“I beg your pardon,” said
Archibald Graves, rather abruptly; “I spoke to
Miss Thorne before church. I think she is engaged
to me.”
The eyes of Beatrice Lambent opened
with astonishment and she stared at this daring young
man, who had the presumption to talk of interposing
between the new schoolmistress and the head of the
parish. She was evidently about to speak, for
her lips moved, but no words came.
It was Hazel who put an end to the unpleasant dilemma.
“I will come at once.
Miss Lambent, if you please,” she said respectfully.
“Miss Beatrice Lambent, if you
please,” said the lady haughtily; “Miss
Lambent is now descending from the organ-loft.”
“I beg your pardon,” exclaimed
Hazel. Then, glancing with quiet dignity at
the intruder and back to Miss Beatrice: “Mr
Graves was a friend of our family a year or two back.
Mr Graves, my mother is at the schoolhouse; if you
wish to see me, I must ask you to call there.”
She followed Miss Beatrice up between
the rows of pews that lady seeming to take her into
moral custody; while, seeing himself the aim of several
pairs of eyes, including those of Mr Chute, Mr William
Forth Burge, Miss Burge, and above all, those of Miss
Lambent, which literally flashed at him, Archibald
Graves nodded shortly, turned upon his heel, and tried
to march carelessly out of church; but his easy motions
were terribly full of restraint.
“I was not aware that Miss Thorne
would be so soon having friends,” said Miss
Lambent; but her remark elicited no reply, for Mr William
Forth Burge and his sister both felt troubled, the
schoolmaster angry, and all too much preoccupied with
the appearance of Hazel Thorne as she passed into
the chancel, and through a bar of brilliant colour
cast by the sun from the new stained-glass window,
which had been placed in the south end of the chancel
in memory of the late vicar, the effect being very
strange, seeming to etherealise Hazel; though for the
matter of that the same effect would have been seen,
had it been noticed, in connection with Miss Beatrice,
who had led the way, drawing aside the curtain that
hung in front of the vestry door, and tapping softly
with her knuckles.
“Come in!”
Very simple words, but they set Hazel’s
heart beating, as, in a whisper full of awe, but at
the same time very distant and cold, Miss Beatrice
said:
“You may go in now.”
As she spoke she drew back, holding
the curtain for Hazel to pass; and trying to master
her emotion, the latter raised the latch and entered
the vestry.
The vicar was standing with his hat
in hand, gazing out of the little window at the cheerful
prospect of a piece of blank old stone wall, surmounted
by a large waterspout, and though he must have heard
the door open and close, he did not turn, but stood
there as stiff and uncompromising of aspect as his
sisters.
He had seen Hazel Thorne twice before,
but in a gloomy room in London; and being of rather
a preoccupied turn of mind, he had paid so little
heed to her personal appearance that he would hardly
have recognised her again. A new mistress had
been required, and the customary correspondence had
taken place; he had called at the institution, asked
a few questions, and there was an end of the matter,
the strong recommendations of the lady-principal being
sufficient for the engagement to be decided on.
Hazel stood waiting for him to turn
round, but the Reverend Henry Lambent remained gazing
at the water-pipe for some few moments before coughing
slightly to clear his throat. Then, in a voice
full of haughty condescension, he began:
“I am glad to find that you
arrived punctually. Miss Thorne, in accordance
with the arrangements that were made; and I take this
opportunity of saying a few words to you at this commencement
of your career in Plumton.”
Here he stopped, and faced slowly
round, allowing his half-closed eyes to rest indifferently
upon the new mistress, who was standing facing the
window, and upon whose rather pale care-worn face the
light fell strongly as he turned.
Very plainly dressed in her well-fitting
mourning, Hazel Thorne was one who could have claimed
a second look from the sternest of mortals.
It was not that she was surpassing
beautiful, and could boast of finely-chiselled nostrils,
Juno-like brow, or any of the wonderfully entrancing
features with which some novelists endow their heroines;
Hazel was simply a sweet-faced, thoroughly English
girl, but there was an expression in her eyes, a touching
look so full of appeal that it even affected the cold,
unimpassioned vicar, who remained silent for some
moments as if wondering, and then hastily said:
“I beg your pardon. Miss Thorne, will
you sit down!”
He placed a chair for her, and drew
another forward from where it was half hidden behind
the folds of the surplice but lately hung upon its
proper peg, and, astonished at himself waited till
Hazel had seated herself before following suit.
“That young man” seemed
to have vanished from his thoughts, and the lecture
he had intended to read the young schoolmistress upon
the bad appearance of such meetings as those which
had taken place that morning dropped from his memory,
and his lips formed words that surprised him as much
as his acts.
“I trust that you have found
everything correct at at the schoolhouse,
Miss Thorne?”
“Quite, I thank you,”
replied Hazel, with quiet dignity, and she entirely
forgot that she was addressing her superior, and left
out the “sir.”
“Of course everything is very
strange and new to you at first; but er
er, you will soon feel quite at home with us, I hope.”
“Indeed, I hope so,” said
Hazel earnestly. “The time has been so
short as yet.”
“Yes of course so
very short,” replied the vicar. “My
sisters will call to-morrow, I have no doubt and see
Mrs Thorne. I shall be down at the school in
the afternoon. You saw Miss Burge, of course,
this morning?”
“Oh yes. Miss Burge walked up to church
with me.”
“And Mr William Forth Burge
too, if I mistake not. Most admirable people,
Miss Thorne. Great patrons of our schools.
I trust that you will er er try
to er that is, endeavour to meet
them in little matters, connected with the management
of the children.”
“You may rely upon my trying
to thoroughly fulfil my duties, Mr Lambent,”
said Hazel quietly.
“Of course to be
sure, Miss Thorne, no doubt,” he said hastily;
and as he spoke he wondered at himself more and more;
“but I must not detain you, Miss Thorne.
Er allow me one moment, the curtain is
rather awkward to one unaccustomed to the place.”
And, to the astonishment the
utter astonishment of his sisters, who
were standing as stiffly in the chancel as if they
were a couple of monumental effigies, the Reverend
Henry Lambent opened the door, passed out first, and
then stood holding the curtain aside for Hazel to pass,
which she did, bowing gravely and with quiet dignity
to the two ladies before gliding along the nave and
out of the door.
Neither of the sisters spoke, but
stood, like the vicar, watching the new mistress leave
the church.
At last Miss Beatrice turned.
“What excuse did she make, Henry?” she
said.
“I er I beg your pardon,
Beatrice?”
“I say, what excuse did she
make? Really, her conduct is very, strange.”
“Excuse? Oh, of course,
about her visitor,” said the vicar absently.
“I er I on second consideration
thought it would be better to ignore the matter.
Perhaps she was not to blame.”
“Henry!”
“Beatrice, my dear,” said
the vicar quietly, “I always abstain from having
refreshments in the vestry, but the morning service
is long and I feel faint. Let us go home to
lunch.”
Miss Beatrice had the first rule over
the vicarage, her elder sister the second rule, and
generally speaking, the vicar let them have matters
entirely their own way; still, there were times when
he took the reins in his own hands, and then it was
dangerous to interfere.
This was one of the times when the
vicar showed that he had a will of his own, and consequently
the sisters exchanged glances and said no more.