MRS. BAXENDALE’S QUESTS
A servant went to Banbrigg each morning
for tidings; Emily, so the report said, moved steadily
towards recovery. On the second day after Wilfrid’s
arrival Mrs. Baxendale took him with her in the brougham,
and let him wait for her whilst she made a call upon
Mrs. Hood; Wilfrid saw an upper window of which the
blind was down against the sun, and would gladly have
lingered within sight of it. Beatrice had excused
herself from accompanying the two.
‘I believe,’ Mrs. Baxendale
said on the way, ’she has gone to some special
service at St. Luke’s.’ She was mistaken,
though Beatrice had in truth been diligent at such
services of late. ‘Now there,’ she
added, ’is a kind of infatuation I find it difficult
even to understand. How can a girl of her sense
and education waste her time in that way? Don’t
think I have no religious belief, Mr. Athel; I’m
not strong-minded enough for that. But this deliberate
working of oneself into a state of nervous excitement
seems to me, to speak plainly, indecent. Dr. Wardle,
with whom I chat rather wickedly now and then, tells
me the revivals are quite a windfall, subsequently,
to him and his brethren. And, do you know, I
begin to see bad results even in my niece. I certainly
wouldn’t have had her down just at this time
if I had suspected her leanings that way. Didn’t
you notice how absent she was last night, and again
at breakfast this morning? All revival, I assure
you.’
‘It’s the want of a serious
interest in life,’ remarked Wilfrid, remembering,
with a smile, a certain conversation between Beatrice
and himself.
‘Then it’s so inconsistent,’
continued the lady, ’for you won’t
abuse my confidence a more worldly girl
I never knew. In her heart I am convinced she
thinks nothing so important as the doings of fashionable
society. She asked me, the first day she was here,
how I lived without what was it? I
quite forget, but some paper or other which is full
of what they call fashionable intelligence. “My
dear,” I said, “I know none of those people,
and care not one grain of salt about their flutterings
hither and thither, their marryings and givings ill
marriage, their dresses and their never
mind what.” And what do you think she answered?
“But you will care when my name begins to be
mentioned.” And she went off with just
so much toss of the head; you know how
Beatrice does it. Well, I suppose she really does
to me an honour by coming down to my poor dull house;
no doubt she’s very brilliant in the world I
know nothing about. I suppose you have seen her
at her best? She won’t waste her graces
upon me, wise girl; only the you know the
movement when I’ve shown my ignorance
now and then. Did you ever dance with her?’
‘Oh, yes; frequently.’
’I should like to see her in
a ball-room. Certainly there are few girls more
handsome; I suppose that is admitted?’
‘Certainly; she queens it everywhere.’
’And her singing is lovely!
Do you know a thought I often have? When I hear
her singing it seems to me as if she were not quite
the same person as at other times; she affects me,
I can’t quite tell you how; it’s a sort
of disenchantment to talk to her immediately afterwards.’
Wilfrid liked Mrs. Baxendale the more,
the more he talked with her; in a day or two the confidence
between them was as complete as if their acquaintance
had been life-long. With her husband, too, he
came to be on an excellent footing. Mr. Baxendale
got him into the library when the ladies retired for
the night, and expatiated for hours on the details
of his electoral campaign. At first Wilfrid found
the subject tedious, but the energy and bright intelligence
of the man ended by stirring his interest in a remarkable
way. It was new to Wilfrid to be in converse
with such a strenuously practical mind; the element
of ambition in him, of less noble ambition which had
had its share in urging him to academic triumphs,
was moved by sympathetic touches; he came to understand
the enthusiasm which possessed the Liberal candidate,
began to be concerned for his success, to feel the
stirrings of party spirit. He aided Baxendale
in drawing up certain addresses for circulation, and
learned the difference between literary elegance and
the tact which gets at the ear of the multitude.
A vulgar man could not have moved him in this way,
and Baxendale was in truth anything but vulgar.
