Captain Winstanley closed with Mrs.
Hawbuck for the pretty little verandah-surrounded
cottage on the slope of the hill above Beechdale.
Captain Hawbuck, a retired naval man, to whom the place
had been very dear, was in his grave, and his wife
was anxious to try if she and her hungry children
could not live on less money in Belgium than they could
in England. The good old post-captain had improved
and beautified the place from a farm-labourer’s
cottage into a habitation which was the quintessence
of picturesque inconvenience. Ceilings which you
could touch with your hand; funny little fireplaces
in angles of the rooms; a corkscrew staircase, which
a stranger ascended or descended at peril of life
or limb; no kitchen worth mentioning, and stuffy little
bedrooms under the thatch. Seen from the outside
the cottage was charming; and if the captain and his
family could only have lived over the way, and looked
at it, they would have had full value for the money
invested in its improvement. Small as the rooms
were, however, and despite that dark slander which
hung over the chimneys, Captain Winstanley declared
that the cottage would suit him admirably.
“I like the situation,”
he said, discussing his bargain in the coffee-room
at The Crown, Lyndhurst.
“I should rather think you did!”
cried Mr. Bell, the local surgeon. “Suits
you down to the ground, doesn’t it?”
Whereby it will be seen that there
was already a certain opinion in the neighbourhood
as to the Captain’s motive for planting himself
at Beechdale-so acute is a quiet little
community of this kind in divining the intentions
of a stranger.
Captain Winstanley took up his quarters
at Beechdale Cottage in less than a week after Mrs.
Tempest’s dinner-party. He sent for his
horses, and began the business of hunting in real
earnest. His two hunters were unanimously pronounced
screws; but it is astonishing how well a good rider
can get across country on a horse which other people
call a screw. Nobody could deny Captain Winstanley’s
merits as a horseman. His costume and appointments
had all the finish of Melton Mowbray, and he was always
in the first flight.
Before he had occupied Captain Hawbuck’s
cottage a month the new-comer had made friends for
himself in all directions. He was as much at home
in the Forest as if he had been native and to the manner
born. His straight riding, his good looks, and
agreeable manners won him everybody’s approval.
There was nothing dissipated or Bohemian about him.
His clothes never smelt of stale tobacco. He was
as punctual at church every Sunday morning as if he
had been a family man, bound to set a good example.
He subscribed liberally to the hounds, and was always
ready with those stray florins and half-crowns
by which a man purchases a cheap popularity among
the horse-holding and ragged-follower class.
Having distinctly asserted her intention
of remaining a widow to Violet, Mrs. Tempest allowed
herself the privilege of being civil to Captain Winstanley.
He dropped in at afternoon tea at least twice a week;
he dined at the Abbey House whenever the Scobels or
any other intimate friends were there “in a
quiet way.” He generally escorted Mrs.
Tempest and her daughter from church on Sunday morning,
Violet persistently loitering twenty yards or so behind
them on the narrow woodland path that led from Beechdale
to the Abbey House.
After walking home from church with
Mrs. Tempest, it was only natural that the Captain
should stop to luncheon, and after luncheon-the
Sabbath afternoon being, in a manner, a legitimate
occasion for dawdling-it was equally natural
for him to linger, looking at the gardens and greenhouses,
or talking beside the drawing-room fire, till the
appearance of the spitfire Queen Anne tea-kettle and
Mrs. Tempest’s infusion of orange pekoe.
Sometimes the Scobels were present
at these Sunday luncheons, sometimes not. Violet
was with her mother, of course, on these occasions;
but, while bodily present, she contrived to maintain
an attitude of aloofness which would have driven a
less resolute man than Conrad Winstanley to absent
himself. A man more sensitive to the opinions
of others could hardly have existed in such an atmosphere
of dislike; but Captain Winstanley meant to live down
Miss Tempest’s aversion, or to give her double
cause for hating him.
“Why have you given up hunting,
Miss Tempest?” he asked one Sunday afternoon,
when they had gone the round of the stables, and Arion
had been fondled and admired-a horse as
gentle as an Italian greyhound in his stable, as fiery
as a wild-cat out of it.
