May had come. The red glow of
the beech-branches had changed to a tender green;
the oaks were amber; the winding forest-paths, the
deep inaccessible glades where the cattle led such
a happy life, were blue with dog-violets and golden
with primroses. Whitsuntide was close at hand,
and good Mr. Scobel had given up his mind to church
decoration, and the entertainment of his school-children
with tea and buns in that delightful valley, where
an iron monument, a little less artistic than a pillar
post-office marks the spot where the Red King fell.
Vixen, though not particularly fond
of school-feasts, had promised to assist at this one.
It was not to be a stiff or ceremonious affair.
There was to be no bevy of young ladies, oppressively
attentive to their small charges, causing the children
to drink scalding tea in a paroxysm of shyness.
The whole thing was to be done in an easy and friendly
manner; with no aid but that of the school-mistress
and master. The magnates of the land were to
have no part in the festival.
“The children enjoy themselves
so much more when there are no finely-dressed people
making believe to wait upon them,” said Mrs.
Scobel; “but I know they’ll be delighted
to have you, Violet. They positively adore you!”
“I’m sure I can’t
imagine why they should,” answered Violet truthfully.
“Oh, but they do. They
like to look at you. When you come into the school-room
they’re all in a flutter; and they point at you
awfully, don’t they, Miss Pierson?” said
Mrs. Scobel, appealing to the school-mistress.
“Yes, ma’am. I can’t
cure them of pointing, do what I will.”
“Oh, they are dear little children,”
exclaimed Violet, “and I don’t care how
much they point at me if they really like me.
They make me such nice little bob-curtsies when I
meet them in the Forest, and they all seem fond of
Argus. I’m sure you have made them extremely
polite, Miss Pierson. I shall be very pleased
to come to your school-feast, Mrs. Scobel; and I’ll
tell our good old Trimmer to make no end of cakes.”
“My dear Violet, pray don’t
think of putting Mrs. Trimmer to any trouble.
Your dear mamma might be angry.”
“Angry at my asking for some
cakes for the school-children, after being papa’s
wife for seventeen years! That couldn’t
be.”
The school-feast was fixed, three
weeks in advance, for the Wednesday in Whitsun week,
and during the interval there were many small meteorologists
in Beechdale school intent upon the changes of the
moon, and all those varied phenomena from which the
rustic mind draws its auguries of coming weather.
The very crowing of early village cocks was regarded
suspiciously by the school children at this period;
and even the harmless domestic pussy, sitting with
his back to the fire, was deemed a cat of evil omen.
It happened that the appointed Wednesday
was a day on which Mrs. Tempest had chosen to invite
a few friends in a quiet way to her seven o’clock
dinner; among the few Captain Winstanley, who had taken
Mrs. Hawbuck’s cottage for an extended period
of three months. Mrs. Tempest had known all about
the school-feast a fortnight before she gave her invitations,
but had forgotten the date at the moment when she arranged
her little dinner. Yet she felt offended that
Violet should insist upon keeping her engagement to
the Scobels.
“But, dear mamma, I am of no
use to you at our parties,” pleaded Vixen; “if
I were at all necessary to your comfort I would give
up the school-feast.”
“My dear Violet, it is not my
comfort I am considering; but I cannot help feeling
annoyed that you should prefer to spend your evening
with a herd of vulgar children-playing
Oranges and Lemons, or Kiss in the Ring, or some other
ridiculous game, and getting yourself into a most
unbecoming perspiration-to a quiet home
evening with a few friends.”
“You see, mamma, I know our
quiet home evenings with a few friends so well.
I could tell you beforehand exactly what will happen,
almost the very words people will say-how
your jardinieres will be admired, and how the
conversation will glance off from your ferns and pélargoniums
to Lady Ellangowan’s orchids, and then drift
back to your old china; after which the ladies will
begin to talk about dress, and the wickedness of giving
seven guineas for a summer bonnet, as Mrs Jones, or
Green, or Robinson has just done; from which their
talk will glide insensibly to the iniquities of modern
servants; and when those have been discussed exhaustively,
one of the younger ladies will tell you the plot of
the last novel she has had from Mudie’s, with
an infinite number of you knows and you sees, and
then perhaps Captain Winstanley-he is coming,
I suppose-will sing a French song, of which
the company will understand about four words in every
verse, and then you will show Mrs. Carteret your last
piece of art needlework-”
“What nonsense you talk, Violet.
