earth but my Maker, and I was
minded so to continue. I’ve been everything
any daughter ever was to a father, and you have stood
to me for my waking and sleeping thought ever since
I could think at all. And now you want me to
go under in my home and see another take my place.
Well, dad, that’s your look-out, of course,
and if you think Mrs. Bascombe will be more useful
to you than me, then take her. But I’ll
say here and now, please, that if you be going to
marry, I shall leave Wych Elm for good and all, because
I couldn’t endure for another woman to be over
me and closer to your interests than what I am.
Never, never could I endure it. Is that quite
clear?”
He looked at her and filled his tobacco
pipe while he done so.
“So clear as can be, Jane,”
he said. “’Tis like your fine courage and
affection to feel so. But I make bold to believe
you haven’t weighed this come-along-of-it same
as I have, and find yourself getting up in the air
too soon. I could no more see Wych Elm without
you than I could see myself without you, and the affection
I feel for Mrs. Bascombe is on a different footing
altogether. Love of a wife and love of a daughter
don’t clash at all. They be different things,
and she would no more come between me and you and
our lifelong devotion than love of man would come between
you and me.”
He flowed on like that, so clever
as need be, and she listened with a face that didn’t
show a spark of the thought behind it. But he
failed to move her an inch, because, unknown to him,
she’d got a fine trump card up her sleeve, of
course.
He saw presently that he wasn’t
making no progress and sighed a good bit and turned
on a pathetic note, which he had at command, and blew
his nose once or twice; but these little touches didn’t
move Jane, so he ventured to ask her what her future
ideas might be away from Wych Elm, if such a fearful
thing was thinkable.
“God, He knows,” said
John Warner, “as I never thought to be up against
life like this, and find myself called to choose by
you, who was the apple of my very eye, between a wife
and an only child; but since you can have the heart
to come between me and a natural affection towards
Mrs. Bascombe, may I venture to ask, dear Jane, what
your own plans might be if you could bring yourself
to do such a deed as to leave me?”
“That’s easy,” she
answered. “If your love for me was not strong
enough to conquer your love for Nelly Bascombe, then
I’m very much afraid, father, my love for you
might go down in its turn, before my feelings for another
man. In a word, dad, if I felt I wasn’t
the queen of your home no more, I should turn my attention
to being queen of another.”
He stared at that.
“Never heard anything more interesting,
dear child,” he said. “’Tis a wonderful
picture to see you reigning away from Wych Elm.
But though I’m sure there’s a dozen men
would thank their stars for such a wife as you, I
can’t but feel in these hard times that few struggling
bachelors would be equal even to such a rare woman,
unless it was in her power to bring ’em something
besides her fine self.”
She smiled at that and rather expected it.
“I thought you’d remind
me how it stood and I was a pauper if you so willed,”
she replied. “But we needn’t go into
figures, because the man I’m aiming at knows
you very well, and he’ll quite understand that
if he was to get me away from you, there won’t
be no flags flying when I go to him, nor yet any marriage
portion. He ain’t what you might call a
struggling bachelor, however, but a pretty snug man
by general accounts.”
“And who might he be, I wonder?”
asked John; because in his heart he didn’t believe
for a moment there was any such a man in the world;
and when Jane declined to name Martin Ball, her father
was more than ever convinced that she was bluffing.
“We will suffer a month to pass,
Jane,” he told her. “Let a full month
go by for us to see where we stand and get the situation
clear in our minds. Certain it is that nought
that could happen will ever cloud my undying affection
for you, and I well know I’m the light also to
which your fine daughterly devotions turn. So
let this high matter be dead between us till four
weeks have slipped by.”
“Like your sense to suggest it,” she answered.
And the subject weren’t named
again between ’em till somebody else named it.
But meantime John didn’t hesitate
to take the affair in strict secrecy to the woman
who had promised to wed him; and when the engagement
was known, of course, Martin Ball struck while the
iron was hot and felt a great bound of hope that Jane
would now look upon him with very different eyes.
And even while he hoped, his spirit sank a bit now
and again in her company. But he put the weak
side away and told himself that love was at best a
fleeting passion.
Jane didn’t say much to him
herself, because in truth she would have a thousand
times sooner bided at Wych Elm with her parent than
wed the busy man of Little Silver; but Martin screwed
himself to the pinch and urged her to let there be
a double wedding. He found her very evasive, however,
for hope hadn’t died in Jane, and she knew by
a good few signs her father was hating the thought
of losing her. The idea of Jane away from Wych
Elm caused him a lot of deep inconvenience, and Nelly
Bascombe seemingly weren’t so much on his side
as he had hoped. Of course the woman well knew
that life at Wych Elm would be far more unrestful with
Jane than without her, and so she rather took the
maiden’s view and tried to make John see it
might be better if his girl was to leave ’em.
