A PENDANT OF THE FOREGOING
Mention has been omitted or forgotten
by the worthy Dame, in her vagrant fowl’s treatment
of a story she cannot incubate, will not relinquish,
and may ultimately addle, that the bridegroom, after
walking with a disengaged arm from the little village
church at Croridge to his coach and four at the cross
of the roads to Lekkatts and the lowland, abruptly,
and as one pursuing a deferential line of conduct he
had prescribed to himself, asked his bride, what seat
she would prefer.
He shouted: ‘Ives!’
A person inside the coach appeared to be effectually
roused.
The glass of the window dropped.
The head of a man emerged. It was the head of
one of the bargefaced men of the British Isles, broad,
and battered flattish, with sentinel eyes.
In an instant the heavy-headed but
not ill-looking fellow was nimble and jumped from
the coach.
‘Napping, my lord,’ he said.
Heavy though the look of him might
be, his feet were light; they flipped a bar of a hornpipe
at a touch of the ground. Perhaps they were allowed
to go with their instinct for the dance, that his master
should have a sample of his wakefulness. He quenched
a smirk and stood to take orders; clad in a flat blue
cap, a brown overcoat, and knee-breeches, as the temporary
bustle of his legs had revealed.
Fleet-wood heard the young lady say:
’I would choose, if you please, to sit beside
you.’
He gave a nod of enforced assent,
glancing at the vacated box.
The man inquired: ‘A knee
and a back for the lady to mount up, my lord?’
‘In!’ was the smart command
to him; and he popped in with the agility of his popping
out.
Then Carinthia made reverence to the
grey lean figure of her uncle and kissed Mrs. Carthew.
She needed no help to mount the coach. Fleetwood’s
arm was rigidly extended, and he did not visibly wince
when this foreign girl sprang to the first hand-grip
on the coach and said: ’No, my husband,
I can do it’; unaided,’ was implied.
Her stride from the axle of the wheel
to the step higher would have been a graceful spectacle
on Alpine crags.
Fleetwood swallowed that, too, though
it conjured up a mocking recollection of the Baden
woods, and an astonished wild donkey preparing himself
for his harness. A sour relish of the irony in
his present position sharpened him to devilish enjoyment
of it, as the finest form of loathing: on the
principle that if we find ourselves consigned to the
nether halls, we do well to dance drunkenly. He
had cried for Romance here it was!
He raised his hat to Mrs. Carthew
and to Lord Levellier. Previous to the ceremony,
the two noblemen had interchanged the short speech
of mannered duellists punctiliously courteous in the
opening act. Their civility was maintained at
the termination of the deadly work. The old lord’s
bosom thanked the young one for not requiring entertainment
and a repast; the young lord’s thanked the old
one for a strict military demeanour at an execution
and the abstaining from any nonsensical talk over the
affair.
A couple of liveried grooms at the
horses’ heads ran and sprang to the hinder seats
as soon as their master had taken the reins. He
sounded the whip caressingly: off those pretty
trotters went.
Mrs. Carthew watched them, waving
to the bride. She was on the present occasion
less than usually an acute or a reflective observer,
owing to her admiration of lordly state and masculine
commandership; and her thought was: ‘She
has indeed made a brilliant marriage!’
The lady thought it, notwithstanding
an eccentricity in the wedding ceremony, such as could
not but be noticeable. But very wealthy noblemen
were commonly, perhaps necessarily, eccentric, for
thus they proved themselves egregious, which the world
expected them to be.
Lord Levellier sounded loud eulogies
of the illustrious driver’s team. His meditation,
as he subsequently stated to Chillon, was upon his
vanquished antagonist’s dexterity, in so conducting
matters, that he had to be taken at once, with naught
of the customary preface and apology for taking to
himself the young lady, of which a handsome settlement,
is the memorial.
We have to suppose, that the curious
occupant of the coach inside aroused no curiosity
in the pair of absorbed observers.
Speculations regarding the chances
of a fall of rain followed the coach until it sank
and the backs of the two liveried grooms closed the
chapter of the wedding, introductory to the honeymoon
at Esslemont, seven miles distant by road, to the
right of Lekkatts. It was out of sight that the
coach turned to the left, Northwestward.