However, if you prefer the children at Stony Cross
to the society of your mother and your mother’s
friends, you must take your own way.”
“And you will forgive me in advance, dear mamma?”
“My love, I have nothing to
forgive. I only deplore a bent of mind which
I can but think unladylike.”
Vixen was glad to be let off with
so brief a lecture. In her heart of hearts she
was not at all sorry that her mother’s friendly
dinner should fall on a day which she had promised
to spend elsewhere. It was a treat to escape
the sameness of that polite entertainment. Yes,
Captain Winstanley was to be there of course, and prolonged
acquaintance had not lessened her dislike to that gentleman.
She had seen him frequently during his residence at
the Hawbuck cottage, not at her mother’s house
only, but at all the best houses in the neighbourhood.
He had done nothing to offend her. He had been
studiously polite; and that was all. Not by one
word had he reminded Violet of that moonlight walk
in the Pavilion garden; not by so much as a glance
or a sigh had he hinted at a hidden passion. So
far she could make no complaint against him.
But the attrition of frequent intercourse did not
wear off the sharp edge of her dislike.
Wednesday afternoon came, and any
evil auguries that had been drawn from the noontide
crowing of restless village cocks was set at naught,
for the weather was peerless: a midsummer sky
and golden sunlight shone upon all things; upon white-walled
cottages and orchards, and gardens where the pure
lilies were beginning to blow, upon the yellow-green
oak leaves and deepening bloom of the beech, and the
long straight roads cleaving the heart of the Forest.
Violet had arranged to drive Mr. and
Mrs. Scobel in her pony-carriage. She was at
the door of their snug little Vicarage at three o’clock;
the vivacious Titmouse tossing his head and jingling
his bit in a burst of pettishness at the aggravating
behaviour of the flies.
Mrs. Scobel came fluttering out, with
the Vicar behind her. Both carried baskets, and
behind them came an old servant, who had been Mrs.
Scobel’s nurse, a woman with a figure like a
hogshead of wine, and a funny little head at the top,
carrying a third basket.
“The buns and bread have gone
straight from the village,” said the Vicar’s
wife. “How well you are looking, Violet.
I hope dear Mrs. Tempest was not very angry at your
coming with us.”
“Dear Mrs. Tempest didn’t
care a straw,” Vixen answered, laughing.
“But she thinks me wanting in dignity for liking
to have a romp with the school-children.”
All the baskets were in by this time,
and Titmouse was in a paroxysm of impatience; so Mr.
and Mrs. Scobel seated themselves quickly, and Vixen
gave her reins a little shake that meant Go, and off
went the pony at a pace which was rather like running
away.
The Vicar looked slightly uneasy.
“Does he always go as fast as this?” he
inquired.
“Sometimes a good deal faster.
He’s an old fencer, you know, and hasn’t
forgotten his jumping days. But of course I don’t
let him jump with the carriage.”
“I should think not,”
ejaculated the Vicar; “unless you wanted to
commit murder and suicide. Don’t you think
you could make him go a little steadier? He’s
going rather like a dog with a tin kettle at his tail,
and if the kettle were to tip over -”
“Oh, he’ll settle down
presently,” said Vixen coolly. “I
don’t want to interfere with him; it makes him
ill-tempered. And if he were to take to kicking -”
“If you’ll pull him up,
I think I’ll get out and walk,” said Mr.
Scobel, the back of whose head was on a level with
the circle which the pony’s hoofs would have
been likely to describe in the event of kicking.
“Oh, please don’t!”
cried Vixen. “If you do that I shall think
you’ve no confidence in my driving.”
She pulled Titmouse together, and
coaxed him into an unobjectionable trot; a trot which
travelled over the ground very fast, without giving
the occupants of the carriage the uncomfortable sensation
of sitting behind a pony intent on getting to the
sharp edge of the horizon and throwing himself over.
They were going up a long hill.
Halfway up they came to the gate of the kennels.
Violet looked at it with a curious half-reluctant glance
that expressed the keenest pain.
“Poor papa,” she sighed.
“He never seemed happier than when he used to
take me to see the hounds.”
“Mr. Vawdrey is to have them
next year,” said Mrs. Scobel. “That
seems right and proper. He will be the biggest
man in this part of the country when the Ashbourne
and Briarwood estates are united. And the Duke
cannot live very long-a man who gives his
mind to eating and drinking, and is laid up with the
gout twice a year.”