Through his life he had been, on a small scale, a
ruler of men, and had ruled with conspicuous success,
yet he had preserved a native sincerity and wrought
under the guidance of an ideal. Like all men
who are worth anything, either in public or private,
he possessed a keen sense of humour, and was too awake
to the ludicrous aspects of charlatanry to fall into
the pits it offered on every band. His misfortune
was the difficulty with which he uttered himself;
even when he got over his nervousness, words came to
him only in a rough-and-tumble fashion; he sputtered
and fumed and beat his forehead for phrases, then
ended with a hearty laugh at his own inarticulateness,
Something like this was his talk in the library of
nights:
’There’s a man called
Rapley, an old-clothes dealer fellow I can’t
get hold of. He’s hanging midway what
do you call it? trimming, with an eye to
the best bargain. Invaluable, if only I could
get him, but a scoundrel. Wants pay, you know;
do anything for pay; win the election for me without
a doubt, if only I pay him; every blackguard in Dunfield
hand and glove with him. Now pay I won’t,
yet I’m bound to get that man. Talked to
him yesterday for two hours and thirty-five minutes
by the parish church clock, just over his shop I
mean the clock is. The fellow hasn’t a
conviction, yet he can talk you blue; if I had his
powers of speech there it is I fail, you
see. I have to address a meeting tomorrow; Rapley
’ll be up at me, and turn me inside out.
He’d do as much for the other man, if only I’d
pay him. That isn’t my idea; I’m
going to win the election clean-handed; satisfaction
in looking back on an honest piece of work; what?
I’ll have another talk with him to-morrow.
Now look at this map of the town; I’ve coloured
it with much care. There you see the stronghold
of the Blues. I’m working that district
street by street a sort of moral invasion.
No humbug; I set my face against humbug. If a
man’s a rogue, or a sot, or a dirty rascal, I
won’t shake hands with him and pretend you
know respect, friendship, how are your
wife and children, so on. He’s a vote, and
I’ve only to deal with him as a vote. Can
he see that two and two make four? Good; I’m
at him by that side. There are my principles;
what have you to urge against them? He urges
damned absurdities. Good; I prove to him
that they are damned absurdities.’
At times Wilfrid managed to lead the
talk to other subjects, such as were suggested by
the books around the room. Baxendale had read
not a little, and entirely in the spheres of fact
and speculation. Political economy and all that
appertained to it was his speciality, but he was remarkably
strong in metaphysics. Wilfrid had flattered himself
that he was tolerably familiar with the highways of
philosophy, but Baxendale made him feel his ignorance.
The man had, for instance, read Kant with extraordinary
thoroughness, and discussed him precisely as he did
his electioneering difficulties; the problems of consciousness
he attacked with hard-headed, methodical patience,
with intelligence, moreover, which was seldom at fault.
Everything that bore the appearance of a knot to be
unravelled had for him an immense attraction.
In mere mental calculation his power was amazing.
He took Wilfrid over his manufactory one day, and
explained to him certain complicated pieces of machinery;
the description was not so lucid as it might have been,
owing to lack of words, but it manifested the completest
understanding of things which to his companion were
as hard as the riddle of the universe. His modesty,
withal, was excessive; to Wilfrid’s humane culture
he deferred at all times; for all the learning which
lay outside his own sphere he had boundless reverence.
Wilfrid’s gain by him was not only of a pleasant
personal acquaintance; the intercourse extended his
views, and in particular gave direction to much that
had hitherto been vague potentiality in his character.
In more than one sense this visit to Dunfield was
to prove a turning point in his life.
Beatrice, in the meantime, held herself
apart; Wilfrid had never before felt himself so little
at ease in her presence. It was as though the
short time which had elapsed since their last meeting
had effected a permanent change in their mutual relations.
Previously their intercourse had gone as far in familiarity
as was possible if it were not to take quite a new
colour; now all at once this past seemed to go for
nothing. Beatrice was the active source of change.
She was deliberately he could not doubt
it extending the distance between them,
annulling bygone intimacy, shifting into ineffective
remoteness all manner of common associations.
Things she would formerly have understood at a half-word
she now affected to need to have explained to her.
