Through the streets of Todborough
and on through the environs of the city the gay cavalcade
rode decorously and discreetly; but nearing Tapton
Downs, the spirits of the party seemed to rise as they
encountered the fresh sea-breeze.
“I am sure you must be dying
for a good gallop,” said Blanche, turning to
Sylla Chipchase. “We turn off the main
road a little farther on, and then, if you remember,
we have lovely turf upon each side of the way.
We generally have what Jim calls a ‘real scurry’
over that.”
“I understand an
impromptu race; that will be great fun. But tell
me, Miss Bloxam you know all these horses have
I any chance of beating Lionel?”
“I can hardly say,” returned
Blanche, laughing. “We have really never
tried them in that way I should think old Selim, the
horse he is riding, is rather faster than yours.”
“Ah; but then, you see, I am
much lighter than he is. Lionel, I challenge
you to a race as soon as we turn off across the downs.
You shall bet me two dozen pair of gloves to one.
I always make him do that, you know,” she remarked
confidentially to Blanche, “in all our battles,
whatever they may be at.”
“Very well,” replied Beauchamp.
“Only remember, I shall expect those gloves
if I win them; and as I did my best for you yesterday
at Rockcliffe, so I intend to do the best for myself
now.”
“A very sporting match,”
exclaimed Bloxam. “There’s about
a mile of capital going over the downs without trespassing.
I’ll ride forward, and be judge and winning-post,
while Sartoris will start you.” And so
saying, Jim trotted forward.
“Now,” exclaimed Blanche,
as, quitting the main highway, they turned into the
cross-country road that led over the downs towards
the sea, “this is where you ought to start from.
If one of you will take the turf on the right-hand
side, and the other that on the left, and do your
best till you come to Jim, we shall all have a splendid
gallop, whichever of you wins. You start them,
Mr. Sartoris. Let them get a hundred yards in
front of us, and then we’ll follow as fast as
we can.”
The antagonists took their places
as directed; Mr. Sartoris gave the word “Go!”
and away they dashed. Miss Bloxam, sailing away
on King Cole in the wake of Sylla Chipchase, scans
that young lady’s performance with a critical
eye. A first-rate horsewoman herself, she was
by no means favourably impressed with it. Sylla
rides well enough, but her seat is not such as would
have been held in high repute in the shires.
She also displays a most ladylike tendency on the
present occasion to what is technically called ride
her horse’s head off.
“Two to one!” murmured
Blanche; “why, it should be ten to one upon old
Selim!” and with that she turned her eyes to
ascertain after what fashion old Selim’s jockey
is conducting himself. But a single glance at
Lionel bending slightly forward in his stirrups, with
hands low and his horse held firmly by the head, pretty
well convinces her that he is a first-flight man to
hounds, and probably has appeared in silk on a racecourse.
The match terminates as might be anticipated:
Sylla, under the laudable impression that she is making
her advantage in the weights tell, gallops her luckless
mare pretty nearly to a standstill, and Lionel, though
winning as he likes, good-naturedly reduces it to a
half length, whereby his defeated antagonist lays
the flattering unction to her soul that, had he carried
a few more pounds, the result would have been the
other way.
They jogged soberly along some couple
of miles, when Blanche exclaimed gaily, “Who
is for the short cut home? ’Let all who
love me follow me.’” And, putting King
Cole at the small fence that bordered the road, she
jumped into the big grass-field on the other side.
Lionel Beauchamp and Laura Chipchase followed promptly;
but Jim, who was a little in advance, said quietly,
“We had better, I think, keep
the road, Sartoris. The governor’s hack,
though admirable in his place, is not quite calculated
for the inspection of the agriculture of the neighbourhood.”
He said this good-naturedly, solely
upon Sylla’s account. He had marked the
finish of her race with Lionel, and had come to the
conclusion that the young lady was not much of a horsewoman.