“Because I have no one I care
to hunt with, now papa is gone.”
“But here in the Forest, where
everybody knows you, where you might have as many
fathers as the Daughter of the Regiment -”
“Yes, I have many kind friends.
But there is not one who could fill my father’s
place-for an hour.”
“It is a pity,” said the
Captain sympathetically. “You were so fond
of hunting, were you not?”
“Passionately.”
“Then it is a shame you should
forego the pleasure. And you must find it very
dull, I should think, riding alone in the forest.”
“Alone! I have my horse.”
“Surely he does not count as a companion.”
“Indeed he does. I wish
for no better company than Arion, now papa is gone.”
“Violet is so eccentric!” Mrs. Tempest
murmured gently.
Captain Winstanley had taken Mrs.
Hawbuck’s cottage till the first of May.
The end of April would see the last of the hunting,
so this arrangement seemed natural enough. He
hunted in good earnest. There was no pretence
about him. It was only the extra knowing ones,
the little knot of choice spirits at The Crown, who
saw some deeper motive than a mere love of sport for
his residence at Beechdale. These advanced minds
had contrived to find out all about Captain Winstanley
by this time-the date of his selling out,
his ostensible and hidden reasons for leaving the
army, the amount of his income, and the general complexion
of his character. There was not much to be advanced
against him. No dark stories; only a leading
notion that he was a man who wanted to improve his
fortunes, and would not be over-scrupulous as to the
means. But as your over-scrupulous man is one
in a thousand, this was ranking Captain Winstanley
with the majority.
The winter was over; there were primroses
peeping out of the moss and brambles, and a shy little
dog-violet shining like a blue eye here and there.
The flaunting daffodils were yellow in every glade,
and the gummy chestnut buds were beginning to swell.
It was mid-March, and as yet there had been no announcement
of home-coming from Roderick Vawdrey or the Dovedales.
The Duke was said to have taken a fancy to the Roman
style of fox-hunting; Lady Mabel was studying art;
the Duchess was suspected of a leaning to Romanism;
and Roderick was dancing attendance upon the family
generally.
“Why should he not stay there
with them?” said Mr. Scobel, sipping his pekoe
in a comfortable little circle of gossipers round Mrs.
Tempest’s gipsy table. “He has very
little else to do with his life. He is a young
man utterly without views or purpose. He is one
of our many Gallios. You could not rouse him
to an interest in those stirring questions that are
agitating the Catholic Church to her very foundation.
He has no mission. I have sounded him, and found
him full of a shallow good-nature. He would build
a church if people asked him, and hardly know, when
it was finished, whether he meant it for Jews or Gentiles.”
Vixen sat in her corner and said nothing.
It amused her-rather with a half-bitter
sense of amusement-to hear them talk about
Roderick. He had quite gone out of her life.
It interested her to know what people thought of him
in his new world.
“If the Duke doesn’t bring
them all home very soon the Duchess will go over to
Rome,” said Mrs. Scobel, with conviction.
“She has been drifting that way for ever so
long. Ignatius isn’t high enough for her.”
The Reverend Ignatius sighed.
He hardly saw his way to ascending any higher.
He had already, acting always in perfect good faith
and conscientious desire for the right, made his pretty
little church obnoxious to many of the simple old
Foresters, to whom a pair of brazen candlesticks on
an altar were among the abominations of Baal, and a
crucifix as hateful as the image of Ashtaroth; obstinate
old people of limited vision, who wanted Mr. Scobel
to stick to what they called the old ways, and read
the Liturgy as they had heard it when they were children.
In the minds of these people, Mr. Scobel’s self-devotion
and hard service were as nothing, while he cut off
the ten commandments from the Sunday morning service,
and lighted his altar candles at the early celebration.
