When Margrave had gone, I glanced
at the clock, not yet nine. I resolved
to go at once to Mrs. Poyntz. It was not an evening
on which she received, but doubtless she would see
me. She owed me an explanation. How thus
carelessly divulge a secret she had been enjoined
to keep; and this rival, of whom I was ignorant?
It was no longer a matter of wonder that Hargrave
should have described Lilian’s peculiar idiosyncrasies
in his sketch of his fabulous Pythoness. Doubtless
Mrs. Poyntz had, with unpardonable levity of indiscretion,
revealed all of which she disapproved in my choice.
But for what object? Was this her boasted friendship
for me? Was it consistent with the regard she
professed for Mrs. Ashleigh and Lilian? Occupied
by these perplexed and indignant thoughts, I arrived
at Mrs. Poyntz’s house, and was admitted to
her presence. She was fortunately alone; her daughter
and the colonel had gone to some party on the Hill.
I would not take the hand she held out to me on entrance;
seated myself in stern displeasure, and proceeded
at once to inquire if she had really betrayed to Mr.
Margrave the secret of my engagement to Lilian.
“Yes, Allen Fenwick; I have
this day told, not only Mr. Margrave, but every person
I met who is likely to tell it to some one else, the
secret of your engagement to Lilian Ashleigh.
I never promised to conceal it; on the contrary, I
wrote word to Anne Ashleigh that I would therein act
as my own judgment counselled me. I think my words
to you were that ’public gossip was sometimes
the best security for the completion of private engagements.’”
“Do you mean that Mrs. or Miss
Ashleigh recoils from the engagement with me, and
that I should meanly compel them both to fulfil it
by calling in the public to censure them if if Oh,
madam, this is worldly artifice indeed!”
“Be good enough to listen to
me quietly. I have never yet showed you the letter
to Mrs. Ashleigh, written by Lady Haughton, and delivered
by Mr. Vigors. That letter I will now show to
you; but before doing so I must enter into a preliminary
explanation. Lady Haughton is one of those women
who love power, and cannot obtain it except through
wealth and station, by her own intellect
never obtain it. When her husband died she was
reduced from an income of twelve thousand a year to
a jointure of twelve hundred, but with the exclusive
guardianship of a young son, a minor, and adequate
allowances for the charge; she continued, therefore,
to preside as mistress over the establishments in town
and country; still had the administration of her son’s
wealth and rank. She stinted his education, in
order to maintain her ascendancy over him. He
became a brainless prodigal, spendthrift alike of
health and fortune. Alarmed, she saw that, probably,
he would die young and a beggar; his only hope of
reform was in marriage. She reluctantly resolved
to marry him to a penniless, well-born, soft-minded
young lady whom she knew she could control; just before
this marriage was to take place he was killed by a
fall from his horse. The Haughton estate passed
to his cousin, the luckiest young man alive, the
same Ashleigh Sumner who had already succeeded, in
default of male issue, to poor Gilbert Ashleigh’s
landed possessions. Over this young man Lady Haughton
could expect no influence. She would be a stranger
in his house. But she had a niece! Mr. Vigors
assured her the niece was beautiful. And if the
niece could become Mrs. Ashleigh Sumner, then Lady
Haughton would be a less unimportant Nobody in the
world, because she would still have her nearest relation
in a Somebody at Haughton Park. Mr. Vigors has
his own pompous reasons for approving an alliance
which he might help to accomplish. The first
step towards that alliance was obviously to bring
into reciprocal attraction the natural charms of the
young lady and the acquired merits of the young gentleman.
Mr. Vigors could easily induce his ward to pay a visit
to Lady Haughton, and Lady Haughton had only to extend
her invitations to her niece; hence the letter to Mrs.
Ashleigh, of which Mr. Vigors was the bearer, and
hence my advice to you, of which you can now understand
the motive. Since you thought Lilian Ashleigh
the only woman you could love, and since I thought
there were other women in the world who might do as
well for Ashleigh Sumner, it seemed to me fair for
all parties that Lilian should not go to Lady Haughton’s
in ignorance of the sentiments with which she had
inspired you. A girl can seldom be sure that
she loves until she is sure that she is loved.
And now,” added Mrs. Poyntz, rising and walking
across the room to her bureau, “now
I will show you Lady Haughton’s invitation to
Mrs. Ashleigh. Here it is!”
I ran my eye over the letter, which
she thrust into my hand, resuming her knitting-work
while I read.
The letter was short, couched in conventional
terms of hollow affection. The writer blamed
herself for having so long neglected her brother’s
widow and child; her heart had been wrapped up too
much in the son she had lost; that loss had made her
turn to the ties of blood still left to her; she had
heard much of Lilian from their common friend, Mr.
