Wherein his Grace of Osmonde’s courier arrives from France
The stronghold of her security lay
in the fact that her household so stood in awe of
her, and that this room, which was one of the richest
and most beautiful, though not the largest, in the
mansion, all her servitors had learned to regard as
a sort of sacred place in which none dared to set
foot unless invited or commanded to enter. Within
its four walls she read and wrote in the morning hours,
no servant entering unless summoned by her; and the
apartment seeming, as it were, a citadel, none approached
without previous parley. In the afternoon the
doors were thrown open, and she entertained there
such visitors as came with less formality than statelier
assemblages demanded. When she went out of it
this morning to go to her chamber that her habit might
be changed and her toilette made, she glanced about
her with a steady countenance.
“Until the babblers flock in
to chatter of the modes and playhouses,” she
said, “all will be as quiet as the grave.
Then I must stand near, and plan well, and be in
such beauty and spirit that they will see naught but
me.”
In the afternoon ’twas the fashion
for those who had naught more serious in their hands
than the killing of time to pay visits to each other’s
houses, and drinking dishes of tea, to dispose of their
neighbours’ characters, discuss the playhouses,
the latest fashions in furbelows or commodes, and
make love either lightly or with serious intent.
One may be sure that at my Lady Dunstanwolde’s
many dishes of Bohea were drunk, and many ogling glances
and much witticism exchanged. There was in these
days even a greater following about her than ever.
A triumphant beauty on the verge of becoming a great
duchess is not like to be neglected by her acquaintance,
and thus her ladyship held assemblies both gay and
brilliantly varied, which were the delight of the fashionable
triflers of the day.
This afternoon they flocked in greater
numbers than usual. The episode of the breaking
of Devil, the unexpected return of his Grace of Osmonde,
the preparations for the union, had given an extra
stimulant to that interest in her ladyship which was
ever great enough to need none. Thereunto was
added the piquancy of the stories of the noticeable
demeanour of Sir John Oxon, of what had seemed to be
so plain a rebellion against his fate, and also of
my lady’s open and cold displeasure at the manner
of his bearing himself as a disappointed man who presumed
to show anger against that to which he should gallantly
have been resigned, as one who is conquered by the
chance of war. Those who had beheld the two
ride homeward together in the morning, were full of
curiousness, and one and another, mentioning the matter,
exchanged glances, speaking plainly of desire to know
more of what had passed, and of hope that chance might
throw the two together again in public, where more
of interest might be gathered. It seemed indeed
not unlikely that Sir John might appear among the
tea-bibbers, and perchance ’twas for this lively
reason that my lady’s room was this afternoon
more than usually full of gay spirits and gossip-loving
ones.
They found, however, only her ladyship’s
self and her sister, Mistress Anne, who, of truth,
did not often join her tea-parties, finding them so
given up to fashionable chatter and worldly witticisms
that she felt herself somewhat out of place.
The world knew Mistress Anne but as a dull, plain
gentlewoman, whom her more brilliant and fortunate
sister gave gracious protection to, and none missed
her when she was absent, or observed her greatly when
she appeared upon the scene. To-day she was
perchance more observed than usual, because her pallor
was so great a contrast to her ladyship’s splendour
of beauty and colour. The contrast between them
was ever a great one; but this afternoon Mistress Anne’s
always pale countenance seemed almost livid, there
were rings of pain or illness round her eyes, and
her features looked drawn and pinched. My Lady
Dunstanwolde, clad in a great rich petticoat of crimson
flowered satin, with wondrous yellow Mechlin for her
ruffles, and with her glorious hair dressed like a
tower, looked taller, more goddess-like and full of
splendid fire than ever she had been before beheld,
or so her visitors said to her and to each other;
though, to tell the truth, this was no new story,
she being one of those women having the curious power
of inspiring the beholder with the feeling each time
he encountered them that he had never before seen
them in such beauty and bloom.
When she had come down the staircase
from her chamber, Anne, who had been standing at the
foot, had indeed started somewhat at the sight of her
rich dress and brilliant hues.