“Do you know when they are to
be married?” asked Vixen, with an unconcerned
air.
“At the end of this year, I
am told. Lady Jane died last November. They
would hardly have the wedding before a twelvemonth
was over. Have you seen much of Mr. Vawdrey since
he came back?”
“I believe I have seen him three
times: once at Lady Southminster’s ball;
once when he came to call upon mamma; once at kettledrum
at Ellangowan, where he was in attendance upon Lady
Mabel. He looked rather like a little dog at
the end of a string; he had just that meekly-obedient
look, combined with an expression of not wanting to
be there, which you see in a dog. If I were engaged,
I would not take my fiancee to kettledrums.”
“Ah, Violet, when are you going
to be engaged?” cried Mrs. Scobel, in a burst
of playfulness. “Where is the man worthy
of you?”
“Nowhere; unless Heaven would
make me such a man as my father.”
“You and Mr. Vawdrey were such
friends when you were girl and boy. I used sometimes
to fancy that childish friendship of yours would lead
to a lasting attachment.”
“Did you? That was a great
mistake. I am not half good enough for Mr. Vawdrey.
I was well enough for a playfellow, but he wants something
much nearer perfection in a wife.”
“But your tastes are so similar.”
“The very reason we should not care for each
other.”
“‘In joining contrasts
lieth love’s delight.’ That’s
what a poet has said, yet I can’t quite believe
that, Violet.”
“But you see the event proves
the poet’s axiom true. Here is my old playfellow,
who cares for nothing but horses and hounds and a country
life, devotedly attached to Lady Mabel Ashbourne, who
reads Greek plays with as much enjoyment as other
young ladies derive from a stirring novel, and who
hasn’t an idea or an attitude that is not strictly
aesthetic.”
“Do you know, Violet, I am very
much afraid that this marriage is rather the result
of calculation than of genuine affection?” said
Mrs. Scobel solemnly.
“Oh, no doubt it will be a grand
thing to unite Ashbourne and Briarwood, but Roderick
Vawdrey is too honourable to marry a girl he could
not love. I would never believe him capable of
such baseness,” answered Violet, standing up
for her old friend.
Here they turned out of the Forest
and drove through a peaceful colony consisting of
half-a-dozen cottages, a rustic inn where reigned a
supreme silence and sleepiness, and two or three houses
in old-world gardens.
Vixen changed the conversation to
buns and school-children, which agreeable theme occupied
them till Titmouse had walked up a tremendously steep
hill, the Vicar trudging through the dust beside him;
and then the deep green vale in which Rufus was slain
lay smiling in the sunshine below their feet.
Perhaps the panorama to be seen from
the top of that hill is absolutely the finest in the
Forest-a vast champaign, stretching far
away to the white walls, tiled roofs, and ancient
abbey-church of Romsey; here a glimpse of winding
water, there a humble village-nameless save
for its inhabitants-nestling among the
trees, or basking in the broad sunshine of a common.
At the top of the hill, Bates, the
gray-headed groom, who had attended Violet ever since
her first pony-ride, took possession of Titmouse and
the chaise, while the baskets were handed over to a
lad, who had been on the watch for their arrival.
Then they all went down the steep path into the valley,
at the bottom of which the children were swarming in
a cluster, as thick as bees, while a pale flame and
a cloud of white smoke went up from the midst of them
like the fire beneath a sacrifice. This indicated
the boiling of the kettle, in true gipsy fashion.
For the next hour and a half tea-drinking
was the all-absorbing business with everybody.
The boiling of the kettle was a grand feature in the
entertainment. Cups and saucers were provided
by a little colony of civilised gipsies, who seem
indigenous to the spot, and whose summer life is devoted
to assisting at picnics and tea-drinkings, telling
fortunes, and selling photographs. White cloths
were spread upon the short sweet turf, and piles of
bread-and-butter, cake and buns, invited the attention
of the flies.
Presently arose the thrilling melody
of a choral grace, with the sweet embellishment of
a strong Hampshire accent. And then, with a swoop
as of eagles on their quarry, the school-children
came down upon the mountains of bread-and-butter,
and ate their way manfully to the buns and cake.