Now this short cut, although over an easy country,
did involve the negotiation of two or three good-sized
fences, and he thought it just possible that the girl
would prefer not being called upon to ride over anything
of that sort. Sylla was possessed of a good
many accomplishments, but riding across country was
not one of them. She had, however, that curious
but common desire to excel in that for which she had
no aptitude; still, if she possessed no other attribute
of a horsewoman, she was undoubtedly gifted with nerve
amounting almost to recklessness.
“Oh, no, Captain Bloxam,”
she exclaimed; “I am sure we can go anywhere
that the rest of them do. Don’t you think
so, Mr. Sartoris?”
Without waiting for a reply, the young
lady jumped her horse into the field, and cantered
smartly after Blanche and her cousin.
“Well, wilful woman must have
her way,” Jim said drily. “Come along,
Sartoris; the governor’s hack can jump well enough
if you don’t hurry him.” And the
two men promptly followed their fair leader across
the grass.
King Cole enjoyed the scurry across
country to the full as much as his mistress, and expressed
his pleasure by shaking his head and reaching hard
at his bit. Laura Chipchase’s horse was
also roused by the smart canter at which they were
going, and began to pull unpleasantly.
“Let him go, Laura,” cried
Miss Bloxam; “the King, too, is fidgeting most
uncomfortably. A good gallop will take the nonsense
out of them.”
And with that the two girls quickened
their pace, and, going on side by side, led the way
at a fair hunting gallop. The first few fences
were small, and as she sailed triumphantly over them,
Sylla’s pulses tingled, and she was fired with
the spirit of emulation. Although she was some
little distance behind, she resolved to catch and pass
the leaders, and with that intent commenced bucketing
her mare along in rather merciless fashion.
In vain did Jim shout words of warning. She
turned a deaf ear to them. Had he not recommended
that she should keep the road? Did he think
the art of crossing a country was known only to the
maidens of Fernshire? She was determined to catch
Blanche and her cousin, whatever her escort might
urge to the contrary, and saw with infinite satisfaction
that she was rapidly closing the gap between them.
Jim Bloxam, galloping a little to her left, and watching
her closely, has already come to the conclusion that
wilful woman will have her fall, and only trusts it
may not be serious.
The mare Sylla was riding was a fairly
good hunter, and if she would but have left her alone
would have carried the girl safely over such obstacles
as they had to encounter. But Jim noticed with
dismay that Sylla had some indistinct idea of assisting
her at her fences, the result of which could only
be inevitable grief. The exhilaration of the
trio in front, as attested by the wild shout sent back
by Lionel Beauchamp as they cleared the first of those
bigger fences previously mentioned, put Sylla’s
blood thoroughly up. Heedless of Jim’s
“For God’s sake, take a pull!” she
struck her mare sharply with the whip, and sent her
at it as fast as she could lay legs to the ground.
The consequence was the mare took off too soon, and
the pair landed in the next field somewhat in a heap.
Jim was over and off his horse in a minute, and at
once came to the discomfited fair’s assistance.
It is seldom that a lady shows to advantage after
a regular “crumpler,” the story of Arabella
Churchill notwithstanding; nor, for the matter of
that, do men either look the better for the process.
No real harm having been done, the ludicrous side
of the situation generally presents itself; but Sylla
was certainly an exception. Although her hat
was broken, her habit woefully torn and mud-stained,
nobody could have looked at her somewhat flushed face
and flashing dark eyes without admitting that she
was a very pretty girl even “in ruins.”
“No, thanks; I am not in the
least hurt, Captain Bloxam,” she replied, as
Jim helped her to her feet; “but I could cry
with vexation. I had set my heart upon catching
those two; but now,” she continued, with a comical
little grimace, “I have got to first catch my
mare.”
With the assistance of Mr. Sartoris,
who, taking Jim’s advice, had followed at a
more sedate pace, this was soon done; and Sylla, having
rectified her toilette as far as circumstances permitted,
was once more in the saddle. That she presented
a rather dilapidated and woebegone appearance, nobody
could be more conscious than herself; but, as a woman
always does under such affliction, she put the best
face she could upon it.