And this she did because it happened, after a week
had passed, she knew a lot more about the truth than
Mr. Warner could. He still clung to the hope that
Jane was lying and that no man wanted her; and even
if such man existed, John, well understanding that
his daughter was not the sort to fill the male eye
in herself, doubted not that the lover would soon
cry off if he heard Jane’s prospects were gone.
He voiced this great truth to Nelly Bascombe, and
he’d have been a good bit surprised to know that
on the very day he did so, she reported his intentions
word for word to the man most interested. Because,
when the situation unfolded, Martin Ball had gone to
Mrs. Bascombe in hope to get some useful aid from
her.
They were acquaint, because Nelly
sold Ball’s honey in her shop, but more than
that Martin didn’t know of the woman. She
had a good name for sense, however, and when he heard
that she had taken Warner, he saw what her power must
now be in that quarter and asked for a tell in private.
Which she was agreeable to give him, and in truth
they saw each other a good few times and traversed
over the situation most careful.
Nelly had a way to understand men
and she listened to Martin and liked the frank fashion
he faced life. He was honest as the day, though
fretting a bit because Jane Warner wouldn’t
say “Yes” and be done with it. He’d
wanted to go to her father, too, and let John know
his hopes; but that Jane wouldn’t allow at this
stage of the affair.
“In fact, she won’t let
me whisper a word,” said Martin to Mrs. Bascombe,
“and ’tis treason to her in a way my coming
to you at all; but I feel terrible sure you can help,
and it looks as if it would be all right and regular
and suit everybody if she was to take me and leave
the coast clear for you when you wed her parent.”
“It does look like that to a
plain sight,” admitted Nelly, “but in truth
things be very different. And for your confidence,
in strict secrecy, I can give you mine. Warner
don’t want her to go. He badly wants me
and her both, while, for her part, she don’t
want to go and hates the thought; but, so far, she’s
determined to do so if I come.”
“That ain’t love, however,” argued
Mr. Ball.
“It ain’t,” admitted
Nelly Bascombe, “and you mustn’t fox yourself
to think she’ll come to you for love. A
good helper she’d be to any man in her own way;
but she belongs to the order of women who can’t
love very grand as a wife. She do love as a daughter
can love a father, however, and it’s very clear
to me that John Warner is her life in a manner of
speaking. On the other hand, it would upset her
existence to the very roots if I went to Wych Elm
at farmer’s right hand, where naturally I should
be.”
Mr. Ball listened and nodded, and
his blue eyes rested upon Mrs. Bascombe’s grey
ones.
“You throw a great light,”
he said. “In a word, there was deeper reasons
far than any growing affection for me that have made
her so on-coming of late?”
“God forbid as I should suggest
such a thing as that,” answered Nelly.
“You’re a sort of man to please any woman,
if I may say so; but I’m only telling you what
lies in her mind. And I’ll say more in fairness
to the both of you. Her father don’t believe
there is a man after her at all. Jane’s
just sitting on the fence, in fact, and waiting to
see if she can’t shake him off me. And
if I’m turned down, then you’ll be turned
down. ’Tis rather amusing in a way.”
“It may be, but I ain’t
much one for a joke,” he confessed, and then
went on. “Though too busy for love-making
and all that, yet I’ve got my pride, Mrs. Bascombe,
and I shouldn’t like to be taken as a last resort amusing
though it might be.”
“No man would,” she answered.
“And I hope I’m wrong. She may be
turning to you for your qualities. She may be
coming for affection after all, knowing you’d
prove a very fine husband.”
“I would,” declared Mr.
Ball. “I can tell you, without self-conceit
or any such thing, that where I loved I’d stick,
and the woman as shared my life would share my all.
There’s a lot in me only hid because nothing
have yet happened to draw it out. I’m busy
and I’m wishful to do my little bit of work
in the world for other people; but if I was married,
my home would be a find thought to me, and my wife
would be first always and her comfort and happiness
a lot more to me than my own. ‘My home’
I call it, but it have long been borne in upon me
that a home is a hollow word with nought in it but
an aunt such as Mary Ball. It may be like blowing
my own trumpet, and I wouldn’t say it save in
an understanding ear; but I do think Jane Warner would
find I was good enough.”
“She certainly would,”
admitted Nelly; and deep in her heart, such was her
powers of perspection, she couldn’t help contrasting
Martin’s simple nature and open praise of himself
with John Warner’s cleverer speechifying and
far more downy and secret mind.
