DEALING WITH MATTERS OF HEARSAY AND MATTERS OF SPORT
One raw, foggy evening, early in the
following December, the house at Newlands presented
an unusually animated scene. On the gravel of
the carriage-sweep, without, grooms walked breathed
and sweating horses the steam from whose
bodies and nostrils showed white in the chill dusk slowly
up and down. In the hall, within, a number of
gentlemen, more or less mud-bespattered, regaled themselves
with cheerful conversation, with strong waters of
unexceptionable quality, and with their host, Mr.
Cathcart’s very excellent cigars. They moved
stiffly and stood in attitudes more professional than
elegant. The long, clear-coloured drawing-room
beyond offered a perspective of much amiable comfort.
The glazed surfaces of its flowery-patterned chintzes
gave back the brightness of candles and shaded lamps,
while drawn curtains shut out the somewhat mournful
prospect of sodden garden, bare trees, and gray, enshrouding
mist. At the tea-table, large, mild, reposeful,
clothed in wealth of black silk and black lace, was
Mrs. Cathcart. Lord Fallowfeild, his handsome,
infantile countenance beaming with good-nature and
good-health above his blue-and-white, bird’s-eye
stock and scarlet hunting-coat, sat by her discoursing
with great affability and at great length. Mary
Ormiston stood near them, an expression of kindly
diversion upon her face. Her figure had grown
somewhat matronly in these days, and there were lines
in her forehead and about the corners of her rather
large mouth, but her crisp hair was still untouched
by gray, her bright, gipsy-like complexion had retained
its freshness, she possessed the same effect of wholesomeness
and good sense as of old, while her honest, brown
eyes were soft with satisfied mother-love as they
met those of the slender, black-headed boy at her
side. Godfrey Ormiston was in his second
term at Eton, and had come to Newlands to-day for
his exeat. The little party was completed
by Lord Shotover, who stood before the fire warming
that part of his person which by the lay mind, unversed
in such mysteries, might have been judged to be already
more than sufficiently warmed by the saddle, his feet
planted far apart and a long glass of brandy and soda
in his hand. For this last he had offered good-tempered
apology.
“I know I’ve no business
to bring it in here, Mrs. Cathcart,” he said,
“and make your drawing-room smell like a pot-house.
But, you see, there was a positive stampede for the
hearth-rug in the hall. A modest man, such as
myself, hadn’t a chance. There’s a
regular rampart, half the county in fact, before that
fire. So I thought I’d just slope in here,
don’t you know? It looked awfully warm and
inviting. And then I wanted to pay my respects
to Mrs. Ormiston too, and talk to this young chap
about Eton in peace.”
Whereat Godfrey flushed up to the
roots of his hair, being very sensibly exalted.
Since what young male creature who knew anything really
worth knowing that was Godfrey’s way
of putting it at least did not know that
Lord Shotover had been a mighty sportsman from his
youth up, and upon a certain famous occasion had won
the Grand National on his own horse?
“Only tea for me, Mrs. Cathcart,”
Lord Fallowfeild was saying. “Capital thing
tea. Never touch spirits in the daytime and never
have. No reflection upon other men’s habits.” He
turned an admiring, fatherly glance upon the tall,
well-made Shotover. “Other men know
their own business best. Always have been a great
advocate for believing every man knows his own business
best. Still stick to my own habits. Like
to be consistent. Very steadying, sobering thing
to be consistent, very strengthening to the character.
Always have told all my children that. As you
begin, so you shall go on. Always have tried to
begin as I was going on. Haven’t always
succeeded, but have made an honest effort. And
it is something, you know, to make an honest effort.
Try to bear that in mind, you young gentleman,” this,
genially, to Godfrey Ormiston. “Not half
a bad rule to start in life with, to go on as you begin,
you know.”
“Always provided you start right,
you know, my dear fellow,” Shotover observed,
patting the boy’s shoulder with his disengaged
hand, and looking at the boy’s mother with a
humorous suggestion of self-depreciation. Now,
as formerly, he entertained the very friendliest sentiments
towards all good women, yet maintained an expensively
extensive acquaintance with women to whom that adjective
is not generically applicable.