He was ‘Mr. Athel’ to an extent he had
never been before; and even of his relatives she spoke
with a diminished familiarity. She emphasised
at every moment the characteristics which were alien
to his sympathies, talked of the ‘revival’
ad nauseam, or changed with alarming suddenness
from that to topics of excessive frivolousness.
Wilfrid little by little ceased to converse with her,
in the real sense of the word; he even felt uncomfortable
in her presence. And Mrs. Baxendale had clear
eyes for at all events the outward features of the
situation.
On the fifth day of Wilfrid’s
presence in the house, Beatrice took the opportunity
of being alone with her aunt to observe that she must
go southwards by a certain train next morning.
‘Oh, surely not!’ protested
Mrs. Baxendale. ’I can’t spare you
yet. And your mother is still in Berkshire.’
‘Yes, but that makes no difference
to me, you know,’ said Beatrice. ’I’m
often at home by myself. Indeed I must go to-morrow.’
’Won’t you stay if I beg
you? It’s four years since you were here,
and who knows how long it will be before I entrap
you again. You’ve already threatened me,
you know, with the peerage, and I’m very sure
you won’t deign to honour me when that day comes.
Now, there’s a good girl to the end
of the week at least.’
It seemed as though Beatrice would persist.
‘Now, if it were not such an
unlikely thing,’ said her aunt, ’I should
be disposed to think it was Mr. Athel who is driving
you away.’
‘Mr. Athel!’ the girl
exclaimed, almost haughtily, and with a flush which
disappeared as rapidly as it came, leaving the lovely
face with a touch of exquisite paleness.
‘I mean,’ said Mrs. Baxendale
quickly, averting her honest eyes, ’that I fear
he has offended you.’
‘How can Mr. Athel have offended
me?’ Beatrice asked, with a certain severity.
‘I thought perhaps a
remark he made last night on the revival.’
Mrs. Baxendale felt ill at ease.
Her first sentence had been inconsiderate; she knew
it as soon as it was uttered, and indeed did not quite
see what could have induced her to make such a remark.
She had not the habit of nice conversation which endows
with complete command of the tongue. But her
wits had, as you see, come to her rescue.
‘Mr. Athel’s opinions
on that subject are not likely to offend me,’
Beatrice replied, with the shadow of a smile.
’I am so afraid lest he should
suspect anything of the kind. I am sure it would
grieve him dreadfully.’
The girl laughed outright, though
not with much joyousness.
’Mr. Athel be grieved for such
a cause! My dear aunt, you don’t know him.
He’s as little sensitive as any man could be.
Why, he holds it a duty to abuse people who do things
he counts foolish.’
‘You exaggerate,’ returned her aunt, with
a smile.
Beatrice continued, vivaciously.
’Oh, you don’t know him
as well as I do. We used to be always wrangling in
the days of my simplicity. I have been marvelling
at his forbearance; it would have been nothing wonderful
if he had called me an idiot. Frankness of that
kind is the mark of his friendship haven’t
you found that out? Hasn’t he taken occasion
yet to inform you that your life is conducted on an
utterly mistaken principle, that you are shallow and
inefficient, that you are worse than useless in the
world, and ought, if properly constituted, to be a
torment to yourself? None of these things he
has said? Oh, then you are not admitted to Mr.
Athel’s intimacy; you are not of the inner circle.’
She spoke with a kind of reckless
gaiety, a mocking merriment which her rich voice and
command of facial expression made very effective.
It startled her hearer, who, when the girl ceased,
took one of her hands and patted it kindly.
‘Why then,’ she said,
’I have been altogether mistaken; for I did really
think he had offended you. But now I’m sure
you’ll stay won’t you?’
’Rather than you should think
I run away from Mr. Athel’s high censure certainly.’
Then she became silent, and shortly
left the room. Mrs. Baxendale sat by herself
musing.