“Why do you jump as if I were
a ghost, Anne?” she asked. “Do I
look like one? My looking-glass did not tell
me so.”
“No,” said Anne; “you - are
so - so crimson and splendid - and
I -
Her ladyship came swiftly down the stairs to her.
“You are not crimson and splendid,”
she said. “’Tis you who are a ghost.
What is it?”
Anne let her soft, dull eyes rest
upon her for a moment helplessly, and when she replied
her voice sounded weak.
“I think - I am ill,
sister,” she said. “I seem to tremble
and feel faint.”
“Go then to bed and see the
physician. You must be cared for,” said
her ladyship. “In sooth, you look ill
indeed.”
“Nay,” said Anne; “I
beg you, sister, this afternoon let me be with you;
it will sustain me. You are so strong - let
me -
She put out her hand as if to touch
her, but it dropped at her side as though its strength
was gone.
“But there will be many babbling
people,” said her sister, with a curious look.
“You do not like company, and these days my
rooms are full. ’Twill irk and tire you.”
“I care not for the people - I
would be with you,” Anne said, in strange imploring.
“I have a sick fancy that I am afraid to sit
alone in my chamber. ’Tis but weakness.
Let me this afternoon be with you.”
“Go then and change your robe,”
said Clorinda, “and put some red upon your cheeks.
You may come if you will. You are a strange
creature Anne.”
And thus saying, she passed into her
apartment. As there are blows and pain which
end in insensibility or delirium, so there are catastrophes
and perils which are so great as to produce something
near akin to these. As she had stood before her
mirror in her chamber watching her reflection, while
her woman attired her in her crimson flowered satin
and builded up her stately head-dress, this other
woman had felt that the hour when she could have shrieked
and raved and betrayed herself had passed by, and
left a deadness like a calm behind, as though horror
had stunned all pain and yet left her senses clear.
She forgot not the thing which lay staring upward
blankly at the under part of the couch which hid it - the
look of its fixed eyes, its outspread locks, and the
purple indentation on the temple she saw as clearly
as she had seen them in that first mad moment when
she had stood staring downward at the thing itself;
but the coursing of her blood was stilled, the gallop
of her pulses, and that wild hysteric leaping of her
heart into her throat, choking her and forcing her
to gasp and pant in that way which in women must ever
end in shrieks and cries and sobbing beatings of the
air. But for the feminine softness to which
her nature had given way for the first time, since
the power of love had mastered her, there was no thing
of earth could have happened to her which would have
brought this rolling ball to her throat, this tremor
to her body - since the hour of her birth
she had never been attacked by such a female folly,
as she would indeed have regarded it once; but now
’twas different - for a while she had
been a woman - a woman who had flung herself
upon the bosom of him who was her soul’s lord,
and resting there, her old rigid strength had been
relaxed.
But ’twas not this woman who
had known tender yielding who returned to take her
place in the Panelled Parlour, knowing of the companion
who waited near her unseen - for it was as
her companion she thought of him, as she had thought
of him when he followed her in the Mall, forced himself
into her box at the play, or stood by her shoulder
at assemblies; he had placed himself by her side again,
and would stay there until she could rid herself of
him.
“After to-night he will be gone,
if I act well my part,” she said, “and
then may I live a freed woman.”
’Twas always upon the divan
she took her place when she received her visitors,
who were accustomed to finding her enthroned there.
This afternoon when she came into the room she paused
for a space, and stood beside it, the parlour being
yet empty. She felt her face grow a little cold,
as if it paled, and her under-lip drew itself tight
across her teeth.
“In a graveyard,” she
said, “I have sat upon the stone ledge of a tomb,
and beneath there was - worse than this, could
I but have seen it. This is no more.”
When the Sir Humphreys and Lord Charleses,
Lady Bettys and Mistress Lovelys were announced in
flocks, fluttering and chattering, she rose from her
old place to meet them, and was brilliant graciousness
itself. She hearkened to their gossipings, and
though ’twas not her way to join in them, she
was this day witty in such way as robbed them of the
dulness in which sometimes gossip ends. It was
a varied company which gathered about her; but to
each she gave his or her moment, and in that moment
said that which they would afterwards remember.