But Lord Fallowfeild was fairly under
weigh. Words flowed from him, careless of comment
or of interruption. He was innocently and conspicuously
happy. He had enjoyed a fine day’s sport
in company with his favourite son, whose financial
embarrassments were not, it may be added, just now
in a critical condition. And then, access of material
prosperity had recently come to Lord Fallowfeild in
the shape of a considerable coal-producing property
in the North of Midlandshire. The income derived
from this amounting to from ten to twelve
thousand a year was payable to him during
his lifetime, with remainder, on trust, in equal shares
to all his children. There were good horses in
the Whitney stables now, and no question of making
shift to let the house in Belgrave Square for the
season, while the amiable nobleman’s banking-account
showed a far from despicable balance. And consciousness
of this last fact formed an agreeable undercurrent
to his every thought. Therefore was he even more
than usually garrulous according to his own kindly
and innocent fashion.
“Very hospitable and friendly
of you and Cathcart, to be sure,” he continued,
“to throw open your house in this way. Kindness
alike to man and beast, man and beast, for which my
son and I are naturally very grateful.”
Lord Shotover looked at Mary again,
smiling. “Little mixed that statement,
isn’t it,” he said, “unless we take
for granted that I’m the beast?”
“I was a good deal perplexed,
I own, Mrs. Cathcart, as to how we should get home
without giving the horses a rest and having them gruelled.
Fourteen miles ”
“A precious long fourteen too,” put in
Shotover.
“So it is,” his father
agreed, “a long fourteen. And my horse was
pumped, regularly pumped. I can’t bear to
see a horse as done as that. It distresses me,
downright distresses me. Hate to over-press a
horse. Hate to over-press anything that can’t
stand up to you and take its revenge on you.
Always feel ashamed of myself if I’ve over-pressed
a horse. But I hadn’t reckoned on the distance.”
“‘The pace was too hot to inquire,’”
quoted Shotover.
“So it was. Meeting at
Grimshott, you see, we very rarely kill so far on
this side of the country.”
“Breaking just where he did,
I’d have bet on that fox doubling back under
Talepenny wood and making across the vale for the earths
in the big Brockhurst warren,” Lord Shotover
declared.
“Would you, though?” said
his father. “Very reasonable forecast, very
reasonable, indeed. Quite the likeliest thing
for him to do, only he didn’t do it. Don’t
believe that fox belonged to this side of the country
at all. Don’t understand his tactics.
If it had been in my poor friend Denier’s time,
I might have suspected him of being a bagman.”
Lord Fallowfeild chuckled a little.
“Ran too straight for a bagman,”
Shotover remarked. “Well, he gave us a
rattling good spin whose-ever fox he was.”
“Didn’t he, though?”
said Lord Fallowfeild genially. He turned
sideways in his chair, threw one shapely leg across
the other, and addressed himself more exclusively
to his hostess. “Haven’t had such
a day for years,” he continued. “And
a very pleasant thing to have such a day just when
my son’s down with me very pleasant,
indeed. It reminds me of my poor, dear friend
Henniker’s time. Good fellow, Henniker.
I liked Henniker. Never had a better master than
Tom Henniker, very tactful, nice-feeling man, and
had such an excellent manner with the farmers
Ah! here’s Cathcart and Knott.
How d’ye do, Knott? Always glad to see
you. Very pleasant meeting such a number
of friends. Very pleasant ending to a pleasant
day, eh, Shotover? Mrs. Cathcart and I were just
speaking of poor Tom Henniker. You used to hunt
then, Cathcart. Do you remember a run, just about
this time of year? It may have been a little
earlier. I tell you why. It was the second
time the hounds met after my poor friend Aldborough’s
funeral.”
“Lord Aldborough died on the
twenty-seventh of October,” John Knott said.
The doctor limped in walking. He suffered a sharp
twinge of sciatica and his face lent itself to astonishing
contortions.
“Plain man, Knott,” Lord
Fallowfeild commented inwardly. “Monstrously
able fellow, but uncommonly plain. So’s
Cathcart for that matter. Well-dressed man and
very well-preserved as to figure, but remarkably like
an ourang-outang now his eyes are sunk and his eyebrows
have grown so tufty.” Then he glanced
anxiously at Lord Shotover to assure himself of the
entire absence of simian approximations in the case
of his own family. “Oh! ah! yes,”
he remarked aloud, and somewhat vaguely. “Quite
right, Knott. Then of course it was earlier.
