Shortly after this, there arrived
at the George and Dragon a stranger. He was a
man somewhat past forty, embrowned by distant travel,
and, his years considered, wonderfully good-looking.
He had good eyes; his dark-brown hair had no sprinkling
of gray in it; and his kindly smile showed very white
and even teeth. He made inquiries about neighbours,
especially respecting Mardykes Hall; and the answers
seemed to interest him profoundly. He inquired
after Philip Feltram, and shed tears when he heard
that he was no longer at Mardykes Hall, and that Trebeck
or other friends could give him no tidings of him.
And then he asked Richard Turnbull
to show him to a quiet room; and so, taking the honest
fellow by the hand, he said,
“Mr. Turnbull, don’t you know me?”
“No, sir,” said the host
of the George and Dragon, after a puzzled stare, “I
can’t say I do, sir.”
The stranger smiled a little sadly,
and shook his head: and with a gentle laugh,
still holding his hand in a very friendly way, he said,
“I should have known you anywhere, Mr. Turnbull — anywhere
on earth or water. Had you turned up on the Himalayas,
or in a junk on the Canton river, or as a dervish
in the mosque of St. Sophia, I should have recognised
my old friend, and asked what news from Golden Friars.
But of course I’m changed. You were a little
my senior; and one advantage among many you have over
your juniors is that you don’t change as we do.
I have played many a game of hand-ball in the inn-yard
of the George, Mr. Turnbull. You often wagered
a pot of ale on my play; you used to say I’d
make the best player of fives, and the best singer
of a song, within ten miles round the meer. You
used to have me behind the bar when I was a boy, with
more of an appetite than I have now. I was then
at Mardykes Hall, and used to go back in old Marlin’s
boat. Is old Marlin still alive?”
“Ay, that — he — is,”
said Turnbull slowly, as he eyed the stranger again
carefully. “I don’t know who you can
be, sir, unless you are — the boy — William
Feltram. La! he was seven or eight years younger
than Philip. But, lawk! — Well — By
Jen, and be you Willie Feltram? But no,
you can’t!”
“Ay, Mr. Turnbull, that very
boy — Willie Feltram — even he, and
no other; and now you’ll shake hands with me,
not so formally, but like an old friend.”
“Ay, that I will,” said
honest Richard Turnbull, with a great smile, and a
hearty grasp of his guest’s hand; and they both
laughed together, and the younger man’s eyes,
for he was an affectionate fool, filled up with tears.
“And I want you to tell me this,”
said William, after they had talked a little quietly,
“now that there is no one to interrupt us, what
has become of my brother Philip? I heard from
a friend an account of his health that has caused
me unspeakable anxiety.”
“His health was not bad; no,
he was a hardy lad, and liked a walk over the fells,
or a pull on the lake; but he was a bit daft, every
one said, and a changed man; and, in troth, they say
the air o’ Mardykes don’t agree with every
one, no more than him. But that’s a tale
that’s neither here nor there.”
“Yes,” said William, “that
was what they told me — his mind affected.
God help and guard us! I have been unhappy ever
since; and if I only knew it was well with poor Philip,
I think I should be too happy. And where is Philip
now?”
“He crossed the lake one night,
having took leave of Sir Bale. They thought he
was going to old Trebeck’s up the Fells.
He likes the Feltrams, and likes the folk at Mardykes
Hall — though those two families was not
always o’er kind to one another. But Trebeck
seed nowt o’ him, nor no one else; and what
has gone wi’ him no one can tell.”
“I heard that also,”
said William with a deep sigh. “But I
hoped it had been cleared up by now, and something
happier been known of the poor fellow by this time.
I’d give a great deal to know — I don’t
know what I would not give to know — I’m
so unhappy about him. And now, my good old friend,
tell your people to get me a chaise, for I must go
to Mardykes Hall; and, first, let me have a room to
dress in.”
At Mardykes Hall a pale and pretty
lady was looking out, alone, from the stone-shafted
drawing-room window across the courtyard and the balustrade,
on which stood many a great stone cup with flowers,
whose leaves were half shed and gone with the winds — emblem
of her hopes. The solemn melancholy of the towering
fells, the ripple of the lonely lake, deepened her
sadness.
The unwonted sound of carriage-wheels
awoke her from her reverie.
Before the chaise reached the steps,
a hand from its window had seized the handle, the
door was thrown open, and William Feltram jumped out.
She was in the hall, she knew not
how; and, with a wild scream and a sob, she threw
herself into his arms.
Here at last was an end of the long
waiting, the dejection which had reached almost the
point of despair. And like two rescued from shipwreck,
they clung together in an agony of happiness.
William had come back with no very
splendid fortune. It was enough, and only enough,
to enable them to marry. Prudent people would
have thought it, very likely, too little. But
he was now home in England, with health unimpaired
by his long sojourn in the East, and with intelligence
and energies improved by the discipline of his arduous
struggle with fortune. He reckoned, therefore,
upon one way or other adding something to their income;
and he knew that a few hundreds a year would make them
happier than hundreds of thousand could other people.