With those of the Court she talked royalty, the humours
of her Majesty, the severities of her Grace of Marlborough;
with statesmen she spoke with such intellect and discretion
that they went away pondering on the good fortune which
had befallen one man when it seemed that it was of
such proportions as might have satisfied a dozen,
for it seemed not fair to them that his Grace of Osmonde,
having already rank, wealth, and fame, should have
added to them a gift of such magnificence as this
beauteous woman would bring; with beaux and wits she
made dazzling jests; and to the beauties who desired
their flatteries she gave praise so adroit that
they were stimulated to plume their feathers afresh
and cease to fear the rivalry of her loveliness.
And yet while she so bore herself,
never once did she cease to feel the presence of that
which, lying near, seemed to her racked soul as one
who lay and listened with staring eyes which mocked;
for there was a thought which would not leave her,
which was, that it could hear, that it could see through
the glazing on its blue orbs, and that knowing itself
bound by the moveless irons of death and dumbness
it impotently raged and cursed that it could not burst
them and shriek out its vengeance, rolling forth among
her worshippers at their feet and hers.
“But he can not,”
she said, within her clenched teeth, again and again - that
he cannot.”
Once as she said this to herself she
caught Anne’s eyes fixed helplessly upon her,
it seeming to be as the poor woman had said, that her
weakness caused her to desire to abide near her sister’s
strength and draw support from it; for she had remained
at my lady’s side closely since she had descended
to the room, and now seemed to implore some protection
for which she was too timid to openly make request.
“You are too weak to stay, Anne,”
her ladyship said. “’Twould be better
that you should retire.”
“I am weak,” the poor
thing answered, in low tones - “but
not too weak to stay. I am always weak.
Would that I were of your strength and courage.
Let me sit down - sister - here.”
She touched the divan’s cushions with a shaking
hand, gazing upward wearily - perchance remembering
that this place seemed ever a sort of throne none
other than the hostess queen herself presumed to encroach
upon.
“You are too meek, poor sister,”
quoth Clorinda. “’Tis not a chair of
coronation or the woolsack of a judge. Sit! sit! - and
let me call for wine!”
She spoke to a lacquey and bade him
bring the drink, for even as she sank into her place
Anne’s cheeks grew whiter.
When ’twas brought, her ladyship
poured it forth and gave it to her sister with her
own hand, obliging her to drink enough to bring her
colour back. Having seen to this, she addressed
the servant who had obeyed her order.
“Hath Jenfry returned from Sir
John Oxon?” she demanded, in that clear, ringing
voice of hers, whose music ever arrested those surrounding
her, whether they were concerned in her speech or
no; but now all felt sufficient interest to prick
up ears and hearken to what was said.
“No, my lady,” the lacquey
answered. “He said that you had bidden
him to wait.”
“But not all day, poor fool,”
she said, setting down Anne’s empty glass upon
the salver. “Did he think I bade him stand
about the door all night? Bring me his message
when he comes.”
“’Tis ever thus with these
dull serving folk,” she said to those nearest
her. “One cannot pay for wit with wages
and livery. They can but obey the literal word.
Sir John, leaving me in haste this morning, I forgot
a question I would have asked, and sent a lacquey
to recall him.”
Anne sat upright.
“Sister - I pray you - another
glass of wine.”
My lady gave it to her at once, and she drained it
eagerly.
“Was he overtaken?” said
a curious matron, who wished not to see the subject
closed.
“No,” quoth her ladyship,
with a light laugh - “though he must
have been in haste, for the man was sent after him
in but a moment’s time. ’Twas then
I told the fellow to go later to his lodgings and deliver
my message into Sir John’s own hand, whence
it seems that he thinks that he must await him till
he comes.”