After that Ball and the widow met
a good few times unknown to the farmer and his daughter,
and there’s no doubt that the more Martin saw
of Mrs. Bascombe, the more impressed he felt with
her good sense. They couldn’t advance each
other’s interests, however, for all Nelly was
able to tell him amounted to nothing. John revealed
to her that Jane hadn’t taken no steps to relieve
the situation, but that she still asserted that she’d
got a man up her sleeve; while all Martin could say
was that Jane held off and marked time and wouldn’t
decide for or against.
“At the end of a month,”
explained Nelly. “John Warner is to get
on to Jane again. He’s death on her stopping
at Wych Elm; but she’s given no sign that she
will stop if I come. I may also tell you that
she’s been to see me on the subject and given
it as her opinion I’ll be doing a very rash
act to go to Wych Elm. She says I’ll live
to find out a lot about her wonderful father as might
surprise me painfully.”
“And for her part to me,”
replied Martin Ball, “she says I’m still
in her mind as a husband, but there’s a good
bit to consider and I mustn’t name the thing
again till she do. In a word, she’s still
tore in half between her father and me. And I
don’t like it too well, because, little though
I know of love, I feel a screw’s loose somewhere
still.”
Nelly looked at Martin, in doubt whether
to tell him something more, or not. But her woman’s
mind decided to tell him.
“And another curious fact,”
she said, “I do believe, at the bottom of his
mind, which is deep as a well, her father’s torn
in half between me and her also!”
His blue eyes goggled at that.
“God’s goodness!”
he cried. “He knows what love is surely even
if she don’t. You must be dreaming, woman.”
“No,” she answered.
“You don’t dream much at forty years old.
He thinks to hide it my John does so
to call him. But I see it very plain indeed.
He knows what amazing gifts his daughter have got,
and he knows she’s vital to Wych Elm; but he
don’t know what gifts I have got to put against
’em, and so I do believe that deep out of sight
he’s weighing her parts against mine.”
“That ain’t love, however,” vowed
Martin.
“’Tis one love weighed
against another,” she told him. “A
man over fifty don’t love like a boy.”
“The depths of human nature!”
cried Mr. Ball. “I never thought that such
things could be. It looks to me, Mrs. Bascombe,
as if However, I’m too loyal to say
it. But you do give one ideas.”
“Like father like daughter,
I shouldn’t wonder,” she said thoughtfully.
“Just the same dark fear as was in my mind,”
he confessed.
He left her then in a mizmaze of deep
reflections; but he didn’t go until they’d
ordained to meet again. A considerable lot more
of each other they did see afore the fateful month
was done, and the more easily they came together because
John Warner began to be very much occupied with Jane
at this season. The fourth week had very near
sped and still she remained firm; while behind the
scenes, when he did see her, John found no help from
Nelly Bascombe. In fact he marked that she’d
got to grow rather impatient on the subject and didn’t
appear to be so interested in her fate, or yet his,
as formerly.
So things came to a climax mighty
fast, and while Warner, who didn’t know what
it was to be beat where his own comfort was concerned,
kept on remorseless at Jane, she hardened her heart
more and more against him and finally took the plunge
and told Martin Ball as she’d wed when he pleased.
He hadn’t seen her much for ten days owing to
press of business, and when she made up her mind,
’twas she had to write and bid him go walking
with her. But he agreed at once so to do and
came at the appointed evening hour. And then,
afore she had time to speak, he cried out as he’d
got a bit of cheerful news for her.
“And I’ve got a bit of
cheerful news for you,” said Jane Warner, though
not in a very cheerful tone of voice. And then,
in a dreary sort of way, she broke her decision.
“Father’s going to marry
the woman at the shop-of-all-sorts, as you know,”
explained Jane; “and if him, why not me?
And, be it as it will, you’ve said so oft you
could do with me that ”
She stopped to let him praise God
and bless her and fall on her neck; but, a good bit
to her astonishment, Martin didn’t show no joy
at all far from it. He was silent
as the grave, for a minute, and then he only axed a
question that didn’t seem to bear much on the
subject.
“Your father haven’t seen
Mrs. Bascombe to-day, then?” he said.
“Not for a week have he seen
her, I believe; but he’s been a good bit occupied
and worried. He was going to sup with her to-night,”
answered Jane. “And that’s why for
I asked you to meet me, Martin.”
“What a world!” mused
Mr. Ball; and he bided silent so long that the woman
grew hot.
“You don’t appear to have
heard me,” she told him pretty sharp, and then
he spoke.
“I heard you only too well,”
he replied. “If my memory serves me, it’s
exactly three weeks now since last I offered for you,
Jane, and your answer was a thought frosty. In
fact, you dared me to name the subject again until
you might be pleased to.”