Record run for that season. Seldom had a better.
We found a fox in the Grimshott gorse and ran to Water
End without a check.”
“And Lemuel Image got into the
Tilney brook,” Mary Ormiston said, laughing
a little.
“So he did though!” Lord
Fallowfeild rejoined, beaming. And then suddenly
his complacency suffered eclipse. For, looking
at the speaker, he became disagreeably aware of having,
on some occasion, said something highly inconvenient
concerning this lady to one of her near relations.
He rushed into speech again: “Loud-voiced,
blustering kind of fellow, Image. I never have
liked Image. Extraordinary marriage that of his
with a connection of poor Aldborough’s.
Never have understood how her people could allow it.”
“Oh! money’ll buy pretty
well everything in this world except brains and a
sound liver,” Dr. Knott said, as he lowered himself
cautiously on to the seat of the highest chair available.
“Or a good conscience,”
Mrs. Cathcart observed, with mild dogmatism.
“I am not altogether so sure
about that,” the doctor answered. “I
have known the doubling of a few charitable subscriptions
work extensive cures under that head. Depend
upon it there’s an immense deal more conscience-money
paid every year than ever finds its way into the coffers
of the Chancellor of the Exchequer.”
“So there is though!”
said Lord Fallowfeild, with an air of regretful conviction.
“Never put it as clearly as that myself, Knott,
but must own I am afraid there is.”
Mr. Cathcart, who had joined Lord
Shotover upon the hearth-rug, here intervened.
He had a tendency to air local grievances, especially
in the presence of his existing noble guest, whom
he regarded, not wholly without reason, as somewhat
lukewarm and dilatory in questions of reform.
“I own to sharing your dislike
of Image,” he remarked. “He behaved
in an anything but straightforward manner about the
site for the new cottage hospital at Parson’s
Holt.”
“Did he, though?” said Lord Fallowfeild.
“Yes. I supposed it had been brought
to your notice.”
Lord Fallowfeild fidgeted a little. “Rather
too downright, Cathcart,” he said to himself.
“Gets you into a corner and fixes you. Not
fair, not at all fair in general society. Oh!
ah! cottage hospital, yes,” he added
aloud. “Very tiresome, vexatious business
about that hospital. I felt it very much at the
time.”
“It was a regular job,” Mr. Cathcart continued.
“No, not a job, not a job, my
dear fellow. Unpleasant word job. Nothing
approaching a job, only an oversight, at most an unfortunate
error of judgment,” Lord Fallowfeild protested. He
glanced at his son inviting support, but that gentleman
was engaged in kindly conversation with bright-eyed,
little Godfrey Ormiston. He glanced at Mary remembered
suddenly that his unfortunate remark regarding that
lady had been connected with her resemblance to her
father, and the latter’s striking defect of
personal beauty. He glanced at the doctor.
But John Knott sat all hunched together, watching
him with an expression rather sardonic than sympathetic.
“There was culpable negligence
somewhere, in any case,” his persecutor, Mr.
Cathcart, went on. “It was obvious Image
pressed that bit of land at Waters End on the committee
simply because no one would buy it for building purposes.
His affectation of generosity as to price was a piece
of transparent hypocrisy.”
“I suppose it was,” Lord Fallowfeild agreed
mildly.
“A certain anonymous donor had
promised a second five hundred pounds, if the hospital
was built on high ground with a subsoil of gravel.”
“It is on gravel,” put
in Lord Fallowfeild anxiously. “Saw it
myself distinctly remember seeing gravel
when the heather had been pared before digging the
foundations bright yellow gravel.”
“Yes, and with a ten-foot bed
of blue clay underneath. Most dangerous soil
going,” this from Dr. Knott, grimly.
“Is it, though?” Lord
Fallowfeild inquired, with an amiable effort to welcome
unpalatable, geological information.
“Not a doubt of it. The
surface water and generally the sewage for
we are very far yet from having discovered a drain-pipe
which is impeccable in respect of leakage soak
through the porous cap down to the clay and lie there to
rise again not at the Last Day by any means, but on
the evening of the very first one that’s been
hot enough to cause evaporation.”