Violet had never been happier since
her return to Hampshire than she felt that sunny afternoon,
as she moved quickly about, ministering to these juvenile
devourers. The sight of their somewhat bovine
contentment took her thoughts away from her own cares
and losses; and presently, when the banquet was concluded-a
conclusion only arrived at by the total consumption
of everything provided, whereby the hungry-eyed gipsy
attendants sunk into despondency-Vixen constituted
herself Lord of Misrule, and led off a noisy procession
in the time-honoured game of Oranges and Lemons, which
entertainment continued till the school-children were
in a high fever. After this they had Kiss in
the Ring; Vixen only stipulating, before she began,
that nobody should presume to drop the handkerchief
before her. Then came Touchwood-a
game charmingly adapted to that wooded valley, where
the trees looked as if they had been planted at convenient
distances on purpose for this juvenile sport.
“Oh, I am so tired,” cried
Violet at last, when church clocks-all out
of earshot in this deep valley-were striking
eight, and the low sun was golden on the silvery beech-boles,
and the quiet half-hidden water-pools under the trees
yonder; “I really don’t think I can have
anything to do with the next game.”
“Oh, if you please, miss,”
cried twenty shrill young voices, “oh, if you
please, miss, we couldn’t play without you-you’re
the best on us!”
This soothing flattery had its effect.
“Oh, but I really don’t
think I can do more than start you,” sighed
Vixen, flushed and breathless, “what is it to
be?”
“Blindman’s Buff,” roared the boys.
“Hunt the Slipper,” screamed the girls.
“Oh, Blindman’s Buff is
best,” said Vixen. “This little wood
is a splendid place for Blindman’s Buff.
But mind, I shall only start you. Now then, who’s
to be Blindman?”
Mr. Scobel volunteered. He had
been a tranquil spectator of the sports hitherto;
but this was the last game, and he felt that he ought
to do something more than look on. Vixen blindfolded
him, asked him the usual question about his father’s
stable, and then sent him spinning amongst the moss-grown
beeches, groping his way fearfully, with outstretched
arms, amidst shrillest laughter and noisest delight.
He was not long blindfold, and had
not had many bumps against the trees before he impounded
the person of a fat and scant-of-breath scholar, a
girl whose hard breathing would have betrayed her neighbourhood
to the dullest ear.
“That’s Polly Sims, I know,” said
the Vicar.
It was Polly Sims, who was incontinently
made as blind as Fortune or Justice, or any other
of the deities who dispense benefits to man.
Polly floundered about among the trees for a long time,
making frantic efforts to catch the empty air, panting
like a human steam-engine, and nearly knocking out
what small amount of brains she might possess against
the gray branches, outstretched like the lean arms
of Macbeth’s weird women across her path.
Finally Polly Sims succeeded in catching Bobby Jones,
whom she clutched with the tenacity of an octopus;
and then came the reign of Bobby Jones, who was an
expert at the game, and who kept the whole party on
the qui vive by his serpentine windings and
twistings among the stout old trunks.
Presently there was a shrill yell
of triumph. Bobby had caught Miss Tempest.
“I know’d her by her musling
gownd, and the sweet-smelling stuff upon her pocket-handkercher,”
he roared.
Violet submitted with a good grace.
“I’m dreadfully tired,” she said,
“and I’m sure I shan’t catch anyone.”
The sun had been getting lower and
lower. There were splashes of ruddy light on
the smooth gray beech-boles, and that was all.
Soon these would fade, and all would be gloom.
The grove had an awful look already. One would
expect to meet some ghostly Druid, or some witch of
eld, among the shadowy tracks left by the forest wildings.
Vixen went about her work languidly. She was
really tired, and was glad to think her day’s
labours were over. She went slowly in and out
among the trees, feeling her way with outstretched
arms, her feet sinking sometimes into deep drifts
of last year’s leaves, or gliding noiselessly
over the moss. The air was soft and cool and dewy,
with a perfume of nameless wild flowers-a
faint aromatic odour of herbs, which the wise women
had gathered for medicinal uses in days of old, when
your village sorceress was your safest doctor.
Everywhere there was the hush and coolness of fast-coming
night. The children’s voices were stilled.
This last stage of the game was a thing of breathless
interest.
Vixen’s footsteps drifted lower
down into the wooded hollow; insensibly she was coming
towards the edge of the treacherously green bog which
has brought many a bold rider to grief in these districts,
and still she had caught no one. She began to
think that she had roamed ever so far away, and was
in danger of losing herself altogether, or at least
losing everybody else, and being left by herself in
the forest darkness. The grassy hollow in which
she was wandering had an atmosphere of solitude.