“Well, and now I do name it,” she told
him.
“Why, if I may ask?” he said.
’Twas her turn to be silent
now. Of course she saw in a moment that things
had gone wrong, and she instantly guessed, knowing
her father, that ’twas he had made up a deep
plot against her behind her back and called the man
off her.
So sure felt she that she named it.
“This be father’s work,” she said.
“You’ve changed your mind, Ball.”
“Minds have been changed,”
he admitted, “and not only mine. But make
no mistake, Jane. This has got nothing whatever
to do with your father so far as I’m concerned.
You’ve been frank, as you always are, and I’ll
be the same. And if Mr. Warner be taking a snack
with Nelly this evening he’ll make good every
word I’m telling you. In fact I dare say
what you have now got to pretend is bad news, Jane,
be really very much the opposite. There’s
only one person is called to suffer to-night so far
as I know, and that’s John Warner. And
even he may not suffer so much as he did ought.
He put Mrs. Bascombe afore you, and so you ordained
to keep your threat and leave him. And you come
to me to take you and make good your threat.”
“You didn’t ought to put
it like that it ain’t decent,”
she said. But she knew, of course, she’d
lost the man.
“It don’t matter now,”
he replied, “because human nature overthrows
decency and delights in surprises decent
and otherwise. What has happened is this.
Me and Nelly Bascombe was equally interested in your
family, and along of that common interest and seeing
a lot of each other and unfolding our opinions, we
got equally interested in one another. And then
nature cut the knot, Jane, and, in a word, I darned
soon found I liked Nelly Bascombe a lot better than
ever I liked you, if you’ll excuse my saying
so; and, what was a lot more to the purpose, she discovered
how she liked me oceans deeper than she liked your
father.”
“My goodness!” cried Miss
Warner. “That’s the brightest news
I’ve heard this longful time, you blessed man!
Oh, Martin, can you get her away from father?
I’ll love you in real earnest to my
dying day I will if you can!”
She sparkled out like that and amazed him yet again.
“I have got her away,”
he said. “And that’s what Mr. Warner’s
going to hear from Nelly to-night, so brace yourself
against he comes home.”
And that’s what John Warner
did hear, of course, put in woman’s nice language,
when he went to sup with his intended. First he
was terrible amused to learn that Ball had come courting
Nelly because, when he thought on Jane, it looked
as if he had been right and she was only putting up
a fancied lover to fright him. In fact, he beamed
upon Mrs. Bascombe so far, for it looked as though
everything was coming his way as usual after all.
But he stopped beaming when she went
on and explained that she was forty and Martin Ball
forty-two, and that she’d come to feel Providence
had planned everything, and how, only too bitter sure,
she felt that Martin was her proper partner, and that
John would find his good daughter a far more lasting
consolation and support than ever she could hope to
be at her best.
John Warner had never been known to
use a crooked word, and he didn’t then.
He made no fuss nor yet uproar, for he was a wonder
at never wasting an ounce of energy on a lost cause.
He only asked one question:
“Are you dead sure of what you’re
saying, Nelly?” he inquired, looking in her
eyes; and she answered that, though cruel grieved to
give such a man a pang, she was yet convinced to the
roots of her being it must be so.
Then she wept, and he said ’twas
vain to work up any excitement on the subject, and
that he doubted not it would be all much the same a
hundred years hence. And she granted that he
was right as usual.
So he left her, and Martin Ball waited,
hid behind the hedge, to see him go; and Jane was
home before him. Then John told his daughter word
for word all that had happened at the shop-of-all-sorts;
and he wasn’t blind to the joy that looked out
of her little eyes. She didn’t even say
she was sorry for him, but just answered as straight
as he had and confessed how she’d offered herself
within the hour to Martin Ball and found that his
views were very much altered and he didn’t want
her no more. “And God knows best, father,”
finished up Jane.
“So it’s generally believed,”
he answered. “And nobody can prove it ain’t
true. For my part, you was always balanced in
my mind very tender against that changeable woman,
and nought but a hair turned the balance her way.
’Tis a strange experience for me not to have
my will, and I feel disgraced in a manner of speaking;
but, if I’ve lost her, I’ve gained you,
seemingly. And I shan’t squeak about it,
nor yet go courting no more; and I’ll venture
to bet, dear Jane, you won’t neither.”
“Never never,”
she swore to him. “I hate every man on earth
but you, dad.”
She closed his eyes and tied up his
chin twenty years after, and when she reigned at Wych
Elm, she found but one difficulty to get
the rising generation of men to bide under her rule
and carry on.