It was in this month of March that
an event impended which caused a considerable flutter
among the dancing population of the Forest. Lord
Southminster’s eldest daughter, Lady Almira Ringwood,
was to marry Sir Ponto Jones, the rich ironmaster-an
alliance of ancient aristocracy and modern wealth
which was considered one of the grandest achievements
of the age, like the discovery of steam or the electric
telegraph; and after the marriage, which was to be
quietly performed in the presence of about a hundred
and fifty blood relations, there was to be a ball,
to which all the county families were bidden, with
very little more distinction or favouritism than in
the good old fairy-tale times, when the king’s
herald went through the streets of the city to invite
everybody, and only some stray Cinderella, cleaning
boots and knives in a back kitchen, found herself
unintentionally excluded. Lady Southminster drew
the line at county families, naturally, but her kindly
feelings allowed a wide margin for parsons, doctors,
and military men-and among these last Captain
Winstanley received a card.
Mrs. Scobel declared that this ball
would be a grand thing for Violet. “You
have never properly come out, you know, dear,”
she said; “but at Southminster you will be seen
by everybody; and, as I daresay Lady Ellangowan will
take you under her wing, you’ll be seen to the
best advantage.”
“Do you think Lady Ellangowan’s
wing will make any difference-in me?”
inquired Vixen.
“It will make a great deal of
difference in the Southminster set,” replied
Mrs. Scobel, who considered herself an authority upon
all social matters.
She was a busy good-natured little
woman, the chosen confidante of all her female friends.
People were always appealing to her on small social
questions, what they ought to do or to wear on such
and such an occasion. She knew the wardrobes
of her friends as well as she knew her own. “I
suppose you’ll wear that lovely pink,”
she would say when discussing an impending dinner-party.
She gave judicious assistance in the composition of
a menu. “My love, everyone has pheasants
at this time of year. Ask your poulterer to send
you guinea-fowls, they are more distingue,”
she would suggest. Or: “If you have
dessert ices, let me recommend you coffee-cream.
We had it last week at Ellangowan Park.”
Vixen made no objection to the Southminster
ball. She was young, and fond of waltzing.
Whirling easily round to the swing of some German
melody, in a great room garlanded with flowers, was
a temporary cessation of all earthly care, the idea
of which was in no wise unpleasant to her. She
had enjoyed her waltzes even at that charity-ball
at the Pavilion, to which she had gone so unwillingly.
The March night was fine, but blustery,
when Mrs. Tempest and her daughter started for the
Southminster ball. The stars were shining in a
windy sky, the tall forest trees were tossing their
heads, the brambles were shivering, and a shrill shriek
came up out of the woodland every now and then like
a human cry for help.
Mrs Tempest had offered to take Mrs.
Scobel and Captain Winstanley in her roomy carriage.
Mr. Scobel was not going to the ball. All such
entertainments were an abhorrence to him; but this
particular ball, being given in Lent, was more especially
abhorrent.
“I shouldn’t think of
going for my own amusement,” Mrs. Scobel told
her husband, “but I want to see Violet Tempest
at her first local ball dance. I want to see
the impression she makes. I believe she will be
the belle of the ball.”
“That would mean the belle of
South Hants,” said the parson. “She
has a beautiful face for a painted window-there
is such a glow of colour.”
“She is absolutely lovely, when
she likes,” replied his wife; “but she
has a curious temper; and there is something very repellent
about her when she does not like people. Strange,
is it not, that she should not like Captain Winstanley?”
“She would be a very noble girl
under more spiritual influences,” sighed the
Reverend Ignatius. “Her present surroundings
are appallingly earthly. Horses, dogs, a table
loaded with meat in Lent and Advent, a total ignoring
of daily matins and even-song. It is sad to see
those we like treading the broad path so blindly.
I feel sorry, my dear, that you should go to this
ball.”
“It is only on Violet’s
account,” repeated Mrs. Scobel. “Mrs.
Tempest will be thinking of nothing but her dress;
there will be nobody interested in that poor girl.”
Urged thus, on purely benevolent grounds,
Mr. Scobel could not withhold his consent; more especially
as he had acquired the habit of letting his wife do
what she liked on most occasions-a marital
custom not easily broken through. So Mrs. Scobel,
who was an economical little woman, “did up”
her silver-gray silk dinner-dress with ten shillings’
worth of black tulle and pink rosebuds, and felt she
had made a success that Madame Elise might have approved.
Her faith in the silver-gray and the rosebuds was
just a little shaken by her first view of Mrs. Tempest
and Violet; the widow in black velvet, rose-point,
and scarlet-Spanish as a portrait by Velasquez;
Violet in black and gold, with white stephanotis in
her hair.