She was on the point of taking off
the handkerchief that Mr. Scobel had bound so effectually
across her eyes, when her outstretched hands clasped
something-a substantial figure, distinctly
human, clad in rough cloth.
Before she had time to think who it
was she had captured, a pair of strong arms clasped
her; she was drawn to a broad chest; she felt a heart
beating strong and fast against her shoulder, while
lips that seemed too familiar to offend kissed hers
with all the passion of a lover’s kiss.
“Don’t be angry,”
said a well-known voice; “I believe it’s
the rule of the game. If it isn’t I’m
sure it ought to be.”
A hand, at once strong and gentle,
took off the handkerchief, and in the soft woodland
twilight she looked up at Roderick Vawdrey’s
face, looking down upon her with an expression which
she presumed must mean a brotherly friendliness-the
delight of an old friend at seeing her after a long
interval.
She was not the less angry at that
outrageous unwarrantable kiss.
“It is not the rule of the game
amongst civilised people; though it possibly may be
among plough-boys and servant-maids!” she exclaimed
indignantly. “You are really a most ungentlemanlike
person! I wonder Lady Mabel Ashbourne has not
taught you better manners.”
“Is that to be my only reward
for saving you from plunging-at least ankle-deep-in
the marshy ground yonder? But for me you would
have been performing a boggy version of Ophelia by
this time.”
“How did you come here?”
“I have been to Langley Brook
for a day’s fly-fishing, and was tramping home
across country in a savage humour at my poor sport,
when I heard the chatter of small voices, and presently
came upon the Scobels and the school-children.
The juveniles were in a state of alarm at having lost
you. They had been playing the game in severe
silence, and at a turn in the grove missed you altogether.
Oh, here comes Scobel, with his trencher on the back
of his head.”
The Vicar came forward, rejoicing
at sight of Violet’s white gown.
“My dear, what a turn you have
given us!” he cried; “those silly children,
to let you out of their sight! I don’t think
a wood is a good place for Blindman’s Buff.”
“No more do I,” answered Vixen, very pale.
“You look as if you had been frightened, too,”
said the Vicar.
“It did feel awfully lonely;
not a sound, except the frogs croaking their vespers,
and one dismal owl screaming in the distance.
And how cold it has turned now the sun has gone down;
and how ghostly the beeches look in their green mantles;
there is something awful in a wood at sunset.”
She ran on in an excited tone, masking
her agitation under an unnatural vivacity. Roderick
watched her keenly. Mr. and Mrs. Scobel went back
to their business of getting the children together,
and the pots, pans, and baskets packed for the return-journey.
The children were inclined to be noisy and insubordinate.
They would have liked to make a night of it in this
woody hollow, or in the gorse-clothed heights up yonder
by Stony Cross. To home after such a festival,
and be herded in small stuffy cottages, was doubtless
trying to free-born humanity, always more or less
envious of the gipsies.
“Shall we walk up the hill together?”
Roderick asked Violet humbly, “while the Scobels
follow with their flock?”
“I am going to drive Mr. and
Mrs. Scobel,” replied Vixen curtly.
“But here is your carriage?”
“I don t know. I rather think it was to
meet us at the top of the hill.”
“Then let us go up together
and find it-unless you hate me too much
to endure my company for a quarter of an hour-or
are too angry with me for my impertinence just now.”
“It is not worth being serious
about,” answered Vixen quietly, after a little
pause. “I was very angry at the moment,
but after all-between you and me-who
were like brother and sister a few years ago, it can’t
matter very much. I daresay you may have kissed
me in those days, though I have forgotten all about
it.”
“I think I did-once
or twice,” admitted Rorie with laudable gravity.
“Then let your impertinence
just now go down to the old account, which we will
close, if you please, to-night. But,” seeing
him drawing nearer her with a sudden eagerness, “mind,
it is never to be repeated. I could not forgive
that.”
“I would do much to escape your
anger,” said Rorie softly.
“The whole situation just now
was too ridiculous,” pursued Vixen, with a spurious
hilarity. “A young woman wandering blindfold
in a wood all alone-it must have seemed
very absurd.”
“It seemed very far from absurd-to
me,” said Rorie.
They were going slowly up the grassy
hill, the short scanty herbage looking gray in the
dimness. Glow-worms were beginning to shine here
and there at the foot of the furze-bushes. A pale
moon was rising above the broad expanse of wood and
valley, which sank with gentle undulations to the
distant plains, where the young corn was growing and
the cattle were grazing in a sober agricultural district.