“Do they, though?” said
Lord Fallowfeild. He was greatly impressed. “Capable
fellow, Knott, wonderful thing science,” he
commented inwardly and with praiseworthy humility.
But Mr. Cathcart returned to the charge.
“The hospital was disastrously
the loser, in any case,” he remarked. “As
a matter of course, the conditions having been disregarded,
Lady Calmady withdrew her promise of a second donation.”
“Oh! ah! Lady Calmady,
really!” the simple-minded nobleman exclaimed.
“Very interesting piece of news and very generous
intention, no doubt, on the part of Lady Calmady.
But give you my word Cathcart that until this moment
I had no notion that the anonymous donor of whom we
heard so much from one or two members of the committee heard
too much, I thought, for I dislike mysteries foolish,
unprofitable things mysteries always turn
out to be nothing at all in the finish oh!
ah! yes well, that the anonymous donor
was Lady Calmady!”
And thereupon he shifted his position
with as much assumption of hauteur as his inherent
amiability permitted. He turned his chair sideways,
presenting an excellently flat, if somewhat broad,
scarlet-clad back to his persecutor upon the hearth-rug. “Sorry
to set a man down in his own house,” he said
to himself, “but Cathcart’s a little wanting
in taste sometimes. He presses a subject home
too closely. And, if I was bamboozled by Image,
it really isn’t Cathcart’s place to remind
me of it.”
He turned a worried and puckered countenance
upon his hostess, upon Dr. Knott, upon the drawing-room
door. In the hall beyond one or two guests still
lingered. A lady had just joined them, notably
straight and tall, and lazily graceful of movement.
Lord Fallowfeild knew her, but could not remember
her name.
“Oh! ah! Shotover,”
he said, over his shoulder, “I don’t want
to hurry you, my dear boy, but perhaps it would be
as well if you’d just go round to the stables
and take a look at the horses.”
Then, as the gentleman addressed moved
away, escorted by his host and followed in admiring
silence by Godfrey Ormiston, he repeated, almost querulously: “Foolish
things mysteries. Nothing in them, as a rule,
when you thrash them out. Mares’ nests generally.
And that reminds me, I hear young” Lord
Fallowfeild’s air of worry became accentuated “young
Calmady’s got home again at last.”
“Yes,” Mrs. Cathcart said,
“Richard and his mother have been at Brockhurst
nearly a month.”
“Have they, though?” exclaimed
Lord Fallowfeild. He fidgeted. “It’s
a painful subject to refer to, but I should be glad
to know the truth of these nasty, uncomfortable rumours
about young Calmady. You see there was that question
of his and my youngest daughter’s marriage.
I never approved. Shotover backed me up in it.
He didn’t approve either. And in the end
Calmady behaved in a very high-minded, straightforward
manner. Came to me himself and exhibited very
good sense and very proper feeling, did Calmady.
Admitted his own disabilities with extraordinary frankness,
too much frankness, I was inclined to think at the
time. It struck me as a trifle callous, don’t
you know. But afterwards, when he left home in
that singular manner and went abroad, and we all lost
sight of him, and heard how reckless he had become
and all that, it weighed on me. I give you my
word, Mrs. Cathcart, it weighed very much on me.
I’ve seldom been more upset by anything in my
life than I was by the whole affair of that wedding.”
“I am afraid it was a great
mistake throughout,” Mrs. Cathcart said.
She folded her plump, white hands upon her ample lap
and sighed gently.
“Wasn’t it, though?
So I told everybody from the start you know,”
commented Lord Fallowfeild.
“It caused a great deal of unhappiness.”
“So it did, so it did,”
the good man said, quite humbly. He looked crestfallen,
his kindly and well-favoured countenance being overspread
by an expression of disarmingly innocent penitence. “It
weighed on me. I should be glad to be able to
forget it, but now it’s all cropping up again.
You see there are these rumours that poor, young Calmady’s
gone under very much one way and another, that his
health’s broken up altogether, and that he is
shut up in two rooms at Brockhurst because it’s
a terribly distressing thing to mention, but that’s
the common talk, you know because he’s
a little touched here” the speaker
tapped his smooth and very candid forehead “a
little wrong here! Horrible thing insanity,”
he repeated.