The drive was a long one, well over
ten miles, along one of those splendid straight roads
which distinguish the New Forest. Mrs. Tempest
and Mrs. Scobel were in high spirits, and prattled
agreeably all the way, only giving Captain Winstanley
time to get a word in edgeways now and then.
Violet looked out of the window and held her peace.
There was always a charm for her in that dark silent
forest, those waving branches and flitting clouds,
stars gleaming like lights on a stormy sea. She
was not much elated at the idea of the ball, and “that
small, small, imperceptibly small talk” of her
mother’s and Mrs. Scobel’s was beyond
measure wearisome to her.
“I hope we shall get there after
the Ellangowans,” said Mrs. Scobel, when they
had driven through the little town of Ringwood, and
were entering a land of level pastures and fertilising
streams, which seemed wonderfully tame after the undulating
forest; “it would be so much nicer for Violet
to be in the Ellangowan set from the first.”
“I beg to state that Miss Tempest
has promised me the first waltz,” said Captain
Winstanley. “I am not going to be ousted
by any offshoot of nobility in Lady Ellangowan’s
set.”
“Oh, of course, if Violet has
promised - What a lot of carriages!
I am afraid there’ll be a block presently.”
There was every prospect of such a
calamity. A confluence of vehicles had poured
into a narrow lane bounded on one side by a treacherous
water-meadow, on the other by a garden-wall. They
all came to a standstill, as Mrs. Scobel had prophesied.
For a quarter of an hour there was no progress whatever,
and a good deal of recrimination among coachmen, and
then the rest of the journey had to be done at a walking
pace.
The reward was worth the labour when,
at the end of a long winding drive, the carriage drew
up before the Italian front of Southminster House;
a white marble portico, long rows of tall windows brilliantly
lighted, a vista of flowers, and statues, and lamps,
and pictures, and velvet hangings, seen through the
open doorway.
“Oh, it is too lovely!”
cried Violet, fresh as a schoolgirl in this new delight;
“first the dark forest and then a house like
this-it is like Fairyland.”
“And you are to be the queen
of it-my queen,” said Conrad Winstanley
in a low voice. “I am to have the first
waltz, remember that. If the Prince of Wales
were my rival I would not give way.”
He detained her hand in his as she
alighted from the carriage. She snatched it from
him angrily.
“I have a good mind not to dance at all,”
she said.
“Why not?”
“It is paying too dearly for
the pleasure to be obliged to dance with you.”
“In what school did you learn politeness, Miss
Tempest?”
“If politeness means civility
to people I despise, I have never learned it,”
answered Vixen.
There was no time for further skirmishing.
He had taken her cloak from her, and handed it to
the attendant nymph, and received a ticket; and now
they were drifting into the tea-room, where a row of
ministering footmen were looking at the guests across
a barricade of urns and teapots, with countenances
that seemed to say, “If you want anything, you
must ask for it. We are here under protest, and
we very much wonder how our people could ever have
invited such rabble!”
“I always feel small in a tea-room
when there are only met in attendance,” whispered
Mr. Scobel, “they are so haughty. I would
sooner ask Gladstone or Disraeli to pour me out a
cup of tea than one of those supercilious creatures.”
Lady Southminster was stationed in
the Teniers room-a small apartment at the
beginning of the suite which ended in the picture-gallery
or ball-room. She was what Joe Gargery called
a “fine figure of a woman,” in ruby velvet
and diamonds, and received her guests with an in discriminating
cordiality which went far to heal the gaping wounds
of county politics.
The Ellangowans had arrived, and Lady
Ellangowan, who was full of good-nature, was quite
ready to take Violet under her wing when Mrs. Scobel
suggested that operation.
“I can find her any number of
partners,” she said. “Oh, there she
goes-off-already with Captain
Winstanley.”
The Captain had lost no time in exacting
his waltz. It was the third on the programme,
and the band were beginning to warm to their work They
were playing a waltz by Offenbach-“Les
Traineaux”-with an accompaniment
of jingling sleigh-bells-music that had
an almost maddening effect on spirits already exhilarated.