Here all was wild and beautiful-rich, yet
barren.
“I’m afraid when we met
last-at Lady Southminster’s ball-that
I forgot to congratulate you upon your engagement
to your cousin,” said Violet by-and-by, when
they had walked a little way in perfect silence.
She was trying to carry out an old
determination. She had always meant to go up
to him frankly, with outstretched hand, and wish him
joy. And she fancied that at the ball she had
said too little. She had not let him understand
that she was really glad. “Believe me, I
am very glad that you should marry someone close at
home-that you should widen your influence
among us.”
“You are very kind,” answered
Rorie, with exceeding coldness. “I suppose
all such engagements are subjects for congratulation,
from a conventional point of view. My future
wife is both amiable and accomplished, as you know.
I have reason to be very proud that she has done me
so great an honour as to prefer me to many worthier
suitors; but I am bound to tell you-as
we once before spoke of this subject, at the time
of your dear father’s death, and I then expressed
myself somewhat strongly-I am bound to
tell you that my engagement to Mabel was made to please
my poor mother. It was when we were all in Italy
together. My mother was dying. Mabel’s
goodness and devotion to her had been beyond all praise;
and my heart was drawn to her by affection, by gratitude;
and I knew that it would make poor mother happy to
see us irrevocably bound to each other-and
so-the thing came about somehow, almost
unawares, and I have every reason to be proud and happy
that fate should have favoured me so far above my
deserts.”
“I am very glad that you are happy,” said
Violet gently.
After this there was a silence which
lasted longer than the previous interval in their
talk. They were at the top of the ill before either
of them spoke.
Then Vixen laid her hand lightly upon
her old playfellow’s arm, and said, with extreme
earnestness:
“You will go into Parliament
by-and-by, no doubt, and have great influence.
Do not let them spoil the Forest. Do not let horrid
grinding-down economists, for the sake of saving a
few pounds or gaining a few pounds, alter and destroy
scenes that are so beautiful and a delight to so many.
England is a rich country, is she not? Surely
she can afford to keep something for her painters and
her poets, and even for the humble holiday-folks who
come to drink tea at Rufus’s stone. Don’t
let our Forest be altered, Rorie. Let all things
be as they were when we were children.”
“All that my voice and influence
can do to keep them so shall be done, Violet,”
he answered in tones as earnest. “I am glad
that you have asked me something to-night. I
am glad, with all my heart, that you have given me
something to do for you. It shall be like a badge
in my helmet, by-and-by, when I enter the lists.
I think I shall say: ’For God and for Violet,’
when I run a tilt against the economic devastators
who want to clear our woods and cut off our commoners.”
He bent down and kissed her hand,
as in token of knightly allegiance. He had just
time to do it comfortably before Mr. and Mrs. Scobel,
with the children and their master and mistress, came
marching up the hill, singing, with shrill glad voices,
one of the harvest-home processional hymns.
“All good gifts around us
Are sent from heaven above,
Then thank the Lord, oh thank the Lord,
For all His love.”
“What a delicious night!”
cried Mr. Scobel. “I think we ought all
to walk home. It would be much nicer than being
driven.”
This he said with a lively recollection
of Titmouse’s performances on the journey out,
and a lurking dread that he might behave a little
worse on the journey home. A lively animal of
that kind, going home to his stable, through the uncertain
lights and shadows of woodland roads, and driven by
such a charioteer as Violet Tempest, was not to be
thought of without a shudder.
“I think I had better walk,
in any case,” said Mr. Scobel thoughtfully.
“I shall be wanted to keep the children together.”
“Let us all walk home,”
suggested Roderick. “We can go through the
plantations. It will be very jolly in the moonlight.
Bates can drive your pony back, Violet.”
Vixen hesitated.
“It’s not more than four miles through
the plantations,” said Roderick.
“Do you think I am afraid of a long walk?”
“Of course not. You were
a modern Atalanta three years ago. I don’t
suppose a winter in Paris and a season at Brighton
have quite spoiled you.”
“It shall be as you like, Mrs.
Scobel,” said Vixen, appealing to the Vicar’s
wife.
“Oh, let us walk by all means,”
replied Mrs. Scobel, divining her husband’s
feelings with respect to Titmouse.
“Then, you may drive the pony
home, Bates,” said Violet; “and be sure
you give him a good supper.”