At this point Dr. Knott, who had been
watching first one person present and then another
from under his shaggy eyebrows with an air of somewhat
harsh amusement, roused himself.
“Pardon me, all a pack of lies,
my lord,” he said, “and stupid ones into
the bargain. Sir Richard Calmady’s as sane
as you are yourself.”
“Is he, though?” the other
exclaimed, brightening sensibly. “Thank
you, Knott. It is a very great relief to me to
hear that.”
“Only a man with a remarkably
sound constitution could have pulled round. I
quite own he’s been very hard hit, and no wonder.
Typhoid and complications ”
“Ah! complications?” inquired
Lord Fallowfeild, who rarely let slip an opportunity
of acquiring information of a pathological description.
“Yes, complications. Of
the sort that are most difficult to deal with, emotional
and moral beginning with his engagement
to Lady Constance ”
“Oh, dear me!” this,
piteously, from that lady’s father.
“And ending his Satanic
Majesty knows where! I don’t. It’s
no concern of mine, nor of any one else’s in
my opinion. He has paid his footing every
man has to pay it, sooner or later to life
and experience, and personal acquaintance with the
thou shalt not which, for cause unknown, goes
for so almighty much in this very queer business of
human existence. He has had a rough time, never
doubt that, with his high-strung, arrogant, sensitive
nature and the dirty trick played on him by that heartless
jade, Dame Fortune, before his birth. For the
time, this illness had knocked the wind out of him.
If he sulks for a bit, small blame to him. But
he’ll come round. He is coming round day
by day.”
As he finished speaking the doctor
got on to his feet somewhat awkwardly. His subject
had affected him more deeply than he quite cared either
to own to himself or to have others see.
“That plaguy sciatic nerve again!” he
growled.
Lord Fallowfeild had risen also. “Capable
man, Knott, but rather rough at times, rather too
didactic,” he said to himself, as he turned to
greet Miss St. Quentin. She had strolled in from
the hall. Her charming face was full of merriment.
There was something altogether gallant in the carriage
of her small head.
“I was so awfully glad to see
Lord Shotover!” she said, as she gave her hand
to that gentleman’s father. “It’s
an age since he and I have met.”
“Very pleasant hearing, my dear
young lady, for Shotover, if he was here to hear it!
Lucky fellow, Shotover.” The kindly
nobleman beamed upon her. He was nothing if not
chivalrous. Mentally, all the same, he was much
perplexed. “Of course, I remember who she
is. But I understood it was Ludovic,” he
said to himself. “Made sure it was Ludovic.
Uncommonly attractive, high-bred woman. Very striking
looking pair, she and Shotover. Can’t fancy
Shotover settled though. Say she’s a lot
of money. Wonder whether it is Shotover? Uncommonly
fine run, best run we’ve had for years,”
he added aloud. “Pity you weren’t
out, Miss St. Quentin. Well, good-bye,
Mrs. Cathcart. I must be going. I am extremely
grateful for all your kindness and hospitality.
It is seldom I have the chance of meeting so many
friends this side of the country. Good-day
to you, Knott goodbye, Miss St. Quentin. Wonder
if I’d better ask her to Whitney,” he
thought, “on the chance of its being Shotover?
Better sound him first though. Never let a man
in for a woman unless you’ve very good reason
to suppose he wants her.”
Honoria, meanwhile, thrusting her
hands into the pockets of her long, fur-lined, tan,
cloth, driving-coat sat down on the arm of Mary Ormiston’s
flowery-patterned, chintz-covered chair.
“I left you all in a state of
holy peace and quiet,” she said, smiling, “and
a fine show you’ve got on hand by the time I
come back.”
“They ran across the ten-acre
field and killed in the shrubbery,” Mrs. Ormiston
put in.
John Knott limped forward. He
stood with his hands behind him looking down at the
two ladies. Some months had elapsed since he and
Miss St. Quentin had met. He was very fond of
the young lady. It interested him to meet her
again. Honoria glanced up at him smiling.
“Have you been out too?” she asked.
“Not a bit of it. I’m
too busy mending other people’s brittle anatomy
to have time to risk breaking any part of my own.
I’m ugly enough already. No need to make
me uglier. I came here for the express purpose
of calling on you.”
“You saw Katherine?” Mary asked.
“Oh yes! I saw Cousin Katherine.”