“I am looking a dreadful guy,”
she said; “and it is very good of you two not
to laugh at me. I dare not even think of my hat,
for nobody ever did, nor ever will, succeed in straightening
that article into any semblance of its former shape
when it has been once stove in. I have only
one thing to be thankful for. Do you know what
that is?”
“That you are not hurt in any way,” replied
Jim.
“Hurt!” she rejoined,
with a contemptuous shrug of her shoulders; “I
never thought of that. Can you guess, Mr. Sartoris?”
“I think so,” he returned,
laughing. “You are well pleased that your
cousin and Miss Bloxam were well in front.”
“Just so,” said Sylla.
“It is easy to see that you are married, Mr.
Sartoris, and can to some extent follow the windings
of our feminine minds. They would have laughed,
and, under pretence of assistance, called attention,”
and here the girl looked ruefully down at her rent
habit, “to all the weak joints in my armour;
and, lastly, they would have done what you won’t, tease
me to death about it for the next week.”
“Matrimony has inculcated that
blindness is wisdom as far as I am concerned,”
said Sartoris.
“You see, Captain Bloxam, how
that ceremony quickens the understanding. But
you are very good. I know you think that my fall
was my own fault; that if I had listened to your warning
it wouldn’t have happened; and you remain mute.
Laura is a dear good girl; but, in your place, she
couldn’t have resisted saying, ‘Didn’t
I tell you so?’ to save her life.”
Jim muttered a courteous and most
mendacious disclaimer of Miss Sylla’s “grief”
being due to disregard of his warning.
The leading trio, in the meanwhile,
lost in all the exultation of a good gallop, and in
utter ignorance of Sylla Chipchase’s fall, kept
on without slacking rein till they once more found
themselves near the high-road, sweeping round from
the point they had left it to this, in an arc, by
traversing the chord of which they had saved about
a mile; and now, looking round for the remainder of
the party, discovered, to their surprise, that they
were nowhere in sight.
“They must have gone round by
the road!” exclaimed Blanche. “Perhaps
your cousin, Laura, is not used to crossing a country.”
“That I can’t say,”
replied Miss Chipchase. “Till this Easter
I haven’t seen her since she was quite a small
child; but I must say, from what I know of her, that
I am rather surprised she didn’t try.”
“I think it most probable she
has tried,” observed Lionel quietly. “Shall
I ride back and see what has become of them?”
“No,” said Miss Chipchase,
“I don’t think that is necessary.
Jim and Mr. Sartoris will no doubt take every care
of her. We had better jump into the road, Blanche,
and see if they are coming that way.”
But of course there were no signs
of the rearguard along the highway; and after a delay
of a few minutes the party agreed that Sylla was well
taken care of, and they might as well proceed leisurely
homewards. The victim of her ambition to “witch
the world with noble horsemanship” saw the leaders
vanish from her view with much satisfaction.
Under Jim Bloxam’s guidance, and proceeding
quietly over more moderate fences, which, though not
the straightest, was perhaps the safest, path to the
high-road, they regained it without further accident.
It must not be supposed that Sylla’s nerves
were shaken by her fall. She rode as boldly
as at first at everything her Mentor allowed; but she
was in a strange country, and compelled, whether she
liked it or not, to trust herself to Jim Bloxam’s
guidance.
“Now,” she exclaimed,
“you have come very nearly to the end of your
responsibilities, Captain Bloxam. You have only,
if possible, to smuggle me into the rectory; and remember I
swear you both to secresy.”
“I can take you,” replied
Jim, “by a bridle-path through the wood, which
will in all probability insure your reaching the rectory
grounds unnoticed; but your getting into the house
I must leave to your own ingenuity.”
When, in the course of the evening,
Jim, in his own impetuous fashion, told that he had
asked the Chipchase girls to come up to the Grange
the next evening, with a view to charades and an impromptu
valse or two, Lady Mary received the intelligence
with the calm resignation of a follower of Mahomet.