Titmouse went rattling down the hill
at a pace that almost justified the Vicar’s
objection to him. He gave a desperate shy in the
hollow at sight of a shaggy donkey, with a swollen
appearance about the head, suggestive, to the equine
mind, of hobgoblins. Convulsed at this appalling
spectre. Titmouse stood on end for a second or
two, and then tore violently off, swinging his carriage
behind him, so that the groom’s figure swayed
to and fro in the moonlight.
“Thank God we’re not sitting
behind that brute!” ejaculated the Vicar devoutly.
The pedestrians went off in the other
direction, along the brow of the hill, by a long white
road that crossed a wide sweep of heathy country,
brown ridges and dark hollows, distant groups of firs
standing black against the moonlit sky, here and there
a solitary yew that looked as if it were haunted-just
such a landscape as that Scottish heath upon which
Macbeth met the three weird women at set of sun, when
the battle was lost and won. Vixen and Rorie
led the way; the procession of school-children followed,
singing hymns as they went with a vocal power that
gave no token of diminution.
“Their singing is very melodious
when the sharp edge is taken off by distance,”
said Rorie; and he and Violet walked at a pace which
soon left the children a good way behind them.
Mellowed by a quarter of a mile or
so of interesting space, the music lent a charm to
the tranquil, perfumed night.
By-and-by they came to the gate of
an enclosure which covered a large extent of ground,
and through which there was a near way to Beechdale
and the Abbey House. They walked along a grassy
track through a plantation of young pines-a
track which led them down into a green and mossy bottom,
where the trees were old and beautiful, and the shadows
fell darker. The tall beech-trunks shone like
silver, or like wonderful frozen trees in some region
of eternal ice and snow. It was a wilderness
in which a stranger would incontinently lose himself;
but every foot of the way was familiar to Vixen and
Rorie. They had followed the hounds by these
green ways, and ridden and rambled here in all seasons.
For some time they walked almost in
silence, enjoying the beauty of the night, the stillness
only broken by the distant chorus of children singing
their pious strains-old hymn-tunes that
Violet had known and loved all her life.
“Doesn’t it almost seem
as if our old childish days had come back?”
said Roderick by-and-by. “Don’t you
feel as if you were a little girl again, Vixen, going
for a ramble with me-fern-hunting or primrose-gathering?”
“No,” answered Vixen firmly.
“Nothing can ever bring the past back for me.
I shall never forget that I had a father-the
best and dearest-and that I have lost him.”
“Dear Violet,” Roderick
began, very gently, “life cannot be made up of
mourning for the dead. We may keep their images
enshrined in our hearts for ever, but we must not
shut our youth from the sunshine. Think how few
years of youth God gives us; and if we waste those
upon vain sorrow -”
“No one can say that I have
wasted my youth, or shut myself from the sunshine.
I go to kettle-drums and dancing-parties. My mother
and I have taken pains to let the world see how happy
we can be without papa.”
“The dear old Squire!”
said Rorie tenderly; “I think he loved me.”
“I am sure he did,” answered Vixen.
“Well, you and I seem to have
entered upon a new life since last we rode through
these woods together. I daresay you are right,
and that it is not possible to fancy oneself back
in the past, even for a moment. Consciousness
of the present hangs so heavily upon us.”
“Yes,” assented Vixen.
They had come to the end of the enclosure,
and stood leaning against a gate, waiting for the
arrival of the children.
“And after all, perhaps, it
is better to live in the present, and look back at
the past, as at an old picture which we shall sooner
or later turn with its face to the wall.”
“I like best to think of my
old self as if it were someone else,” said Violet.
“I know there was a little girl whom her father
called Vixen, who used to ride after the hounds, and
roam about the Forest on her pony; and who was herself
almost as wild as the Forest ponies. But I can’t
associate her with this present me,” concluded
Violet, pointing to herself with a half-scornful gesture.
“And which is the better, do
you think,” asked Rorie, “the wild Violet
of the past, or the elegant exotic of the present?”
“I know which was the happier.”
“Ah,” sighed Rorie, “happiness
is a habit we outgrow when we get out of our teens.
But you, at nineteen, ought to have a year or so to
the good.”
The children came in sight, tramping
along the rutty green walk, singing lustily, Mr. Scobel
walking at their head, and swinging his stick in time
with the tuneful choir.
“He only is the Maker
Of all things near and far;
He paints the wayside flower,
He lights the evening star.”