Vigors; she longed to embrace so charming a niece.
Then followed the invitation and the postscript.
The postscript ran thus, so far as I can remember:
“Whatever my own grief at
my irreparable bereavement, I am no egotist;
I keep my sorrow to myself.
You will find some pleasant guests at my
house, among others our joint
connection, young Ashleigh Sumner.”
“Woman’s postscripts are
proverbial for their significance,” said Mrs.
Poyntz, when I had concluded the letter and laid it
on the table; “and if I did not at once show
you this hypocritical effusion, it was simply because
at the name Ashleigh Sumner its object became transparent,
not perhaps to poor Anne Ashleigh nor to innocent Lilian,
but to my knowledge of the parties concerned, as it
ought to be to that shrewd intelligence which you
derive partly from nature, partly from the insight
into life which a true physician cannot fail to acquire.
And if I know anything of you, you would have romantically
said, had you seen the letter at first, and understood
its covert intention, ’Let me not shackle the
choice of the woman I love, and to whom an alliance
so coveted in the eyes of the world might, if she
were left free, be proffered.’”
“I should not have gathered
from the postscript all that you see in it; but had
its purport been so suggested to me, you are right,
I should have so said. Well, and as Mr. Margrave
tells me that you informed him that I have a rival,
I am now to conclude that the rival is Mr. Ashleigh
Sumner?”
“Has not Mrs. Ashleigh or Lilian
mentioned him in writing to you?”
“Yes, both; Lilian very slightly,
Mrs. Ashleigh with some praise, as a young man of
high character, and very courteous to her.”
“Yet, though I asked you to
come and tell me who were the guests at Lady Haughton’s,
you never did so.”
“Pardon me; but of the guests
I thought nothing, and letters addressed to my heart
seemed to me too sacred to talk about. And Ashleigh
Sumner then courts Lilian! How do you know?”
“I know everything that concerns
me; and here, the explanation is simple. My aunt,
Lady Delafield, is staying with Lady Haughton.
Lady Delafield is one of the women of fashion who
shine by their own light; Lady Haughton shines by
borrowed light, and borrows every ray she can find.”
“And Lady Delafield writes you word ”
“That Ashleigh Sumner is caught by Lilian’s
beauty.”
“And Lilian herself ”
“Women like Lady Delafield do
not readily believe that any girl could refuse Ashleigh
Sumner; considered in himself, he is steady and good-looking;
considered as owner of Kirby Hall and Haughton Park,
he has, in the eyes of any sensible mother, the virtues
of Cato and the beauty of Antinous.”
I pressed my hand to my heart; close
to my heart lay a letter from Lilian, and there was
no word in that letter which showed that her heart
was gone from mine. I shook my head gently, and
smiled in confiding triumph.
Mrs. Poyntz surveyed me with a bent
brow and a compressed lip.
“I understand your smile,”
she said ironically. “Very likely Lilian
may be quite untouched by this young man’s admiration,
but Anne Ashleigh may be dazzled by so brilliant a
prospect for her daughter; and, in short, I thought
it desirable to let your engagement be publicly known
throughout the town to-day. That information
will travel; it will reach Ashleigh Sumner through
Mr. Vigors, or others in this neighbourhood, with whom
I know that he corresponds. It will bring affairs
to a crisis, and before it may be too late. I
think it well that Ashleigh Sumner should leave that
house; if he leave it for good, so much the better.
And, perhaps, the sooner Lilian returns to L
the lighter your own heart will be.”
“And for these reasons you have
published the secret of ”
“Your engagement? Yes.
Prepare to be congratulated wherever you go. And
now if you hear either from mother or daughter that
Ashleigh Sumner has proposed, and been, let us say,
refused, I do not doubt that, in the pride of your
heart, you will come and tell me.”
“Rely upon it, I will; but before
I take leave, allow me to ask why you described to
a young man like Mr. Margrave , whose wild
and strange humours you have witnessed and not approved any
of those traits of character in Miss Ashleigh which
distinguish her from other girls of her age?”
“I? You mistake. I
said nothing to him of her character. I mentioned
her name, and said she was beautiful, that was all.”
“Nay, you said that she was
fond of musing, of solitude; that in her fancies she
believed in the reality of visions which might flit
before her eyes as they flit before the eyes of all
imaginative dreamers.”
“Not a word did I say to Mr.
Margrave of such peculiarities in Lilian; not a word
more than what I have told you, on my honour!”
Still incredulous, but disguising
my incredulity with that convenient smile by which
we accomplish so much of the polite dissimulation
indispensable to the decencies of civilized life, I
took my departure, returned home, and wrote to Lilian.