She was a woman given to thoughtfulness,
for all that she used her tongue freely when with
those she liked. She did not greatly seek such
society as Dunfield had to offer, and partly on that
account, partly owing to alarms excited by her caustic
comments on matters of popular interest, the ladies
of the town left her abundance of leisure. She
used it well. Though not a highly-educated woman,
she read constantly, and books of a solid kind.
Society in Dunfield had its book club, and Mrs. Baxendale
enjoyed the advantage of choosing literature which
her fellow-members were very willing to let her keep
as long as she liked. Beatrice derived much amusement
from her aunt’s method of reading. Beatrice,
with the run of Mr. Mudie’s catalogues, would
have half-a-dozen volumes in her lap at the same time,
and as often as not get through them tant
bien que mal in the same day. But
to the provincial lady a book was a solid and serious
affair. To read a chapter was to have provided
matter for a day’s reflection; the marker was
put at the place where reading had ceased, and the
book was not re-opened till previous matter had been
thoroughly digested and assimilated. It was a
slow method, but not without its advantages, I assure
you.
Perhaps to relieve her worthy aunt
of any lingering anxiousness, Beatrice, throughout
the day, wore an appearance of much contentment, and
to Wilfrid was especially condescending, even talking
with him freely on a subject quite unconnected with
her pet interests. That evening two gentlemen,
politicians, dined at the house; Beatrice, under cover
of their loud discussions in the drawing-room, exchanged
certain remarks with Wilfrid.
‘My aunt was so good as to apologise
to me on your behalf this morning,’ she began.
‘Apologise? What have I been guilty of?’
’Oh, nothing. She doesn’t
appreciate the freemasonry between us. It occurred
to her that your remarks on my well, my
predilections, might have troubled me. Judge
how amused I was!’
She did not look at him from the first,
and appeared to be examining, even whilst she spoke,
a book of prints.
‘I sincerely hope,’ Wilfrid
replied, ’that I have uttered no thoughtless
piece of rudeness. If I have, I beg you to forgive
me.’
She glanced at him. He appeared
to speak seriously, and it was the kind of speech
he would never have dreamed of making to her in former
days, at all events in this tone.
‘You know perfectly well,’
she answered, with slow voice, bending to look more
closely at a page, ’that you never said anything
to me which could call for apology.’
‘I am not so sure of that,’ Wilfrid replied,
smiling.
‘Then take my assurance now,’
said Beatrice, closing her book, and rising to move
towards her aunt. As she went, she cast a look
back, a look of curious blankness, as if into vacancy.
She sang shortly after, and the souls
of the politicians were stirred within them.
For Wilfrid, he lay back with his eyes closed, his
heart borne on the flood of music to that pale-windowed
room of sickness, whose occupant must needs be so
sadly pale. The security he felt in the knowledge
that Emily grew better daily made him able to talk
cheerfully and behave like one without preoccupation,
but Emily in truth was never out of his mind.
He lived towards the day when he should kneel at her
feet, and feel once more upon his forehead those cold,
pure lips. And that day, as he believed, was
now very near.
To her aunt’s secret surprise,
Beatrice allowed the end of the week to come and go
without any allusion to the subject of departure.
It was all the more strange, seeing that the girl’s
show of easy friendliness with Wilfrid had not lasted
beyond the day; she had become as distant and self-centred
as before. But on the morning of the following
Tuesday, as Mrs. Baxendale sat reading not long after
breakfast, Beatrice entered the room in her light
travelling garb, and came forward, buttoning her glove.
‘You are going out?’ Mrs.
Baxendale asked, with some misgiving.
’Yes to London.
They are calling a cab. You know how I dislike
preparatory miseries.’
Her aunt kept astonished silence.
She looked at the girl, then down at her book.
‘Well,’ she said at length,
’it only remains to me to remember the old proverb.
But when is the train? Are you off this moment?’
’The train leaves in five-and-twenty
minutes. May I disturb uncle, do you think?’
’Ah, now I understand why you
asked if he would be at home through the morning.
I’ll go and fetch him.’
She went quickly to the library.
Mr. Baxendale sat there alone.