She saw it was hopeless attempting any further to
control the march of events.
“No,” she murmured confidentially
to Mr. Cottrell in the drawing-room, “the Fates
are against me. I have done all that woman could,
but I cannot contend with destiny. It is sad;
but whatever with due forethought I propose, destiny,
embodied in the shape of that wretch Jim, persistently
thwarts. There is no such thing as instilling
the slightest tact into him.”
“But, my dear Lady Mary,”
rejoined Cottrell, whose sense of the humorous was
again highly gratified by the outcome of the trip to
Trotbury, “I really cannot see that you have
any cause for complaint. Things look to me progressing
very favourably in the direction you wish.”
“My dear Pansey,” replied
her ladyship, solemnly, “you do not understand
these things quite so well as I thought you
did. A variety of belles disturbs concentration,
and prevents that earnestness of purpose which is
so highly desirable.”
“I see,” rejoined Pansey,
laughing. “To revert to the metaphor you
used in our conversation some days since, you object
to a peal of belles. Your doctrine may be embodied
in the formula, I presume, of one belle and one ringer.”
“Yes,” rejoined her ladyship,
smiling, “that about describes it. And
now I think it is about bed-time. Jim, my dear,”
she continued, as she took her bed-room candle, “as
you have thought fit to improvise a ball, you had
better take care that the young ladies have partners
by asking three or four of the officers from Rockcliffe,
if they will waive ceremony and come.”
“All right,” he replied,
“I will send over the first thing to-morrow
morning;” and from the inflexion of his mother’s
voice, Jim gathered that his programme for the morrow
had, at all events, not met altogether with her approval.
But there were still a few more bitter
drops to be squeezed into the cup of Lady Mary’s
discontent before she laid her head upon her pillow.
She had not been ten minutes in her room when there
was a tap at the door, and Blanche entered.
“I just looked in, mamma dear,
to ask you if you knew that the Chipchases were related
to Mrs. Wriothesley?”
“Nonsense!” exclaimed
Lady Mary; “what can you be dreaming of?
Why, I have known Laura and her sister all their
lives; and had they been related to that detestable
woman, I must have heard of it.”
“Well, I can only say that Sylla
Chipchase told me to-day at Trotbury that Mrs. Wriothesley
was her aunt, and that she was going up to stay with
her as soon as the holidays were over.”
“Good Heavens!” exclaimed
Lady Mary, “I might have guessed it; I might
have known there was some reason for my instinctive
dislike to that girl. That a niece of that horrid
woman should turn out as objectionable as herself
is only what one might expect.”
“But really, mamma dear,”
expostulated Blanche, “although I don’t
quite like Sylla Chipchase myself, you cannot say
that of her. I know you don’t like Mrs.
Wriothesley; but she is a very pretty woman, and Jim
declares a very pleasant one.”
“Don’t talk to me of Jim!”
cried Lady Mary petulantly. “He is too
provoking, and thinks every woman not positively ugly
that smiles upon him delightful; but I lose all patience
when I speak of Mrs. Wriothesley. Of course
it’s quite possible for Mrs. Wriothesley to be
Sylla’s aunt, although no relation to her cousins;
and you say this girl is going to stay with her?”
“Yes, for the remainder of the
season,” rejoined Blanche.
“Upon my word,” exclaimed
Lady Mary, “I really cannot think what sins I
have committed, that such a trial should be laid upon
me. Mrs. Wriothesley is bad enough as it is,
and hard enough to keep at arms’ length; but
Mrs. Wriothesley with a pretty girl to chaperon and
I am sorry to own that Sylla is that a
girl, moreover, who has forced her way upon us in
the country, will be simply unendurable.”