It was five years since they had parted
in France, where a journey of importance to the Indian
firm, whose right hand he was, had brought him.
The refined tastes that are supposed
to accompany gentle blood, his love of art, his talent
for music and drawing, had accidentally attracted the
attention of the little travelling-party which old
Lady Harbottle chaperoned. Miss Janet, now Lady
Mardykes, learning that his name was Feltram, made
inquiry through a common friend, and learned what
interested her still more about him. It ended
in an acquaintance, which his manly and gentle nature
and his entertaining qualities soon improved into
an intimacy.
Feltram had chosen to work his own
way, being proud, and also prosperous enough to prevent
his pride, in this respect, from being placed under
too severe a pressure of temptation. He heard
not from but of his brother, through a friend in London,
and more lately from Gertrude, whose account of him
was sad and even alarming.
When Lady Mardykes came in, her delight
knew no bounds. She had already formed a plan
for their future, and was not to be put off — William
Feltram was to take the great grazing farm that belonged
to the Mardykes estate; or, if he preferred it, to
farm it for her, sharing the profits. She wanted
something to interest her, and this was just the thing.
It was hardly half-a-mile away, up the lake, and there
was such a comfortable house and garden, and she and
Gertrude could be as much together as ever almost;
and, in fact, Gertrude and her husband could be nearly
always at Mardykes Hall.
So eager and entreating was she, that
there was no escape. The plan was adopted immediately
on their marriage, and no happier neighbours for a
time were ever known.
But was Lady Mardykes content? was
she even exempt from the heartache which each mortal
thinks he has all to himself? The longing of her
life was for children; and again and again had her
hopes been disappointed.
One tiny pretty little baby indeed
was born, and lived for two years, and then died;
and none had come to supply its place and break the
childless silence in the great old nursery. That
was her sorrow; a greater one than men can understand.
Another source of grief was this:
that Sir Bale Mardykes conceived a dislike to William
Feltram that was unaccountable. At first suppressed,
it betrayed itself negatively only; but with time it
increased; and in the end the Baronet made little
secret of his wish to get rid of him. Many and
ingenious were the annoyances he contrived; and at
last he told his wife plainly that he wished William
Feltram to find some other abode for himself.
Lady Mardykes pleaded earnestly, and
even with tears; for if Gertrude were to leave the
neighbourhood, she well knew how utterly solitary her
own life would become.
Sir Bale at last vouchsafed some little
light as to his motives. There was an old story,
he told her, that his estate would go to a Feltram.
He had an instinctive distrust of that family.
It was a feeling not given him for nothing; it might
be the means of defeating their plotting and strategy.
Old Trebeck, he fancied, had a finger in it. Philip
Feltram had told him that Mardykes was to pass away
to a Feltram. Well, they might conspire; but
he would take what care he could that the estate should
not be stolen from his family. He did not want
his wife stript of her jointure, or his children,
if he had any, left without bread.
All this sounded very like madness;
but the idea was propounded by Philip Feltram.
His own jealousy was at bottom founded on superstition
which he would not avow and could hardly define.
He bitterly blamed himself for having permitted William
Feltram to place himself where he was.
In the midst of these annoyances William
Feltram was seriously thinking of throwing up the
farm, and seeking similar occupation somewhere else.
One day, walking alone in the thick
wood that skirts the lake near his farm, he was discussing
this problem with himself; and every now and then
he repeated his question, “Shall I throw it up,
and give him the lease back if he likes?” On
a sudden he heard a voice near him say:
“Hold it, you fool! — hold
hard, you fool! — hold it, you fool!”
The situation being lonely, he was
utterly puzzled to account for the interruption, until
on a sudden a huge parrot, green, crimson, and yellow,
plunged from among the boughs over his head to the
ground, and partly flying, and partly hopping and
tumbling along, got lamely, but swiftly, out of sight
among the thick underwood; and he could neither start
it nor hear it any more. The interruption reminded
him of that which befel Robinson Crusoe. It was
more singular, however; for he owned no such bird;
and its strangeness impressed the omen all the more.
He related it when he got home to
his wife; and as people when living a solitary life,
and also suffering, are prone to superstition, she
did not laugh at the adventure, as in a healthier
state of spirits, I suppose, she would.