Upon a table near there lay the loaded
whip; for she had felt it bolder to let it lie there
as if forgotten, because her pulse had sprung so at
first sight of it when she came down, and she had so
quailed before the desire to thrust it away, to hide
it from her sight. “And that I quail before,”
she had said, “I must have the will to face - or
I am lost.” So she had let it stay.
A languishing beauty, with melting
blue eyes and a pretty fashion of ever keeping before
the world of her admirers her waxen delicacy, lifted
the heavy thing in her frail white hand.
“How can your ladyship wield
it?” she said. “It is so heavy for
a woman - but your ladyship is - is
not -
“Not quite a woman,” said
the beautiful creature, standing at her full great
height, and smiling down at this blue and white piece
of frailty with the flashing splendour of her eyes.
“Not quite a woman,” cried
two wits at once. “A goddess rather - an
Olympian goddess.”
The languisher could not endure comparisons
which so seemed to disparage her ethereal charms.
She lifted the weapon with a great effort, which
showed the slimness of her delicate fair wrist and
the sweet tracery of blue veins upon it.
“Nay,” she said lispingly,
“it needs the muscle of a great man to lift
it. I could not hold it - much less
beat with it a horse.” And to show how
coarse a strength was needed and how far her femininity
lacked such vigour, she dropped it upon the floor - and
it rolled beneath the edge of the divan.
“Now,” the thought shot
through my lady’s brain, as a bolt shoots from
the sky - “now - he laughs!”
She had no time to stir - there
were upon their knees three beaux at once, and each
would sure have thrust his arm below the seat and rummaged,
had not God saved her! Yes, ’twas of God
she thought in that terrible mad second - God! - and
only a mind that is not human could have told why.
For Anne - poor Mistress
Anne - white-faced and shaking, was before
them all, and with a strange adroitness stooped, - and
thrust her hand below, and drawing the thing forth,
held it up to view.
“’Tis here,” she
said, “and in sooth, sister, I wonder not at
its falling - its weight is so great.”
Clorinda took it from her hand.
“I shall break no more beasts
like Devil,” she said, “and for quieter
ones it weighs too much; I shall lay it by.”
She crossed the room and laid it upon a shelf.
“It was ever heavy - but
for Devil. ’Tis done with,” she said;
and there came back to her face - which for
a second had lost hue - a flood of crimson
so glowing, and a smile so strange, that those who
looked and heard, said to themselves that ’twas
the thought of Osmonde who had so changed her, which
made her blush. But a few moments later they
beheld the same glow mount again. A lacquey
entered, bearing a salver on which lay two letters.
One was a large one, sealed with a ducal coronet,
and this she saw first, and took in her hand even
before the man had time to speak.
“His Grace’s courier has
arrived from France,” he said; “the package
was ordered to be delivered at once.”
“It must be that his Grace returns
earlier than we had hoped,” she said, and then
the other missive caught her eye.
“’Tis your ladyship’s
own,” the lacquey explained somewhat anxiously.
“’Twas brought back, Sir John not having
yet come home, and Jenfry having waited three hours.”
“’Twas long enough,”
quoth her ladyship. “’Twill do to-morrow.”
She did not lay Osmonde’s
letter aside, but kept it in her hand, and seeing
that she waited for their retirement to read it, her
guests began to make their farewells. One by
one or in groups of twos and threes they left her,
the men bowing low, and going away fretted by the memory
of the picture she made - a tall and regal
figure in her flowered crimson, her stateliness seeming
relaxed and softened by the mere holding of the sealed
missive in her hand. But the women were vaguely
envious, not of Osmonde, but of her before whom there
lay outspread as far as life’s horizon reached,
a future of such perfect love and joy; for Gerald
Mertoun had been marked by feminine eyes since his
earliest youth, and had seemed to embody all that
woman’s dreams or woman’s ambitions or
her love could desire.
When the last was gone, Clorinda turned,
tore her letter open, and held it hard to her lips.