‘Beatrice is going,’ she
said, coming behind his chair. ’Will you
come and say good-bye?’
Mr. Baxendale jumped up.
‘Going? Leaving?’
His wife nodded.
’Why? What is it?
You haven’t quarrelled with her about the prayer-meetings?’
’No. It’s a fancy
of hers, that’s all. Come along; she’s
only twenty minutes to catch the train.’
When they reached the drawing-room,
Beatrice was not there. Upon Mrs. Baxendale’s
withdrawal she had gone to Wilfrid’s door and
knocked at it. Wilfrid was pacing about in thought.
It surprised him to see who his visitor was; yet more,
when she advanced to him with her hand extended, saying
a simple ‘Good-bye.’
‘Good-bye? Wherefore?’
Her attire explained. Beatrice
possessed the beauty of form and face which makes
profit of any costume; in the light-brown cape, and
hat to match, her tall, lithe figure had a womanly
dignity which suited well with the unsmiling expressiveness
of her countenance. The ‘good-bye’
was uttered briefly and without emphasis, as one uses
any insignificant form of speech.
Wilfrid resolved at once to accept
her whim; after all, it was but another instance of
frequent eccentricities.
‘Who is going to the station with you?’
he asked.
‘No one. I hate partings on the platform.’
She moved away almost as far as the door, then turned
again.
‘You will be in town before going back to Oxford?’
Wilfrid hesitated.
‘Oh, never mind,’ she said; and was gone.
Ten minutes later Wilfrid went to
the drawing-room. Mr. and Mrs. Baxendale were
talking together; they became silent as he entered.
‘Has Miss Redwing gone?’ he asked.
‘She took leave of you, didn’t she?’
replied the lady.
‘Yes. But it was So unprepared for, I half
thought it might be a joke.’
‘Oh, she’s fond of these
surprises,’ Mrs. Baxendale said, in a tone of
good-natured allowance. ’On the whole I
sympathise with her; I myself prefer not to linger
over such occasions.’
Later in the day Mrs. Baxendale drove
out to Banbrigg, this time alone. On her return,
she sought Wilfrid and found him in his room.
There was concern on her face.
‘I have heard something very
painful from Mrs. Hood,’ she began. ’It
seems that Emily is in ignorance of her father’s
death.’
Wilfrid looked at her in astonishment.
‘I told you,’ Mrs. Baxendale
pursued, ’that she had not been altogether well
just before it happened, but it now appears that the
dreadful incident of her entering the room just when
the body was brought in must have taken place when
she was delirious. The poor woman has had no
suspicion of that; but it is proved by Emily’s
questions, now that she begins to talk. Of course
it makes a new anxiety. Mrs. Hood has not dared
to hint at the truth, but it cannot be concealed for
long.’
‘But this is most extraordinary,’
Wilfrid exclaimed, ’What, then, was the origin
of her illness?’
’That is the mystery. Mrs.
Hood’s memory seems to be confused, but I got
her to allow that the feverish symptoms were declared
even the night before the death was known. I
hardly like to hint it, but it really seemed to me
as if she were keeping something back. One moment
she said that Emily had been made ill by anxiety at
her father’s lateness in coming home that night,
and the next she seemed, for some reason, unwilling
to admit that it was so. The poor woman is in
a sad, sad state, and no wonder. She wishes that
somebody else might tell Emily the truth; but surely
it will come most easily from her.’
Wilfrid was deeply distressed.
‘It is the very worst that still
remains,’ he said, ’and we thought the
worst was over. What does the doctor say?
Can she bear it yet? It is impossible to let
her continue in ignorance.’
It was at length decided that Mrs.
Baxendale should visit the doctor, and hear his opinion.
She had got into her mind a certain distrust of Mrs.
Hood, and even doubted whether Emily ought to be left
in her hands during convalescence; there was clearly
no want of devotion on the mother’s part, but
it appeared to Mrs. Baxendale that the poor woman had
been overtaxed, and was herself on the point of illness,
perhaps of mental failure. From going well things
had suddenly taken an anxious turn.