They continued, however, to discuss
the question together; and all the more industriously
as a farm of the same kind, only some fifteen miles
away, was now offered to all bidders, under another
landlord. Gertrude, who felt Sir Bale’s
unkindness all the more that she was a distant cousin
of his, as it had proved on comparing notes, was very
strong in favour of the change, and had been urging
it with true feminine ingenuity and persistence upon
her husband. A very singular dream rather damped
her ardour, however, and it appeared thus:
She had gone to her bed full of this
subject; and she thought, although she could not remember
having done so, had fallen asleep. She was still
thinking, as she had been all the day, about leaving
the farm. It seemed to her that she was quite
awake, and a candle burning all the time in the room,
awaiting the return of her husband, who was away at
the fair near Haworth; she saw the interior of the
room distinctly. It was a sultry night, and a
little bit of the window was raised. A very slight
sound in that direction attracted her attention; and
to her surprise she saw a jay hop upon the window-sill,
and into the room.
Up sat Gertrude, surprised and a little
startled at the visit of so large a bird, without
presence of mind for the moment even to frighten it
away, and staring at it, as they say, with all her
eyes. A sofa stood at the foot of the bed; and
under this the bird swiftly hopped. She extended
her hand now to take the bell-rope at the left side
of the bed, and in doing so displaced the curtains,
which were open only at the foot. She was amazed
there to see a lady dressed entirely in black, and
with the old-fashioned hood over her head. She
was young and pretty, and looked kindly at her, but
with now and then a slight contraction of lips and
eyebrows that indicates pain. This little twitching
was momentary, and recurred, it seemed, about once
or twice in a minute.
How it was that she was not frightened
on seeing this lady, standing like an old friend at
her bedside, she could not afterwards understand.
Some influence besides the kindness of her look prevented
any sensation of terror at the time. With a very
white hand the young lady in black held a white handkerchief
pressed to her bosom at the top of her bodice.
“Who are you?” asked Gertrude.
“I am a kinswoman, although
you don’t know me; and I have come to tell you
that you must not leave Faxwell” (the name of
the place) “or Janet. If you go, I will
go with you; and I can make you fear me.”
Her voice was very distinct, but also
very faint, with something undulatory in it, that
seemed to enter Gertrude’s head rather than her
ear.
Saying this she smiled horribly, and,
lifting her handkerchief, disclosed for a moment a
great wound in her breast, deep in which Gertrude
saw darkly the head of a snake writhing.
Hereupon she uttered a wild scream
of terror, and, diving under the bed-clothes, remained
more dead than alive there, until her maid, alarmed
by her cry, came in, and having searched the room,
and shut the window at her desire, did all in her
power to comfort her.
If this was a nightmare and embodied
only by a form of expression which in some states
belongs to the imagination, a leading idea in the
controversy in which her mind had long been employed,
it had at least the effect of deciding her against
leaving Faxwell. And so that point was settled;
and unpleasant relations continued between the tenants
of the farm and the master of Mardykes Hall.
To Lady Mardykes all this was very
painful, although Sir Bale did not insist upon making
a separation between his wife and her cousin.
But to Mardykes Hall that cousin came no more.
Even Lady Mardykes thought it better to see her at
Faxwell than to risk a meeting in the temper in which
Sir Bale then was. And thus several years passed.
No tidings of Philip Feltram were
heard; and, in fact, none ever reached that part of
the world; and if it had not been highly improbable
that he could have drowned himself in the lake without
his body sooner or later having risen to the surface,
it would have been concluded that he had either accidentally
or by design made away with himself in its waters.
Over Mardykes Hall there was a gloom — no
sound of children’s voices was heard there,
and even the hope of that merry advent had died out.
This disappointment had no doubt helped
to fix in Sir Bale’s mind the idea of the insecurity
of his property, and the morbid fancy that William
Feltram and old Trebeck were conspiring to seize it;
than which, I need hardly say, no imagination more
insane could have fixed itself in his mind.
In other things, however, Sir Bale
was shrewd and sharp, a clear and rapid man of business,
and although this was a strange whim, it was not so
unnatural in a man who was by nature so prone to suspicion
as Sir Bale Mardykes.
During the years, now seven, that
had elapsed since the marriage of Sir Bale and Miss
Janet Feltram, there had happened but one event, except
the death of their only child, to place them in mourning.
That was the decease of Sir William Walsingham, the
husband of Lady Mardykes’ sister. She now
lived in a handsome old dower-house at Islington, and
being wealthy, made now and then an excursion to Mardykes
Hall, in which she was sometimes accompanied by her
sister Lady Haworth. Sir Oliver being a Parliament-man
was much in London and deep in politics and intrigue,
and subject, as convivial rogues are, to occasional
hard hits from gout.
But change and separation had made
no alteration in these ladies’ mutual affections,
and no three sisters were ever more attached.
Was Lady Mardykes happy with her lord?
A woman so gentle and loving as she, is a happy wife
with any husband who is not an absolute brute.
There must have been, I suppose, some good about Sir
Bale. His wife was certainly deeply attached
to him. She admired his wisdom, and feared his
inflexible will, and altogether made of him a domestic
idol. To acquire this enviable position, I suspect
there must be something not essentially disagreeable
about a man. At all events, what her neighbours
good-naturedly termed her infatuation continued, and
indeed rather improved by time.