Before she read a word she kissed it passionately
a score of times, paying no heed that Anne sate gazing
at her; and having kissed it so, she fell to reading
it, her cheeks warm with the glow of a sweet and splendid
passion, her bosom rising and falling in a tempest
of tender, fluttering breaths - and ’twas
these words her eyes devoured:
“If I should head this page I write
to you ’Goddess and Queen, and Empress of
my deepest soul,’ what more should I be saying
than ’My Love’ and ‘My Clorinda,’
since these express all the soul of man could crave
for or his body desire. The body and soul of
me so long for thee, sweetheart, and sweetest beautiful
woman that the hand of Nature ever fashioned for
the joy of mortals, that I have had need to pray Heaven’s
help to aid me to endure the passing of the days that
lie between me and the hour which will make me
the most strangely, rapturously, happy man, not
in England, not in the world, but in all God’s
universe. I must pray Heaven again, and indeed
do and will, for humbleness which shall teach me
to remember that I am not deity, but mere man - mere
man - though I shall hold a goddess to my
breast and gaze into eyes which are like deep pools
of Paradise, and yet answer mine with the marvel
of such love as none but such a soul could make a
woman’s, and so fit to mate with man’s.
In the heavy days when I was wont to gaze at you
from afar with burning heart, my unceasing anguish
was that even high honour itself could not subdue
and conquer the thoughts which leaped within me
even as my pulse leaped, and even as my pulse could
not be stilled unless by death. And one that
for ever haunted - ay, and taunted - me
was the image of how your tall, beauteous body
would yield itself to a strong man’s arm, and
your noble head with its heavy tower of hair resting
upon his shoulder - the centres of his
very being would be thrilled and shaken by the uplifting
of such melting eyes as surely man ne’er
gazed within on earth before, and the ripe and
scarlet bow of a mouth so beauteous and so sweet with
womanhood. This beset me day and night, and
with such torture that I feared betimes my brain
might reel and I become a lost and ruined madman.
And now - it is no more forbidden me to dwell
upon it - nay, I lie waking at night,
wooing the picture to me, and at times I rise from
my dreams to kneel by my bedside and thank God that
He hath given me at last what surely is my own!-for
so it seems to me, my love, that each of us is
but a part of the other, and that such forces of Nature
rush to meet together in us, that Nature herself
would cry out were we rent apart. If there
were aught to rise like a ghost between us, if there
were aught that could sunder us - noble soul,
let us but swear that it shall weld us but the
closer together, and that locked in each other’s
arms its blows shall not even make our united strength
to sway. Sweetest lady, your lovely lip will
curve in smiles, and you will say, ‘He is
mad with his joy - my Gerald’ (for never
till my heart stops at its last beat and leaves
me still, a dead man, cold upon my bed, can I forget
the music of your speech when you spoke those words,
‘My Gerald! My Gerald.’) And
indeed I crave your pardon, for a man so filled
with rapture cannot be quite sane, and sometimes I
wonder if I walk through the palace gardens like
one who is drunk, so does my brain reel.
But soon, my heavenly, noble love, my exile will be
over, and this is in truth what my letter is to
tell you, that in four days your lacqueys will
throw open your doors to me and I shall enter, and
being led to you, shall kneel at your feet and kiss
the hem of your robe, and then rise standing to
fold her who will so soon be my very wife to my
throbbing breast.”
Back to her face had come all the
softness which had been lost, the hard lines were
gone, the tender curves had returned, her lashes looked
as if they were moist. Anne, sitting rigidly
and gazing at her, was afraid to speak, knowing that
she was not for the time on earth, but that the sound
of a voice would bring her back to it, and that ’twas
well she should be away as long as she might.
She read the letter, not once, but
thrice, dwelling upon every word, ’twas plain;
and when she had reached the last one, turning back
the pages and beginning again. When she looked
up at last, ’twas with an almost wild little
smile, for she had indeed for that one moment forgotten.
“Locked in each other’s
arms,” she said - “locked in each
other’s arms. My Gerald! My Gerald!
’What surely is my own - my own’!”
Anne rose and came to her, laying
her hand on her arm. She spoke in a voice low,
hushed, and strained.
“Come away, sister,” she
said, “for a little while - come away.”