Pansey Cottrell, had he been present
at this scene, would most thoroughly have enjoyed
it, and even Blanche could not help laughing at her
mother’s dismay. Lady Mary’s was
no simulation of despair. She pictured, as Cottrell
would have divined, herself and her former foe once
more pitted against each other as rivals, and recalled
rather bitterly that campaign of four or five years
back, when another niece of that lady’s successfully
carried off an eligible parti that she, Lady
Mary, had at that time selected as suitable for her
eldest daughter. She had congratulated her antagonist
in most orthodox fashion when the engagement was announced;
and, though nothing but the most honied words were
exchanged between them, Mrs. Wriothesley had contrived
to let her see, as a woman always can, that she was
quite aware of her disappointment, and thoroughly
cognizant that her soft speeches were as dust and
ashes in her mouth.
“Well, good night, mamma,”
said Blanche, breaking in upon her mother’s
reverie. “Although you don’t like
Mrs. Wriothesley, I really don’t think that
need interfere with your slumbers.”
“My dear, you don’t know
her,” rejoined Lady Mary, with a vindictive
emphasis that sent Blanche laughing out of the room.
Jim Bloxam might have his faults,
but no one could charge him with lack of energy.
Whatever he busied himself about, Jim did it with
all his might. He had as in these
days who has not? dabbled a little in amateur
theatricals; and, whatever his audience might think
of his performance, the stage-manager would emphatically
testify that he threw himself into the business heart
and soul. That he should take counsel with Mrs.
Sartoris next morning concerning the proposed charades
was only what might have been expected; and then,
an unusual thing in a country-house party, a dearth
of talent was discovered. Neither Blanche nor
the Misses Evesham had ever taken part in anything
of the kind, and declared in favour of being lookers-on.
Mr. Sartoris promised to assist to the extent of
his ability; but neither he nor his wife would accept
the responsibility of deciding what they should do,
or in fact undertaking the management. The trio
seemed rather nonplussed, when Pansey Cottrell, who
had taken no part in the discussion, said quietly,
“Why don’t you go down
to the rectory, and talk things over with the young
ladies there? Miss Sylla is very clever in that
way, I can vouch, having seen her.”
“Of course,” exclaimed
Jim. “How stupid of me not to think of
it before! Get your hat, Mrs. Sartoris.
We have just nice time to slip across before lunch.”
Upon arriving at the rectory, Jim
plunged at once in medias res.
“We are come across to consult
you about what we are to do to-night. Rumour,
in the shape of Pansey Cottrell, declares, Miss Sylla,
that you are ‘immense’ in all this sort
of thing.”
“Mr. Cottrell, as you will soon
discover, has been imposing upon you to a great extent,”
replied Sylla; “but still I shall be glad to
be of any use I can.”
“Our difficulty is this,”
interposed Mrs. Sartoris: “when I have acted,
it has always been in a regular play. My words
have been set down for me, so that of course I knew
exactly what I had to say and when to say it; but
in charades, Captain Bloxam tells me, I shall have
to improvise my words. I have never seen one
acted; but that strikes me as dreadfully difficult.”
“You are perfectly right, Mrs.
Sartoris; it is. And yet people who have serious
misgivings about their ability to act a play have no
hesitation about taking part in charades. It
is wont to result in all the characters wanting to
talk together, or else in nobody apparently having
anything to say, or in one character being so enamoured
with the ease he or she improvises, that the affair
resolves itself into a mere monologue. I would
venture to suggest that our charades should be merely
pantomimic.”
“Glorious!” exclaimed
Jim. “I vote we place ourselves in Miss
Sylla’s hands, and elect her manageress.
Will you agree, Mrs. Sartoris?”
“Most certainly. The idea
sounds excellent, and to leave the originator to carry
it out is undoubtedly the best thing we can do.”
“Very well, then; if you will
give me an hour or two to think out my words, I will
explain how they ought to be done.”
“If you wouldn’t mind
coming up to the Grange, we might have a rehearsal
this afternoon, rummage up the properties, and all
the rest of it,” exclaimed Jim, energetically.
“That will do admirably,”
said Laura Chipchase. “And now, Sylla,
the sooner you set that great mind of yours to work,
the better.”