“How is she?”
“An embodiment of faith, hope,
and charity, as usual, but with just that pinch of
malice thrown in which gives the compound a flavour.
In short, she is enchanting. And then she looks
so admirably well.”
“That six months at sea was a great restorative,”
Mary remarked.
“Yet it really is rather wonderful
when you consider the state she was in before we went
to you at Ormiston, and how frightened we were at her
undertaking the journey to Naples.”
“Her affections are satisfied,”
Dr. Knott said, and his loose lips worked into a smile,
half sneering, half tender. “I am an old
man, and I have had a good lot to do with women at
second hand. Feed their hearts, and the rest
of the mechanism runs easy enough. Anything short
of organic disease can be cured by that sort of nourishment.
Even organic disease can be arrested by it. And
what’s more, I have known disease develop in
an apparently perfectly healthy subject simply because
the heart was starved. Oh! I tell you, you’re
marvelous beings.”
“And yet you know I feel so
abominably sold,” Honoria declared, “when
I consider the way in which we all Roger,
Mr. Quayle, and I acted bodyguard, attended
Cousin Katherine to Naples, wrapped her in cotton
wool, dear thing, sternly determined to protect her
at all costs and all hazards from well,
I am ashamed to say I had no name bad enough at that
time for Richard Calmady! And then this very person,
whom we regarded as her probable destruction, proves
to be her absolute salvation, while she proceeds to
turn the tables upon us in the smartest fashion imaginable.
She showed us the door and entreated us, in the most
beguiling manner, to return whence we came and leave
her wholly at the mercy of the enemy. I was furious” Miss
St. Quentin laughed “downright furious!
And Roger’s temper, for all his high-mightiness,
was a thing to swear at, rather than swear by, the
morning he and I left Naples. With the greatest
difficulty we persuaded her even to keep Clara.
She had a rage, dear thing, for getting rid of the
lot of us. Oh! we had a royal skirmish and no
mistake.”
“So Roger told me.”
Honoria stretched herself a little,
lolled against the back of the chair, steadying herself
by laying one hand affectionately on the other woman’s
shoulder. And John Knott, observing her, noted
not only her nonchalant and almost boyish grace, but
a swift change in her humour from light-hearted laughter
to a certain, and as he fancied, half-unwilling enthusiasm.
“But to-day,” she went
on, “when Cousin Katherine told me about it,
I confess the whole situation laid hold of me.
I could not help seeing it must have been finely romantic
to go off like that those two alone caring
as she cares, and after the long separation. It
sounds like a thing in some Elizabethan ballad.
There’s a rhythm in it all which stirs one’s
blood. She says the yacht’s crew were delightful
to her, and treated her as a queen. One can fancy
that the stately, lovely queen-mother,
and that strange only son! They called in
at the North African ports, and at Gib and Madeira,
and the Cape de Verds, and then ran straight for Rio.
Then they steamed up the coast to Pernambuco, and
on to the West Indies. Richard never went ashore,
Cousin Katherine only once or twice. But they
squattered about in the everlasting summer of tropic
harbours, fringed with palms and low, dim, red-roofed,
tropic houses just sampled it all, the colour,
and light, and beauty, and far awayness of it and
then, when the fancy took them, got up steam and slipped
out again to sea. And the name of the yacht is
the Reprieve. That’s in the picture,
isn’t it?”
Honoria paused. She leaned forward,
her chin in her hands, her elbows on her knees.
She looked up at John Knott, and there was a singular
expression in her clear and serious eyes.
“I used to pity Cousin Katherine,”
she said. “I used to break my heart over
her. And now now, upon my word, I believe
I envy her. And see here, Dr. Knott, she
has asked me to go on to Brockhurst from here.
It seems that though Richard refuses to see any one,
except you of course, and Julius March, he fusses
at his mother being so much alone. What ought
I to do? I feel rather uncertain. I have
fought him, I own I have. We have never been
friends, he and I. He doesn’t like me. He’s
no reason to like me anything but!
What do you say? Shall I refuse or shall I go?”
And the doctor reflected a little,
drawing his great, square hand down over his mouth
and heavy, bristly chin.
“Yes, go,” he answered.
“Go and chance it. Your being at Brockhurst
may work out in more of good than we now know.”