The long lofty picture-gallery made
a magnificent ball-room-a polished floor
of dark wood-a narrow line of light under
the projecting cornice, the famous Paul Veronese,
the world-renowned Rubens, the adorable Titian-ideal
beauty looking down with art’s eternal tranquillity
upon the whisk and whirl of actual life-here
a calm Madonna, contemplating, with deep unfathomable
eyes, these brief ephemera of a night-there
Judith with a white muscular arm holding the tyrant’s
head aloft above the dancers-yonder Philip
of Spain frowning on this Lenten festival.
Violet and Captain Winstanley waltzed
in a stern silence. She was vexed with herself
for her loss of temper just now. In his breast
there was a deeper anger. “When would my
day come?” he asked himself. “When
shall I be able to bow this proud head, to bend this
stubborn will?” It must be soon-he
was tired of playing his submissive part-tired
of holding his cards hidden.
They held on to the end of the waltz-the
last clash of the sleigh-bells.
“Who’s that girl in black
and gold?” asked a Guardsman of Lady Ellangowan;
“those two are the best dancers in the room-it’s
a thousand to nothing on them.”
That final clash of the bells brought
the Captain and his partner to anchor at the end of
the gallery, which opened through an archway into
a spacious palm-house with a lofty dome. In the
middle of this archway, looking at the dancers, stood
a figure at sight of which Violet Tempest’s
heart gave a great leap, and then stood still.
It was Roderick Vawdrey. He was
standing alone, listlessly contemplating the ball-room,
with much less life and expression in his face than
there was in the pictured faces on the walls.
“That was a very nice waltz
thanks,” said Vixen, giving the captain a little
curtsey.
“Shall I take you back to Mrs. Tempest?”
Roderick had seen her by this time,
and was coming towards her with a singularly grave
and distant countenance, she thought; not at all like
the Rorie of old times. But of course that was
over and done with. She must never call him Rorie
any more, not even in her own thoughts. A sharp
sudden memory thrilled her, as they stood face to face
in that brilliant gallery-the memory of
their last meeting in the darkened room on the day
of her father’s funeral.
“How do you do?” said
Roderick, with a gush of originality. “Your
mamma is here, I suppose.”
“Haven’t you seen her?”
“No; we’ve only just come.”
“We,” no doubt, meant
the Dovedale party, of which Mr. Vawdrey was henceforth
a part.
“I did not know you were to
be here,” said Vixen, “or then that you
were in England.”
“We only came home yesterday,
or I should have called at the Abbey House. We
have been coming home, or talking about it, for the
last three weeks. A few days ago the Duchess
took it into her head that she ought to be at Lady
Almira’s wedding-there’s some
kind of relationship, you know, between the Ashbournes
and the Southminsters-so we put on a spurt,
and here we are.”
“I am very glad,” said
Vixen, not knowing very well what to say; and then
seeing Captain Winstanley standing stiffly at her side,
with an aggrieved expression of countenance, she faltered:
“I beg your pardon; I don’t think you
have ever met Mr. Vawdrey. Captain Winstanley-Mr.
Vawdrey.”
Both gentlemen acknowledged the introduction
with the stiffest and chilliest of bows; and then
the Captain offered Violet his arm, and she, having
no excuse for refusing it, submitted quietly to be
taken away from her old friend. Roderick made
no attempt to detain her.
The change in him could hardly have
been more marked, Vixen thought. Yes, the old
Rorie-playfellow, scapegoat, friend of the
dear old childish days-was verily dead
and gone.
“Shall we go and look at the
presents?” asked Captain Winstanley.
“What presents?”
“Lady Almira’s wedding
presents. They are all laid out in the library.
I hear they are very splendid. Everybody is crowding
to see them.”
“I daresay mamma would like
to go, and Mrs. Scobel,” suggested Vixen.
“Then we will all go together.”
They found the two matrons side by
side on a settee, under a lovely girlish head by Greuze.
They were both delighted at the idea of seeing the
presents. It was something to do. Mrs. Tempest
had made up her mind to abjure even square dances
this evening. There was something incongruous
in widowhood and the Lancers; especially in one’s
own neighbourhood.